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Tip revision: cb7f6544f09d38eb73f9894426f8cca16b9bf5b1 authored by cvs2svn on 26 March 2002, 13:47:16 UTC
This commit was manufactured by cvs2svn to create tag 'r221c2'.
Tip revision: cb7f654
AutoIndent.py
import string
#from Tkinter import TclError
#import tkMessageBox
#import tkSimpleDialog

###$ event <<newline-and-indent>>
###$ win <Key-Return>
###$ win <KP_Enter>
###$ unix <Key-Return>
###$ unix <KP_Enter>

###$ event <<indent-region>>
###$ win <Control-bracketright>
###$ unix <Alt-bracketright>
###$ unix <Control-bracketright>

###$ event <<dedent-region>>
###$ win <Control-bracketleft>
###$ unix <Alt-bracketleft>
###$ unix <Control-bracketleft>

###$ event <<comment-region>>
###$ win <Alt-Key-3>
###$ unix <Alt-Key-3>

###$ event <<uncomment-region>>
###$ win <Alt-Key-4>
###$ unix <Alt-Key-4>

###$ event <<tabify-region>>
###$ win <Alt-Key-5>
###$ unix <Alt-Key-5>

###$ event <<untabify-region>>
###$ win <Alt-Key-6>
###$ unix <Alt-Key-6>

import PyParse

class AutoIndent:

    menudefs = [
        ('edit', [
            None,
            ('_Indent region', '<<indent-region>>'),
            ('_Dedent region', '<<dedent-region>>'),
            ('Comment _out region', '<<comment-region>>'),
            ('U_ncomment region', '<<uncomment-region>>'),
            ('Tabify region', '<<tabify-region>>'),
            ('Untabify region', '<<untabify-region>>'),
            ('Toggle tabs', '<<toggle-tabs>>'),
            ('New indent width', '<<change-indentwidth>>'),
        ]),
    ]

    keydefs = {
        '<<smart-backspace>>': ['<Key-BackSpace>'],
        '<<newline-and-indent>>': ['<Key-Return>', '<KP_Enter>'],
        '<<smart-indent>>': ['<Key-Tab>']
    }

    windows_keydefs = {
        '<<indent-region>>': ['<Control-bracketright>'],
        '<<dedent-region>>': ['<Control-bracketleft>'],
        '<<comment-region>>': ['<Alt-Key-3>'],
        '<<uncomment-region>>': ['<Alt-Key-4>'],
        '<<tabify-region>>': ['<Alt-Key-5>'],
        '<<untabify-region>>': ['<Alt-Key-6>'],
        '<<toggle-tabs>>': ['<Alt-Key-t>'],
        '<<change-indentwidth>>': ['<Alt-Key-u>'],
    }

    unix_keydefs = {
        '<<indent-region>>': ['<Alt-bracketright>',
                              '<Meta-bracketright>',
                              '<Control-bracketright>'],
        '<<dedent-region>>': ['<Alt-bracketleft>',
                              '<Meta-bracketleft>',
                              '<Control-bracketleft>'],
        '<<comment-region>>': ['<Alt-Key-3>', '<Meta-Key-3>'],
        '<<uncomment-region>>': ['<Alt-Key-4>', '<Meta-Key-4>'],
        '<<tabify-region>>': ['<Alt-Key-5>', '<Meta-Key-5>'],
        '<<untabify-region>>': ['<Alt-Key-6>', '<Meta-Key-6>'],
        '<<toggle-tabs>>': ['<Alt-Key-t>'],
        '<<change-indentwidth>>': ['<Alt-Key-u>'],
    }

    # usetabs true  -> literal tab characters are used by indent and
    #                  dedent cmds, possibly mixed with spaces if
    #                  indentwidth is not a multiple of tabwidth
    #         false -> tab characters are converted to spaces by indent
    #                  and dedent cmds, and ditto TAB keystrokes
    # indentwidth is the number of characters per logical indent level.
    # tabwidth is the display width of a literal tab character.
    # CAUTION:  telling Tk to use anything other than its default
    # tab setting causes it to use an entirely different tabbing algorithm,
    # treating tab stops as fixed distances from the left margin.
    # Nobody expects this, so for now tabwidth should never be changed.
    usetabs = 1
    indentwidth = 4
    tabwidth = 8    # for IDLE use, must remain 8 until Tk is fixed

    # If context_use_ps1 is true, parsing searches back for a ps1 line;
    # else searches for a popular (if, def, ...) Python stmt.
    context_use_ps1 = 0

    # When searching backwards for a reliable place to begin parsing,
    # first start num_context_lines[0] lines back, then
    # num_context_lines[1] lines back if that didn't work, and so on.
    # The last value should be huge (larger than the # of lines in a
    # conceivable file).
    # Making the initial values larger slows things down more often.
    num_context_lines = 50, 500, 5000000

    def __init__(self, editwin):
        self.editwin = editwin
        self.text = editwin.text

    def config(self, **options):
        for key, value in options.items():
            if key == 'usetabs':
                self.usetabs = value
            elif key == 'indentwidth':
                self.indentwidth = value
            elif key == 'tabwidth':
                self.tabwidth = value
            elif key == 'context_use_ps1':
                self.context_use_ps1 = value
            else:
                raise KeyError, "bad option name: %s" % `key`

    # If ispythonsource and guess are true, guess a good value for
    # indentwidth based on file content (if possible), and if
    # indentwidth != tabwidth set usetabs false.
    # In any case, adjust the Text widget's view of what a tab
    # character means.

    def set_indentation_params(self, ispythonsource, guess=1):
        if guess and ispythonsource:
            i = self.guess_indent()
            if 2 <= i <= 8:
                self.indentwidth = i
            if self.indentwidth != self.tabwidth:
                self.usetabs = 0

        self.editwin.set_tabwidth(self.tabwidth)

    def smart_backspace_event(self, event):
        text = self.text
        first, last = self.editwin.get_selection_indices()
        if first and last:
            text.delete(first, last)
            text.mark_set("insert", first)
            return "break"
        # Delete whitespace left, until hitting a real char or closest
        # preceding virtual tab stop.
        chars = text.get("insert linestart", "insert")
        if chars == '':
            if text.compare("insert", ">", "1.0"):
                # easy: delete preceding newline
                text.delete("insert-1c")
            else:
                text.bell()     # at start of buffer
            return "break"
        if  chars[-1] not in " \t":
            # easy: delete preceding real char
            text.delete("insert-1c")
            return "break"
        # Ick.  It may require *inserting* spaces if we back up over a
        # tab character!  This is written to be clear, not fast.
        expand, tabwidth = string.expandtabs, self.tabwidth
        have = len(expand(chars, tabwidth))
        assert have > 0
        want = ((have - 1) // self.indentwidth) * self.indentwidth
        ncharsdeleted = 0
        while 1:
            chars = chars[:-1]
            ncharsdeleted = ncharsdeleted + 1
            have = len(expand(chars, tabwidth))
            if have <= want or chars[-1] not in " \t":
                break
        text.undo_block_start()
        text.delete("insert-%dc" % ncharsdeleted, "insert")
        if have < want:
            text.insert("insert", ' ' * (want - have))
        text.undo_block_stop()
        return "break"

    def smart_indent_event(self, event):
        # if intraline selection:
        #     delete it
        # elif multiline selection:
        #     do indent-region & return
        # indent one level
        text = self.text
        first, last = self.editwin.get_selection_indices()
        text.undo_block_start()
        try:
            if first and last:
                if index2line(first) != index2line(last):
                    return self.indent_region_event(event)
                text.delete(first, last)
                text.mark_set("insert", first)
            prefix = text.get("insert linestart", "insert")
            raw, effective = classifyws(prefix, self.tabwidth)
            if raw == len(prefix):
                # only whitespace to the left
                self.reindent_to(effective + self.indentwidth)
            else:
                if self.usetabs:
                    pad = '\t'
                else:
                    effective = len(string.expandtabs(prefix,
                                                      self.tabwidth))
                    n = self.indentwidth
                    pad = ' ' * (n - effective % n)
                text.insert("insert", pad)
            text.see("insert")
            return "break"
        finally:
            text.undo_block_stop()

    def newline_and_indent_event(self, event):
        text = self.text
        first, last = self.editwin.get_selection_indices()
        text.undo_block_start()
        try:
            if first and last:
                text.delete(first, last)
                text.mark_set("insert", first)
            line = text.get("insert linestart", "insert")
            i, n = 0, len(line)
            while i < n and line[i] in " \t":
                i = i+1
            if i == n:
                # the cursor is in or at leading indentation; just inject
                # an empty line at the start
                text.insert("insert linestart", '\n')
                return "break"
            indent = line[:i]
            # strip whitespace before insert point
            i = 0
            while line and line[-1] in " \t":
                line = line[:-1]
                i = i+1
            if i:
                text.delete("insert - %d chars" % i, "insert")
            # strip whitespace after insert point
            while text.get("insert") in " \t":
                text.delete("insert")
            # start new line
            text.insert("insert", '\n')

            # adjust indentation for continuations and block
            # open/close first need to find the last stmt
            lno = index2line(text.index('insert'))
            y = PyParse.Parser(self.indentwidth, self.tabwidth)
            for context in self.num_context_lines:
                startat = max(lno - context, 1)
                startatindex = `startat` + ".0"
                rawtext = text.get(startatindex, "insert")
                y.set_str(rawtext)
                bod = y.find_good_parse_start(
                          self.context_use_ps1,
                          self._build_char_in_string_func(startatindex))
                if bod is not None or startat == 1:
                    break
            y.set_lo(bod or 0)
            c = y.get_continuation_type()
            if c != PyParse.C_NONE:
                # The current stmt hasn't ended yet.
                if c == PyParse.C_STRING:
                    # inside a string; just mimic the current indent
                    text.insert("insert", indent)
                elif c == PyParse.C_BRACKET:
                    # line up with the first (if any) element of the
                    # last open bracket structure; else indent one
                    # level beyond the indent of the line with the
                    # last open bracket
                    self.reindent_to(y.compute_bracket_indent())
                elif c == PyParse.C_BACKSLASH:
                    # if more than one line in this stmt already, just
                    # mimic the current indent; else if initial line
                    # has a start on an assignment stmt, indent to
                    # beyond leftmost =; else to beyond first chunk of
                    # non-whitespace on initial line
                    if y.get_num_lines_in_stmt() > 1:
                        text.insert("insert", indent)
                    else:
                        self.reindent_to(y.compute_backslash_indent())
                else:
                    assert 0, "bogus continuation type " + `c`
                return "break"

            # This line starts a brand new stmt; indent relative to
            # indentation of initial line of closest preceding
            # interesting stmt.
            indent = y.get_base_indent_string()
            text.insert("insert", indent)
            if y.is_block_opener():
                self.smart_indent_event(event)
            elif indent and y.is_block_closer():
                self.smart_backspace_event(event)
            return "break"
        finally:
            text.see("insert")
            text.undo_block_stop()

    auto_indent = newline_and_indent_event

    # Our editwin provides a is_char_in_string function that works
    # with a Tk text index, but PyParse only knows about offsets into
    # a string. This builds a function for PyParse that accepts an
    # offset.

    def _build_char_in_string_func(self, startindex):
        def inner(offset, _startindex=startindex,
                  _icis=self.editwin.is_char_in_string):
            return _icis(_startindex + "+%dc" % offset)
        return inner

    def indent_region_event(self, event):
        head, tail, chars, lines = self.get_region()
        for pos in range(len(lines)):
            line = lines[pos]
            if line:
                raw, effective = classifyws(line, self.tabwidth)
                effective = effective + self.indentwidth
                lines[pos] = self._make_blanks(effective) + line[raw:]
        self.set_region(head, tail, chars, lines)
        return "break"

    def dedent_region_event(self, event):
        head, tail, chars, lines = self.get_region()
        for pos in range(len(lines)):
            line = lines[pos]
            if line:
                raw, effective = classifyws(line, self.tabwidth)
                effective = max(effective - self.indentwidth, 0)
                lines[pos] = self._make_blanks(effective) + line[raw:]
        self.set_region(head, tail, chars, lines)
        return "break"

    def comment_region_event(self, event):
        head, tail, chars, lines = self.get_region()
        for pos in range(len(lines) - 1):
            line = lines[pos]
            lines[pos] = '##' + line
        self.set_region(head, tail, chars, lines)

    def uncomment_region_event(self, event):
        head, tail, chars, lines = self.get_region()
        for pos in range(len(lines)):
            line = lines[pos]
            if not line:
                continue
            if line[:2] == '##':
                line = line[2:]
            elif line[:1] == '#':
                line = line[1:]
            lines[pos] = line
        self.set_region(head, tail, chars, lines)

    def tabify_region_event(self, event):
        head, tail, chars, lines = self.get_region()
        tabwidth = self._asktabwidth()
        for pos in range(len(lines)):
            line = lines[pos]
            if line:
                raw, effective = classifyws(line, tabwidth)
                ntabs, nspaces = divmod(effective, tabwidth)
                lines[pos] = '\t' * ntabs + ' ' * nspaces + line[raw:]
        self.set_region(head, tail, chars, lines)

    def untabify_region_event(self, event):
        head, tail, chars, lines = self.get_region()
        tabwidth = self._asktabwidth()
        for pos in range(len(lines)):
            lines[pos] = string.expandtabs(lines[pos], tabwidth)
        self.set_region(head, tail, chars, lines)

    def toggle_tabs_event(self, event):
        if self.editwin.askyesno(
              "Toggle tabs",
              "Turn tabs " + ("on", "off")[self.usetabs] + "?",
              parent=self.text):
            self.usetabs = not self.usetabs
        return "break"

    # XXX this isn't bound to anything -- see class tabwidth comments
    def change_tabwidth_event(self, event):
        new = self._asktabwidth()
        if new != self.tabwidth:
            self.tabwidth = new
            self.set_indentation_params(0, guess=0)
        return "break"

    def change_indentwidth_event(self, event):
        new = self.editwin.askinteger(
                  "Indent width",
                  "New indent width (1-16)",
                  parent=self.text,
                  initialvalue=self.indentwidth,
                  minvalue=1,
                  maxvalue=16)
        if new and new != self.indentwidth:
            self.indentwidth = new
        return "break"

    def get_region(self):
        text = self.text
        first, last = self.editwin.get_selection_indices()
        if first and last:
            head = text.index(first + " linestart")
            tail = text.index(last + "-1c lineend +1c")
        else:
            head = text.index("insert linestart")
            tail = text.index("insert lineend +1c")
        chars = text.get(head, tail)
        lines = string.split(chars, "\n")
        return head, tail, chars, lines

    def set_region(self, head, tail, chars, lines):
        text = self.text
        newchars = string.join(lines, "\n")
        if newchars == chars:
            text.bell()
            return
        text.tag_remove("sel", "1.0", "end")
        text.mark_set("insert", head)
        text.undo_block_start()
        text.delete(head, tail)
        text.insert(head, newchars)
        text.undo_block_stop()
        text.tag_add("sel", head, "insert")

    # Make string that displays as n leading blanks.

    def _make_blanks(self, n):
        if self.usetabs:
            ntabs, nspaces = divmod(n, self.tabwidth)
            return '\t' * ntabs + ' ' * nspaces
        else:
            return ' ' * n

    # Delete from beginning of line to insert point, then reinsert
    # column logical (meaning use tabs if appropriate) spaces.

    def reindent_to(self, column):
        text = self.text
        text.undo_block_start()
        if text.compare("insert linestart", "!=", "insert"):
            text.delete("insert linestart", "insert")
        if column:
            text.insert("insert", self._make_blanks(column))
        text.undo_block_stop()

    def _asktabwidth(self):
        return self.editwin.askinteger(
            "Tab width",
            "Spaces per tab?",
            parent=self.text,
            initialvalue=self.tabwidth,
            minvalue=1,
            maxvalue=16) or self.tabwidth

    # Guess indentwidth from text content.
    # Return guessed indentwidth.  This should not be believed unless
    # it's in a reasonable range (e.g., it will be 0 if no indented
    # blocks are found).

    def guess_indent(self):
        opener, indented = IndentSearcher(self.text, self.tabwidth).run()
        if opener and indented:
            raw, indentsmall = classifyws(opener, self.tabwidth)
            raw, indentlarge = classifyws(indented, self.tabwidth)
        else:
            indentsmall = indentlarge = 0
        return indentlarge - indentsmall

# "line.col" -> line, as an int
def index2line(index):
    return int(float(index))

# Look at the leading whitespace in s.
# Return pair (# of leading ws characters,
#              effective # of leading blanks after expanding
#              tabs to width tabwidth)

def classifyws(s, tabwidth):
    raw = effective = 0
    for ch in s:
        if ch == ' ':
            raw = raw + 1
            effective = effective + 1
        elif ch == '\t':
            raw = raw + 1
            effective = (effective // tabwidth + 1) * tabwidth
        else:
            break
    return raw, effective

import tokenize
_tokenize = tokenize
del tokenize

class IndentSearcher:

    # .run() chews over the Text widget, looking for a block opener
    # and the stmt following it.  Returns a pair,
    #     (line containing block opener, line containing stmt)
    # Either or both may be None.

    def __init__(self, text, tabwidth):
        self.text = text
        self.tabwidth = tabwidth
        self.i = self.finished = 0
        self.blkopenline = self.indentedline = None

    def readline(self):
        if self.finished:
            return ""
        i = self.i = self.i + 1
        mark = `i` + ".0"
        if self.text.compare(mark, ">=", "end"):
            return ""
        return self.text.get(mark, mark + " lineend+1c")

    def tokeneater(self, type, token, start, end, line,
                   INDENT=_tokenize.INDENT,
                   NAME=_tokenize.NAME,
                   OPENERS=('class', 'def', 'for', 'if', 'try', 'while')):
        if self.finished:
            pass
        elif type == NAME and token in OPENERS:
            self.blkopenline = line
        elif type == INDENT and self.blkopenline:
            self.indentedline = line
            self.finished = 1

    def run(self):
        save_tabsize = _tokenize.tabsize
        _tokenize.tabsize = self.tabwidth
        try:
            try:
                _tokenize.tokenize(self.readline, self.tokeneater)
            except _tokenize.TokenError:
                # since we cut off the tokenizer early, we can trigger
                # spurious errors
                pass
        finally:
            _tokenize.tabsize = save_tabsize
        return self.blkopenline, self.indentedline
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