datetime.datetime now round microseconds to nearest with ties going to nearest
even integer (ROUND_HALF_EVEN), as round(float), instead of rounding towards
-Infinity (ROUND_FLOOR).
pytime API: replace _PyTime_ROUND_HALF_UP with _PyTime_ROUND_HALF_EVEN. Fix
also _PyTime_Divide() for negative numbers.
_PyTime_AsTimeval_impl() now reuses _PyTime_Divide() instead of reimplementing
rounding modes.
"""Issue #23517: datetime.timedelta constructor now rounds microseconds to
nearest with ties going away from zero (ROUND_HALF_UP), as Python 2 and Python
older than 3.3, instead of rounding to nearest with ties going to nearest even
integer (ROUND_HALF_EVEN)."""
datetime.timedelta uses rounding mode ROUND_HALF_EVEN again.
datetime.datetime now round microseconds to nearest with ties going away from
zero (ROUND_HALF_UP), as Python 2 and Python older than 3.3, instead of
rounding towards -Infinity (ROUND_FLOOR).
with ties going away from zero (ROUND_HALF_UP), as Python 2 and Python older
than 3.3, instead of rounding to nearest with ties going to nearest even
integer (ROUND_HALF_EVEN).
This patch brings the pure-python datetime more in-line with the C
module. Patch contributed by Brian Kearns, a PyPy developer. PyPy
project has been running these modifications in PyPy2 stdlib.
This commit includes:
- General PEP8/cleanups;
- Better testing of argument types passed to constructors;
- Removal of duplicate operations;
- Optimization of timedelta creation;
- Caching the result of __hash__ like the C accelerator;
- Enhancements/bug fixes in tests.