##// END OF EJS Templates
chg: make is possible to call by default an hg binary located next to chg...
chg: make is possible to call by default an hg binary located next to chg When a single version of hg is in use and it's in the PATH, using chg is just a matter of calling chg. But when there are multiple installations of hg+chg around, and hg is referred to with an absolute path, using chg is more annoying because it requires both changing the invocation to hg to use chg, but also setting CHGHG. Currently, we set HGPATH when we build chg to remove the need to set CHGHG in the previous paragraph. But that means chg now hardcodes its installation path, which makes the installation not relocatable. Hence this proposal to make chg find ./hg relative to itself (as opposed to CHGHG=./hg which find hg relative to cwd). This only works on linux as written, but since it's opt-in, it sounds fine. Tested by hand, as I'm not sure how else to test this. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D9006

File last commit:

r37195:68ee6182 default
r46125:eb443f7c default
Show More
document.py
122 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.
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
from . import 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 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)