(Code contributed by Jiwon Seo.)
The documentation portion of the patch is being re-worked and will be
checked-in soon. Likewise, PEP 289 will be updated to reflect Guido's
rationale for the design decisions on binding behavior (as described in
in his patch comments and in discussions on python-dev).
The test file, test_genexps.py, is written in doctest format and is
meant to exercise all aspects of the the patch. Further additions are
welcome from everyone. Please stress test this new feature as much as
possible before the alpha release.
compile() becomes replacement for builtin compile()
compileFile() generates a .pyc from a .py
both are exported in __init__
compiler.parse() gets optional second argument to specify compilation
mode, e.g. single, eval, exec
Add AbstractCompileMode as parent class and Module, Expression, and
Interactive as concrete subclasses. Each corresponds to a compilation
mode.
THe AbstractCompileMode instances in turn delegate to CodeGeneration
subclasses specialized for their particular functions --
ModuleCodeGenerator, ExpressionCodeGeneration,
InteractiveCodeGenerator.
The argument properties are ordered from easiest to hardest. The
harder the arg, the more complicated that code that must be generated
to return it from getChildren() and/or getChildNodes(). The old
calculation routine was bogus, because it always set hardest_arg to
the hardness of the last argument. Now use max() to always set it to
the hardness of the hardest argument.
Remove the only test in the syntax module. It ends up that the
transformer must handle this error case.
In the transformer, check for a list compression in com_assign_list()
by looking for a list_for node where a comma is expected.
In pycodegen.compile() re-raise the SyntaxError rather than catching
it and exiting
Invoke compiler.syntax.check() after building AST. If a SyntaxError
occurs, print the error and exit without generating a .pyc file.
Refactor code to use compiler.misc.set_filename() rather than passing
filename argument around to each CodeGenerator instance.
Remove the option to have nested scopes or old LGB scopes. This has a
large impact on the code base, by removing the need for two variants
of each CodeGenerator.
Add a get_module() method to CodeGenerator objects, used to get the
future features for the current module.
Set CO_GENERATOR, CO_GENERATOR_ALLOWED, and CO_FUTURE_DIVISION flags
as appropriate.
Attempt to fix the value of nlocals in newCodeObject(), assuming that
nlocals is 0 if CO_NEWLOCALS is not defined.
Fix list comp code generation -- emit GET_ITER instead of Const(0)
after the list.
Add CO_GENERATOR flag to generators.
Get CO_xxx flags from the new module
try/except or try/finally.
Previous versions had only track SETUP_LOOP blocks and ignored the
exception part. This meant that it allowed continue inside a
try/except but generated buggy code. Now it does the right thing.
As the doc string for _lookupName() explains:
This routine uses a list instead of a dictionary, because a
dictionary can't store two different keys if the keys have the
same value but different types, e.g. 2 and 2L. The compiler
must treat these two separately, so it does an explicit type
comparison before comparing the values.
Avoid if/elif/elif/else tests where the final else is supposed to
handle exactly one case instead of all other cases. When the list of
operators is extended, the catchall else treats all new operators as
the last operator in the set of tests. Instead, raise an exception if
an unexpected operator occurs.
Use a dictionary instead of a list to map objects to their offsets in
a const/name tuple of a code object.
XXX The conversion is perhaps incomplete, in that we shouldn't have to
do the list2dict to start.
Add support for floor division (// and //=)
The implementation of getChildren() and getChildNodes() is intended to
be faster, because it avoids calling flatten() on every return value.
But it's not clear that it is a lot faster, because constructing a
tuple with just the right values ends up being slow. (Too many
attribute lookups probably.)
The ast.txt file is much more complicated, with funny characters at
the ends of names (*, &, !) to indicate the types of each child node.
The astgen script is also much more complex, making me wonder if it's
still useful.
varnames should list all the local variables (with arguments first).
The XXX_NAME ops typically occur at the module level and assignment
ops should create locals.
(Hard to believe these were never handled before)
Add misc.mangle() that mangles based on the rules in compile.c.
XXX Need to test the corner cases
Update CodeGenerator with a class_name attribute bound to None. If a
particular instance is created within a class scope, the instance's
class_name is bound to that class's name.
Add mangle() method to CodeGenerator that mangles if the class_name
has a class_name in it.
Modify the FunctionCodeGenerator family to handle an extra argument--
the class_name.
Wrap all name ops and attrnames in calls to self.mangle()
Make nested scopes enabled by default
Add is_constant_false() helper so that compiled code and symbols are
consistent with builtin compiler's handling of "if 0:"
Fix doc string handling to be consistent with recent change that
eliminates the doc string from the Module's node attribute.
Add fix to print handling from Evan & Shane.
Track change to visitor api by making "verbose" explicit.
Comment out setting CO_NESTED flag (it's unnecessary in 2.2).
Evan Simpson's fix. And his explanation:
If you defined two nested functions in a row that refer to the
same non-global variable, the second one will be generated as
though the variable were global.
The use of com_node() introduces a lot of extra stack frames, enough
to cause a stack overflow compiling test.test_parser with the standard
interpreter recursionlimit. The com_node() is a convenience function
that hides the dispatch details, but comes at a very high cost. It is
more efficient to dispatch directly in the callers. In these cases,
use lookup_node() and call the dispatched node directly.
Also handle yield_stmt in a way that will work with Python 2.1
(suggested by Shane Hathaway)