##// END OF EJS Templates
normalize unicode notebook filenames...
normalize unicode notebook filenames used in comparison check for notebook name change. Unless the filenames are normalized, unchanged names may result in false positives for a name change (e.g. OS X uses NFD on the filesystem, so u'\xfc' roundtripped to the filesystem will be u'u\u0308'), which can result in the first save of a notebook after open performing the following actions: 1. save the recently opened notebook 2. `old_name != new_name`, so name change detected 3. delete old_name (which is actually new_name), which ultimately deletes the just-saved notebook In master, this has a symptom of the first checkpoint failing because the first save actually deleted the file, and you can't checkpoint a notebook that doesn't exist. closes #3360

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dir2.py
73 lines | 2.5 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# encoding: utf-8
"""A fancy version of Python's builtin :func:`dir` function.
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2008-2011 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
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Code
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def get_class_members(cls):
ret = dir(cls)
if hasattr(cls, '__bases__'):
try:
bases = cls.__bases__
except AttributeError:
# `obj` lied to hasattr (e.g. Pyro), ignore
pass
else:
for base in bases:
ret.extend(get_class_members(base))
return ret
def dir2(obj):
"""dir2(obj) -> list of strings
Extended version of the Python builtin dir(), which does a few extra
checks, and supports common objects with unusual internals that confuse
dir(), such as Traits and PyCrust.
This version is guaranteed to return only a list of true strings, whereas
dir() returns anything that objects inject into themselves, even if they
are later not really valid for attribute access (many extension libraries
have such bugs).
"""
# Start building the attribute list via dir(), and then complete it
# with a few extra special-purpose calls.
words = set(dir(obj))
if hasattr(obj, '__class__'):
#words.add('__class__')
words |= set(get_class_members(obj.__class__))
# for objects with Enthought's traits, add trait_names() list
# for PyCrust-style, add _getAttributeNames() magic method list
for attr in ('trait_names', '_getAttributeNames'):
if hasattr(obj, attr):
try:
func = getattr(obj, attr)
if callable(func):
words |= set(func())
except:
# TypeError: obj is class not instance
pass
# filter out non-string attributes which may be stuffed by dir() calls
# and poor coding in third-party modules
words = [w for w in words if isinstance(w, basestring)]
return sorted(words)