| % libparser.tex |
| % |
| % Introductory documentation for the new parser built-in module. |
| % |
| % Copyright 1995 Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University |
| % and Fred L. Drake, Jr. This copyright notice must be distributed on |
| % all copies, but this document otherwise may be distributed as part |
| % of the Python distribution. No fee may be charged for this document |
| % in any representation, either on paper or electronically. This |
| % restriction does not affect other elements in a distributed package |
| % in any way. |
| % |
| |
| \section{Built-in Module \sectcode{parser}} |
| \bimodindex{parser} |
| |
| The \code{parser} module provides an interface to Python's internal |
| parser and byte-code compiler. The primary purpose for this interface |
| is to allow Python code to edit the parse tree of a Python expression |
| and create executable code from this. This is better than trying |
| to parse and modify an arbitrary Python code fragment as a string |
| because parsing is performed in a manner identical to the code |
| forming the application. It is also faster. |
| |
| There are a few things to note about this module which are important |
| to making use of the data structures created. This is not a tutorial |
| on editing the parse trees for Python code, but some examples of using |
| the \code{parser} module are presented. |
| |
| Most importantly, a good understanding of the Python grammar processed |
| by the internal parser is required. For full information on the |
| language syntax, refer to the Language Reference. The parser itself |
| is created from a grammar specification defined in the file |
| \file{Grammar/Grammar} in the standard Python distribution. The parse |
| trees stored in the ``AST objects'' created by this module are the |
| actual output from the internal parser when created by the |
| \code{expr()} or \code{suite()} functions, described below. The AST |
| objects created by \code{sequence2ast()} faithfully simulate those |
| structures. Be aware that the values of the sequences which are |
| considered ``correct'' will vary from one version of Python to another |
| as the formal grammar for the language is revised. However, |
| transporting code from one Python version to another as source text |
| will always allow correct parse trees to be created in the target |
| version, with the only restriction being that migrating to an older |
| version of the interpreter will not support more recent language |
| constructs. The parse trees are not typically compatible from one |
| version to another, whereas source code has always been |
| forward-compatible. |
| |
| Each element of the sequences returned by \code{ast2list} or |
| \code{ast2tuple()} has a simple form. Sequences representing |
| non-terminal elements in the grammar always have a length greater than |
| one. The first element is an integer which identifies a production in |
| the grammar. These integers are given symbolic names in the C header |
| file \file{Include/graminit.h} and the Python module |
| \file{Lib/symbol.py}. Each additional element of the sequence represents |
| a component of the production as recognized in the input string: these |
| are always sequences which have the same form as the parent. An |
| important aspect of this structure which should be noted is that |
| keywords used to identify the parent node type, such as the keyword |
| \code{if} in an \code{if_stmt}, are included in the node tree without |
| any special treatment. For example, the \code{if} keyword is |
| represented by the tuple \code{(1, 'if')}, where \code{1} is the |
| numeric value associated with all \code{NAME} tokens, including |
| variable and function names defined by the user. In an alternate form |
| returned when line number information is requested, the same token |
| might be represented as \code{(1, 'if', 12)}, where the \code{12} |
| represents the line number at which the terminal symbol was found. |
| |
| Terminal elements are represented in much the same way, but without |
| any child elements and the addition of the source text which was |
| identified. The example of the \code{if} keyword above is |
| representative. The various types of terminal symbols are defined in |
| the C header file \file{Include/token.h} and the Python module |
| \file{Lib/token.py}. |
| |
| The AST objects are not required to support the functionality of this |
| module, but are provided for three purposes: to allow an application |
| to amortize the cost of processing complex parse trees, to provide a |
| parse tree representation which conserves memory space when compared |
| to the Python list or tuple representation, and to ease the creation |
| of additional modules in C which manipulate parse trees. A simple |
| ``wrapper'' class may be created in Python to hide the use of AST |
| objects; the \code{AST} library module provides a variety of such |
| classes. |
| |
| The \code{parser} module defines functions for a few distinct |
| purposes. The most important purposes are to create AST objects and |
| to convert AST objects to other representations such as parse trees |
| and compiled code objects, but there are also functions which serve to |
| query the type of parse tree represented by an AST object. |
| |
| \renewcommand{\indexsubitem}{(in module parser)} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Creating AST Objects} |
| |
| AST objects may be created from source code or from a parse tree. |
| When creating an AST object from source, different functions are used |
| to create the \code{'eval'} and \code{'exec'} forms. |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{expr}{string} |
| The \code{expr()} function parses the parameter \code{\var{string}} |
| as if it were an input to \code{compile(\var{string}, 'eval')}. If |
| the parse succeeds, an AST object is created to hold the internal |
| parse tree representation, otherwise an appropriate exception is |
| thrown. |
| \end{funcdesc} |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{suite}{string} |
| The \code{suite()} function parses the parameter \code{\var{string}} |
| as if it were an input to \code{compile(\var{string}, 'exec')}. If |
| the parse succeeds, an AST object is created to hold the internal |
| parse tree representation, otherwise an appropriate exception is |
| thrown. |
| \end{funcdesc} |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{sequence2ast}{sequence} |
| This function accepts a parse tree represented as a sequence and |
| builds an internal representation if possible. If it can validate |
| that the tree conforms to the Python grammar and all nodes are valid |
| node types in the host version of Python, an AST object is created |
| from the internal representation and returned to the called. If there |
| is a problem creating the internal representation, or if the tree |
| cannot be validated, a \code{ParserError} exception is thrown. An AST |
| object created this way should not be assumed to compile correctly; |
| normal exceptions thrown by compilation may still be initiated when |
| the AST object is passed to \code{compileast()}. This may indicate |
| problems not related to syntax (such as a \code{MemoryError} |
| exception), but may also be due to constructs such as the result of |
| parsing \code{del f(0)}, which escapes the Python parser but is |
| checked by the bytecode compiler. |
| |
| Sequences representing terminal tokens may be represented as either |
| two-element lists of the form \code{(1, 'name')} or as three-element |
| lists of the form \code{(1, 'name', 56)}. If the third element is |
| present, it is assumed to be a valid line number. The line number |
| may be specified for any subset of the terminal symbols in the input |
| tree. |
| \end{funcdesc} |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{tuple2ast}{sequence} |
| This is the same function as \code{sequence2ast()}. This entry point |
| is maintained for backward compatibility. |
| \end{funcdesc} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Converting AST Objects} |
| |
| AST objects, regardless of the input used to create them, may be |
| converted to parse trees represented as list- or tuple- trees, or may |
| be compiled into executable code objects. Parse trees may be |
| extracted with or without line numbering information. |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{ast2list}{ast\optional{\, line_info\code{ = 0}}} |
| This function accepts an AST object from the caller in |
| \code{\var{ast}} and returns a Python list representing the |
| equivelent parse tree. The resulting list representation can be used |
| for inspection or the creation of a new parse tree in list form. This |
| function does not fail so long as memory is available to build the |
| list representation. If the parse tree will only be used for |
| inspection, \code{ast2tuple()} should be used instead to reduce memory |
| consumption and fragmentation. When the list representation is |
| required, this function is significantly faster than retrieving a |
| tuple representation and converting that to nested lists. |
| |
| If \code{\var{line_info}} is true, line number information will be |
| included for all terminal tokens as a third element of the list |
| representing the token. Note that the line number provided specifies |
| the line on which the token \emph{ends\/}. This information is |
| omitted if the flag is false or omitted. |
| \end{funcdesc} |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{ast2tuple}{ast\optional{\, line_info\code{ = 0}}} |
| This function accepts an AST object from the caller in |
| \code{\var{ast}} and returns a Python tuple representing the |
| equivelent parse tree. Other than returning a tuple instead of a |
| list, this function is identical to \code{ast2list()}. |
| |
| If \code{\var{line_info}} is true, line number information will be |
| included for all terminal tokens as a third element of the list |
| representing the token. This information is omitted if the flag is |
| false or omitted. |
| \end{funcdesc} |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{compileast}{ast\optional{\, filename\code{ = '<ast>'}}} |
| The Python byte compiler can be invoked on an AST object to produce |
| code objects which can be used as part of an \code{exec} statement or |
| a call to the built-in \code{eval()} function. This function provides |
| the interface to the compiler, passing the internal parse tree from |
| \code{\var{ast}} to the parser, using the source file name specified |
| by the \code{\var{filename}} parameter. The default value supplied |
| for \code{\var{filename}} indicates that the source was an AST object. |
| |
| Compiling an AST object may result in exceptions related to |
| compilation; an example would be a \code{SyntaxError} caused by the |
| parse tree for \code{del f(0)}: this statement is considered legal |
| within the formal grammar for Python but is not a legal language |
| construct. The \code{SyntaxError} raised for this condition is |
| actually generated by the Python byte-compiler normally, which is why |
| it can be raised at this point by the \code{parser} module. Most |
| causes of compilation failure can be diagnosed programmatically by |
| inspection of the parse tree. |
| \end{funcdesc} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Queries on AST Objects} |
| |
| Two functions are provided which allow an application to determine if |
| an AST was create as an expression or a suite. Neither of these |
| functions can be used to determine if an AST was created from source |
| code via \code{expr()} or \code{suite()} or from a parse tree via |
| \code{sequence2ast()}. |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{isexpr}{ast} |
| When \code{\var{ast}} represents an \code{'eval'} form, this function |
| returns a true value (\code{1}), otherwise it returns false |
| (\code{0}). This is useful, since code objects normally cannot be |
| queried for this information using existing built-in functions. Note |
| that the code objects created by \code{compileast()} cannot be queried |
| like this either, and are identical to those created by the built-in |
| \code{compile()} function. |
| \end{funcdesc} |
| |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{issuite}{ast} |
| This function mirrors \code{isexpr()} in that it reports whether an |
| AST object represents an \code{'exec'} form, commonly known as a |
| ``suite.'' It is not safe to assume that this function is equivelent |
| to \code{not isexpr(\var{ast})}, as additional syntactic fragments may |
| be supported in the future. |
| \end{funcdesc} |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Exceptions and Error Handling} |
| |
| The parser module defines a single exception, but may also pass other |
| built-in exceptions from other portions of the Python runtime |
| environment. See each function for information about the exceptions |
| it can raise. |
| |
| \begin{excdesc}{ParserError} |
| Exception raised when a failure occurs within the parser module. This |
| is generally produced for validation failures rather than the built in |
| \code{SyntaxError} thrown during normal parsing. |
| The exception argument is either a string describing the reason of the |
| failure or a tuple containing a sequence causing the failure from a parse |
| tree passed to \code{sequence2ast()} and an explanatory string. Calls to |
| \code{sequence2ast()} need to be able to handle either type of exception, |
| while calls to other functions in the module will only need to be |
| aware of the simple string values. |
| \end{excdesc} |
| |
| Note that the functions \code{compileast()}, \code{expr()}, and |
| \code{suite()} may throw exceptions which are normally thrown by the |
| parsing and compilation process. These include the built in |
| exceptions \code{MemoryError}, \code{OverflowError}, |
| \code{SyntaxError}, and \code{SystemError}. In these cases, these |
| exceptions carry all the meaning normally associated with them. Refer |
| to the descriptions of each function for detailed information. |
| |
| |
| \subsection{AST Objects} |
| |
| AST objects returned by \code{expr()}, \code{suite()}, and |
| \code{sequence2ast()} have no methods of their own. |
| Some of the functions defined which accept an AST object as their |
| first argument may change to object methods in the future. The type |
| of these objects is available as \code{ASTType} in the module. |
| |
| Ordered and equality comparisons are supported between AST objects. |
| |
| |
| \subsection{Examples} |
| \nodename{AST Examples} |
| |
| The parser modules allows operations to be performed on the parse tree |
| of Python source code before the bytecode is generated, and provides |
| for inspection of the parse tree for information gathering purposes. |
| Two examples are presented. The simple example demonstrates emulation |
| of the \code{compile()} built-in function and the complex example |
| shows the use of a parse tree for information discovery. |
| |
| \subsubsection{Emulation of \sectcode{compile()}} |
| |
| While many useful operations may take place between parsing and |
| bytecode generation, the simplest operation is to do nothing. For |
| this purpose, using the \code{parser} module to produce an |
| intermediate data structure is equivelent to the code |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> code = compile('a + 5', 'eval') |
| >>> a = 5 |
| >>> eval(code) |
| 10 |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| The equivelent operation using the \code{parser} module is somewhat |
| longer, and allows the intermediate internal parse tree to be retained |
| as an AST object: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> import parser |
| >>> ast = parser.expr('a + 5') |
| >>> code = parser.compileast(ast) |
| >>> a = 5 |
| >>> eval(code) |
| 10 |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| An application which needs both AST and code objects can package this |
| code into readily available functions: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| import parser |
| |
| def load_suite(source_string): |
| ast = parser.suite(source_string) |
| code = parser.compileast(ast) |
| return ast, code |
| |
| def load_expression(source_string): |
| ast = parser.expr(source_string) |
| code = parser.compileast(ast) |
| return ast, code |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| \subsubsection{Information Discovery} |
| |
| Some applications benefit from direct access to the parse tree. The |
| remainder of this section demonstrates how the parse tree provides |
| access to module documentation defined in docstrings without requiring |
| that the code being examined be loaded into a running interpreter via |
| \code{import}. This can be very useful for performing analyses of |
| untrusted code. |
| |
| Generally, the example will demonstrate how the parse tree may be |
| traversed to distill interesting information. Two functions and a set |
| of classes are developed which provide programmatic access to high |
| level function and class definitions provided by a module. The |
| classes extract information from the parse tree and provide access to |
| the information at a useful semantic level, one function provides a |
| simple low-level pattern matching capability, and the other function |
| defines a high-level interface to the classes by handling file |
| operations on behalf of the caller. All source files mentioned here |
| which are not part of the Python installation are located in the |
| \file{Demo/parser/} directory of the distribution. |
| |
| The dynamic nature of Python allows the programmer a great deal of |
| flexibility, but most modules need only a limited measure of this when |
| defining classes, functions, and methods. In this example, the only |
| definitions that will be considered are those which are defined in the |
| top level of their context, e.g., a function defined by a \code{def} |
| statement at column zero of a module, but not a function defined |
| within a branch of an \code{if} ... \code{else} construct, though |
| there are some good reasons for doing so in some situations. Nesting |
| of definitions will be handled by the code developed in the example. |
| |
| To construct the upper-level extraction methods, we need to know what |
| the parse tree structure looks like and how much of it we actually |
| need to be concerned about. Python uses a moderately deep parse tree |
| so there are a large number of intermediate nodes. It is important to |
| read and understand the formal grammar used by Python. This is |
| specified in the file \file{Grammar/Grammar} in the distribution. |
| Consider the simplest case of interest when searching for docstrings: |
| a module consisting of a docstring and nothing else. (See file |
| \file{docstring.py}.) |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| """Some documentation. |
| """ |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Using the interpreter to take a look at the parse tree, we find a |
| bewildering mass of numbers and parentheses, with the documentation |
| buried deep in nested tuples. |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> import parser |
| >>> import pprint |
| >>> ast = parser.suite(open('docstring.py').read()) |
| >>> tup = parser.ast2tuple(ast) |
| >>> pprint.pprint(tup) |
| (257, |
| (264, |
| (265, |
| (266, |
| (267, |
| (307, |
| (287, |
| (288, |
| (289, |
| (290, |
| (292, |
| (293, |
| (294, |
| (295, |
| (296, |
| (297, |
| (298, |
| (299, |
| (300, (3, '"""Some documentation.\012"""'))))))))))))))))), |
| (4, ''))), |
| (4, ''), |
| (0, '')) |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| The numbers at the first element of each node in the tree are the node |
| types; they map directly to terminal and non-terminal symbols in the |
| grammar. Unfortunately, they are represented as integers in the |
| internal representation, and the Python structures generated do not |
| change that. However, the \code{symbol} and \code{token} modules |
| provide symbolic names for the node types and dictionaries which map |
| from the integers to the symbolic names for the node types. |
| |
| In the output presented above, the outermost tuple contains four |
| elements: the integer \code{257} and three additional tuples. Node |
| type \code{257} has the symbolic name \code{file_input}. Each of |
| these inner tuples contains an integer as the first element; these |
| integers, \code{264}, \code{4}, and \code{0}, represent the node types |
| \code{stmt}, \code{NEWLINE}, and \code{ENDMARKER}, respectively. |
| Note that these values may change depending on the version of Python |
| you are using; consult \file{symbol.py} and \file{token.py} for |
| details of the mapping. It should be fairly clear that the outermost |
| node is related primarily to the input source rather than the contents |
| of the file, and may be disregarded for the moment. The \code{stmt} |
| node is much more interesting. In particular, all docstrings are |
| found in subtrees which are formed exactly as this node is formed, |
| with the only difference being the string itself. The association |
| between the docstring in a similar tree and the defined entity (class, |
| function, or module) which it describes is given by the position of |
| the docstring subtree within the tree defining the described |
| structure. |
| |
| By replacing the actual docstring with something to signify a variable |
| component of the tree, we allow a simple pattern matching approach to |
| check any given subtree for equivelence to the general pattern for |
| docstrings. Since the example demonstrates information extraction, we |
| can safely require that the tree be in tuple form rather than list |
| form, allowing a simple variable representation to be |
| \code{['variable_name']}. A simple recursive function can implement |
| the pattern matching, returning a boolean and a dictionary of variable |
| name to value mappings. (See file \file{example.py}.) |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| from types import ListType, TupleType |
| |
| def match(pattern, data, vars=None): |
| if vars is None: |
| vars = {} |
| if type(pattern) is ListType: |
| vars[pattern[0]] = data |
| return 1, vars |
| if type(pattern) is not TupleType: |
| return (pattern == data), vars |
| if len(data) != len(pattern): |
| return 0, vars |
| for pattern, data in map(None, pattern, data): |
| same, vars = match(pattern, data, vars) |
| if not same: |
| break |
| return same, vars |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Using this simple representation for syntactic variables and the symbolic |
| node types, the pattern for the candidate docstring subtrees becomes |
| fairly readable. (See file \file{example.py}.) |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| import symbol |
| import token |
| |
| DOCSTRING_STMT_PATTERN = ( |
| symbol.stmt, |
| (symbol.simple_stmt, |
| (symbol.small_stmt, |
| (symbol.expr_stmt, |
| (symbol.testlist, |
| (symbol.test, |
| (symbol.and_test, |
| (symbol.not_test, |
| (symbol.comparison, |
| (symbol.expr, |
| (symbol.xor_expr, |
| (symbol.and_expr, |
| (symbol.shift_expr, |
| (symbol.arith_expr, |
| (symbol.term, |
| (symbol.factor, |
| (symbol.power, |
| (symbol.atom, |
| (token.STRING, ['docstring']) |
| )))))))))))))))), |
| (token.NEWLINE, '') |
| )) |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Using the \code{match()} function with this pattern, extracting the |
| module docstring from the parse tree created previously is easy: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> found, vars = match(DOCSTRING_STMT_PATTERN, tup[1]) |
| >>> found |
| 1 |
| >>> vars |
| {'docstring': '"""Some documentation.\012"""'} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Once specific data can be extracted from a location where it is |
| expected, the question of where information can be expected |
| needs to be answered. When dealing with docstrings, the answer is |
| fairly simple: the docstring is the first \code{stmt} node in a code |
| block (\code{file_input} or \code{suite} node types). A module |
| consists of a single \code{file_input} node, and class and function |
| definitions each contain exactly one \code{suite} node. Classes and |
| functions are readily identified as subtrees of code block nodes which |
| start with \code{(stmt, (compound_stmt, (classdef, ...} or |
| \code{(stmt, (compound_stmt, (funcdef, ...}. Note that these subtrees |
| cannot be matched by \code{match()} since it does not support multiple |
| sibling nodes to match without regard to number. A more elaborate |
| matching function could be used to overcome this limitation, but this |
| is sufficient for the example. |
| |
| Given the ability to determine whether a statement might be a |
| docstring and extract the actual string from the statement, some work |
| needs to be performed to walk the parse tree for an entire module and |
| extract information about the names defined in each context of the |
| module and associate any docstrings with the names. The code to |
| perform this work is not complicated, but bears some explanation. |
| |
| The public interface to the classes is straightforward and should |
| probably be somewhat more flexible. Each ``major'' block of the |
| module is described by an object providing several methods for inquiry |
| and a constructor which accepts at least the subtree of the complete |
| parse tree which it represents. The \code{ModuleInfo} constructor |
| accepts an optional \code{\var{name}} parameter since it cannot |
| otherwise determine the name of the module. |
| |
| The public classes include \code{ClassInfo}, \code{FunctionInfo}, |
| and \code{ModuleInfo}. All objects provide the |
| methods \code{get_name()}, \code{get_docstring()}, |
| \code{get_class_names()}, and \code{get_class_info()}. The |
| \code{ClassInfo} objects support \code{get_method_names()} and |
| \code{get_method_info()} while the other classes provide |
| \code{get_function_names()} and \code{get_function_info()}. |
| |
| Within each of the forms of code block that the public classes |
| represent, most of the required information is in the same form and is |
| accessed in the same way, with classes having the distinction that |
| functions defined at the top level are referred to as ``methods.'' |
| Since the difference in nomenclature reflects a real semantic |
| distinction from functions defined outside of a class, the |
| implementation needs to maintain the distinction. |
| Hence, most of the functionality of the public classes can be |
| implemented in a common base class, \code{SuiteInfoBase}, with the |
| accessors for function and method information provided elsewhere. |
| Note that there is only one class which represents function and method |
| information; this parallels the use of the \code{def} statement to |
| define both types of elements. |
| |
| Most of the accessor functions are declared in \code{SuiteInfoBase} |
| and do not need to be overriden by subclasses. More importantly, the |
| extraction of most information from a parse tree is handled through a |
| method called by the \code{SuiteInfoBase} constructor. The example |
| code for most of the classes is clear when read alongside the formal |
| grammar, but the method which recursively creates new information |
| objects requires further examination. Here is the relevant part of |
| the \code{SuiteInfoBase} definition from \file{example.py}: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| class SuiteInfoBase: |
| _docstring = '' |
| _name = '' |
| |
| def __init__(self, tree = None): |
| self._class_info = {} |
| self._function_info = {} |
| if tree: |
| self._extract_info(tree) |
| |
| def _extract_info(self, tree): |
| # extract docstring |
| if len(tree) == 2: |
| found, vars = match(DOCSTRING_STMT_PATTERN[1], tree[1]) |
| else: |
| found, vars = match(DOCSTRING_STMT_PATTERN, tree[3]) |
| if found: |
| self._docstring = eval(vars['docstring']) |
| # discover inner definitions |
| for node in tree[1:]: |
| found, vars = match(COMPOUND_STMT_PATTERN, node) |
| if found: |
| cstmt = vars['compound'] |
| if cstmt[0] == symbol.funcdef: |
| name = cstmt[2][1] |
| self._function_info[name] = FunctionInfo(cstmt) |
| elif cstmt[0] == symbol.classdef: |
| name = cstmt[2][1] |
| self._class_info[name] = ClassInfo(cstmt) |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| After initializing some internal state, the constructor calls the |
| \code{_extract_info()} method. This method performs the bulk of the |
| information extraction which takes place in the entire example. The |
| extraction has two distinct phases: the location of the docstring for |
| the parse tree passed in, and the discovery of additional definitions |
| within the code block represented by the parse tree. |
| |
| The initial \code{if} test determines whether the nested suite is of |
| the ``short form'' or the ``long form.'' The short form is used when |
| the code block is on the same line as the definition of the code |
| block, as in |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| def square(x): "Square an argument."; return x ** 2 |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| while the long form uses an indented block and allows nested |
| definitions: |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| def make_power(exp): |
| "Make a function that raises an argument to the exponent `exp'." |
| def raiser(x, y=exp): |
| return x ** y |
| return raiser |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| When the short form is used, the code block may contain a docstring as |
| the first, and possibly only, \code{small_stmt} element. The |
| extraction of such a docstring is slightly different and requires only |
| a portion of the complete pattern used in the more common case. As |
| implemented, the docstring will only be found if there is only |
| one \code{small_stmt} node in the \code{simple_stmt} node. Since most |
| functions and methods which use the short form do not provide a |
| docstring, this may be considered sufficient. The extraction of the |
| docstring proceeds using the \code{match()} function as described |
| above, and the value of the docstring is stored as an attribute of the |
| \code{SuiteInfoBase} object. |
| |
| After docstring extraction, a simple definition discovery |
| algorithm operates on the \code{stmt} nodes of the \code{suite} node. The |
| special case of the short form is not tested; since there are no |
| \code{stmt} nodes in the short form, the algorithm will silently skip |
| the single \code{simple_stmt} node and correctly not discover any |
| nested definitions. |
| |
| Each statement in the code block is categorized as |
| a class definition, function or method definition, or |
| something else. For the definition statements, the name of the |
| element defined is extracted and a representation object |
| appropriate to the definition is created with the defining subtree |
| passed as an argument to the constructor. The repesentation objects |
| are stored in instance variables and may be retrieved by name using |
| the appropriate accessor methods. |
| |
| The public classes provide any accessors required which are more |
| specific than those provided by the \code{SuiteInfoBase} class, but |
| the real extraction algorithm remains common to all forms of code |
| blocks. A high-level function can be used to extract the complete set |
| of information from a source file. (See file \file{example.py}.) |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| def get_docs(fileName): |
| source = open(fileName).read() |
| import os |
| basename = os.path.basename(os.path.splitext(fileName)[0]) |
| import parser |
| ast = parser.suite(source) |
| tup = parser.ast2tuple(ast) |
| return ModuleInfo(tup, basename) |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| This provides an easy-to-use interface to the documentation of a |
| module. If information is required which is not extracted by the code |
| of this example, the code may be extended at clearly defined points to |
| provide additional capabilities. |
| |
| |
| %% |
| %% end of file |