# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- """Display formatters. Inheritance diagram: .. inheritance-diagram:: IPython.core.formatters :parts: 3 Authors: * Robert Kern * Brian Granger """ #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Copyright (C) 2010-2011, IPython Development Team. # # Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License. # # The full license is in the file COPYING.txt, distributed with this software. #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Imports #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Stdlib imports import abc import sys import warnings # Our own imports from IPython.config.configurable import Configurable from IPython.lib import pretty from IPython.utils.traitlets import ( Bool, Dict, Integer, Unicode, CUnicode, ObjectName, List, ) from IPython.utils.py3compat import unicode_to_str, with_metaclass, PY3 if PY3: from io import StringIO else: from StringIO import StringIO #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # The main DisplayFormatter class #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- class DisplayFormatter(Configurable): # When set to true only the default plain text formatter will be used. plain_text_only = Bool(False, config=True) def _plain_text_only_changed(self, name, old, new): warnings.warn("""DisplayFormatter.plain_text_only is deprecated. Use DisplayFormatter.active_types = ['text/plain'] for the same effect. """, DeprecationWarning) if new: self.active_types = ['text/plain'] else: self.active_types = self.format_types active_types = List(Unicode, config=True, help="""List of currently active mime-types to display. You can use this to set a white-list for formats to display. Most users will not need to change this value. """) def _active_types_default(self): return self.format_types def _active_types_changed(self, name, old, new): for key, formatter in self.formatters.items(): if key in new: formatter.enabled = True else: formatter.enabled = False # A dict of formatter whose keys are format types (MIME types) and whose # values are subclasses of BaseFormatter. formatters = Dict() def _formatters_default(self): """Activate the default formatters.""" formatter_classes = [ PlainTextFormatter, HTMLFormatter, SVGFormatter, PNGFormatter, JPEGFormatter, LatexFormatter, JSONFormatter, JavascriptFormatter ] d = {} for cls in formatter_classes: f = cls(parent=self) d[f.format_type] = f return d def format(self, obj, include=None, exclude=None): """Return a format data dict for an object. By default all format types will be computed. The following MIME types are currently implemented: * text/plain * text/html * text/latex * application/json * application/javascript * image/png * image/jpeg * image/svg+xml Parameters ---------- obj : object The Python object whose format data will be computed. include : list or tuple, optional A list of format type strings (MIME types) to include in the format data dict. If this is set *only* the format types included in this list will be computed. exclude : list or tuple, optional A list of format type string (MIME types) to exclude in the format data dict. If this is set all format types will be computed, except for those included in this argument. Returns ------- (format_dict, metadata_dict) : tuple of two dicts format_dict is a dictionary of key/value pairs, one of each format that was generated for the object. The keys are the format types, which will usually be MIME type strings and the values and JSON'able data structure containing the raw data for the representation in that format. metadata_dict is a dictionary of metadata about each mime-type output. Its keys will be a strict subset of the keys in format_dict. """ format_dict = {} md_dict = {} for format_type, formatter in self.formatters.items(): if include and format_type not in include: continue if exclude and format_type in exclude: continue md = None try: data = formatter(obj) except: # FIXME: log the exception raise # formatters can return raw data or (data, metadata) if isinstance(data, tuple) and len(data) == 2: data, md = data if data is not None: format_dict[format_type] = data if md is not None: md_dict[format_type] = md return format_dict, md_dict @property def format_types(self): """Return the format types (MIME types) of the active formatters.""" return list(self.formatters.keys()) #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Formatters for specific format types (text, html, svg, etc.) #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- class FormatterABC(with_metaclass(abc.ABCMeta, object)): """ Abstract base class for Formatters. A formatter is a callable class that is responsible for computing the raw format data for a particular format type (MIME type). For example, an HTML formatter would have a format type of `text/html` and would return the HTML representation of the object when called. """ # The format type of the data returned, usually a MIME type. format_type = 'text/plain' # Is the formatter enabled... enabled = True @abc.abstractmethod def __call__(self, obj): """Return a JSON'able representation of the object. If the object cannot be formatted by this formatter, then return None """ try: return repr(obj) except Exception: return None class BaseFormatter(Configurable): """A base formatter class that is configurable. This formatter should usually be used as the base class of all formatters. It is a traited :class:`Configurable` class and includes an extensible API for users to determine how their objects are formatted. The following logic is used to find a function to format an given object. 1. The object is introspected to see if it has a method with the name :attr:`print_method`. If is does, that object is passed to that method for formatting. 2. If no print method is found, three internal dictionaries are consulted to find print method: :attr:`singleton_printers`, :attr:`type_printers` and :attr:`deferred_printers`. Users should use these dictionaries to register functions that will be used to compute the format data for their objects (if those objects don't have the special print methods). The easiest way of using these dictionaries is through the :meth:`for_type` and :meth:`for_type_by_name` methods. If no function/callable is found to compute the format data, ``None`` is returned and this format type is not used. """ format_type = Unicode('text/plain') enabled = Bool(True, config=True) print_method = ObjectName('__repr__') # The singleton printers. # Maps the IDs of the builtin singleton objects to the format functions. singleton_printers = Dict(config=True) def _singleton_printers_default(self): return {} # The type-specific printers. # Map type objects to the format functions. type_printers = Dict(config=True) def _type_printers_default(self): return {} # The deferred-import type-specific printers. # Map (modulename, classname) pairs to the format functions. deferred_printers = Dict(config=True) def _deferred_printers_default(self): return {} def __call__(self, obj): """Compute the format for an object.""" if self.enabled: obj_id = id(obj) try: obj_class = getattr(obj, '__class__', None) or type(obj) # First try to find registered singleton printers for the type. try: printer = self.singleton_printers[obj_id] except (TypeError, KeyError): pass else: return printer(obj) # Next look for type_printers. for cls in pretty._get_mro(obj_class): if cls in self.type_printers: return self.type_printers[cls](obj) else: printer = self._in_deferred_types(cls) if printer is not None: return printer(obj) # Finally look for special method names. if hasattr(obj_class, self.print_method): printer = getattr(obj_class, self.print_method) return printer(obj) return None except Exception: pass else: return None def for_type(self, typ, func): """Add a format function for a given type. Parameters ----------- typ : class The class of the object that will be formatted using `func`. func : callable The callable that will be called to compute the format data. The call signature of this function is simple, it must take the object to be formatted and return the raw data for the given format. Subclasses may use a different call signature for the `func` argument. """ oldfunc = self.type_printers.get(typ, None) if func is not None: # To support easy restoration of old printers, we need to ignore # Nones. self.type_printers[typ] = func return oldfunc def for_type_by_name(self, type_module, type_name, func): """Add a format function for a type specified by the full dotted module and name of the type, rather than the type of the object. Parameters ---------- type_module : str The full dotted name of the module the type is defined in, like ``numpy``. type_name : str The name of the type (the class name), like ``dtype`` func : callable The callable that will be called to compute the format data. The call signature of this function is simple, it must take the object to be formatted and return the raw data for the given format. Subclasses may use a different call signature for the `func` argument. """ key = (type_module, type_name) oldfunc = self.deferred_printers.get(key, None) if func is not None: # To support easy restoration of old printers, we need to ignore # Nones. self.deferred_printers[key] = func return oldfunc 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 if key in self.deferred_printers: # Move the printer over to the regular registry. printer = self.deferred_printers.pop(key) self.type_printers[cls] = printer return printer class PlainTextFormatter(BaseFormatter): """The default pretty-printer. This uses :mod:`IPython.lib.pretty` to compute the format data of the object. If the object cannot be pretty printed, :func:`repr` is used. See the documentation of :mod:`IPython.lib.pretty` for details on how to write pretty printers. Here is a simple example:: def dtype_pprinter(obj, p, cycle): if cycle: return p.text('dtype(...)') if hasattr(obj, 'fields'): if obj.fields is None: p.text(repr(obj)) else: p.begin_group(7, 'dtype([') for i, field in enumerate(obj.descr): if i > 0: p.text(',') p.breakable() p.pretty(field) p.end_group(7, '])') """ # The format type of data returned. format_type = Unicode('text/plain') # This subclass ignores this attribute as it always need to return # something. enabled = Bool(True, config=False) # Look for a _repr_pretty_ methods to use for pretty printing. print_method = ObjectName('_repr_pretty_') # Whether to pretty-print or not. pprint = Bool(True, config=True) # Whether to be verbose or not. verbose = Bool(False, config=True) # The maximum width. max_width = Integer(79, config=True) # The newline character. newline = Unicode('\n', config=True) # format-string for pprinting floats float_format = Unicode('%r') # setter for float precision, either int or direct format-string float_precision = CUnicode('', config=True) def _float_precision_changed(self, name, old, new): """float_precision changed, set float_format accordingly. float_precision can be set by int or str. This will set float_format, after interpreting input. If numpy has been imported, numpy print precision will also be set. integer `n` sets format to '%.nf', otherwise, format set directly. An empty string returns to defaults (repr for float, 8 for numpy). This parameter can be set via the '%precision' magic. """ if '%' in new: # got explicit format string fmt = new try: fmt%3.14159 except Exception: raise ValueError("Precision must be int or format string, not %r"%new) elif new: # otherwise, should be an int try: i = int(new) assert i >= 0 except ValueError: raise ValueError("Precision must be int or format string, not %r"%new) except AssertionError: raise ValueError("int precision must be non-negative, not %r"%i) fmt = '%%.%if'%i if 'numpy' in sys.modules: # set numpy precision if it has been imported import numpy numpy.set_printoptions(precision=i) else: # default back to repr fmt = '%r' if 'numpy' in sys.modules: import numpy # numpy default is 8 numpy.set_printoptions(precision=8) self.float_format = fmt # Use the default pretty printers from IPython.lib.pretty. def _singleton_printers_default(self): return pretty._singleton_pprinters.copy() def _type_printers_default(self): d = pretty._type_pprinters.copy() d[float] = lambda obj,p,cycle: p.text(self.float_format%obj) return d def _deferred_printers_default(self): return pretty._deferred_type_pprinters.copy() #### FormatterABC interface #### def __call__(self, obj): """Compute the pretty representation of the object.""" if not self.pprint: return pretty._safe_repr(obj) else: # This uses use StringIO, as cStringIO doesn't handle unicode. stream = StringIO() # self.newline.encode() is a quick fix for issue gh-597. We need to # ensure that stream does not get a mix of unicode and bytestrings, # or it will cause trouble. printer = pretty.RepresentationPrinter(stream, self.verbose, self.max_width, unicode_to_str(self.newline), singleton_pprinters=self.singleton_printers, type_pprinters=self.type_printers, deferred_pprinters=self.deferred_printers) printer.pretty(obj) printer.flush() return stream.getvalue() class HTMLFormatter(BaseFormatter): """An HTML formatter. To define the callables that compute the HTML representation of your objects, define a :meth:`_repr_html_` method or use the :meth:`for_type` or :meth:`for_type_by_name` methods to register functions that handle this. The return value of this formatter should be a valid HTML snippet that could be injected into an existing DOM. It should *not* include the ````` or ```
`` tags. """ format_type = Unicode('text/html') print_method = ObjectName('_repr_html_') class SVGFormatter(BaseFormatter): """An SVG formatter. To define the callables that compute the SVG representation of your objects, define a :meth:`_repr_svg_` method or use the :meth:`for_type` or :meth:`for_type_by_name` methods to register functions that handle this. The return value of this formatter should be valid SVG enclosed in ```