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thirdparty: vendor zope.interface 4.4.3...
thirdparty: vendor zope.interface 4.4.3 I've been trying to formalize interfaces for various components of Mercurial. So far, we've been using the "abc" package. This package is "good enough" for a lot of tasks. But it quickly falls over. For example, if you declare an @abc.abstractproperty, you must implement that attribute with a @property or the class compile time checking performed by abc will complain. This often forces you to implement dumb @property wrappers to return a _ prefixed attribute of the sane name. That's ugly. I've also wanted to implement automated checking that classes conform to various interfaces and don't expose other "public" attributes. After doing a bit of research and asking around, the general consensus seems to be that zope.interface is the best package for doing interface-based programming in Python. It has built-in support for verifying classes and objects conform to interfaces. It allows an interface's properties to be defined during __init__. There's even an "adapter registry" that allow you to register interfaces and look up which classes implement them. That could potentially be useful for places where our custom registry.py modules currently facilitates central registrations, but at a type level. Imagine extensions providing alternate implementations of things like the local repository interface to allow opening repositories with custom requirements. Anyway, this commit vendors zope.interface 4.4.3. The contents of the source tarball have been copied into mercurial/thirdparty/zope/ without modifications. Test modules have been removed because they are not interesting to us. The LICENSE.txt file has been copied so it lives next to the source. The Python modules don't use relative imports. zope/__init__.py defines a namespace package. So we'll need to modify the source code before this package is usable inside Mercurial. This will be done in subsequent commits. # no-check-commit for various style failures Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2928

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document.py
120 lines | 3.9 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
##############################################################################
#
# Copyright (c) 2001, 2002 Zope Foundation and Contributors.
# All Rights Reserved.
#
# This software is subject to the provisions of the Zope Public License,
# Version 2.1 (ZPL). A copy of the ZPL should accompany this distribution.
# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND ANY AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
# WARRANTIES ARE DISCLAIMED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
# WARRANTIES OF TITLE, MERCHANTABILITY, AGAINST INFRINGEMENT, AND FITNESS
# FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
#
##############################################################################
""" Pretty-Print an Interface object as structured text (Yum)
This module provides a function, asStructuredText, for rendering an
interface as structured text.
"""
import zope.interface
def asStructuredText(I, munge=0, rst=False):
""" Output structured text format. Note, this will whack any existing
'structured' format of the text.
If `rst=True`, then the output will quote all code as inline literals in
accordance with 'reStructuredText' markup principles.
"""
if rst:
inline_literal = lambda s: "``%s``" % (s,)
else:
inline_literal = lambda s: s
r = [inline_literal(I.getName())]
outp = r.append
level = 1
if I.getDoc():
outp(_justify_and_indent(_trim_doc_string(I.getDoc()), level))
bases = [base
for base in I.__bases__
if base is not zope.interface.Interface
]
if bases:
outp(_justify_and_indent("This interface extends:", level, munge))
level += 1
for b in bases:
item = "o %s" % inline_literal(b.getName())
outp(_justify_and_indent(_trim_doc_string(item), level, munge))
level -= 1
namesAndDescriptions = sorted(I.namesAndDescriptions())
outp(_justify_and_indent("Attributes:", level, munge))
level += 1
for name, desc in namesAndDescriptions:
if not hasattr(desc, 'getSignatureString'): # ugh...
item = "%s -- %s" % (inline_literal(desc.getName()),
desc.getDoc() or 'no documentation')
outp(_justify_and_indent(_trim_doc_string(item), level, munge))
level -= 1
outp(_justify_and_indent("Methods:", level, munge))
level += 1
for name, desc in namesAndDescriptions:
if hasattr(desc, 'getSignatureString'): # ugh...
_call = "%s%s" % (desc.getName(), desc.getSignatureString())
item = "%s -- %s" % (inline_literal(_call),
desc.getDoc() or 'no documentation')
outp(_justify_and_indent(_trim_doc_string(item), level, munge))
return "\n\n".join(r) + "\n\n"
def asReStructuredText(I, munge=0):
""" Output reStructuredText format. Note, this will whack any existing
'structured' format of the text."""
return asStructuredText(I, munge=munge, rst=True)
def _trim_doc_string(text):
""" Trims a doc string to make it format
correctly with structured text. """
lines = text.replace('\r\n', '\n').split('\n')
nlines = [lines.pop(0)]
if lines:
min_indent = min([len(line) - len(line.lstrip())
for line in lines])
for line in lines:
nlines.append(line[min_indent:])
return '\n'.join(nlines)
def _justify_and_indent(text, level, munge=0, width=72):
""" indent and justify text, rejustify (munge) if specified """
indent = " " * level
if munge:
lines = []
line = indent
text = text.split()
for word in text:
line = ' '.join([line, word])
if len(line) > width:
lines.append(line)
line = indent
else:
lines.append(line)
return '\n'.join(lines)
else:
return indent + \
text.strip().replace("\r\n", "\n") .replace("\n", "\n" + indent)