The documentation on the uuid
module says:
UUID.
variant
¶The UUID variant, which determines the internal layout of the UUID. This will be one of the integer constants RESERVED_NCS, RFC_4122, RESERVED_MICROSOFT, or RESERVED_FUTURE.
And later:
uuid.
RESERVED_NCS
¶Reserved for NCS compatibility.
uuid.
RFC_4122
¶Specifies the UUID layout given in RFC 4122.
uuid.
RESERVED_MICROSOFT
¶Reserved for Microsoft compatibility.
uuid.
RESERVED_FUTURE
¶Reserved for future definition.
Given this, I expected to see integers when accessing these attributes. However:
>>> import uuid
>>> u = uuid.uuid4()
>>> u.variant
'specified in RFC 4122'
>>> uuid.RESERVED_NCS
'reserved for NCS compatibility'
>>> uuid.RFC_4122
'specified in RFC 4122'
>>> uuid.RESERVED_MICROSOFT
'reserved for Microsoft compatibility'
>>> uuid.RESERVED_FUTURE
'reserved for future definition'
This produces the same result in 2.7.9 and 3.4.2, and I haven't found documentation for any version that suggests that these constants might be strings.
The most relevant search results I could produce on this issue happen to be the source code for this module (on SVN or GitHub), which contains this statement:
RESERVED_NCS, RFC_4122, RESERVED_MICROSOFT, RESERVED_FUTURE = [
'reserved for NCS compatibility', 'specified in RFC 4122',
'reserved for Microsoft compatibility', 'reserved for future definition']
Given the results I saw in the interpreter, this makes perfect sense, but I can't say the same for the documentation.
Is this a simple documentation bug, or is there someplace where these attributes would indeed be integers, as the documentation promises? What's going on here?