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MisterAI/LocalAI_Demo_backends / cpu-diffusers.upgrade-tmp /python /lib /python3.10 /idlelib /pyparse.py
| """Define partial Python code Parser used by editor and hyperparser. | |
| Instances of ParseMap are used with str.translate. | |
| The following bound search and match functions are defined: | |
| _synchre - start of popular statement; | |
| _junkre - whitespace or comment line; | |
| _match_stringre: string, possibly without closer; | |
| _itemre - line that may have bracket structure start; | |
| _closere - line that must be followed by dedent. | |
| _chew_ordinaryre - non-special characters. | |
| """ | |
| import re | |
| # Reason last statement is continued (or C_NONE if it's not). | |
| (C_NONE, C_BACKSLASH, C_STRING_FIRST_LINE, | |
| C_STRING_NEXT_LINES, C_BRACKET) = range(5) | |
| # Find what looks like the start of a popular statement. | |
| _synchre = re.compile(r""" | |
| ^ | |
| [ \t]* | |
| (?: while | |
| | else | |
| | def | |
| | return | |
| | assert | |
| | break | |
| | class | |
| | continue | |
| | elif | |
| | try | |
| | except | |
| | raise | |
| | import | |
| | yield | |
| ) | |
| \b | |
| """, re.VERBOSE | re.MULTILINE).search | |
| # Match blank line or non-indenting comment line. | |
| _junkre = re.compile(r""" | |
| [ \t]* | |
| (?: \# \S .* )? | |
| \n | |
| """, re.VERBOSE).match | |
| # Match any flavor of string; the terminating quote is optional | |
| # so that we're robust in the face of incomplete program text. | |
| _match_stringre = re.compile(r""" | |
| \""" [^"\\]* (?: | |
| (?: \\. | "(?!"") ) | |
| [^"\\]* | |
| )* | |
| (?: \""" )? | |
| | " [^"\\\n]* (?: \\. [^"\\\n]* )* "? | |
| | ''' [^'\\]* (?: | |
| (?: \\. | '(?!'') ) | |
| [^'\\]* | |
| )* | |
| (?: ''' )? | |
| | ' [^'\\\n]* (?: \\. [^'\\\n]* )* '? | |
| """, re.VERBOSE | re.DOTALL).match | |
| # Match a line that starts with something interesting; | |
| # used to find the first item of a bracket structure. | |
| _itemre = re.compile(r""" | |
| [ \t]* | |
| [^\s#\\] # if we match, m.end()-1 is the interesting char | |
| """, re.VERBOSE).match | |
| # Match start of statements that should be followed by a dedent. | |
| _closere = re.compile(r""" | |
| \s* | |
| (?: return | |
| | break | |
| | continue | |
| | raise | |
| | pass | |
| ) | |
| \b | |
| """, re.VERBOSE).match | |
| # Chew up non-special chars as quickly as possible. If match is | |
| # successful, m.end() less 1 is the index of the last boring char | |
| # matched. If match is unsuccessful, the string starts with an | |
| # interesting char. | |
| _chew_ordinaryre = re.compile(r""" | |
| [^[\](){}#'"\\]+ | |
| """, re.VERBOSE).match | |
| class ParseMap(dict): | |
| r"""Dict subclass that maps anything not in dict to 'x'. | |
| This is designed to be used with str.translate in study1. | |
| Anything not specifically mapped otherwise becomes 'x'. | |
| Example: replace everything except whitespace with 'x'. | |
| >>> keepwhite = ParseMap((ord(c), ord(c)) for c in ' \t\n\r') | |
| >>> "a + b\tc\nd".translate(keepwhite) | |
| 'x x x\tx\nx' | |
| """ | |
| # Calling this triples access time; see bpo-32940 | |
| def __missing__(self, key): | |
| return 120 # ord('x') | |
| # Map all ascii to 120 to avoid __missing__ call, then replace some. | |
| trans = ParseMap.fromkeys(range(128), 120) | |
| trans.update((ord(c), ord('(')) for c in "({[") # open brackets => '('; | |
| trans.update((ord(c), ord(')')) for c in ")}]") # close brackets => ')'. | |
| trans.update((ord(c), ord(c)) for c in "\"'\\\n#") # Keep these. | |
| class Parser: | |
| def __init__(self, indentwidth, tabwidth): | |
| self.indentwidth = indentwidth | |
| self.tabwidth = tabwidth | |
| def set_code(self, s): | |
| assert len(s) == 0 or s[-1] == '\n' | |
| self.code = s | |
| self.study_level = 0 | |
| def find_good_parse_start(self, is_char_in_string): | |
| """ | |
| Return index of a good place to begin parsing, as close to the | |
| end of the string as possible. This will be the start of some | |
| popular stmt like "if" or "def". Return None if none found: | |
| the caller should pass more prior context then, if possible, or | |
| if not (the entire program text up until the point of interest | |
| has already been tried) pass 0 to set_lo(). | |
| This will be reliable iff given a reliable is_char_in_string() | |
| function, meaning that when it says "no", it's absolutely | |
| guaranteed that the char is not in a string. | |
| """ | |
| code, pos = self.code, None | |
| # Peek back from the end for a good place to start, | |
| # but don't try too often; pos will be left None, or | |
| # bumped to a legitimate synch point. | |
| limit = len(code) | |
| for tries in range(5): | |
| i = code.rfind(":\n", 0, limit) | |
| if i < 0: | |
| break | |
| i = code.rfind('\n', 0, i) + 1 # start of colon line (-1+1=0) | |
| m = _synchre(code, i, limit) | |
| if m and not is_char_in_string(m.start()): | |
| pos = m.start() | |
| break | |
| limit = i | |
| if pos is None: | |
| # Nothing looks like a block-opener, or stuff does | |
| # but is_char_in_string keeps returning true; most likely | |
| # we're in or near a giant string, the colorizer hasn't | |
| # caught up enough to be helpful, or there simply *aren't* | |
| # any interesting stmts. In any of these cases we're | |
| # going to have to parse the whole thing to be sure, so | |
| # give it one last try from the start, but stop wasting | |
| # time here regardless of the outcome. | |
| m = _synchre(code) | |
| if m and not is_char_in_string(m.start()): | |
| pos = m.start() | |
| return pos | |
| # Peeking back worked; look forward until _synchre no longer | |
| # matches. | |
| i = pos + 1 | |
| while m := _synchre(code, i): | |
| s, i = m.span() | |
| if not is_char_in_string(s): | |
| pos = s | |
| return pos | |
| def set_lo(self, lo): | |
| """ Throw away the start of the string. | |
| Intended to be called with the result of find_good_parse_start(). | |
| """ | |
| assert lo == 0 or self.code[lo-1] == '\n' | |
| if lo > 0: | |
| self.code = self.code[lo:] | |
| def _study1(self): | |
| """Find the line numbers of non-continuation lines. | |
| As quickly as humanly possible <wink>, find the line numbers (0- | |
| based) of the non-continuation lines. | |
| Creates self.{goodlines, continuation}. | |
| """ | |
| if self.study_level >= 1: | |
| return | |
| self.study_level = 1 | |
| # Map all uninteresting characters to "x", all open brackets | |
| # to "(", all close brackets to ")", then collapse runs of | |
| # uninteresting characters. This can cut the number of chars | |
| # by a factor of 10-40, and so greatly speed the following loop. | |
| code = self.code | |
| code = code.translate(trans) | |
| code = code.replace('xxxxxxxx', 'x') | |
| code = code.replace('xxxx', 'x') | |
| code = code.replace('xx', 'x') | |
| code = code.replace('xx', 'x') | |
| code = code.replace('\nx', '\n') | |
| # Replacing x\n with \n would be incorrect because | |
| # x may be preceded by a backslash. | |
| # March over the squashed version of the program, accumulating | |
| # the line numbers of non-continued stmts, and determining | |
| # whether & why the last stmt is a continuation. | |
| continuation = C_NONE | |
| level = lno = 0 # level is nesting level; lno is line number | |
| self.goodlines = goodlines = [0] | |
| push_good = goodlines.append | |
| i, n = 0, len(code) | |
| while i < n: | |
| ch = code[i] | |
| i = i+1 | |
| # cases are checked in decreasing order of frequency | |
| if ch == 'x': | |
| continue | |
| if ch == '\n': | |
| lno = lno + 1 | |
| if level == 0: | |
| push_good(lno) | |
| # else we're in an unclosed bracket structure | |
| continue | |
| if ch == '(': | |
| level = level + 1 | |
| continue | |
| if ch == ')': | |
| if level: | |
| level = level - 1 | |
| # else the program is invalid, but we can't complain | |
| continue | |
| if ch == '"' or ch == "'": | |
| # consume the string | |
| quote = ch | |
| if code[i-1:i+2] == quote * 3: | |
| quote = quote * 3 | |
| firstlno = lno | |
| w = len(quote) - 1 | |
| i = i+w | |
| while i < n: | |
| ch = code[i] | |
| i = i+1 | |
| if ch == 'x': | |
| continue | |
| if code[i-1:i+w] == quote: | |
| i = i+w | |
| break | |
| if ch == '\n': | |
| lno = lno + 1 | |
| if w == 0: | |
| # unterminated single-quoted string | |
| if level == 0: | |
| push_good(lno) | |
| break | |
| continue | |
| if ch == '\\': | |
| assert i < n | |
| if code[i] == '\n': | |
| lno = lno + 1 | |
| i = i+1 | |
| continue | |
| # else comment char or paren inside string | |
| else: | |
| # didn't break out of the loop, so we're still | |
| # inside a string | |
| if (lno - 1) == firstlno: | |
| # before the previous \n in code, we were in the first | |
| # line of the string | |
| continuation = C_STRING_FIRST_LINE | |
| else: | |
| continuation = C_STRING_NEXT_LINES | |
| continue # with outer loop | |
| if ch == '#': | |
| # consume the comment | |
| i = code.find('\n', i) | |
| assert i >= 0 | |
| continue | |
| assert ch == '\\' | |
| assert i < n | |
| if code[i] == '\n': | |
| lno = lno + 1 | |
| if i+1 == n: | |
| continuation = C_BACKSLASH | |
| i = i+1 | |
| # The last stmt may be continued for all 3 reasons. | |
| # String continuation takes precedence over bracket | |
| # continuation, which beats backslash continuation. | |
| if (continuation != C_STRING_FIRST_LINE | |
| and continuation != C_STRING_NEXT_LINES and level > 0): | |
| continuation = C_BRACKET | |
| self.continuation = continuation | |
| # Push the final line number as a sentinel value, regardless of | |
| # whether it's continued. | |
| assert (continuation == C_NONE) == (goodlines[-1] == lno) | |
| if goodlines[-1] != lno: | |
| push_good(lno) | |
| def get_continuation_type(self): | |
| self._study1() | |
| return self.continuation | |
| def _study2(self): | |
| """ | |
| study1 was sufficient to determine the continuation status, | |
| but doing more requires looking at every character. study2 | |
| does this for the last interesting statement in the block. | |
| Creates: | |
| self.stmt_start, stmt_end | |
| slice indices of last interesting stmt | |
| self.stmt_bracketing | |
| the bracketing structure of the last interesting stmt; for | |
| example, for the statement "say(boo) or die", | |
| stmt_bracketing will be ((0, 0), (0, 1), (2, 0), (2, 1), | |
| (4, 0)). Strings and comments are treated as brackets, for | |
| the matter. | |
| self.lastch | |
| last interesting character before optional trailing comment | |
| self.lastopenbracketpos | |
| if continuation is C_BRACKET, index of last open bracket | |
| """ | |
| if self.study_level >= 2: | |
| return | |
| self._study1() | |
| self.study_level = 2 | |
| # Set p and q to slice indices of last interesting stmt. | |
| code, goodlines = self.code, self.goodlines | |
| i = len(goodlines) - 1 # Index of newest line. | |
| p = len(code) # End of goodlines[i] | |
| while i: | |
| assert p | |
| # Make p be the index of the stmt at line number goodlines[i]. | |
| # Move p back to the stmt at line number goodlines[i-1]. | |
| q = p | |
| for nothing in range(goodlines[i-1], goodlines[i]): | |
| # tricky: sets p to 0 if no preceding newline | |
| p = code.rfind('\n', 0, p-1) + 1 | |
| # The stmt code[p:q] isn't a continuation, but may be blank | |
| # or a non-indenting comment line. | |
| if _junkre(code, p): | |
| i = i-1 | |
| else: | |
| break | |
| if i == 0: | |
| # nothing but junk! | |
| assert p == 0 | |
| q = p | |
| self.stmt_start, self.stmt_end = p, q | |
| # Analyze this stmt, to find the last open bracket (if any) | |
| # and last interesting character (if any). | |
| lastch = "" | |
| stack = [] # stack of open bracket indices | |
| push_stack = stack.append | |
| bracketing = [(p, 0)] | |
| while p < q: | |
| # suck up all except ()[]{}'"#\\ | |
| m = _chew_ordinaryre(code, p, q) | |
| if m: | |
| # we skipped at least one boring char | |
| newp = m.end() | |
| # back up over totally boring whitespace | |
| i = newp - 1 # index of last boring char | |
| while i >= p and code[i] in " \t\n": | |
| i = i-1 | |
| if i >= p: | |
| lastch = code[i] | |
| p = newp | |
| if p >= q: | |
| break | |
| ch = code[p] | |
| if ch in "([{": | |
| push_stack(p) | |
| bracketing.append((p, len(stack))) | |
| lastch = ch | |
| p = p+1 | |
| continue | |
| if ch in ")]}": | |
| if stack: | |
| del stack[-1] | |
| lastch = ch | |
| p = p+1 | |
| bracketing.append((p, len(stack))) | |
| continue | |
| if ch == '"' or ch == "'": | |
| # consume string | |
| # Note that study1 did this with a Python loop, but | |
| # we use a regexp here; the reason is speed in both | |
| # cases; the string may be huge, but study1 pre-squashed | |
| # strings to a couple of characters per line. study1 | |
| # also needed to keep track of newlines, and we don't | |
| # have to. | |
| bracketing.append((p, len(stack)+1)) | |
| lastch = ch | |
| p = _match_stringre(code, p, q).end() | |
| bracketing.append((p, len(stack))) | |
| continue | |
| if ch == '#': | |
| # consume comment and trailing newline | |
| bracketing.append((p, len(stack)+1)) | |
| p = code.find('\n', p, q) + 1 | |
| assert p > 0 | |
| bracketing.append((p, len(stack))) | |
| continue | |
| assert ch == '\\' | |
| p = p+1 # beyond backslash | |
| assert p < q | |
| if code[p] != '\n': | |
| # the program is invalid, but can't complain | |
| lastch = ch + code[p] | |
| p = p+1 # beyond escaped char | |
| # end while p < q: | |
| self.lastch = lastch | |
| self.lastopenbracketpos = stack[-1] if stack else None | |
| self.stmt_bracketing = tuple(bracketing) | |
| def compute_bracket_indent(self): | |
| """Return number of spaces the next line should be indented. | |
| Line continuation must be C_BRACKET. | |
| """ | |
| self._study2() | |
| assert self.continuation == C_BRACKET | |
| j = self.lastopenbracketpos | |
| code = self.code | |
| n = len(code) | |
| origi = i = code.rfind('\n', 0, j) + 1 | |
| j = j+1 # one beyond open bracket | |
| # find first list item; set i to start of its line | |
| while j < n: | |
| m = _itemre(code, j) | |
| if m: | |
| j = m.end() - 1 # index of first interesting char | |
| extra = 0 | |
| break | |
| else: | |
| # this line is junk; advance to next line | |
| i = j = code.find('\n', j) + 1 | |
| else: | |
| # nothing interesting follows the bracket; | |
| # reproduce the bracket line's indentation + a level | |
| j = i = origi | |
| while code[j] in " \t": | |
| j = j+1 | |
| extra = self.indentwidth | |
| return len(code[i:j].expandtabs(self.tabwidth)) + extra | |
| def get_num_lines_in_stmt(self): | |
| """Return number of physical lines in last stmt. | |
| The statement doesn't have to be an interesting statement. This is | |
| intended to be called when continuation is C_BACKSLASH. | |
| """ | |
| self._study1() | |
| goodlines = self.goodlines | |
| return goodlines[-1] - goodlines[-2] | |
| def compute_backslash_indent(self): | |
| """Return number of spaces the next line should be indented. | |
| Line continuation must be C_BACKSLASH. Also assume that the new | |
| line is the first one following the initial line of the stmt. | |
| """ | |
| self._study2() | |
| assert self.continuation == C_BACKSLASH | |
| code = self.code | |
| i = self.stmt_start | |
| while code[i] in " \t": | |
| i = i+1 | |
| startpos = i | |
| # See whether the initial line starts an assignment stmt; i.e., | |
| # look for an = operator | |
| endpos = code.find('\n', startpos) + 1 | |
| found = level = 0 | |
| while i < endpos: | |
| ch = code[i] | |
| if ch in "([{": | |
| level = level + 1 | |
| i = i+1 | |
| elif ch in ")]}": | |
| if level: | |
| level = level - 1 | |
| i = i+1 | |
| elif ch == '"' or ch == "'": | |
| i = _match_stringre(code, i, endpos).end() | |
| elif ch == '#': | |
| # This line is unreachable because the # makes a comment of | |
| # everything after it. | |
| break | |
| elif level == 0 and ch == '=' and \ | |
| (i == 0 or code[i-1] not in "=<>!") and \ | |
| code[i+1] != '=': | |
| found = 1 | |
| break | |
| else: | |
| i = i+1 | |
| if found: | |
| # found a legit =, but it may be the last interesting | |
| # thing on the line | |
| i = i+1 # move beyond the = | |
| found = re.match(r"\s*\\", code[i:endpos]) is None | |
| if not found: | |
| # oh well ... settle for moving beyond the first chunk | |
| # of non-whitespace chars | |
| i = startpos | |
| while code[i] not in " \t\n": | |
| i = i+1 | |
| return len(code[self.stmt_start:i].expandtabs(\ | |
| self.tabwidth)) + 1 | |
| def get_base_indent_string(self): | |
| """Return the leading whitespace on the initial line of the last | |
| interesting stmt. | |
| """ | |
| self._study2() | |
| i, n = self.stmt_start, self.stmt_end | |
| j = i | |
| code = self.code | |
| while j < n and code[j] in " \t": | |
| j = j + 1 | |
| return code[i:j] | |
| def is_block_opener(self): | |
| "Return True if the last interesting statement opens a block." | |
| self._study2() | |
| return self.lastch == ':' | |
| def is_block_closer(self): | |
| "Return True if the last interesting statement closes a block." | |
| self._study2() | |
| return _closere(self.code, self.stmt_start) is not None | |
| def get_last_stmt_bracketing(self): | |
| """Return bracketing structure of the last interesting statement. | |
| The returned tuple is in the format defined in _study2(). | |
| """ | |
| self._study2() | |
| return self.stmt_bracketing | |
| if __name__ == '__main__': | |
| from unittest import main | |
| main('idlelib.idle_test.test_pyparse', verbosity=2) | |
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