Home | History | Annotate | Download | only in idlelib
      1 import re
      2 import sys
      3 
      4 # Reason last stmt is continued (or C_NONE if it's not).
      5 (C_NONE, C_BACKSLASH, C_STRING_FIRST_LINE,
      6  C_STRING_NEXT_LINES, C_BRACKET) = range(5)
      7 
      8 if 0:   # for throwaway debugging output
      9     def dump(*stuff):
     10         sys.__stdout__.write(" ".join(map(str, stuff)) + "\n")
     11 
     12 # Find what looks like the start of a popular stmt.
     13 
     14 _synchre = re.compile(r"""
     15     ^
     16     [ \t]*
     17     (?: while
     18     |   else
     19     |   def
     20     |   return
     21     |   assert
     22     |   break
     23     |   class
     24     |   continue
     25     |   elif
     26     |   try
     27     |   except
     28     |   raise
     29     |   import
     30     |   yield
     31     )
     32     \b
     33 """, re.VERBOSE | re.MULTILINE).search
     34 
     35 # Match blank line or non-indenting comment line.
     36 
     37 _junkre = re.compile(r"""
     38     [ \t]*
     39     (?: \# \S .* )?
     40     \n
     41 """, re.VERBOSE).match
     42 
     43 # Match any flavor of string; the terminating quote is optional
     44 # so that we're robust in the face of incomplete program text.
     45 
     46 _match_stringre = re.compile(r"""
     47     \""" [^"\\]* (?:
     48                      (?: \\. | "(?!"") )
     49                      [^"\\]*
     50                  )*
     51     (?: \""" )?
     52 
     53 |   " [^"\\\n]* (?: \\. [^"\\\n]* )* "?
     54 
     55 |   ''' [^'\\]* (?:
     56                    (?: \\. | '(?!'') )
     57                    [^'\\]*
     58                 )*
     59     (?: ''' )?
     60 
     61 |   ' [^'\\\n]* (?: \\. [^'\\\n]* )* '?
     62 """, re.VERBOSE | re.DOTALL).match
     63 
     64 # Match a line that starts with something interesting;
     65 # used to find the first item of a bracket structure.
     66 
     67 _itemre = re.compile(r"""
     68     [ \t]*
     69     [^\s#\\]    # if we match, m.end()-1 is the interesting char
     70 """, re.VERBOSE).match
     71 
     72 # Match start of stmts that should be followed by a dedent.
     73 
     74 _closere = re.compile(r"""
     75     \s*
     76     (?: return
     77     |   break
     78     |   continue
     79     |   raise
     80     |   pass
     81     )
     82     \b
     83 """, re.VERBOSE).match
     84 
     85 # Chew up non-special chars as quickly as possible.  If match is
     86 # successful, m.end() less 1 is the index of the last boring char
     87 # matched.  If match is unsuccessful, the string starts with an
     88 # interesting char.
     89 
     90 _chew_ordinaryre = re.compile(r"""
     91     [^[\](){}#'"\\]+
     92 """, re.VERBOSE).match
     93 
     94 # Build translation table to map uninteresting chars to "x", open
     95 # brackets to "(", and close brackets to ")".
     96 
     97 _tran = ['x'] * 256
     98 for ch in "({[":
     99     _tran[ord(ch)] = '('
    100 for ch in ")}]":
    101     _tran[ord(ch)] = ')'
    102 for ch in "\"'\\\n#":
    103     _tran[ord(ch)] = ch
    104 _tran = ''.join(_tran)
    105 del ch
    106 
    107 try:
    108     UnicodeType = type(unicode(""))
    109 except NameError:
    110     UnicodeType = None
    111 
    112 class Parser:
    113 
    114     def __init__(self, indentwidth, tabwidth):
    115         self.indentwidth = indentwidth
    116         self.tabwidth = tabwidth
    117 
    118     def set_str(self, str):
    119         assert len(str) == 0 or str[-1] == '\n'
    120         if type(str) is UnicodeType:
    121             # The parse functions have no idea what to do with Unicode, so
    122             # replace all Unicode characters with "x".  This is "safe"
    123             # so long as the only characters germane to parsing the structure
    124             # of Python are 7-bit ASCII.  It's *necessary* because Unicode
    125             # strings don't have a .translate() method that supports
    126             # deletechars.
    127             uniphooey = str
    128             str = []
    129             push = str.append
    130             for raw in map(ord, uniphooey):
    131                 push(raw < 127 and chr(raw) or "x")
    132             str = "".join(str)
    133         self.str = str
    134         self.study_level = 0
    135 
    136     # Return index of a good place to begin parsing, as close to the
    137     # end of the string as possible.  This will be the start of some
    138     # popular stmt like "if" or "def".  Return None if none found:
    139     # the caller should pass more prior context then, if possible, or
    140     # if not (the entire program text up until the point of interest
    141     # has already been tried) pass 0 to set_lo.
    142     #
    143     # This will be reliable iff given a reliable is_char_in_string
    144     # function, meaning that when it says "no", it's absolutely
    145     # guaranteed that the char is not in a string.
    146 
    147     def find_good_parse_start(self, is_char_in_string=None,
    148                               _synchre=_synchre):
    149         str, pos = self.str, None
    150 
    151         if not is_char_in_string:
    152             # no clue -- make the caller pass everything
    153             return None
    154 
    155         # Peek back from the end for a good place to start,
    156         # but don't try too often; pos will be left None, or
    157         # bumped to a legitimate synch point.
    158         limit = len(str)
    159         for tries in range(5):
    160             i = str.rfind(":\n", 0, limit)
    161             if i < 0:
    162                 break
    163             i = str.rfind('\n', 0, i) + 1  # start of colon line
    164             m = _synchre(str, i, limit)
    165             if m and not is_char_in_string(m.start()):
    166                 pos = m.start()
    167                 break
    168             limit = i
    169         if pos is None:
    170             # Nothing looks like a block-opener, or stuff does
    171             # but is_char_in_string keeps returning true; most likely
    172             # we're in or near a giant string, the colorizer hasn't
    173             # caught up enough to be helpful, or there simply *aren't*
    174             # any interesting stmts.  In any of these cases we're
    175             # going to have to parse the whole thing to be sure, so
    176             # give it one last try from the start, but stop wasting
    177             # time here regardless of the outcome.
    178             m = _synchre(str)
    179             if m and not is_char_in_string(m.start()):
    180                 pos = m.start()
    181             return pos
    182 
    183         # Peeking back worked; look forward until _synchre no longer
    184         # matches.
    185         i = pos + 1
    186         while 1:
    187             m = _synchre(str, i)
    188             if m:
    189                 s, i = m.span()
    190                 if not is_char_in_string(s):
    191                     pos = s
    192             else:
    193                 break
    194         return pos
    195 
    196     # Throw away the start of the string.  Intended to be called with
    197     # find_good_parse_start's result.
    198 
    199     def set_lo(self, lo):
    200         assert lo == 0 or self.str[lo-1] == '\n'
    201         if lo > 0:
    202             self.str = self.str[lo:]
    203 
    204     # As quickly as humanly possible <wink>, find the line numbers (0-
    205     # based) of the non-continuation lines.
    206     # Creates self.{goodlines, continuation}.
    207 
    208     def _study1(self):
    209         if self.study_level >= 1:
    210             return
    211         self.study_level = 1
    212 
    213         # Map all uninteresting characters to "x", all open brackets
    214         # to "(", all close brackets to ")", then collapse runs of
    215         # uninteresting characters.  This can cut the number of chars
    216         # by a factor of 10-40, and so greatly speed the following loop.
    217         str = self.str
    218         str = str.translate(_tran)
    219         str = str.replace('xxxxxxxx', 'x')
    220         str = str.replace('xxxx', 'x')
    221         str = str.replace('xx', 'x')
    222         str = str.replace('xx', 'x')
    223         str = str.replace('\nx', '\n')
    224         # note that replacing x\n with \n would be incorrect, because
    225         # x may be preceded by a backslash
    226 
    227         # March over the squashed version of the program, accumulating
    228         # the line numbers of non-continued stmts, and determining
    229         # whether & why the last stmt is a continuation.
    230         continuation = C_NONE
    231         level = lno = 0     # level is nesting level; lno is line number
    232         self.goodlines = goodlines = [0]
    233         push_good = goodlines.append
    234         i, n = 0, len(str)
    235         while i < n:
    236             ch = str[i]
    237             i = i+1
    238 
    239             # cases are checked in decreasing order of frequency
    240             if ch == 'x':
    241                 continue
    242 
    243             if ch == '\n':
    244                 lno = lno + 1
    245                 if level == 0:
    246                     push_good(lno)
    247                     # else we're in an unclosed bracket structure
    248                 continue
    249 
    250             if ch == '(':
    251                 level = level + 1
    252                 continue
    253 
    254             if ch == ')':
    255                 if level:
    256                     level = level - 1
    257                     # else the program is invalid, but we can't complain
    258                 continue
    259 
    260             if ch == '"' or ch == "'":
    261                 # consume the string
    262                 quote = ch
    263                 if str[i-1:i+2] == quote * 3:
    264                     quote = quote * 3
    265                 firstlno = lno
    266                 w = len(quote) - 1
    267                 i = i+w
    268                 while i < n:
    269                     ch = str[i]
    270                     i = i+1
    271 
    272                     if ch == 'x':
    273                         continue
    274 
    275                     if str[i-1:i+w] == quote:
    276                         i = i+w
    277                         break
    278 
    279                     if ch == '\n':
    280                         lno = lno + 1
    281                         if w == 0:
    282                             # unterminated single-quoted string
    283                             if level == 0:
    284                                 push_good(lno)
    285                             break
    286                         continue
    287 
    288                     if ch == '\\':
    289                         assert i < n
    290                         if str[i] == '\n':
    291                             lno = lno + 1
    292                         i = i+1
    293                         continue
    294 
    295                     # else comment char or paren inside string
    296 
    297                 else:
    298                     # didn't break out of the loop, so we're still
    299                     # inside a string
    300                     if (lno - 1) == firstlno:
    301                         # before the previous \n in str, we were in the first
    302                         # line of the string
    303                         continuation = C_STRING_FIRST_LINE
    304                     else:
    305                         continuation = C_STRING_NEXT_LINES
    306                 continue    # with outer loop
    307 
    308             if ch == '#':
    309                 # consume the comment
    310                 i = str.find('\n', i)
    311                 assert i >= 0
    312                 continue
    313 
    314             assert ch == '\\'
    315             assert i < n
    316             if str[i] == '\n':
    317                 lno = lno + 1
    318                 if i+1 == n:
    319                     continuation = C_BACKSLASH
    320             i = i+1
    321 
    322         # The last stmt may be continued for all 3 reasons.
    323         # String continuation takes precedence over bracket
    324         # continuation, which beats backslash continuation.
    325         if (continuation != C_STRING_FIRST_LINE
    326             and continuation != C_STRING_NEXT_LINES and level > 0):
    327             continuation = C_BRACKET
    328         self.continuation = continuation
    329 
    330         # Push the final line number as a sentinel value, regardless of
    331         # whether it's continued.
    332         assert (continuation == C_NONE) == (goodlines[-1] == lno)
    333         if goodlines[-1] != lno:
    334             push_good(lno)
    335 
    336     def get_continuation_type(self):
    337         self._study1()
    338         return self.continuation
    339 
    340     # study1 was sufficient to determine the continuation status,
    341     # but doing more requires looking at every character.  study2
    342     # does this for the last interesting statement in the block.
    343     # Creates:
    344     #     self.stmt_start, stmt_end
    345     #         slice indices of last interesting stmt
    346     #     self.stmt_bracketing
    347     #         the bracketing structure of the last interesting stmt;
    348     #         for example, for the statement "say(boo) or die", stmt_bracketing
    349     #         will be [(0, 0), (3, 1), (8, 0)]. Strings and comments are
    350     #         treated as brackets, for the matter.
    351     #     self.lastch
    352     #         last non-whitespace character before optional trailing
    353     #         comment
    354     #     self.lastopenbracketpos
    355     #         if continuation is C_BRACKET, index of last open bracket
    356 
    357     def _study2(self):
    358         if self.study_level >= 2:
    359             return
    360         self._study1()
    361         self.study_level = 2
    362 
    363         # Set p and q to slice indices of last interesting stmt.
    364         str, goodlines = self.str, self.goodlines
    365         i = len(goodlines) - 1
    366         p = len(str)    # index of newest line
    367         while i:
    368             assert p
    369             # p is the index of the stmt at line number goodlines[i].
    370             # Move p back to the stmt at line number goodlines[i-1].
    371             q = p
    372             for nothing in range(goodlines[i-1], goodlines[i]):
    373                 # tricky: sets p to 0 if no preceding newline
    374                 p = str.rfind('\n', 0, p-1) + 1
    375             # The stmt str[p:q] isn't a continuation, but may be blank
    376             # or a non-indenting comment line.
    377             if  _junkre(str, p):
    378                 i = i-1
    379             else:
    380                 break
    381         if i == 0:
    382             # nothing but junk!
    383             assert p == 0
    384             q = p
    385         self.stmt_start, self.stmt_end = p, q
    386 
    387         # Analyze this stmt, to find the last open bracket (if any)
    388         # and last interesting character (if any).
    389         lastch = ""
    390         stack = []  # stack of open bracket indices
    391         push_stack = stack.append
    392         bracketing = [(p, 0)]
    393         while p < q:
    394             # suck up all except ()[]{}'"#\\
    395             m = _chew_ordinaryre(str, p, q)
    396             if m:
    397                 # we skipped at least one boring char
    398                 newp = m.end()
    399                 # back up over totally boring whitespace
    400                 i = newp - 1    # index of last boring char
    401                 while i >= p and str[i] in " \t\n":
    402                     i = i-1
    403                 if i >= p:
    404                     lastch = str[i]
    405                 p = newp
    406                 if p >= q:
    407                     break
    408 
    409             ch = str[p]
    410 
    411             if ch in "([{":
    412                 push_stack(p)
    413                 bracketing.append((p, len(stack)))
    414                 lastch = ch
    415                 p = p+1
    416                 continue
    417 
    418             if ch in ")]}":
    419                 if stack:
    420                     del stack[-1]
    421                 lastch = ch
    422                 p = p+1
    423                 bracketing.append((p, len(stack)))
    424                 continue
    425 
    426             if ch == '"' or ch == "'":
    427                 # consume string
    428                 # Note that study1 did this with a Python loop, but
    429                 # we use a regexp here; the reason is speed in both
    430                 # cases; the string may be huge, but study1 pre-squashed
    431                 # strings to a couple of characters per line.  study1
    432                 # also needed to keep track of newlines, and we don't
    433                 # have to.
    434                 bracketing.append((p, len(stack)+1))
    435                 lastch = ch
    436                 p = _match_stringre(str, p, q).end()
    437                 bracketing.append((p, len(stack)))
    438                 continue
    439 
    440             if ch == '#':
    441                 # consume comment and trailing newline
    442                 bracketing.append((p, len(stack)+1))
    443                 p = str.find('\n', p, q) + 1
    444                 assert p > 0
    445                 bracketing.append((p, len(stack)))
    446                 continue
    447 
    448             assert ch == '\\'
    449             p = p+1     # beyond backslash
    450             assert p < q
    451             if str[p] != '\n':
    452                 # the program is invalid, but can't complain
    453                 lastch = ch + str[p]
    454             p = p+1     # beyond escaped char
    455 
    456         # end while p < q:
    457 
    458         self.lastch = lastch
    459         if stack:
    460             self.lastopenbracketpos = stack[-1]
    461         self.stmt_bracketing = tuple(bracketing)
    462 
    463     # Assuming continuation is C_BRACKET, return the number
    464     # of spaces the next line should be indented.
    465 
    466     def compute_bracket_indent(self):
    467         self._study2()
    468         assert self.continuation == C_BRACKET
    469         j = self.lastopenbracketpos
    470         str = self.str
    471         n = len(str)
    472         origi = i = str.rfind('\n', 0, j) + 1
    473         j = j+1     # one beyond open bracket
    474         # find first list item; set i to start of its line
    475         while j < n:
    476             m = _itemre(str, j)
    477             if m:
    478                 j = m.end() - 1     # index of first interesting char
    479                 extra = 0
    480                 break
    481             else:
    482                 # this line is junk; advance to next line
    483                 i = j = str.find('\n', j) + 1
    484         else:
    485             # nothing interesting follows the bracket;
    486             # reproduce the bracket line's indentation + a level
    487             j = i = origi
    488             while str[j] in " \t":
    489                 j = j+1
    490             extra = self.indentwidth
    491         return len(str[i:j].expandtabs(self.tabwidth)) + extra
    492 
    493     # Return number of physical lines in last stmt (whether or not
    494     # it's an interesting stmt!  this is intended to be called when
    495     # continuation is C_BACKSLASH).
    496 
    497     def get_num_lines_in_stmt(self):
    498         self._study1()
    499         goodlines = self.goodlines
    500         return goodlines[-1] - goodlines[-2]
    501 
    502     # Assuming continuation is C_BACKSLASH, return the number of spaces
    503     # the next line should be indented.  Also assuming the new line is
    504     # the first one following the initial line of the stmt.
    505 
    506     def compute_backslash_indent(self):
    507         self._study2()
    508         assert self.continuation == C_BACKSLASH
    509         str = self.str
    510         i = self.stmt_start
    511         while str[i] in " \t":
    512             i = i+1
    513         startpos = i
    514 
    515         # See whether the initial line starts an assignment stmt; i.e.,
    516         # look for an = operator
    517         endpos = str.find('\n', startpos) + 1
    518         found = level = 0
    519         while i < endpos:
    520             ch = str[i]
    521             if ch in "([{":
    522                 level = level + 1
    523                 i = i+1
    524             elif ch in ")]}":
    525                 if level:
    526                     level = level - 1
    527                 i = i+1
    528             elif ch == '"' or ch == "'":
    529                 i = _match_stringre(str, i, endpos).end()
    530             elif ch == '#':
    531                 break
    532             elif level == 0 and ch == '=' and \
    533                    (i == 0 or str[i-1] not in "=<>!") and \
    534                    str[i+1] != '=':
    535                 found = 1
    536                 break
    537             else:
    538                 i = i+1
    539 
    540         if found:
    541             # found a legit =, but it may be the last interesting
    542             # thing on the line
    543             i = i+1     # move beyond the =
    544             found = re.match(r"\s*\\", str[i:endpos]) is None
    545 
    546         if not found:
    547             # oh well ... settle for moving beyond the first chunk
    548             # of non-whitespace chars
    549             i = startpos
    550             while str[i] not in " \t\n":
    551                 i = i+1
    552 
    553         return len(str[self.stmt_start:i].expandtabs(\
    554                                      self.tabwidth)) + 1
    555 
    556     # Return the leading whitespace on the initial line of the last
    557     # interesting stmt.
    558 
    559     def get_base_indent_string(self):
    560         self._study2()
    561         i, n = self.stmt_start, self.stmt_end
    562         j = i
    563         str = self.str
    564         while j < n and str[j] in " \t":
    565             j = j + 1
    566         return str[i:j]
    567 
    568     # Did the last interesting stmt open a block?
    569 
    570     def is_block_opener(self):
    571         self._study2()
    572         return self.lastch == ':'
    573 
    574     # Did the last interesting stmt close a block?
    575 
    576     def is_block_closer(self):
    577         self._study2()
    578         return _closere(self.str, self.stmt_start) is not None
    579 
    580     # index of last open bracket ({[, or None if none
    581     lastopenbracketpos = None
    582 
    583     def get_last_open_bracket_pos(self):
    584         self._study2()
    585         return self.lastopenbracketpos
    586 
    587     # the structure of the bracketing of the last interesting statement,
    588     # in the format defined in _study2, or None if the text didn't contain
    589     # anything
    590     stmt_bracketing = None
    591 
    592     def get_last_stmt_bracketing(self):
    593         self._study2()
    594         return self.stmt_bracketing
    595