# type: ignore
# pragma: nocover
# type: ignore
"""
Return a function that will perform a substitution on a string
"""
return
"""
Take a sequence of pairs specifying substitutions, and create
a function that performs those substitutions.
>>> multi_substitution(('foo', 'bar'), ('bar', 'baz'))('foo')
'baz'
"""
=
# compose function applies last function first, so reverse the
# substitutions to get the expected order.
=
return
"""
A case insensitive string class; behaves just like str
except compares equal when the only variation is case.
>>> s = FoldedCase('hello world')
>>> s == 'Hello World'
True
>>> 'Hello World' == s
True
>>> s != 'Hello World'
False
>>> s.index('O')
4
>>> s.split('O')
['hell', ' w', 'rld']
>>> sorted(map(FoldedCase, ['GAMMA', 'alpha', 'Beta']))
['alpha', 'Beta', 'GAMMA']
Sequence membership is straightforward.
>>> "Hello World" in [s]
True
>>> s in ["Hello World"]
True
You may test for set inclusion, but candidate and elements
must both be folded.
>>> FoldedCase("Hello World") in {s}
True
>>> s in {FoldedCase("Hello World")}
True
String inclusion works as long as the FoldedCase object
is on the right.
>>> "hello" in FoldedCase("Hello World")
True
But not if the FoldedCase object is on the left:
>>> FoldedCase('hello') in 'Hello World'
False
In that case, use ``in_``:
>>> FoldedCase('hello').in_('Hello World')
True
>>> FoldedCase('hello') > FoldedCase('Hello')
False
"""
return <
return >
return ==
return !=
return
return
return in
# cache lower since it's likely to be called frequently.
return
return
=
return
# Python 3.8 compatibility
=
r"""
Return True if the supplied value is decodable (using the default
encoding).
>>> is_decodable(b'\xff')
False
>>> is_decodable(b'\x32')
True
"""
r"""
Return True if the value appears to be binary (that is, it's a byte
string and isn't decodable).
>>> is_binary(b'\xff')
True
>>> is_binary('\xff')
False
"""
return and not
r"""
Trim something like a docstring to remove the whitespace that
is common due to indentation and formatting.
>>> trim("\n\tfoo = bar\n\t\tbar = baz\n")
'foo = bar\n\tbar = baz'
"""
return
"""
Wrap lines of text, retaining existing newlines as
paragraph markers.
>>> print(wrap(lorem_ipsum))
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do
eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad
minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut
aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in
reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla
pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in
culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.
<BLANKLINE>
Curabitur pretium tincidunt lacus. Nulla gravida orci a odio. Nullam
varius, turpis et commodo pharetra, est eros bibendum elit, nec luctus
magna felis sollicitudin mauris. Integer in mauris eu nibh euismod
gravida. Duis ac tellus et risus vulputate vehicula. Donec lobortis
risus a elit. Etiam tempor. Ut ullamcorper, ligula eu tempor congue,
eros est euismod turpis, id tincidunt sapien risus a quam. Maecenas
fermentum consequat mi. Donec fermentum. Pellentesque malesuada nulla
a mi. Duis sapien sem, aliquet nec, commodo eget, consequat quis,
neque. Aliquam faucibus, elit ut dictum aliquet, felis nisl adipiscing
sapien, sed malesuada diam lacus eget erat. Cras mollis scelerisque
nunc. Nullam arcu. Aliquam consequat. Curabitur augue lorem, dapibus
quis, laoreet et, pretium ac, nisi. Aenean magna nisl, mollis quis,
molestie eu, feugiat in, orci. In hac habitasse platea dictumst.
"""
=
=
return
r"""
Given a multi-line string, return an unwrapped version.
>>> wrapped = wrap(lorem_ipsum)
>>> wrapped.count('\n')
20
>>> unwrapped = unwrap(wrapped)
>>> unwrapped.count('\n')
1
>>> print(unwrapped)
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing ...
Curabitur pretium tincidunt lacus. Nulla gravida orci ...
"""
=
=
return
"""object that will split a string with the given arguments for each call
>>> s = Splitter(',')
>>> s('hello, world, this is your, master calling')
['hello', ' world', ' this is your', ' master calling']
"""
=
return
"""
>>> indent('foo')
' foo'
"""
return +
"""
Given an identifier, return the words that identifier represents,
whether in camel case, underscore-separated, etc.
>>> WordSet.parse("camelCase")
('camel', 'Case')
>>> WordSet.parse("under_sep")
('under', 'sep')
Acronyms should be retained
>>> WordSet.parse("firstSNL")
('first', 'SNL')
>>> WordSet.parse("you_and_I")
('you', 'and', 'I')
>>> WordSet.parse("A simple test")
('A', 'simple', 'test')
Multiple caps should not interfere with the first cap of another word.
>>> WordSet.parse("myABCClass")
('my', 'ABC', 'Class')
The result is a WordSet, so you can get the form you need.
>>> WordSet.parse("myABCClass").underscore_separated()
'my_ABC_Class'
>>> WordSet.parse('a-command').camel_case()
'ACommand'
>>> WordSet.parse('someIdentifier').lowered().space_separated()
'some identifier'
Slices of the result should return another WordSet.
>>> WordSet.parse('taken-out-of-context')[1:].underscore_separated()
'out_of_context'
>>> WordSet.from_class_name(WordSet()).lowered().space_separated()
'word set'
>>> example = WordSet.parse('figured it out')
>>> example.headless_camel_case()
'figuredItOut'
>>> example.dash_separated()
'figured-it-out'
"""
=
return
return
return
=
=
=
return
return
return
return
"""
Remove the item from the end of the set.
>>> WordSet.parse('foo bar').trim_right('foo')
('foo', 'bar')
>>> WordSet.parse('foo bar').trim_right('bar')
('foo',)
>>> WordSet.parse('').trim_right('bar')
()
"""
return
"""
Remove the item from the beginning of the set.
>>> WordSet.parse('foo bar').trim_left('foo')
('bar',)
>>> WordSet.parse('foo bar').trim_left('bar')
('foo', 'bar')
>>> WordSet.parse('').trim_left('bar')
()
"""
return
"""
>>> WordSet.parse('foo bar').trim('foo')
('bar',)
"""
return
=
=
return
=
return
return
# for backward compatibility
=
r"""
Remove HTML from the string `s`.
>>> str(simple_html_strip(''))
''
>>> print(simple_html_strip('A <bold>stormy</bold> day in paradise'))
A stormy day in paradise
>>> print(simple_html_strip('Somebody <!-- do not --> tell the truth.'))
Somebody tell the truth.
>>> print(simple_html_strip('What about<br/>\nmultiple lines?'))
What about
multiple lines?
"""
=
=
return
"""
A string separated by a separator. Overrides __iter__ for getting
the values.
>>> list(SeparatedValues('a,b,c'))
['a', 'b', 'c']
Whitespace is stripped and empty values are discarded.
>>> list(SeparatedValues(' a, b , c, '))
['a', 'b', 'c']
"""
=
=
return
r"""
Given a series of lines, find the common prefix and strip it from them.
>>> lines = [
... 'abcdefg\n',
... 'abc\n',
... 'abcde\n',
... ]
>>> res = Stripper.strip_prefix(lines)
>>> res.prefix
'abc'
>>> list(res.lines)
['defg\n', '\n', 'de\n']
If no prefix is common, nothing should be stripped.
>>> lines = [
... 'abcd\n',
... '1234\n',
... ]
>>> res = Stripper.strip_prefix(lines)
>>> res.prefix = ''
>>> list(res.lines)
['abcd\n', '1234\n']
"""
=
=
, =
=
return
return
, , =
return
"""
Return the common prefix of two lines.
"""
=
-= 1
return
"""
Remove the prefix from the text if it exists.
>>> remove_prefix('underwhelming performance', 'underwhelming ')
'performance'
>>> remove_prefix('something special', 'sample')
'something special'
"""
, , =
return
"""
Remove the suffix from the text if it exists.
>>> remove_suffix('name.git', '.git')
'name'
>>> remove_suffix('something special', 'sample')
'something special'
"""
, , =
return
r"""
Replace alternate newlines with the canonical newline.
>>> normalize_newlines('Lorem Ipsum\u2029')
'Lorem Ipsum\n'
>>> normalize_newlines('Lorem Ipsum\r\n')
'Lorem Ipsum\n'
>>> normalize_newlines('Lorem Ipsum\x85')
'Lorem Ipsum\n'
"""
=
=
return
return and not
r"""
Yield valid lines of a string or iterable.
>>> list(yield_lines(''))
[]
>>> list(yield_lines(['foo', 'bar']))
['foo', 'bar']
>>> list(yield_lines('foo\nbar'))
['foo', 'bar']
>>> list(yield_lines('\nfoo\n#bar\nbaz #comment'))
['foo', 'baz #comment']
>>> list(yield_lines(['foo\nbar', 'baz', 'bing\n\n\n']))
['foo', 'bar', 'baz', 'bing']
"""
return
return
"""
Drop comments.
>>> drop_comment('foo # bar')
'foo'
A hash without a space may be in a URL.
>>> drop_comment('http://example.com/foo#bar')
'http://example.com/foo#bar'
"""
return
r"""
Join lines continued by a trailing backslash.
>>> list(join_continuation(['foo \\', 'bar', 'baz']))
['foobar', 'baz']
>>> list(join_continuation(['foo \\', 'bar', 'baz']))
['foobar', 'baz']
>>> list(join_continuation(['foo \\', 'bar \\', 'baz']))
['foobarbaz']
Not sure why, but...
The character preceeding the backslash is also elided.
>>> list(join_continuation(['goo\\', 'dly']))
['godly']
A terrible idea, but...
If no line is available to continue, suppress the lines.
>>> list(join_continuation(['foo', 'bar\\', 'baz\\']))
['foo']
"""
=
= +
return
yield