1Six: Python 2 and 3 Compatibility Library
2=========================================
3
4.. module:: six
5   :synopsis: Python 2 and 3 compatibility
6
7.. moduleauthor:: Benjamin Peterson <benjamin@python.org>
8.. sectionauthor:: Benjamin Peterson <benjamin@python.org>
9
10
11Six provides simple utilities for wrapping over differences between Python 2 and
12Python 3.  It is intended to support codebases that work on both Python 2 and 3
13without modification.  six consists of only one Python file, so it is painless
14to copy into a project.
15
16Six can be downloaded on `PyPi <https://pypi.python.org/pypi/six/>`_.  Its bug
17tracker and code hosting is on `GitHub <https://github.com/benjaminp/six>`_.
18
19The name, "six", comes from the fact that 2*3 equals 6.  Why not addition?
20Multiplication is more powerful, and, anyway, "five" has already been snatched
21away by the (admittedly now moribund) Zope Five project.
22
23
24Indices and tables
25------------------
26
27* :ref:`genindex`
28* :ref:`search`
29
30
31Package contents
32----------------
33
34.. data:: PY2
35
36   A boolean indicating if the code is running on Python 2.
37
38.. data:: PY3
39
40   A boolean indicating if the code is running on Python 3.
41
42
43Constants
44>>>>>>>>>
45
46Six provides constants that may differ between Python versions.  Ones ending
47``_types`` are mostly useful as the second argument to ``isinstance`` or
48``issubclass``.
49
50
51.. data:: class_types
52
53   Possible class types.  In Python 2, this encompasses old-style and new-style
54   classes.  In Python 3, this is just new-styles.
55
56
57.. data:: integer_types
58
59   Possible integer types.  In Python 2, this is :func:`py2:long` and
60   :func:`py2:int`, and in Python 3, just :func:`py3:int`.
61
62
63.. data:: string_types
64
65   Possible types for text data.  This is :func:`py2:basestring` in Python 2 and
66   :func:`py3:str` in Python 3.
67
68
69.. data:: text_type
70
71   Type for representing (Unicode) textual data.  This is :func:`py2:unicode` in
72   Python 2 and :func:`py3:str` in Python 3.
73
74
75.. data:: binary_type
76
77   Type for representing binary data.  This is :func:`py2:str` in Python 2 and
78   :func:`py3:bytes` in Python 3.
79
80
81.. data:: MAXSIZE
82
83   The maximum  size of a  container like :func:`py3:list`  or :func:`py3:dict`.
84   This  is  equivalent  to  :data:`py3:sys.maxsize` in  Python  2.6  and  later
85   (including 3.x).   Note, this is temptingly  similar to, but not  the same as
86   :data:`py2:sys.maxint`  in  Python  2.   There is  no  direct  equivalent  to
87   :data:`py2:sys.maxint` in  Python 3  because its integer  type has  no limits
88   aside from memory.
89
90
91Here's example usage of the module::
92
93   import six
94
95   def dispatch_types(value):
96       if isinstance(value, six.integer_types):
97           handle_integer(value)
98       elif isinstance(value, six.class_types):
99           handle_class(value)
100       elif isinstance(value, six.string_types):
101           handle_string(value)
102
103
104Object model compatibility
105>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
106
107Python 3 renamed the attributes of several interpreter data structures.  The
108following accessors are available.  Note that the recommended way to inspect
109functions and methods is the stdlib :mod:`py3:inspect` module.
110
111
112.. function:: get_unbound_function(meth)
113
114   Get the function out of unbound method *meth*.  In Python 3, unbound methods
115   don't exist, so this function just returns *meth* unchanged.  Example
116   usage::
117
118      from six import get_unbound_function
119
120      class X(object):
121          def method(self):
122              pass
123      method_function = get_unbound_function(X.method)
124
125
126.. function:: get_method_function(meth)
127
128   Get the function out of method object *meth*.
129
130
131.. function:: get_method_self(meth)
132
133   Get the ``self`` of bound method *meth*.
134
135
136.. function:: get_function_closure(func)
137
138   Get the closure (list of cells) associated with *func*.  This is equivalent
139   to ``func.__closure__`` on Python 2.6+ and ``func.func_closure`` on Python
140   2.5.
141
142
143.. function:: get_function_code(func)
144
145   Get the code object associated with *func*.  This is equivalent to
146   ``func.__code__`` on Python 2.6+ and ``func.func_code`` on Python 2.5.
147
148
149.. function:: get_function_defaults(func)
150
151   Get the defaults tuple associated with *func*.  This is equivalent to
152   ``func.__defaults__`` on Python 2.6+ and ``func.func_defaults`` on Python
153   2.5.
154
155
156.. function:: get_function_globals(func)
157
158   Get the globals of *func*.  This is equivalent to ``func.__globals__`` on
159   Python 2.6+ and ``func.func_globals`` on Python 2.5.
160
161
162.. function:: next(it)
163              advance_iterator(it)
164
165   Get the next item of iterator *it*.  :exc:`py3:StopIteration` is raised if
166   the iterator is exhausted.  This is a replacement for calling ``it.next()``
167   in Python 2 and ``next(it)`` in Python 3.  Python 2.6 and above have a
168   builtin ``next`` function, so six's version is only necessary for Python 2.5
169   compatibility.
170
171
172.. function:: callable(obj)
173
174   Check if *obj* can be called.  Note ``callable`` has returned in Python 3.2,
175   so using six's version is only necessary when supporting Python 3.0 or 3.1.
176
177
178.. function:: iterkeys(dictionary, **kwargs)
179
180   Returns an iterator over *dictionary*\'s keys. This replaces
181   ``dictionary.iterkeys()`` on Python 2 and ``dictionary.keys()`` on
182   Python 3.  *kwargs* are passed through to the underlying method.
183
184
185.. function:: itervalues(dictionary, **kwargs)
186
187   Returns an iterator over *dictionary*\'s values. This replaces
188   ``dictionary.itervalues()`` on Python 2 and ``dictionary.values()`` on
189   Python 3.  *kwargs* are passed through to the underlying method.
190
191
192.. function:: iteritems(dictionary, **kwargs)
193
194   Returns an iterator over *dictionary*\'s items. This replaces
195   ``dictionary.iteritems()`` on Python 2 and ``dictionary.items()`` on
196   Python 3.  *kwargs* are passed through to the underlying method.
197
198
199.. function:: iterlists(dictionary, **kwargs)
200
201   Calls ``dictionary.iterlists()`` on Python 2 and ``dictionary.lists()`` on
202   Python 3.  No builtin Python mapping type has such a method; this method is
203   intended for use with multi-valued dictionaries like `Werkzeug's
204   <http://werkzeug.pocoo.org/docs/datastructures/#werkzeug.datastructures.MultiDict>`_.
205   *kwargs* are passed through to the underlying method.
206
207
208.. function:: viewkeys(dictionary)
209
210   Return a view over *dictionary*\'s keys. This replaces
211   :meth:`py2:dict.viewkeys` on Python 2.7 and :meth:`py3:dict.keys` on
212   Python 3.
213
214
215.. function:: viewvalues(dictionary)
216
217   Return a view over *dictionary*\'s values. This replaces
218   :meth:`py2:dict.viewvalues` on Python 2.7 and :meth:`py3:dict.values` on
219   Python 3.
220
221
222.. function:: viewitems(dictionary)
223
224   Return a view over *dictionary*\'s items. This replaces
225   :meth:`py2:dict.viewitems` on Python 2.7 and :meth:`py3:dict.items` on
226   Python 3.
227
228
229.. function:: create_bound_method(func, obj)
230
231   Return a method object wrapping *func* and bound to *obj*.  On both Python 2
232   and 3, this will return a :func:`py3:types.MethodType` object.  The reason
233   this wrapper exists is that on Python 2, the ``MethodType`` constructor
234   requires the *obj*'s class to be passed.
235
236
237.. function:: create_unbound_method(func, cls)
238
239   Return an unbound method object wrapping *func*.  In Python 2, this will
240   return a :func:`py2:types.MethodType` object.  In Python 3, unbound methods
241   do not exist and this wrapper will simply return *func*.
242
243
244.. class:: Iterator
245
246   A class for making portable iterators. The intention is that it be subclassed
247   and subclasses provide a ``__next__`` method. In Python 2, :class:`Iterator`
248   has one method: ``next``. It simply delegates to ``__next__``. An alternate
249   way to do this would be to simply alias ``next`` to ``__next__``. However,
250   this interacts badly with subclasses that override
251   ``__next__``. :class:`Iterator` is empty on Python 3. (In fact, it is just
252   aliased to :class:`py3:object`.)
253
254
255.. decorator:: wraps(wrapped, assigned=functools.WRAPPER_ASSIGNMENTS, updated=functools.WRAPPER_UPDATES)
256
257   This is exactly the :func:`py3:functools.wraps` decorator, but it sets the
258   ``__wrapped__`` attribute on what it decorates as :func:`py3:functools.wraps`
259   does on Python versions after 3.2.
260
261
262Syntax compatibility
263>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
264
265These functions smooth over operations which have different syntaxes between
266Python 2 and 3.
267
268
269.. function:: exec_(code, globals=None, locals=None)
270
271   Execute *code* in the scope of *globals* and *locals*.  *code* can be a
272   string or a code object.  If *globals* or *locals* are not given, they will
273   default to the scope of the caller.  If just *globals* is given, it will also
274   be used as *locals*.
275
276   .. note::
277
278      Python 3's :func:`py3:exec` doesn't take keyword arguments, so calling
279      :func:`exec` with them should be avoided.
280
281
282.. function:: print_(*args, *, file=sys.stdout, end="\\n", sep=" ", flush=False)
283
284   Print *args* into *file*.  Each argument will be separated with *sep* and
285   *end* will be written to the file after the last argument is printed.  If
286   *flush* is true, ``file.flush()`` will be called after all data is written.
287
288   .. note::
289
290      In Python 2, this function imitates Python 3's :func:`py3:print` by not
291      having softspace support.  If you don't know what that is, you're probably
292      ok. :)
293
294
295.. function:: raise_from(exc_value, exc_value_from)
296
297   Raise an exception from a context.  On Python 3, this is equivalent to
298   ``raise exc_value from exc_value_from``.  On Python 2, which does not support
299   exception chaining, it is equivalent to ``raise exc_value``.
300
301
302.. function:: reraise(exc_type, exc_value, exc_traceback=None)
303
304   Reraise an exception, possibly with a different traceback.  In the simple
305   case, ``reraise(*sys.exc_info())`` with an active exception (in an except
306   block) reraises the current exception with the last traceback.  A different
307   traceback can be specified with the *exc_traceback* parameter.  Note that
308   since the exception reraising is done within the :func:`reraise` function,
309   Python will attach the call frame of :func:`reraise` to whatever traceback is
310   raised.
311
312
313.. function:: with_metaclass(metaclass, *bases)
314
315   Create a new class with base classes *bases* and metaclass *metaclass*.  This
316   is designed to be used in class declarations like this: ::
317
318      from six import with_metaclass
319
320      class Meta(type):
321          pass
322
323      class Base(object):
324          pass
325
326      class MyClass(with_metaclass(Meta, Base)):
327          pass
328
329   Another way to set a metaclass on a class is with the :func:`add_metaclass`
330   decorator.
331
332
333.. decorator:: add_metaclass(metaclass)
334
335   Class decorator that replaces a normally-constructed class with a
336   metaclass-constructed one.  Example usage: ::
337
338       @add_metaclass(Meta)
339       class MyClass(object):
340           pass
341
342   That code produces a class equivalent to ::
343
344       class MyClass(object, metaclass=Meta):
345           pass
346
347   on Python 3 or ::
348
349       class MyClass(object):
350           __metaclass__ = Meta
351
352   on Python 2.
353
354   Note that class decorators require Python 2.6. However, the effect of the
355   decorator can be emulated on Python 2.5 like so::
356
357       class MyClass(object):
358           pass
359       MyClass = add_metaclass(Meta)(MyClass)
360
361
362Binary and text data
363>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
364
365Python 3 enforces the distinction between byte strings and text strings far more
366rigorously than Python 2 does; binary data cannot be automatically coerced to
367or from text data.  six provides several functions to assist in classifying
368string data in all Python versions.
369
370
371.. function:: b(data)
372
373   A "fake" bytes literal.  *data* should always be a normal string literal.  In
374   Python 2, :func:`b` returns a 8-bit string.  In Python 3, *data* is encoded
375   with the latin-1 encoding to bytes.
376
377
378   .. note::
379
380      Since all Python versions 2.6 and after support the ``b`` prefix,
381      code without 2.5 support doesn't need :func:`b`.
382
383
384.. function:: u(text)
385
386   A "fake" unicode literal.  *text* should always be a normal string literal.
387   In Python 2, :func:`u` returns unicode, and in Python 3, a string.  Also, in
388   Python 2, the string is decoded with the ``unicode-escape`` codec, which
389   allows unicode escapes to be used in it.
390
391
392   .. note::
393
394      In Python 3.3, the ``u`` prefix has been reintroduced. Code that only
395      supports Python 3 versions of 3.3 and higher thus does not need
396      :func:`u`.
397
398   .. note::
399
400      On Python 2, :func:`u` doesn't know what the encoding of the literal
401      is. Each byte is converted directly to the unicode codepoint of the same
402      value. Because of this, it's only safe to use :func:`u` with strings of
403      ASCII data.
404
405
406.. function:: unichr(c)
407
408   Return the (Unicode) string representing the codepoint *c*.  This is
409   equivalent to :func:`py2:unichr` on Python 2 and :func:`py3:chr` on Python 3.
410
411
412.. function:: int2byte(i)
413
414   Converts *i* to a byte.  *i* must be in ``range(0, 256)``.  This is
415   equivalent to :func:`py2:chr` in Python 2 and ``bytes((i,))`` in Python 3.
416
417
418.. function:: byte2int(bs)
419
420   Converts the first byte of *bs* to an integer.  This is equivalent to
421   ``ord(bs[0])`` on Python 2 and ``bs[0]`` on Python 3.
422
423
424.. function:: indexbytes(buf, i)
425
426   Return the byte at index *i* of *buf* as an integer.  This is equivalent to
427   indexing a bytes object in Python 3.
428
429
430.. function:: iterbytes(buf)
431
432   Return an iterator over bytes in *buf* as integers.  This is equivalent to
433   a bytes object iterator in Python 3.
434
435
436.. data:: StringIO
437
438   This is a fake file object for textual data.  It's an alias for
439   :class:`py2:StringIO.StringIO` in Python 2 and :class:`py3:io.StringIO` in
440   Python 3.
441
442
443.. data:: BytesIO
444
445   This is a fake file object for binary data.  In Python 2, it's an alias for
446   :class:`py2:StringIO.StringIO`, but in Python 3, it's an alias for
447   :class:`py3:io.BytesIO`.
448
449
450.. decorator:: python_2_unicode_compatible
451
452   A class decorator that takes a class defining a ``__str__`` method.  On
453   Python 3, the decorator does nothing.  On Python 2, it aliases the
454   ``__str__`` method to ``__unicode__`` and creates a new ``__str__`` method
455   that returns the result of ``__unicode__()`` encoded with UTF-8.
456
457
458unittest assertions
459>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
460
461Six contains compatibility shims for unittest assertions that have been renamed.
462The parameters are the same as their aliases, but you must pass the test method
463as the first argument. For example::
464
465    import six
466    import unittest
467
468    class TestAssertCountEqual(unittest.TestCase):
469        def test(self):
470            six.assertCountEqual(self, (1, 2), [2, 1])
471
472Note these functions are only available on Python 2.7 or later.
473
474.. function:: assertCountEqual()
475
476   Alias for :meth:`~py3:unittest.TestCase.assertCountEqual` on Python 3 and
477   :meth:`~py2:unittest.TestCase.assertItemsEqual` on Python 2.
478
479
480.. function:: assertRaisesRegex()
481
482   Alias for :meth:`~py3:unittest.TestCase.assertRaisesRegex` on Python 3 and
483   :meth:`~py2:unittest.TestCase.assertRaisesRegexp` on Python 2.
484
485
486.. function:: assertRegex()
487
488   Alias for :meth:`~py3:unittest.TestCase.assertRegex` on Python 3 and
489   :meth:`~py2:unittest.TestCase.assertRegexpMatches` on Python 2.
490
491
492Renamed modules and attributes compatibility
493>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
494
495.. module:: six.moves
496   :synopsis: Renamed modules and attributes compatibility
497
498Python 3 reorganized the standard library and moved several functions to
499different modules.  Six provides a consistent interface to them through the fake
500:mod:`six.moves` module.  For example, to load the module for parsing HTML on
501Python 2 or 3, write::
502
503   from six.moves import html_parser
504
505Similarly, to get the function to reload modules, which was moved from the
506builtin module to the ``imp`` module, use::
507
508   from six.moves import reload_module
509
510For the most part, :mod:`six.moves` aliases are the names of the modules in
511Python 3.  When the new Python 3 name is a package, the components of the name
512are separated by underscores.  For example, ``html.parser`` becomes
513``html_parser``.  In some cases where several modules have been combined, the
514Python 2 name is retained.  This is so the appropriate modules can be found when
515running on Python 2.  For example, ``BaseHTTPServer`` which is in
516``http.server`` in Python 3 is aliased as ``BaseHTTPServer``.
517
518Some modules which had two implementations have been merged in Python 3.  For
519example, ``cPickle`` no longer exists in Python 3; it was merged with
520``pickle``.  In these cases, fetching the fast version will load the fast one on
521Python 2 and the merged module in Python 3.
522
523The :mod:`py2:urllib`, :mod:`py2:urllib2`, and :mod:`py2:urlparse` modules have
524been combined in the :mod:`py3:urllib` package in Python 3.  The
525:mod:`six.moves.urllib` package is a version-independent location for this
526functionality; its structure mimics the structure of the Python 3
527:mod:`py3:urllib` package.
528
529.. note::
530
531   In order to make imports of the form::
532
533     from six.moves.cPickle import loads
534
535   work, six places special proxy objects in :data:`py3:sys.modules`. These
536   proxies lazily load the underlying module when an attribute is fetched. This
537   will fail if the underlying module is not available in the Python
538   interpreter. For example, ``sys.modules["six.moves.winreg"].LoadKey`` would
539   fail on any non-Windows platform. Unfortunately, some applications try to
540   load attributes on every module in :data:`py3:sys.modules`. six mitigates
541   this problem for some applications by pretending attributes on unimportable
542   modules do not exist. This hack does not work in every case, though. If you are
543   encountering problems with the lazy modules and don't use any from imports
544   directly from ``six.moves`` modules, you can workaround the issue by removing
545   the six proxy modules::
546
547     d = [name for name in sys.modules if name.startswith("six.moves.")]
548     for name in d:
549         del sys.modules[name]
550
551Supported renames:
552
553+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
554| Name                         | Python 2 name                       | Python 3 name                         |
555+==============================+=====================================+=======================================+
556| ``builtins``                 | :mod:`py2:__builtin__`              | :mod:`py3:builtins`                   |
557+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
558| ``configparser``             | :mod:`py2:ConfigParser`             | :mod:`py3:configparser`               |
559+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
560| ``copyreg``                  | :mod:`py2:copy_reg`                 | :mod:`py3:copyreg`                    |
561+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
562| ``cPickle``                  | :mod:`py2:cPickle`                  | :mod:`py3:pickle`                     |
563+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
564| ``cStringIO``                | :func:`py2:cStringIO.StringIO`      | :class:`py3:io.StringIO`              |
565+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
566| ``dbm_gnu``                  | :func:`py2:gdbm`                    | :class:`py3:dbm.gnu`                  |
567+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
568| ``_dummy_thread``            | :mod:`py2:dummy_thread`             | :mod:`py3:_dummy_thread`              |
569+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
570| ``email_mime_base``          | :mod:`py2:email.MIMEBase`           | :mod:`py3:email.mime.base`            |
571+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
572| ``email_mime_image``         | :mod:`py2:email.MIMEImage`          | :mod:`py3:email.mime.image`           |
573+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
574| ``email_mime_multipart``     | :mod:`py2:email.MIMEMultipart`      | :mod:`py3:email.mime.multipart`       |
575+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
576| ``email_mime_nonmultipart``  | :mod:`py2:email.MIMENonMultipart`   | :mod:`py3:email.mime.nonmultipart`    |
577+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
578| ``email_mime_text``          | :mod:`py2:email.MIMEText`           | :mod:`py3:email.mime.text`            |
579+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
580| ``filter``                   | :func:`py2:itertools.ifilter`       | :func:`py3:filter`                    |
581+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
582| ``filterfalse``              | :func:`py2:itertools.ifilterfalse`  | :func:`py3:itertools.filterfalse`     |
583+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
584| ``getcwd``                   | :func:`py2:os.getcwdu`              | :func:`py3:os.getcwd`                 |
585+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
586| ``getcwdb``                  | :func:`py2:os.getcwd`               | :func:`py3:os.getcwdb`                |
587+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
588| ``getoutput``                | :func:`py2:commands.getoutput`      | :func:`py3:subprocess.getoutput`      |
589+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
590| ``http_cookiejar``           | :mod:`py2:cookielib`                | :mod:`py3:http.cookiejar`             |
591+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
592| ``http_cookies``             | :mod:`py2:Cookie`                   | :mod:`py3:http.cookies`               |
593+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
594| ``html_entities``            | :mod:`py2:htmlentitydefs`           | :mod:`py3:html.entities`              |
595+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
596| ``html_parser``              | :mod:`py2:HTMLParser`               | :mod:`py3:html.parser`                |
597+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
598| ``http_client``              | :mod:`py2:httplib`                  | :mod:`py3:http.client`                |
599+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
600| ``BaseHTTPServer``           | :mod:`py2:BaseHTTPServer`           | :mod:`py3:http.server`                |
601+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
602| ``CGIHTTPServer``            | :mod:`py2:CGIHTTPServer`            | :mod:`py3:http.server`                |
603+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
604| ``SimpleHTTPServer``         | :mod:`py2:SimpleHTTPServer`         | :mod:`py3:http.server`                |
605+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
606| ``input``                    | :func:`py2:raw_input`               | :func:`py3:input`                     |
607+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
608| ``intern``                   | :func:`py2:intern`                  | :func:`py3:sys.intern`                |
609+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
610| ``map``                      | :func:`py2:itertools.imap`          | :func:`py3:map`                       |
611+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
612| ``queue``                    | :mod:`py2:Queue`                    | :mod:`py3:queue`                      |
613+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
614| ``range``                    | :func:`py2:xrange`                  | :func:`py3:range`                     |
615+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
616| ``reduce``                   | :func:`py2:reduce`                  | :func:`py3:functools.reduce`          |
617+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
618| ``reload_module``            | :func:`py2:reload`                  | :func:`py3:imp.reload`,               |
619|                              |                                     | :func:`py3:importlib.reload`          |
620|                              |                                     | on Python 3.4+                        |
621+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
622| ``reprlib``                  | :mod:`py2:repr`                     | :mod:`py3:reprlib`                    |
623+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
624| ``shlex_quote``              | :mod:`py2:pipes.quote`              | :mod:`py3:shlex.quote`                |
625+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
626| ``socketserver``             | :mod:`py2:SocketServer`             | :mod:`py3:socketserver`               |
627+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
628| ``_thread``                  | :mod:`py2:thread`                   | :mod:`py3:_thread`                    |
629+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
630| ``tkinter``                  | :mod:`py2:Tkinter`                  | :mod:`py3:tkinter`                    |
631+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
632| ``tkinter_dialog``           | :mod:`py2:Dialog`                   | :mod:`py3:tkinter.dialog`             |
633+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
634| ``tkinter_filedialog``       | :mod:`py2:FileDialog`               | :mod:`py3:tkinter.FileDialog`         |
635+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
636| ``tkinter_scrolledtext``     | :mod:`py2:ScrolledText`             | :mod:`py3:tkinter.scrolledtext`       |
637+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
638| ``tkinter_simpledialog``     | :mod:`py2:SimpleDialog`             | :mod:`py3:tkinter.simpledialog`       |
639+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
640| ``tkinter_ttk``              | :mod:`py2:ttk`                      | :mod:`py3:tkinter.ttk`                |
641+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
642| ``tkinter_tix``              | :mod:`py2:Tix`                      | :mod:`py3:tkinter.tix`                |
643+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
644| ``tkinter_constants``        | :mod:`py2:Tkconstants`              | :mod:`py3:tkinter.constants`          |
645+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
646| ``tkinter_dnd``              | :mod:`py2:Tkdnd`                    | :mod:`py3:tkinter.dnd`                |
647+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
648| ``tkinter_colorchooser``     | :mod:`py2:tkColorChooser`           | :mod:`py3:tkinter.colorchooser`       |
649+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
650| ``tkinter_commondialog``     | :mod:`py2:tkCommonDialog`           | :mod:`py3:tkinter.commondialog`       |
651+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
652| ``tkinter_tkfiledialog``     | :mod:`py2:tkFileDialog`             | :mod:`py3:tkinter.filedialog`         |
653+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
654| ``tkinter_font``             | :mod:`py2:tkFont`                   | :mod:`py3:tkinter.font`               |
655+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
656| ``tkinter_messagebox``       | :mod:`py2:tkMessageBox`             | :mod:`py3:tkinter.messagebox`         |
657+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
658| ``tkinter_tksimpledialog``   | :mod:`py2:tkSimpleDialog`           | :mod:`py3:tkinter.simpledialog`       |
659+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
660| ``urllib.parse``             | See :mod:`six.moves.urllib.parse`   | :mod:`py3:urllib.parse`               |
661+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
662| ``urllib.error``             | See :mod:`six.moves.urllib.error`   | :mod:`py3:urllib.error`               |
663+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
664| ``urllib.request``           | See :mod:`six.moves.urllib.request` | :mod:`py3:urllib.request`             |
665+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
666| ``urllib.response``          | See :mod:`six.moves.urllib.response`| :mod:`py3:urllib.response`            |
667+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
668| ``urllib.robotparser``       | :mod:`py2:robotparser`              | :mod:`py3:urllib.robotparser`         |
669+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
670| ``urllib_robotparser``       | :mod:`py2:robotparser`              | :mod:`py3:urllib.robotparser`         |
671+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
672| ``UserDict``                 | :class:`py2:UserDict.UserDict`      | :class:`py3:collections.UserDict`     |
673+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
674| ``UserList``                 | :class:`py2:UserList.UserList`      | :class:`py3:collections.UserList`     |
675+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
676| ``UserString``               | :class:`py2:UserString.UserString`  | :class:`py3:collections.UserString`   |
677+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
678| ``winreg``                   | :mod:`py2:_winreg`                  | :mod:`py3:winreg`                     |
679+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
680| ``xmlrpc_client``            | :mod:`py2:xmlrpclib`                | :mod:`py3:xmlrpc.client`              |
681+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
682| ``xmlrpc_server``            | :mod:`py2:SimpleXMLRPCServer`       | :mod:`py3:xmlrpc.server`              |
683+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
684| ``xrange``                   | :func:`py2:xrange`                  | :func:`py3:range`                     |
685+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
686| ``zip``                      | :func:`py2:itertools.izip`          | :func:`py3:zip`                       |
687+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
688| ``zip_longest``              | :func:`py2:itertools.izip_longest`  | :func:`py3:itertools.zip_longest`     |
689+------------------------------+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
690
691urllib parse
692<<<<<<<<<<<<
693
694.. module:: six.moves.urllib.parse
695   :synopsis: Stuff from :mod:`py2:urlparse` and :mod:`py2:urllib` in Python 2 and :mod:`py3:urllib.parse` in Python 3
696
697Contains functions from Python 3's :mod:`py3:urllib.parse` and Python 2's:
698
699:mod:`py2:urlparse`:
700
701* :func:`py2:urlparse.ParseResult`
702* :func:`py2:urlparse.SplitResult`
703* :func:`py2:urlparse.urlparse`
704* :func:`py2:urlparse.urlunparse`
705* :func:`py2:urlparse.parse_qs`
706* :func:`py2:urlparse.parse_qsl`
707* :func:`py2:urlparse.urljoin`
708* :func:`py2:urlparse.urldefrag`
709* :func:`py2:urlparse.urlsplit`
710* :func:`py2:urlparse.urlunsplit`
711* :func:`py2:urlparse.splitquery`
712* :func:`py2:urlparse.uses_fragment`
713* :func:`py2:urlparse.uses_netloc`
714* :func:`py2:urlparse.uses_params`
715* :func:`py2:urlparse.uses_query`
716* :func:`py2:urlparse.uses_relative`
717
718and :mod:`py2:urllib`:
719
720* :func:`py2:urllib.quote`
721* :func:`py2:urllib.quote_plus`
722* :func:`py2:urllib.splittag`
723* :func:`py2:urllib.splituser`
724* :func:`py2:urllib.splitvalue`
725* :func:`py2:urllib.unquote` (also exposed as :func:`py3:urllib.parse.unquote_to_bytes`)
726* :func:`py2:urllib.unquote_plus`
727* :func:`py2:urllib.urlencode`
728
729
730urllib error
731<<<<<<<<<<<<
732
733.. module:: six.moves.urllib.error
734   :synopsis: Stuff from :mod:`py2:urllib` and :mod:`py2:urllib2` in Python 2 and :mod:`py3:urllib.error` in Python 3
735
736Contains exceptions from Python 3's :mod:`py3:urllib.error` and Python 2's:
737
738:mod:`py2:urllib`:
739
740* :exc:`py2:urllib.ContentTooShortError`
741
742and :mod:`py2:urllib2`:
743
744* :exc:`py2:urllib2.URLError`
745* :exc:`py2:urllib2.HTTPError`
746
747
748urllib request
749<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
750
751.. module:: six.moves.urllib.request
752   :synopsis: Stuff from :mod:`py2:urllib` and :mod:`py2:urllib2` in Python 2 and :mod:`py3:urllib.request` in Python 3
753
754Contains items from Python 3's :mod:`py3:urllib.request` and Python 2's:
755
756:mod:`py2:urllib`:
757
758* :func:`py2:urllib.pathname2url`
759* :func:`py2:urllib.url2pathname`
760* :func:`py2:urllib.getproxies`
761* :func:`py2:urllib.urlretrieve`
762* :func:`py2:urllib.urlcleanup`
763* :class:`py2:urllib.URLopener`
764* :class:`py2:urllib.FancyURLopener`
765* :func:`py2:urllib.proxy_bypass`
766
767and :mod:`py2:urllib2`:
768
769* :func:`py2:urllib2.urlopen`
770* :func:`py2:urllib2.install_opener`
771* :func:`py2:urllib2.build_opener`
772* :func:`py2:urllib2.parse_http_list`
773* :func:`py2:urllib2.parse_keqv_list`
774* :class:`py2:urllib2.Request`
775* :class:`py2:urllib2.OpenerDirector`
776* :class:`py2:urllib2.HTTPDefaultErrorHandler`
777* :class:`py2:urllib2.HTTPRedirectHandler`
778* :class:`py2:urllib2.HTTPCookieProcessor`
779* :class:`py2:urllib2.ProxyHandler`
780* :class:`py2:urllib2.BaseHandler`
781* :class:`py2:urllib2.HTTPPasswordMgr`
782* :class:`py2:urllib2.HTTPPasswordMgrWithDefaultRealm`
783* :class:`py2:urllib2.AbstractBasicAuthHandler`
784* :class:`py2:urllib2.HTTPBasicAuthHandler`
785* :class:`py2:urllib2.ProxyBasicAuthHandler`
786* :class:`py2:urllib2.AbstractDigestAuthHandler`
787* :class:`py2:urllib2.HTTPDigestAuthHandler`
788* :class:`py2:urllib2.ProxyDigestAuthHandler`
789* :class:`py2:urllib2.HTTPHandler`
790* :class:`py2:urllib2.HTTPSHandler`
791* :class:`py2:urllib2.FileHandler`
792* :class:`py2:urllib2.FTPHandler`
793* :class:`py2:urllib2.CacheFTPHandler`
794* :class:`py2:urllib2.UnknownHandler`
795* :class:`py2:urllib2.HTTPErrorProcessor`
796
797
798urllib response
799<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
800
801.. module:: six.moves.urllib.response
802   :synopsis: Stuff from :mod:`py2:urllib` in Python 2 and :mod:`py3:urllib.response` in Python 3
803
804Contains classes from Python 3's :mod:`py3:urllib.response` and Python 2's:
805
806:mod:`py2:urllib`:
807
808* :class:`py2:urllib.addbase`
809* :class:`py2:urllib.addclosehook`
810* :class:`py2:urllib.addinfo`
811* :class:`py2:urllib.addinfourl`
812
813
814Advanced - Customizing renames
815<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
816
817.. currentmodule:: six
818
819It is possible to add additional names to the :mod:`six.moves` namespace.
820
821
822.. function:: add_move(item)
823
824   Add *item* to the :mod:`six.moves` mapping.  *item* should be a
825   :class:`MovedAttribute` or :class:`MovedModule` instance.
826
827
828.. function:: remove_move(name)
829
830   Remove the :mod:`six.moves` mapping called *name*.  *name* should be a
831   string.
832
833
834Instances of the following classes can be passed to :func:`add_move`.  Neither
835have any public members.
836
837
838.. class:: MovedModule(name, old_mod, new_mod)
839
840   Create a mapping for :mod:`six.moves` called *name* that references different
841   modules in Python 2 and 3.  *old_mod* is the name of the Python 2 module.
842   *new_mod* is the name of the Python 3 module.
843
844
845.. class:: MovedAttribute(name, old_mod, new_mod, old_attr=None, new_attr=None)
846
847   Create a mapping for :mod:`six.moves` called *name* that references different
848   attributes in Python 2 and 3.  *old_mod* is the name of the Python 2 module.
849   *new_mod* is the name of the Python 3 module.  If *new_attr* is not given, it
850   defaults to *old_attr*.  If neither is given, they both default to *name*.
851