New version by Tim Peters improves block opening test.

This commit is contained in:
Guido van Rossum 1999-06-01 15:03:30 +00:00
parent 116b31bed7
commit 8234dfcccb
1 changed files with 52 additions and 2 deletions

View File

@ -39,7 +39,6 @@ TK_TABWIDTH_DEFAULT = 8
###$ unix <Alt-Key-6>
import re
_is_block_opener = re.compile(r":\s*(#.*)?$").search
_is_block_closer = re.compile(r"""
\s*
( return
@ -50,6 +49,9 @@ _is_block_closer = re.compile(r"""
)
\b
""", re.VERBOSE).match
# colon followed by optional comment
_looks_like_opener = re.compile(r":\s*(#.*)?$").search
del re
class AutoIndent:
@ -136,7 +138,7 @@ class AutoIndent:
if guess and ispythonsource:
i = self.guess_indent()
import sys
##import sys
##sys.__stdout__.write("indent %d\n" % i)
if 2 <= i <= 8:
self.indentwidth = i
@ -423,6 +425,54 @@ def classifyws(s, tabwidth):
break
return raw, effective
# Return true iff line probably opens a block. This is a limited
# analysis based on whether the line's last "interesting" character
# is a colon.
def _is_block_opener(line):
if not _looks_like_opener(line):
return 0
# Looks like an opener, but possible we're in a comment
# x = 3 # and then:
# or a string
# x = ":#"
# If no comment character, we're not in a comment <duh>, and the
# colon is the last non-ws char on the line so it's not in a
# (single-line) string either.
if string.find(line, '#') < 0:
return 1
# Now it's hard: There's a colon and a comment char. Brute force
# approximation.
lastch, i, n = 0, 0, len(line)
while i < n:
ch = line[i]
if ch == '\\':
lastch = ch
i = i+2
elif ch in "\"'":
# consume string
w = 1 # width of string quote
if line[i:i+3] in ('"""', "'''"):
w = 3
ch = ch * 3
i = i+w
while i < n:
if line[i] == '\\':
i = i+2
elif line[i:i+w] == ch:
i = i+w
break
else:
i = i+1
lastch = ch
elif ch == '#':
break
else:
if ch not in string.whitespace:
lastch = ch
i = i+1
return lastch == ':'
import tokenize
_tokenize = tokenize
del tokenize