types. Added a new API function, PyUnicode_TransformDecimalToASCII(),
which transforms non-ASCII decimal digits in a Unicode string to their
ASCII equivalents.
* PyUnicode_EncodeFSDefault(), PyUnicode_DecodeFSDefaultAndSize() and
PyUnicode_DecodeFSDefault() use the locale encoding instead of UTF-8 if
Py_FileSystemDefaultEncoding is NULL
* redecode_filenames() functions and _Py_code_object_list (issue #9630)
are no more needed: remove them
Database (Py_UNICODE_TOLOWER, Py_UNICODE_ISDECIMAL, and others) now accept
and return characters from the full Unicode range (Py_UCS4).
The differences from Python code are few:
- unicodedata.numeric(), unicodedata.decimal() and unicodedata.digit()
now return the correct value for large code points
- repr() may consider more characters as printable.
It's a ParseTuple converter: decode bytes objects to unicode using
PyUnicode_DecodeFSDefaultAndSize(); str objects are output as-is.
* Don't specify surrogateescape error handler in the comments nor the
documentation, but PyUnicode_DecodeFSDefaultAndSize() and
PyUnicode_EncodeFSDefault() because these functions use strict error handler
for the mbcs encoding (on Windows).
* Remove PyUnicode_FSConverter() comment in unicodeobject.c to avoid
inconsistency with unicodeobject.h.
object to Py_FileSystemDefaultEncoding with the "surrogateescape" error
handler, return a bytes object. If Py_FileSystemDefaultEncoding is not set,
fall back to UTF-8.
* Add paragraph titles to c-api/unicode.rst.
* Fix PyUnicode_DecodeFSDefault*() comment: it now uses the "surrogateescape"
error handler (and not "replace")
* Remove "The function is intended to be used for paths and file names only
during bootstrapping process where the codecs are not set up." from
PyUnicode_FSConverter() comment: it is used after the bootstrapping and for
other purposes than file names