Mercurial > hg
view i18n/hggettext @ 19854:49d4919d21c2
shelve: add a shelve extension to save/restore working changes
This extension saves shelved changes using a temporary draft commit,
and bundles the temporary commit and its draft ancestors, then
strips them.
This strategy makes it possible to use Mercurial's bundle and merge
machinery to resolve conflicts if necessary when unshelving, even
when the destination commit or its ancestors have been amended,
squashed, or evolved. (Once a change has been unshelved, its
associated unbundled commits are either rolled back or stripped.)
Storing the shelved change as a bundle also avoids the difficulty
that hidden commits would cause, of making it impossible to amend
the parent if it is a draft commits (a common scenario).
Although this extension shares its name and some functionality with
the third party hgshelve extension, it has little else in common.
Notably, the hgshelve extension shelves changes as unified diffs,
which makes conflict resolution a matter of finding .rej files and
conflict markers, and cleaning up the mess by hand.
We do not yet allow hunk-level choosing of changes to record.
Compared to the hgshelve extension, this is a small regression in
usability, but we hope to integrate that at a later point, once the
record machinery becomes more reusable and robust.
author | David Soria Parra <dsp@experimentalworks.net> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 29 Aug 2013 09:22:13 -0700 |
parents | 80deae3bc5ea |
children | 2516bba643e7 |
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#!/usr/bin/env python # # hggettext - carefully extract docstrings for Mercurial # # Copyright 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. # The normalize function is taken from pygettext which is distributed # with Python under the Python License, which is GPL compatible. """Extract docstrings from Mercurial commands. Compared to pygettext, this script knows about the cmdtable and table dictionaries used by Mercurial, and will only extract docstrings from functions mentioned therein. Use xgettext like normal to extract strings marked as translatable and join the message cataloges to get the final catalog. """ import os, sys, inspect def escape(s): # The order is important, the backslash must be escaped first # since the other replacements introduce new backslashes # themselves. s = s.replace('\\', '\\\\') s = s.replace('\n', '\\n') s = s.replace('\r', '\\r') s = s.replace('\t', '\\t') s = s.replace('"', '\\"') return s def normalize(s): # This converts the various Python string types into a format that # is appropriate for .po files, namely much closer to C style. lines = s.split('\n') if len(lines) == 1: s = '"' + escape(s) + '"' else: if not lines[-1]: del lines[-1] lines[-1] = lines[-1] + '\n' lines = map(escape, lines) lineterm = '\\n"\n"' s = '""\n"' + lineterm.join(lines) + '"' return s def poentry(path, lineno, s): return ('#: %s:%d\n' % (path, lineno) + 'msgid %s\n' % normalize(s) + 'msgstr ""\n') def offset(src, doc, name, default): """Compute offset or issue a warning on stdout.""" # Backslashes in doc appear doubled in src. end = src.find(doc.replace('\\', '\\\\')) if end == -1: # This can happen if the docstring contains unnecessary escape # sequences such as \" in a triple-quoted string. The problem # is that \" is turned into " and so doc wont appear in src. sys.stderr.write("warning: unknown offset in %s, assuming %d lines\n" % (name, default)) return default else: return src.count('\n', 0, end) def importpath(path): """Import a path like foo/bar/baz.py and return the baz module.""" if path.endswith('.py'): path = path[:-3] if path.endswith('/__init__'): path = path[:-9] path = path.replace('/', '.') mod = __import__(path) for comp in path.split('.')[1:]: mod = getattr(mod, comp) return mod def docstrings(path): """Extract docstrings from path. This respects the Mercurial cmdtable/table convention and will only extract docstrings from functions mentioned in these tables. """ mod = importpath(path) if mod.__doc__: src = open(path).read() lineno = 1 + offset(src, mod.__doc__, path, 7) print poentry(path, lineno, mod.__doc__) functions = list(getattr(mod, 'i18nfunctions', [])) functions = [(f, True) for f in functions] cmdtable = getattr(mod, 'cmdtable', {}) if not cmdtable: # Maybe we are processing mercurial.commands? cmdtable = getattr(mod, 'table', {}) functions.extend((c[0], False) for c in cmdtable.itervalues()) for func, rstrip in functions: if func.__doc__: src = inspect.getsource(func) name = "%s.%s" % (path, func.__name__) lineno = func.func_code.co_firstlineno doc = func.__doc__ if rstrip: doc = doc.rstrip() lineno += offset(src, doc, name, 1) print poentry(path, lineno, doc) def rawtext(path): src = open(path).read() print poentry(path, 1, src) if __name__ == "__main__": # It is very important that we import the Mercurial modules from # the source tree where hggettext is executed. Otherwise we might # accidentally import and extract strings from a Mercurial # installation mentioned in PYTHONPATH. sys.path.insert(0, os.getcwd()) from mercurial import demandimport; demandimport.enable() for path in sys.argv[1:]: if path.endswith('.txt'): rawtext(path) else: docstrings(path)