mirror of
https://git.lyx.org/repos/lyx.git
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731 lines
22 KiB
Python
731 lines
22 KiB
Python
# This file is part of lyx2lyx
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# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
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# Copyright (C) 2002-2011 Dekel Tsur <dekel@lyx.org>,
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# José Matos <jamatos@lyx.org>, Richard Heck <rgheck@comcast.net>
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#
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# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
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# modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
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# as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
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# of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
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#
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# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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# GNU General Public License for more details.
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#
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# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
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# Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
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"""
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This module offers several free functions to help parse lines.
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More documentaton is below, but here is a quick guide to what
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they do. Optional arguments are marked by brackets.
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find_token(lines, token[, start[, end[, ignorews]]]):
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Returns the first line i, start <= i < end, on which
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token is found at the beginning. Returns -1 if not
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found.
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If ignorews is (given and) True, then differences
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in whitespace do not count, except that there must be no
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extra whitespace following token itself.
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find_token_exact(lines, token[, start[, end]]]):
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As find_token, but with ignorews set to True.
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find_tokens(lines, tokens[, start[, end[, ignorews]]]):
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Returns the first line i, start <= i < end, on which
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one of the tokens in tokens is found at the beginning.
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Returns -1 if not found.
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If ignorews is (given and) True, then differences
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in whitespace do not count, except that there must be no
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extra whitespace following token itself.
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find_tokens_exact(lines, token[, start[, end]]):
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As find_tokens, but with ignorews True.
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find_token_backwards(lines, token, start):
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find_tokens_backwards(lines, tokens, start):
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As before, but look backwards.
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find_substring(lines, sub[, start[, end]]) -> int
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As find_token, but sub may be anywhere in the line.
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find_re(lines, rexp, start[, end]):
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As find_token, but rexp is a regular expression object,
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so it has to be passed as e.g.: re.compile(r'...').
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get_value(lines, token[, start[, end[, default[, delete]]]]):
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Similar to find_token, but it returns what follows the
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token on the found line. Example:
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get_value(document.header, "\\use_xetex", 0)
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will find a line like:
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\\use_xetex true
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and, in that case, return "true". (Note that whitespace
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is stripped.) The final argument, default, defaults to "",
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and is what is returned if we do not find anything. So you
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can use that to set a default.
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get_quoted_value(lines, token[, start[, end[, default[, delete]]]]):
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Similar to get_value, but it will strip quotes off the
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value, if they are present. So use this one for cases
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where the value is normally quoted.
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get_option_value(line, option):
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This assumes we have a line with something like:
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option="value"
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and returns value. Returns "" if not found.
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get_bool_value(lines, token[, start[, end[, default, delete]]]]):
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Like get_value, but returns a boolean.
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set_bool_value(lines, token, value[, start[, end]]):
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Find `token` in `lines[start:end]` and set to boolean value bool(`value`).
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Return old value. Raise ValueError if token is not in lines.
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del_token(lines, token[, start[, end]]):
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Like find_token, but deletes the line if it finds one.
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Returns True if a line got deleted, otherwise False.
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Use get_* with the optional argument "delete=True", if you want to
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get and delete a token.
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find_beginning_of(lines, i, start_token, end_token):
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Here, start_token and end_token are meant to be a matching
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pair, like "\\begin_layout" and "\\end_layout". We look for
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the start_token that pairs with the end_token that occurs
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on or after line i. Returns -1 if not found.
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So, in the layout case, this would find the \\begin_layout
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for the layout line i is in.
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Example:
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ec = find_token(document.body, "</cell", i)
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bc = find_beginning_of(document.body, ec, \
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"<cell", "</cell")
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Now, assuming no -1s, bc-ec wraps the cell for line i.
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find_end_of(lines, i, start_token, end_token):
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Like find_beginning_of, but looking for the matching
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end_token. This might look like:
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bc = find_token_(document.body, "<cell", i)
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ec = find_end_of(document.body, bc, "<cell", "</cell")
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Now, assuming no -1s, bc-ec wrap the next cell.
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find_end_of_inset(lines, i):
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Specialization of find_end_of for insets.
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find_end_of_layout(lines, i):
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Specialization of find_end_of for layouts.
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find_end_of_sequence(lines, i):
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Find the end of the sequence of layouts of the same kind.
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Considers nesting. If the last paragraph in sequence is nested,
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the position of the last \end_deeper is returned, else
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the position of the last \end_layout.
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is_in_inset(lines, i, inset, default=(-1,-1)):
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Check if line i is in an inset of the given type.
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If so, returns starting and ending lines. Otherwise,
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return default.
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Example:
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is_in_inset(document.body, i, "\\begin_inset Tabular")
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returns (-1,-1) unless i is within a table. If it is, then
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it returns the line on which the table begins and the one
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on which it ends. Note that this pair will evaulate to
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boolean True, so
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if is_in_inset(..., default=False):
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will do what you expect.
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get_containing_inset(lines, i):
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Finds out what kind of inset line i is within. Returns a
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list containing what follows \begin_inset on the line
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on which the inset begins, plus the starting and ending line.
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Returns False on any kind of error or if it isn't in an inset.
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So get_containing_inset(document.body, i) might return:
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("CommandInset ref", 300, 306)
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if i is within an InsetRef beginning on line 300 and ending
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on line 306.
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get_containing_layout(lines, i):
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As get_containing_inset, but for layout. Additionally returns the
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position of real paragraph start (after par params) as 4th value.
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find_nonempty_line(lines, start[, end):
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Finds the next non-empty line.
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check_token(line, token):
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Does line begin with token?
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is_nonempty_line(line):
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Does line contain something besides whitespace?
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count_pars_in_inset(lines, i):
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Counts the paragraphs inside an inset.
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"""
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import re
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# Utilities for one line
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def check_token(line, token):
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""" check_token(line, token) -> bool
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Return True if token is present in line and is the first element
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else returns False.
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Deprecated. Use line.startswith(token).
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"""
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return line.startswith(token)
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def is_nonempty_line(line):
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""" is_nonempty_line(line) -> bool
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Return False if line is either empty or it has only whitespaces,
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else return True."""
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return bool(line.strip())
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# Utilities for a list of lines
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def find_token(lines, token, start=0, end=0, ignorews=False):
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""" find_token(lines, token, start[[, end], ignorews]) -> int
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Return the lowest line where token is found, and is the first
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element, in lines[start, end].
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If ignorews is True (default is False), then differences in
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whitespace are ignored, but there must be whitespace following
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token itself.
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Use find_substring(lines, sub) to find a substring anywhere in `lines`.
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Return -1 on failure."""
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if end == 0 or end > len(lines):
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end = len(lines)
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if ignorews:
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y = token.split()
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for i in range(start, end):
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if ignorews:
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x = lines[i].split()
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if len(x) < len(y):
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continue
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if x[:len(y)] == y:
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return i
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else:
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if lines[i].startswith(token):
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return i
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return -1
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def find_token_exact(lines, token, start=0, end=0):
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return find_token(lines, token, start, end, True)
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def find_tokens(lines, tokens, start=0, end=0, ignorews=False):
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""" find_tokens(lines, tokens, start[[, end], ignorews]) -> int
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Return the lowest line where one token in tokens is found, and is
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the first element, in lines[start, end].
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Return -1 on failure."""
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if end == 0 or end > len(lines):
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end = len(lines)
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for i in range(start, end):
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for token in tokens:
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if ignorews:
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x = lines[i].split()
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y = token.split()
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if len(x) < len(y):
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continue
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if x[:len(y)] == y:
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return i
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else:
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if lines[i].startswith(token):
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return i
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return -1
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def find_tokens_exact(lines, tokens, start=0, end=0):
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return find_tokens(lines, tokens, start, end, True)
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def find_substring(lines, sub, start=0, end=0):
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""" find_substring(lines, sub[, start[, end]]) -> int
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Return the lowest line number `i` in [start, end] where
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`sub` is a substring of line[i].
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Return -1 on failure."""
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if end == 0 or end > len(lines):
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end = len(lines)
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for i in range(start, end):
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if sub in lines[i]:
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return i
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return -1
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def find_re(lines, rexp, start=0, end=0):
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""" find_re(lines, rexp[, start[, end]]) -> int
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Return the lowest line number `i` in [start, end] where the regular
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expression object `rexp` matches at the beginning of line[i].
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Return -1 on failure.
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Start your pattern with the wildcard ".*" to find a match anywhere in a
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line. Use find_substring() to find a substring anywhere in the lines.
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"""
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if end == 0 or end > len(lines):
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end = len(lines)
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for i in range(start, end):
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if rexp.match(lines[i]):
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return i
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return -1
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def find_token_backwards(lines, token, start):
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""" find_token_backwards(lines, token, start) -> int
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Return the highest line where token is found, and is the first
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element, in lines[start, end].
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Return -1 on failure."""
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for i in range(start, -1, -1):
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if lines[i].startswith(token):
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return i
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return -1
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def find_tokens_backwards(lines, tokens, start):
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""" find_tokens_backwards(lines, token, start) -> int
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Return the highest line where token is found, and is the first
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element, in lines[end, start].
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Return -1 on failure."""
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for i in range(start, -1, -1):
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line = lines[i]
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for token in tokens:
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if line.startswith(token):
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return i
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return -1
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def find_complete_lines(lines, sublines, start=0, end=0):
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"""Find first occurence of sequence `sublines` in list `lines`.
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Return index of first line or -1 on failure.
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Efficient search for a sub-list in a large list. Works for any values.
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>>> find_complete_lines([1, 2, 3, 1, 1, 2], [1, 2])
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0
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The `start` and `end` arguments work similar to list.index()
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>>> find_complete_lines([1, 2, 3, 1, 1 ,2], [1, 2], start=1)
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4
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>>> find_complete_lines([1, 2, 3, 1, 1 ,2], [1, 2], start=1, end=4)
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-1
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The return value can be used to substitute the sub-list.
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Take care to check before use:
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>>> l = [1, 1, 2]
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>>> s = find_complete_lines(l, [1, 2])
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>>> if s != -1:
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... l[s:s+2] = [3]; l
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[1, 3]
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See also del_complete_lines().
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"""
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if not sublines:
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return start
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end = end or len(lines)
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N = len(sublines)
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try:
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while True:
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for j, value in enumerate(sublines):
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i = lines.index(value, start, end)
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if j and i != start:
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start = i-j
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break
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start = i + 1
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else:
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return i +1 - N
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except ValueError: # `sublines` not found
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return -1
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def find_across_lines(lines, sub, start=0, end=0):
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sublines = sub.splitlines()
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if len(sublines) > 2:
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# at least 3 lines: the middle one(s) are complete -> use index search
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i = find_complete_lines(lines, sublines[1:-1], start+1, end-1)
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if i < start+1:
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return -1
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try:
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if (lines[i-1].endswith(sublines[0]) and
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lines[i+len(sublines)].startswith(sublines[-1])):
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return i-1
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except IndexError:
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pass
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elif len(sublines) > 1:
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# last subline must start a line
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i = find_token(lines, sublines[-1], start, end)
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if i < start + 1:
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return -1
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if lines[i-1].endswith(sublines[0]):
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return i-1
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else: # no line-break, may be in the middle of a line
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if end == 0 or end > len(lines):
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end = len(lines)
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for i in range(start, end):
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if sub in lines[i]:
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return i
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return -1
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def get_value(lines, token, start=0, end=0, default="", delete=False):
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"""Find `token` in `lines` and return part of line that follows it.
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Find the next line that looks like:
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token followed by other stuff
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If `delete` is True, delete the line (if found).
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Return "followed by other stuff" with leading and trailing
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whitespace removed.
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"""
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i = find_token_exact(lines, token, start, end)
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if i == -1:
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return default
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# TODO: establish desired behaviour, eventually change to
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# return lines.pop(i)[len(token):].strip() # or default
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# see test_parser_tools.py
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l = lines[i].split(None, 1)
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if delete:
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del(lines[i])
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if len(l) > 1:
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return l[1].strip()
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return default
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def get_quoted_value(lines, token, start=0, end=0, default="", delete=False):
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""" get_quoted_value(lines, token, start[[, end], default]) -> string
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Find the next line that looks like:
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token "followed by other stuff"
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Returns "followed by other stuff" with leading and trailing
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whitespace and quotes removed. If there are no quotes, that is OK too.
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So use get_value to preserve possible quotes, this one to remove them,
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if they are there.
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Note that we will NOT strip quotes from default!
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"""
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val = get_value(lines, token, start, end, "", delete)
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if not val:
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return default
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return val.strip('"')
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bool_values = {True: ("true", "1"),
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False: ("false", "0")}
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def get_bool_value(lines, token, start=0, end=0, default=None, delete=False):
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""" get_bool_value(lines, token, start[[, end], default]) -> string
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Find the next line that looks like:
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token <bool_value>
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Return True if <bool_value> is 1 or "true", False if bool_value
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is 0 or "false", else `default`.
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"""
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val = get_quoted_value(lines, token, start, end, default, delete)
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if val in bool_values[True]:
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return True
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if val in bool_values[False]:
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return False
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return default
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def set_bool_value(lines, token, value, start=0, end=0):
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"""Find `token` in `lines` and set to bool(`value`).
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Return previous value. Raise `ValueError` if `token` is not in lines.
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Cf. find_token(), get_bool_value().
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"""
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i = find_token(lines, token, start, end)
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if i == -1:
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raise ValueError
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oldvalue = get_bool_value(lines, token, i, i+1)
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if oldvalue is value:
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return oldvalue
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# Use 0/1 or true/false?
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if get_quoted_value(lines, token, i, i+1) in ('0', '1'):
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value_string = bool_values[value][1]
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else:
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value_string = bool_values[value][0]
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# set to new value
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lines[i] = "%s %s" % (token, value_string)
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return oldvalue
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def get_option_value(line, option):
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rx = option + '\s*=\s*"([^"]+)"'
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rx = re.compile(rx)
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m = rx.search(line)
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if not m:
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return ""
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return m.group(1)
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def set_option_value(line, option, value):
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rx = '(' + option + '\s*=\s*")[^"]+"'
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rx = re.compile(rx)
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m = rx.search(line)
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if not m:
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return line
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return re.sub(rx, '\g<1>' + value + '"', line)
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def del_token(lines, token, start=0, end=0):
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""" del_token(lines, token, start, end) -> int
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Find the first line in lines where token is the first element
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and delete that line. Returns True if we deleted a line, False
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if we did not."""
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k = find_token_exact(lines, token, start, end)
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if k == -1:
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return False
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del lines[k]
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return True
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def del_complete_lines(lines, sublines, start=0, end=0):
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"""Delete first occurence of `sublines` in list `lines`.
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Efficient deletion of a sub-list in a list. Works for any values.
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The `start` and `end` arguments work similar to list.index()
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|
|
Returns True if a deletion was done and False if not.
|
|
|
|
>>> l = [1, 0, 1, 1, 1, 2]
|
|
>>> del_complete_lines(l, [0, 1, 1])
|
|
True
|
|
>>> l
|
|
[1, 1, 2]
|
|
"""
|
|
i = find_complete_lines(lines, sublines, start, end)
|
|
if i == -1:
|
|
return False
|
|
del(lines[i:i+len(sublines)])
|
|
return True
|
|
|
|
|
|
def del_value(lines, token, start=0, end=0, default=None):
|
|
"""
|
|
Find the next line that looks like:
|
|
token followed by other stuff
|
|
Delete that line and return "followed by other stuff"
|
|
with leading and trailing whitespace removed.
|
|
|
|
If token is not found, return `default`.
|
|
"""
|
|
i = find_token_exact(lines, token, start, end)
|
|
if i == -1:
|
|
return default
|
|
return lines.pop(i)[len(token):].strip()
|
|
|
|
|
|
def find_beginning_of(lines, i, start_token, end_token):
|
|
count = 1
|
|
while i > 0:
|
|
i = find_tokens_backwards(lines, [start_token, end_token], i-1)
|
|
if i == -1:
|
|
return -1
|
|
if lines[i].startswith(end_token):
|
|
count = count+1
|
|
else:
|
|
count = count-1
|
|
if count == 0:
|
|
return i
|
|
return -1
|
|
|
|
|
|
def find_end_of(lines, i, start_token, end_token):
|
|
count = 1
|
|
n = len(lines)
|
|
while i < n:
|
|
i = find_tokens(lines, [end_token, start_token], i+1)
|
|
if i == -1:
|
|
return -1
|
|
if lines[i].startswith(start_token):
|
|
count = count+1
|
|
else:
|
|
count = count-1
|
|
if count == 0:
|
|
return i
|
|
return -1
|
|
|
|
|
|
def find_nonempty_line(lines, start=0, end=0):
|
|
if end == 0:
|
|
end = len(lines)
|
|
for i in range(start, end):
|
|
if lines[i].strip():
|
|
return i
|
|
return -1
|
|
|
|
|
|
def find_end_of_inset(lines, i):
|
|
" Find end of inset, where lines[i] is included."
|
|
return find_end_of(lines, i, "\\begin_inset", "\\end_inset")
|
|
|
|
|
|
def find_end_of_layout(lines, i):
|
|
" Find end of layout, where lines[i] is included."
|
|
return find_end_of(lines, i, "\\begin_layout", "\\end_layout")
|
|
|
|
|
|
def is_in_inset(lines, i, inset, default=(-1,-1)):
|
|
"""
|
|
Check if line i is in an inset of the given type.
|
|
If so, return starting and ending lines, otherwise `default`.
|
|
Example:
|
|
is_in_inset(document.body, i, "\\begin_inset Tabular")
|
|
returns (-1,-1) if `i` is not within a "Tabular" inset (i.e. a table).
|
|
If it is, then it returns the line on which the table begins and the one
|
|
on which it ends.
|
|
Note that this pair will evaulate to boolean True, so (with the optional
|
|
default value set to False)
|
|
if is_in_inset(..., default=False):
|
|
will do what you expect.
|
|
"""
|
|
start = find_token_backwards(lines, inset, i)
|
|
if start == -1:
|
|
return default
|
|
end = find_end_of_inset(lines, start)
|
|
if end < i: # this includes the notfound case.
|
|
return default
|
|
return (start, end)
|
|
|
|
|
|
def get_containing_inset(lines, i):
|
|
'''
|
|
Finds out what kind of inset line i is within. Returns a
|
|
list containing (i) what follows \begin_inset on the line
|
|
on which the inset begins, plus the starting and ending line.
|
|
Returns False on any kind of error or if it isn't in an inset.
|
|
'''
|
|
j = i
|
|
while True:
|
|
stins = find_token_backwards(lines, "\\begin_inset", j)
|
|
if stins == -1:
|
|
return False
|
|
endins = find_end_of_inset(lines, stins)
|
|
if endins > j:
|
|
break
|
|
j = stins - 1
|
|
|
|
if endins < i:
|
|
return False
|
|
|
|
inset = get_value(lines, "\\begin_inset", stins)
|
|
if inset == "":
|
|
# shouldn't happen
|
|
return False
|
|
return (inset, stins, endins)
|
|
|
|
|
|
def get_containing_layout(lines, i):
|
|
'''
|
|
Find out what kind of layout line `i` is within.
|
|
Return a tuple
|
|
(layoutname, layoutstart, layoutend, startofcontent)
|
|
containing
|
|
* layout style/name,
|
|
* start line number,
|
|
* end line number, and
|
|
* number of first paragraph line (after all params).
|
|
Return `False` on any kind of error.
|
|
'''
|
|
j = i
|
|
while True:
|
|
stlay = find_token_backwards(lines, "\\begin_layout", j)
|
|
if stlay == -1:
|
|
return False
|
|
endlay = find_end_of_layout(lines, stlay)
|
|
if endlay > i:
|
|
break
|
|
j = stlay - 1
|
|
|
|
if endlay < i:
|
|
return False
|
|
|
|
layoutname = get_value(lines, "\\begin_layout", stlay)
|
|
if layoutname == "": # layout style missing
|
|
# TODO: What shall we do in this case?
|
|
pass
|
|
# layoutname == "Standard" # use same fallback as the LyX parser:
|
|
# raise ValueError("Missing layout name on line %d"%stlay) # diagnosis
|
|
# return False # generic error response
|
|
par_params = ["\\noindent", "\\indent", "\\indent-toggle", "\\leftindent",
|
|
"\\start_of_appendix", "\\paragraph_spacing", "\\align",
|
|
"\\labelwidthstring"]
|
|
stpar = stlay
|
|
while True:
|
|
stpar += 1
|
|
if lines[stpar].split(' ', 1)[0] not in par_params:
|
|
break
|
|
return (layoutname, stlay, endlay, stpar)
|
|
|
|
|
|
def count_pars_in_inset(lines, i):
|
|
'''
|
|
Counts the paragraphs within this inset
|
|
'''
|
|
ins = get_containing_inset(lines, i)
|
|
if ins == -1:
|
|
return -1
|
|
pars = 0
|
|
for j in range(ins[1], ins[2]):
|
|
m = re.match(r'\\begin_layout (.*)', lines[j])
|
|
if m and get_containing_inset(lines, j)[0] == ins[0]:
|
|
pars += 1
|
|
|
|
return pars
|
|
|
|
|
|
def find_end_of_sequence(lines, i):
|
|
'''
|
|
Returns the end of a sequence of identical layouts.
|
|
'''
|
|
lay = get_containing_layout(lines, i)
|
|
if lay == False:
|
|
return -1
|
|
layout = lay[0]
|
|
endlay = lay[2]
|
|
i = endlay
|
|
while True:
|
|
m = re.match(r'\\begin_layout (.*)', lines[i])
|
|
if m and m.group(1) != layout:
|
|
return endlay
|
|
elif lines[i] == "\\begin_deeper":
|
|
j = find_end_of(lines, i, "\\begin_deeper", "\\end_deeper")
|
|
if j != -1:
|
|
i = j
|
|
endlay = j
|
|
continue
|
|
if m and m.group(1) == layout:
|
|
endlay = find_end_of_layout(lines, i)
|
|
i = endlay
|
|
continue
|
|
if i == len(lines) - 1:
|
|
break
|
|
i = i + 1
|
|
|
|
return endlay
|