Thanks to Jon Dufresne (@jdufresne) for review.
Co-authored-by: Asif Saif Uddin <auvipy@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Rizwan Mansuri <Rizwan@webbyfox.com>
Calling dict.keys() is unnecessary. The two are functionally equivalent
on modern Pythons.
Inspired by Lennart Regebro's talk "Prehistoric Patterns in Python" from
PyCon 2017.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V5-JH23Vk0I
Set literals are available on all supported Python versions. They are
idiomatic and always faster:
$ python3 -m timeit '{}'
10000000 loops, best of 3: 0.0357 usec per loop
$ python3 -m timeit 'dict()'
10000000 loops, best of 3: 0.104 usec per loop
$ python3 -m timeit '{1, 2, 3}'
10000000 loops, best of 3: 0.0754 usec per loop
$ python3 -m timeit 'set([1, 2, 3])'
1000000 loops, best of 3: 0.228 usec per loop
* Add Meta.fields = '__all__' to serializer classes where required.
* Add explicit on_delete=models.CASCADE to ForeignKey fields.
* Use '.remote_field' and '.model' in preference to '.rel' and '.to' when inspecting model fields.
* Use new value_from_object in preference to internal _get_val_from_obj
* Get rid of runtests.py
* Moved test code from rest_framework/tests and rest_framework/runtests to tests
* Invoke py.test from setup.py
* Invoke py.test from Travis
* Invoke py.test from tox
* Changed setUpClass to be just plain setUp in test_permissions.py
* Updated contribution guideline to show how to invoke py.test