Mercurial > hg
view tests/filterpyflakes.py @ 20655:37f3be9d1541
doc: gendoc.py creates valid output for option descriptions with newlines
gendoc.py did not handle the hanging indentation for descriptions. Work around
this by joining all in one single line (same as in minirst since previous
patch).
This problem occurred when translations of option lines were very long. Do not
bother the translators with this detail.
On a long option description, the translator continued on a new line as usual.
gendoc.py created invalid rst syntax like this:
-o, --option
Description line 1
description line 2
The new output is:
-o, --option
Description line 1 description line 2
The lines could theoretically become very long, but line breaking is handled
when generating the final documentation.
author | Simon Heimberg <simohe@besonet.ch> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 20 Feb 2014 09:17:22 +0100 |
parents | 681f7b9213a4 |
children | 0768cda8b579 |
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line source
#!/usr/bin/env python # Filter output by pyflakes to control which warnings we check import sys, re, os def makekey(typeandline): """ for sorting lines by: msgtype, path/to/file, lineno, message typeandline is a sequence of a message type and the entire message line the message line format is path/to/file:line: message >>> makekey((3, 'example.py:36: any message')) (3, 'example.py', 36, ' any message') >>> makekey((7, 'path/to/file.py:68: dummy message')) (7, 'path/to/file.py', 68, ' dummy message') >>> makekey((2, 'fn:88: m')) > makekey((2, 'fn:9: m')) True """ msgtype, line = typeandline fname, line, message = line.split(":", 2) # line as int for ordering 9 before 88 return msgtype, fname, int(line), message lines = [] for line in sys.stdin: # We whitelist tests (see more messages in pyflakes.messages) pats = [ r"imported but unused", r"local variable '.*' is assigned to but never used", r"unable to detect undefined names", ] for msgtype, pat in enumerate(pats): if re.search(pat, line): break # pattern matches else: continue # no pattern matched, next line fn = line.split(':', 1)[0] f = open(os.path.join(os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(__file__)), fn)) data = f.read() f.close() if 'no-' 'check-code' in data: continue lines.append((msgtype, line)) for msgtype, line in sorted(lines, key=makekey): sys.stdout.write(line) print