##// END OF EJS Templates
settings: simplify handling of form values for hooks and extensions...
settings: simplify handling of form values for hooks and extensions This makes simpler to follow the code path and search for input input field names. The form field names are hardcoded in the template, so generating them programmatically in the controller do not really add any flexibility.

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termcolors.py
200 lines | 6.8 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
"""
termcolors.py
Grabbed from Django (http://www.djangoproject.com)
"""
color_names = ('black', 'red', 'green', 'yellow', 'blue', 'magenta', 'cyan', 'white')
foreground = dict([(color_names[x], '3%s' % x) for x in range(8)])
background = dict([(color_names[x], '4%s' % x) for x in range(8)])
RESET = '0'
opt_dict = {'bold': '1', 'underscore': '4', 'blink': '5', 'reverse': '7', 'conceal': '8'}
def colorize(text='', opts=(), **kwargs):
"""
Returns your text, enclosed in ANSI graphics codes.
Depends on the keyword arguments 'fg' and 'bg', and the contents of
the opts tuple/list.
Returns the RESET code if no parameters are given.
Valid colors:
'black', 'red', 'green', 'yellow', 'blue', 'magenta', 'cyan', 'white'
Valid options:
'bold'
'underscore'
'blink'
'reverse'
'conceal'
'noreset' - string will not be auto-terminated with the RESET code
Examples:
colorize('hello', fg='red', bg='blue', opts=('blink',))
colorize()
colorize('goodbye', opts=('underscore',))
print colorize('first line', fg='red', opts=('noreset',))
print 'this should be red too'
print colorize('and so should this')
print 'this should not be red'
"""
code_list = []
if text == '' and len(opts) == 1 and opts[0] == 'reset':
return '\x1b[%sm' % RESET
for k, v in kwargs.iteritems():
if k == 'fg':
code_list.append(foreground[v])
elif k == 'bg':
code_list.append(background[v])
for o in opts:
if o in opt_dict:
code_list.append(opt_dict[o])
if 'noreset' not in opts:
text = text + '\x1b[%sm' % RESET
return ('\x1b[%sm' % ';'.join(code_list)) + text
def make_style(opts=(), **kwargs):
"""
Returns a function with default parameters for colorize()
Example:
bold_red = make_style(opts=('bold',), fg='red')
print bold_red('hello')
KEYWORD = make_style(fg='yellow')
COMMENT = make_style(fg='blue', opts=('bold',))
"""
return lambda text: colorize(text, opts, **kwargs)
NOCOLOR_PALETTE = 'nocolor'
DARK_PALETTE = 'dark'
LIGHT_PALETTE = 'light'
PALETTES = {
NOCOLOR_PALETTE: {
'ERROR': {},
'NOTICE': {},
'SQL_FIELD': {},
'SQL_COLTYPE': {},
'SQL_KEYWORD': {},
'SQL_TABLE': {},
'HTTP_INFO': {},
'HTTP_SUCCESS': {},
'HTTP_REDIRECT': {},
'HTTP_NOT_MODIFIED': {},
'HTTP_BAD_REQUEST': {},
'HTTP_NOT_FOUND': {},
'HTTP_SERVER_ERROR': {},
},
DARK_PALETTE: {
'ERROR': { 'fg': 'red', 'opts': ('bold',) },
'NOTICE': { 'fg': 'red' },
'SQL_FIELD': { 'fg': 'green', 'opts': ('bold',) },
'SQL_COLTYPE': { 'fg': 'green' },
'SQL_KEYWORD': { 'fg': 'yellow' },
'SQL_TABLE': { 'opts': ('bold',) },
'HTTP_INFO': { 'opts': ('bold',) },
'HTTP_SUCCESS': { },
'HTTP_REDIRECT': { 'fg': 'green' },
'HTTP_NOT_MODIFIED': { 'fg': 'cyan' },
'HTTP_BAD_REQUEST': { 'fg': 'red', 'opts': ('bold',) },
'HTTP_NOT_FOUND': { 'fg': 'yellow' },
'HTTP_SERVER_ERROR': { 'fg': 'magenta', 'opts': ('bold',) },
},
LIGHT_PALETTE: {
'ERROR': { 'fg': 'red', 'opts': ('bold',) },
'NOTICE': { 'fg': 'red' },
'SQL_FIELD': { 'fg': 'green', 'opts': ('bold',) },
'SQL_COLTYPE': { 'fg': 'green' },
'SQL_KEYWORD': { 'fg': 'blue' },
'SQL_TABLE': { 'opts': ('bold',) },
'HTTP_INFO': { 'opts': ('bold',) },
'HTTP_SUCCESS': { },
'HTTP_REDIRECT': { 'fg': 'green', 'opts': ('bold',) },
'HTTP_NOT_MODIFIED': { 'fg': 'green' },
'HTTP_BAD_REQUEST': { 'fg': 'red', 'opts': ('bold',) },
'HTTP_NOT_FOUND': { 'fg': 'red' },
'HTTP_SERVER_ERROR': { 'fg': 'magenta', 'opts': ('bold',) },
}
}
DEFAULT_PALETTE = DARK_PALETTE
def parse_color_setting(config_string):
"""Parse a DJANGO_COLORS environment variable to produce the system palette
The general form of a pallete definition is:
"palette;role=fg;role=fg/bg;role=fg,option,option;role=fg/bg,option,option"
where:
palette is a named palette; one of 'light', 'dark', or 'nocolor'.
role is a named style used by Django
fg is a background color.
bg is a background color.
option is a display options.
Specifying a named palette is the same as manually specifying the individual
definitions for each role. Any individual definitions following the pallete
definition will augment the base palette definition.
Valid roles:
'error', 'notice', 'sql_field', 'sql_coltype', 'sql_keyword', 'sql_table',
'http_info', 'http_success', 'http_redirect', 'http_bad_request',
'http_not_found', 'http_server_error'
Valid colors:
'black', 'red', 'green', 'yellow', 'blue', 'magenta', 'cyan', 'white'
Valid options:
'bold', 'underscore', 'blink', 'reverse', 'conceal'
"""
if not config_string:
return PALETTES[DEFAULT_PALETTE]
# Split the color configuration into parts
parts = config_string.lower().split(';')
palette = PALETTES[NOCOLOR_PALETTE].copy()
for part in parts:
if part in PALETTES:
# A default palette has been specified
palette.update(PALETTES[part])
elif '=' in part:
# Process a palette defining string
definition = {}
# Break the definition into the role,
# plus the list of specific instructions.
# The role must be in upper case
role, instructions = part.split('=')
role = role.upper()
styles = instructions.split(',')
styles.reverse()
# The first instruction can contain a slash
# to break apart fg/bg.
colors = styles.pop().split('/')
colors.reverse()
fg = colors.pop()
if fg in color_names:
definition['fg'] = fg
if colors and colors[-1] in color_names:
definition['bg'] = colors[-1]
# All remaining instructions are options
opts = tuple(s for s in styles if s in opt_dict.keys())
if opts:
definition['opts'] = opts
# The nocolor palette has all available roles.
# Use that palette as the basis for determining
# if the role is valid.
if role in PALETTES[NOCOLOR_PALETTE] and definition:
palette[role] = definition
# If there are no colors specified, return the empty palette.
if palette == PALETTES[NOCOLOR_PALETTE]:
return None
return palette