S
Steven W. Orr
I have module M1 which has the following line in it:
StartTime = safe_dict_get ( dic, 'starttime', 0xFFFFFFFF )
It gets imported by modules M2 and M3. And finally, M4 imports both M2 and
M3.
M4
|\M3
| |\M1
|\M2
| |\M1
I'm building a .deb file which means I have to compile the modules into
..pyc and .pyo files.
The compile command I use is
python=/usr/bin/python2.3
i_python ()
{
$python -c "import $1"
$python -O -c "import $1"
}
i_python M1
i_python M2
i_python M3
i_python M4
When M1 is compiled, there's no problem. The same for when I compile M2
and M3. But when M4 is compiled, I get the following message:
M1.py:268: FutureWarning: hex/oct constants > sys.maxint will
return positive values in Python 2.4 and up
StartTime = safe_dict_get ( dic, 'starttime', 0xFFFFFFFF )
I get the message twice, ostensibly because of M3 and M2.
I was able to shut off the warning by adding the following lines *before*
the import in M4.
import warnings
warnings.filterwarnings('ignore', category=FutureWarning)
My question is this: Why can the warning not be shut off by putting the
two lines in M1?
TIA
--
Time flies like the wind. Fruit flies like a banana. Stranger things have .0.
happened but none stranger than this. Does your driver's license say Organ ..0
Donor?Black holes are where God divided by zero. Listen to me! We are all- 000
individuals! What if this weren't a hypothetical question?
steveo at syslang.net
StartTime = safe_dict_get ( dic, 'starttime', 0xFFFFFFFF )
It gets imported by modules M2 and M3. And finally, M4 imports both M2 and
M3.
M4
|\M3
| |\M1
|\M2
| |\M1
I'm building a .deb file which means I have to compile the modules into
..pyc and .pyo files.
The compile command I use is
python=/usr/bin/python2.3
i_python ()
{
$python -c "import $1"
$python -O -c "import $1"
}
i_python M1
i_python M2
i_python M3
i_python M4
When M1 is compiled, there's no problem. The same for when I compile M2
and M3. But when M4 is compiled, I get the following message:
M1.py:268: FutureWarning: hex/oct constants > sys.maxint will
return positive values in Python 2.4 and up
StartTime = safe_dict_get ( dic, 'starttime', 0xFFFFFFFF )
I get the message twice, ostensibly because of M3 and M2.
I was able to shut off the warning by adding the following lines *before*
the import in M4.
import warnings
warnings.filterwarnings('ignore', category=FutureWarning)
My question is this: Why can the warning not be shut off by putting the
two lines in M1?
TIA
--
Time flies like the wind. Fruit flies like a banana. Stranger things have .0.
happened but none stranger than this. Does your driver's license say Organ ..0
Donor?Black holes are where God divided by zero. Listen to me! We are all- 000
individuals! What if this weren't a hypothetical question?
steveo at syslang.net