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Moving extensions to either quarantine or deathrow....
Moving extensions to either quarantine or deathrow. When a module is moved to quarantine, it means that while we intend to keep it, it is currently broken or sufficiently untested that it can't be in the main IPython codebase. To be moved back into the main IPython codebase a module must: 1. Work fully. 2. Have a test suite. 3. Be a proper IPython extension and tie into the official APIs. 3. Have members of the IPython dev team who are willing to maintain it. When a module is moved to deathrow, it means that the code is either broken and not worth repairing, deprecated, replaced by newer functionality, or code that should be developed and maintained by a third party.

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splitinput.py
83 lines | 2.6 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
#!/usr/bin/env python
# encoding: utf-8
"""
Simple utility for splitting user input.
Authors:
* Brian Granger
* Fernando Perez
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2008-2009 The IPython Development Team
#
# Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in
# the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
import re
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Main function
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# RegExp for splitting line contents into pre-char//first word-method//rest.
# For clarity, each group in on one line.
# WARNING: update the regexp if the escapes in iplib are changed, as they
# are hardwired in.
# Although it's not solely driven by the regex, note that:
# ,;/% only trigger if they are the first character on the line
# ! and !! trigger if they are first char(s) *or* follow an indent
# ? triggers as first or last char.
# The three parts of the regex are:
# 1) pre: pre_char *or* initial whitespace
# 2) ifun: first word/method (mix of \w and '.')
# 3) the_rest: rest of line (separated from ifun by space if non-empty)
line_split = re.compile(r'^([,;/%?]|!!?|\s*)'
r'\s*([\w\.]+)'
r'(\s+.*$|$)')
# r'[\w\.]+'
# r'\s*=\s*%.*'
def split_user_input(line, pattern=None):
"""Split user input into pre-char/whitespace, function part and rest.
This is currently handles lines with '=' in them in a very inconsistent
manner.
"""
if pattern is None:
pattern = line_split
match = pattern.match(line)
if not match:
# print "match failed for line '%s'" % line
try:
ifun, the_rest = line.split(None,1)
except ValueError:
# print "split failed for line '%s'" % line
ifun, the_rest = line,''
pre = re.match('^(\s*)(.*)',line).groups()[0]
else:
pre,ifun,the_rest = match.groups()
# ifun has to be a valid python identifier, so it better be only pure
# ascii, no unicode:
try:
ifun = ifun.encode('ascii')
except UnicodeEncodeError:
the_rest = ifun + u' ' + the_rest
ifun = u''
#print 'line:<%s>' % line # dbg
#print 'pre <%s> ifun <%s> rest <%s>' % (pre,ifun.strip(),the_rest) # dbg
return pre, ifun.strip(), the_rest.lstrip()