| r"""Utilities to compile possibly incomplete Python source code. |
| |
| This module provides two interfaces, broadly similar to the builtin |
| function compile(), that take progam text, a filename and a 'mode' |
| and: |
| |
| - Return a code object if the command is complete and valid |
| - Return None if the command is incomplete |
| - Raise SyntaxError, ValueError or OverflowError if the command is a |
| syntax error (OverflowError and ValueError can be produced by |
| malformed literals). |
| |
| Approach: |
| |
| First, check if the source consists entirely of blank lines and |
| comments; if so, replace it with 'pass', because the built-in |
| parser doesn't always do the right thing for these. |
| |
| Compile three times: as is, with \n, and with \n\n appended. If it |
| compiles as is, it's complete. If it compiles with one \n appended, |
| we expect more. If it doesn't compile either way, we compare the |
| error we get when compiling with \n or \n\n appended. If the errors |
| are the same, the code is broken. But if the errors are different, we |
| expect more. Not intuitive; not even guaranteed to hold in future |
| releases; but this matches the compiler's behavior from Python 1.4 |
| through 2.2, at least. |
| |
| Caveat: |
| |
| It is possible (but not likely) that the parser stops parsing with a |
| successful outcome before reaching the end of the source; in this |
| case, trailing symbols may be ignored instead of causing an error. |
| For example, a backslash followed by two newlines may be followed by |
| arbitrary garbage. This will be fixed once the API for the parser is |
| better. |
| |
| The two interfaces are: |
| |
| compile_command(source, filename, symbol): |
| |
| Compiles a single command in the manner described above. |
| |
| CommandCompiler(): |
| |
| Instances of this class have __call__ methods identical in |
| signature to compile_command; the difference is that if the |
| instance compiles program text containing a __future__ statement, |
| the instance 'remembers' and compiles all subsequent program texts |
| with the statement in force. |
| |
| The module also provides another class: |
| |
| Compile(): |
| |
| Instances of this class act like the built-in function compile, |
| but with 'memory' in the sense described above. |
| """ |
| |
| import __future__ |
| |
| _features = [getattr(__future__, fname) |
| for fname in __future__.all_feature_names] |
| |
| __all__ = ["compile_command", "Compile", "CommandCompiler"] |
| |
| def _maybe_compile(compiler, source, filename, symbol): |
| # Check for source consisting of only blank lines and comments |
| for line in source.split("\n"): |
| line = line.strip() |
| if line and line[0] != '#': |
| break # Leave it alone |
| else: |
| source = "pass" # Replace it with a 'pass' statement |
| |
| err = err1 = err2 = None |
| code = code1 = code2 = None |
| |
| try: |
| code = compiler(source, filename, symbol) |
| except SyntaxError, err: |
| pass |
| |
| try: |
| code1 = compiler(source + "\n", filename, symbol) |
| except SyntaxError, err1: |
| pass |
| |
| try: |
| code2 = compiler(source + "\n\n", filename, symbol) |
| except SyntaxError, err2: |
| pass |
| |
| if code: |
| return code |
| try: |
| e1 = err1.__dict__ |
| except AttributeError: |
| e1 = err1 |
| try: |
| e2 = err2.__dict__ |
| except AttributeError: |
| e2 = err2 |
| if not code1 and e1 == e2: |
| raise SyntaxError, err1 |
| |
| def compile_command(source, filename="<input>", symbol="single"): |
| r"""Compile a command and determine whether it is incomplete. |
| |
| Arguments: |
| |
| source -- the source string; may contain \n characters |
| filename -- optional filename from which source was read; default |
| "<input>" |
| symbol -- optional grammar start symbol; "single" (default) or "eval" |
| |
| Return value / exceptions raised: |
| |
| - Return a code object if the command is complete and valid |
| - Return None if the command is incomplete |
| - Raise SyntaxError, ValueError or OverflowError if the command is a |
| syntax error (OverflowError and ValueError can be produced by |
| malformed literals). |
| """ |
| return _maybe_compile(compile, source, filename, symbol) |
| |
| class Compile: |
| """Instances of this class behave much like the built-in compile |
| function, but if one is used to compile text containing a future |
| statement, it "remembers" and compiles all subsequent program texts |
| with the statement in force.""" |
| def __init__(self): |
| self.flags = 0 |
| |
| def __call__(self, source, filename, symbol): |
| codeob = compile(source, filename, symbol, self.flags, 1) |
| for feature in _features: |
| if codeob.co_flags & feature.compiler_flag: |
| self.flags |= feature.compiler_flag |
| return codeob |
| |
| class CommandCompiler: |
| """Instances of this class have __call__ methods identical in |
| signature to compile_command; the difference is that if the |
| instance compiles program text containing a __future__ statement, |
| the instance 'remembers' and compiles all subsequent program texts |
| with the statement in force.""" |
| |
| def __init__(self,): |
| self.compiler = Compile() |
| |
| def __call__(self, source, filename="<input>", symbol="single"): |
| r"""Compile a command and determine whether it is incomplete. |
| |
| Arguments: |
| |
| source -- the source string; may contain \n characters |
| filename -- optional filename from which source was read; |
| default "<input>" |
| symbol -- optional grammar start symbol; "single" (default) or |
| "eval" |
| |
| Return value / exceptions raised: |
| |
| - Return a code object if the command is complete and valid |
| - Return None if the command is incomplete |
| - Raise SyntaxError, ValueError or OverflowError if the command is a |
| syntax error (OverflowError and ValueError can be produced by |
| malformed literals). |
| """ |
| return _maybe_compile(self.compiler, source, filename, symbol) |