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authorMathieu Bridon <[email protected]>2018-06-17 17:53:16 +0200
committerEric Engestrom <[email protected]>2018-08-01 14:26:19 +0100
commite40200e0aa14ec4180dd090dd37a2de80b5e4119 (patch)
tree90d0638c7cab1bbe4a1179caadfcd97ab59b4932 /src/intel/common/meson.build
parent12eb5b496bc311ebfd1e68921ec7429e709daaca (diff)
python: Don't abuse hex()
The hex() builtin returns a string containing the hexa-decimal representation of an integer. When the argument is not an integer, then the function calls that object's __hex__() method, if one is defined. That method is supposed to return a string. While that's not explicitly documented, that string is supposed to be a valid hexa-decimal representation for a number. Python 2 doesn't enforce this though, which is why we got away with returning things like 'NIR_TRUE' which are not numbers. In Python 3, the hex() builtin instead calls an object's __index__() method, which itself must return an integer. That integer is then automatically converted to a string with its hexa-decimal representation by the rest of the hex() function. As a result, we really can't make this compatible with Python 3 as it is. The solution is to stop using the hex() builtin, and instead use a hex() object method, which can return whatever we want, in Python 2 and 3. Signed-off-by: Mathieu Bridon <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Eric Engestrom <[email protected]> Reviewed-by: Dylan Baker <[email protected]>
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