- Issue #719888: Updated tokenize to use a bytes API. generate_tokens has been

renamed tokenize and now works with bytes rather than strings. A new
  detect_encoding function has been added for determining source file encoding
  according to PEP-0263. Token sequences returned by tokenize always start
  with an ENCODING token which specifies the encoding used to decode the file.
  This token is used to encode the output of untokenize back to bytes.

Credit goes to Michael "I'm-going-to-name-my-first-child-unittest" Foord from Resolver Systems for this work.
This commit is contained in:
Trent Nelson 2008-03-18 22:41:35 +00:00
parent 112367a980
commit 428de65ca9
16 changed files with 609 additions and 182 deletions

View file

@ -209,3 +209,5 @@ docs@python.org), and we'll be glad to correct the problem.
* Moshe Zadka
* Milan Zamazal
* Cheng Zhang
* Trent Nelson
* Michael Foord

View file

@ -9,50 +9,34 @@
The :mod:`tokenize` module provides a lexical scanner for Python source code,
implemented in Python. The scanner in this module returns comments as tokens as
well, making it useful for implementing "pretty-printers," including colorizers
for on-screen displays.
implemented in Python. The scanner in this module returns comments as tokens
as well, making it useful for implementing "pretty-printers," including
colorizers for on-screen displays.
The primary entry point is a :term:`generator`:
.. function:: generate_tokens(readline)
.. function:: tokenize(readline)
The :func:`generate_tokens` generator requires one argument, *readline*, which
The :func:`tokenize` generator requires one argument, *readline*, which
must be a callable object which provides the same interface as the
:meth:`readline` method of built-in file objects (see section
:ref:`bltin-file-objects`). Each call to the function should return one line of
input as a string.
:ref:`bltin-file-objects`). Each call to the function should return one
line of input as bytes.
The generator produces 5-tuples with these members: the token type; the token
string; a 2-tuple ``(srow, scol)`` of ints specifying the row and column where
the token begins in the source; a 2-tuple ``(erow, ecol)`` of ints specifying
the row and column where the token ends in the source; and the line on which the
token was found. The line passed is the *logical* line; continuation lines are
included.
An older entry point is retained for backward compatibility:
.. function:: tokenize(readline[, tokeneater])
The :func:`tokenize` function accepts two parameters: one representing the input
stream, and one providing an output mechanism for :func:`tokenize`.
The first parameter, *readline*, must be a callable object which provides the
same interface as the :meth:`readline` method of built-in file objects (see
section :ref:`bltin-file-objects`). Each call to the function should return one
line of input as a string. Alternately, *readline* may be a callable object that
signals completion by raising :exc:`StopIteration`.
The second parameter, *tokeneater*, must also be a callable object. It is
called once for each token, with five arguments, corresponding to the tuples
generated by :func:`generate_tokens`.
The generator produces 5-tuples with these members: the token type; the
token string; a 2-tuple ``(srow, scol)`` of ints specifying the row and
column where the token begins in the source; a 2-tuple ``(erow, ecol)`` of
ints specifying the row and column where the token ends in the source; and
the line on which the token was found. The line passed is the *logical*
line; continuation lines are included.
tokenize determines the source encoding of the file by looking for a utf-8
bom or encoding cookie, according to :pep:`263`.
All constants from the :mod:`token` module are also exported from
:mod:`tokenize`, as are two additional token type values that might be passed to
the *tokeneater* function by :func:`tokenize`:
:mod:`tokenize`, as are three additional token type values:
.. data:: COMMENT
@ -62,55 +46,95 @@ the *tokeneater* function by :func:`tokenize`:
.. data:: NL
Token value used to indicate a non-terminating newline. The NEWLINE token
indicates the end of a logical line of Python code; NL tokens are generated when
a logical line of code is continued over multiple physical lines.
indicates the end of a logical line of Python code; NL tokens are generated
when a logical line of code is continued over multiple physical lines.
Another function is provided to reverse the tokenization process. This is useful
for creating tools that tokenize a script, modify the token stream, and write
back the modified script.
.. data:: ENCODING
Token value that indicates the encoding used to decode the source bytes
into text. The first token returned by :func:`tokenize` will always be an
ENCODING token.
Another function is provided to reverse the tokenization process. This is
useful for creating tools that tokenize a script, modify the token stream, and
write back the modified script.
.. function:: untokenize(iterable)
Converts tokens back into Python source code. The *iterable* must return
sequences with at least two elements, the token type and the token string. Any
additional sequence elements are ignored.
The reconstructed script is returned as a single string. The result is
guaranteed to tokenize back to match the input so that the conversion is
lossless and round-trips are assured. The guarantee applies only to the token
type and token string as the spacing between tokens (column positions) may
change.
Converts tokens back into Python source code. The *iterable* must return
sequences with at least two elements, the token type and the token string.
Any additional sequence elements are ignored.
The reconstructed script is returned as a single string. The result is
guaranteed to tokenize back to match the input so that the conversion is
lossless and round-trips are assured. The guarantee applies only to the
token type and token string as the spacing between tokens (column
positions) may change.
It returns bytes, encoded using the ENCODING token, which is the first
token sequence output by :func:`tokenize`.
:func:`tokenize` needs to detect the encoding of source files it tokenizes. The
function it uses to do this is available:
.. function:: detect_encoding(readline)
The :func:`detect_encoding` function is used to detect the encoding that
should be used to decode a Python source file. It requires one argment,
readline, in the same way as the :func:`tokenize` generator.
It will call readline a maximum of twice, and return the encoding used
(as a string) and a list of any lines (not decoded from bytes) it has read
in.
It detects the encoding from the presence of a utf-8 bom or an encoding
cookie as specified in pep-0263. If both a bom and a cookie are present,
but disagree, a SyntaxError will be raised.
If no encoding is specified, then the default of 'utf-8' will be returned.
Example of a script re-writer that transforms float literals into Decimal
objects::
def decistmt(s):
"""Substitute Decimals for floats in a string of statements.
def decistmt(s):
"""Substitute Decimals for floats in a string of statements.
>>> from decimal import Decimal
>>> s = 'print(+21.3e-5*-.1234/81.7)'
>>> decistmt(s)
"print (+Decimal ('21.3e-5')*-Decimal ('.1234')/Decimal ('81.7'))"
The format of the exponent is inherited from the platform C library.
Known cases are "e-007" (Windows) and "e-07" (not Windows). Since
we're only showing 12 digits, and the 13th isn't close to 5, the
rest of the output should be platform-independent.
>>> exec(s) #doctest: +ELLIPSIS
-3.21716034272e-0...7
Output from calculations with Decimal should be identical across all
platforms.
>>> exec(decistmt(s))
-3.217160342717258261933904529E-7
"""
result = []
g = tokenize(BytesIO(s.encode('utf-8')).readline) # tokenize the string
for toknum, tokval, _, _, _ in g:
if toknum == NUMBER and '.' in tokval: # replace NUMBER tokens
result.extend([
(NAME, 'Decimal'),
(OP, '('),
(STRING, repr(tokval)),
(OP, ')')
])
else:
result.append((toknum, tokval))
return untokenize(result).decode('utf-8')
>>> from decimal import Decimal
>>> s = 'print(+21.3e-5*-.1234/81.7)'
>>> decistmt(s)
"print(+Decimal ('21.3e-5')*-Decimal ('.1234')/Decimal ('81.7'))"
>>> exec(s)
-3.21716034272e-007
>>> exec(decistmt(s))
-3.217160342717258261933904529E-7
"""
result = []
g = generate_tokens(StringIO(s).readline) # tokenize the string
for toknum, tokval, _, _, _ in g:
if toknum == NUMBER and '.' in tokval: # replace NUMBER tokens
result.extend([
(NAME, 'Decimal'),
(OP, '('),
(STRING, repr(tokval)),
(OP, ')')
])
else:
result.append((toknum, tokval))
return untokenize(result)

View file

@ -392,6 +392,9 @@ details.
* The functions :func:`os.tmpnam`, :func:`os.tempnam` and :func:`os.tmpfile`
have been removed in favor of the :mod:`tempfile` module.
* The :mod:`tokenize` module has been changed to work with bytes. The main
entry point is now :func:`tokenize.tokenize`, instead of generate_tokens.
.. ======================================================================
.. whole new modules get described in subsections here

View file

@ -1437,7 +1437,9 @@ def run(self):
_tokenize.tabsize = self.tabwidth
try:
try:
_tokenize.tokenize(self.readline, self.tokeneater)
tokens = _tokenize.generate_tokens(self.readline)
for token in tokens:
self.tokeneater(*token)
except _tokenize.TokenError:
# since we cut off the tokenizer early, we can trigger
# spurious errors

View file

@ -657,7 +657,9 @@ def getblock(lines):
"""Extract the block of code at the top of the given list of lines."""
blockfinder = BlockFinder()
try:
tokenize.tokenize(iter(lines).__next__, blockfinder.tokeneater)
tokens = tokenize.generate_tokens(iter(lines).__next__)
for _token in tokens:
blockfinder.tokeneater(*_token)
except (EndOfBlock, IndentationError):
pass
return lines[:blockfinder.last]

View file

@ -1,13 +1,14 @@
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
doctests = """
Tests for the tokenize module.
>>> import glob, random, sys
The tests can be really simple. Given a small fragment of source
code, print out a table with tokens. The ENDMARK is omitted for
brevity.
>>> dump_tokens("1 + 1")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NUMBER '1' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '+' (1, 2) (1, 3)
NUMBER '1' (1, 4) (1, 5)
@ -15,6 +16,7 @@
>>> dump_tokens("if False:\\n"
... " # NL\\n"
... " True = False # NEWLINE\\n")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'if' (1, 0) (1, 2)
NAME 'False' (1, 3) (1, 8)
OP ':' (1, 8) (1, 9)
@ -34,27 +36,12 @@
... x += 2
... x += 5
... \"""
>>> for tok in generate_tokens(StringIO(indent_error_file).readline): pass
>>> readline = BytesIO(indent_error_file.encode('utf-8')).readline
>>> for tok in tokenize(readline): pass
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
IndentationError: unindent does not match any outer indentation level
Test roundtrip for `untokenize`. `f` is an open file or a string. The source
code in f is tokenized, converted back to source code via tokenize.untokenize(),
and tokenized again from the latter. The test fails if the second tokenization
doesn't match the first.
>>> def roundtrip(f):
... if isinstance(f, str): f = StringIO(f)
... token_list = list(generate_tokens(f.readline))
... f.close()
... tokens1 = [tok[:2] for tok in token_list]
... new_text = untokenize(tokens1)
... readline = iter(new_text.splitlines(1)).__next__
... tokens2 = [tok[:2] for tok in generate_tokens(readline)]
... return tokens1 == tokens2
...
There are some standard formattig practises that are easy to get right.
>>> roundtrip("if x == 1:\\n"
@ -67,14 +54,14 @@
Some people use different formatting conventions, which makes
untokenize a little trickier. Note that this test involves trailing
whitespace after the colon. Note that we use hex escapes to make the
two trailing blanks apperant in the expected output.
two trailing blanks apparent in the expected output.
>>> roundtrip("if x == 1 : \\n"
... " print(x)\\n")
True
>>> f = test_support.findfile("tokenize_tests.txt")
>>> roundtrip(open(f))
>>> roundtrip(open(f, 'rb'))
True
>>> roundtrip("if x == 1:\\n"
@ -122,27 +109,33 @@
Ordinary integers and binary operators
>>> dump_tokens("0xff <= 255")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NUMBER '0xff' (1, 0) (1, 4)
OP '<=' (1, 5) (1, 7)
NUMBER '255' (1, 8) (1, 11)
>>> dump_tokens("0b10 <= 255")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NUMBER '0b10' (1, 0) (1, 4)
OP '<=' (1, 5) (1, 7)
NUMBER '255' (1, 8) (1, 11)
>>> dump_tokens("0o123 <= 0O123")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NUMBER '0o123' (1, 0) (1, 5)
OP '<=' (1, 6) (1, 8)
NUMBER '0O123' (1, 9) (1, 14)
>>> dump_tokens("1234567 > ~0x15")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NUMBER '1234567' (1, 0) (1, 7)
OP '>' (1, 8) (1, 9)
OP '~' (1, 10) (1, 11)
NUMBER '0x15' (1, 11) (1, 15)
>>> dump_tokens("2134568 != 1231515")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NUMBER '2134568' (1, 0) (1, 7)
OP '!=' (1, 8) (1, 10)
NUMBER '1231515' (1, 11) (1, 18)
>>> dump_tokens("(-124561-1) & 200000000")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
OP '(' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '-' (1, 1) (1, 2)
NUMBER '124561' (1, 2) (1, 8)
@ -152,15 +145,18 @@
OP '&' (1, 12) (1, 13)
NUMBER '200000000' (1, 14) (1, 23)
>>> dump_tokens("0xdeadbeef != -1")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NUMBER '0xdeadbeef' (1, 0) (1, 10)
OP '!=' (1, 11) (1, 13)
OP '-' (1, 14) (1, 15)
NUMBER '1' (1, 15) (1, 16)
>>> dump_tokens("0xdeadc0de & 12345")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NUMBER '0xdeadc0de' (1, 0) (1, 10)
OP '&' (1, 11) (1, 12)
NUMBER '12345' (1, 13) (1, 18)
>>> dump_tokens("0xFF & 0x15 | 1234")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NUMBER '0xFF' (1, 0) (1, 4)
OP '&' (1, 5) (1, 6)
NUMBER '0x15' (1, 7) (1, 11)
@ -170,18 +166,22 @@
Long integers
>>> dump_tokens("x = 0")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
NUMBER '0' (1, 4) (1, 5)
>>> dump_tokens("x = 0xfffffffffff")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
NUMBER '0xffffffffff (1, 4) (1, 17)
>>> dump_tokens("x = 123141242151251616110")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
NUMBER '123141242151 (1, 4) (1, 25)
>>> dump_tokens("x = -15921590215012591")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
OP '-' (1, 4) (1, 5)
@ -190,32 +190,39 @@
Floating point numbers
>>> dump_tokens("x = 3.14159")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
NUMBER '3.14159' (1, 4) (1, 11)
>>> dump_tokens("x = 314159.")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
NUMBER '314159.' (1, 4) (1, 11)
>>> dump_tokens("x = .314159")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
NUMBER '.314159' (1, 4) (1, 11)
>>> dump_tokens("x = 3e14159")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
NUMBER '3e14159' (1, 4) (1, 11)
>>> dump_tokens("x = 3E123")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
NUMBER '3E123' (1, 4) (1, 9)
>>> dump_tokens("x+y = 3e-1230")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '+' (1, 1) (1, 2)
NAME 'y' (1, 2) (1, 3)
OP '=' (1, 4) (1, 5)
NUMBER '3e-1230' (1, 6) (1, 13)
>>> dump_tokens("x = 3.14e159")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
NUMBER '3.14e159' (1, 4) (1, 12)
@ -223,6 +230,7 @@
String literals
>>> dump_tokens("x = ''; y = \\\"\\\"")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
STRING "''" (1, 4) (1, 6)
@ -231,6 +239,7 @@
OP '=' (1, 10) (1, 11)
STRING '""' (1, 12) (1, 14)
>>> dump_tokens("x = '\\\"'; y = \\\"'\\\"")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
STRING '\\'"\\'' (1, 4) (1, 7)
@ -239,24 +248,28 @@
OP '=' (1, 11) (1, 12)
STRING '"\\'"' (1, 13) (1, 16)
>>> dump_tokens("x = \\\"doesn't \\\"shrink\\\", does it\\\"")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
STRING '"doesn\\'t "' (1, 4) (1, 14)
NAME 'shrink' (1, 14) (1, 20)
STRING '", does it"' (1, 20) (1, 31)
>>> dump_tokens("x = 'abc' + 'ABC'")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
STRING "'abc'" (1, 4) (1, 9)
OP '+' (1, 10) (1, 11)
STRING "'ABC'" (1, 12) (1, 17)
>>> dump_tokens('y = "ABC" + "ABC"')
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'y' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
STRING '"ABC"' (1, 4) (1, 9)
OP '+' (1, 10) (1, 11)
STRING '"ABC"' (1, 12) (1, 17)
>>> dump_tokens("x = r'abc' + r'ABC' + R'ABC' + R'ABC'")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
STRING "r'abc'" (1, 4) (1, 10)
@ -267,6 +280,7 @@
OP '+' (1, 29) (1, 30)
STRING "R'ABC'" (1, 31) (1, 37)
>>> dump_tokens('y = r"abc" + r"ABC" + R"ABC" + R"ABC"')
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'y' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
STRING 'r"abc"' (1, 4) (1, 10)
@ -280,6 +294,7 @@
Operators
>>> dump_tokens("def d22(a, b, c=2, d=2, *k): pass")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'def' (1, 0) (1, 3)
NAME 'd22' (1, 4) (1, 7)
OP '(' (1, 7) (1, 8)
@ -301,6 +316,7 @@
OP ':' (1, 27) (1, 28)
NAME 'pass' (1, 29) (1, 33)
>>> dump_tokens("def d01v_(a=1, *k, **w): pass")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'def' (1, 0) (1, 3)
NAME 'd01v_' (1, 4) (1, 9)
OP '(' (1, 9) (1, 10)
@ -321,6 +337,7 @@
>>> dump_tokens("if 1 < 1 > 1 == 1 >= 5 <= 0x15 <= 0x12 != " +
... "1 and 5 in 1 not in 1 is 1 or 5 is not 1: pass")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'if' (1, 0) (1, 2)
NUMBER '1' (1, 3) (1, 4)
OP '<' (1, 5) (1, 6)
@ -357,6 +374,7 @@
Shift
>>> dump_tokens("x = 1 << 1 >> 5")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
NUMBER '1' (1, 4) (1, 5)
@ -368,6 +386,7 @@
Additive
>>> dump_tokens("x = 1 - y + 15 - 1 + 0x124 + z + a[5]")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
NUMBER '1' (1, 4) (1, 5)
@ -390,6 +409,7 @@
Multiplicative
>>> dump_tokens("x = 1//1*1/5*12%0x12")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'x' (1, 0) (1, 1)
OP '=' (1, 2) (1, 3)
NUMBER '1' (1, 4) (1, 5)
@ -407,6 +427,7 @@
Unary
>>> dump_tokens("~1 ^ 1 & 1 |1 ^ -1")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
OP '~' (1, 0) (1, 1)
NUMBER '1' (1, 1) (1, 2)
OP '^' (1, 3) (1, 4)
@ -419,6 +440,7 @@
OP '-' (1, 16) (1, 17)
NUMBER '1' (1, 17) (1, 18)
>>> dump_tokens("-1*1/1+1*1//1 - ---1**1")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
OP '-' (1, 0) (1, 1)
NUMBER '1' (1, 1) (1, 2)
OP '*' (1, 2) (1, 3)
@ -442,6 +464,7 @@
Selector
>>> dump_tokens("import sys, time\\nx = sys.modules['time'].time()")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
NAME 'import' (1, 0) (1, 6)
NAME 'sys' (1, 7) (1, 10)
OP ',' (1, 10) (1, 11)
@ -463,6 +486,7 @@
Methods
>>> dump_tokens("@staticmethod\\ndef foo(x,y): pass")
ENCODING 'utf-8' (0, 0) (0, 0)
OP '@' (1, 0) (1, 1)
NAME 'staticmethod (1, 1) (1, 13)
NEWLINE '\\n' (1, 13) (1, 14)
@ -485,42 +509,43 @@
True
>>> roundtrip("# Comment \\\\nx = 0")
True
>>>
>>> tempdir = os.path.dirname(f) or os.curdir
>>> testfiles = glob.glob(os.path.join(tempdir, "test*.py"))
>>> if not test_support.is_resource_enabled("compiler"):
... testfiles = random.sample(testfiles, 10)
...
>>> for testfile in testfiles:
... if not roundtrip(open(testfile)): break
... else: True
True
"""
from test import test_support
from tokenize import (tokenize, untokenize, generate_tokens, NUMBER, NAME, OP,
STRING, ENDMARKER, tok_name)
from io import StringIO
import os
from tokenize import (tokenize, _tokenize, untokenize, NUMBER, NAME, OP,
STRING, ENDMARKER, tok_name, detect_encoding)
from io import BytesIO
from unittest import TestCase
import os, sys, glob
def dump_tokens(s):
"""Print out the tokens in s in a table format.
The ENDMARKER is omitted.
"""
f = StringIO(s)
for type, token, start, end, line in generate_tokens(f.readline):
f = BytesIO(s.encode('utf-8'))
for type, token, start, end, line in tokenize(f.readline):
if type == ENDMARKER:
break
type = tok_name[type]
print("%(type)-10.10s %(token)-13.13r %(start)s %(end)s" % locals())
def roundtrip(s):
f = StringIO(s)
source = untokenize(generate_tokens(f.readline))
print(source, end="")
def roundtrip(f):
"""
Test roundtrip for `untokenize`. `f` is an open file or a string.
The source code in f is tokenized, converted back to source code via
tokenize.untokenize(), and tokenized again from the latter. The test
fails if the second tokenization doesn't match the first.
"""
if isinstance(f, str):
f = BytesIO(f.encode('utf-8'))
token_list = list(tokenize(f.readline))
f.close()
tokens1 = [tok[:2] for tok in token_list]
new_bytes = untokenize(tokens1)
readline = (line for line in new_bytes.splitlines(1)).__next__
tokens2 = [tok[:2] for tok in tokenize(readline)]
return tokens1 == tokens2
# This is an example from the docs, set up as a doctest.
def decistmt(s):
@ -545,9 +570,8 @@ def decistmt(s):
>>> exec(decistmt(s))
-3.217160342717258261933904529E-7
"""
result = []
g = generate_tokens(StringIO(s).readline) # tokenize the string
g = tokenize(BytesIO(s.encode('utf-8')).readline) # tokenize the string
for toknum, tokval, _, _, _ in g:
if toknum == NUMBER and '.' in tokval: # replace NUMBER tokens
result.extend([
@ -558,7 +582,238 @@ def decistmt(s):
])
else:
result.append((toknum, tokval))
return untokenize(result)
return untokenize(result).decode('utf-8')
class TestTokenizerAdheresToPep0263(TestCase):
"""
Test that tokenizer adheres to the coding behaviour stipulated in PEP 0263.
"""
def _testFile(self, filename):
path = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), filename)
return roundtrip(open(path, 'rb'))
def test_utf8_coding_cookie_and_no_utf8_bom(self):
f = 'tokenize_tests-utf8-coding-cookie-and-utf8-bom-sig.txt'
self.assertTrue(self._testFile(f))
def test_latin1_coding_cookie_and_utf8_bom(self):
"""
As per PEP 0263, if a file starts with a utf-8 BOM signature, the only
allowed encoding for the comment is 'utf-8'. The text file used in
this test starts with a BOM signature, but specifies latin1 as the
coding, so verify that a SyntaxError is raised, which matches the
behaviour of the interpreter when it encounters a similar condition.
"""
f = 'tokenize_tests-latin1-coding-cookie-and-utf8-bom-sig.txt'
self.failUnlessRaises(SyntaxError, self._testFile, f)
def test_no_coding_cookie_and_utf8_bom(self):
f = 'tokenize_tests-no-coding-cookie-and-utf8-bom-sig-only.txt'
self.assertTrue(self._testFile(f))
def test_utf8_coding_cookie_and_utf8_bom(self):
f = 'tokenize_tests-utf8-coding-cookie-and-utf8-bom-sig.txt'
self.assertTrue(self._testFile(f))
class Test_Tokenize(TestCase):
def test__tokenize_decodes_with_specified_encoding(self):
literal = '"ЉЊЈЁЂ"'
line = literal.encode('utf-8')
first = False
def readline():
nonlocal first
if not first:
first = True
return line
else:
return b''
# skip the initial encoding token and the end token
tokens = list(_tokenize(readline, encoding='utf-8'))[1:-1]
expected_tokens = [(3, '"ЉЊЈЁЂ"', (1, 0), (1, 7), '"ЉЊЈЁЂ"')]
self.assertEquals(tokens, expected_tokens,
"bytes not decoded with encoding")
def test__tokenize_does_not_decode_with_encoding_none(self):
literal = '"ЉЊЈЁЂ"'
first = False
def readline():
nonlocal first
if not first:
first = True
return literal
else:
return b''
# skip the end token
tokens = list(_tokenize(readline, encoding=None))[:-1]
expected_tokens = [(3, '"ЉЊЈЁЂ"', (1, 0), (1, 7), '"ЉЊЈЁЂ"')]
self.assertEquals(tokens, expected_tokens,
"string not tokenized when encoding is None")
class TestDetectEncoding(TestCase):
def get_readline(self, lines):
index = 0
def readline():
nonlocal index
if index == len(lines):
raise StopIteration
line = lines[index]
index += 1
return line
return readline
def test_no_bom_no_encoding_cookie(self):
lines = (
b'# something\n',
b'print(something)\n',
b'do_something(else)\n'
)
encoding, consumed_lines = detect_encoding(self.get_readline(lines))
self.assertEquals(encoding, 'utf-8')
self.assertEquals(consumed_lines, list(lines[:2]))
def test_bom_no_cookie(self):
lines = (
b'\xef\xbb\xbf# something\n',
b'print(something)\n',
b'do_something(else)\n'
)
encoding, consumed_lines = detect_encoding(self.get_readline(lines))
self.assertEquals(encoding, 'utf-8')
self.assertEquals(consumed_lines,
[b'# something\n', b'print(something)\n'])
def test_cookie_first_line_no_bom(self):
lines = (
b'# -*- coding: latin-1 -*-\n',
b'print(something)\n',
b'do_something(else)\n'
)
encoding, consumed_lines = detect_encoding(self.get_readline(lines))
self.assertEquals(encoding, 'latin-1')
self.assertEquals(consumed_lines, [b'# -*- coding: latin-1 -*-\n'])
def test_matched_bom_and_cookie_first_line(self):
lines = (
b'\xef\xbb\xbf# coding=utf-8\n',
b'print(something)\n',
b'do_something(else)\n'
)
encoding, consumed_lines = detect_encoding(self.get_readline(lines))
self.assertEquals(encoding, 'utf-8')
self.assertEquals(consumed_lines, [b'# coding=utf-8\n'])
def test_mismatched_bom_and_cookie_first_line_raises_syntaxerror(self):
lines = (
b'\xef\xbb\xbf# vim: set fileencoding=ascii :\n',
b'print(something)\n',
b'do_something(else)\n'
)
readline = self.get_readline(lines)
self.assertRaises(SyntaxError, detect_encoding, readline)
def test_cookie_second_line_no_bom(self):
lines = (
b'#! something\n',
b'# vim: set fileencoding=ascii :\n',
b'print(something)\n',
b'do_something(else)\n'
)
encoding, consumed_lines = detect_encoding(self.get_readline(lines))
self.assertEquals(encoding, 'ascii')
expected = [b'#! something\n', b'# vim: set fileencoding=ascii :\n']
self.assertEquals(consumed_lines, expected)
def test_matched_bom_and_cookie_second_line(self):
lines = (
b'\xef\xbb\xbf#! something\n',
b'f# coding=utf-8\n',
b'print(something)\n',
b'do_something(else)\n'
)
encoding, consumed_lines = detect_encoding(self.get_readline(lines))
self.assertEquals(encoding, 'utf-8')
self.assertEquals(consumed_lines,
[b'#! something\n', b'f# coding=utf-8\n'])
def test_mismatched_bom_and_cookie_second_line_raises_syntaxerror(self):
lines = (
b'\xef\xbb\xbf#! something\n',
b'# vim: set fileencoding=ascii :\n',
b'print(something)\n',
b'do_something(else)\n'
)
readline = self.get_readline(lines)
self.assertRaises(SyntaxError, detect_encoding, readline)
def test_short_files(self):
readline = self.get_readline((b'print(something)\n',))
encoding, consumed_lines = detect_encoding(readline)
self.assertEquals(encoding, 'utf-8')
self.assertEquals(consumed_lines, [b'print(something)\n'])
encoding, consumed_lines = detect_encoding(self.get_readline(()))
self.assertEquals(encoding, 'utf-8')
self.assertEquals(consumed_lines, [])
readline = self.get_readline((b'\xef\xbb\xbfprint(something)\n',))
encoding, consumed_lines = detect_encoding(readline)
self.assertEquals(encoding, 'utf-8')
self.assertEquals(consumed_lines, [b'print(something)\n'])
readline = self.get_readline((b'\xef\xbb\xbf',))
encoding, consumed_lines = detect_encoding(readline)
self.assertEquals(encoding, 'utf-8')
self.assertEquals(consumed_lines, [])
class TestTokenize(TestCase):
def test_tokenize(self):
import tokenize as tokenize_module
encoding = object()
encoding_used = None
def mock_detect_encoding(readline):
return encoding, ['first', 'second']
def mock__tokenize(readline, encoding):
nonlocal encoding_used
encoding_used = encoding
out = []
while True:
next_line = readline()
if next_line:
out.append(next_line)
continue
return out
counter = 0
def mock_readline():
nonlocal counter
counter += 1
if counter == 5:
return b''
return counter
orig_detect_encoding = tokenize_module.detect_encoding
orig__tokenize = tokenize_module._tokenize
tokenize_module.detect_encoding = mock_detect_encoding
tokenize_module._tokenize = mock__tokenize
try:
results = tokenize(mock_readline)
self.assertEquals(list(results), ['first', 'second', 1, 2, 3, 4])
finally:
tokenize_module.detect_encoding = orig_detect_encoding
tokenize_module._tokenize = orig__tokenize
self.assertTrue(encoding_used, encoding)
__test__ = {"doctests" : doctests, 'decistmt': decistmt}
@ -566,6 +821,10 @@ def decistmt(s):
def test_main():
from test import test_tokenize
test_support.run_doctest(test_tokenize, True)
test_support.run_unittest(TestTokenizerAdheresToPep0263)
test_support.run_unittest(Test_Tokenize)
test_support.run_unittest(TestDetectEncoding)
test_support.run_unittest(TestTokenize)
if __name__ == "__main__":
test_main()

View file

@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
# -*- coding: latin1 -*-
# IMPORTANT: this file has the utf-8 BOM signature '\xef\xbb\xbf'
# at the start of it. Make sure this is preserved if any changes
# are made! Also note that the coding cookie above conflicts with
# the presense of a utf-8 BOM signature -- this is intended.
# Arbitrary encoded utf-8 text (stolen from test_doctest2.py).
x = 'ЉЊЈЁЂ'
def y():
"""
And again in a comment. ЉЊЈЁЂ
"""
pass

View file

@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
# IMPORTANT: this file has the utf-8 BOM signature '\xef\xbb\xbf'
# at the start of it. Make sure this is preserved if any changes
# are made!
# Arbitrary encoded utf-8 text (stolen from test_doctest2.py).
x = 'ЉЊЈЁЂ'
def y():
"""
And again in a comment. ЉЊЈЁЂ
"""
pass

View file

@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# IMPORTANT: unlike the other test_tokenize-*.txt files, this file
# does NOT have the utf-8 BOM signature '\xef\xbb\xbf' at the start
# of it. Make sure this is not added inadvertently by your editor
# if any changes are made to this file!
# Arbitrary encoded utf-8 text (stolen from test_doctest2.py).
x = 'ЉЊЈЁЂ'
def y():
"""
And again in a comment. ЉЊЈЁЂ
"""
pass

View file

@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# IMPORTANT: this file has the utf-8 BOM signature '\xef\xbb\xbf'
# at the start of it. Make sure this is preserved if any changes
# are made!
# Arbitrary encoded utf-8 text (stolen from test_doctest2.py).
x = 'ЉЊЈЁЂ'
def y():
"""
And again in a comment. ЉЊЈЁЂ
"""
pass

View file

@ -1,8 +1,11 @@
"""Tokenization help for Python programs.
generate_tokens(readline) is a generator that breaks a stream of
text into Python tokens. It accepts a readline-like method which is called
repeatedly to get the next line of input (or "" for EOF). It generates
tokenize(readline) is a generator that breaks a stream of
bytes into Python tokens. It decodes the bytes according to
PEP-0263 for determining source file encoding.
It accepts a readline-like method which is called
repeatedly to get the next line of input (or b"" for EOF). It generates
5-tuples with these members:
the token type (see token.py)
@ -13,32 +16,32 @@
It is designed to match the working of the Python tokenizer exactly, except
that it produces COMMENT tokens for comments and gives type OP for all
operators
Older entry points
tokenize_loop(readline, tokeneater)
tokenize(readline, tokeneater=printtoken)
are the same, except instead of generating tokens, tokeneater is a callback
function to which the 5 fields described above are passed as 5 arguments,
each time a new token is found."""
operators. Aditionally, all token lists start with an ENCODING token
which tells you which encoding was used to decode the bytes stream."""
__author__ = 'Ka-Ping Yee <ping@lfw.org>'
__credits__ = \
'GvR, ESR, Tim Peters, Thomas Wouters, Fred Drake, Skip Montanaro, Raymond Hettinger'
__credits__ = ('GvR, ESR, Tim Peters, Thomas Wouters, Fred Drake, '
'Skip Montanaro, Raymond Hettinger, Trent Nelson, '
'Michael Foord')
import string, re
import re, string, sys
from token import *
from codecs import lookup
from itertools import chain, repeat
cookie_re = re.compile("coding[:=]\s*([-\w.]+)")
import token
__all__ = [x for x in dir(token) if x[0] != '_'] + ["COMMENT", "tokenize",
"generate_tokens", "NL", "untokenize"]
"detect_encoding", "NL", "untokenize", "ENCODING"]
del token
COMMENT = N_TOKENS
tok_name[COMMENT] = 'COMMENT'
NL = N_TOKENS + 1
tok_name[NL] = 'NL'
N_TOKENS += 2
ENCODING = N_TOKENS + 2
tok_name[ENCODING] = 'ENCODING'
N_TOKENS += 3
def group(*choices): return '(' + '|'.join(choices) + ')'
def any(*choices): return group(*choices) + '*'
@ -132,33 +135,6 @@ class TokenError(Exception): pass
class StopTokenizing(Exception): pass
def printtoken(type, token, startrowcol, endrowcol, line): # for testing
(srow, scol), (erow, ecol) = startrowcol, endrowcol
print("%d,%d-%d,%d:\t%s\t%s" % \
(srow, scol, erow, ecol, tok_name[type], repr(token)))
def tokenize(readline, tokeneater=printtoken):
"""
The tokenize() function accepts two parameters: one representing the
input stream, and one providing an output mechanism for tokenize().
The first parameter, readline, must be a callable object which provides
the same interface as the readline() method of built-in file objects.
Each call to the function should return one line of input as a string.
The second parameter, tokeneater, must also be a callable object. It is
called once for each token, with five arguments, corresponding to the
tuples generated by generate_tokens().
"""
try:
tokenize_loop(readline, tokeneater)
except StopTokenizing:
pass
# backwards compatible interface
def tokenize_loop(readline, tokeneater):
for token_info in generate_tokens(readline):
tokeneater(*token_info)
class Untokenizer:
@ -166,6 +142,7 @@ def __init__(self):
self.tokens = []
self.prev_row = 1
self.prev_col = 0
self.encoding = None
def add_whitespace(self, start):
row, col = start
@ -180,6 +157,9 @@ def untokenize(self, iterable):
self.compat(t, iterable)
break
tok_type, token, start, end, line = t
if tok_type == ENCODING:
self.encoding = token
continue
self.add_whitespace(start)
self.tokens.append(token)
self.prev_row, self.prev_col = end
@ -193,12 +173,16 @@ def compat(self, token, iterable):
indents = []
toks_append = self.tokens.append
toknum, tokval = token
if toknum in (NAME, NUMBER):
tokval += ' '
if toknum in (NEWLINE, NL):
startline = True
for tok in iterable:
toknum, tokval = tok[:2]
if toknum == ENCODING:
self.encoding = tokval
continue
if toknum in (NAME, NUMBER):
tokval += ' '
@ -216,8 +200,11 @@ def compat(self, token, iterable):
startline = False
toks_append(tokval)
def untokenize(iterable):
"""Transform tokens back into Python source code.
It returns a bytes object, encoded using the ENCODING
token, which is the first token sequence output by tokenize.
Each element returned by the iterable must be a token sequence
with at least two elements, a token number and token value. If
@ -227,24 +214,89 @@ def untokenize(iterable):
Untokenized source will match input source exactly
Round-trip invariant for limited intput:
# Output text will tokenize the back to the input
t1 = [tok[:2] for tok in generate_tokens(f.readline)]
# Output bytes will tokenize the back to the input
t1 = [tok[:2] for tok in tokenize(f.readline)]
newcode = untokenize(t1)
readline = iter(newcode.splitlines(1)).__next__
t2 = [tok[:2] for tokin generate_tokens(readline)]
readline = BytesIO(newcode).readline
t2 = [tok[:2] for tok in tokenize(readline)]
assert t1 == t2
"""
ut = Untokenizer()
return ut.untokenize(iterable)
out = ut.untokenize(iterable)
if ut.encoding is not None:
out = out.encode(ut.encoding)
return out
def generate_tokens(readline):
def detect_encoding(readline):
"""
The generate_tokens() generator requires one argment, readline, which
The detect_encoding() function is used to detect the encoding that should
be used to decode a Python source file. It requires one argment, readline,
in the same way as the tokenize() generator.
It will call readline a maximum of twice, and return the encoding used
(as a string) and a list of any lines (left as bytes) it has read
in.
It detects the encoding from the presence of a utf-8 bom or an encoding
cookie as specified in pep-0263. If both a bom and a cookie are present,
but disagree, a SyntaxError will be raised.
If no encoding is specified, then the default of 'utf-8' will be returned.
"""
utf8_bom = b'\xef\xbb\xbf'
bom_found = False
encoding = None
def read_or_stop():
try:
return readline()
except StopIteration:
return b''
def find_cookie(line):
try:
line_string = line.decode('ascii')
except UnicodeDecodeError:
pass
else:
matches = cookie_re.findall(line_string)
if matches:
encoding = matches[0]
if bom_found and lookup(encoding).name != 'utf-8':
# This behaviour mimics the Python interpreter
raise SyntaxError('encoding problem: utf-8')
return encoding
first = read_or_stop()
if first.startswith(utf8_bom):
bom_found = True
first = first[3:]
if not first:
return 'utf-8', []
encoding = find_cookie(first)
if encoding:
return encoding, [first]
second = read_or_stop()
if not second:
return 'utf-8', [first]
encoding = find_cookie(second)
if encoding:
return encoding, [first, second]
return 'utf-8', [first, second]
def tokenize(readline):
"""
The tokenize() generator requires one argment, readline, which
must be a callable object which provides the same interface as the
readline() method of built-in file objects. Each call to the function
should return one line of input as a string. Alternately, readline
should return one line of input as bytes. Alternately, readline
can be a callable function terminating with StopIteration:
readline = open(myfile).__next__ # Example of alternate readline
readline = open(myfile, 'rb').__next__ # Example of alternate readline
The generator produces 5-tuples with these members: the token type; the
token string; a 2-tuple (srow, scol) of ints specifying the row and
@ -252,18 +304,38 @@ def generate_tokens(readline):
ints specifying the row and column where the token ends in the source;
and the line on which the token was found. The line passed is the
logical line; continuation lines are included.
The first token sequence will always be an ENCODING token
which tells you which encoding was used to decode the bytes stream.
"""
encoding, consumed = detect_encoding(readline)
def readline_generator():
while True:
try:
yield readline()
except StopIteration:
return
chained = chain(consumed, readline_generator())
return _tokenize(chained.__next__, encoding)
def _tokenize(readline, encoding):
lnum = parenlev = continued = 0
namechars, numchars = string.ascii_letters + '_', '0123456789'
contstr, needcont = '', 0
contline = None
indents = [0]
if encoding is not None:
yield (ENCODING, encoding, (0, 0), (0, 0), '')
while 1: # loop over lines in stream
try:
line = readline()
except StopIteration:
line = ''
line = b''
if encoding is not None:
line = line.decode(encoding)
lnum = lnum + 1
pos, max = 0, len(line)
@ -385,7 +457,8 @@ def generate_tokens(readline):
yield (DEDENT, '', (lnum, 0), (lnum, 0), '')
yield (ENDMARKER, '', (lnum, 0), (lnum, 0), '')
if __name__ == '__main__': # testing
import sys
if len(sys.argv) > 1: tokenize(open(sys.argv[1]).readline)
else: tokenize(sys.stdin.readline)
# An undocumented, backwards compatible, API for all the places in the standard
# library that expect to be able to use tokenize with strings
def generate_tokens(readline):
return _tokenize(readline, None)

View file

@ -752,3 +752,5 @@ Artur Zaprzala
Mike Zarnstorff
Siebren van der Zee
Uwe Zessin
Trent Nelson
Michael Foord

View file

@ -41,6 +41,12 @@ Library
- Issue #1202: zlib.crc32 and zlib.adler32 now return an unsigned value.
- Issue #719888: Updated tokenize to use a bytes API. generate_tokens has been
renamed tokenize and now works with bytes rather than strings. A new
detect_encoding function has been added for determining source file encoding
according to PEP-0263. Token sequences returned by tokenize always start
with an ENCODING token which specifies the encoding used to decode the file.
This token is used to encode the output of untokenize back to bytes.
What's New in Python 3.0a3?
===========================
@ -175,7 +181,6 @@ Library
- Issue #1578: Problems in win_getpass.
Build
-----

View file

@ -631,7 +631,9 @@ class Options:
try:
eater.set_filename(filename)
try:
tokenize.tokenize(fp.readline, eater)
tokens = tokenize.generate_tokens(fp.readline)
for _token in tokens:
eater(*_token)
except tokenize.TokenError as e:
print('%s: %s, line %d, column %d' % (
e.args[0], filename, e.args[1][0], e.args[1][1]),

View file

@ -103,7 +103,9 @@ def __init__(self, fname, file):
def run(self):
try:
tokenize.tokenize(self.file.readline, self.tokeneater)
tokens = tokenize.generate_tokens(self.file.readline)
for _token in tokens:
self.tokeneater(*_token)
except tokenize.TokenError as msg:
errprint("%r: Token Error: %s" % (self.fname, msg))
self.nerrors = self.nerrors + 1

View file

@ -173,7 +173,9 @@ def __init__(self, f):
self.stats = []
def run(self):
tokenize.tokenize(self.getline, self.tokeneater)
tokens = tokenize.generate_tokens(self.getline)
for _token in tokens:
self.tokeneater(*_token)
# Remove trailing empty lines.
lines = self.lines
while lines and lines[-1] == "\n":