[David Abrahams] > The following change in behavior is causing one of my tests to fail. Dear Lord, another buggy test <wink>. > Is it intentional? Yes, as part of the ongoing push toward int/long unification. If you tried the same test in Python 2.1, it would have blown up in the "sys.maxint * 2" part. In 2.2, it blows up in the "int()" part. In 2.3, it doesn't blow up at all. In 2.4 or 2.5, __builtin__.int and __builtin__.long may well be the same object. > Should isinstance(int(x),int) really ever return False? In 2.3, yes (albeit unfortunately). > Python 2.2.2 (#1, Feb 3 2003, 14:10:37) > >>> int(sys.maxint * 2) > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "<stdin>", line 1, in ? > OverflowError: long int too large to convert to int > Python 2.3a2+ (#1, Feb 24 2003, 15:02:10) > >>> int(sys.maxint * 2) > 4294967294L Adding one more: Python 2.1.3 (#35, Apr 8 2002, 17:47:50) [MSC 32 bit (Intel)] on win32 >>> int(sys.maxint * 2) Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in ? OverflowError: integer multiplication
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