test_ok1/py/doc/future/code_template.txt

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===============================================================
py.code_template: Lightweight and flexible code template system
===============================================================
.. contents::
.. sectnum::
Motivation
==========
There are as many python templating systems as there are web frameworks
(a lot). This is partly because it is so darned easy to write a templating
system in Python. What are the distinguishing characteristics of the
py.code_template templating system?
* Optimized for generating code (Python, C, bash scripts, etc.),
not XML or HTML
* Designed for use by Python programmers, not by web artists
+ Aesthetic sensibilities are different
+ The templates should be an organic part of a module -- just more code
+ Templates do not need to be incredibly full-featured, because
programmers are perfectly capable of escaping to Python for
advanced features.
- No requirement to support inheritance
- No requirement to support exec
* Designed so that templates can be coded in the most natural way
for the task at hand
+ Generation of code and scripts often does not follow MVC paradigm!
+ Small template fragments are typically coded *inside* Python modules
+ Sometimes it is natural to put strings inside code; sometimes it is
natural to put code inside strings. Both should be supported as
reasonably and naturally as possible.
Imaginary-world examples
========================
These would be real-world examples, but, not only is this module not yet
implemented, as of now, PyPy is not incredibly useful to the average
programmer...
translator/c/genc.py
--------------------
The original function::
def gen_readable_parts_of_main_c_file(f, database, preimplementationlines=[]):
#
# All declarations
#
structdeflist = database.getstructdeflist()
print >> f
print >> f, '/***********************************************************/'
print >> f, '/*** Structure definitions ***/'
print >> f
for node in structdeflist:
print >> f, 'struct %s;' % node.name
print >> f
for node in structdeflist:
for line in node.definition():
print >> f, line
print >> f
print >> f, '/***********************************************************/'
print >> f, '/*** Forward declarations ***/'
print >> f
for node in database.globalcontainers():
for line in node.forward_declaration():
print >> f, line
#
# Implementation of functions and global structures and arrays
#
print >> f
print >> f, '/***********************************************************/'
print >> f, '/*** Implementations ***/'
print >> f
for line in preimplementationlines:
print >> f, line
print >> f, '#include "src/g_include.h"'
print >> f
blank = True
for node in database.globalcontainers():
if blank:
print >> f
blank = False
for line in node.implementation():
print >> f, line
blank = True
This could be refactored heavily. An initial starting point
would look something like this, although later, the template
instance could be passed in and reused directly, rather than
passing the file handle around::
def gen_readable_parts_of_main_c_file(f, database, preimplementationlines=[]):
def container_implementation():
# Helper function designed to introduce blank lines
# between container implementations
blank = True
for node in database.globalcontainers():
if blank:
yield ''
blank = False
for line in node.implementation():
yield line
blank = True
t = code_template.Template()
#
# All declarations
#
structdeflist = database.getstructdeflist()
t.write(dedent=8, text='''
/***********************************************************/
/*** Structure definitions ***/
{for node in structdeflist}
struct {node.name};
{endfor}
{for node in structdeflist}
{for line in node.definition}
{line}
{endfor}
{endfor}
/***********************************************************/
/*** Forward declarations ***/
{for node in database.globalcontainers()}
{for line in node.forward_declaration()}
{line}
{endfor}
{endfor}
{**
** Implementation of functions and global structures and arrays
**}
/***********************************************************/
/*** Implementations ***/
{for line in preimplementationlines}
{line}
{endfor}
#include "src/g_include.h"
{for line in container_implementation()}
{line}
{endfor}
""")
t.output(f)
translator/c/genc.py gen_makefile
---------------------------------
The original code::
MAKEFILE = '''
CC = gcc
$(TARGET): $(OBJECTS)
\t$(CC) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@ $(OBJECTS) $(LIBDIRS) $(LIBS)
%.o: %.c
\t$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o $@ -c $< $(INCLUDEDIRS)
clean:
\trm -f $(OBJECTS)
'''
def gen_makefile(self, targetdir):
def write_list(lst, prefix):
for i, fn in enumerate(lst):
print >> f, prefix, fn,
if i < len(lst)-1:
print >> f, '\\'
else:
print >> f
prefix = ' ' * len(prefix)
compiler = self.getccompiler(extra_includes=['.'])
cfiles = []
ofiles = []
for fn in compiler.cfilenames:
fn = py.path.local(fn).basename
assert fn.endswith('.c')
cfiles.append(fn)
ofiles.append(fn[:-2] + '.o')
f = targetdir.join('Makefile').open('w')
print >> f, '# automatically generated Makefile'
print >> f
print >> f, 'TARGET =', py.path.local(compiler.outputfilename).basename
print >> f
write_list(cfiles, 'SOURCES =')
print >> f
write_list(ofiles, 'OBJECTS =')
print >> f
args = ['-l'+libname for libname in compiler.libraries]
print >> f, 'LIBS =', ' '.join(args)
args = ['-L'+path for path in compiler.library_dirs]
print >> f, 'LIBDIRS =', ' '.join(args)
args = ['-I'+path for path in compiler.include_dirs]
write_list(args, 'INCLUDEDIRS =')
print >> f
print >> f, 'CFLAGS =', ' '.join(compiler.compile_extra)
print >> f, 'LDFLAGS =', ' '.join(compiler.link_extra)
print >> f, MAKEFILE.strip()
f.close()
Could look something like this::
MAKEFILE = '''
# automatically generated Makefile
TARGET = {py.path.local(compiler.outputfilename).basename}
{for line in write_list(cfiles, 'SOURCES =')}
{line}
{endfor}
{for line in write_list(ofiles, 'OBJECTS =')}
{line}
{endfor}
LIBS ={for libname in compiler.libraries} -l{libname}{endfor}
LIBDIRS ={for path in compiler.library_dirs} -L{path}{endfor}
INCLUDEDIRS ={for path in compiler.include_dirs} -I{path}{endfor}
CFLAGS ={for extra in compiler.compile_extra} {extra}{endfor}
LDFLAGS ={for extra in compiler.link_extra} {extra}{endfor}
CC = gcc
$(TARGET): $(OBJECTS)
\t$(CC) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@ $(OBJECTS) $(LIBDIRS) $(LIBS)
%.o: %.c
\t$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o $@ -c $< $(INCLUDEDIRS)
clean:
\trm -f $(OBJECTS)
'''
def gen_makefile(self, targetdir):
def write_list(lst, prefix):
for i, fn in enumerate(lst):
yield '%s %s %s' % (prefix, fn, i < len(list)-1 and '\\' or '')
prefix = ' ' * len(prefix)
compiler = self.getccompiler(extra_includes=['.'])
cfiles = []
ofiles = []
for fn in compiler.cfilenames:
fn = py.path.local(fn).basename
assert fn.endswith('.c')
cfiles.append(fn)
ofiles.append(fn[:-2] + '.o')
code_template.Template(MAKEFILE).output(targetdir.join('Makefile'))
translator/llvm/module/excsupport.py
------------------------------------
The original string::
invokeunwind_code = '''
ccc %(returntype)s%%__entrypoint__%(entrypointname)s {
%%result = invoke %(cconv)s %(returntype)s%%%(entrypointname)s to label %%no_exception except label %%exception
no_exception:
store %%RPYTHON_EXCEPTION_VTABLE* null, %%RPYTHON_EXCEPTION_VTABLE** %%last_exception_type
ret %(returntype)s %%result
exception:
ret %(noresult)s
}
ccc int %%__entrypoint__raised_LLVMException() {
%%tmp = load %%RPYTHON_EXCEPTION_VTABLE** %%last_exception_type
%%result = cast %%RPYTHON_EXCEPTION_VTABLE* %%tmp to int
ret int %%result
}
internal fastcc void %%unwind() {
unwind
}
'''
Could look something like this if it was used in conjunction with a template::
invokeunwind_code = '''
ccc {returntype}%__entrypoint__{entrypointname} {
%result = invoke {cconv} {returntype}%{entrypointname} to label %no_exception except label %exception
no_exception:
store %RPYTHON_EXCEPTION_VTABLE* null, %RPYTHON_EXCEPTION_VTABLE** %last_exception_type
ret {returntype} %result
exception:
ret {noresult}
}
ccc int %__entrypoint__raised_LLVMException() {
%tmp = load %RPYTHON_EXCEPTION_VTABLE** %last_exception_type
%result = cast %RPYTHON_EXCEPTION_VTABLE* %tmp to int
ret int %result
}
internal fastcc void %unwind() {
unwind
}
'''
Template syntax
===============
Design decision
---------------
As all programmers must know by now, all the special symbols on the keyboard
are quite heavily overloaded. Often, template systems work around this fact
by having special notation like `<*` ... `*>` or {% ... %}. Some template systems
even have multiple special notations -- one for comments, one for statements,
one for expressions, etc.
I find these hard to type and ugly. Other markups are either too lightweight,
or use characters which occur so frequently in the target languages that it
becomes hard to distinguish marked-up content from content which should be
rendered as-is.
The compromise taken by *code_template* is to use braces (**{}**) for markup.
This immediately raises the question: what about when the marked-up language
is C or C++? The answer is that if the leading brace is immediately followed
by whitespace, it is normal text; if not it is the start of markup.
To support normal text which has a leading brace immediately followed by
an identifier, if the first whitespace character after the brace is a space
character (e.g. not a newline or tab), it will be removed from the output.
Examples::
{ This is normal text and the space between { and This will be removed}
{'this must be a valid Python expression' + ' because it is treated as markup'}
{
This is normal text, but nothing is altered (the newline is kept intact)
}
{{1:'Any valid Python expression is allowed as markup'}[1].ljust(30)}
.. _`Code element`:
Elements
--------
Templates consist of normal text and code elements.
(Comments are considered to be code elements.)
All code elements start with a `left brace`_ which is not followed by
whitespace.
Keyword element
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A keyword element is a `code element`_ which starts with a keyword_.
For example, *{if foo}* is a keyword element, but *{foo}* is a `substituted expression`_.
Keyword
~~~~~~~
A keyword is a word used in `conditional text`_ or in `repeated text`_, e.g.
one of *if*, *elif*, *else*, *endif*, *for*, or *endfor*.
Keywords are designed to match their Python equivalents. However, since
templates cannot use spacing to indicate expression nesting, the additional
keywords *endif* and *endfor* are required.
Left brace
~~~~~~~~~~
All elements other than normal text start with a left brace -- the symbol '{',
sometimes known as a 'curly bracket'. A left brace is itself considered
to be normal text if it is followed by whitespace. If the whitespace starts
with a space character, that space character will be stripped from the output.
If the whitespace starts with a tab or linefeed character, the whitespace will
be left in the output.
Normal Text
~~~~~~~~~~~
Normal text remains unsubstituted. Transition from text to the other elements
is effected by use of a `left brace`_ which is not followed by whitespace.
Comment
~~~~~~~
A comment starts with a left brace followed by an asterisk ('{`*`'), and
ends with an asterisk followed by a right brace ('`*`}')::
This is a template -- this text will be copied to the output.
{* This is a comment and this text will not be copied to the output *}
{*
Comments can span lines,
but cannot be nested
*}
Substituted expression
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Any python expression may be used::
Dear {record.name},
we are sorry to inform you that you did not win {record.contest}.
The expression must be surrounded by braces, and there must not be any
whitespace between the leftmost brace and the start of the expression.
The expression will automatically be converted to a string with str().
Conditional text
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The following template has text which is included conditionally::
This text will always be included in the output
{if foo}
This text will be included if foo is true
{elif bar}
This text will be included if foo is not true but bar is true
{else}
This text will be included if neither foo nor bar is true
{endif}
The {elif} and {else} elements are optional.
Repeated text
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The following template shows how to pull multiple items out of a list::
{for student, score in sorted(scorelist)}
{student.ljust(20)} {score}
{endfor}
Whitespace removal or modification
----------------------------------
In general, whitespace in `Normal Text`_ is transferred unchanged to the
output. There are three exceptions to this rule:
Line separators
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Each newline is converted to the final output using os.linesep.
Beginning or end of string
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
py.code_template is designed to allow easy use of templates inside of python
modules. The canonical way to write a template is inside a triple-quoted
string, e.g.::
my_template = '''
This is my template. It can have any text at all in it except
another triple-single-quote.
'''
To support this usage, if the first character is a newline, it will be
removed, and if the last line consists solely of whitespace with no
trailing newline, it will also be removed.
A comment or single keyword element on a line
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Whenever a `keyword element`_ or comment_ is on a line
*by itself*, that line will not be copied to the output.
This happens when:
- There is nothing on the line before the keyword element
or comment except whitespace (spaces and/or tabs).
- There is nothing on the line after the keyword element
or comment except a newline.
Note that even a multi-line comment or keyword element can
have the preceding whitespace and subsequent newline stripped
by this rule.
The primary purpose of this rule is to allow the Python
programmer to use indentation, **even inside a template**::
This is a template
{if mylist}
List items:
{for item in mylist}
- {item}
{endfor}
{endif}
Template usage
==============
Templates are used by importing the Template class from py.code_template,
constructing a template, and then sending data with the write() method.
In general, there are four methods for getting the formatted data back out
of the template object:
- read() reads all the data currently in the object
- output(fobj) outputs the data to a file
fobj can either be an open file object, or a string. If it is
a string, the file will be opened, written, and closed.
- open(fobj) (or calling the object constructor with a file object)
If the open() method is used, or if a file object is passed to
the constructor, each write() will automatically flush the data
out to the file. If the fobj is a string, it is considered to
be *owned*, otherwise it is considered to be *borrowed*. *Owned*
file objects are closed when the class is deleted.
- write() can be explicitly called with a file object, in which case
it will invoke output() on that object after it generates the data.
Template instantiation and methods
==================================
template = code_template.Template(outf=None, cache=None)
If outf is given, it will be passed to the open() method
cache may be given as a mapping. If not given, the template will use
the shared default cache. This is not thread safe.
template.open
-------------
template.open(outf, borrowed = None)
The open method closes the internal file object if it was already open,
and then re-opens it on the given file. It is an error to call open()
if there is data in the object left over from previous writes. (Call
output() instead.)
borrowed defaults to 0 if outf is a string, and 1 if it is a file object.
borrowed can also be set explicitly if required.
template.close
--------------
close() disassociates the file from the template, and closes the file if
it was not borrowed. close() is automatically called by the destructor.
template.write
--------------
template.write(text='', outf=None, dedent=0, localvars=None, globalvars=None,
framelevel=1)
The write method has the following parameters:
- text is the template itself
- if outf is not None, the output method will be invoked on the object
after the current template is processed. If no outf is given, data
will be accumulated internal to the instance until a write() with outf
is processed, or read() or output() is called, whichever comes first, if
there is no file object. If there is a file object, data will be flushed
to the file after every write.
- dedent, if given is applied to each line in the template, to "de-indent"
- localvars and globalvars default to the dictionaries of the caller. A copy
of localvars is made so that the __TrueSpace__ identifier can be added.
- cache may be given as a mapping. If not given, the template will use
the shared default cache. This is not thread safe.
- framelevel is used to determine which stackframe to access for globals
and locals if localvars and/or globalvars are not specified. The default
is to use the caller's frame.
The write method supports the print >> file protocol by deleting the softspace
attribute on every invocation. This allows code like::
t = code_template.Template()
print >> t, "Hello, world"
template.read
--------------
This method reads and flushes all accumulated data in the object. Note that
if a file has been associated with the object, there will never be any data
to read.
template.output
---------------
This method takes one parameter, outf. template.output() first
invokes template.read() to read and flush all accumulated data,
and then outputs the data to the file specified by outf.
If outf has a write() method, that will be invoked with the
data. If outf has no write() method, it will be treated as
a filename, and that file will be replaced.
Caching and thread safety
=========================
The compiled version of every template is cached internal to the
code_template module (unless a separate cache object is specified).
This allows efficient template reuse, but is not currently thread-safe.
Alternatively, each invocation of a template object can specify a
cache object. This is thread-safe, but not very efficient. A shared
model could be implemented later.