| % Module and documentation by Eric S. Raymond, 21 Dec 1998 |
| |
| \section{\module{shlex} --- |
| Simple lexical analysis.} |
| |
| \declaremodule{standard}{shlex} |
| \modulesynopsis{Simple lexical analysis for \UNIX{} shell-like languages.} |
| \moduleauthor{Eric S. Raymond}{esr@snark.thyrsus.com} |
| \sectionauthor{Eric S. Raymond}{esr@snark.thyrsus.com} |
| |
| \versionadded{1.5.2} |
| |
| The \class{shlex} class makes it easy to write lexical analyzers for |
| simple syntaxes resembling that of the \UNIX{} shell. This will often |
| be useful for writing minilanguages, e.g.\ in run control files for |
| Python applications. |
| |
| \begin{classdesc}{shlex}{\optional{stream}} |
| A \class{shlex} instance or subclass instance is a lexical analyzer |
| object. The initialization argument, if present, specifies where to |
| read characters from. It must be a file- or stream-like object with |
| \method{read()} and \method{readline()} methods. If no argument is given, |
| input will be taken from \code{sys.stdin}. |
| |
| \end{classdesc} |
| |
| \subsection{shlex Objects \label{shlex-objects}} |
| |
| A \class{shlex} instance has the following methods: |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}{get_token}{} |
| Return a token. If tokens have been stacked using |
| \method{push_token()}, pop a token off the stack. Otherwise, read one |
| from the input stream. If reading encounters an immediate |
| end-of-file, an empty string is returned. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}{push_token}{str} |
| Push the argument onto the token stack. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| Instances of \class{shlex} subclasses have some public instance |
| variables which either control lexical analysis or can be used |
| for debugging: |
| |
| \begin{memberdesc}{commenters} |
| The string of characters that are recognized as comment beginners. |
| All characters from the comment beginner to end of line are ignored. |
| Includes just \character{\#} by default. |
| \end{memberdesc} |
| |
| \begin{memberdesc}{wordchars} |
| The string of characters that will accumulate into multi-character |
| tokens. By default, includes all \ASCII{} alphanumerics and |
| underscore. |
| \end{memberdesc} |
| |
| \begin{memberdesc}{whitespace} |
| Characters that will be considered whitespace and skipped. Whitespace |
| bounds tokens. By default, includes space, tab, linefeed and |
| carriage-return. |
| \end{memberdesc} |
| |
| \begin{memberdesc}{quotes} |
| Characters that will be considered string quotes. The token |
| accumulates until the same quote is encountered again (thus, different |
| quote types protect each other as in the shall.) By default, includes |
| \ASCII{} single and double quotes. |
| \end{memberdesc} |
| |
| Note that any character not declared to be a word character, |
| whitespace, or a quote will be returned as a single-character token. |
| |
| Quote and comment characters are not recognized within words. Thus, |
| the bare words \samp{ain't} and \samp{ain\#t} would be returned as single |
| tokens by the default parser. |
| |
| \begin{memberdesc}{lineno} |
| Source line number (count of newlines seen so far plus one). |
| \end{memberdesc} |
| |
| \begin{memberdesc}{token} |
| The token buffer. It may be useful to examine this when catching |
| exceptions. |
| \end{memberdesc} |