| Summary: |
TypeError: __init__() got an unexpected keyword argument 'future_imports' |
| Product: |
Mesa
|
Reporter: |
Vinson Lee <vlee> |
| Component: |
Mesa core | Assignee: |
Dylan Baker <baker.dylan.c> |
| Status: |
RESOLVED
FIXED
|
QA Contact: |
mesa-dev |
| Severity: |
normal
|
|
|
| Priority: |
medium
|
CC: |
baker.dylan.c, bochecha, fdo-bugs
|
| Version: |
git | Keywords: |
bisected, regression |
| Hardware: |
x86-64 (AMD64) | |
|
| OS: |
Linux (All) | |
|
| Whiteboard: |
|
|
i915 platform:
|
|
i915 features:
|
|
Use of freedesktop.org services, including Bugzilla, is subject to our Code of Conduct. How we collect and use information is described in our Privacy Policy.
Build error with Python 2.6. GEN main/format_unpack.c Traceback (most recent call last): File "./main/format_unpack.py", line 893, in <module> template = Template(string, future_imports=['division']); TypeError: __init__() got an unexpected keyword argument 'future_imports' commit 9b6746b7c0bef64be419c8cf2ecd916980e2718a Author: Mathieu Bridon <bochecha@daitauha.fr> Date: Wed Jul 25 11:53:54 2018 +0200 python: Use explicit integer divisions In Python 2, divisions of integers return an integer: >>> 32 / 4 8 In Python 3 though, they return floats: >>> 32 / 4 8.0 However, Python 3 has an explicit integer division operator: >>> 32 // 4 8 That operator exists on Python >= 2.2, so let's use it everywhere to make the scripts compatible with both Python 2 and 3. In addition, using __future__.division tells Python 2 to behave the same way as Python 3, which helps ensure the scripts produce the same output in both versions of Python. Signed-off-by: Mathieu Bridon <bochecha@daitauha.fr> Reviewed-by: Eric Engestrom <eric.engestrom@intel.com> (v2) Reviewed-by: Dylan Baker <dylan@pnwbakers.com>