import copy from collections import OrderedDict class OrderedSet: """ A set which keeps the ordering of the inserted items. Currently backs onto OrderedDict. """ def __init__(self, iterable=None): self.dict = OrderedDict.fromkeys(iterable or ()) def add(self, item): self.dict[item] = None def remove(self, item): del self.dict[item] def discard(self, item): try: self.remove(item) except KeyError: pass def __iter__(self): return iter(self.dict) def __contains__(self, item): return item in self.dict def __bool__(self): return bool(self.dict) def __len__(self): return len(self.dict) class MultiValueDictKeyError(KeyError): pass class MultiValueDict(dict): """ A subclass of dictionary customized to handle multiple values for the same key. >>> d = MultiValueDict({'name': ['Adrian', 'Simon'], 'position': ['Developer']}) >>> d['name'] 'Simon' >>> d.getlist('name') ['Adrian', 'Simon'] >>> d.getlist('doesnotexist') [] >>> d.getlist('doesnotexist', ['Adrian', 'Simon']) ['Adrian', 'Simon'] >>> d.get('lastname', 'nonexistent') 'nonexistent' >>> d.setlist('lastname', ['Holovaty', 'Willison']) This class exists to solve the irritating problem raised by cgi.parse_qs, which returns a list for every key, even though most Web forms submit single name-value pairs. """ def __init__(self, key_to_list_mapping=()): super().__init__(key_to_list_mapping) def __repr__(self): return "<%s: %s>" % (self.__class__.__name__, super().__repr__()) def __getitem__(self, key): """ Return the last data value for this key, or [] if it's an empty list; raise KeyError if not found. """ try: list_ = super().__getitem__(key) except KeyError: raise MultiValueDictKeyError(key) try: return list_[-1] except IndexError: return [] def __setitem__(self, key, value): super().__setitem__(key, [value]) def __copy__(self): return self.__class__([ (k, v[:]) for k, v in self.lists() ]) def __deepcopy__(self, memo): result = self.__class__() memo[id(self)] = result for key, value in dict.items(self): dict.__setitem__(result, copy.deepcopy(key, memo), copy.deepcopy(value, memo)) return result def __getstate__(self): obj_dict = self.__dict__.copy() obj_dict['_data'] = {k: self._getlist(k) for k in self} return obj_dict def __setstate__(self, obj_dict): data = obj_dict.pop('_data', {}) for k, v in data.items(): self.setlist(k, v) self.__dict__.update(obj_dict) def get(self, key, default=None): """ Return the last data value for the passed key. If key doesn't exist or value is an empty list, return `default`. """ try: val = self[key] except KeyError: return default if val == []: return default return val def _getlist(self, key, default=None, force_list=False): """ Return a list of values for the key. Used internally to manipulate values list. If force_list is True, return a new copy of values. """ try: values = super().__getitem__(key) except KeyError: if default is None: return [] return default else: if force_list: values = list(values) if values is not None else None return values def getlist(self, key, default=None): """ Return the list of values for the key. If key doesn't exist, return a default value. """ return self._getlist(key, default, force_list=True) def setlist(self, key, list_): super().__setitem__(key, list_) def setdefault(self, key, default=None): if key not in self: self[key] = default # Do not return default here because __setitem__() may store # another value -- QueryDict.__setitem__() does. Look it up. return self[key] def setlistdefault(self, key, default_list=None): if key not in self: if default_list is None: default_list = [] self.setlist(key, default_list) # Do not return default_list here because setlist() may store # another value -- QueryDict.setlist() does. Look it up. return self._getlist(key) def appendlist(self, key, value): """Append an item to the internal list associated with key.""" self.setlistdefault(key).append(value) def items(self): """ Yield (key, value) pairs, where value is the last item in the list associated with the key. """ for key in self: yield key, self[key] def lists(self): """Yield (key, list) pairs.""" return iter(super().items()) def values(self): """Yield the last value on every key list.""" for key in self: yield self[key] def copy(self): """Return a shallow copy of this object.""" return copy.copy(self) def update(self, *args, **kwargs): """Extend rather than replace existing key lists.""" if len(args) > 1: raise TypeError("update expected at most 1 arguments, got %d" % len(args)) if args: other_dict = args[0] if isinstance(other_dict, MultiValueDict): for key, value_list in other_dict.lists(): self.setlistdefault(key).extend(value_list) else: try: for key, value in other_dict.items(): self.setlistdefault(key).append(value) except TypeError: raise ValueError("MultiValueDict.update() takes either a MultiValueDict or dictionary") for key, value in kwargs.items(): self.setlistdefault(key).append(value) def dict(self): """Return current object as a dict with singular values.""" return {key: self[key] for key in self} class ImmutableList(tuple): """ A tuple-like object that raises useful errors when it is asked to mutate. Example:: >>> a = ImmutableList(range(5), warning="You cannot mutate this.") >>> a[3] = '4' Traceback (most recent call last): ... AttributeError: You cannot mutate this. """ def __new__(cls, *args, warning='ImmutableList object is immutable.', **kwargs): self = tuple.__new__(cls, *args, **kwargs) self.warning = warning return self def complain(self, *wargs, **kwargs): if isinstance(self.warning, Exception): raise self.warning else: raise AttributeError(self.warning) # All list mutation functions complain. __delitem__ = complain __delslice__ = complain __iadd__ = complain __imul__ = complain __setitem__ = complain __setslice__ = complain append = complain extend = complain insert = complain pop = complain remove = complain sort = complain reverse = complain class DictWrapper(dict): """ Wrap accesses to a dictionary so that certain values (those starting with the specified prefix) are passed through a function before being returned. The prefix is removed before looking up the real value. Used by the SQL construction code to ensure that values are correctly quoted before being used. """ def __init__(self, data, func, prefix): super().__init__(data) self.func = func self.prefix = prefix def __getitem__(self, key): """ Retrieve the real value after stripping the prefix string (if present). If the prefix is present, pass the value through self.func before returning, otherwise return the raw value. """ if key.startswith(self.prefix): use_func = True key = key[len(self.prefix):] else: use_func = False value = super().__getitem__(key) if use_func: return self.func(value) return value