| """Check for errs in the AST. | 
 |  | 
 | The Python parser does not catch all syntax errors.  Others, like | 
 | assignments with invalid targets, are caught in the code generation | 
 | phase. | 
 |  | 
 | The compiler package catches some errors in the transformer module. | 
 | But it seems clearer to write checkers that use the AST to detect | 
 | errors. | 
 | """ | 
 |  | 
 | from compiler import ast, walk | 
 |  | 
 | def check(tree, multi=None): | 
 |     v = SyntaxErrorChecker(multi) | 
 |     walk(tree, v) | 
 |     return v.errors | 
 |  | 
 | class SyntaxErrorChecker: | 
 |     """A visitor to find syntax errors in the AST.""" | 
 |  | 
 |     def __init__(self, multi=None): | 
 |         """Create new visitor object. | 
 |  | 
 |         If optional argument multi is not None, then print messages | 
 |         for each error rather than raising a SyntaxError for the | 
 |         first. | 
 |         """ | 
 |         self.multi = multi | 
 |         self.errors = 0 | 
 |  | 
 |     def error(self, node, msg): | 
 |         self.errors = self.errors + 1 | 
 |         if self.multi is not None: | 
 |             print "%s:%s: %s" % (node.filename, node.lineno, msg) | 
 |         else: | 
 |             raise SyntaxError, "%s (%s:%s)" % (msg, node.filename, node.lineno) | 
 |  | 
 |     def visitAssign(self, node): | 
 |         # the transformer module handles many of these | 
 |         pass | 
 | ##        for target in node.nodes: | 
 | ##            if isinstance(target, ast.AssList): | 
 | ##                if target.lineno is None: | 
 | ##                    target.lineno = node.lineno | 
 | ##                self.error(target, "can't assign to list comprehension") |