#! /usr/local/bin/python #! /usr/local/bin/python # This file contains a class and a main program that perform two # related (though complimentary) formatting operations on Python # programs. When called as "pindend -c", it takes a valid Python # program as input and outputs a version augmented with block-closing # comments. When called as "pindent -r" it assumes its input is a # Python program with block-closing comments but with its indentation # messed up, and outputs a properly indented version. # A "block-closing comment" is a comment of the form '# end ' # where is the keyword that opened the block. If the # opening keyword is 'def' or 'class', the function or class name may # be repeated in the block-closing comment as well. Here is an # example of a program fully augmented with block-closing comments: # def foobar(a, b): # if a == b: # a = a+1 # elif a < b: # b = b-1 # if b > a: a = a-1 # # end if # else: # print 'oops!' # # end if # # end def foobar # Note that only the last part of an if...elif...else... block needs a # block-closing comment; the same is true for other compound # statements (e.g. try...except). Also note that "short-form" blocks # like the second 'if' in the example must be closed as well; # otherwise the 'else' in the example would be ambiguous (remember # that indentation is not significant when interpreting block-closing # comments). # Both operations are idempotent (i.e. applied to their own output # they yield an identical result). Running first "pindent -c" and # then "pindent -r" on a valid Python program produces a program that # is semantically identical to the input (though its indentation may # be different). # Other options: # -s stepsize: set the indentation step size (default 8) # -t tabsize : set the number of spaces a tab character is worth (default 8) # file ... : input file(s) (default standard input) # The results always go to standard output # Caveats: # - comments ending in a backslash will be mistaken for continued lines # - continuations using backslash are always left unchanged # - continuations inside parentheses are not extra indented by -r # but must be indented for -c to work correctly (this breaks # idempotency!) # - continued lines inside triple-quoted strings are totally garbled # Secret feature: # - On input, a block may also be closed with an "end statement" -- # this is a block-closing comment without the '#' sign. # Possible improvements: # - check syntax based on transitions in 'next' table # - better error reporting # - better error recovery # - check identifier after class/def # The following wishes need a more complete tokenization of the source: # - Don't get fooled by comments ending in backslash # - reindent continuation lines indicated by backslash # - handle continuation lines inside parentheses/braces/brackets # - handle triple quoted strings spanning lines # - realign comments # - optionally do much more thorough reformatting, a la C indent # Defaults STEPSIZE = 8 TABSIZE = 8 import os import regex import string import sys next = {} next['if'] = next['elif'] = 'elif', 'else', 'end' next['while'] = next['for'] = 'else', 'end' next['try'] = 'except', 'finally' next['except'] = 'except', 'else', 'end' next['else'] = next['finally'] = next['def'] = next['class'] = 'end' next['end'] = () start = 'if', 'while', 'for', 'try', 'def', 'class' class PythonIndenter: def __init__(self, fpi = sys.stdin, fpo = sys.stdout, indentsize = STEPSIZE, tabsize = TABSIZE): self.fpi = fpi self.fpo = fpo self.indentsize = indentsize self.tabsize = tabsize self.lineno = 0 self.write = fpo.write self.kwprog = regex.symcomp( '^[ \t]*\([a-z]+\)' '\([ \t]+\([a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*\)\)?' '[^a-zA-Z0-9_]') self.endprog = regex.symcomp( '^[ \t]*#?[ \t]*end[ \t]+\([a-z]+\)' '\([ \t]+\([a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*\)\)?' '[^a-zA-Z0-9_]') self.wsprog = regex.compile('^[ \t]*') # end def __init__ def readline(self): line = self.fpi.readline() if line: self.lineno = self.lineno + 1 # end if return line # end def readline def error(self, fmt, *args): if args: fmt = fmt % args # end if sys.stderr.write('Error at line %d: %s\n' % (self.lineno, fmt)) self.write('### %s ###\n' % fmt) # end def error def getline(self): line = self.readline() while line[-2:] == '\\\n': line2 = self.readline() if not line2: break # end if line = line + line2 # end while return line # end def getline def putline(self, line, indent = None): if indent is None: self.write(line) return # end if tabs, spaces = divmod(indent*self.indentsize, self.tabsize) i = max(0, self.wsprog.match(line)) self.write('\t'*tabs + ' '*spaces + line[i:]) # end def putline def reformat(self): stack = [] while 1: line = self.getline() if not line: break # EOF # end if if self.endprog.match(line) >= 0: kw = 'end' kw2 = self.endprog.group('kw') if not stack: self.error('unexpected end') elif stack[-1][0] != kw2: self.error('unmatched end') # end if del stack[-1:] self.putline(line, len(stack)) continue # end if if self.kwprog.match(line) >= 0: kw = self.kwprog.group('kw') if kw in start: self.putline(line, len(stack)) stack.append((kw, kw)) continue # end if if next.has_key(kw) and stack: self.putline(line, len(stack)-1) kwa, kwb = stack[-1] stack[-1] = kwa, kw continue # end if # end if self.putline(line, len(stack)) # end while if stack: self.error('unterminated keywords') for kwa, kwb in stack: self.write('\t%s\n' % kwa) # end for # end if # end def reformat def complete(self): self.indentsize = 1 stack = [] todo = [] current, firstkw, lastkw, topid = 0, '', '', '' while 1: line = self.getline() i = max(0, self.wsprog.match(line)) if self.endprog.match(line) >= 0: thiskw = 'end' endkw = self.endprog.group('kw') thisid = self.endprog.group('id') elif self.kwprog.match(line) >= 0: thiskw = self.kwprog.group('kw') if not next.has_key(thiskw): thiskw = '' # end if if thiskw in ('def', 'class'): thisid = self.kwprog.group('id') else: thisid = '' # end if elif line[i:i+1] in ('\n', '#'): todo.append(line) continue else: thiskw = '' # end if indent = len(string.expandtabs(line[:i], self.tabsize)) while indent < current: if firstkw: if topid: s = '# end %s %s\n' % ( firstkw, topid) else: s = '# end %s\n' % firstkw # end if self.putline(s, current) firstkw = lastkw = '' # end if current, firstkw, lastkw, topid = stack[-1] del stack[-1] # end while if indent == current and firstkw: if thiskw == 'end': if endkw != firstkw: self.error('mismatched end') # end if firstkw = lastkw = '' elif not thiskw or thiskw in start: if topid: s = '# end %s %s\n' % ( firstkw, topid) else: s = '# end %s\n' % firstkw # end if self.putline(s, current) firstkw = lastkw = topid = '' # end if # end if if indent > current: stack.append(current, firstkw, lastkw, topid) if thiskw and thiskw not in start: # error thiskw = '' # end if current, firstkw, lastkw, topid = \ indent, thiskw, thiskw, thisid # end if if thiskw: if thiskw in start: firstkw = lastkw = thiskw topid = thisid else: lastkw = thiskw # end if # end if for l in todo: self.write(l) # end for todo = [] if not line: break # end if self.write(line) # end while # end def complete # end class PythonIndenter # Simplified user interface # - xxx_filter(input, output): read and write file objects # - xxx_string(s): take and return string object # - xxx_file(filename): process file in place, return true iff changed def complete_filter(input= sys.stdin, output = sys.stdout, stepsize = STEPSIZE, tabsize = TABSIZE): pi = PythonIndenter(input, output, stepsize, tabsize) pi.complete() # end def complete_filter def reformat_filter(input = sys.stdin, output = sys.stdout, stepsize = STEPSIZE, tabsize = TABSIZE): pi = PythonIndenter(input, output, stepsize, tabsize) pi.reformat() # end def reformat class StringReader: def __init__(self, buf): self.buf = buf self.pos = 0 self.len = len(self.buf) # end def __init__ def read(self, n = 0): if n <= 0: n = self.len - self.pos else: n = min(n, self.len - self.pos) # end if r = self.buf[self.pos : self.pos + n] self.pos = self.pos + n return r # end def read def readline(self): i = string.find(self.buf, '\n', self.pos) return self.read(i + 1 - self.pos) # end def readline def readlines(self): lines = [] line = self.readline() while line: lines.append(line) line = self.readline() # end while return lines # end def readlines # seek/tell etc. are left as an exercise for the reader # end class StringReader class StringWriter: def __init__(self): self.buf = '' # end def __init__ def write(self, s): self.buf = self.buf + s # end def write def getvalue(self): return self.buf # end def getvalue # end class StringWriter def complete_string(source, stepsize = STEPSIZE, tabsize = TABSIZE): input = StringReader(source) output = StringWriter() pi = PythonIndenter(input, output, stepsize, tabsize) pi.complete() return output.getvalue() # end def complete_string def reformat_string(source, stepsize = STEPSIZE, tabsize = TABSIZE): input = StringReader(source) output = StringWriter() pi = PythonIndenter(input, output, stepsize, tabsize) pi.reformat() return output.getvalue() # end def reformat_string def complete_file(filename, stepsize = STEPSIZE, tabsize = TABSIZE): source = open(filename, 'r').read() result = complete_string(source, stepsize, tabsize) if source == result: return 0 # end if import os try: os.rename(filename, filename + '~') except os.error: pass # end try f = open(filename, 'w') f.write(result) f.close() return 1 # end def complete_file def reformat_file(filename, stepsize = STEPSIZE, tabsize = TABSIZE): source = open(filename, 'r').read() result = reformat_string(source, stepsize, tabsize) if source == result: return 0 # end if import os os.rename(filename, filename + '~') f = open(filename, 'w') f.write(result) f.close() return 1 # end def reformat_file # Test program when called as a script usage = """ usage: pindent (-c|-r) [-s stepsize] [-t tabsize] [file] ... -c : complete a correctly indented program (add #end directives) -r : reformat a completed program (use #end directives) -s stepsize: indentation step (default %(STEPSIZE)d) -t tabsize : the worth in spaces of a tab (default %(TABSIZE)d) [file] ... : files are changed in place, with backups in file~ If no files are specified or a single - is given, the program acts as a filter (reads stdin, writes stdout). """ % vars() def test(): import getopt try: opts, args = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], 'crs:t:') except getopt.error, msg: sys.stderr.write('Error: %s\n' % msg) sys.stderr.write(usage) sys.exit(2) # end try action = None stepsize = STEPSIZE tabsize = TABSIZE for o, a in opts: if o == '-c': action = 'complete' elif o == '-r': action = 'reformat' elif o == '-s': stepsize = string.atoi(a) elif o == '-t': tabsize = string.atoi(a) # end if # end for if not action: sys.stderr.write( 'You must specify -c(omplete) or -r(eformat)\n') sys.stderr.write(usage) sys.exit(2) # end if if not args or args == ['-']: action = eval(action + '_filter') action(sys.stdin, sys.stdout, stepsize, tabsize) else: action = eval(action + '_file') for file in args: action(file, stepsize, tabsize) # end for # end if # end def test if __name__ == '__main__': test() # end if