| :mod:`formatter` --- Generic output formatting |
| ============================================== |
| |
| .. module:: formatter |
| :synopsis: Generic output formatter and device interface. |
| :deprecated: |
| |
| .. deprecated:: 3.4 |
| Due to lack of usage, the formatter module has been deprecated and is slated |
| for removal in Python 3.6. |
| |
| |
| This module supports two interface definitions, each with multiple |
| implementations: The *formatter* interface, and the *writer* interface which is |
| required by the formatter interface. |
| |
| Formatter objects transform an abstract flow of formatting events into specific |
| output events on writer objects. Formatters manage several stack structures to |
| allow various properties of a writer object to be changed and restored; writers |
| need not be able to handle relative changes nor any sort of "change back" |
| operation. Specific writer properties which may be controlled via formatter |
| objects are horizontal alignment, font, and left margin indentations. A |
| mechanism is provided which supports providing arbitrary, non-exclusive style |
| settings to a writer as well. Additional interfaces facilitate formatting |
| events which are not reversible, such as paragraph separation. |
| |
| Writer objects encapsulate device interfaces. Abstract devices, such as file |
| formats, are supported as well as physical devices. The provided |
| implementations all work with abstract devices. The interface makes available |
| mechanisms for setting the properties which formatter objects manage and |
| inserting data into the output. |
| |
| |
| .. _formatter-interface: |
| |
| The Formatter Interface |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| Interfaces to create formatters are dependent on the specific formatter class |
| being instantiated. The interfaces described below are the required interfaces |
| which all formatters must support once initialized. |
| |
| One data element is defined at the module level: |
| |
| |
| .. data:: AS_IS |
| |
| Value which can be used in the font specification passed to the ``push_font()`` |
| method described below, or as the new value to any other ``push_property()`` |
| method. Pushing the ``AS_IS`` value allows the corresponding ``pop_property()`` |
| method to be called without having to track whether the property was changed. |
| |
| The following attributes are defined for formatter instance objects: |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: formatter.writer |
| |
| The writer instance with which the formatter interacts. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: formatter.end_paragraph(blanklines) |
| |
| Close any open paragraphs and insert at least *blanklines* before the next |
| paragraph. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: formatter.add_line_break() |
| |
| Add a hard line break if one does not already exist. This does not break the |
| logical paragraph. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: formatter.add_hor_rule(*args, **kw) |
| |
| Insert a horizontal rule in the output. A hard break is inserted if there is |
| data in the current paragraph, but the logical paragraph is not broken. The |
| arguments and keywords are passed on to the writer's :meth:`send_line_break` |
| method. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: formatter.add_flowing_data(data) |
| |
| Provide data which should be formatted with collapsed whitespace. Whitespace |
| from preceding and successive calls to :meth:`add_flowing_data` is considered as |
| well when the whitespace collapse is performed. The data which is passed to |
| this method is expected to be word-wrapped by the output device. Note that any |
| word-wrapping still must be performed by the writer object due to the need to |
| rely on device and font information. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: formatter.add_literal_data(data) |
| |
| Provide data which should be passed to the writer unchanged. Whitespace, |
| including newline and tab characters, are considered legal in the value of |
| *data*. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: formatter.add_label_data(format, counter) |
| |
| Insert a label which should be placed to the left of the current left margin. |
| This should be used for constructing bulleted or numbered lists. If the |
| *format* value is a string, it is interpreted as a format specification for |
| *counter*, which should be an integer. The result of this formatting becomes the |
| value of the label; if *format* is not a string it is used as the label value |
| directly. The label value is passed as the only argument to the writer's |
| :meth:`send_label_data` method. Interpretation of non-string label values is |
| dependent on the associated writer. |
| |
| Format specifications are strings which, in combination with a counter value, |
| are used to compute label values. Each character in the format string is copied |
| to the label value, with some characters recognized to indicate a transform on |
| the counter value. Specifically, the character ``'1'`` represents the counter |
| value formatter as an Arabic number, the characters ``'A'`` and ``'a'`` |
| represent alphabetic representations of the counter value in upper and lower |
| case, respectively, and ``'I'`` and ``'i'`` represent the counter value in Roman |
| numerals, in upper and lower case. Note that the alphabetic and roman |
| transforms require that the counter value be greater than zero. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: formatter.flush_softspace() |
| |
| Send any pending whitespace buffered from a previous call to |
| :meth:`add_flowing_data` to the associated writer object. This should be called |
| before any direct manipulation of the writer object. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: formatter.push_alignment(align) |
| |
| Push a new alignment setting onto the alignment stack. This may be |
| :const:`AS_IS` if no change is desired. If the alignment value is changed from |
| the previous setting, the writer's :meth:`new_alignment` method is called with |
| the *align* value. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: formatter.pop_alignment() |
| |
| Restore the previous alignment. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: formatter.push_font((size, italic, bold, teletype)) |
| |
| Change some or all font properties of the writer object. Properties which are |
| not set to :const:`AS_IS` are set to the values passed in while others are |
| maintained at their current settings. The writer's :meth:`new_font` method is |
| called with the fully resolved font specification. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: formatter.pop_font() |
| |
| Restore the previous font. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: formatter.push_margin(margin) |
| |
| Increase the number of left margin indentations by one, associating the logical |
| tag *margin* with the new indentation. The initial margin level is ``0``. |
| Changed values of the logical tag must be true values; false values other than |
| :const:`AS_IS` are not sufficient to change the margin. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: formatter.pop_margin() |
| |
| Restore the previous margin. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: formatter.push_style(*styles) |
| |
| Push any number of arbitrary style specifications. All styles are pushed onto |
| the styles stack in order. A tuple representing the entire stack, including |
| :const:`AS_IS` values, is passed to the writer's :meth:`new_styles` method. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: formatter.pop_style(n=1) |
| |
| Pop the last *n* style specifications passed to :meth:`push_style`. A tuple |
| representing the revised stack, including :const:`AS_IS` values, is passed to |
| the writer's :meth:`new_styles` method. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: formatter.set_spacing(spacing) |
| |
| Set the spacing style for the writer. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: formatter.assert_line_data(flag=1) |
| |
| Inform the formatter that data has been added to the current paragraph |
| out-of-band. This should be used when the writer has been manipulated |
| directly. The optional *flag* argument can be set to false if the writer |
| manipulations produced a hard line break at the end of the output. |
| |
| |
| .. _formatter-impls: |
| |
| Formatter Implementations |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| Two implementations of formatter objects are provided by this module. Most |
| applications may use one of these classes without modification or subclassing. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: NullFormatter(writer=None) |
| |
| A formatter which does nothing. If *writer* is omitted, a :class:`NullWriter` |
| instance is created. No methods of the writer are called by |
| :class:`NullFormatter` instances. Implementations should inherit from this |
| class if implementing a writer interface but don't need to inherit any |
| implementation. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: AbstractFormatter(writer) |
| |
| The standard formatter. This implementation has demonstrated wide applicability |
| to many writers, and may be used directly in most circumstances. It has been |
| used to implement a full-featured World Wide Web browser. |
| |
| |
| .. _writer-interface: |
| |
| The Writer Interface |
| -------------------- |
| |
| Interfaces to create writers are dependent on the specific writer class being |
| instantiated. The interfaces described below are the required interfaces which |
| all writers must support once initialized. Note that while most applications can |
| use the :class:`AbstractFormatter` class as a formatter, the writer must |
| typically be provided by the application. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: writer.flush() |
| |
| Flush any buffered output or device control events. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: writer.new_alignment(align) |
| |
| Set the alignment style. The *align* value can be any object, but by convention |
| is a string or ``None``, where ``None`` indicates that the writer's "preferred" |
| alignment should be used. Conventional *align* values are ``'left'``, |
| ``'center'``, ``'right'``, and ``'justify'``. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: writer.new_font(font) |
| |
| Set the font style. The value of *font* will be ``None``, indicating that the |
| device's default font should be used, or a tuple of the form ``(size, |
| italic, bold, teletype)``. Size will be a string indicating the size of |
| font that should be used; specific strings and their interpretation must be |
| defined by the application. The *italic*, *bold*, and *teletype* values are |
| Boolean values specifying which of those font attributes should be used. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: writer.new_margin(margin, level) |
| |
| Set the margin level to the integer *level* and the logical tag to *margin*. |
| Interpretation of the logical tag is at the writer's discretion; the only |
| restriction on the value of the logical tag is that it not be a false value for |
| non-zero values of *level*. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: writer.new_spacing(spacing) |
| |
| Set the spacing style to *spacing*. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: writer.new_styles(styles) |
| |
| Set additional styles. The *styles* value is a tuple of arbitrary values; the |
| value :const:`AS_IS` should be ignored. The *styles* tuple may be interpreted |
| either as a set or as a stack depending on the requirements of the application |
| and writer implementation. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: writer.send_line_break() |
| |
| Break the current line. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: writer.send_paragraph(blankline) |
| |
| Produce a paragraph separation of at least *blankline* blank lines, or the |
| equivalent. The *blankline* value will be an integer. Note that the |
| implementation will receive a call to :meth:`send_line_break` before this call |
| if a line break is needed; this method should not include ending the last line |
| of the paragraph. It is only responsible for vertical spacing between |
| paragraphs. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: writer.send_hor_rule(*args, **kw) |
| |
| Display a horizontal rule on the output device. The arguments to this method |
| are entirely application- and writer-specific, and should be interpreted with |
| care. The method implementation may assume that a line break has already been |
| issued via :meth:`send_line_break`. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: writer.send_flowing_data(data) |
| |
| Output character data which may be word-wrapped and re-flowed as needed. Within |
| any sequence of calls to this method, the writer may assume that spans of |
| multiple whitespace characters have been collapsed to single space characters. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: writer.send_literal_data(data) |
| |
| Output character data which has already been formatted for display. Generally, |
| this should be interpreted to mean that line breaks indicated by newline |
| characters should be preserved and no new line breaks should be introduced. The |
| data may contain embedded newline and tab characters, unlike data provided to |
| the :meth:`send_formatted_data` interface. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: writer.send_label_data(data) |
| |
| Set *data* to the left of the current left margin, if possible. The value of |
| *data* is not restricted; treatment of non-string values is entirely |
| application- and writer-dependent. This method will only be called at the |
| beginning of a line. |
| |
| |
| .. _writer-impls: |
| |
| Writer Implementations |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| Three implementations of the writer object interface are provided as examples by |
| this module. Most applications will need to derive new writer classes from the |
| :class:`NullWriter` class. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: NullWriter() |
| |
| A writer which only provides the interface definition; no actions are taken on |
| any methods. This should be the base class for all writers which do not need to |
| inherit any implementation methods. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: AbstractWriter() |
| |
| A writer which can be used in debugging formatters, but not much else. Each |
| method simply announces itself by printing its name and arguments on standard |
| output. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: DumbWriter(file=None, maxcol=72) |
| |
| Simple writer class which writes output on the :term:`file object` passed |
| in as *file* or, if *file* is omitted, on standard output. The output is |
| simply word-wrapped to the number of columns specified by *maxcol*. This |
| class is suitable for reflowing a sequence of paragraphs. |
| |