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pep8.py
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#!/usr/bin/env python
# pep8.py - Check Python source code formatting, according to PEP 8
# Copyright (C) 2006 Johann C. Rocholl <johann@rocholl.net>
#
# Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person
# obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files
# (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction,
# including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge,
# publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software,
# and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so,
# subject to the following conditions:
#
# The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
# included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
#
# THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
# EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
# MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
# NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS
# BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN
# ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
# CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
# SOFTWARE.
"""
Check Python source code formatting, according to PEP 8:
http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/
For usage and a list of options, try this:
$ python pep8.py -h
This program and its regression test suite live here:
http://github.com/jcrocholl/pep8
Groups of errors and warnings:
E errors
W warnings
100 indentation
200 whitespace
300 blank lines
400 imports
500 line length
600 deprecation
700 statements
You can add checks to this program by writing plugins. Each plugin is
a simple function that is called for each line of source code, either
physical or logical.
Physical line:
- Raw line of text from the input file.
Logical line:
- Multi-line statements converted to a single line.
- Stripped left and right.
- Contents of strings replaced with 'xxx' of same length.
- Comments removed.
The check function requests physical or logical lines by the name of
the first argument:
def maximum_line_length(physical_line)
def extraneous_whitespace(logical_line)
def blank_lines(logical_line, blank_lines, indent_level, line_number)
The last example above demonstrates how check plugins can request
additional information with extra arguments. All attributes of the
Checker object are available. Some examples:
lines: a list of the raw lines from the input file
tokens: the tokens that contribute to this logical line
line_number: line number in the input file
blank_lines: blank lines before this one
indent_char: first indentation character in this file (' ' or '\t')
indent_level: indentation (with tabs expanded to multiples of 8)
previous_indent_level: indentation on previous line
previous_logical: previous logical line
The docstring of each check function shall be the relevant part of
text from PEP 8. It is printed if the user enables --show-pep8.
Several docstrings contain examples directly from the PEP 8 document.
Okay: spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2})
E201: spam( ham[1], {eggs: 2})
These examples are verified automatically when pep8.py is run with the
--doctest option. You can add examples for your own check functions.
The format is simple: "Okay" or error/warning code followed by colon
and space, the rest of the line is example source code. If you put 'r'
before the docstring, you can use \n for newline, \t for tab and \s
for space.
"""
__version__ = '0.5.1dev'
import os
import sys
import re
import time
import inspect
import keyword
import tokenize
import ConfigParser
from optparse import OptionParser
from fnmatch import fnmatch
try:
frozenset
except NameError:
from sets import ImmutableSet as frozenset
DEFAULT_EXCLUDE = '.svn,CVS,.bzr,.hg,.git'
DEFAULT_IGNORE = 'E24'
MAX_LINE_LENGTH = 79
DEFAULT_CONFIG = os.path.expanduser('~/.pep8rc')
STRING_OPTIONS = ('exclude', 'filename', 'select', 'ignore',
'show_source', 'testsuite', 'config')
BOOL_OPTIONS = ('repeat', 'show_source', 'show_pep8', 'statistics',
'count', 'benchmark', 'doctest')
INT_OPTIONS = ('verbose', 'quiet', 'max_line_length')
INDENT_REGEX = re.compile(r'([ \t]*)')
RAISE_COMMA_REGEX = re.compile(r'raise\s+\w+\s*(,)')
SELFTEST_REGEX = re.compile(r'(Okay|[EW]\d{3}):\s(.*)')
ERRORCODE_REGEX = re.compile(r'[EW]\d{3}')
DOCSTRING_REGEX = re.compile(r'u?r?["\']')
WHITESPACE_AROUND_OPERATOR_REGEX = \
re.compile('([^\w\s]*)\s*(\t| )\s*([^\w\s]*)')
EXTRANEOUS_WHITESPACE_REGEX = re.compile(r'[[({] | []}),;:]')
WHITESPACE_AROUND_NAMED_PARAMETER_REGEX = \
re.compile(r'[()]|\s=[^=]|[^=!<>]=\s')
WHITESPACE = ' \t'
BINARY_OPERATORS = frozenset(['**=', '*=', '+=', '-=', '!=', '<>',
'%=', '^=', '&=', '|=', '==', '/=', '//=', '<=', '>=', '<<=', '>>=',
'%', '^', '&', '|', '=', '/', '//', '<', '>', '<<'])
UNARY_OPERATORS = frozenset(['>>', '**', '*', '+', '-'])
OPERATORS = BINARY_OPERATORS | UNARY_OPERATORS
SKIP_TOKENS = frozenset([tokenize.COMMENT, tokenize.NL, tokenize.INDENT,
tokenize.DEDENT, tokenize.NEWLINE])
E225NOT_KEYWORDS = (frozenset(keyword.kwlist + ['print']) -
frozenset(['False', 'None', 'True']))
BENCHMARK_KEYS = ('directories', 'files', 'logical lines', 'physical lines')
options = None
args = None
##############################################################################
# Plugins (check functions) for physical lines
##############################################################################
def tabs_or_spaces(physical_line, indent_char):
r"""
Never mix tabs and spaces.
The most popular way of indenting Python is with spaces only. The
second-most popular way is with tabs only. Code indented with a mixture
of tabs and spaces should be converted to using spaces exclusively. When
invoking the Python command line interpreter with the -t option, it issues
warnings about code that illegally mixes tabs and spaces. When using -tt
these warnings become errors. These options are highly recommended!
Okay: if a == 0:\n a = 1\n b = 1
E101: if a == 0:\n a = 1\n\tb = 1
"""
indent = INDENT_REGEX.match(physical_line).group(1)
for offset, char in enumerate(indent):
if char != indent_char:
return offset, "E101 indentation contains mixed spaces and tabs"
def tabs_obsolete(physical_line):
r"""
For new projects, spaces-only are strongly recommended over tabs. Most
editors have features that make this easy to do.
Okay: if True:\n return
W191: if True:\n\treturn
"""
indent = INDENT_REGEX.match(physical_line).group(1)
if indent.count('\t'):
return indent.index('\t'), "W191 indentation contains tabs"
def trailing_whitespace(physical_line):
r"""
JCR: Trailing whitespace is superfluous.
FBM: Except when it occurs as part of a blank line (i.e. the line is
nothing but whitespace). According to Python docs[1] a line with only
whitespace is considered a blank line, and is to be ignored. However,
matching a blank line to its indentation level avoids mistakenly
terminating a multi-line statement (e.g. class declaration) when
pasting code into the standard Python interpreter.
[1] http://docs.python.org/reference/lexical_analysis.html#blank-lines
The warning returned varies on whether the line itself is blank, for easier
filtering for those who want to indent their blank lines.
Okay: spam(1)
W291: spam(1)\s
W293: class Foo(object):\n \n bang = 12
"""
physical_line = physical_line.rstrip('\n') # chr(10), newline
physical_line = physical_line.rstrip('\r') # chr(13), carriage return
physical_line = physical_line.rstrip('\x0c') # chr(12), form feed, ^L
stripped = physical_line.rstrip()
if physical_line != stripped:
if stripped:
return len(stripped), "W291 trailing whitespace"
else:
return 0, "W293 blank line contains whitespace"
def trailing_blank_lines(physical_line, lines, line_number):
r"""
JCR: Trailing blank lines are superfluous.
Okay: spam(1)
W391: spam(1)\n
"""
if physical_line.strip() == '' and line_number == len(lines):
return 0, "W391 blank line at end of file"
def missing_newline(physical_line):
"""
JCR: The last line should have a newline.
"""
if physical_line.rstrip() == physical_line:
return len(physical_line), "W292 no newline at end of file"
def maximum_line_length(physical_line):
"""
Limit all lines to a maximum of 79 characters.
There are still many devices around that are limited to 80 character
lines; plus, limiting windows to 80 characters makes it possible to have
several windows side-by-side. The default wrapping on such devices looks
ugly. Therefore, please limit all lines to a maximum of 79 characters.
For flowing long blocks of text (docstrings or comments), limiting the
length to 72 characters is recommended.
"""
line = physical_line.rstrip()
length = len(line)
if length > options.max_line_length:
try:
# The line could contain multi-byte characters
if not hasattr(line, 'decode'): # Python 3
line = line.encode('latin-1')
length = len(line.decode('utf-8'))
except UnicodeDecodeError:
pass
if length > options.max_line_length:
return options.max_line_length, \
"E501 line too long (%d characters)" % length
##############################################################################
# Plugins (check functions) for logical lines
##############################################################################
def blank_lines(logical_line, blank_lines, indent_level, line_number,
previous_logical, previous_indent_level,
blank_lines_before_comment):
r"""
Separate top-level function and class definitions with two blank lines.
Method definitions inside a class are separated by a single blank line.
Extra blank lines may be used (sparingly) to separate groups of related
functions. Blank lines may be omitted between a bunch of related
one-liners (e.g. a set of dummy implementations).
Use blank lines in functions, sparingly, to indicate logical sections.
Okay: def a():\n pass\n\n\ndef b():\n pass
Okay: def a():\n pass\n\n\n# Foo\n# Bar\n\ndef b():\n pass
E301: class Foo:\n b = 0\n def bar():\n pass
E302: def a():\n pass\n\ndef b(n):\n pass
E303: def a():\n pass\n\n\n\ndef b(n):\n pass
E303: def a():\n\n\n\n pass
E304: @decorator\n\ndef a():\n pass
"""
if line_number == 1:
return # Don't expect blank lines before the first line
max_blank_lines = max(blank_lines, blank_lines_before_comment)
if previous_logical.startswith('@'):
if max_blank_lines:
return 0, "E304 blank lines found after function decorator"
elif max_blank_lines > 2 or (indent_level and max_blank_lines == 2):
return 0, "E303 too many blank lines (%d)" % max_blank_lines
elif (logical_line.startswith('def ') or
logical_line.startswith('class ') or
logical_line.startswith('@')):
if indent_level:
if not (max_blank_lines or previous_indent_level < indent_level or
DOCSTRING_REGEX.match(previous_logical)):
return 0, "E301 expected 1 blank line, found 0"
elif max_blank_lines != 2:
return 0, "E302 expected 2 blank lines, found %d" % max_blank_lines
def extraneous_whitespace(logical_line):
"""
Avoid extraneous whitespace in the following situations:
- Immediately inside parentheses, brackets or braces.
- Immediately before a comma, semicolon, or colon.
Okay: spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2})
E201: spam( ham[1], {eggs: 2})
E201: spam(ham[ 1], {eggs: 2})
E201: spam(ham[1], { eggs: 2})
E202: spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2} )
E202: spam(ham[1 ], {eggs: 2})
E202: spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2 })
E203: if x == 4: print x, y; x, y = y , x
E203: if x == 4: print x, y ; x, y = y, x
E203: if x == 4 : print x, y; x, y = y, x
"""
line = logical_line
for match in EXTRANEOUS_WHITESPACE_REGEX.finditer(line):
text = match.group()
char = text.strip()
found = match.start()
if text == char + ' ' and char in '([{':
return found + 1, "E201 whitespace after '%s'" % char
if text == ' ' + char and line[found - 1] != ',':
if char in '}])':
return found, "E202 whitespace before '%s'" % char
if char in ',;:':
return found, "E203 whitespace before '%s'" % char
def missing_whitespace(logical_line):
"""
JCR: Each comma, semicolon or colon should be followed by whitespace.
Okay: [a, b]
Okay: (3,)
Okay: a[1:4]
Okay: a[:4]
Okay: a[1:]
Okay: a[1:4:2]
E231: ['a','b']
E231: foo(bar,baz)
"""
line = logical_line
for index in range(len(line) - 1):
char = line[index]
if char in ',;:' and line[index + 1] not in WHITESPACE:
before = line[:index]
if char == ':' and before.count('[') > before.count(']'):
continue # Slice syntax, no space required
if char == ',' and line[index + 1] == ')':
continue # Allow tuple with only one element: (3,)
return index, "E231 missing whitespace after '%s'" % char
def indentation(logical_line, previous_logical, indent_char,
indent_level, previous_indent_level):
r"""
Use 4 spaces per indentation level.
For really old code that you don't want to mess up, you can continue to
use 8-space tabs.
Okay: a = 1
Okay: if a == 0:\n a = 1
E111: a = 1
Okay: for item in items:\n pass
E112: for item in items:\npass
Okay: a = 1\nb = 2
E113: a = 1\n b = 2
"""
if indent_char == ' ' and indent_level % 4:
return 0, "E111 indentation is not a multiple of four"
indent_expect = previous_logical.endswith(':')
if indent_expect and indent_level <= previous_indent_level:
return 0, "E112 expected an indented block"
if indent_level > previous_indent_level and not indent_expect:
return 0, "E113 unexpected indentation"
def whitespace_before_parameters(logical_line, tokens):
"""
Avoid extraneous whitespace in the following situations:
- Immediately before the open parenthesis that starts the argument
list of a function call.
- Immediately before the open parenthesis that starts an indexing or
slicing.
Okay: spam(1)
E211: spam (1)
Okay: dict['key'] = list[index]
E211: dict ['key'] = list[index]
E211: dict['key'] = list [index]
"""
prev_type = tokens[0][0]
prev_text = tokens[0][1]
prev_end = tokens[0][3]
for index in range(1, len(tokens)):
token_type, text, start, end, line = tokens[index]
if (token_type == tokenize.OP and
text in '([' and
start != prev_end and
(prev_type == tokenize.NAME or prev_text in '}])') and
# Syntax "class A (B):" is allowed, but avoid it
(index < 2 or tokens[index - 2][1] != 'class') and
# Allow "return (a.foo for a in range(5))"
(not keyword.iskeyword(prev_text))):
return prev_end, "E211 whitespace before '%s'" % text
prev_type = token_type
prev_text = text
prev_end = end
def whitespace_around_operator(logical_line):
"""
Avoid extraneous whitespace in the following situations:
- More than one space around an assignment (or other) operator to
align it with another.
Okay: a = 12 + 3
E221: a = 4 + 5
E222: a = 4 + 5
E223: a = 4\t+ 5
E224: a = 4 +\t5
"""
for match in WHITESPACE_AROUND_OPERATOR_REGEX.finditer(logical_line):
before, whitespace, after = match.groups()
tab = whitespace == '\t'
offset = match.start(2)
if before in OPERATORS:
return offset, (tab and "E224 tab after operator" or
"E222 multiple spaces after operator")
elif after in OPERATORS:
return offset, (tab and "E223 tab before operator" or
"E221 multiple spaces before operator")
def missing_whitespace_around_operator(logical_line, tokens):
r"""
- Always surround these binary operators with a single space on
either side: assignment (=), augmented assignment (+=, -= etc.),
comparisons (==, <, >, !=, <>, <=, >=, in, not in, is, is not),
Booleans (and, or, not).
- Use spaces around arithmetic operators.
Okay: i = i + 1
Okay: submitted += 1
Okay: x = x * 2 - 1
Okay: hypot2 = x * x + y * y
Okay: c = (a + b) * (a - b)
Okay: foo(bar, key='word', *args, **kwargs)
Okay: baz(**kwargs)
Okay: negative = -1
Okay: spam(-1)
Okay: alpha[:-i]
Okay: if not -5 < x < +5:\n pass
Okay: lambda *args, **kw: (args, kw)
E225: i=i+1
E225: submitted +=1
E225: x = x*2 - 1
E225: hypot2 = x*x + y*y
E225: c = (a+b) * (a-b)
E225: c = alpha -4
E225: z = x **y
"""
parens = 0
need_space = False
prev_type = tokenize.OP
prev_text = prev_end = None
for token_type, text, start, end, line in tokens:
if token_type in (tokenize.NL, tokenize.NEWLINE, tokenize.ERRORTOKEN):
# ERRORTOKEN is triggered by backticks in Python 3000
continue
if text in ('(', 'lambda'):
parens += 1
elif text == ')':
parens -= 1
if need_space:
if start != prev_end:
need_space = False
elif text == '>' and prev_text == '<':
# Tolerate the "<>" operator, even if running Python 3
pass
else:
return prev_end, "E225 missing whitespace around operator"
elif token_type == tokenize.OP and prev_end is not None:
if text == '=' and parens:
# Allow keyword args or defaults: foo(bar=None).
pass
elif text in BINARY_OPERATORS:
need_space = True
elif text in UNARY_OPERATORS:
# Allow unary operators: -123, -x, +1.
# Allow argument unpacking: foo(*args, **kwargs).
if prev_type == tokenize.OP:
if prev_text in '}])':
need_space = True
elif prev_type == tokenize.NAME:
if prev_text not in E225NOT_KEYWORDS:
need_space = True
else:
need_space = True
if need_space and start == prev_end:
return prev_end, "E225 missing whitespace around operator"
prev_type = token_type
prev_text = text
prev_end = end
def whitespace_around_comma(logical_line):
"""
Avoid extraneous whitespace in the following situations:
- More than one space around an assignment (or other) operator to
align it with another.
JCR: This should also be applied around comma etc.
Note: these checks are disabled by default
Okay: a = (1, 2)
E241: a = (1, 2)
E242: a = (1,\t2)
"""
line = logical_line
for separator in ',;:':
found = line.find(separator + ' ')
if found > -1:
return found + 1, "E241 multiple spaces after '%s'" % separator
found = line.find(separator + '\t')
if found > -1:
return found + 1, "E242 tab after '%s'" % separator
def whitespace_around_named_parameter_equals(logical_line):
"""
Don't use spaces around the '=' sign when used to indicate a
keyword argument or a default parameter value.
Okay: def complex(real, imag=0.0):
Okay: return magic(r=real, i=imag)
Okay: boolean(a == b)
Okay: boolean(a != b)
Okay: boolean(a <= b)
Okay: boolean(a >= b)
E251: def complex(real, imag = 0.0):
E251: return magic(r = real, i = imag)
"""
parens = 0
for match in WHITESPACE_AROUND_NAMED_PARAMETER_REGEX.finditer(
logical_line):
text = match.group()
if parens and len(text) == 3:
issue = "E251 no spaces around keyword / parameter equals"
return match.start(), issue
if text == '(':
parens += 1
elif text == ')':
parens -= 1
def whitespace_before_inline_comment(logical_line, tokens):
"""
Separate inline comments by at least two spaces.
An inline comment is a comment on the same line as a statement. Inline
comments should be separated by at least two spaces from the statement.
They should start with a # and a single space.
Okay: x = x + 1 # Increment x
Okay: x = x + 1 # Increment x
E261: x = x + 1 # Increment x
E262: x = x + 1 #Increment x
E262: x = x + 1 # Increment x
"""
prev_end = (0, 0)
for token_type, text, start, end, line in tokens:
if token_type == tokenize.NL:
continue
if token_type == tokenize.COMMENT:
if not line[:start[1]].strip():
continue
if prev_end[0] == start[0] and start[1] < prev_end[1] + 2:
return (prev_end,
"E261 at least two spaces before inline comment")
if (len(text) > 1 and text.startswith('# ')
or not text.startswith('# ')):
return start, "E262 inline comment should start with '# '"
else:
prev_end = end
def imports_on_separate_lines(logical_line):
r"""
Imports should usually be on separate lines.
Okay: import os\nimport sys
E401: import sys, os
Okay: from subprocess import Popen, PIPE
Okay: from myclas import MyClass
Okay: from foo.bar.yourclass import YourClass
Okay: import myclass
Okay: import foo.bar.yourclass
"""
line = logical_line
if line.startswith('import '):
found = line.find(',')
if found > -1:
return found, "E401 multiple imports on one line"
def compound_statements(logical_line):
r"""
Compound statements (multiple statements on the same line) are
generally discouraged.
While sometimes it's okay to put an if/for/while with a small body
on the same line, never do this for multi-clause statements. Also
avoid folding such long lines!
Okay: if foo == 'blah':\n do_blah_thing()
Okay: do_one()
Okay: do_two()
Okay: do_three()
E701: if foo == 'blah': do_blah_thing()
E701: for x in lst: total += x
E701: while t < 10: t = delay()
E701: if foo == 'blah': do_blah_thing()
E701: else: do_non_blah_thing()
E701: try: something()
E701: finally: cleanup()
E701: if foo == 'blah': one(); two(); three()
E702: do_one(); do_two(); do_three()
"""
line = logical_line
found = line.find(':')
if -1 < found < len(line) - 1:
before = line[:found]
if (before.count('{') <= before.count('}') and # {'a': 1} (dict)
before.count('[') <= before.count(']') and # [1:2] (slice)
not re.search(r'\blambda\b', before)): # lambda x: x
return found, "E701 multiple statements on one line (colon)"
found = line.find(';')
if -1 < found:
return found, "E702 multiple statements on one line (semicolon)"
def python_3000_has_key(logical_line):
"""
The {}.has_key() method will be removed in the future version of
Python. Use the 'in' operation instead, like:
d = {"a": 1, "b": 2}
if "b" in d:
print d["b"]
"""
pos = logical_line.find('.has_key(')
if pos > -1:
return pos, "W601 .has_key() is deprecated, use 'in'"
def python_3000_raise_comma(logical_line):
"""
When raising an exception, use "raise ValueError('message')"
instead of the older form "raise ValueError, 'message'".
The paren-using form is preferred because when the exception arguments
are long or include string formatting, you don't need to use line
continuation characters thanks to the containing parentheses. The older
form will be removed in Python 3000.
"""
match = RAISE_COMMA_REGEX.match(logical_line)
if match:
return match.start(1), "W602 deprecated form of raising exception"
def python_3000_not_equal(logical_line):
"""
!= can also be written <>, but this is an obsolete usage kept for
backwards compatibility only. New code should always use !=.
The older syntax is removed in Python 3000.
"""
pos = logical_line.find('<>')
if pos > -1:
return pos, "W603 '<>' is deprecated, use '!='"
def python_3000_backticks(logical_line):
"""
Backticks are removed in Python 3000.
Use repr() instead.
"""
pos = logical_line.find('`')
if pos > -1:
return pos, "W604 backticks are deprecated, use 'repr()'"
##############################################################################
# Helper functions
##############################################################################
if '' == ''.encode():
# Python 2: implicit encoding.
def readlines(filename):
return open(filename).readlines()
else:
# Python 3: decode to latin-1.
# This function is lazy, it does not read the encoding declaration.
# XXX: use tokenize.detect_encoding()
def readlines(filename):
return open(filename, encoding='latin-1').readlines()
def expand_indent(line):
"""
Return the amount of indentation.
Tabs are expanded to the next multiple of 8.
>>> expand_indent(' ')
4
>>> expand_indent('\\t')
8
>>> expand_indent(' \\t')
8
>>> expand_indent(' \\t')
8
>>> expand_indent(' \\t')
16
"""
result = 0
for char in line:
if char == '\t':
result = result // 8 * 8 + 8
elif char == ' ':
result += 1
else:
break
return result
def mute_string(text):
"""
Replace contents with 'xxx' to prevent syntax matching.
>>> mute_string('"abc"')
'"xxx"'
>>> mute_string("'''abc'''")
"'''xxx'''"
>>> mute_string("r'abc'")
"r'xxx'"
"""
start = 1
end = len(text) - 1
# String modifiers (e.g. u or r)
if text.endswith('"'):
start += text.index('"')
elif text.endswith("'"):
start += text.index("'")
# Triple quotes
if text.endswith('"""') or text.endswith("'''"):
start += 2
end -= 2
return text[:start] + 'x' * (end - start) + text[end:]
def message(text):
"""Print a message."""
# print >> sys.stderr, options.prog + ': ' + text
# print >> sys.stderr, text
print(text)
##############################################################################
# Framework to run all checks
##############################################################################
def find_checks(argument_name):
"""
Find all globally visible functions where the first argument name
starts with argument_name.
"""
checks = []
for name, function in globals().items():
if not inspect.isfunction(function):
continue
args = inspect.getargspec(function)[0]
if args and args[0].startswith(argument_name):
codes = ERRORCODE_REGEX.findall(inspect.getdoc(function) or '')
for code in codes or ['']:
if not code or not ignore_code(code):
checks.append((name, function, args))
break
checks.sort()
return checks
class Checker(object):
"""
Load a Python source file, tokenize it, check coding style.
"""
def __init__(self, filename, lines=None):
self.filename = filename
if filename is None:
self.filename = 'stdin'
self.lines = lines or []
elif lines is None:
self.lines = readlines(filename)
else:
self.lines = lines
options.counters['physical lines'] += len(self.lines)
def readline(self):
"""
Get the next line from the input buffer.
"""
self.line_number += 1
if self.line_number > len(self.lines):
return ''
return self.lines[self.line_number - 1]
def readline_check_physical(self):
"""
Check and return the next physical line. This method can be
used to feed tokenize.generate_tokens.
"""
line = self.readline()
if line:
self.check_physical(line)
return line
def run_check(self, check, argument_names):
"""
Run a check plugin.
"""
arguments = []
for name in argument_names:
arguments.append(getattr(self, name))
return check(*arguments)
def check_physical(self, line):
"""
Run all physical checks on a raw input line.
"""
self.physical_line = line
if self.indent_char is None and len(line) and line[0] in ' \t':
self.indent_char = line[0]
for name, check, argument_names in options.physical_checks:
result = self.run_check(check, argument_names)
if result is not None:
offset, text = result
self.report_error(self.line_number, offset, text, check)
def build_tokens_line(self):
"""
Build a logical line from tokens.
"""
self.mapping = []
logical = []
length = 0
previous = None
for token in self.tokens:
token_type, text = token[0:2]
if token_type in SKIP_TOKENS:
continue
if token_type == tokenize.STRING:
text = mute_string(text)
if previous:
end_line, end = previous[3]
start_line, start = token[2]
if end_line != start_line: # different row
prev_text = self.lines[end_line - 1][end - 1]
if prev_text == ',' or (prev_text not in '{[('
and text not in '}])'):
logical.append(' ')
length += 1
elif end != start: # different column
fill = self.lines[end_line - 1][end:start]
logical.append(fill)
length += len(fill)
self.mapping.append((length, token))
logical.append(text)
length += len(text)
previous = token
self.logical_line = ''.join(logical)
assert self.logical_line.lstrip() == self.logical_line
assert self.logical_line.rstrip() == self.logical_line
def check_logical(self):
"""
Build a line from tokens and run all logical checks on it.
"""
options.counters['logical lines'] += 1
self.build_tokens_line()
first_line = self.lines[self.mapping[0][1][2][0] - 1]
indent = first_line[:self.mapping[0][1][2][1]]
self.previous_indent_level = self.indent_level
self.indent_level = expand_indent(indent)
if options.verbose >= 2:
print(self.logical_line[:80].rstrip())
for name, check, argument_names in options.logical_checks:
if options.verbose >= 4:
print(' ' + name)
result = self.run_check(check, argument_names)
if result is not None:
offset, text = result
if isinstance(offset, tuple):
original_number, original_offset = offset
else:
for token_offset, token in self.mapping:
if offset >= token_offset:
original_number = token[2][0]
original_offset = (token[2][1]
+ offset - token_offset)
self.report_error(original_number, original_offset,
text, check)
self.previous_logical = self.logical_line
def check_all(self, expected=None, line_offset=0):
"""
Run all checks on the input file.
"""
self.expected = expected or ()
self.line_offset = line_offset
self.line_number = 0
self.file_errors = 0
self.indent_char = None
self.indent_level = 0
self.previous_logical = ''
self.blank_lines = 0
self.blank_lines_before_comment = 0
self.tokens = []
parens = 0
for token in tokenize.generate_tokens(self.readline_check_physical):
if options.verbose >= 3:
if token[2][0] == token[3][0]:
pos = '[%s:%s]' % (token[2][1] or '', token[3][1])
else:
pos = 'l.%s' % token[3][0]
print('l.%s\t%s\t%s\t%r' %
(token[2][0], pos, tokenize.tok_name[token[0]], token[1]))
self.tokens.append(token)
token_type, text = token[0:2]
if token_type == tokenize.OP and text in '([{':
parens += 1
if token_type == tokenize.OP and text in '}])':
parens -= 1
if token_type == tokenize.NEWLINE and not parens:
self.check_logical()
self.blank_lines = 0
self.blank_lines_before_comment = 0
self.tokens = []
if token_type == tokenize.NL and not parens:
if len(self.tokens) <= 1:
# The physical line contains only this token.
self.blank_lines += 1
self.tokens = []
if token_type == tokenize.COMMENT:
source_line = token[4]
token_start = token[2][1]
if source_line[:token_start].strip() == '':
self.blank_lines_before_comment = max(self.blank_lines,
self.blank_lines_before_comment)
self.blank_lines = 0
if text.endswith('\n') and not parens:
# The comment also ends a physical line. This works around
# Python < 2.6 behaviour, which does not generate NL after
# a comment which is on a line by itself.
self.tokens = []
return self.file_errors