Don't crash when nonlocal is used at module level (fixes SF#1705365)

This commit is contained in:
Nick Coghlan 2007-04-23 10:14:27 +00:00
parent 846f1ee390
commit 4138bfec0a
2 changed files with 16 additions and 5 deletions

View File

@ -388,6 +388,12 @@ Misuse of the nonlocal statement can lead to a few unique syntax errors.
...
SyntaxError: no binding for nonlocal 'x' found
From SF bug #1705365
>>> nonlocal x
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
SyntaxError: nonlocal declaration not allowed at module level
TODO(jhylton): Figure out how to test SyntaxWarning with doctest.
## >>> def f(x):

View File

@ -337,8 +337,6 @@ PyST_GetScope(PySTEntryObject *ste, PyObject *name)
block, the name is treated as global until it is assigned to; then it
is treated as a local.
TODO(jhylton): Discuss nonlocal
The symbol table requires two passes to determine the scope of each name.
The first pass collects raw facts from the AST via the symtable_visit_*
functions: the name is a parameter here, the name is used but not defined
@ -348,8 +346,10 @@ PyST_GetScope(PySTEntryObject *ste, PyObject *name)
When a function is entered during the second pass, the parent passes
the set of all name bindings visible to its children. These bindings
are used to determine if non-local variables are free or implicit globals.
After doing the local analysis, it analyzes each of its child blocks
using an updated set of name bindings.
Names which are explicitly declared nonlocal must exist in this set of
visible names - if they do not, a syntax error is raised. After doing
the local analysis, it analyzes each of its child blocks using an
updated set of name bindings.
The children update the free variable set. If a local variable is added to
the free variable set by the child, the variable is marked as a cell. The
@ -415,6 +415,11 @@ analyze_name(PySTEntryObject *ste, PyObject *scopes, PyObject *name, long flags,
PyString_AS_STRING(name));
return 0;
}
if (!bound) {
PyErr_Format(PyExc_SyntaxError,
"nonlocal declaration not allowed at module level");
return 0;
}
if (!PySet_Contains(bound, name)) {
PyErr_Format(PyExc_SyntaxError,
"no binding for nonlocal '%s' found",