| #! /usr/bin/env python | 
 |  | 
 | # Released to the public domain, by Tim Peters, 03 October 2000. | 
 |  | 
 | """reindent [-d][-r][-v] [ path ... ] | 
 |  | 
 | -d (--dryrun)   Dry run.   Analyze, but don't make any changes to, files. | 
 | -r (--recurse)  Recurse.   Search for all .py files in subdirectories too. | 
 | -n (--nobackup) No backup. Does not make a ".bak" file before reindenting. | 
 | -v (--verbose)  Verbose.   Print informative msgs; else no output. | 
 | -h (--help)     Help.      Print this usage information and exit. | 
 |  | 
 | Change Python (.py) files to use 4-space indents and no hard tab characters. | 
 | Also trim excess spaces and tabs from ends of lines, and remove empty lines | 
 | at the end of files.  Also ensure the last line ends with a newline. | 
 |  | 
 | If no paths are given on the command line, reindent operates as a filter, | 
 | reading a single source file from standard input and writing the transformed | 
 | source to standard output.  In this case, the -d, -r and -v flags are | 
 | ignored. | 
 |  | 
 | You can pass one or more file and/or directory paths.  When a directory | 
 | path, all .py files within the directory will be examined, and, if the -r | 
 | option is given, likewise recursively for subdirectories. | 
 |  | 
 | If output is not to standard output, reindent overwrites files in place, | 
 | renaming the originals with a .bak extension.  If it finds nothing to | 
 | change, the file is left alone.  If reindent does change a file, the changed | 
 | file is a fixed-point for future runs (i.e., running reindent on the | 
 | resulting .py file won't change it again). | 
 |  | 
 | The hard part of reindenting is figuring out what to do with comment | 
 | lines.  So long as the input files get a clean bill of health from | 
 | tabnanny.py, reindent should do a good job. | 
 |  | 
 | The backup file is a copy of the one that is being reindented. The ".bak" | 
 | file is generated with shutil.copy(), but some corner cases regarding | 
 | user/group and permissions could leave the backup file more readable that | 
 | you'd prefer. You can always use the --nobackup option to prevent this. | 
 | """ | 
 |  | 
 | __version__ = "1" | 
 |  | 
 | import tokenize | 
 | import os, shutil | 
 | import sys | 
 |  | 
 | verbose    = 0 | 
 | recurse    = 0 | 
 | dryrun     = 0 | 
 | makebackup = True | 
 |  | 
 | def usage(msg=None): | 
 |     if msg is not None: | 
 |         print(msg, file=sys.stderr) | 
 |     print(__doc__, file=sys.stderr) | 
 |  | 
 | def errprint(*args): | 
 |     sep = "" | 
 |     for arg in args: | 
 |         sys.stderr.write(sep + str(arg)) | 
 |         sep = " " | 
 |     sys.stderr.write("\n") | 
 |  | 
 | def main(): | 
 |     import getopt | 
 |     global verbose, recurse, dryrun, makebackup | 
 |     try: | 
 |         opts, args = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], "drnvh", | 
 |                         ["dryrun", "recurse", "nobackup", "verbose", "help"]) | 
 |     except getopt.error as msg: | 
 |         usage(msg) | 
 |         return | 
 |     for o, a in opts: | 
 |         if o in ('-d', '--dryrun'): | 
 |             dryrun += 1 | 
 |         elif o in ('-r', '--recurse'): | 
 |             recurse += 1 | 
 |         elif o in ('-n', '--nobackup'): | 
 |             makebackup = False | 
 |         elif o in ('-v', '--verbose'): | 
 |             verbose += 1 | 
 |         elif o in ('-h', '--help'): | 
 |             usage() | 
 |             return | 
 |     if not args: | 
 |         r = Reindenter(sys.stdin) | 
 |         r.run() | 
 |         r.write(sys.stdout) | 
 |         return | 
 |     for arg in args: | 
 |         check(arg) | 
 |  | 
 | def check(file): | 
 |     if os.path.isdir(file) and not os.path.islink(file): | 
 |         if verbose: | 
 |             print("listing directory", file) | 
 |         names = os.listdir(file) | 
 |         for name in names: | 
 |             fullname = os.path.join(file, name) | 
 |             if ((recurse and os.path.isdir(fullname) and | 
 |                  not os.path.islink(fullname) and | 
 |                  not os.path.split(fullname)[1].startswith(".")) | 
 |                 or name.lower().endswith(".py")): | 
 |                 check(fullname) | 
 |         return | 
 |  | 
 |     if verbose: | 
 |         print("checking", file, "...", end=' ') | 
 |     try: | 
 |         f = open(file) | 
 |     except IOError as msg: | 
 |         errprint("%s: I/O Error: %s" % (file, str(msg))) | 
 |         return | 
 |  | 
 |     r = Reindenter(f) | 
 |     f.close() | 
 |     if r.run(): | 
 |         if verbose: | 
 |             print("changed.") | 
 |             if dryrun: | 
 |                 print("But this is a dry run, so leaving it alone.") | 
 |         if not dryrun: | 
 |             bak = file + ".bak" | 
 |             if makebackup: | 
 |                 shutil.copyfile(file, bak) | 
 |                 if verbose: | 
 |                     print("backed up", file, "to", bak) | 
 |             f = open(file, "w") | 
 |             r.write(f) | 
 |             f.close() | 
 |             if verbose: | 
 |                 print("wrote new", file) | 
 |         return True | 
 |     else: | 
 |         if verbose: | 
 |             print("unchanged.") | 
 |         return False | 
 |  | 
 | def _rstrip(line, JUNK='\n \t'): | 
 |     """Return line stripped of trailing spaces, tabs, newlines. | 
 |  | 
 |     Note that line.rstrip() instead also strips sundry control characters, | 
 |     but at least one known Emacs user expects to keep junk like that, not | 
 |     mentioning Barry by name or anything <wink>. | 
 |     """ | 
 |  | 
 |     i = len(line) | 
 |     while i > 0 and line[i-1] in JUNK: | 
 |         i -= 1 | 
 |     return line[:i] | 
 |  | 
 | class Reindenter: | 
 |  | 
 |     def __init__(self, f): | 
 |         self.find_stmt = 1  # next token begins a fresh stmt? | 
 |         self.level = 0      # current indent level | 
 |  | 
 |         # Raw file lines. | 
 |         self.raw = f.readlines() | 
 |  | 
 |         # File lines, rstripped & tab-expanded.  Dummy at start is so | 
 |         # that we can use tokenize's 1-based line numbering easily. | 
 |         # Note that a line is all-blank iff it's "\n". | 
 |         self.lines = [_rstrip(line).expandtabs() + "\n" | 
 |                       for line in self.raw] | 
 |         self.lines.insert(0, None) | 
 |         self.index = 1  # index into self.lines of next line | 
 |  | 
 |         # List of (lineno, indentlevel) pairs, one for each stmt and | 
 |         # comment line.  indentlevel is -1 for comment lines, as a | 
 |         # signal that tokenize doesn't know what to do about them; | 
 |         # indeed, they're our headache! | 
 |         self.stats = [] | 
 |  | 
 |     def run(self): | 
 |         tokens = tokenize.generate_tokens(self.getline) | 
 |         for _token in tokens: | 
 |             self.tokeneater(*_token) | 
 |         # Remove trailing empty lines. | 
 |         lines = self.lines | 
 |         while lines and lines[-1] == "\n": | 
 |             lines.pop() | 
 |         # Sentinel. | 
 |         stats = self.stats | 
 |         stats.append((len(lines), 0)) | 
 |         # Map count of leading spaces to # we want. | 
 |         have2want = {} | 
 |         # Program after transformation. | 
 |         after = self.after = [] | 
 |         # Copy over initial empty lines -- there's nothing to do until | 
 |         # we see a line with *something* on it. | 
 |         i = stats[0][0] | 
 |         after.extend(lines[1:i]) | 
 |         for i in range(len(stats)-1): | 
 |             thisstmt, thislevel = stats[i] | 
 |             nextstmt = stats[i+1][0] | 
 |             have = getlspace(lines[thisstmt]) | 
 |             want = thislevel * 4 | 
 |             if want < 0: | 
 |                 # A comment line. | 
 |                 if have: | 
 |                     # An indented comment line.  If we saw the same | 
 |                     # indentation before, reuse what it most recently | 
 |                     # mapped to. | 
 |                     want = have2want.get(have, -1) | 
 |                     if want < 0: | 
 |                         # Then it probably belongs to the next real stmt. | 
 |                         for j in range(i+1, len(stats)-1): | 
 |                             jline, jlevel = stats[j] | 
 |                             if jlevel >= 0: | 
 |                                 if have == getlspace(lines[jline]): | 
 |                                     want = jlevel * 4 | 
 |                                 break | 
 |                     if want < 0:           # Maybe it's a hanging | 
 |                                            # comment like this one, | 
 |                         # in which case we should shift it like its base | 
 |                         # line got shifted. | 
 |                         for j in range(i-1, -1, -1): | 
 |                             jline, jlevel = stats[j] | 
 |                             if jlevel >= 0: | 
 |                                 want = have + getlspace(after[jline-1]) - \ | 
 |                                        getlspace(lines[jline]) | 
 |                                 break | 
 |                     if want < 0: | 
 |                         # Still no luck -- leave it alone. | 
 |                         want = have | 
 |                 else: | 
 |                     want = 0 | 
 |             assert want >= 0 | 
 |             have2want[have] = want | 
 |             diff = want - have | 
 |             if diff == 0 or have == 0: | 
 |                 after.extend(lines[thisstmt:nextstmt]) | 
 |             else: | 
 |                 for line in lines[thisstmt:nextstmt]: | 
 |                     if diff > 0: | 
 |                         if line == "\n": | 
 |                             after.append(line) | 
 |                         else: | 
 |                             after.append(" " * diff + line) | 
 |                     else: | 
 |                         remove = min(getlspace(line), -diff) | 
 |                         after.append(line[remove:]) | 
 |         return self.raw != self.after | 
 |  | 
 |     def write(self, f): | 
 |         f.writelines(self.after) | 
 |  | 
 |     # Line-getter for tokenize. | 
 |     def getline(self): | 
 |         if self.index >= len(self.lines): | 
 |             line = "" | 
 |         else: | 
 |             line = self.lines[self.index] | 
 |             self.index += 1 | 
 |         return line | 
 |  | 
 |     # Line-eater for tokenize. | 
 |     def tokeneater(self, type, token, slinecol, end, line, | 
 |                    INDENT=tokenize.INDENT, | 
 |                    DEDENT=tokenize.DEDENT, | 
 |                    NEWLINE=tokenize.NEWLINE, | 
 |                    COMMENT=tokenize.COMMENT, | 
 |                    NL=tokenize.NL): | 
 |  | 
 |         if type == NEWLINE: | 
 |             # A program statement, or ENDMARKER, will eventually follow, | 
 |             # after some (possibly empty) run of tokens of the form | 
 |             #     (NL | COMMENT)* (INDENT | DEDENT+)? | 
 |             self.find_stmt = 1 | 
 |  | 
 |         elif type == INDENT: | 
 |             self.find_stmt = 1 | 
 |             self.level += 1 | 
 |  | 
 |         elif type == DEDENT: | 
 |             self.find_stmt = 1 | 
 |             self.level -= 1 | 
 |  | 
 |         elif type == COMMENT: | 
 |             if self.find_stmt: | 
 |                 self.stats.append((slinecol[0], -1)) | 
 |                 # but we're still looking for a new stmt, so leave | 
 |                 # find_stmt alone | 
 |  | 
 |         elif type == NL: | 
 |             pass | 
 |  | 
 |         elif self.find_stmt: | 
 |             # This is the first "real token" following a NEWLINE, so it | 
 |             # must be the first token of the next program statement, or an | 
 |             # ENDMARKER. | 
 |             self.find_stmt = 0 | 
 |             if line:   # not endmarker | 
 |                 self.stats.append((slinecol[0], self.level)) | 
 |  | 
 | # Count number of leading blanks. | 
 | def getlspace(line): | 
 |     i, n = 0, len(line) | 
 |     while i < n and line[i] == " ": | 
 |         i += 1 | 
 |     return i | 
 |  | 
 | if __name__ == '__main__': | 
 |     main() |