##// END OF EJS Templates
coal: copy newer things from paper...
coal: copy newer things from paper Basically, coal style in hgweb is intended to be functionally equivalent (just different in style) to paper, and does this by reusing almost all templates from paper (except header.tmpl, where it specifies a different css file). Looks like everybody forgot this and so many improvements to paper templates, that should've also made it into coal, were often only half-done there (usually thanks to template reuse). Let's fix this by bulk-copying missing things from paper/map and style-paper.css to coal/map and style-coal.css. There were many improvements to paper that didn't touch coal, and that makes it hard to untangle the code and split this patch into many, but here are some of the changes (paper-only), that now get into coal: 41c4bdd1d585 - hgweb: color line which is linked to in file source view f3393d458bf5 - hgweb: highlight line which is linked to at annotate view f2e4fdb3dd27 - hgweb: code selection without line numbers in file source view 5ec5097b4c0f - hgweb: add line wrapping switch to file source view bf661a03fddc - hgweb: use css margin instead of empty <p> before diffstat table It also fixes line anchor in annotateline template (#42 vs #l42).

File last commit:

r21292:a7a9d84f default
r26244:399e970e default
Show More
py3kcompat.py
65 lines | 2.1 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# py3kcompat.py - compatibility definitions for running hg in py3k
#
# Copyright 2010 Renato Cunha <renatoc@gmail.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
import builtins
from numbers import Number
def bytesformatter(format, args):
'''Custom implementation of a formatter for bytestrings.
This function currently relies on the string formatter to do the
formatting and always returns bytes objects.
>>> bytesformatter(20, 10)
0
>>> bytesformatter('unicode %s, %s!', ('string', 'foo'))
b'unicode string, foo!'
>>> bytesformatter(b'test %s', 'me')
b'test me'
>>> bytesformatter('test %s', 'me')
b'test me'
>>> bytesformatter(b'test %s', b'me')
b'test me'
>>> bytesformatter('test %s', b'me')
b'test me'
>>> bytesformatter('test %d: %s', (1, b'result'))
b'test 1: result'
'''
# The current implementation just converts from bytes to unicode, do
# what's needed and then convert the results back to bytes.
# Another alternative is to use the Python C API implementation.
if isinstance(format, Number):
# If the fixer erroneously passes a number remainder operation to
# bytesformatter, we just return the correct operation
return format % args
if isinstance(format, bytes):
format = format.decode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape')
if isinstance(args, bytes):
args = args.decode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape')
if isinstance(args, tuple):
newargs = []
for arg in args:
if isinstance(arg, bytes):
arg = arg.decode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape')
newargs.append(arg)
args = tuple(newargs)
ret = format % args
return ret.encode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape')
builtins.bytesformatter = bytesformatter
origord = builtins.ord
def fakeord(char):
if isinstance(char, int):
return char
return origord(char)
builtins.ord = fakeord
if __name__ == '__main__':
import doctest
doctest.testmod()