Remove *ignore* and *on_error* arguments from `pathlib.Path.copy[_into]()`,
because these arguments are under-designed. Specifically:
- *ignore* is appropriated from `shutil.copytree()`, but it's not clear
how it should apply when the user copies a non-directory. We've changed
the callback signature from the `shutil` version, but I'm not confident
the new signature is as good as it can be.
- *on_error* is a generalisation of `shutil.copytree()`'s error handling,
which is to accumulate exceptions and raise a single `shutil.Error` at
the end. It's not obvious which solution is better.
Additionally, this arguments may be challenging to implement in future user
subclasses of `PathBase`, which might utilise a native recursive copying
method.
Per feedback from Paul Moore on GH-123158, it's better to defer making
`Path.delete()` public than ship it with under-designed error handling
capabilities.
We leave a remnant `_delete()` method, which is used by `move()`. Any
functionality not needed by `move()` is deleted.
These two methods accept an *existing* directory path, onto which we join
the source path's base name to form the final target path.
A possible alternative implementation is to check for directories in
`copy()` and `move()` and adjust the target path, which is done in several
`shutil` functions. This behaviour is helpful in a shell context, but
less so in a stored program that explicitly specifies destinations. For
example, a user that calls `Path('foo.py').copy('bar.py')` might not
imagine that `bar.py/foo.py` would be created, but under the alternative
implementation this will happen if `bar.py` is an existing directory.
When display lines above the cursor come from the cache, the first line
to not come from the cache may be a wrapped line, starting half way
through a logical line in the buffer. Detect and handle this case to
avoid accidentally drawing a stray prompt in the middle of a logical
line.
Add a `Path.move()` method that moves a file or directory tree, and returns a new `Path` instance pointing to the target.
This method is similar to `shutil.move()`, except that it doesn't accept a *copy_function* argument, and it doesn't check whether the destination is an existing directory.
`Py_DECREF` and `PyStackRef_CLOSE` are now implemented as macros in the
free-threaded build in ceval.c. There are two motivations;
* MSVC has problems inlining functions in ceval.c in the PGO build.
* We will want to mark escaping calls in order to spill the stack
pointer in ceval.c and we will want to do this around `_Py_Dealloc`
(or `_Py_MergeZeroLocalRefcount` or `_Py_DecRefShared`), not around
the entire `Py_DECREF` or `PyStackRef_CLOSE` call.