##// END OF EJS Templates
Merge pull request #1472 from minrk/ipexec_esc...
Merge pull request #1472 from minrk/ipexec_esc more general fix for #662 Previously, the extra readline output was only stripped from the front, but I have recently seen it (Python 3.2, OSX 10.7) elsewhere, so the replacement is now a general re.sub.

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r5545:13c81858
r6237:3912ea7c merge
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pretty.py
725 lines | 22.6 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 # -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""
pretty
~~
Python advanced pretty printer. This pretty printer is intended to
replace the old `pprint` python module which does not allow developers
to provide their own pretty print callbacks.
This module is based on ruby's `prettyprint.rb` library by `Tanaka Akira`.
Example Usage
=============
To directly print the representation of an object use `pprint`::
from pretty import pprint
pprint(complex_object)
To get a string of the output use `pretty`::
from pretty import pretty
string = pretty(complex_object)
Extending
=========
The pretty library allows developers to add pretty printing rules for their
own objects. This process is straightforward. All you have to do is to
Brian Granger
Renamed __pretty__ to _repr_pretty_ and changed updated pretty.py...
r3879 add a `_repr_pretty_` method to your object and call the methods on the
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 pretty printer passed::
class MyObject(object):
Brian Granger
Renamed __pretty__ to _repr_pretty_ and changed updated pretty.py...
r3879 def _repr_pretty_(self, p, cycle):
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 ...
Depending on the python version you want to support you have two
possibilities. The following list shows the python 2.5 version and the
compatibility one.
Brian Granger
Renamed __pretty__ to _repr_pretty_ and changed updated pretty.py...
r3879 Here the example implementation of a `_repr_pretty_` method for a list
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 subclass for python 2.5 and higher (python 2.5 requires the with statement
__future__ import)::
class MyList(list):
Brian Granger
Renamed __pretty__ to _repr_pretty_ and changed updated pretty.py...
r3879 def _repr_pretty_(self, p, cycle):
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 if cycle:
p.text('MyList(...)')
else:
with p.group(8, 'MyList([', '])'):
for idx, item in enumerate(self):
if idx:
p.text(',')
p.breakable()
p.pretty(item)
The `cycle` parameter is `True` if pretty detected a cycle. You *have* to
react to that or the result is an infinite loop. `p.text()` just adds
non breaking text to the output, `p.breakable()` either adds a whitespace
or breaks here. If you pass it an argument it's used instead of the
default space. `p.pretty` prettyprints another object using the pretty print
method.
The first parameter to the `group` function specifies the extra indentation
of the next line. In this example the next item will either be not
breaked (if the items are short enough) or aligned with the right edge of
the opening bracked of `MyList`.
If you want to support python 2.4 and lower you can use this code::
class MyList(list):
Brian Granger
Renamed __pretty__ to _repr_pretty_ and changed updated pretty.py...
r3879 def _repr_pretty_(self, p, cycle):
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 if cycle:
p.text('MyList(...)')
else:
p.begin_group(8, 'MyList([')
for idx, item in enumerate(self):
if idx:
p.text(',')
p.breakable()
p.pretty(item)
p.end_group(8, '])')
If you just want to indent something you can use the group function
without open / close parameters. Under python 2.5 you can also use this
code::
with p.indent(2):
...
Or under python2.4 you might want to modify ``p.indentation`` by hand but
this is rather ugly.
:copyright: 2007 by Armin Ronacher.
Portions (c) 2009 by Robert Kern.
:license: BSD License.
"""
Thomas Kluyver
Change to pass tests in IPython.extensions
r3115 from __future__ import with_statement
from contextlib import contextmanager
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 import sys
import types
import re
import datetime
from StringIO import StringIO
from collections import deque
__all__ = ['pretty', 'pprint', 'PrettyPrinter', 'RepresentationPrinter',
'for_type', 'for_type_by_name']
_re_pattern_type = type(re.compile(''))
def pretty(obj, verbose=False, max_width=79, newline='\n'):
"""
Pretty print the object's representation.
"""
stream = StringIO()
printer = RepresentationPrinter(stream, verbose, max_width, newline)
printer.pretty(obj)
printer.flush()
return stream.getvalue()
def pprint(obj, verbose=False, max_width=79, newline='\n'):
"""
Like `pretty` but print to stdout.
"""
printer = RepresentationPrinter(sys.stdout, verbose, max_width, newline)
printer.pretty(obj)
printer.flush()
sys.stdout.write(newline)
sys.stdout.flush()
class _PrettyPrinterBase(object):
@contextmanager
def indent(self, indent):
"""with statement support for indenting/dedenting."""
self.indentation += indent
try:
yield
finally:
self.indentation -= indent
@contextmanager
def group(self, indent=0, open='', close=''):
"""like begin_group / end_group but for the with statement."""
self.begin_group(indent, open)
try:
with self.indent(indent):
yield
finally:
self.end_group(indent, close)
class PrettyPrinter(_PrettyPrinterBase):
"""
Baseclass for the `RepresentationPrinter` prettyprinter that is used to
generate pretty reprs of objects. Contrary to the `RepresentationPrinter`
Brian Granger
Renamed __pretty__ to _repr_pretty_ and changed updated pretty.py...
r3879 this printer knows nothing about the default pprinters or the `_repr_pretty_`
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 callback method.
"""
def __init__(self, output, max_width=79, newline='\n'):
self.output = output
self.max_width = max_width
self.newline = newline
self.output_width = 0
self.buffer_width = 0
self.buffer = deque()
root_group = Group(0)
self.group_stack = [root_group]
self.group_queue = GroupQueue(root_group)
self.indentation = 0
def _break_outer_groups(self):
while self.max_width < self.output_width + self.buffer_width:
group = self.group_queue.deq()
if not group:
return
while group.breakables:
x = self.buffer.popleft()
self.output_width = x.output(self.output, self.output_width)
self.buffer_width -= x.width
while self.buffer and isinstance(self.buffer[0], Text):
x = self.buffer.popleft()
self.output_width = x.output(self.output, self.output_width)
self.buffer_width -= x.width
def text(self, obj):
"""Add literal text to the output."""
width = len(obj)
if self.buffer:
text = self.buffer[-1]
if not isinstance(text, Text):
text = Text()
self.buffer.append(text)
text.add(obj, width)
self.buffer_width += width
self._break_outer_groups()
else:
self.output.write(obj)
self.output_width += width
def breakable(self, sep=' '):
"""
Add a breakable separator to the output. This does not mean that it
will automatically break here. If no breaking on this position takes
place the `sep` is inserted which default to one space.
"""
width = len(sep)
group = self.group_stack[-1]
if group.want_break:
self.flush()
self.output.write(self.newline)
self.output.write(' ' * self.indentation)
self.output_width = self.indentation
self.buffer_width = 0
else:
self.buffer.append(Breakable(sep, width, self))
self.buffer_width += width
self._break_outer_groups()
def begin_group(self, indent=0, open=''):
"""
Begin a group. If you want support for python < 2.5 which doesn't has
the with statement this is the preferred way:
p.begin_group(1, '{')
...
p.end_group(1, '}')
The python 2.5 expression would be this:
with p.group(1, '{', '}'):
...
The first parameter specifies the indentation for the next line (usually
the width of the opening text), the second the opening text. All
parameters are optional.
"""
if open:
self.text(open)
group = Group(self.group_stack[-1].depth + 1)
self.group_stack.append(group)
self.group_queue.enq(group)
self.indentation += indent
def end_group(self, dedent=0, close=''):
"""End a group. See `begin_group` for more details."""
self.indentation -= dedent
group = self.group_stack.pop()
if not group.breakables:
self.group_queue.remove(group)
if close:
self.text(close)
def flush(self):
"""Flush data that is left in the buffer."""
for data in self.buffer:
self.output_width += data.output(self.output, self.output_width)
self.buffer.clear()
self.buffer_width = 0
def _get_mro(obj_class):
""" Get a reasonable method resolution order of a class and its superclasses
for both old-style and new-style classes.
"""
if not hasattr(obj_class, '__mro__'):
# Old-style class. Mix in object to make a fake new-style class.
Robert Kern
BUG: Partial fix for the case of old-style extension types that do not descend from object, like the VTK types. Still need to work on getting a real MRO for them.
r1864 try:
obj_class = type(obj_class.__name__, (obj_class, object), {})
except TypeError:
# Old-style extension type that does not descend from object.
# FIXME: try to construct a more thorough MRO.
mro = [obj_class]
else:
mro = obj_class.__mro__[1:-1]
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 else:
mro = obj_class.__mro__
return mro
class RepresentationPrinter(PrettyPrinter):
"""
Special pretty printer that has a `pretty` method that calls the pretty
printer for a python object.
This class stores processing data on `self` so you must *never* use
this class in a threaded environment. Always lock it or reinstanciate
it.
Instances also have a verbose flag callbacks can access to control their
output. For example the default instance repr prints all attributes and
methods that are not prefixed by an underscore if the printer is in
verbose mode.
"""
Robert Kern
ENH: Refactor pretty to allow it to run without global type registries.
r3208 def __init__(self, output, verbose=False, max_width=79, newline='\n',
singleton_pprinters=None, type_pprinters=None, deferred_pprinters=None):
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 PrettyPrinter.__init__(self, output, max_width, newline)
self.verbose = verbose
self.stack = []
Robert Kern
ENH: Refactor pretty to allow it to run without global type registries.
r3208 if singleton_pprinters is None:
singleton_pprinters = _singleton_pprinters.copy()
self.singleton_pprinters = singleton_pprinters
if type_pprinters is None:
type_pprinters = _type_pprinters.copy()
self.type_pprinters = type_pprinters
if deferred_pprinters is None:
deferred_pprinters = _deferred_type_pprinters.copy()
self.deferred_pprinters = deferred_pprinters
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831
def pretty(self, obj):
"""Pretty print the given object."""
obj_id = id(obj)
cycle = obj_id in self.stack
self.stack.append(obj_id)
self.begin_group()
try:
obj_class = getattr(obj, '__class__', None) or type(obj)
Brian Granger
Renamed __pretty__ to _repr_pretty_ and changed updated pretty.py...
r3879 # First try to find registered singleton printers for the type.
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 try:
Robert Kern
ENH: Refactor pretty to allow it to run without global type registries.
r3208 printer = self.singleton_pprinters[obj_id]
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 except (TypeError, KeyError):
pass
else:
return printer(obj, self, cycle)
Brian Granger
Renamed __pretty__ to _repr_pretty_ and changed updated pretty.py...
r3879 # Next look for type_printers.
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 for cls in _get_mro(obj_class):
Robert Kern
ENH: Refactor pretty to allow it to run without global type registries.
r3208 if cls in self.type_pprinters:
return self.type_pprinters[cls](obj, self, cycle)
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 else:
printer = self._in_deferred_types(cls)
if printer is not None:
return printer(obj, self, cycle)
Brian Granger
Renamed __pretty__ to _repr_pretty_ and changed updated pretty.py...
r3879 # Finally look for special method names.
if hasattr(obj_class, '_repr_pretty_'):
return obj_class._repr_pretty_(obj, self, cycle)
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 return _default_pprint(obj, self, cycle)
finally:
self.end_group()
self.stack.pop()
def _in_deferred_types(self, cls):
"""
Check if the given class is specified in the deferred type registry.
Returns the printer from the registry if it exists, and None if the
class is not in the registry. Successful matches will be moved to the
regular type registry for future use.
"""
mod = getattr(cls, '__module__', None)
name = getattr(cls, '__name__', None)
key = (mod, name)
printer = None
Robert Kern
ENH: Refactor pretty to allow it to run without global type registries.
r3208 if key in self.deferred_pprinters:
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 # Move the printer over to the regular registry.
Robert Kern
ENH: Refactor pretty to allow it to run without global type registries.
r3208 printer = self.deferred_pprinters.pop(key)
self.type_pprinters[cls] = printer
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 return printer
class Printable(object):
def output(self, stream, output_width):
return output_width
class Text(Printable):
def __init__(self):
self.objs = []
self.width = 0
def output(self, stream, output_width):
for obj in self.objs:
stream.write(obj)
return output_width + self.width
def add(self, obj, width):
self.objs.append(obj)
self.width += width
class Breakable(Printable):
def __init__(self, seq, width, pretty):
self.obj = seq
self.width = width
self.pretty = pretty
self.indentation = pretty.indentation
self.group = pretty.group_stack[-1]
self.group.breakables.append(self)
def output(self, stream, output_width):
self.group.breakables.popleft()
if self.group.want_break:
stream.write(self.pretty.newline)
stream.write(' ' * self.indentation)
return self.indentation
if not self.group.breakables:
self.pretty.group_queue.remove(self.group)
stream.write(self.obj)
return output_width + self.width
class Group(Printable):
def __init__(self, depth):
self.depth = depth
self.breakables = deque()
self.want_break = False
class GroupQueue(object):
def __init__(self, *groups):
self.queue = []
for group in groups:
self.enq(group)
def enq(self, group):
depth = group.depth
while depth > len(self.queue) - 1:
self.queue.append([])
self.queue[depth].append(group)
def deq(self):
for stack in self.queue:
for idx, group in enumerate(reversed(stack)):
if group.breakables:
del stack[idx]
group.want_break = True
return group
for group in stack:
group.want_break = True
del stack[:]
def remove(self, group):
try:
self.queue[group.depth].remove(group)
except ValueError:
pass
Thomas Kluyver
Python 3 compatibility in IPython.lib.pretty
r4752 try:
_baseclass_reprs = (object.__repr__, types.InstanceType.__repr__)
except AttributeError: # Python 3
_baseclass_reprs = (object.__repr__,)
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831
def _default_pprint(obj, p, cycle):
"""
The default print function. Used if an object does not provide one and
it's none of the builtin objects.
"""
klass = getattr(obj, '__class__', None) or type(obj)
if getattr(klass, '__repr__', None) not in _baseclass_reprs:
# A user-provided repr.
p.text(repr(obj))
return
p.begin_group(1, '<')
p.pretty(klass)
p.text(' at 0x%x' % id(obj))
if cycle:
p.text(' ...')
elif p.verbose:
first = True
for key in dir(obj):
if not key.startswith('_'):
try:
value = getattr(obj, key)
except AttributeError:
continue
if isinstance(value, types.MethodType):
continue
if not first:
p.text(',')
p.breakable()
p.text(key)
p.text('=')
step = len(key) + 1
p.indentation += step
p.pretty(value)
p.indentation -= step
first = False
p.end_group(1, '>')
Robert Kern
BUG: For subclasses of tuple, list, dict, set, and frozenset, only use the pretty-printer if the subclasses do not replace the base class's __repr__.
r3883 def _seq_pprinter_factory(start, end, basetype):
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 """
Factory that returns a pprint function useful for sequences. Used by
the default pprint for tuples, dicts, lists, sets and frozensets.
"""
def inner(obj, p, cycle):
Robert Kern
BUG: For subclasses of tuple, list, dict, set, and frozenset, only use the pretty-printer if the subclasses do not replace the base class's __repr__.
r3883 typ = type(obj)
if basetype is not None and typ is not basetype and typ.__repr__ != basetype.__repr__:
# If the subclass provides its own repr, use it instead.
return p.text(typ.__repr__(obj))
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 if cycle:
return p.text(start + '...' + end)
step = len(start)
p.begin_group(step, start)
for idx, x in enumerate(obj):
if idx:
p.text(',')
p.breakable()
p.pretty(x)
if len(obj) == 1 and type(obj) is tuple:
# Special case for 1-item tuples.
p.text(',')
p.end_group(step, end)
return inner
Robert Kern
BUG: For subclasses of tuple, list, dict, set, and frozenset, only use the pretty-printer if the subclasses do not replace the base class's __repr__.
r3883 def _dict_pprinter_factory(start, end, basetype=None):
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 """
Factory that returns a pprint function used by the default pprint of
dicts and dict proxies.
"""
def inner(obj, p, cycle):
Robert Kern
BUG: For subclasses of tuple, list, dict, set, and frozenset, only use the pretty-printer if the subclasses do not replace the base class's __repr__.
r3883 typ = type(obj)
if basetype is not None and typ is not basetype and typ.__repr__ != basetype.__repr__:
# If the subclass provides its own repr, use it instead.
return p.text(typ.__repr__(obj))
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 if cycle:
return p.text('{...}')
p.begin_group(1, start)
keys = obj.keys()
try:
keys.sort()
except Exception, e:
# Sometimes the keys don't sort.
pass
for idx, key in enumerate(keys):
if idx:
p.text(',')
p.breakable()
p.pretty(key)
p.text(': ')
p.pretty(obj[key])
p.end_group(1, end)
return inner
def _super_pprint(obj, p, cycle):
"""The pprint for the super type."""
p.begin_group(8, '<super: ')
p.pretty(obj.__self_class__)
p.text(',')
p.breakable()
p.pretty(obj.__self__)
p.end_group(8, '>')
def _re_pattern_pprint(obj, p, cycle):
"""The pprint function for regular expression patterns."""
p.text('re.compile(')
pattern = repr(obj.pattern)
if pattern[:1] in 'uU':
pattern = pattern[1:]
prefix = 'ur'
else:
prefix = 'r'
pattern = prefix + pattern.replace('\\\\', '\\')
p.text(pattern)
if obj.flags:
p.text(',')
p.breakable()
done_one = False
for flag in ('TEMPLATE', 'IGNORECASE', 'LOCALE', 'MULTILINE', 'DOTALL',
'UNICODE', 'VERBOSE', 'DEBUG'):
if obj.flags & getattr(re, flag):
if done_one:
p.text('|')
p.text('re.' + flag)
done_one = True
p.text(')')
def _type_pprint(obj, p, cycle):
"""The pprint for classes and types."""
if obj.__module__ in ('__builtin__', 'exceptions'):
name = obj.__name__
else:
name = obj.__module__ + '.' + obj.__name__
p.text(name)
def _repr_pprint(obj, p, cycle):
"""A pprint that just redirects to the normal repr function."""
p.text(repr(obj))
def _function_pprint(obj, p, cycle):
"""Base pprint for all functions and builtin functions."""
if obj.__module__ in ('__builtin__', 'exceptions') or not obj.__module__:
name = obj.__name__
else:
name = obj.__module__ + '.' + obj.__name__
p.text('<function %s>' % name)
def _exception_pprint(obj, p, cycle):
"""Base pprint for all exceptions."""
if obj.__class__.__module__ == 'exceptions':
name = obj.__class__.__name__
else:
name = '%s.%s' % (
obj.__class__.__module__,
obj.__class__.__name__
)
step = len(name) + 1
p.begin_group(step, '(')
for idx, arg in enumerate(getattr(obj, 'args', ())):
if idx:
p.text(',')
p.breakable()
p.pretty(arg)
p.end_group(step, ')')
#: the exception base
try:
_exception_base = BaseException
except NameError:
_exception_base = Exception
#: printers for builtin types
_type_pprinters = {
int: _repr_pprint,
long: _repr_pprint,
float: _repr_pprint,
str: _repr_pprint,
unicode: _repr_pprint,
Robert Kern
BUG: For subclasses of tuple, list, dict, set, and frozenset, only use the pretty-printer if the subclasses do not replace the base class's __repr__.
r3883 tuple: _seq_pprinter_factory('(', ')', tuple),
list: _seq_pprinter_factory('[', ']', list),
dict: _dict_pprinter_factory('{', '}', dict),
Thomas Kluyver
Python 3 compatibility in IPython.lib.pretty
r4752
Robert Kern
BUG: For subclasses of tuple, list, dict, set, and frozenset, only use the pretty-printer if the subclasses do not replace the base class's __repr__.
r3883 set: _seq_pprinter_factory('set([', '])', set),
frozenset: _seq_pprinter_factory('frozenset([', '])', frozenset),
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 super: _super_pprint,
_re_pattern_type: _re_pattern_pprint,
type: _type_pprint,
types.FunctionType: _function_pprint,
types.BuiltinFunctionType: _function_pprint,
types.SliceType: _repr_pprint,
types.MethodType: _repr_pprint,
Thomas Kluyver
Python 3 compatibility in IPython.lib.pretty
r4752
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 datetime.datetime: _repr_pprint,
datetime.timedelta: _repr_pprint,
_exception_base: _exception_pprint
}
Thomas Kluyver
Python 3 compatibility in IPython.lib.pretty
r4752 try:
_type_pprinters[types.DictProxyType] = _dict_pprinter_factory('<dictproxy {', '}>')
MinRK
remove erroneous trailing comma in lib.pretty...
r5545 _type_pprinters[types.ClassType] = _type_pprint
Thomas Kluyver
Python 3 compatibility in IPython.lib.pretty
r4752 except AttributeError: # Python 3
pass
try:
_type_pprinters[xrange] = _repr_pprint
except NameError:
_type_pprinters[range] = _repr_pprint
Robert Kern
ENH: Add the ipy_pretty extension.
r1831 #: printers for types specified by name
_deferred_type_pprinters = {
}
def for_type(typ, func):
"""
Add a pretty printer for a given type.
"""
oldfunc = _type_pprinters.get(typ, None)
if func is not None:
# To support easy restoration of old pprinters, we need to ignore Nones.
_type_pprinters[typ] = func
return oldfunc
def for_type_by_name(type_module, type_name, func):
"""
Add a pretty printer for a type specified by the module and name of a type
rather than the type object itself.
"""
key = (type_module, type_name)
oldfunc = _deferred_type_pprinters.get(key, None)
if func is not None:
# To support easy restoration of old pprinters, we need to ignore Nones.
_deferred_type_pprinters[key] = func
return oldfunc
#: printers for the default singletons
_singleton_pprinters = dict.fromkeys(map(id, [None, True, False, Ellipsis,
NotImplemented]), _repr_pprint)
if __name__ == '__main__':
from random import randrange
class Foo(object):
def __init__(self):
self.foo = 1
self.bar = re.compile(r'\s+')
self.blub = dict.fromkeys(range(30), randrange(1, 40))
self.hehe = 23424.234234
self.list = ["blub", "blah", self]
def get_foo(self):
print "foo"
pprint(Foo(), verbose=True)