Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/fancyopts.py @ 25783:1f6878c87c25
templater: introduce one-pass parsing of nested template strings
Instead of re-parsing quoted strings as templates, the tokenizer can delegate
the parsing of nested template strings to the parser. It has two benefits:
1. syntax errors can be reported with absolute positions
2. nested template can use quotes just like shell: "{"{rev}"}"
It doesn't sound nice that the tokenizer recurses into the parser. We could
instead make the tokenize itself recursive, but it would be much more
complicated because we would have to adjust binding strengths carefully and
put dummy infix operators to concatenate template fragments.
Now "string" token without r"" never appears. It will be removed by the next
patch.
author | Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 15 Jun 2015 23:11:35 +0900 |
parents | 69e8384a436c |
children | 6002e2d95e54 |
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# fancyopts.py - better command line parsing # # Copyright 2005-2009 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> and others # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. import getopt import util from i18n import _ def gnugetopt(args, options, longoptions): """Parse options mostly like getopt.gnu_getopt. This is different from getopt.gnu_getopt in that an argument of - will become an argument of - instead of vanishing completely. """ extraargs = [] if '--' in args: stopindex = args.index('--') extraargs = args[stopindex + 1:] args = args[:stopindex] opts, parseargs = getopt.getopt(args, options, longoptions) args = [] while parseargs: arg = parseargs.pop(0) if arg and arg[0] == '-' and len(arg) > 1: parseargs.insert(0, arg) topts, newparseargs = getopt.getopt(parseargs, options, longoptions) opts = opts + topts parseargs = newparseargs else: args.append(arg) args.extend(extraargs) return opts, args def fancyopts(args, options, state, gnu=False): """ read args, parse options, and store options in state each option is a tuple of: short option or '' long option default value description option value label(optional) option types include: boolean or none - option sets variable in state to true string - parameter string is stored in state list - parameter string is added to a list integer - parameter strings is stored as int function - call function with parameter non-option args are returned """ namelist = [] shortlist = '' argmap = {} defmap = {} for option in options: if len(option) == 5: short, name, default, comment, dummy = option else: short, name, default, comment = option # convert opts to getopt format oname = name name = name.replace('-', '_') argmap['-' + short] = argmap['--' + oname] = name defmap[name] = default # copy defaults to state if isinstance(default, list): state[name] = default[:] elif callable(default): state[name] = None else: state[name] = default # does it take a parameter? if not (default is None or default is True or default is False): if short: short += ':' if oname: oname += '=' if short: shortlist += short if name: namelist.append(oname) # parse arguments if gnu: parse = gnugetopt else: parse = getopt.getopt opts, args = parse(args, shortlist, namelist) # transfer result to state for opt, val in opts: name = argmap[opt] obj = defmap[name] t = type(obj) if callable(obj): state[name] = defmap[name](val) elif t is type(1): try: state[name] = int(val) except ValueError: raise util.Abort(_('invalid value %r for option %s, ' 'expected int') % (val, opt)) elif t is type(''): state[name] = val elif t is type([]): state[name].append(val) elif t is type(None) or t is type(False): state[name] = True # return unparsed args return args