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Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +00001% libparser.tex
2%
3% Introductory documentation for the new parser built-in module.
4%
5% Copyright 1995 Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
6% and Fred L. Drake, Jr. This copyright notice must be distributed on
7% all copies, but this document otherwise may be distributed as part
8% of the Python distribution. No fee may be charged for this document
9% in any representation, either on paper or electronically. This
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11% in any way.
12%
13
14\section{Built-in Module \sectcode{parser}}
15\bimodindex{parser}
16
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +000017The \code{parser} module provides an interface to Python's internal
18parser and byte-code compiler. The primary purpose for this interface
19is to allow Python code to edit the parse tree of a Python expression
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +000020and create executable code from this. This is better than trying
21to parse and modify an arbitrary Python code fragment as a string
22because parsing is performed in a manner identical to the code
23forming the application. It is also faster.
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +000024
25There are a few things to note about this module which are important
26to making use of the data structures created. This is not a tutorial
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +000027on editing the parse trees for Python code, but some examples of using
28the \code{parser} module are presented.
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +000029
30Most importantly, a good understanding of the Python grammar processed
31by the internal parser is required. For full information on the
32language syntax, refer to the Language Reference. The parser itself
33is created from a grammar specification defined in the file
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +000034\file{Grammar/Grammar} in the standard Python distribution. The parse
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +000035trees stored in the ``AST objects'' created by this module are the
36actual output from the internal parser when created by the
37\code{expr()} or \code{suite()} functions, described below. The AST
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +000038objects created by \code{sequence2ast()} faithfully simulate those
39structures. Be aware that the values of the sequences which are
40considered ``correct'' will vary from one version of Python to another
41as the formal grammar for the language is revised. However,
42transporting code from one Python version to another as source text
43will always allow correct parse trees to be created in the target
44version, with the only restriction being that migrating to an older
45version of the interpreter will not support more recent language
46constructs. The parse trees are not typically compatible from one
47version to another, whereas source code has always been
48forward-compatible.
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +000049
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +000050Each element of the sequences returned by \code{ast2list} or
51\code{ast2tuple()} has a simple form. Sequences representing
52non-terminal elements in the grammar always have a length greater than
53one. The first element is an integer which identifies a production in
54the grammar. These integers are given symbolic names in the C header
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +000055file \file{Include/graminit.h} and the Python module
56\file{Lib/symbol.py}. Each additional element of the sequence represents
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +000057a component of the production as recognized in the input string: these
58are always sequences which have the same form as the parent. An
59important aspect of this structure which should be noted is that
60keywords used to identify the parent node type, such as the keyword
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +000061\code{if} in an \code{if_stmt}, are included in the node tree without
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +000062any special treatment. For example, the \code{if} keyword is
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +000063represented by the tuple \code{(1, 'if')}, where \code{1} is the
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +000064numeric value associated with all \code{NAME} tokens, including
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +000065variable and function names defined by the user. In an alternate form
66returned when line number information is requested, the same token
67might be represented as \code{(1, 'if', 12)}, where the \code{12}
68represents the line number at which the terminal symbol was found.
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +000069
70Terminal elements are represented in much the same way, but without
71any child elements and the addition of the source text which was
72identified. The example of the \code{if} keyword above is
73representative. The various types of terminal symbols are defined in
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +000074the C header file \file{Include/token.h} and the Python module
75\file{Lib/token.py}.
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +000076
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +000077The AST objects are not required to support the functionality of this
78module, but are provided for three purposes: to allow an application
79to amortize the cost of processing complex parse trees, to provide a
80parse tree representation which conserves memory space when compared
81to the Python list or tuple representation, and to ease the creation
82of additional modules in C which manipulate parse trees. A simple
83``wrapper'' class may be created in Python to hide the use of AST
84objects; the \code{AST} library module provides a variety of such
85classes.
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +000086
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +000087The \code{parser} module defines functions for a few distinct
88purposes. The most important purposes are to create AST objects and
89to convert AST objects to other representations such as parse trees
90and compiled code objects, but there are also functions which serve to
91query the type of parse tree represented by an AST object.
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +000092
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +000093\renewcommand{\indexsubitem}{(in module parser)}
94
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +000095
96\subsection{Creating AST Objects}
97
98AST objects may be created from source code or from a parse tree.
99When creating an AST object from source, different functions are used
100to create the \code{'eval'} and \code{'exec'} forms.
101
102\begin{funcdesc}{expr}{string}
103The \code{expr()} function parses the parameter \code{\var{string}}
104as if it were an input to \code{compile(\var{string}, 'eval')}. If
105the parse succeeds, an AST object is created to hold the internal
106parse tree representation, otherwise an appropriate exception is
107thrown.
108\end{funcdesc}
109
110\begin{funcdesc}{suite}{string}
111The \code{suite()} function parses the parameter \code{\var{string}}
112as if it were an input to \code{compile(\var{string}, 'exec')}. If
113the parse succeeds, an AST object is created to hold the internal
114parse tree representation, otherwise an appropriate exception is
115thrown.
116\end{funcdesc}
117
118\begin{funcdesc}{sequence2ast}{sequence}
119This function accepts a parse tree represented as a sequence and
120builds an internal representation if possible. If it can validate
121that the tree conforms to the Python grammar and all nodes are valid
122node types in the host version of Python, an AST object is created
123from the internal representation and returned to the called. If there
124is a problem creating the internal representation, or if the tree
125cannot be validated, a \code{ParserError} exception is thrown. An AST
126object created this way should not be assumed to compile correctly;
127normal exceptions thrown by compilation may still be initiated when
128the AST object is passed to \code{compileast()}. This may indicate
129problems not related to syntax (such as a \code{MemoryError}
130exception), but may also be due to constructs such as the result of
131parsing \code{del f(0)}, which escapes the Python parser but is
132checked by the bytecode compiler.
133
134Sequences representing terminal tokens may be represented as either
135two-element lists of the form \code{(1, 'name')} or as three-element
136lists of the form \code{(1, 'name', 56)}. If the third element is
137present, it is assumed to be a valid line number. The line number
138may be specified for any subset of the terminal symbols in the input
139tree.
140\end{funcdesc}
141
142\begin{funcdesc}{tuple2ast}{sequence}
143This is the same function as \code{sequence2ast()}. This entry point
144is maintained for backward compatibility.
145\end{funcdesc}
146
147
148\subsection{Converting AST Objects}
149
150AST objects, regardless of the input used to create them, may be
151converted to parse trees represented as list- or tuple- trees, or may
152be compiled into executable code objects. Parse trees may be
153extracted with or without line numbering information.
154
155\begin{funcdesc}{ast2list}{ast\optional{\, line_info\code{ = 0}}}
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000156This function accepts an AST object from the caller in
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000157\code{\var{ast}} and returns a Python list representing the
158equivelent parse tree. The resulting list representation can be used
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000159for inspection or the creation of a new parse tree in list form. This
160function does not fail so long as memory is available to build the
161list representation. If the parse tree will only be used for
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000162inspection, \code{ast2tuple()} should be used instead to reduce memory
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000163consumption and fragmentation. When the list representation is
164required, this function is significantly faster than retrieving a
165tuple representation and converting that to nested lists.
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000166
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000167If \code{\var{line_info}} is true, line number information will be
168included for all terminal tokens as a third element of the list
Fred Drake9abe64a1996-12-05 22:28:43 +0000169representing the token. Note that the line number provided specifies
170the line on which the token \emph{ends\/}. This information is
171omitted if the flag is false or omitted.
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000172\end{funcdesc}
173
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000174\begin{funcdesc}{ast2tuple}{ast\optional{\, line_info\code{ = 0}}}
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000175This function accepts an AST object from the caller in
176\code{\var{ast}} and returns a Python tuple representing the
177equivelent parse tree. Other than returning a tuple instead of a
178list, this function is identical to \code{ast2list()}.
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000179
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000180If \code{\var{line_info}} is true, line number information will be
181included for all terminal tokens as a third element of the list
182representing the token. This information is omitted if the flag is
183false or omitted.
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000184\end{funcdesc}
185
186\begin{funcdesc}{compileast}{ast\optional{\, filename\code{ = '<ast>'}}}
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000187The Python byte compiler can be invoked on an AST object to produce
188code objects which can be used as part of an \code{exec} statement or
189a call to the built-in \code{eval()} function. This function provides
190the interface to the compiler, passing the internal parse tree from
191\code{\var{ast}} to the parser, using the source file name specified
192by the \code{\var{filename}} parameter. The default value supplied
193for \code{\var{filename}} indicates that the source was an AST object.
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000194
195Compiling an AST object may result in exceptions related to
196compilation; an example would be a \code{SyntaxError} caused by the
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000197parse tree for \code{del f(0)}: this statement is considered legal
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000198within the formal grammar for Python but is not a legal language
199construct. The \code{SyntaxError} raised for this condition is
200actually generated by the Python byte-compiler normally, which is why
201it can be raised at this point by the \code{parser} module. Most
202causes of compilation failure can be diagnosed programmatically by
203inspection of the parse tree.
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000204\end{funcdesc}
205
206
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000207\subsection{Queries on AST Objects}
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000208
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000209Two functions are provided which allow an application to determine if
210an AST was create as an expression or a suite. Neither of these
211functions can be used to determine if an AST was created from source
212code via \code{expr()} or \code{suite()} or from a parse tree via
213\code{sequence2ast()}.
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000214
215\begin{funcdesc}{isexpr}{ast}
216When \code{\var{ast}} represents an \code{'eval'} form, this function
217returns a true value (\code{1}), otherwise it returns false
218(\code{0}). This is useful, since code objects normally cannot be
219queried for this information using existing built-in functions. Note
220that the code objects created by \code{compileast()} cannot be queried
221like this either, and are identical to those created by the built-in
222\code{compile()} function.
223\end{funcdesc}
224
225
226\begin{funcdesc}{issuite}{ast}
227This function mirrors \code{isexpr()} in that it reports whether an
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000228AST object represents an \code{'exec'} form, commonly known as a
229``suite.'' It is not safe to assume that this function is equivelent
230to \code{not isexpr(\var{ast})}, as additional syntactic fragments may
231be supported in the future.
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000232\end{funcdesc}
233
234
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000235\subsection{Exceptions and Error Handling}
236
237The parser module defines a single exception, but may also pass other
238built-in exceptions from other portions of the Python runtime
239environment. See each function for information about the exceptions
240it can raise.
241
242\begin{excdesc}{ParserError}
243Exception raised when a failure occurs within the parser module. This
244is generally produced for validation failures rather than the built in
245\code{SyntaxError} thrown during normal parsing.
246The exception argument is either a string describing the reason of the
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000247failure or a tuple containing a sequence causing the failure from a parse
248tree passed to \code{sequence2ast()} and an explanatory string. Calls to
249\code{sequence2ast()} need to be able to handle either type of exception,
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000250while calls to other functions in the module will only need to be
251aware of the simple string values.
252\end{excdesc}
253
254Note that the functions \code{compileast()}, \code{expr()}, and
255\code{suite()} may throw exceptions which are normally thrown by the
256parsing and compilation process. These include the built in
257exceptions \code{MemoryError}, \code{OverflowError},
258\code{SyntaxError}, and \code{SystemError}. In these cases, these
259exceptions carry all the meaning normally associated with them. Refer
260to the descriptions of each function for detailed information.
261
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000262
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000263\subsection{AST Objects}
264
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000265AST objects returned by \code{expr()}, \code{suite()}, and
266\code{sequence2ast()} have no methods of their own.
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000267Some of the functions defined which accept an AST object as their
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000268first argument may change to object methods in the future. The type
269of these objects is available as \code{ASTType} in the module.
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000270
271Ordered and equality comparisons are supported between AST objects.
272
273
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000274\subsection{Examples}
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000275
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000276The parser modules allows operations to be performed on the parse tree
277of Python source code before the bytecode is generated, and provides
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000278for inspection of the parse tree for information gathering purposes.
279Two examples are presented. The simple example demonstrates emulation
280of the \code{compile()} built-in function and the complex example
281shows the use of a parse tree for information discovery.
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000282
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000283\subsubsection{Emulation of \sectcode{compile()}}
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000284
285While many useful operations may take place between parsing and
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000286bytecode generation, the simplest operation is to do nothing. For
287this purpose, using the \code{parser} module to produce an
288intermediate data structure is equivelent to the code
289
290\begin{verbatim}
291>>> code = compile('a + 5', 'eval')
292>>> a = 5
293>>> eval(code)
29410
295\end{verbatim}
296
297The equivelent operation using the \code{parser} module is somewhat
298longer, and allows the intermediate internal parse tree to be retained
299as an AST object:
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000300
301\begin{verbatim}
302>>> import parser
303>>> ast = parser.expr('a + 5')
304>>> code = parser.compileast(ast)
305>>> a = 5
306>>> eval(code)
30710
308\end{verbatim}
309
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000310An application which needs both AST and code objects can package this
311code into readily available functions:
312
313\begin{verbatim}
314import parser
315
316def load_suite(source_string):
317 ast = parser.suite(source_string)
318 code = parser.compileast(ast)
319 return ast, code
320
321def load_expression(source_string):
322 ast = parser.expr(source_string)
323 code = parser.compileast(ast)
324 return ast, code
325\end{verbatim}
326
327\subsubsection{Information Discovery}
328
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000329Some applications benefit from direct access to the parse tree. The
330remainder of this section demonstrates how the parse tree provides
331access to module documentation defined in docstrings without requiring
332that the code being examined be loaded into a running interpreter via
333\code{import}. This can be very useful for performing analyses of
334untrusted code.
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000335
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000336Generally, the example will demonstrate how the parse tree may be
337traversed to distill interesting information. Two functions and a set
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000338of classes are developed which provide programmatic access to high
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000339level function and class definitions provided by a module. The
340classes extract information from the parse tree and provide access to
341the information at a useful semantic level, one function provides a
342simple low-level pattern matching capability, and the other function
343defines a high-level interface to the classes by handling file
344operations on behalf of the caller. All source files mentioned here
345which are not part of the Python installation are located in the
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000346\file{Demo/parser/} directory of the distribution.
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000347
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000348The dynamic nature of Python allows the programmer a great deal of
349flexibility, but most modules need only a limited measure of this when
350defining classes, functions, and methods. In this example, the only
351definitions that will be considered are those which are defined in the
352top level of their context, e.g., a function defined by a \code{def}
353statement at column zero of a module, but not a function defined
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000354within a branch of an \code{if} ... \code{else} construct, though
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000355there are some good reasons for doing so in some situations. Nesting
356of definitions will be handled by the code developed in the example.
357
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000358To construct the upper-level extraction methods, we need to know what
359the parse tree structure looks like and how much of it we actually
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000360need to be concerned about. Python uses a moderately deep parse tree
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000361so there are a large number of intermediate nodes. It is important to
362read and understand the formal grammar used by Python. This is
363specified in the file \file{Grammar/Grammar} in the distribution.
364Consider the simplest case of interest when searching for docstrings:
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000365a module consisting of a docstring and nothing else. (See file
366\file{docstring.py}.)
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000367
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000368\begin{verbatim}
369"""Some documentation.
370"""
371\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000372
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000373Using the interpreter to take a look at the parse tree, we find a
374bewildering mass of numbers and parentheses, with the documentation
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000375buried deep in nested tuples.
Guido van Rossum4b73a061995-10-11 17:30:04 +0000376
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000377\begin{verbatim}
378>>> import parser
379>>> import pprint
380>>> ast = parser.suite(open('docstring.py').read())
381>>> tup = parser.ast2tuple(ast)
382>>> pprint.pprint(tup)
383(257,
384 (264,
385 (265,
386 (266,
387 (267,
388 (307,
389 (287,
390 (288,
391 (289,
392 (290,
393 (292,
394 (293,
395 (294,
396 (295,
397 (296,
398 (297,
399 (298,
400 (299,
401 (300, (3, '"""Some documentation.\012"""'))))))))))))))))),
402 (4, ''))),
403 (4, ''),
404 (0, ''))
405\end{verbatim}
406
407The numbers at the first element of each node in the tree are the node
408types; they map directly to terminal and non-terminal symbols in the
409grammar. Unfortunately, they are represented as integers in the
410internal representation, and the Python structures generated do not
411change that. However, the \code{symbol} and \code{token} modules
412provide symbolic names for the node types and dictionaries which map
413from the integers to the symbolic names for the node types.
414
415In the output presented above, the outermost tuple contains four
416elements: the integer \code{257} and three additional tuples. Node
417type \code{257} has the symbolic name \code{file_input}. Each of
418these inner tuples contains an integer as the first element; these
419integers, \code{264}, \code{4}, and \code{0}, represent the node types
420\code{stmt}, \code{NEWLINE}, and \code{ENDMARKER}, respectively.
421Note that these values may change depending on the version of Python
422you are using; consult \file{symbol.py} and \file{token.py} for
423details of the mapping. It should be fairly clear that the outermost
424node is related primarily to the input source rather than the contents
425of the file, and may be disregarded for the moment. The \code{stmt}
426node is much more interesting. In particular, all docstrings are
427found in subtrees which are formed exactly as this node is formed,
428with the only difference being the string itself. The association
429between the docstring in a similar tree and the defined entity (class,
430function, or module) which it describes is given by the position of
431the docstring subtree within the tree defining the described
432structure.
433
434By replacing the actual docstring with something to signify a variable
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000435component of the tree, we allow a simple pattern matching approach to
436check any given subtree for equivelence to the general pattern for
437docstrings. Since the example demonstrates information extraction, we
438can safely require that the tree be in tuple form rather than list
439form, allowing a simple variable representation to be
440\code{['variable_name']}. A simple recursive function can implement
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000441the pattern matching, returning a boolean and a dictionary of variable
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000442name to value mappings. (See file \file{example.py}.)
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000443
444\begin{verbatim}
445from types import ListType, TupleType
446
447def match(pattern, data, vars=None):
448 if vars is None:
449 vars = {}
450 if type(pattern) is ListType:
451 vars[pattern[0]] = data
452 return 1, vars
453 if type(pattern) is not TupleType:
454 return (pattern == data), vars
455 if len(data) != len(pattern):
456 return 0, vars
457 for pattern, data in map(None, pattern, data):
458 same, vars = match(pattern, data, vars)
459 if not same:
460 break
461 return same, vars
462\end{verbatim}
463
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000464Using this simple representation for syntactic variables and the symbolic
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000465node types, the pattern for the candidate docstring subtrees becomes
466fairly readable. (See file \file{example.py}.)
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000467
468\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000469import symbol
470import token
471
472DOCSTRING_STMT_PATTERN = (
473 symbol.stmt,
474 (symbol.simple_stmt,
475 (symbol.small_stmt,
476 (symbol.expr_stmt,
477 (symbol.testlist,
478 (symbol.test,
479 (symbol.and_test,
480 (symbol.not_test,
481 (symbol.comparison,
482 (symbol.expr,
483 (symbol.xor_expr,
484 (symbol.and_expr,
485 (symbol.shift_expr,
486 (symbol.arith_expr,
487 (symbol.term,
488 (symbol.factor,
489 (symbol.power,
490 (symbol.atom,
491 (token.STRING, ['docstring'])
492 )))))))))))))))),
493 (token.NEWLINE, '')
494 ))
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000495\end{verbatim}
496
497Using the \code{match()} function with this pattern, extracting the
498module docstring from the parse tree created previously is easy:
499
500\begin{verbatim}
501>>> found, vars = match(DOCSTRING_STMT_PATTERN, tup[1])
502>>> found
5031
504>>> vars
505{'docstring': '"""Some documentation.\012"""'}
506\end{verbatim}
507
508Once specific data can be extracted from a location where it is
509expected, the question of where information can be expected
510needs to be answered. When dealing with docstrings, the answer is
511fairly simple: the docstring is the first \code{stmt} node in a code
512block (\code{file_input} or \code{suite} node types). A module
513consists of a single \code{file_input} node, and class and function
514definitions each contain exactly one \code{suite} node. Classes and
515functions are readily identified as subtrees of code block nodes which
516start with \code{(stmt, (compound_stmt, (classdef, ...} or
517\code{(stmt, (compound_stmt, (funcdef, ...}. Note that these subtrees
518cannot be matched by \code{match()} since it does not support multiple
519sibling nodes to match without regard to number. A more elaborate
520matching function could be used to overcome this limitation, but this
521is sufficient for the example.
522
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000523Given the ability to determine whether a statement might be a
524docstring and extract the actual string from the statement, some work
525needs to be performed to walk the parse tree for an entire module and
526extract information about the names defined in each context of the
527module and associate any docstrings with the names. The code to
528perform this work is not complicated, but bears some explanation.
529
530The public interface to the classes is straightforward and should
531probably be somewhat more flexible. Each ``major'' block of the
532module is described by an object providing several methods for inquiry
533and a constructor which accepts at least the subtree of the complete
534parse tree which it represents. The \code{ModuleInfo} constructor
535accepts an optional \code{\var{name}} parameter since it cannot
536otherwise determine the name of the module.
537
538The public classes include \code{ClassInfo}, \code{FunctionInfo},
539and \code{ModuleInfo}. All objects provide the
540methods \code{get_name()}, \code{get_docstring()},
541\code{get_class_names()}, and \code{get_class_info()}. The
542\code{ClassInfo} objects support \code{get_method_names()} and
543\code{get_method_info()} while the other classes provide
544\code{get_function_names()} and \code{get_function_info()}.
545
546Within each of the forms of code block that the public classes
547represent, most of the required information is in the same form and is
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000548accessed in the same way, with classes having the distinction that
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000549functions defined at the top level are referred to as ``methods.''
550Since the difference in nomenclature reflects a real semantic
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000551distinction from functions defined outside of a class, the
552implementation needs to maintain the distinction.
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000553Hence, most of the functionality of the public classes can be
554implemented in a common base class, \code{SuiteInfoBase}, with the
555accessors for function and method information provided elsewhere.
556Note that there is only one class which represents function and method
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000557information; this paralels the use of the \code{def} statement to
558define both types of elements.
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000559
560Most of the accessor functions are declared in \code{SuiteInfoBase}
561and do not need to be overriden by subclasses. More importantly, the
562extraction of most information from a parse tree is handled through a
563method called by the \code{SuiteInfoBase} constructor. The example
564code for most of the classes is clear when read alongside the formal
565grammar, but the method which recursively creates new information
566objects requires further examination. Here is the relevant part of
567the \code{SuiteInfoBase} definition from \file{example.py}:
568
569\begin{verbatim}
570class SuiteInfoBase:
571 _docstring = ''
572 _name = ''
573
574 def __init__(self, tree = None):
575 self._class_info = {}
576 self._function_info = {}
577 if tree:
578 self._extract_info(tree)
579
580 def _extract_info(self, tree):
581 # extract docstring
582 if len(tree) == 2:
583 found, vars = match(DOCSTRING_STMT_PATTERN[1], tree[1])
584 else:
585 found, vars = match(DOCSTRING_STMT_PATTERN, tree[3])
586 if found:
587 self._docstring = eval(vars['docstring'])
588 # discover inner definitions
589 for node in tree[1:]:
590 found, vars = match(COMPOUND_STMT_PATTERN, node)
591 if found:
592 cstmt = vars['compound']
593 if cstmt[0] == symbol.funcdef:
594 name = cstmt[2][1]
595 self._function_info[name] = FunctionInfo(cstmt)
596 elif cstmt[0] == symbol.classdef:
597 name = cstmt[2][1]
598 self._class_info[name] = ClassInfo(cstmt)
599\end{verbatim}
600
601After initializing some internal state, the constructor calls the
602\code{_extract_info()} method. This method performs the bulk of the
603information extraction which takes place in the entire example. The
604extraction has two distinct phases: the location of the docstring for
605the parse tree passed in, and the discovery of additional definitions
606within the code block represented by the parse tree.
607
608The initial \code{if} test determines whether the nested suite is of
609the ``short form'' or the ``long form.'' The short form is used when
610the code block is on the same line as the definition of the code
611block, as in
612
613\begin{verbatim}
614def square(x): "Square an argument."; return x ** 2
615\end{verbatim}
616
617while the long form uses an indented block and allows nested
618definitions:
619
620\begin{verbatim}
621def make_power(exp):
622 "Make a function that raises an argument to the exponent `exp'."
623 def raiser(x, y=exp):
624 return x ** y
625 return raiser
626\end{verbatim}
627
628When the short form is used, the code block may contain a docstring as
629the first, and possibly only, \code{small_stmt} element. The
630extraction of such a docstring is slightly different and requires only
631a portion of the complete pattern used in the more common case. As
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000632implemented, the docstring will only be found if there is only
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000633one \code{small_stmt} node in the \code{simple_stmt} node. Since most
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000634functions and methods which use the short form do not provide a
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000635docstring, this may be considered sufficient. The extraction of the
636docstring proceeds using the \code{match()} function as described
637above, and the value of the docstring is stored as an attribute of the
638\code{SuiteInfoBase} object.
639
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000640After docstring extraction, a simple definition discovery
641algorithm operates on the \code{stmt} nodes of the \code{suite} node. The
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000642special case of the short form is not tested; since there are no
643\code{stmt} nodes in the short form, the algorithm will silently skip
644the single \code{simple_stmt} node and correctly not discover any
645nested definitions.
646
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000647Each statement in the code block is categorized as
648a class definition, function or method definition, or
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000649something else. For the definition statements, the name of the
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000650element defined is extracted and a representation object
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000651appropriate to the definition is created with the defining subtree
652passed as an argument to the constructor. The repesentation objects
653are stored in instance variables and may be retrieved by name using
654the appropriate accessor methods.
655
656The public classes provide any accessors required which are more
657specific than those provided by the \code{SuiteInfoBase} class, but
658the real extraction algorithm remains common to all forms of code
659blocks. A high-level function can be used to extract the complete set
Fred Drake4b7d5a41996-09-11 21:57:40 +0000660of information from a source file. (See file \file{example.py}.)
Guido van Rossum8206fb91996-08-26 00:33:29 +0000661
662\begin{verbatim}
663def get_docs(fileName):
664 source = open(fileName).read()
665 import os
666 basename = os.path.basename(os.path.splitext(fileName)[0])
667 import parser
668 ast = parser.suite(source)
669 tup = parser.ast2tuple(ast)
670 return ModuleInfo(tup, basename)
671\end{verbatim}
672
673This provides an easy-to-use interface to the documentation of a
674module. If information is required which is not extracted by the code
675of this example, the code may be extended at clearly defined points to
676provide additional capabilities.
Guido van Rossum47478871996-08-21 14:32:37 +0000677
678
679%%
680%% end of file