Changelog for
python310-lazy-object-proxy-1.10.0-1.5.x86_64.rpm :
* Sat Dec 16 2023 Dirk Müller
- update to 1.10.0:
* Added Python 3.12 wheels.
* Dropped support for Python 3.7.
* Applied some reformatting and lint fixes using ruff to the codebase (mostly more Python 2 leftover cleanups).
* Fri May 05 2023 Dirk Müller - update to 1.9.0:
* Added support for matrix multiplication operator (``AATT``).
* Should have all the wheels now (including the manylinux ones).
* Bumped minimum version requirements for setuptools and setuptools-scm.
* Switched the default pure python fallback implementation to the \"simple\" one (when you ``from lazy_object_proxy import Proxy`` and the C extension is not available). Previously the \"slots\" implementation was used but as it turns out it is slower on Python 3.
* Fri Apr 21 2023 Dirk Müller - add sle15_python_module_pythons (jsc#PED-68)
* Thu Apr 13 2023 Matej Cepl - Make calling of %{sle15modernpython} optional.
* Fri Dec 02 2022 Yogalakshmi Arunachalam - Update to v1.8.0 Cleaned up use of cPickle. Contributed by Sandro Tosi in #62. Cleaned up more dead Python 2 code. Added Python 3.11 wheels. Dropped support for Python 3.6.
* Thu Aug 18 2022 Ben Greiner - Clean specfile, remove code coverage check and travis-fold
* Sat Mar 26 2022 Dirk Müller - update to 1.7.1:
* Removed most of the Python 2 support code and fixed ``python_requires`` to require at least Python 3.6.
* Note that 1.7.0 has been yanked because it could not install on Python 2.7.
* Switched CI to GitHub Actions, this has a couple consequences:
* Fixed ``__index__`` to fallback to ``int`` if the wrapped object doesn\'t have an ``__index__`` method. This prevents situations where code using a proxy would otherwise likely just call ``int`` had the object not have an ``__index__`` method.
* Wed Oct 13 2021 Ben Greiner - Unpin setuptools_scm<6.0 limit
* Sat Jul 31 2021 Dirk Müller - update to 1.6.0:
* Added support for async special methods (``__aiter__``, ``__anext__``, ``__await__``, ``__aenter__``, ``__aexit__``). These are used in the ``async for``, ``await` and ``async with`` statements. Note that ``__await__`` returns a wrapper that tries to emulate the crazy stuff going on in the ceval loop, so there will be a small performance overhead.
* Added the ``__resolved__`` property. You can use it to check if the factory has been called.
* Fri Feb 26 2021 Markéta Machová - Drop broken %ifpython3 macro