version becomes 3.1.2
[python/dscho.git] / Misc / python-mode.el
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1 ;;; python-mode.el --- Major mode for editing Python programs
3 ;; Copyright (C) 1992,1993,1994 Tim Peters
5 ;; Author: 2003-2007 http://sf.net/projects/python-mode
6 ;; 1995-2002 Barry A. Warsaw
7 ;; 1992-1994 Tim Peters
8 ;; Maintainer: python-mode@python.org
9 ;; Created: Feb 1992
10 ;; Keywords: python languages oop
12 (defconst py-version "$Revision$"
13 "`python-mode' version number.")
15 ;; This software is provided as-is, without express or implied
16 ;; warranty. Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute or sell this
17 ;; software, without fee, for any purpose and by any individual or
18 ;; organization, is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright
19 ;; notice and this paragraph appear in all copies.
21 ;;; Commentary:
23 ;; This is a major mode for editing Python programs. It was developed by Tim
24 ;; Peters after an original idea by Michael A. Guravage. Tim subsequently
25 ;; left the net and in 1995, Barry Warsaw inherited the mode. Tim's now back
26 ;; but disavows all responsibility for the mode. In fact, we suspect he
27 ;; doesn't even use Emacs any more. In 2003, python-mode.el was moved to its
28 ;; own SourceForge project apart from the Python project, and now is
29 ;; maintained by the volunteers at the python-mode@python.org mailing list.
31 ;; pdbtrack support contributed by Ken Manheimer, April 2001. Skip Montanaro
32 ;; has also contributed significantly to python-mode's development.
34 ;; Please use the SourceForge Python project to submit bugs or
35 ;; patches:
37 ;; http://sourceforge.net/projects/python
39 ;; INSTALLATION:
41 ;; To install, just drop this file into a directory on your load-path and
42 ;; byte-compile it. To set up Emacs to automatically edit files ending in
43 ;; ".py" using python-mode add the following to your ~/.emacs file (GNU
44 ;; Emacs) or ~/.xemacs/init.el file (XEmacs):
45 ;; (setq auto-mode-alist (cons '("\\.py$" . python-mode) auto-mode-alist))
46 ;; (setq interpreter-mode-alist (cons '("python" . python-mode)
47 ;; interpreter-mode-alist))
48 ;; (autoload 'python-mode "python-mode" "Python editing mode." t)
50 ;; In XEmacs syntax highlighting should be enabled automatically. In GNU
51 ;; Emacs you may have to add these lines to your ~/.emacs file:
52 ;; (global-font-lock-mode t)
53 ;; (setq font-lock-maximum-decoration t)
55 ;; FOR MORE INFORMATION:
57 ;; There is some information on python-mode.el at
59 ;; http://www.python.org/emacs/python-mode/
61 ;; It does contain links to other packages that you might find useful,
62 ;; such as pdb interfaces, OO-Browser links, etc.
64 ;; BUG REPORTING:
66 ;; As mentioned above, please use the SourceForge Python project for
67 ;; submitting bug reports or patches. The old recommendation, to use
68 ;; C-c C-b will still work, but those reports have a higher chance of
69 ;; getting buried in my mailbox. Please include a complete, but
70 ;; concise code sample and a recipe for reproducing the bug. Send
71 ;; suggestions and other comments to python-mode@python.org.
73 ;; When in a Python mode buffer, do a C-h m for more help. It's
74 ;; doubtful that a texinfo manual would be very useful, but if you
75 ;; want to contribute one, I'll certainly accept it!
77 ;;; Code:
79 (require 'comint)
80 (require 'custom)
81 (require 'cl)
82 (require 'compile)
83 (require 'ansi-color)
86 ;; user definable variables
87 ;; vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv
89 (defgroup python nil
90 "Support for the Python programming language, <http://www.python.org/>"
91 :group 'languages
92 :prefix "py-")
94 (defcustom py-tab-always-indent t
95 "*Non-nil means TAB in Python mode should always reindent the current line,
96 regardless of where in the line point is when the TAB command is used."
97 :type 'boolean
98 :group 'python)
100 (defcustom py-python-command "python"
101 "*Shell command used to start Python interpreter."
102 :type 'string
103 :group 'python)
105 (make-obsolete-variable 'py-jpython-command 'py-jython-command)
106 (defcustom py-jython-command "jython"
107 "*Shell command used to start the Jython interpreter."
108 :type 'string
109 :group 'python
110 :tag "Jython Command")
112 (defcustom py-default-interpreter 'cpython
113 "*Which Python interpreter is used by default.
114 The value for this variable can be either `cpython' or `jython'.
116 When the value is `cpython', the variables `py-python-command' and
117 `py-python-command-args' are consulted to determine the interpreter
118 and arguments to use.
120 When the value is `jython', the variables `py-jython-command' and
121 `py-jython-command-args' are consulted to determine the interpreter
122 and arguments to use.
124 Note that this variable is consulted only the first time that a Python
125 mode buffer is visited during an Emacs session. After that, use
126 \\[py-toggle-shells] to change the interpreter shell."
127 :type '(choice (const :tag "Python (a.k.a. CPython)" cpython)
128 (const :tag "Jython" jython))
129 :group 'python)
131 (defcustom py-python-command-args '("-i")
132 "*List of string arguments to be used when starting a Python shell."
133 :type '(repeat string)
134 :group 'python)
136 (make-obsolete-variable 'py-jpython-command-args 'py-jython-command-args)
137 (defcustom py-jython-command-args '("-i")
138 "*List of string arguments to be used when starting a Jython shell."
139 :type '(repeat string)
140 :group 'python
141 :tag "Jython Command Args")
143 (defcustom py-indent-offset 4
144 "*Amount of offset per level of indentation.
145 `\\[py-guess-indent-offset]' can usually guess a good value when
146 you're editing someone else's Python code."
147 :type 'integer
148 :group 'python)
150 (defcustom py-continuation-offset 4
151 "*Additional amount of offset to give for some continuation lines.
152 Continuation lines are those that immediately follow a backslash
153 terminated line. Only those continuation lines for a block opening
154 statement are given this extra offset."
155 :type 'integer
156 :group 'python)
158 (defcustom py-smart-indentation t
159 "*Should `python-mode' try to automagically set some indentation variables?
160 When this variable is non-nil, two things happen when a buffer is set
161 to `python-mode':
163 1. `py-indent-offset' is guessed from existing code in the buffer.
164 Only guessed values between 2 and 8 are considered. If a valid
165 guess can't be made (perhaps because you are visiting a new
166 file), then the value in `py-indent-offset' is used.
168 2. `indent-tabs-mode' is turned off if `py-indent-offset' does not
169 equal `tab-width' (`indent-tabs-mode' is never turned on by
170 Python mode). This means that for newly written code, tabs are
171 only inserted in indentation if one tab is one indentation
172 level, otherwise only spaces are used.
174 Note that both these settings occur *after* `python-mode-hook' is run,
175 so if you want to defeat the automagic configuration, you must also
176 set `py-smart-indentation' to nil in your `python-mode-hook'."
177 :type 'boolean
178 :group 'python)
180 (defcustom py-align-multiline-strings-p t
181 "*Flag describing how multi-line triple quoted strings are aligned.
182 When this flag is non-nil, continuation lines are lined up under the
183 preceding line's indentation. When this flag is nil, continuation
184 lines are aligned to column zero."
185 :type '(choice (const :tag "Align under preceding line" t)
186 (const :tag "Align to column zero" nil))
187 :group 'python)
189 (defcustom py-block-comment-prefix "##"
190 "*String used by \\[comment-region] to comment out a block of code.
191 This should follow the convention for non-indenting comment lines so
192 that the indentation commands won't get confused (i.e., the string
193 should be of the form `#x...' where `x' is not a blank or a tab, and
194 `...' is arbitrary). However, this string should not end in whitespace."
195 :type 'string
196 :group 'python)
198 (defcustom py-honor-comment-indentation t
199 "*Controls how comment lines influence subsequent indentation.
201 When nil, all comment lines are skipped for indentation purposes, and
202 if possible, a faster algorithm is used (i.e. X/Emacs 19 and beyond).
204 When t, lines that begin with a single `#' are a hint to subsequent
205 line indentation. If the previous line is such a comment line (as
206 opposed to one that starts with `py-block-comment-prefix'), then its
207 indentation is used as a hint for this line's indentation. Lines that
208 begin with `py-block-comment-prefix' are ignored for indentation
209 purposes.
211 When not nil or t, comment lines that begin with a single `#' are used
212 as indentation hints, unless the comment character is in column zero."
213 :type '(choice
214 (const :tag "Skip all comment lines (fast)" nil)
215 (const :tag "Single # `sets' indentation for next line" t)
216 (const :tag "Single # `sets' indentation except at column zero"
217 other)
219 :group 'python)
221 (defcustom py-temp-directory
222 (let ((ok '(lambda (x)
223 (and x
224 (setq x (expand-file-name x)) ; always true
225 (file-directory-p x)
226 (file-writable-p x)
227 x))))
228 (or (funcall ok (getenv "TMPDIR"))
229 (funcall ok "/usr/tmp")
230 (funcall ok "/tmp")
231 (funcall ok "/var/tmp")
232 (funcall ok ".")
233 (error
234 "Couldn't find a usable temp directory -- set `py-temp-directory'")))
235 "*Directory used for temporary files created by a *Python* process.
236 By default, the first directory from this list that exists and that you
237 can write into: the value (if any) of the environment variable TMPDIR,
238 /usr/tmp, /tmp, /var/tmp, or the current directory."
239 :type 'string
240 :group 'python)
242 (defcustom py-beep-if-tab-change t
243 "*Ring the bell if `tab-width' is changed.
244 If a comment of the form
246 \t# vi:set tabsize=<number>:
248 is found before the first code line when the file is entered, and the
249 current value of (the general Emacs variable) `tab-width' does not
250 equal <number>, `tab-width' is set to <number>, a message saying so is
251 displayed in the echo area, and if `py-beep-if-tab-change' is non-nil
252 the Emacs bell is also rung as a warning."
253 :type 'boolean
254 :group 'python)
256 (defcustom py-jump-on-exception t
257 "*Jump to innermost exception frame in *Python Output* buffer.
258 When this variable is non-nil and an exception occurs when running
259 Python code synchronously in a subprocess, jump immediately to the
260 source code of the innermost traceback frame."
261 :type 'boolean
262 :group 'python)
264 (defcustom py-ask-about-save t
265 "If not nil, ask about which buffers to save before executing some code.
266 Otherwise, all modified buffers are saved without asking."
267 :type 'boolean
268 :group 'python)
270 (defcustom py-backspace-function 'backward-delete-char-untabify
271 "*Function called by `py-electric-backspace' when deleting backwards."
272 :type 'function
273 :group 'python)
275 (defcustom py-delete-function 'delete-char
276 "*Function called by `py-electric-delete' when deleting forwards."
277 :type 'function
278 :group 'python)
280 (defcustom py-imenu-show-method-args-p nil
281 "*Controls echoing of arguments of functions & methods in the Imenu buffer.
282 When non-nil, arguments are printed."
283 :type 'boolean
284 :group 'python)
285 (make-variable-buffer-local 'py-indent-offset)
287 (defcustom py-pdbtrack-do-tracking-p t
288 "*Controls whether the pdbtrack feature is enabled or not.
289 When non-nil, pdbtrack is enabled in all comint-based buffers,
290 e.g. shell buffers and the *Python* buffer. When using pdb to debug a
291 Python program, pdbtrack notices the pdb prompt and displays the
292 source file and line that the program is stopped at, much the same way
293 as gud-mode does for debugging C programs with gdb."
294 :type 'boolean
295 :group 'python)
296 (make-variable-buffer-local 'py-pdbtrack-do-tracking-p)
298 (defcustom py-pdbtrack-minor-mode-string " PDB"
299 "*String to use in the minor mode list when pdbtrack is enabled."
300 :type 'string
301 :group 'python)
303 (defcustom py-import-check-point-max
304 20000
305 "Maximum number of characters to search for a Java-ish import statement.
306 When `python-mode' tries to calculate the shell to use (either a
307 CPython or a Jython shell), it looks at the so-called `shebang' line
308 -- i.e. #! line. If that's not available, it looks at some of the
309 file heading imports to see if they look Java-like."
310 :type 'integer
311 :group 'python
314 (make-obsolete-variable 'py-jpython-packages 'py-jython-packages)
315 (defcustom py-jython-packages
316 '("java" "javax" "org" "com")
317 "Imported packages that imply `jython-mode'."
318 :type '(repeat string)
319 :group 'python)
321 ;; Not customizable
322 (defvar py-master-file nil
323 "If non-nil, execute the named file instead of the buffer's file.
324 The intent is to allow you to set this variable in the file's local
325 variable section, e.g.:
327 # Local Variables:
328 # py-master-file: \"master.py\"
329 # End:
331 so that typing \\[py-execute-buffer] in that buffer executes the named
332 master file instead of the buffer's file. If the file name has a
333 relative path, the value of variable `default-directory' for the
334 buffer is prepended to come up with a file name.")
335 (make-variable-buffer-local 'py-master-file)
337 (defcustom py-pychecker-command "pychecker"
338 "*Shell command used to run Pychecker."
339 :type 'string
340 :group 'python
341 :tag "Pychecker Command")
343 (defcustom py-pychecker-command-args '("--stdlib")
344 "*List of string arguments to be passed to pychecker."
345 :type '(repeat string)
346 :group 'python
347 :tag "Pychecker Command Args")
349 (defvar py-shell-alist
350 '(("jython" . 'jython)
351 ("python" . 'cpython))
352 "*Alist of interpreters and python shells. Used by `py-choose-shell'
353 to select the appropriate python interpreter mode for a file.")
355 (defcustom py-shell-input-prompt-1-regexp "^>>> "
356 "*A regular expression to match the input prompt of the shell."
357 :type 'string
358 :group 'python)
360 (defcustom py-shell-input-prompt-2-regexp "^[.][.][.] "
361 "*A regular expression to match the input prompt of the shell after the
362 first line of input."
363 :type 'string
364 :group 'python)
366 (defcustom py-shell-switch-buffers-on-execute t
367 "*Controls switching to the Python buffer where commands are
368 executed. When non-nil the buffer switches to the Python buffer, if
369 not no switching occurs."
370 :type 'boolean
371 :group 'python)
374 ;; ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
375 ;; NO USER DEFINABLE VARIABLES BEYOND THIS POINT
377 (defvar py-line-number-offset 0
378 "When an exception occurs as a result of py-execute-region, a
379 subsequent py-up-exception needs the line number where the region
380 started, in order to jump to the correct file line. This variable is
381 set in py-execute-region and used in py-jump-to-exception.")
383 (defconst py-emacs-features
384 (let (features)
385 features)
386 "A list of features extant in the Emacs you are using.
387 There are many flavors of Emacs out there, with different levels of
388 support for features needed by `python-mode'.")
390 ;; Face for None, True, False, self, and Ellipsis
391 (defvar py-pseudo-keyword-face 'py-pseudo-keyword-face
392 "Face for pseudo keywords in Python mode, like self, True, False, Ellipsis.")
393 (make-face 'py-pseudo-keyword-face)
395 ;; PEP 318 decorators
396 (defvar py-decorators-face 'py-decorators-face
397 "Face method decorators.")
398 (make-face 'py-decorators-face)
400 ;; Face for builtins
401 (defvar py-builtins-face 'py-builtins-face
402 "Face for builtins like TypeError, object, open, and exec.")
403 (make-face 'py-builtins-face)
405 ;; XXX, TODO, and FIXME comments and such
406 (defvar py-XXX-tag-face 'py-XXX-tag-face
407 "Face for XXX, TODO, and FIXME tags")
408 (make-face 'py-XXX-tag-face)
410 (defun py-font-lock-mode-hook ()
411 (or (face-differs-from-default-p 'py-pseudo-keyword-face)
412 (copy-face 'font-lock-keyword-face 'py-pseudo-keyword-face))
413 (or (face-differs-from-default-p 'py-builtins-face)
414 (copy-face 'font-lock-keyword-face 'py-builtins-face))
415 (or (face-differs-from-default-p 'py-decorators-face)
416 (copy-face 'py-pseudo-keyword-face 'py-decorators-face))
417 (or (face-differs-from-default-p 'py-XXX-tag-face)
418 (copy-face 'font-lock-comment-face 'py-XXX-tag-face))
420 (add-hook 'font-lock-mode-hook 'py-font-lock-mode-hook)
422 (defvar python-font-lock-keywords
423 (let ((kw1 (mapconcat 'identity
424 '("and" "assert" "break" "class"
425 "continue" "def" "del" "elif"
426 "else" "except" "exec" "for"
427 "from" "global" "if" "import"
428 "in" "is" "lambda" "not"
429 "or" "pass" "print" "raise"
430 "return" "while" "with" "yield"
432 "\\|"))
433 (kw2 (mapconcat 'identity
434 '("else:" "except:" "finally:" "try:")
435 "\\|"))
436 (kw3 (mapconcat 'identity
437 '("ArithmeticError" "AssertionError"
438 "AttributeError" "DeprecationWarning" "EOFError"
439 "Ellipsis" "EnvironmentError" "Exception" "False"
440 "FloatingPointError" "FutureWarning" "IOError"
441 "ImportError" "IndentationError" "IndexError"
442 "KeyError" "KeyboardInterrupt" "LookupError"
443 "MemoryError" "NameError" "None" "NotImplemented"
444 "NotImplementedError" "OSError" "OverflowError"
445 "OverflowWarning" "PendingDeprecationWarning"
446 "ReferenceError" "RuntimeError" "RuntimeWarning"
447 "StopIteration" "SyntaxError"
448 "SyntaxWarning" "SystemError" "SystemExit"
449 "TabError" "True" "TypeError" "UnboundLocalError"
450 "UnicodeDecodeError" "UnicodeEncodeError"
451 "UnicodeError" "UnicodeTranslateError"
452 "UserWarning" "ValueError" "Warning"
453 "ZeroDivisionError" "__debug__"
454 "__import__" "__name__" "abs" "apply" "basestring"
455 "bool" "buffer" "callable" "chr" "classmethod"
456 "cmp" "compile" "complex" "copyright"
457 "delattr" "dict" "dir" "divmod"
458 "enumerate" "eval" "exit" "file"
459 "filter" "float" "getattr" "globals" "hasattr"
460 "hash" "hex" "id" "int"
461 "isinstance" "issubclass" "iter" "len" "license"
462 "list" "locals" "long" "map" "max" "min" "object"
463 "oct" "open" "ord" "pow" "property" "range"
464 "reload" "repr" "round"
465 "setattr" "slice" "staticmethod" "str" "sum"
466 "super" "tuple" "type" "unichr" "unicode" "vars"
467 "zip")
468 "\\|"))
469 (kw4 (mapconcat 'identity
470 ;; Exceptions and warnings
471 '("ArithmeticError" "AssertionError"
472 "AttributeError" "DeprecationWarning" "EOFError"
473 "EnvironmentError" "Exception"
474 "FloatingPointError" "FutureWarning" "IOError"
475 "ImportError" "IndentationError" "IndexError"
476 "KeyError" "KeyboardInterrupt" "LookupError"
477 "MemoryError" "NameError" "NotImplemented"
478 "NotImplementedError" "OSError" "OverflowError"
479 "OverflowWarning" "PendingDeprecationWarning"
480 "ReferenceError" "RuntimeError" "RuntimeWarning"
481 "StandardError" "StopIteration" "SyntaxError"
482 "SyntaxWarning" "SystemError" "SystemExit"
483 "TabError" "TypeError" "UnboundLocalError"
484 "UnicodeDecodeError" "UnicodeEncodeError"
485 "UnicodeError" "UnicodeTranslateError"
486 "UserWarning" "ValueError" "Warning"
487 "ZeroDivisionError")
488 "\\|"))
490 (list
491 '("^[ \t]*\\(@.+\\)" 1 'py-decorators-face)
492 ;; keywords
493 (cons (concat "\\<\\(" kw1 "\\)\\>[ \n\t(]") 1)
494 ;; builtins when they don't appear as object attributes
495 (list (concat "\\([^. \t]\\|^\\)[ \t]*\\<\\(" kw3 "\\)\\>[ \n\t(]") 2
496 'py-builtins-face)
497 ;; block introducing keywords with immediately following colons.
498 ;; Yes "except" is in both lists.
499 (cons (concat "\\<\\(" kw2 "\\)[ \n\t(]") 1)
500 ;; Exceptions
501 (list (concat "\\<\\(" kw4 "\\)[ \n\t:,(]") 1 'py-builtins-face)
502 ;; `as' but only in "import foo as bar" or "with foo as bar"
503 '("[ \t]*\\(\\<from\\>.*\\)?\\<import\\>.*\\<\\(as\\)\\>" . 2)
504 '("[ \t]*\\<with\\>.*\\<\\(as\\)\\>" . 1)
505 ;; classes
506 '("\\<class[ \t]+\\([a-zA-Z_]+[a-zA-Z0-9_]*\\)" 1 font-lock-type-face)
507 ;; functions
508 '("\\<def[ \t]+\\([a-zA-Z_]+[a-zA-Z0-9_]*\\)"
509 1 font-lock-function-name-face)
510 ;; pseudo-keywords
511 '("\\<\\(self\\|None\\|True\\|False\\|Ellipsis\\)\\>"
512 1 py-pseudo-keyword-face)
513 ;; XXX, TODO, and FIXME tags
514 '("XXX\\|TODO\\|FIXME" 0 py-XXX-tag-face t)
516 "Additional expressions to highlight in Python mode.")
517 (put 'python-mode 'font-lock-defaults '(python-font-lock-keywords))
519 ;; have to bind py-file-queue before installing the kill-emacs-hook
520 (defvar py-file-queue nil
521 "Queue of Python temp files awaiting execution.
522 Currently-active file is at the head of the list.")
524 (defvar py-pdbtrack-is-tracking-p nil)
526 (defvar py-pychecker-history nil)
530 ;; Constants
532 (defconst py-stringlit-re
533 (concat
534 ;; These fail if backslash-quote ends the string (not worth
535 ;; fixing?). They precede the short versions so that the first two
536 ;; quotes don't look like an empty short string.
538 ;; (maybe raw), long single quoted triple quoted strings (SQTQ),
539 ;; with potential embedded single quotes
540 "[rR]?'''[^']*\\(\\('[^']\\|''[^']\\)[^']*\\)*'''"
541 "\\|"
542 ;; (maybe raw), long double quoted triple quoted strings (DQTQ),
543 ;; with potential embedded double quotes
544 "[rR]?\"\"\"[^\"]*\\(\\(\"[^\"]\\|\"\"[^\"]\\)[^\"]*\\)*\"\"\""
545 "\\|"
546 "[rR]?'\\([^'\n\\]\\|\\\\.\\)*'" ; single-quoted
547 "\\|" ; or
548 "[rR]?\"\\([^\"\n\\]\\|\\\\.\\)*\"" ; double-quoted
550 "Regular expression matching a Python string literal.")
552 (defconst py-continued-re
553 ;; This is tricky because a trailing backslash does not mean
554 ;; continuation if it's in a comment
555 (concat
556 "\\(" "[^#'\"\n\\]" "\\|" py-stringlit-re "\\)*"
557 "\\\\$")
558 "Regular expression matching Python backslash continuation lines.")
560 (defconst py-blank-or-comment-re "[ \t]*\\($\\|#\\)"
561 "Regular expression matching a blank or comment line.")
563 (defconst py-outdent-re
564 (concat "\\(" (mapconcat 'identity
565 '("else:"
566 "except\\(\\s +.*\\)?:"
567 "finally:"
568 "elif\\s +.*:")
569 "\\|")
570 "\\)")
571 "Regular expression matching statements to be dedented one level.")
573 (defconst py-block-closing-keywords-re
574 "\\(return\\|raise\\|break\\|continue\\|pass\\)"
575 "Regular expression matching keywords which typically close a block.")
577 (defconst py-no-outdent-re
578 (concat
579 "\\("
580 (mapconcat 'identity
581 (list "try:"
582 "except\\(\\s +.*\\)?:"
583 "while\\s +.*:"
584 "for\\s +.*:"
585 "if\\s +.*:"
586 "elif\\s +.*:"
587 (concat py-block-closing-keywords-re "[ \t\n]")
589 "\\|")
590 "\\)")
591 "Regular expression matching lines not to dedent after.")
593 (defvar py-traceback-line-re
594 "[ \t]+File \"\\([^\"]+\\)\", line \\([0-9]+\\)"
595 "Regular expression that describes tracebacks.")
597 ;; pdbtrack constants
598 (defconst py-pdbtrack-stack-entry-regexp
599 ; "^> \\([^(]+\\)(\\([0-9]+\\))\\([?a-zA-Z0-9_]+\\)()"
600 "^> \\(.*\\)(\\([0-9]+\\))\\([?a-zA-Z0-9_]+\\)()"
601 "Regular expression pdbtrack uses to find a stack trace entry.")
603 (defconst py-pdbtrack-input-prompt "\n[(<]*[Pp]db[>)]+ "
604 "Regular expression pdbtrack uses to recognize a pdb prompt.")
606 (defconst py-pdbtrack-track-range 10000
607 "Max number of characters from end of buffer to search for stack entry.")
611 ;; Major mode boilerplate
613 ;; define a mode-specific abbrev table for those who use such things
614 (defvar python-mode-abbrev-table nil
615 "Abbrev table in use in `python-mode' buffers.")
616 (define-abbrev-table 'python-mode-abbrev-table nil)
618 (defvar python-mode-hook nil
619 "*Hook called by `python-mode'.")
621 (make-obsolete-variable 'jpython-mode-hook 'jython-mode-hook)
622 (defvar jython-mode-hook nil
623 "*Hook called by `jython-mode'. `jython-mode' also calls
624 `python-mode-hook'.")
626 (defvar py-shell-hook nil
627 "*Hook called by `py-shell'.")
629 ;; In previous version of python-mode.el, the hook was incorrectly
630 ;; called py-mode-hook, and was not defvar'd. Deprecate its use.
631 (and (fboundp 'make-obsolete-variable)
632 (make-obsolete-variable 'py-mode-hook 'python-mode-hook))
634 (defvar py-mode-map ()
635 "Keymap used in `python-mode' buffers.")
636 (if py-mode-map
638 (setq py-mode-map (make-sparse-keymap))
639 ;; electric keys
640 (define-key py-mode-map ":" 'py-electric-colon)
641 ;; indentation level modifiers
642 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c\C-l" 'py-shift-region-left)
643 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c\C-r" 'py-shift-region-right)
644 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c<" 'py-shift-region-left)
645 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c>" 'py-shift-region-right)
646 ;; subprocess commands
647 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c\C-c" 'py-execute-buffer)
648 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c\C-m" 'py-execute-import-or-reload)
649 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c\C-s" 'py-execute-string)
650 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c|" 'py-execute-region)
651 (define-key py-mode-map "\e\C-x" 'py-execute-def-or-class)
652 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c!" 'py-shell)
653 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c\C-t" 'py-toggle-shells)
654 ;; Caution! Enter here at your own risk. We are trying to support
655 ;; several behaviors and it gets disgusting. :-( This logic ripped
656 ;; largely from CC Mode.
658 ;; In XEmacs 19, Emacs 19, and Emacs 20, we use this to bind
659 ;; backwards deletion behavior to DEL, which both Delete and
660 ;; Backspace get translated to. There's no way to separate this
661 ;; behavior in a clean way, so deal with it! Besides, it's been
662 ;; this way since the dawn of time.
663 (if (not (boundp 'delete-key-deletes-forward))
664 (define-key py-mode-map "\177" 'py-electric-backspace)
665 ;; However, XEmacs 20 actually achieved enlightenment. It is
666 ;; possible to sanely define both backward and forward deletion
667 ;; behavior under X separately (TTYs are forever beyond hope, but
668 ;; who cares? XEmacs 20 does the right thing with these too).
669 (define-key py-mode-map [delete] 'py-electric-delete)
670 (define-key py-mode-map [backspace] 'py-electric-backspace))
671 ;; Separate M-BS from C-M-h. The former should remain
672 ;; backward-kill-word.
673 (define-key py-mode-map [(control meta h)] 'py-mark-def-or-class)
674 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c\C-k" 'py-mark-block)
675 ;; Miscellaneous
676 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c:" 'py-guess-indent-offset)
677 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c\t" 'py-indent-region)
678 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c\C-d" 'py-pdbtrack-toggle-stack-tracking)
679 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c\C-n" 'py-next-statement)
680 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c\C-p" 'py-previous-statement)
681 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c\C-u" 'py-goto-block-up)
682 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c#" 'py-comment-region)
683 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c?" 'py-describe-mode)
684 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c\C-h" 'py-help-at-point)
685 (define-key py-mode-map "\e\C-a" 'py-beginning-of-def-or-class)
686 (define-key py-mode-map "\e\C-e" 'py-end-of-def-or-class)
687 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c-" 'py-up-exception)
688 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c=" 'py-down-exception)
689 ;; stuff that is `standard' but doesn't interface well with
690 ;; python-mode, which forces us to rebind to special commands
691 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-xnd" 'py-narrow-to-defun)
692 ;; information
693 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c\C-b" 'py-submit-bug-report)
694 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c\C-v" 'py-version)
695 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-c\C-w" 'py-pychecker-run)
696 ;; shadow global bindings for newline-and-indent w/ the py- version.
697 ;; BAW - this is extremely bad form, but I'm not going to change it
698 ;; for now.
699 (mapcar #'(lambda (key)
700 (define-key py-mode-map key 'py-newline-and-indent))
701 (where-is-internal 'newline-and-indent))
702 ;; Force RET to be py-newline-and-indent even if it didn't get
703 ;; mapped by the above code. motivation: Emacs' default binding for
704 ;; RET is `newline' and C-j is `newline-and-indent'. Most Pythoneers
705 ;; expect RET to do a `py-newline-and-indent' and any Emacsers who
706 ;; dislike this are probably knowledgeable enough to do a rebind.
707 ;; However, we do *not* change C-j since many Emacsers have already
708 ;; swapped RET and C-j and they don't want C-j bound to `newline' to
709 ;; change.
710 (define-key py-mode-map "\C-m" 'py-newline-and-indent)
713 (defvar py-mode-output-map nil
714 "Keymap used in *Python Output* buffers.")
715 (if py-mode-output-map
717 (setq py-mode-output-map (make-sparse-keymap))
718 (define-key py-mode-output-map [button2] 'py-mouseto-exception)
719 (define-key py-mode-output-map "\C-c\C-c" 'py-goto-exception)
720 ;; TBD: Disable all self-inserting keys. This is bogus, we should
721 ;; really implement this as *Python Output* buffer being read-only
722 (mapcar #' (lambda (key)
723 (define-key py-mode-output-map key
724 #'(lambda () (interactive) (beep))))
725 (where-is-internal 'self-insert-command))
728 (defvar py-shell-map nil
729 "Keymap used in *Python* shell buffers.")
730 (if py-shell-map
732 (setq py-shell-map (copy-keymap comint-mode-map))
733 (define-key py-shell-map [tab] 'tab-to-tab-stop)
734 (define-key py-shell-map "\C-c-" 'py-up-exception)
735 (define-key py-shell-map "\C-c=" 'py-down-exception)
738 (defvar py-mode-syntax-table nil
739 "Syntax table used in `python-mode' buffers.")
740 (when (not py-mode-syntax-table)
741 (setq py-mode-syntax-table (make-syntax-table))
742 (modify-syntax-entry ?\( "()" py-mode-syntax-table)
743 (modify-syntax-entry ?\) ")(" py-mode-syntax-table)
744 (modify-syntax-entry ?\[ "(]" py-mode-syntax-table)
745 (modify-syntax-entry ?\] ")[" py-mode-syntax-table)
746 (modify-syntax-entry ?\{ "(}" py-mode-syntax-table)
747 (modify-syntax-entry ?\} "){" py-mode-syntax-table)
748 ;; Add operator symbols misassigned in the std table
749 (modify-syntax-entry ?\$ "." py-mode-syntax-table)
750 (modify-syntax-entry ?\% "." py-mode-syntax-table)
751 (modify-syntax-entry ?\& "." py-mode-syntax-table)
752 (modify-syntax-entry ?\* "." py-mode-syntax-table)
753 (modify-syntax-entry ?\+ "." py-mode-syntax-table)
754 (modify-syntax-entry ?\- "." py-mode-syntax-table)
755 (modify-syntax-entry ?\/ "." py-mode-syntax-table)
756 (modify-syntax-entry ?\< "." py-mode-syntax-table)
757 (modify-syntax-entry ?\= "." py-mode-syntax-table)
758 (modify-syntax-entry ?\> "." py-mode-syntax-table)
759 (modify-syntax-entry ?\| "." py-mode-syntax-table)
760 ;; For historical reasons, underscore is word class instead of
761 ;; symbol class. GNU conventions say it should be symbol class, but
762 ;; there's a natural conflict between what major mode authors want
763 ;; and what users expect from `forward-word' and `backward-word'.
764 ;; Guido and I have hashed this out and have decided to keep
765 ;; underscore in word class. If you're tempted to change it, try
766 ;; binding M-f and M-b to py-forward-into-nomenclature and
767 ;; py-backward-into-nomenclature instead. This doesn't help in all
768 ;; situations where you'd want the different behavior
769 ;; (e.g. backward-kill-word).
770 (modify-syntax-entry ?\_ "w" py-mode-syntax-table)
771 ;; Both single quote and double quote are string delimiters
772 (modify-syntax-entry ?\' "\"" py-mode-syntax-table)
773 (modify-syntax-entry ?\" "\"" py-mode-syntax-table)
774 ;; comment delimiters
775 (modify-syntax-entry ?\# "<" py-mode-syntax-table)
776 (modify-syntax-entry ?\n ">" py-mode-syntax-table)
779 ;; An auxiliary syntax table which places underscore and dot in the
780 ;; symbol class for simplicity
781 (defvar py-dotted-expression-syntax-table nil
782 "Syntax table used to identify Python dotted expressions.")
783 (when (not py-dotted-expression-syntax-table)
784 (setq py-dotted-expression-syntax-table
785 (copy-syntax-table py-mode-syntax-table))
786 (modify-syntax-entry ?_ "_" py-dotted-expression-syntax-table)
787 (modify-syntax-entry ?. "_" py-dotted-expression-syntax-table))
791 ;; Utilities
792 (defmacro py-safe (&rest body)
793 "Safely execute BODY, return nil if an error occurred."
794 (` (condition-case nil
795 (progn (,@ body))
796 (error nil))))
798 (defsubst py-keep-region-active ()
799 "Keep the region active in XEmacs."
800 ;; Ignore byte-compiler warnings you might see. Also note that
801 ;; FSF's Emacs 19 does it differently; its policy doesn't require us
802 ;; to take explicit action.
803 (and (boundp 'zmacs-region-stays)
804 (setq zmacs-region-stays t)))
806 (defsubst py-point (position)
807 "Returns the value of point at certain commonly referenced POSITIONs.
808 POSITION can be one of the following symbols:
810 bol -- beginning of line
811 eol -- end of line
812 bod -- beginning of def or class
813 eod -- end of def or class
814 bob -- beginning of buffer
815 eob -- end of buffer
816 boi -- back to indentation
817 bos -- beginning of statement
819 This function does not modify point or mark."
820 (let ((here (point)))
821 (cond
822 ((eq position 'bol) (beginning-of-line))
823 ((eq position 'eol) (end-of-line))
824 ((eq position 'bod) (py-beginning-of-def-or-class 'either))
825 ((eq position 'eod) (py-end-of-def-or-class 'either))
826 ;; Kind of funny, I know, but useful for py-up-exception.
827 ((eq position 'bob) (beginning-of-buffer))
828 ((eq position 'eob) (end-of-buffer))
829 ((eq position 'boi) (back-to-indentation))
830 ((eq position 'bos) (py-goto-initial-line))
831 (t (error "Unknown buffer position requested: %s" position))
833 (prog1
834 (point)
835 (goto-char here))))
837 (defsubst py-highlight-line (from to file line)
838 (cond
839 ((fboundp 'make-extent)
840 ;; XEmacs
841 (let ((e (make-extent from to)))
842 (set-extent-property e 'mouse-face 'highlight)
843 (set-extent-property e 'py-exc-info (cons file line))
844 (set-extent-property e 'keymap py-mode-output-map)))
846 ;; Emacs -- Please port this!
850 (defun py-in-literal (&optional lim)
851 "Return non-nil if point is in a Python literal (a comment or string).
852 Optional argument LIM indicates the beginning of the containing form,
853 i.e. the limit on how far back to scan."
854 ;; This is the version used for non-XEmacs, which has a nicer
855 ;; interface.
857 ;; WARNING: Watch out for infinite recursion.
858 (let* ((lim (or lim (py-point 'bod)))
859 (state (parse-partial-sexp lim (point))))
860 (cond
861 ((nth 3 state) 'string)
862 ((nth 4 state) 'comment)
863 (t nil))))
865 ;; XEmacs has a built-in function that should make this much quicker.
866 ;; In this case, lim is ignored
867 (defun py-fast-in-literal (&optional lim)
868 "Fast version of `py-in-literal', used only by XEmacs.
869 Optional LIM is ignored."
870 ;; don't have to worry about context == 'block-comment
871 (buffer-syntactic-context))
873 (if (fboundp 'buffer-syntactic-context)
874 (defalias 'py-in-literal 'py-fast-in-literal))
878 ;; Menu definitions, only relevent if you have the easymenu.el package
879 ;; (standard in the latest Emacs 19 and XEmacs 19 distributions).
880 (defvar py-menu nil
881 "Menu for Python Mode.
882 This menu will get created automatically if you have the `easymenu'
883 package. Note that the latest X/Emacs releases contain this package.")
885 (and (py-safe (require 'easymenu) t)
886 (easy-menu-define
887 py-menu py-mode-map "Python Mode menu"
888 '("Python"
889 ["Comment Out Region" py-comment-region (mark)]
890 ["Uncomment Region" (py-comment-region (point) (mark) '(4)) (mark)]
892 ["Mark current block" py-mark-block t]
893 ["Mark current def" py-mark-def-or-class t]
894 ["Mark current class" (py-mark-def-or-class t) t]
896 ["Shift region left" py-shift-region-left (mark)]
897 ["Shift region right" py-shift-region-right (mark)]
899 ["Import/reload file" py-execute-import-or-reload t]
900 ["Execute buffer" py-execute-buffer t]
901 ["Execute region" py-execute-region (mark)]
902 ["Execute def or class" py-execute-def-or-class (mark)]
903 ["Execute string" py-execute-string t]
904 ["Start interpreter..." py-shell t]
906 ["Go to start of block" py-goto-block-up t]
907 ["Go to start of class" (py-beginning-of-def-or-class t) t]
908 ["Move to end of class" (py-end-of-def-or-class t) t]
909 ["Move to start of def" py-beginning-of-def-or-class t]
910 ["Move to end of def" py-end-of-def-or-class t]
912 ["Describe mode" py-describe-mode t]
917 ;; Imenu definitions
918 (defvar py-imenu-class-regexp
919 (concat ; <<classes>>
920 "\\(" ;
921 "^[ \t]*" ; newline and maybe whitespace
922 "\\(class[ \t]+[a-zA-Z0-9_]+\\)" ; class name
923 ; possibly multiple superclasses
924 "\\([ \t]*\\((\\([a-zA-Z0-9_,. \t\n]\\)*)\\)?\\)"
925 "[ \t]*:" ; and the final :
926 "\\)" ; >>classes<<
928 "Regexp for Python classes for use with the Imenu package."
931 (defvar py-imenu-method-regexp
932 (concat ; <<methods and functions>>
933 "\\(" ;
934 "^[ \t]*" ; new line and maybe whitespace
935 "\\(def[ \t]+" ; function definitions start with def
936 "\\([a-zA-Z0-9_]+\\)" ; name is here
937 ; function arguments...
938 ;; "[ \t]*(\\([-+/a-zA-Z0-9_=,\* \t\n.()\"'#]*\\))"
939 "[ \t]*(\\([^:#]*\\))"
940 "\\)" ; end of def
941 "[ \t]*:" ; and then the :
942 "\\)" ; >>methods and functions<<
944 "Regexp for Python methods/functions for use with the Imenu package."
947 (defvar py-imenu-method-no-arg-parens '(2 8)
948 "Indices into groups of the Python regexp for use with Imenu.
950 Using these values will result in smaller Imenu lists, as arguments to
951 functions are not listed.
953 See the variable `py-imenu-show-method-args-p' for more
954 information.")
956 (defvar py-imenu-method-arg-parens '(2 7)
957 "Indices into groups of the Python regexp for use with imenu.
958 Using these values will result in large Imenu lists, as arguments to
959 functions are listed.
961 See the variable `py-imenu-show-method-args-p' for more
962 information.")
964 ;; Note that in this format, this variable can still be used with the
965 ;; imenu--generic-function. Otherwise, there is no real reason to have
966 ;; it.
967 (defvar py-imenu-generic-expression
968 (cons
969 (concat
970 py-imenu-class-regexp
971 "\\|" ; or...
972 py-imenu-method-regexp
974 py-imenu-method-no-arg-parens)
975 "Generic Python expression which may be used directly with Imenu.
976 Used by setting the variable `imenu-generic-expression' to this value.
977 Also, see the function \\[py-imenu-create-index] for a better
978 alternative for finding the index.")
980 ;; These next two variables are used when searching for the Python
981 ;; class/definitions. Just saving some time in accessing the
982 ;; generic-python-expression, really.
983 (defvar py-imenu-generic-regexp nil)
984 (defvar py-imenu-generic-parens nil)
987 (defun py-imenu-create-index-function ()
988 "Python interface function for the Imenu package.
989 Finds all Python classes and functions/methods. Calls function
990 \\[py-imenu-create-index-engine]. See that function for the details
991 of how this works."
992 (setq py-imenu-generic-regexp (car py-imenu-generic-expression)
993 py-imenu-generic-parens (if py-imenu-show-method-args-p
994 py-imenu-method-arg-parens
995 py-imenu-method-no-arg-parens))
996 (goto-char (point-min))
997 ;; Warning: When the buffer has no classes or functions, this will
998 ;; return nil, which seems proper according to the Imenu API, but
999 ;; causes an error in the XEmacs port of Imenu. Sigh.
1000 (py-imenu-create-index-engine nil))
1002 (defun py-imenu-create-index-engine (&optional start-indent)
1003 "Function for finding Imenu definitions in Python.
1005 Finds all definitions (classes, methods, or functions) in a Python
1006 file for the Imenu package.
1008 Returns a possibly nested alist of the form
1010 (INDEX-NAME . INDEX-POSITION)
1012 The second element of the alist may be an alist, producing a nested
1013 list as in
1015 (INDEX-NAME . INDEX-ALIST)
1017 This function should not be called directly, as it calls itself
1018 recursively and requires some setup. Rather this is the engine for
1019 the function \\[py-imenu-create-index-function].
1021 It works recursively by looking for all definitions at the current
1022 indention level. When it finds one, it adds it to the alist. If it
1023 finds a definition at a greater indentation level, it removes the
1024 previous definition from the alist. In its place it adds all
1025 definitions found at the next indentation level. When it finds a
1026 definition that is less indented then the current level, it returns
1027 the alist it has created thus far.
1029 The optional argument START-INDENT indicates the starting indentation
1030 at which to continue looking for Python classes, methods, or
1031 functions. If this is not supplied, the function uses the indentation
1032 of the first definition found."
1033 (let (index-alist
1034 sub-method-alist
1035 looking-p
1036 def-name prev-name
1037 cur-indent def-pos
1038 (class-paren (first py-imenu-generic-parens))
1039 (def-paren (second py-imenu-generic-parens)))
1040 (setq looking-p
1041 (re-search-forward py-imenu-generic-regexp (point-max) t))
1042 (while looking-p
1043 (save-excursion
1044 ;; used to set def-name to this value but generic-extract-name
1045 ;; is new to imenu-1.14. this way it still works with
1046 ;; imenu-1.11
1047 ;;(imenu--generic-extract-name py-imenu-generic-parens))
1048 (let ((cur-paren (if (match-beginning class-paren)
1049 class-paren def-paren)))
1050 (setq def-name
1051 (buffer-substring-no-properties (match-beginning cur-paren)
1052 (match-end cur-paren))))
1053 (save-match-data
1054 (py-beginning-of-def-or-class 'either))
1055 (beginning-of-line)
1056 (setq cur-indent (current-indentation)))
1057 ;; HACK: want to go to the next correct definition location. We
1058 ;; explicitly list them here but it would be better to have them
1059 ;; in a list.
1060 (setq def-pos
1061 (or (match-beginning class-paren)
1062 (match-beginning def-paren)))
1063 ;; if we don't have a starting indent level, take this one
1064 (or start-indent
1065 (setq start-indent cur-indent))
1066 ;; if we don't have class name yet, take this one
1067 (or prev-name
1068 (setq prev-name def-name))
1069 ;; what level is the next definition on? must be same, deeper
1070 ;; or shallower indentation
1071 (cond
1072 ;; Skip code in comments and strings
1073 ((py-in-literal))
1074 ;; at the same indent level, add it to the list...
1075 ((= start-indent cur-indent)
1076 (push (cons def-name def-pos) index-alist))
1077 ;; deeper indented expression, recurse
1078 ((< start-indent cur-indent)
1079 ;; the point is currently on the expression we're supposed to
1080 ;; start on, so go back to the last expression. The recursive
1081 ;; call will find this place again and add it to the correct
1082 ;; list
1083 (re-search-backward py-imenu-generic-regexp (point-min) 'move)
1084 (setq sub-method-alist (py-imenu-create-index-engine cur-indent))
1085 (if sub-method-alist
1086 ;; we put the last element on the index-alist on the start
1087 ;; of the submethod alist so the user can still get to it.
1088 (let ((save-elmt (pop index-alist)))
1089 (push (cons prev-name
1090 (cons save-elmt sub-method-alist))
1091 index-alist))))
1092 ;; found less indented expression, we're done.
1094 (setq looking-p nil)
1095 (re-search-backward py-imenu-generic-regexp (point-min) t)))
1096 ;; end-cond
1097 (setq prev-name def-name)
1098 (and looking-p
1099 (setq looking-p
1100 (re-search-forward py-imenu-generic-regexp
1101 (point-max) 'move))))
1102 (nreverse index-alist)))
1106 (defun py-choose-shell-by-shebang ()
1107 "Choose CPython or Jython mode by looking at #! on the first line.
1108 Returns the appropriate mode function.
1109 Used by `py-choose-shell', and similar to but distinct from
1110 `set-auto-mode', though it uses `auto-mode-interpreter-regexp' (if available)."
1111 ;; look for an interpreter specified in the first line
1112 ;; similar to set-auto-mode (files.el)
1113 (let* ((re (if (boundp 'auto-mode-interpreter-regexp)
1114 auto-mode-interpreter-regexp
1115 ;; stolen from Emacs 21.2
1116 "#![ \t]?\\([^ \t\n]*/bin/env[ \t]\\)?\\([^ \t\n]+\\)"))
1117 (interpreter (save-excursion
1118 (goto-char (point-min))
1119 (if (looking-at re)
1120 (match-string 2)
1121 "")))
1122 elt)
1123 ;; Map interpreter name to a mode.
1124 (setq elt (assoc (file-name-nondirectory interpreter)
1125 py-shell-alist))
1126 (and elt (caddr elt))))
1130 (defun py-choose-shell-by-import ()
1131 "Choose CPython or Jython mode based imports.
1132 If a file imports any packages in `py-jython-packages', within
1133 `py-import-check-point-max' characters from the start of the file,
1134 return `jython', otherwise return nil."
1135 (let (mode)
1136 (save-excursion
1137 (goto-char (point-min))
1138 (while (and (not mode)
1139 (search-forward-regexp
1140 "^\\(\\(from\\)\\|\\(import\\)\\) \\([^ \t\n.]+\\)"
1141 py-import-check-point-max t))
1142 (setq mode (and (member (match-string 4) py-jython-packages)
1143 'jython
1144 ))))
1145 mode))
1148 (defun py-choose-shell ()
1149 "Choose CPython or Jython mode. Returns the appropriate mode function.
1150 This does the following:
1151 - look for an interpreter with `py-choose-shell-by-shebang'
1152 - examine imports using `py-choose-shell-by-import'
1153 - default to the variable `py-default-interpreter'"
1154 (interactive)
1155 (or (py-choose-shell-by-shebang)
1156 (py-choose-shell-by-import)
1157 py-default-interpreter
1158 ; 'cpython ;; don't use to py-default-interpreter, because default
1159 ; ;; is only way to choose CPython
1163 ;;;###autoload
1164 (defun python-mode ()
1165 "Major mode for editing Python files.
1166 To submit a problem report, enter `\\[py-submit-bug-report]' from a
1167 `python-mode' buffer. Do `\\[py-describe-mode]' for detailed
1168 documentation. To see what version of `python-mode' you are running,
1169 enter `\\[py-version]'.
1171 This mode knows about Python indentation, tokens, comments and
1172 continuation lines. Paragraphs are separated by blank lines only.
1174 COMMANDS
1175 \\{py-mode-map}
1176 VARIABLES
1178 py-indent-offset\t\tindentation increment
1179 py-block-comment-prefix\t\tcomment string used by `comment-region'
1180 py-python-command\t\tshell command to invoke Python interpreter
1181 py-temp-directory\t\tdirectory used for temp files (if needed)
1182 py-beep-if-tab-change\t\tring the bell if `tab-width' is changed"
1183 (interactive)
1184 ;; set up local variables
1185 (kill-all-local-variables)
1186 (make-local-variable 'font-lock-defaults)
1187 (make-local-variable 'paragraph-separate)
1188 (make-local-variable 'paragraph-start)
1189 (make-local-variable 'require-final-newline)
1190 (make-local-variable 'comment-start)
1191 (make-local-variable 'comment-end)
1192 (make-local-variable 'comment-start-skip)
1193 (make-local-variable 'comment-column)
1194 (make-local-variable 'comment-indent-function)
1195 (make-local-variable 'indent-region-function)
1196 (make-local-variable 'indent-line-function)
1197 (make-local-variable 'add-log-current-defun-function)
1198 (make-local-variable 'fill-paragraph-function)
1200 (set-syntax-table py-mode-syntax-table)
1201 (setq major-mode 'python-mode
1202 mode-name "Python"
1203 local-abbrev-table python-mode-abbrev-table
1204 font-lock-defaults '(python-font-lock-keywords)
1205 paragraph-separate "^[ \t]*$"
1206 paragraph-start "^[ \t]*$"
1207 require-final-newline t
1208 comment-start "# "
1209 comment-end ""
1210 comment-start-skip "# *"
1211 comment-column 40
1212 comment-indent-function 'py-comment-indent-function
1213 indent-region-function 'py-indent-region
1214 indent-line-function 'py-indent-line
1215 ;; tell add-log.el how to find the current function/method/variable
1216 add-log-current-defun-function 'py-current-defun
1218 fill-paragraph-function 'py-fill-paragraph
1220 (use-local-map py-mode-map)
1221 ;; add the menu
1222 (if py-menu
1223 (easy-menu-add py-menu))
1224 ;; Emacs 19 requires this
1225 (if (boundp 'comment-multi-line)
1226 (setq comment-multi-line nil))
1227 ;; Install Imenu if available
1228 (when (py-safe (require 'imenu))
1229 (setq imenu-create-index-function #'py-imenu-create-index-function)
1230 (setq imenu-generic-expression py-imenu-generic-expression)
1231 (if (fboundp 'imenu-add-to-menubar)
1232 (imenu-add-to-menubar (format "%s-%s" "IM" mode-name)))
1234 ;; Run the mode hook. Note that py-mode-hook is deprecated.
1235 (if python-mode-hook
1236 (run-hooks 'python-mode-hook)
1237 (run-hooks 'py-mode-hook))
1238 ;; Now do the automagical guessing
1239 (if py-smart-indentation
1240 (let ((offset py-indent-offset))
1241 ;; It's okay if this fails to guess a good value
1242 (if (and (py-safe (py-guess-indent-offset))
1243 (<= py-indent-offset 8)
1244 (>= py-indent-offset 2))
1245 (setq offset py-indent-offset))
1246 (setq py-indent-offset offset)
1247 ;; Only turn indent-tabs-mode off if tab-width !=
1248 ;; py-indent-offset. Never turn it on, because the user must
1249 ;; have explicitly turned it off.
1250 (if (/= tab-width py-indent-offset)
1251 (setq indent-tabs-mode nil))
1253 ;; Set the default shell if not already set
1254 (when (null py-which-shell)
1255 (py-toggle-shells (py-choose-shell))))
1258 (make-obsolete 'jpython-mode 'jython-mode)
1259 (defun jython-mode ()
1260 "Major mode for editing Jython/Jython files.
1261 This is a simple wrapper around `python-mode'.
1262 It runs `jython-mode-hook' then calls `python-mode.'
1263 It is added to `interpreter-mode-alist' and `py-choose-shell'.
1265 (interactive)
1266 (python-mode)
1267 (py-toggle-shells 'jython)
1268 (when jython-mode-hook
1269 (run-hooks 'jython-mode-hook)))
1272 ;; It's handy to add recognition of Python files to the
1273 ;; interpreter-mode-alist and to auto-mode-alist. With the former, we
1274 ;; can specify different `derived-modes' based on the #! line, but
1275 ;; with the latter, we can't. So we just won't add them if they're
1276 ;; already added.
1277 ;;;###autoload
1278 (let ((modes '(("jython" . jython-mode)
1279 ("python" . python-mode))))
1280 (while modes
1281 (when (not (assoc (car modes) interpreter-mode-alist))
1282 (push (car modes) interpreter-mode-alist))
1283 (setq modes (cdr modes))))
1284 ;;;###autoload
1285 (when (not (or (rassq 'python-mode auto-mode-alist)
1286 (rassq 'jython-mode auto-mode-alist)))
1287 (push '("\\.py$" . python-mode) auto-mode-alist))
1291 ;; electric characters
1292 (defun py-outdent-p ()
1293 "Returns non-nil if the current line should dedent one level."
1294 (save-excursion
1295 (and (progn (back-to-indentation)
1296 (looking-at py-outdent-re))
1297 ;; short circuit infloop on illegal construct
1298 (not (bobp))
1299 (progn (forward-line -1)
1300 (py-goto-initial-line)
1301 (back-to-indentation)
1302 (while (or (looking-at py-blank-or-comment-re)
1303 (bobp))
1304 (backward-to-indentation 1))
1305 (not (looking-at py-no-outdent-re)))
1308 (defun py-electric-colon (arg)
1309 "Insert a colon.
1310 In certain cases the line is dedented appropriately. If a numeric
1311 argument ARG is provided, that many colons are inserted
1312 non-electrically. Electric behavior is inhibited inside a string or
1313 comment."
1314 (interactive "*P")
1315 (self-insert-command (prefix-numeric-value arg))
1316 ;; are we in a string or comment?
1317 (if (save-excursion
1318 (let ((pps (parse-partial-sexp (save-excursion
1319 (py-beginning-of-def-or-class)
1320 (point))
1321 (point))))
1322 (not (or (nth 3 pps) (nth 4 pps)))))
1323 (save-excursion
1324 (let ((here (point))
1325 (outdent 0)
1326 (indent (py-compute-indentation t)))
1327 (if (and (not arg)
1328 (py-outdent-p)
1329 (= indent (save-excursion
1330 (py-next-statement -1)
1331 (py-compute-indentation t)))
1333 (setq outdent py-indent-offset))
1334 ;; Don't indent, only dedent. This assumes that any lines
1335 ;; that are already dedented relative to
1336 ;; py-compute-indentation were put there on purpose. It's
1337 ;; highly annoying to have `:' indent for you. Use TAB, C-c
1338 ;; C-l or C-c C-r to adjust. TBD: Is there a better way to
1339 ;; determine this???
1340 (if (< (current-indentation) indent) nil
1341 (goto-char here)
1342 (beginning-of-line)
1343 (delete-horizontal-space)
1344 (indent-to (- indent outdent))
1345 )))))
1348 ;; Python subprocess utilities and filters
1349 (defun py-execute-file (proc filename)
1350 "Send to Python interpreter process PROC \"exec(open('FILENAME').read())\".
1351 Make that process's buffer visible and force display. Also make
1352 comint believe the user typed this string so that
1353 `kill-output-from-shell' does The Right Thing."
1354 (let ((curbuf (current-buffer))
1355 (procbuf (process-buffer proc))
1356 ; (comint-scroll-to-bottom-on-output t)
1357 (msg (format "## working on region in file %s...\n" filename))
1358 (cmd (format "exec(open(r'%s').read())\n" filename)))
1359 (unwind-protect
1360 (save-excursion
1361 (set-buffer procbuf)
1362 (goto-char (point-max))
1363 (move-marker (process-mark proc) (point))
1364 (funcall (process-filter proc) proc msg))
1365 (set-buffer curbuf))
1366 (process-send-string proc cmd)))
1368 (defun py-comint-output-filter-function (string)
1369 "Watch output for Python prompt and exec next file waiting in queue.
1370 This function is appropriate for `comint-output-filter-functions'."
1371 ;;remove ansi terminal escape sequences from string, not sure why they are
1372 ;;still around...
1373 (setq string (ansi-color-filter-apply string))
1374 (when (and (string-match py-shell-input-prompt-1-regexp string)
1375 py-file-queue)
1376 (if py-shell-switch-buffers-on-execute
1377 (pop-to-buffer (current-buffer)))
1378 (py-safe (delete-file (car py-file-queue)))
1379 (setq py-file-queue (cdr py-file-queue))
1380 (if py-file-queue
1381 (let ((pyproc (get-buffer-process (current-buffer))))
1382 (py-execute-file pyproc (car py-file-queue))))
1385 (defun py-pdbtrack-overlay-arrow (activation)
1386 "Activate or de arrow at beginning-of-line in current buffer."
1387 ;; This was derived/simplified from edebug-overlay-arrow
1388 (cond (activation
1389 (setq overlay-arrow-position (make-marker))
1390 (setq overlay-arrow-string "=>")
1391 (set-marker overlay-arrow-position (py-point 'bol) (current-buffer))
1392 (setq py-pdbtrack-is-tracking-p t))
1393 (overlay-arrow-position
1394 (setq overlay-arrow-position nil)
1395 (setq py-pdbtrack-is-tracking-p nil))
1398 (defun py-pdbtrack-track-stack-file (text)
1399 "Show the file indicated by the pdb stack entry line, in a separate window.
1401 Activity is disabled if the buffer-local variable
1402 `py-pdbtrack-do-tracking-p' is nil.
1404 We depend on the pdb input prompt matching `py-pdbtrack-input-prompt'
1405 at the beginning of the line.
1407 If the traceback target file path is invalid, we look for the most
1408 recently visited python-mode buffer which either has the name of the
1409 current function \(or class) or which defines the function \(or
1410 class). This is to provide for remote scripts, eg, Zope's 'Script
1411 (Python)' - put a _copy_ of the script in a buffer named for the
1412 script, and set to python-mode, and pdbtrack will find it.)"
1413 ;; Instead of trying to piece things together from partial text
1414 ;; (which can be almost useless depending on Emacs version), we
1415 ;; monitor to the point where we have the next pdb prompt, and then
1416 ;; check all text from comint-last-input-end to process-mark.
1418 ;; Also, we're very conservative about clearing the overlay arrow,
1419 ;; to minimize residue. This means, for instance, that executing
1420 ;; other pdb commands wipe out the highlight. You can always do a
1421 ;; 'where' (aka 'w') command to reveal the overlay arrow.
1422 (let* ((origbuf (current-buffer))
1423 (currproc (get-buffer-process origbuf)))
1425 (if (not (and currproc py-pdbtrack-do-tracking-p))
1426 (py-pdbtrack-overlay-arrow nil)
1428 (let* ((procmark (process-mark currproc))
1429 (block (buffer-substring (max comint-last-input-end
1430 (- procmark
1431 py-pdbtrack-track-range))
1432 procmark))
1433 target target_fname target_lineno target_buffer)
1435 (if (not (string-match (concat py-pdbtrack-input-prompt "$") block))
1436 (py-pdbtrack-overlay-arrow nil)
1438 (setq target (py-pdbtrack-get-source-buffer block))
1440 (if (stringp target)
1441 (message "pdbtrack: %s" target)
1443 (setq target_lineno (car target))
1444 (setq target_buffer (cadr target))
1445 (setq target_fname (buffer-file-name target_buffer))
1446 (switch-to-buffer-other-window target_buffer)
1447 (goto-line target_lineno)
1448 (message "pdbtrack: line %s, file %s" target_lineno target_fname)
1449 (py-pdbtrack-overlay-arrow t)
1450 (pop-to-buffer origbuf t)
1452 )))))
1455 (defun py-pdbtrack-get-source-buffer (block)
1456 "Return line number and buffer of code indicated by block's traceback text.
1458 We look first to visit the file indicated in the trace.
1460 Failing that, we look for the most recently visited python-mode buffer
1461 with the same name or having the named function.
1463 If we're unable find the source code we return a string describing the
1464 problem as best as we can determine."
1466 (if (not (string-match py-pdbtrack-stack-entry-regexp block))
1468 "Traceback cue not found"
1470 (let* ((filename (match-string 1 block))
1471 (lineno (string-to-int (match-string 2 block)))
1472 (funcname (match-string 3 block))
1473 funcbuffer)
1475 (cond ((file-exists-p filename)
1476 (list lineno (find-file-noselect filename)))
1478 ((setq funcbuffer (py-pdbtrack-grub-for-buffer funcname lineno))
1479 (if (string-match "/Script (Python)$" filename)
1480 ;; Add in number of lines for leading '##' comments:
1481 (setq lineno
1482 (+ lineno
1483 (save-excursion
1484 (set-buffer funcbuffer)
1485 (count-lines
1486 (point-min)
1487 (max (point-min)
1488 (string-match "^\\([^#]\\|#[^#]\\|#$\\)"
1489 (buffer-substring (point-min)
1490 (point-max)))
1491 ))))))
1492 (list lineno funcbuffer))
1494 ((= (elt filename 0) ?\<)
1495 (format "(Non-file source: '%s')" filename))
1497 (t (format "Not found: %s(), %s" funcname filename)))
1502 (defun py-pdbtrack-grub-for-buffer (funcname lineno)
1503 "Find most recent buffer itself named or having function funcname.
1505 We walk the buffer-list history for python-mode buffers that are
1506 named for funcname or define a function funcname."
1507 (let ((buffers (buffer-list))
1509 got)
1510 (while (and buffers (not got))
1511 (setq buf (car buffers)
1512 buffers (cdr buffers))
1513 (if (and (save-excursion (set-buffer buf)
1514 (string= major-mode "python-mode"))
1515 (or (string-match funcname (buffer-name buf))
1516 (string-match (concat "^\\s-*\\(def\\|class\\)\\s-+"
1517 funcname "\\s-*(")
1518 (save-excursion
1519 (set-buffer buf)
1520 (buffer-substring (point-min)
1521 (point-max))))))
1522 (setq got buf)))
1523 got))
1525 (defun py-postprocess-output-buffer (buf)
1526 "Highlight exceptions found in BUF.
1527 If an exception occurred return t, otherwise return nil. BUF must exist."
1528 (let (line file bol err-p)
1529 (save-excursion
1530 (set-buffer buf)
1531 (beginning-of-buffer)
1532 (while (re-search-forward py-traceback-line-re nil t)
1533 (setq file (match-string 1)
1534 line (string-to-int (match-string 2))
1535 bol (py-point 'bol))
1536 (py-highlight-line bol (py-point 'eol) file line)))
1537 (when (and py-jump-on-exception line)
1538 (beep)
1539 (py-jump-to-exception file line)
1540 (setq err-p t))
1541 err-p))
1545 ;;; Subprocess commands
1547 ;; only used when (memq 'broken-temp-names py-emacs-features)
1548 (defvar py-serial-number 0)
1549 (defvar py-exception-buffer nil)
1550 (defconst py-output-buffer "*Python Output*")
1551 (make-variable-buffer-local 'py-output-buffer)
1553 ;; for toggling between CPython and Jython
1554 (defvar py-which-shell nil)
1555 (defvar py-which-args py-python-command-args)
1556 (defvar py-which-bufname "Python")
1557 (make-variable-buffer-local 'py-which-shell)
1558 (make-variable-buffer-local 'py-which-args)
1559 (make-variable-buffer-local 'py-which-bufname)
1561 (defun py-toggle-shells (arg)
1562 "Toggles between the CPython and Jython shells.
1564 With positive argument ARG (interactively \\[universal-argument]),
1565 uses the CPython shell, with negative ARG uses the Jython shell, and
1566 with a zero argument, toggles the shell.
1568 Programmatically, ARG can also be one of the symbols `cpython' or
1569 `jython', equivalent to positive arg and negative arg respectively."
1570 (interactive "P")
1571 ;; default is to toggle
1572 (if (null arg)
1573 (setq arg 0))
1574 ;; preprocess arg
1575 (cond
1576 ((equal arg 0)
1577 ;; toggle
1578 (if (string-equal py-which-bufname "Python")
1579 (setq arg -1)
1580 (setq arg 1)))
1581 ((equal arg 'cpython) (setq arg 1))
1582 ((equal arg 'jython) (setq arg -1)))
1583 (let (msg)
1584 (cond
1585 ((< 0 arg)
1586 ;; set to CPython
1587 (setq py-which-shell py-python-command
1588 py-which-args py-python-command-args
1589 py-which-bufname "Python"
1590 msg "CPython")
1591 (if (string-equal py-which-bufname "Jython")
1592 (setq mode-name "Python")))
1593 ((> 0 arg)
1594 (setq py-which-shell py-jython-command
1595 py-which-args py-jython-command-args
1596 py-which-bufname "Jython"
1597 msg "Jython")
1598 (if (string-equal py-which-bufname "Python")
1599 (setq mode-name "Jython")))
1601 (message "Using the %s shell" msg)
1602 (setq py-output-buffer (format "*%s Output*" py-which-bufname))))
1604 ;;;###autoload
1605 (defun py-shell (&optional argprompt)
1606 "Start an interactive Python interpreter in another window.
1607 This is like Shell mode, except that Python is running in the window
1608 instead of a shell. See the `Interactive Shell' and `Shell Mode'
1609 sections of the Emacs manual for details, especially for the key
1610 bindings active in the `*Python*' buffer.
1612 With optional \\[universal-argument], the user is prompted for the
1613 flags to pass to the Python interpreter. This has no effect when this
1614 command is used to switch to an existing process, only when a new
1615 process is started. If you use this, you will probably want to ensure
1616 that the current arguments are retained (they will be included in the
1617 prompt). This argument is ignored when this function is called
1618 programmatically, or when running in Emacs 19.34 or older.
1620 Note: You can toggle between using the CPython interpreter and the
1621 Jython interpreter by hitting \\[py-toggle-shells]. This toggles
1622 buffer local variables which control whether all your subshell
1623 interactions happen to the `*Jython*' or `*Python*' buffers (the
1624 latter is the name used for the CPython buffer).
1626 Warning: Don't use an interactive Python if you change sys.ps1 or
1627 sys.ps2 from their default values, or if you're running code that
1628 prints `>>> ' or `... ' at the start of a line. `python-mode' can't
1629 distinguish your output from Python's output, and assumes that `>>> '
1630 at the start of a line is a prompt from Python. Similarly, the Emacs
1631 Shell mode code assumes that both `>>> ' and `... ' at the start of a
1632 line are Python prompts. Bad things can happen if you fool either
1633 mode.
1635 Warning: If you do any editing *in* the process buffer *while* the
1636 buffer is accepting output from Python, do NOT attempt to `undo' the
1637 changes. Some of the output (nowhere near the parts you changed!) may
1638 be lost if you do. This appears to be an Emacs bug, an unfortunate
1639 interaction between undo and process filters; the same problem exists in
1640 non-Python process buffers using the default (Emacs-supplied) process
1641 filter."
1642 (interactive "P")
1643 ;; Set the default shell if not already set
1644 (when (null py-which-shell)
1645 (py-toggle-shells py-default-interpreter))
1646 (let ((args py-which-args))
1647 (when (and argprompt
1648 (interactive-p)
1649 (fboundp 'split-string))
1650 ;; TBD: Perhaps force "-i" in the final list?
1651 (setq args (split-string
1652 (read-string (concat py-which-bufname
1653 " arguments: ")
1654 (concat
1655 (mapconcat 'identity py-which-args " ") " ")
1656 ))))
1657 (if (not (equal (buffer-name) "*Python*"))
1658 (switch-to-buffer-other-window
1659 (apply 'make-comint py-which-bufname py-which-shell nil args))
1660 (apply 'make-comint py-which-bufname py-which-shell nil args))
1661 (make-local-variable 'comint-prompt-regexp)
1662 (setq comint-prompt-regexp (concat py-shell-input-prompt-1-regexp "\\|"
1663 py-shell-input-prompt-2-regexp "\\|"
1664 "^([Pp]db) "))
1665 (add-hook 'comint-output-filter-functions
1666 'py-comint-output-filter-function)
1667 ;; pdbtrack
1668 (add-hook 'comint-output-filter-functions 'py-pdbtrack-track-stack-file)
1669 (setq py-pdbtrack-do-tracking-p t)
1670 (set-syntax-table py-mode-syntax-table)
1671 (use-local-map py-shell-map)
1672 (run-hooks 'py-shell-hook)
1675 (defun py-clear-queue ()
1676 "Clear the queue of temporary files waiting to execute."
1677 (interactive)
1678 (let ((n (length py-file-queue)))
1679 (mapcar 'delete-file py-file-queue)
1680 (setq py-file-queue nil)
1681 (message "%d pending files de-queued." n)))
1684 (defun py-execute-region (start end &optional async)
1685 "Execute the region in a Python interpreter.
1687 The region is first copied into a temporary file (in the directory
1688 `py-temp-directory'). If there is no Python interpreter shell
1689 running, this file is executed synchronously using
1690 `shell-command-on-region'. If the program is long running, use
1691 \\[universal-argument] to run the command asynchronously in its own
1692 buffer.
1694 When this function is used programmatically, arguments START and END
1695 specify the region to execute, and optional third argument ASYNC, if
1696 non-nil, specifies to run the command asynchronously in its own
1697 buffer.
1699 If the Python interpreter shell is running, the region is exec()'d
1700 in that shell. If you try to execute regions too quickly,
1701 `python-mode' will queue them up and execute them one at a time when
1702 it sees a `>>> ' prompt from Python. Each time this happens, the
1703 process buffer is popped into a window (if it's not already in some
1704 window) so you can see it, and a comment of the form
1706 \t## working on region in file <name>...
1708 is inserted at the end. See also the command `py-clear-queue'."
1709 (interactive "r\nP")
1710 ;; Skip ahead to the first non-blank line
1711 (let* ((proc (get-process py-which-bufname))
1712 (temp (if (memq 'broken-temp-names py-emacs-features)
1713 (let
1714 ((sn py-serial-number)
1715 (pid (and (fboundp 'emacs-pid) (emacs-pid))))
1716 (setq py-serial-number (1+ py-serial-number))
1717 (if pid
1718 (format "python-%d-%d" sn pid)
1719 (format "python-%d" sn)))
1720 (make-temp-name "python-")))
1721 (file (concat (expand-file-name temp py-temp-directory) ".py"))
1722 (cur (current-buffer))
1723 (buf (get-buffer-create file))
1724 shell)
1725 ;; Write the contents of the buffer, watching out for indented regions.
1726 (save-excursion
1727 (goto-char start)
1728 (beginning-of-line)
1729 (while (and (looking-at "\\s *$")
1730 (< (point) end))
1731 (forward-line 1))
1732 (setq start (point))
1733 (or (< start end)
1734 (error "Region is empty"))
1735 (setq py-line-number-offset (count-lines 1 start))
1736 (let ((needs-if (/= (py-point 'bol) (py-point 'boi))))
1737 (set-buffer buf)
1738 (python-mode)
1739 (when needs-if
1740 (insert "if 1:\n")
1741 (setq py-line-number-offset (- py-line-number-offset 1)))
1742 (insert-buffer-substring cur start end)
1743 ;; Set the shell either to the #! line command, or to the
1744 ;; py-which-shell buffer local variable.
1745 (setq shell (or (py-choose-shell-by-shebang)
1746 (py-choose-shell-by-import)
1747 py-which-shell))))
1748 (cond
1749 ;; always run the code in its own asynchronous subprocess
1750 (async
1751 ;; User explicitly wants this to run in its own async subprocess
1752 (save-excursion
1753 (set-buffer buf)
1754 (write-region (point-min) (point-max) file nil 'nomsg))
1755 (let* ((buf (generate-new-buffer-name py-output-buffer))
1756 ;; TBD: a horrible hack, but why create new Custom variables?
1757 (arg (if (string-equal py-which-bufname "Python")
1758 "-u" "")))
1759 (start-process py-which-bufname buf shell arg file)
1760 (pop-to-buffer buf)
1761 (py-postprocess-output-buffer buf)
1762 ;; TBD: clean up the temporary file!
1764 ;; if the Python interpreter shell is running, queue it up for
1765 ;; execution there.
1766 (proc
1767 ;; use the existing python shell
1768 (save-excursion
1769 (set-buffer buf)
1770 (write-region (point-min) (point-max) file nil 'nomsg))
1771 (if (not py-file-queue)
1772 (py-execute-file proc file)
1773 (message "File %s queued for execution" file))
1774 (setq py-file-queue (append py-file-queue (list file)))
1775 (setq py-exception-buffer (cons file (current-buffer))))
1777 ;; TBD: a horrible hack, but why create new Custom variables?
1778 (let ((cmd (concat py-which-shell (if (string-equal py-which-bufname
1779 "Jython")
1780 " -" ""))))
1781 ;; otherwise either run it synchronously in a subprocess
1782 (save-excursion
1783 (set-buffer buf)
1784 (shell-command-on-region (point-min) (point-max)
1785 cmd py-output-buffer))
1786 ;; shell-command-on-region kills the output buffer if it never
1787 ;; existed and there's no output from the command
1788 (if (not (get-buffer py-output-buffer))
1789 (message "No output.")
1790 (setq py-exception-buffer (current-buffer))
1791 (let ((err-p (py-postprocess-output-buffer py-output-buffer)))
1792 (pop-to-buffer py-output-buffer)
1793 (if err-p
1794 (pop-to-buffer py-exception-buffer)))
1797 ;; Clean up after ourselves.
1798 (kill-buffer buf)))
1801 ;; Code execution commands
1802 (defun py-execute-buffer (&optional async)
1803 "Send the contents of the buffer to a Python interpreter.
1804 If the file local variable `py-master-file' is non-nil, execute the
1805 named file instead of the buffer's file.
1807 If there is a *Python* process buffer it is used. If a clipping
1808 restriction is in effect, only the accessible portion of the buffer is
1809 sent. A trailing newline will be supplied if needed.
1811 See the `\\[py-execute-region]' docs for an account of some
1812 subtleties, including the use of the optional ASYNC argument."
1813 (interactive "P")
1814 (let ((old-buffer (current-buffer)))
1815 (if py-master-file
1816 (let* ((filename (expand-file-name py-master-file))
1817 (buffer (or (get-file-buffer filename)
1818 (find-file-noselect filename))))
1819 (set-buffer buffer)))
1820 (py-execute-region (point-min) (point-max) async)
1821 (pop-to-buffer old-buffer)))
1823 (defun py-execute-import-or-reload (&optional async)
1824 "Import the current buffer's file in a Python interpreter.
1826 If the file has already been imported, then do reload instead to get
1827 the latest version.
1829 If the file's name does not end in \".py\", then do exec instead.
1831 If the current buffer is not visiting a file, do `py-execute-buffer'
1832 instead.
1834 If the file local variable `py-master-file' is non-nil, import or
1835 reload the named file instead of the buffer's file. The file may be
1836 saved based on the value of `py-execute-import-or-reload-save-p'.
1838 See the `\\[py-execute-region]' docs for an account of some
1839 subtleties, including the use of the optional ASYNC argument.
1841 This may be preferable to `\\[py-execute-buffer]' because:
1843 - Definitions stay in their module rather than appearing at top
1844 level, where they would clutter the global namespace and not affect
1845 uses of qualified names (MODULE.NAME).
1847 - The Python debugger gets line number information about the functions."
1848 (interactive "P")
1849 ;; Check file local variable py-master-file
1850 (if py-master-file
1851 (let* ((filename (expand-file-name py-master-file))
1852 (buffer (or (get-file-buffer filename)
1853 (find-file-noselect filename))))
1854 (set-buffer buffer)))
1855 (let ((file (buffer-file-name (current-buffer))))
1856 (if file
1857 (progn
1858 ;; Maybe save some buffers
1859 (save-some-buffers (not py-ask-about-save) nil)
1860 (py-execute-string
1861 (if (string-match "\\.py$" file)
1862 (let ((f (file-name-sans-extension
1863 (file-name-nondirectory file))))
1864 (format "if globals().has_key('%s'):\n reload(%s)\nelse:\n import %s\n"
1865 f f f))
1866 (format "exec(open(r'%s'))\n" file))
1867 async))
1868 ;; else
1869 (py-execute-buffer async))))
1872 (defun py-execute-def-or-class (&optional async)
1873 "Send the current function or class definition to a Python interpreter.
1875 If there is a *Python* process buffer it is used.
1877 See the `\\[py-execute-region]' docs for an account of some
1878 subtleties, including the use of the optional ASYNC argument."
1879 (interactive "P")
1880 (save-excursion
1881 (py-mark-def-or-class)
1882 ;; mark is before point
1883 (py-execute-region (mark) (point) async)))
1886 (defun py-execute-string (string &optional async)
1887 "Send the argument STRING to a Python interpreter.
1889 If there is a *Python* process buffer it is used.
1891 See the `\\[py-execute-region]' docs for an account of some
1892 subtleties, including the use of the optional ASYNC argument."
1893 (interactive "sExecute Python command: ")
1894 (save-excursion
1895 (set-buffer (get-buffer-create
1896 (generate-new-buffer-name " *Python Command*")))
1897 (insert string)
1898 (py-execute-region (point-min) (point-max) async)))
1902 (defun py-jump-to-exception (file line)
1903 "Jump to the Python code in FILE at LINE."
1904 (let ((buffer (cond ((string-equal file "<stdin>")
1905 (if (consp py-exception-buffer)
1906 (cdr py-exception-buffer)
1907 py-exception-buffer))
1908 ((and (consp py-exception-buffer)
1909 (string-equal file (car py-exception-buffer)))
1910 (cdr py-exception-buffer))
1911 ((py-safe (find-file-noselect file)))
1912 ;; could not figure out what file the exception
1913 ;; is pointing to, so prompt for it
1914 (t (find-file (read-file-name "Exception file: "
1916 file t))))))
1917 ;; Fiddle about with line number
1918 (setq line (+ py-line-number-offset line))
1920 (pop-to-buffer buffer)
1921 ;; Force Python mode
1922 (if (not (eq major-mode 'python-mode))
1923 (python-mode))
1924 (goto-line line)
1925 (message "Jumping to exception in file %s on line %d" file line)))
1927 (defun py-mouseto-exception (event)
1928 "Jump to the code which caused the Python exception at EVENT.
1929 EVENT is usually a mouse click."
1930 (interactive "e")
1931 (cond
1932 ((fboundp 'event-point)
1933 ;; XEmacs
1934 (let* ((point (event-point event))
1935 (buffer (event-buffer event))
1936 (e (and point buffer (extent-at point buffer 'py-exc-info)))
1937 (info (and e (extent-property e 'py-exc-info))))
1938 (message "Event point: %d, info: %s" point info)
1939 (and info
1940 (py-jump-to-exception (car info) (cdr info)))
1942 ;; Emacs -- Please port this!
1945 (defun py-goto-exception ()
1946 "Go to the line indicated by the traceback."
1947 (interactive)
1948 (let (file line)
1949 (save-excursion
1950 (beginning-of-line)
1951 (if (looking-at py-traceback-line-re)
1952 (setq file (match-string 1)
1953 line (string-to-int (match-string 2)))))
1954 (if (not file)
1955 (error "Not on a traceback line"))
1956 (py-jump-to-exception file line)))
1958 (defun py-find-next-exception (start buffer searchdir errwhere)
1959 "Find the next Python exception and jump to the code that caused it.
1960 START is the buffer position in BUFFER from which to begin searching
1961 for an exception. SEARCHDIR is a function, either
1962 `re-search-backward' or `re-search-forward' indicating the direction
1963 to search. ERRWHERE is used in an error message if the limit (top or
1964 bottom) of the trackback stack is encountered."
1965 (let (file line)
1966 (save-excursion
1967 (set-buffer buffer)
1968 (goto-char (py-point start))
1969 (if (funcall searchdir py-traceback-line-re nil t)
1970 (setq file (match-string 1)
1971 line (string-to-int (match-string 2)))))
1972 (if (and file line)
1973 (py-jump-to-exception file line)
1974 (error "%s of traceback" errwhere))))
1976 (defun py-down-exception (&optional bottom)
1977 "Go to the next line down in the traceback.
1978 With \\[univeral-argument] (programmatically, optional argument
1979 BOTTOM), jump to the bottom (innermost) exception in the exception
1980 stack."
1981 (interactive "P")
1982 (let* ((proc (get-process "Python"))
1983 (buffer (if proc "*Python*" py-output-buffer)))
1984 (if bottom
1985 (py-find-next-exception 'eob buffer 're-search-backward "Bottom")
1986 (py-find-next-exception 'eol buffer 're-search-forward "Bottom"))))
1988 (defun py-up-exception (&optional top)
1989 "Go to the previous line up in the traceback.
1990 With \\[universal-argument] (programmatically, optional argument TOP)
1991 jump to the top (outermost) exception in the exception stack."
1992 (interactive "P")
1993 (let* ((proc (get-process "Python"))
1994 (buffer (if proc "*Python*" py-output-buffer)))
1995 (if top
1996 (py-find-next-exception 'bob buffer 're-search-forward "Top")
1997 (py-find-next-exception 'bol buffer 're-search-backward "Top"))))
2000 ;; Electric deletion
2001 (defun py-electric-backspace (arg)
2002 "Delete preceding character or levels of indentation.
2003 Deletion is performed by calling the function in `py-backspace-function'
2004 with a single argument (the number of characters to delete).
2006 If point is at the leftmost column, delete the preceding newline.
2008 Otherwise, if point is at the leftmost non-whitespace character of a
2009 line that is neither a continuation line nor a non-indenting comment
2010 line, or if point is at the end of a blank line, this command reduces
2011 the indentation to match that of the line that opened the current
2012 block of code. The line that opened the block is displayed in the
2013 echo area to help you keep track of where you are. With
2014 \\[universal-argument] dedents that many blocks (but not past column
2015 zero).
2017 Otherwise the preceding character is deleted, converting a tab to
2018 spaces if needed so that only a single column position is deleted.
2019 \\[universal-argument] specifies how many characters to delete;
2020 default is 1.
2022 When used programmatically, argument ARG specifies the number of
2023 blocks to dedent, or the number of characters to delete, as indicated
2024 above."
2025 (interactive "*p")
2026 (if (or (/= (current-indentation) (current-column))
2027 (bolp)
2028 (py-continuation-line-p)
2029 ; (not py-honor-comment-indentation)
2030 ; (looking-at "#[^ \t\n]") ; non-indenting #
2032 (funcall py-backspace-function arg)
2033 ;; else indent the same as the colon line that opened the block
2034 ;; force non-blank so py-goto-block-up doesn't ignore it
2035 (insert-char ?* 1)
2036 (backward-char)
2037 (let ((base-indent 0) ; indentation of base line
2038 (base-text "") ; and text of base line
2039 (base-found-p nil))
2040 (save-excursion
2041 (while (< 0 arg)
2042 (condition-case nil ; in case no enclosing block
2043 (progn
2044 (py-goto-block-up 'no-mark)
2045 (setq base-indent (current-indentation)
2046 base-text (py-suck-up-leading-text)
2047 base-found-p t))
2048 (error nil))
2049 (setq arg (1- arg))))
2050 (delete-char 1) ; toss the dummy character
2051 (delete-horizontal-space)
2052 (indent-to base-indent)
2053 (if base-found-p
2054 (message "Closes block: %s" base-text)))))
2057 (defun py-electric-delete (arg)
2058 "Delete preceding or following character or levels of whitespace.
2060 The behavior of this function depends on the variable
2061 `delete-key-deletes-forward'. If this variable is nil (or does not
2062 exist, as in older Emacsen and non-XEmacs versions), then this
2063 function behaves identically to \\[c-electric-backspace].
2065 If `delete-key-deletes-forward' is non-nil and is supported in your
2066 Emacs, then deletion occurs in the forward direction, by calling the
2067 function in `py-delete-function'.
2069 \\[universal-argument] (programmatically, argument ARG) specifies the
2070 number of characters to delete (default is 1)."
2071 (interactive "*p")
2072 (if (or (and (fboundp 'delete-forward-p) ;XEmacs 21
2073 (delete-forward-p))
2074 (and (boundp 'delete-key-deletes-forward) ;XEmacs 20
2075 delete-key-deletes-forward))
2076 (funcall py-delete-function arg)
2077 (py-electric-backspace arg)))
2079 ;; required for pending-del and delsel modes
2080 (put 'py-electric-colon 'delete-selection t) ;delsel
2081 (put 'py-electric-colon 'pending-delete t) ;pending-del
2082 (put 'py-electric-backspace 'delete-selection 'supersede) ;delsel
2083 (put 'py-electric-backspace 'pending-delete 'supersede) ;pending-del
2084 (put 'py-electric-delete 'delete-selection 'supersede) ;delsel
2085 (put 'py-electric-delete 'pending-delete 'supersede) ;pending-del
2089 (defun py-indent-line (&optional arg)
2090 "Fix the indentation of the current line according to Python rules.
2091 With \\[universal-argument] (programmatically, the optional argument
2092 ARG non-nil), ignore dedenting rules for block closing statements
2093 (e.g. return, raise, break, continue, pass)
2095 This function is normally bound to `indent-line-function' so
2096 \\[indent-for-tab-command] will call it."
2097 (interactive "P")
2098 (let* ((ci (current-indentation))
2099 (move-to-indentation-p (<= (current-column) ci))
2100 (need (py-compute-indentation (not arg)))
2101 (cc (current-column)))
2102 ;; dedent out a level if previous command was the same unless we're in
2103 ;; column 1
2104 (if (and (equal last-command this-command)
2105 (/= cc 0))
2106 (progn
2107 (beginning-of-line)
2108 (delete-horizontal-space)
2109 (indent-to (* (/ (- cc 1) py-indent-offset) py-indent-offset)))
2110 (progn
2111 ;; see if we need to dedent
2112 (if (py-outdent-p)
2113 (setq need (- need py-indent-offset)))
2114 (if (or py-tab-always-indent
2115 move-to-indentation-p)
2116 (progn (if (/= ci need)
2117 (save-excursion
2118 (beginning-of-line)
2119 (delete-horizontal-space)
2120 (indent-to need)))
2121 (if move-to-indentation-p (back-to-indentation)))
2122 (insert-tab))))))
2124 (defun py-newline-and-indent ()
2125 "Strives to act like the Emacs `newline-and-indent'.
2126 This is just `strives to' because correct indentation can't be computed
2127 from scratch for Python code. In general, deletes the whitespace before
2128 point, inserts a newline, and takes an educated guess as to how you want
2129 the new line indented."
2130 (interactive)
2131 (let ((ci (current-indentation)))
2132 (if (< ci (current-column)) ; if point beyond indentation
2133 (newline-and-indent)
2134 ;; else try to act like newline-and-indent "normally" acts
2135 (beginning-of-line)
2136 (insert-char ?\n 1)
2137 (move-to-column ci))))
2139 (defun py-compute-indentation (honor-block-close-p)
2140 "Compute Python indentation.
2141 When HONOR-BLOCK-CLOSE-P is non-nil, statements such as `return',
2142 `raise', `break', `continue', and `pass' force one level of
2143 dedenting."
2144 (save-excursion
2145 (beginning-of-line)
2146 (let* ((bod (py-point 'bod))
2147 (pps (parse-partial-sexp bod (point)))
2148 (boipps (parse-partial-sexp bod (py-point 'boi)))
2149 placeholder)
2150 (cond
2151 ;; are we inside a multi-line string or comment?
2152 ((or (and (nth 3 pps) (nth 3 boipps))
2153 (and (nth 4 pps) (nth 4 boipps)))
2154 (save-excursion
2155 (if (not py-align-multiline-strings-p) 0
2156 ;; skip back over blank & non-indenting comment lines
2157 ;; note: will skip a blank or non-indenting comment line
2158 ;; that happens to be a continuation line too
2159 (re-search-backward "^[ \t]*\\([^ \t\n#]\\|#[ \t\n]\\)" nil 'move)
2160 (back-to-indentation)
2161 (current-column))))
2162 ;; are we on a continuation line?
2163 ((py-continuation-line-p)
2164 (let ((startpos (point))
2165 (open-bracket-pos (py-nesting-level))
2166 endpos searching found state cind cline)
2167 (if open-bracket-pos
2168 (progn
2169 (setq endpos (py-point 'bol))
2170 (py-goto-initial-line)
2171 (setq cind (current-indentation))
2172 (setq cline cind)
2173 (dolist (bp
2174 (nth 9 (save-excursion
2175 (parse-partial-sexp (point) endpos)))
2176 cind)
2177 (if (search-forward "\n" bp t) (setq cline cind))
2178 (goto-char (1+ bp))
2179 (skip-chars-forward " \t")
2180 (setq cind (if (memq (following-char) '(?\n ?# ?\\))
2181 (+ cline py-indent-offset)
2182 (current-column)))))
2183 ;; else on backslash continuation line
2184 (forward-line -1)
2185 (if (py-continuation-line-p) ; on at least 3rd line in block
2186 (current-indentation) ; so just continue the pattern
2187 ;; else started on 2nd line in block, so indent more.
2188 ;; if base line is an assignment with a start on a RHS,
2189 ;; indent to 2 beyond the leftmost "="; else skip first
2190 ;; chunk of non-whitespace characters on base line, + 1 more
2191 ;; column
2192 (end-of-line)
2193 (setq endpos (point)
2194 searching t)
2195 (back-to-indentation)
2196 (setq startpos (point))
2197 ;; look at all "=" from left to right, stopping at first
2198 ;; one not nested in a list or string
2199 (while searching
2200 (skip-chars-forward "^=" endpos)
2201 (if (= (point) endpos)
2202 (setq searching nil)
2203 (forward-char 1)
2204 (setq state (parse-partial-sexp startpos (point)))
2205 (if (and (zerop (car state)) ; not in a bracket
2206 (null (nth 3 state))) ; & not in a string
2207 (progn
2208 (setq searching nil) ; done searching in any case
2209 (setq found
2210 (not (or
2211 (eq (following-char) ?=)
2212 (memq (char-after (- (point) 2))
2213 '(?< ?> ?!)))))))))
2214 (if (or (not found) ; not an assignment
2215 (looking-at "[ \t]*\\\\")) ; <=><spaces><backslash>
2216 (progn
2217 (goto-char startpos)
2218 (skip-chars-forward "^ \t\n")))
2219 ;; if this is a continuation for a block opening
2220 ;; statement, add some extra offset.
2221 (+ (current-column) (if (py-statement-opens-block-p)
2222 py-continuation-offset 0)
2224 ))))
2226 ;; not on a continuation line
2227 ((bobp) (current-indentation))
2229 ;; Dfn: "Indenting comment line". A line containing only a
2230 ;; comment, but which is treated like a statement for
2231 ;; indentation calculation purposes. Such lines are only
2232 ;; treated specially by the mode; they are not treated
2233 ;; specially by the Python interpreter.
2235 ;; The rules for indenting comment lines are a line where:
2236 ;; - the first non-whitespace character is `#', and
2237 ;; - the character following the `#' is whitespace, and
2238 ;; - the line is dedented with respect to (i.e. to the left
2239 ;; of) the indentation of the preceding non-blank line.
2241 ;; The first non-blank line following an indenting comment
2242 ;; line is given the same amount of indentation as the
2243 ;; indenting comment line.
2245 ;; All other comment-only lines are ignored for indentation
2246 ;; purposes.
2248 ;; Are we looking at a comment-only line which is *not* an
2249 ;; indenting comment line? If so, we assume that it's been
2250 ;; placed at the desired indentation, so leave it alone.
2251 ;; Indenting comment lines are aligned as statements down
2252 ;; below.
2253 ((and (looking-at "[ \t]*#[^ \t\n]")
2254 ;; NOTE: this test will not be performed in older Emacsen
2255 (fboundp 'forward-comment)
2256 (<= (current-indentation)
2257 (save-excursion
2258 (forward-comment (- (point-max)))
2259 (current-indentation))))
2260 (current-indentation))
2262 ;; else indentation based on that of the statement that
2263 ;; precedes us; use the first line of that statement to
2264 ;; establish the base, in case the user forced a non-std
2265 ;; indentation for the continuation lines (if any)
2267 ;; skip back over blank & non-indenting comment lines note:
2268 ;; will skip a blank or non-indenting comment line that
2269 ;; happens to be a continuation line too. use fast Emacs 19
2270 ;; function if it's there.
2271 (if (and (eq py-honor-comment-indentation nil)
2272 (fboundp 'forward-comment))
2273 (forward-comment (- (point-max)))
2274 (let ((prefix-re (concat py-block-comment-prefix "[ \t]*"))
2275 done)
2276 (while (not done)
2277 (re-search-backward "^[ \t]*\\([^ \t\n#]\\|#\\)" nil 'move)
2278 (setq done (or (bobp)
2279 (and (eq py-honor-comment-indentation t)
2280 (save-excursion
2281 (back-to-indentation)
2282 (not (looking-at prefix-re))
2284 (and (not (eq py-honor-comment-indentation t))
2285 (save-excursion
2286 (back-to-indentation)
2287 (and (not (looking-at prefix-re))
2288 (or (looking-at "[^#]")
2289 (not (zerop (current-column)))
2294 ;; if we landed inside a string, go to the beginning of that
2295 ;; string. this handles triple quoted, multi-line spanning
2296 ;; strings.
2297 (py-goto-beginning-of-tqs (nth 3 (parse-partial-sexp bod (point))))
2298 ;; now skip backward over continued lines
2299 (setq placeholder (point))
2300 (py-goto-initial-line)
2301 ;; we may *now* have landed in a TQS, so find the beginning of
2302 ;; this string.
2303 (py-goto-beginning-of-tqs
2304 (save-excursion (nth 3 (parse-partial-sexp
2305 placeholder (point)))))
2306 (+ (current-indentation)
2307 (if (py-statement-opens-block-p)
2308 py-indent-offset
2309 (if (and honor-block-close-p (py-statement-closes-block-p))
2310 (- py-indent-offset)
2311 0)))
2312 )))))
2314 (defun py-guess-indent-offset (&optional global)
2315 "Guess a good value for, and change, `py-indent-offset'.
2317 By default, make a buffer-local copy of `py-indent-offset' with the
2318 new value, so that other Python buffers are not affected. With
2319 \\[universal-argument] (programmatically, optional argument GLOBAL),
2320 change the global value of `py-indent-offset'. This affects all
2321 Python buffers (that don't have their own buffer-local copy), both
2322 those currently existing and those created later in the Emacs session.
2324 Some people use a different value for `py-indent-offset' than you use.
2325 There's no excuse for such foolishness, but sometimes you have to deal
2326 with their ugly code anyway. This function examines the file and sets
2327 `py-indent-offset' to what it thinks it was when they created the
2328 mess.
2330 Specifically, it searches forward from the statement containing point,
2331 looking for a line that opens a block of code. `py-indent-offset' is
2332 set to the difference in indentation between that line and the Python
2333 statement following it. If the search doesn't succeed going forward,
2334 it's tried again going backward."
2335 (interactive "P") ; raw prefix arg
2336 (let (new-value
2337 (start (point))
2338 (restart (point))
2339 (found nil)
2340 colon-indent)
2341 (py-goto-initial-line)
2342 (while (not (or found (eobp)))
2343 (when (and (re-search-forward ":[ \t]*\\($\\|[#\\]\\)" nil 'move)
2344 (not (py-in-literal restart)))
2345 (setq restart (point))
2346 (py-goto-initial-line)
2347 (if (py-statement-opens-block-p)
2348 (setq found t)
2349 (goto-char restart))))
2350 (unless found
2351 (goto-char start)
2352 (py-goto-initial-line)
2353 (while (not (or found (bobp)))
2354 (setq found (and
2355 (re-search-backward ":[ \t]*\\($\\|[#\\]\\)" nil 'move)
2356 (or (py-goto-initial-line) t) ; always true -- side effect
2357 (py-statement-opens-block-p)))))
2358 (setq colon-indent (current-indentation)
2359 found (and found (zerop (py-next-statement 1)))
2360 new-value (- (current-indentation) colon-indent))
2361 (goto-char start)
2362 (if (not found)
2363 (error "Sorry, couldn't guess a value for py-indent-offset")
2364 (funcall (if global 'kill-local-variable 'make-local-variable)
2365 'py-indent-offset)
2366 (setq py-indent-offset new-value)
2367 (or noninteractive
2368 (message "%s value of py-indent-offset set to %d"
2369 (if global "Global" "Local")
2370 py-indent-offset)))
2373 (defun py-comment-indent-function ()
2374 "Python version of `comment-indent-function'."
2375 ;; This is required when filladapt is turned off. Without it, when
2376 ;; filladapt is not used, comments which start in column zero
2377 ;; cascade one character to the right
2378 (save-excursion
2379 (beginning-of-line)
2380 (let ((eol (py-point 'eol)))
2381 (and comment-start-skip
2382 (re-search-forward comment-start-skip eol t)
2383 (setq eol (match-beginning 0)))
2384 (goto-char eol)
2385 (skip-chars-backward " \t")
2386 (max comment-column (+ (current-column) (if (bolp) 0 1)))
2389 (defun py-narrow-to-defun (&optional class)
2390 "Make text outside current defun invisible.
2391 The defun visible is the one that contains point or follows point.
2392 Optional CLASS is passed directly to `py-beginning-of-def-or-class'."
2393 (interactive "P")
2394 (save-excursion
2395 (widen)
2396 (py-end-of-def-or-class class)
2397 (let ((end (point)))
2398 (py-beginning-of-def-or-class class)
2399 (narrow-to-region (point) end))))
2402 (defun py-shift-region (start end count)
2403 "Indent lines from START to END by COUNT spaces."
2404 (save-excursion
2405 (goto-char end)
2406 (beginning-of-line)
2407 (setq end (point))
2408 (goto-char start)
2409 (beginning-of-line)
2410 (setq start (point))
2411 (indent-rigidly start end count)))
2413 (defun py-shift-region-left (start end &optional count)
2414 "Shift region of Python code to the left.
2415 The lines from the line containing the start of the current region up
2416 to (but not including) the line containing the end of the region are
2417 shifted to the left, by `py-indent-offset' columns.
2419 If a prefix argument is given, the region is instead shifted by that
2420 many columns. With no active region, dedent only the current line.
2421 You cannot dedent the region if any line is already at column zero."
2422 (interactive
2423 (let ((p (point))
2424 (m (mark))
2425 (arg current-prefix-arg))
2426 (if m
2427 (list (min p m) (max p m) arg)
2428 (list p (save-excursion (forward-line 1) (point)) arg))))
2429 ;; if any line is at column zero, don't shift the region
2430 (save-excursion
2431 (goto-char start)
2432 (while (< (point) end)
2433 (back-to-indentation)
2434 (if (and (zerop (current-column))
2435 (not (looking-at "\\s *$")))
2436 (error "Region is at left edge"))
2437 (forward-line 1)))
2438 (py-shift-region start end (- (prefix-numeric-value
2439 (or count py-indent-offset))))
2440 (py-keep-region-active))
2442 (defun py-shift-region-right (start end &optional count)
2443 "Shift region of Python code to the right.
2444 The lines from the line containing the start of the current region up
2445 to (but not including) the line containing the end of the region are
2446 shifted to the right, by `py-indent-offset' columns.
2448 If a prefix argument is given, the region is instead shifted by that
2449 many columns. With no active region, indent only the current line."
2450 (interactive
2451 (let ((p (point))
2452 (m (mark))
2453 (arg current-prefix-arg))
2454 (if m
2455 (list (min p m) (max p m) arg)
2456 (list p (save-excursion (forward-line 1) (point)) arg))))
2457 (py-shift-region start end (prefix-numeric-value
2458 (or count py-indent-offset)))
2459 (py-keep-region-active))
2461 (defun py-indent-region (start end &optional indent-offset)
2462 "Reindent a region of Python code.
2464 The lines from the line containing the start of the current region up
2465 to (but not including) the line containing the end of the region are
2466 reindented. If the first line of the region has a non-whitespace
2467 character in the first column, the first line is left alone and the
2468 rest of the region is reindented with respect to it. Else the entire
2469 region is reindented with respect to the (closest code or indenting
2470 comment) statement immediately preceding the region.
2472 This is useful when code blocks are moved or yanked, when enclosing
2473 control structures are introduced or removed, or to reformat code
2474 using a new value for the indentation offset.
2476 If a numeric prefix argument is given, it will be used as the value of
2477 the indentation offset. Else the value of `py-indent-offset' will be
2478 used.
2480 Warning: The region must be consistently indented before this function
2481 is called! This function does not compute proper indentation from
2482 scratch (that's impossible in Python), it merely adjusts the existing
2483 indentation to be correct in context.
2485 Warning: This function really has no idea what to do with
2486 non-indenting comment lines, and shifts them as if they were indenting
2487 comment lines. Fixing this appears to require telepathy.
2489 Special cases: whitespace is deleted from blank lines; continuation
2490 lines are shifted by the same amount their initial line was shifted,
2491 in order to preserve their relative indentation with respect to their
2492 initial line; and comment lines beginning in column 1 are ignored."
2493 (interactive "*r\nP") ; region; raw prefix arg
2494 (save-excursion
2495 (goto-char end) (beginning-of-line) (setq end (point-marker))
2496 (goto-char start) (beginning-of-line)
2497 (let ((py-indent-offset (prefix-numeric-value
2498 (or indent-offset py-indent-offset)))
2499 (indents '(-1)) ; stack of active indent levels
2500 (target-column 0) ; column to which to indent
2501 (base-shifted-by 0) ; amount last base line was shifted
2502 (indent-base (if (looking-at "[ \t\n]")
2503 (py-compute-indentation t)
2506 (while (< (point) end)
2507 (setq ci (current-indentation))
2508 ;; figure out appropriate target column
2509 (cond
2510 ((or (eq (following-char) ?#) ; comment in column 1
2511 (looking-at "[ \t]*$")) ; entirely blank
2512 (setq target-column 0))
2513 ((py-continuation-line-p) ; shift relative to base line
2514 (setq target-column (+ ci base-shifted-by)))
2515 (t ; new base line
2516 (if (> ci (car indents)) ; going deeper; push it
2517 (setq indents (cons ci indents))
2518 ;; else we should have seen this indent before
2519 (setq indents (memq ci indents)) ; pop deeper indents
2520 (if (null indents)
2521 (error "Bad indentation in region, at line %d"
2522 (save-restriction
2523 (widen)
2524 (1+ (count-lines 1 (point)))))))
2525 (setq target-column (+ indent-base
2526 (* py-indent-offset
2527 (- (length indents) 2))))
2528 (setq base-shifted-by (- target-column ci))))
2529 ;; shift as needed
2530 (if (/= ci target-column)
2531 (progn
2532 (delete-horizontal-space)
2533 (indent-to target-column)))
2534 (forward-line 1))))
2535 (set-marker end nil))
2537 (defun py-comment-region (beg end &optional arg)
2538 "Like `comment-region' but uses double hash (`#') comment starter."
2539 (interactive "r\nP")
2540 (let ((comment-start py-block-comment-prefix))
2541 (comment-region beg end arg)))
2544 ;; Functions for moving point
2545 (defun py-previous-statement (count)
2546 "Go to the start of the COUNTth preceding Python statement.
2547 By default, goes to the previous statement. If there is no such
2548 statement, goes to the first statement. Return count of statements
2549 left to move. `Statements' do not include blank, comment, or
2550 continuation lines."
2551 (interactive "p") ; numeric prefix arg
2552 (if (< count 0) (py-next-statement (- count))
2553 (py-goto-initial-line)
2554 (let (start)
2555 (while (and
2556 (setq start (point)) ; always true -- side effect
2557 (> count 0)
2558 (zerop (forward-line -1))
2559 (py-goto-statement-at-or-above))
2560 (setq count (1- count)))
2561 (if (> count 0) (goto-char start)))
2562 count))
2564 (defun py-next-statement (count)
2565 "Go to the start of next Python statement.
2566 If the statement at point is the i'th Python statement, goes to the
2567 start of statement i+COUNT. If there is no such statement, goes to the
2568 last statement. Returns count of statements left to move. `Statements'
2569 do not include blank, comment, or continuation lines."
2570 (interactive "p") ; numeric prefix arg
2571 (if (< count 0) (py-previous-statement (- count))
2572 (beginning-of-line)
2573 (let (start)
2574 (while (and
2575 (setq start (point)) ; always true -- side effect
2576 (> count 0)
2577 (py-goto-statement-below))
2578 (setq count (1- count)))
2579 (if (> count 0) (goto-char start)))
2580 count))
2582 (defun py-goto-block-up (&optional nomark)
2583 "Move up to start of current block.
2584 Go to the statement that starts the smallest enclosing block; roughly
2585 speaking, this will be the closest preceding statement that ends with a
2586 colon and is indented less than the statement you started on. If
2587 successful, also sets the mark to the starting point.
2589 `\\[py-mark-block]' can be used afterward to mark the whole code
2590 block, if desired.
2592 If called from a program, the mark will not be set if optional argument
2593 NOMARK is not nil."
2594 (interactive)
2595 (let ((start (point))
2596 (found nil)
2597 initial-indent)
2598 (py-goto-initial-line)
2599 ;; if on blank or non-indenting comment line, use the preceding stmt
2600 (if (looking-at "[ \t]*\\($\\|#[^ \t\n]\\)")
2601 (progn
2602 (py-goto-statement-at-or-above)
2603 (setq found (py-statement-opens-block-p))))
2604 ;; search back for colon line indented less
2605 (setq initial-indent (current-indentation))
2606 (if (zerop initial-indent)
2607 ;; force fast exit
2608 (goto-char (point-min)))
2609 (while (not (or found (bobp)))
2610 (setq found
2611 (and
2612 (re-search-backward ":[ \t]*\\($\\|[#\\]\\)" nil 'move)
2613 (or (py-goto-initial-line) t) ; always true -- side effect
2614 (< (current-indentation) initial-indent)
2615 (py-statement-opens-block-p))))
2616 (if found
2617 (progn
2618 (or nomark (push-mark start))
2619 (back-to-indentation))
2620 (goto-char start)
2621 (error "Enclosing block not found"))))
2623 (defun py-beginning-of-def-or-class (&optional class count)
2624 "Move point to start of `def' or `class'.
2626 Searches back for the closest preceding `def'. If you supply a prefix
2627 arg, looks for a `class' instead. The docs below assume the `def'
2628 case; just substitute `class' for `def' for the other case.
2629 Programmatically, if CLASS is `either', then moves to either `class'
2630 or `def'.
2632 When second optional argument is given programmatically, move to the
2633 COUNTth start of `def'.
2635 If point is in a `def' statement already, and after the `d', simply
2636 moves point to the start of the statement.
2638 Otherwise (i.e. when point is not in a `def' statement, or at or
2639 before the `d' of a `def' statement), searches for the closest
2640 preceding `def' statement, and leaves point at its start. If no such
2641 statement can be found, leaves point at the start of the buffer.
2643 Returns t iff a `def' statement is found by these rules.
2645 Note that doing this command repeatedly will take you closer to the
2646 start of the buffer each time.
2648 To mark the current `def', see `\\[py-mark-def-or-class]'."
2649 (interactive "P") ; raw prefix arg
2650 (setq count (or count 1))
2651 (let ((at-or-before-p (<= (current-column) (current-indentation)))
2652 (start-of-line (goto-char (py-point 'bol)))
2653 (start-of-stmt (goto-char (py-point 'bos)))
2654 (start-re (cond ((eq class 'either) "^[ \t]*\\(class\\|def\\)\\>")
2655 (class "^[ \t]*class\\>")
2656 (t "^[ \t]*def\\>")))
2658 ;; searching backward
2659 (if (and (< 0 count)
2660 (or (/= start-of-stmt start-of-line)
2661 (not at-or-before-p)))
2662 (end-of-line))
2663 ;; search forward
2664 (if (and (> 0 count)
2665 (zerop (current-column))
2666 (looking-at start-re))
2667 (end-of-line))
2668 (if (re-search-backward start-re nil 'move count)
2669 (goto-char (match-beginning 0)))))
2671 ;; Backwards compatibility
2672 (defalias 'beginning-of-python-def-or-class 'py-beginning-of-def-or-class)
2674 (defun py-end-of-def-or-class (&optional class count)
2675 "Move point beyond end of `def' or `class' body.
2677 By default, looks for an appropriate `def'. If you supply a prefix
2678 arg, looks for a `class' instead. The docs below assume the `def'
2679 case; just substitute `class' for `def' for the other case.
2680 Programmatically, if CLASS is `either', then moves to either `class'
2681 or `def'.
2683 When second optional argument is given programmatically, move to the
2684 COUNTth end of `def'.
2686 If point is in a `def' statement already, this is the `def' we use.
2688 Else, if the `def' found by `\\[py-beginning-of-def-or-class]'
2689 contains the statement you started on, that's the `def' we use.
2691 Otherwise, we search forward for the closest following `def', and use that.
2693 If a `def' can be found by these rules, point is moved to the start of
2694 the line immediately following the `def' block, and the position of the
2695 start of the `def' is returned.
2697 Else point is moved to the end of the buffer, and nil is returned.
2699 Note that doing this command repeatedly will take you closer to the
2700 end of the buffer each time.
2702 To mark the current `def', see `\\[py-mark-def-or-class]'."
2703 (interactive "P") ; raw prefix arg
2704 (if (and count (/= count 1))
2705 (py-beginning-of-def-or-class (- 1 count)))
2706 (let ((start (progn (py-goto-initial-line) (point)))
2707 (which (cond ((eq class 'either) "\\(class\\|def\\)")
2708 (class "class")
2709 (t "def")))
2710 (state 'not-found))
2711 ;; move point to start of appropriate def/class
2712 (if (looking-at (concat "[ \t]*" which "\\>")) ; already on one
2713 (setq state 'at-beginning)
2714 ;; else see if py-beginning-of-def-or-class hits container
2715 (if (and (py-beginning-of-def-or-class class)
2716 (progn (py-goto-beyond-block)
2717 (> (point) start)))
2718 (setq state 'at-end)
2719 ;; else search forward
2720 (goto-char start)
2721 (if (re-search-forward (concat "^[ \t]*" which "\\>") nil 'move)
2722 (progn (setq state 'at-beginning)
2723 (beginning-of-line)))))
2724 (cond
2725 ((eq state 'at-beginning) (py-goto-beyond-block) t)
2726 ((eq state 'at-end) t)
2727 ((eq state 'not-found) nil)
2728 (t (error "Internal error in `py-end-of-def-or-class'")))))
2730 ;; Backwards compabitility
2731 (defalias 'end-of-python-def-or-class 'py-end-of-def-or-class)
2734 ;; Functions for marking regions
2735 (defun py-mark-block (&optional extend just-move)
2736 "Mark following block of lines. With prefix arg, mark structure.
2737 Easier to use than explain. It sets the region to an `interesting'
2738 block of succeeding lines. If point is on a blank line, it goes down to
2739 the next non-blank line. That will be the start of the region. The end
2740 of the region depends on the kind of line at the start:
2742 - If a comment, the region will include all succeeding comment lines up
2743 to (but not including) the next non-comment line (if any).
2745 - Else if a prefix arg is given, and the line begins one of these
2746 structures:
2748 if elif else try except finally for while def class
2750 the region will be set to the body of the structure, including
2751 following blocks that `belong' to it, but excluding trailing blank
2752 and comment lines. E.g., if on a `try' statement, the `try' block
2753 and all (if any) of the following `except' and `finally' blocks
2754 that belong to the `try' structure will be in the region. Ditto
2755 for if/elif/else, for/else and while/else structures, and (a bit
2756 degenerate, since they're always one-block structures) def and
2757 class blocks.
2759 - Else if no prefix argument is given, and the line begins a Python
2760 block (see list above), and the block is not a `one-liner' (i.e.,
2761 the statement ends with a colon, not with code), the region will
2762 include all succeeding lines up to (but not including) the next
2763 code statement (if any) that's indented no more than the starting
2764 line, except that trailing blank and comment lines are excluded.
2765 E.g., if the starting line begins a multi-statement `def'
2766 structure, the region will be set to the full function definition,
2767 but without any trailing `noise' lines.
2769 - Else the region will include all succeeding lines up to (but not
2770 including) the next blank line, or code or indenting-comment line
2771 indented strictly less than the starting line. Trailing indenting
2772 comment lines are included in this case, but not trailing blank
2773 lines.
2775 A msg identifying the location of the mark is displayed in the echo
2776 area; or do `\\[exchange-point-and-mark]' to flip down to the end.
2778 If called from a program, optional argument EXTEND plays the role of
2779 the prefix arg, and if optional argument JUST-MOVE is not nil, just
2780 moves to the end of the block (& does not set mark or display a msg)."
2781 (interactive "P") ; raw prefix arg
2782 (py-goto-initial-line)
2783 ;; skip over blank lines
2784 (while (and
2785 (looking-at "[ \t]*$") ; while blank line
2786 (not (eobp))) ; & somewhere to go
2787 (forward-line 1))
2788 (if (eobp)
2789 (error "Hit end of buffer without finding a non-blank stmt"))
2790 (let ((initial-pos (point))
2791 (initial-indent (current-indentation))
2792 last-pos ; position of last stmt in region
2793 (followers
2794 '((if elif else) (elif elif else) (else)
2795 (try except finally) (except except) (finally)
2796 (for else) (while else)
2797 (def) (class) ) )
2798 first-symbol next-symbol)
2800 (cond
2801 ;; if comment line, suck up the following comment lines
2802 ((looking-at "[ \t]*#")
2803 (re-search-forward "^[ \t]*[^ \t#]" nil 'move) ; look for non-comment
2804 (re-search-backward "^[ \t]*#") ; and back to last comment in block
2805 (setq last-pos (point)))
2807 ;; else if line is a block line and EXTEND given, suck up
2808 ;; the whole structure
2809 ((and extend
2810 (setq first-symbol (py-suck-up-first-keyword) )
2811 (assq first-symbol followers))
2812 (while (and
2813 (or (py-goto-beyond-block) t) ; side effect
2814 (forward-line -1) ; side effect
2815 (setq last-pos (point)) ; side effect
2816 (py-goto-statement-below)
2817 (= (current-indentation) initial-indent)
2818 (setq next-symbol (py-suck-up-first-keyword))
2819 (memq next-symbol (cdr (assq first-symbol followers))))
2820 (setq first-symbol next-symbol)))
2822 ;; else if line *opens* a block, search for next stmt indented <=
2823 ((py-statement-opens-block-p)
2824 (while (and
2825 (setq last-pos (point)) ; always true -- side effect
2826 (py-goto-statement-below)
2827 (> (current-indentation) initial-indent)
2830 ;; else plain code line; stop at next blank line, or stmt or
2831 ;; indenting comment line indented <
2833 (while (and
2834 (setq last-pos (point)) ; always true -- side effect
2835 (or (py-goto-beyond-final-line) t)
2836 (not (looking-at "[ \t]*$")) ; stop at blank line
2838 (>= (current-indentation) initial-indent)
2839 (looking-at "[ \t]*#[^ \t\n]"))) ; ignore non-indenting #
2840 nil)))
2842 ;; skip to end of last stmt
2843 (goto-char last-pos)
2844 (py-goto-beyond-final-line)
2846 ;; set mark & display
2847 (if just-move
2848 () ; just return
2849 (push-mark (point) 'no-msg)
2850 (forward-line -1)
2851 (message "Mark set after: %s" (py-suck-up-leading-text))
2852 (goto-char initial-pos))))
2854 (defun py-mark-def-or-class (&optional class)
2855 "Set region to body of def (or class, with prefix arg) enclosing point.
2856 Pushes the current mark, then point, on the mark ring (all language
2857 modes do this, but although it's handy it's never documented ...).
2859 In most Emacs language modes, this function bears at least a
2860 hallucinogenic resemblance to `\\[py-end-of-def-or-class]' and
2861 `\\[py-beginning-of-def-or-class]'.
2863 And in earlier versions of Python mode, all 3 were tightly connected.
2864 Turned out that was more confusing than useful: the `goto start' and
2865 `goto end' commands are usually used to search through a file, and
2866 people expect them to act a lot like `search backward' and `search
2867 forward' string-search commands. But because Python `def' and `class'
2868 can nest to arbitrary levels, finding the smallest def containing
2869 point cannot be done via a simple backward search: the def containing
2870 point may not be the closest preceding def, or even the closest
2871 preceding def that's indented less. The fancy algorithm required is
2872 appropriate for the usual uses of this `mark' command, but not for the
2873 `goto' variations.
2875 So the def marked by this command may not be the one either of the
2876 `goto' commands find: If point is on a blank or non-indenting comment
2877 line, moves back to start of the closest preceding code statement or
2878 indenting comment line. If this is a `def' statement, that's the def
2879 we use. Else searches for the smallest enclosing `def' block and uses
2880 that. Else signals an error.
2882 When an enclosing def is found: The mark is left immediately beyond
2883 the last line of the def block. Point is left at the start of the
2884 def, except that: if the def is preceded by a number of comment lines
2885 followed by (at most) one optional blank line, point is left at the
2886 start of the comments; else if the def is preceded by a blank line,
2887 point is left at its start.
2889 The intent is to mark the containing def/class and its associated
2890 documentation, to make moving and duplicating functions and classes
2891 pleasant."
2892 (interactive "P") ; raw prefix arg
2893 (let ((start (point))
2894 (which (cond ((eq class 'either) "\\(class\\|def\\)")
2895 (class "class")
2896 (t "def"))))
2897 (push-mark start)
2898 (if (not (py-go-up-tree-to-keyword which))
2899 (progn (goto-char start)
2900 (error "Enclosing %s not found"
2901 (if (eq class 'either)
2902 "def or class"
2903 which)))
2904 ;; else enclosing def/class found
2905 (setq start (point))
2906 (py-goto-beyond-block)
2907 (push-mark (point))
2908 (goto-char start)
2909 (if (zerop (forward-line -1)) ; if there is a preceding line
2910 (progn
2911 (if (looking-at "[ \t]*$") ; it's blank
2912 (setq start (point)) ; so reset start point
2913 (goto-char start)) ; else try again
2914 (if (zerop (forward-line -1))
2915 (if (looking-at "[ \t]*#") ; a comment
2916 ;; look back for non-comment line
2917 ;; tricky: note that the regexp matches a blank
2918 ;; line, cuz \n is in the 2nd character class
2919 (and
2920 (re-search-backward "^[ \t]*[^ \t#]" nil 'move)
2921 (forward-line 1))
2922 ;; no comment, so go back
2923 (goto-char start)))))))
2924 (exchange-point-and-mark)
2925 (py-keep-region-active))
2927 ;; ripped from cc-mode
2928 (defun py-forward-into-nomenclature (&optional arg)
2929 "Move forward to end of a nomenclature section or word.
2930 With \\[universal-argument] (programmatically, optional argument ARG),
2931 do it that many times.
2933 A `nomenclature' is a fancy way of saying AWordWithMixedCaseNotUnderscores."
2934 (interactive "p")
2935 (let ((case-fold-search nil))
2936 (if (> arg 0)
2937 (re-search-forward
2938 "\\(\\W\\|[_]\\)*\\([A-Z]*[a-z0-9]*\\)"
2939 (point-max) t arg)
2940 (while (and (< arg 0)
2941 (re-search-backward
2942 "\\(\\W\\|[a-z0-9]\\)[A-Z]+\\|\\(\\W\\|[_]\\)\\w+"
2943 (point-min) 0))
2944 (forward-char 1)
2945 (setq arg (1+ arg)))))
2946 (py-keep-region-active))
2948 (defun py-backward-into-nomenclature (&optional arg)
2949 "Move backward to beginning of a nomenclature section or word.
2950 With optional ARG, move that many times. If ARG is negative, move
2951 forward.
2953 A `nomenclature' is a fancy way of saying AWordWithMixedCaseNotUnderscores."
2954 (interactive "p")
2955 (py-forward-into-nomenclature (- arg))
2956 (py-keep-region-active))
2960 ;; pdbtrack functions
2961 (defun py-pdbtrack-toggle-stack-tracking (arg)
2962 (interactive "P")
2963 (if (not (get-buffer-process (current-buffer)))
2964 (error "No process associated with buffer '%s'" (current-buffer)))
2965 ;; missing or 0 is toggle, >0 turn on, <0 turn off
2966 (if (or (not arg)
2967 (zerop (setq arg (prefix-numeric-value arg))))
2968 (setq py-pdbtrack-do-tracking-p (not py-pdbtrack-do-tracking-p))
2969 (setq py-pdbtrack-do-tracking-p (> arg 0)))
2970 (message "%sabled Python's pdbtrack"
2971 (if py-pdbtrack-do-tracking-p "En" "Dis")))
2973 (defun turn-on-pdbtrack ()
2974 (interactive)
2975 (py-pdbtrack-toggle-stack-tracking 1))
2977 (defun turn-off-pdbtrack ()
2978 (interactive)
2979 (py-pdbtrack-toggle-stack-tracking 0))
2983 ;; Pychecker
2985 ;; hack for FSF Emacs
2986 (unless (fboundp 'read-shell-command)
2987 (defalias 'read-shell-command 'read-string))
2989 (defun py-pychecker-run (command)
2990 "*Run pychecker (default on the file currently visited)."
2991 (interactive
2992 (let ((default
2993 (format "%s %s %s" py-pychecker-command
2994 (mapconcat 'identity py-pychecker-command-args " ")
2995 (buffer-file-name)))
2996 (last (when py-pychecker-history
2997 (let* ((lastcmd (car py-pychecker-history))
2998 (cmd (cdr (reverse (split-string lastcmd))))
2999 (newcmd (reverse (cons (buffer-file-name) cmd))))
3000 (mapconcat 'identity newcmd " ")))))
3002 (list
3003 (if (fboundp 'read-shell-command)
3004 (read-shell-command "Run pychecker like this: "
3005 (if last
3006 last
3007 default)
3008 'py-pychecker-history)
3009 (read-string "Run pychecker like this: "
3010 (if last
3011 last
3012 default)
3013 'py-pychecker-history))
3015 (save-some-buffers (not py-ask-about-save) nil)
3016 (compile-internal command "No more errors"))
3020 ;; pydoc commands. The guts of this function is stolen from XEmacs's
3021 ;; symbol-near-point, but without the useless regexp-quote call on the
3022 ;; results, nor the interactive bit. Also, we've added the temporary
3023 ;; syntax table setting, which Skip originally had broken out into a
3024 ;; separate function. Note that Emacs doesn't have the original
3025 ;; function.
3026 (defun py-symbol-near-point ()
3027 "Return the first textual item to the nearest point."
3028 ;; alg stolen from etag.el
3029 (save-excursion
3030 (with-syntax-table py-dotted-expression-syntax-table
3031 (if (or (bobp) (not (memq (char-syntax (char-before)) '(?w ?_))))
3032 (while (not (looking-at "\\sw\\|\\s_\\|\\'"))
3033 (forward-char 1)))
3034 (while (looking-at "\\sw\\|\\s_")
3035 (forward-char 1))
3036 (if (re-search-backward "\\sw\\|\\s_" nil t)
3037 (progn (forward-char 1)
3038 (buffer-substring (point)
3039 (progn (forward-sexp -1)
3040 (while (looking-at "\\s'")
3041 (forward-char 1))
3042 (point))))
3043 nil))))
3045 (defun py-help-at-point ()
3046 "Get help from Python based on the symbol nearest point."
3047 (interactive)
3048 (let* ((sym (py-symbol-near-point))
3049 (base (substring sym 0 (or (search "." sym :from-end t) 0)))
3050 cmd)
3051 (if (not (equal base ""))
3052 (setq cmd (concat "import " base "\n")))
3053 (setq cmd (concat "import pydoc\n"
3055 "try: pydoc.help('" sym "')\n"
3056 "except: print 'No help available on:', \"" sym "\""))
3057 (message cmd)
3058 (py-execute-string cmd)
3059 (set-buffer "*Python Output*")
3060 ;; BAW: Should we really be leaving the output buffer in help-mode?
3061 (help-mode)))
3065 ;; Documentation functions
3067 ;; dump the long form of the mode blurb; does the usual doc escapes,
3068 ;; plus lines of the form ^[vc]:name$ to suck variable & command docs
3069 ;; out of the right places, along with the keys they're on & current
3070 ;; values
3071 (defun py-dump-help-string (str)
3072 (with-output-to-temp-buffer "*Help*"
3073 (let ((locals (buffer-local-variables))
3074 funckind funcname func funcdoc
3075 (start 0) mstart end
3076 keys )
3077 (while (string-match "^%\\([vc]\\):\\(.+\\)\n" str start)
3078 (setq mstart (match-beginning 0) end (match-end 0)
3079 funckind (substring str (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1))
3080 funcname (substring str (match-beginning 2) (match-end 2))
3081 func (intern funcname))
3082 (princ (substitute-command-keys (substring str start mstart)))
3083 (cond
3084 ((equal funckind "c") ; command
3085 (setq funcdoc (documentation func)
3086 keys (concat
3087 "Key(s): "
3088 (mapconcat 'key-description
3089 (where-is-internal func py-mode-map)
3090 ", "))))
3091 ((equal funckind "v") ; variable
3092 (setq funcdoc (documentation-property func 'variable-documentation)
3093 keys (if (assq func locals)
3094 (concat
3095 "Local/Global values: "
3096 (prin1-to-string (symbol-value func))
3097 " / "
3098 (prin1-to-string (default-value func)))
3099 (concat
3100 "Value: "
3101 (prin1-to-string (symbol-value func))))))
3102 (t ; unexpected
3103 (error "Error in py-dump-help-string, tag `%s'" funckind)))
3104 (princ (format "\n-> %s:\t%s\t%s\n\n"
3105 (if (equal funckind "c") "Command" "Variable")
3106 funcname keys))
3107 (princ funcdoc)
3108 (terpri)
3109 (setq start end))
3110 (princ (substitute-command-keys (substring str start))))
3111 (print-help-return-message)))
3113 (defun py-describe-mode ()
3114 "Dump long form of Python-mode docs."
3115 (interactive)
3116 (py-dump-help-string "Major mode for editing Python files.
3117 Knows about Python indentation, tokens, comments and continuation lines.
3118 Paragraphs are separated by blank lines only.
3120 Major sections below begin with the string `@'; specific function and
3121 variable docs begin with `->'.
3123 @EXECUTING PYTHON CODE
3125 \\[py-execute-import-or-reload]\timports or reloads the file in the Python interpreter
3126 \\[py-execute-buffer]\tsends the entire buffer to the Python interpreter
3127 \\[py-execute-region]\tsends the current region
3128 \\[py-execute-def-or-class]\tsends the current function or class definition
3129 \\[py-execute-string]\tsends an arbitrary string
3130 \\[py-shell]\tstarts a Python interpreter window; this will be used by
3131 \tsubsequent Python execution commands
3132 %c:py-execute-import-or-reload
3133 %c:py-execute-buffer
3134 %c:py-execute-region
3135 %c:py-execute-def-or-class
3136 %c:py-execute-string
3137 %c:py-shell
3139 @VARIABLES
3141 py-indent-offset\tindentation increment
3142 py-block-comment-prefix\tcomment string used by comment-region
3144 py-python-command\tshell command to invoke Python interpreter
3145 py-temp-directory\tdirectory used for temp files (if needed)
3147 py-beep-if-tab-change\tring the bell if tab-width is changed
3148 %v:py-indent-offset
3149 %v:py-block-comment-prefix
3150 %v:py-python-command
3151 %v:py-temp-directory
3152 %v:py-beep-if-tab-change
3154 @KINDS OF LINES
3156 Each physical line in the file is either a `continuation line' (the
3157 preceding line ends with a backslash that's not part of a comment, or
3158 the paren/bracket/brace nesting level at the start of the line is
3159 non-zero, or both) or an `initial line' (everything else).
3161 An initial line is in turn a `blank line' (contains nothing except
3162 possibly blanks or tabs), a `comment line' (leftmost non-blank
3163 character is `#'), or a `code line' (everything else).
3165 Comment Lines
3167 Although all comment lines are treated alike by Python, Python mode
3168 recognizes two kinds that act differently with respect to indentation.
3170 An `indenting comment line' is a comment line with a blank, tab or
3171 nothing after the initial `#'. The indentation commands (see below)
3172 treat these exactly as if they were code lines: a line following an
3173 indenting comment line will be indented like the comment line. All
3174 other comment lines (those with a non-whitespace character immediately
3175 following the initial `#') are `non-indenting comment lines', and
3176 their indentation is ignored by the indentation commands.
3178 Indenting comment lines are by far the usual case, and should be used
3179 whenever possible. Non-indenting comment lines are useful in cases
3180 like these:
3182 \ta = b # a very wordy single-line comment that ends up being
3183 \t #... continued onto another line
3185 \tif a == b:
3186 ##\t\tprint 'panic!' # old code we've `commented out'
3187 \t\treturn a
3189 Since the `#...' and `##' comment lines have a non-whitespace
3190 character following the initial `#', Python mode ignores them when
3191 computing the proper indentation for the next line.
3193 Continuation Lines and Statements
3195 The Python-mode commands generally work on statements instead of on
3196 individual lines, where a `statement' is a comment or blank line, or a
3197 code line and all of its following continuation lines (if any)
3198 considered as a single logical unit. The commands in this mode
3199 generally (when it makes sense) automatically move to the start of the
3200 statement containing point, even if point happens to be in the middle
3201 of some continuation line.
3204 @INDENTATION
3206 Primarily for entering new code:
3207 \t\\[indent-for-tab-command]\t indent line appropriately
3208 \t\\[py-newline-and-indent]\t insert newline, then indent
3209 \t\\[py-electric-backspace]\t reduce indentation, or delete single character
3211 Primarily for reindenting existing code:
3212 \t\\[py-guess-indent-offset]\t guess py-indent-offset from file content; change locally
3213 \t\\[universal-argument] \\[py-guess-indent-offset]\t ditto, but change globally
3215 \t\\[py-indent-region]\t reindent region to match its context
3216 \t\\[py-shift-region-left]\t shift region left by py-indent-offset
3217 \t\\[py-shift-region-right]\t shift region right by py-indent-offset
3219 Unlike most programming languages, Python uses indentation, and only
3220 indentation, to specify block structure. Hence the indentation supplied
3221 automatically by Python-mode is just an educated guess: only you know
3222 the block structure you intend, so only you can supply correct
3223 indentation.
3225 The \\[indent-for-tab-command] and \\[py-newline-and-indent] keys try to suggest plausible indentation, based on
3226 the indentation of preceding statements. E.g., assuming
3227 py-indent-offset is 4, after you enter
3228 \tif a > 0: \\[py-newline-and-indent]
3229 the cursor will be moved to the position of the `_' (_ is not a
3230 character in the file, it's just used here to indicate the location of
3231 the cursor):
3232 \tif a > 0:
3233 \t _
3234 If you then enter `c = d' \\[py-newline-and-indent], the cursor will move
3236 \tif a > 0:
3237 \t c = d
3238 \t _
3239 Python-mode cannot know whether that's what you intended, or whether
3240 \tif a > 0:
3241 \t c = d
3243 was your intent. In general, Python-mode either reproduces the
3244 indentation of the (closest code or indenting-comment) preceding
3245 statement, or adds an extra py-indent-offset blanks if the preceding
3246 statement has `:' as its last significant (non-whitespace and non-
3247 comment) character. If the suggested indentation is too much, use
3248 \\[py-electric-backspace] to reduce it.
3250 Continuation lines are given extra indentation. If you don't like the
3251 suggested indentation, change it to something you do like, and Python-
3252 mode will strive to indent later lines of the statement in the same way.
3254 If a line is a continuation line by virtue of being in an unclosed
3255 paren/bracket/brace structure (`list', for short), the suggested
3256 indentation depends on whether the current line contains the first item
3257 in the list. If it does, it's indented py-indent-offset columns beyond
3258 the indentation of the line containing the open bracket. If you don't
3259 like that, change it by hand. The remaining items in the list will mimic
3260 whatever indentation you give to the first item.
3262 If a line is a continuation line because the line preceding it ends with
3263 a backslash, the third and following lines of the statement inherit their
3264 indentation from the line preceding them. The indentation of the second
3265 line in the statement depends on the form of the first (base) line: if
3266 the base line is an assignment statement with anything more interesting
3267 than the backslash following the leftmost assigning `=', the second line
3268 is indented two columns beyond that `='. Else it's indented to two
3269 columns beyond the leftmost solid chunk of non-whitespace characters on
3270 the base line.
3272 Warning: indent-region should not normally be used! It calls \\[indent-for-tab-command]
3273 repeatedly, and as explained above, \\[indent-for-tab-command] can't guess the block
3274 structure you intend.
3275 %c:indent-for-tab-command
3276 %c:py-newline-and-indent
3277 %c:py-electric-backspace
3280 The next function may be handy when editing code you didn't write:
3281 %c:py-guess-indent-offset
3284 The remaining `indent' functions apply to a region of Python code. They
3285 assume the block structure (equals indentation, in Python) of the region
3286 is correct, and alter the indentation in various ways while preserving
3287 the block structure:
3288 %c:py-indent-region
3289 %c:py-shift-region-left
3290 %c:py-shift-region-right
3292 @MARKING & MANIPULATING REGIONS OF CODE
3294 \\[py-mark-block]\t mark block of lines
3295 \\[py-mark-def-or-class]\t mark smallest enclosing def
3296 \\[universal-argument] \\[py-mark-def-or-class]\t mark smallest enclosing class
3297 \\[comment-region]\t comment out region of code
3298 \\[universal-argument] \\[comment-region]\t uncomment region of code
3299 %c:py-mark-block
3300 %c:py-mark-def-or-class
3301 %c:comment-region
3303 @MOVING POINT
3305 \\[py-previous-statement]\t move to statement preceding point
3306 \\[py-next-statement]\t move to statement following point
3307 \\[py-goto-block-up]\t move up to start of current block
3308 \\[py-beginning-of-def-or-class]\t move to start of def
3309 \\[universal-argument] \\[py-beginning-of-def-or-class]\t move to start of class
3310 \\[py-end-of-def-or-class]\t move to end of def
3311 \\[universal-argument] \\[py-end-of-def-or-class]\t move to end of class
3313 The first two move to one statement beyond the statement that contains
3314 point. A numeric prefix argument tells them to move that many
3315 statements instead. Blank lines, comment lines, and continuation lines
3316 do not count as `statements' for these commands. So, e.g., you can go
3317 to the first code statement in a file by entering
3318 \t\\[beginning-of-buffer]\t to move to the top of the file
3319 \t\\[py-next-statement]\t to skip over initial comments and blank lines
3320 Or do `\\[py-previous-statement]' with a huge prefix argument.
3321 %c:py-previous-statement
3322 %c:py-next-statement
3323 %c:py-goto-block-up
3324 %c:py-beginning-of-def-or-class
3325 %c:py-end-of-def-or-class
3327 @LITTLE-KNOWN EMACS COMMANDS PARTICULARLY USEFUL IN PYTHON MODE
3329 `\\[indent-new-comment-line]' is handy for entering a multi-line comment.
3331 `\\[set-selective-display]' with a `small' prefix arg is ideally suited for viewing the
3332 overall class and def structure of a module.
3334 `\\[back-to-indentation]' moves point to a line's first non-blank character.
3336 `\\[indent-relative]' is handy for creating odd indentation.
3338 @OTHER EMACS HINTS
3340 If you don't like the default value of a variable, change its value to
3341 whatever you do like by putting a `setq' line in your .emacs file.
3342 E.g., to set the indentation increment to 4, put this line in your
3343 .emacs:
3344 \t(setq py-indent-offset 4)
3345 To see the value of a variable, do `\\[describe-variable]' and enter the variable
3346 name at the prompt.
3348 When entering a key sequence like `C-c C-n', it is not necessary to
3349 release the CONTROL key after doing the `C-c' part -- it suffices to
3350 press the CONTROL key, press and release `c' (while still holding down
3351 CONTROL), press and release `n' (while still holding down CONTROL), &
3352 then release CONTROL.
3354 Entering Python mode calls with no arguments the value of the variable
3355 `python-mode-hook', if that value exists and is not nil; for backward
3356 compatibility it also tries `py-mode-hook'; see the `Hooks' section of
3357 the Elisp manual for details.
3359 Obscure: When python-mode is first loaded, it looks for all bindings
3360 to newline-and-indent in the global keymap, and shadows them with
3361 local bindings to py-newline-and-indent."))
3363 (require 'info-look)
3364 ;; The info-look package does not always provide this function (it
3365 ;; appears this is the case with XEmacs 21.1)
3366 (when (fboundp 'info-lookup-maybe-add-help)
3367 (info-lookup-maybe-add-help
3368 :mode 'python-mode
3369 :regexp "[a-zA-Z0-9_]+"
3370 :doc-spec '(("(python-lib)Module Index")
3371 ("(python-lib)Class-Exception-Object Index")
3372 ("(python-lib)Function-Method-Variable Index")
3373 ("(python-lib)Miscellaneous Index")))
3377 ;; Helper functions
3378 (defvar py-parse-state-re
3379 (concat
3380 "^[ \t]*\\(elif\\|else\\|while\\|def\\|class\\)\\>"
3381 "\\|"
3382 "^[^ #\t\n]"))
3384 (defun py-parse-state ()
3385 "Return the parse state at point (see `parse-partial-sexp' docs)."
3386 (save-excursion
3387 (let ((here (point))
3388 pps done)
3389 (while (not done)
3390 ;; back up to the first preceding line (if any; else start of
3391 ;; buffer) that begins with a popular Python keyword, or a
3392 ;; non- whitespace and non-comment character. These are good
3393 ;; places to start parsing to see whether where we started is
3394 ;; at a non-zero nesting level. It may be slow for people who
3395 ;; write huge code blocks or huge lists ... tough beans.
3396 (re-search-backward py-parse-state-re nil 'move)
3397 (beginning-of-line)
3398 ;; In XEmacs, we have a much better way to test for whether
3399 ;; we're in a triple-quoted string or not. Emacs does not
3400 ;; have this built-in function, which is its loss because
3401 ;; without scanning from the beginning of the buffer, there's
3402 ;; no accurate way to determine this otherwise.
3403 (save-excursion (setq pps (parse-partial-sexp (point) here)))
3404 ;; make sure we don't land inside a triple-quoted string
3405 (setq done (or (not (nth 3 pps))
3406 (bobp)))
3407 ;; Just go ahead and short circuit the test back to the
3408 ;; beginning of the buffer. This will be slow, but not
3409 ;; nearly as slow as looping through many
3410 ;; re-search-backwards.
3411 (if (not done)
3412 (goto-char (point-min))))
3413 pps)))
3415 (defun py-nesting-level ()
3416 "Return the buffer position of the last unclosed enclosing list.
3417 If nesting level is zero, return nil."
3418 (let ((status (py-parse-state)))
3419 (if (zerop (car status))
3420 nil ; not in a nest
3421 (car (cdr status))))) ; char# of open bracket
3423 (defun py-backslash-continuation-line-p ()
3424 "Return t iff preceding line ends with backslash that is not in a comment."
3425 (save-excursion
3426 (beginning-of-line)
3427 (and
3428 ;; use a cheap test first to avoid the regexp if possible
3429 ;; use 'eq' because char-after may return nil
3430 (eq (char-after (- (point) 2)) ?\\ )
3431 ;; make sure; since eq test passed, there is a preceding line
3432 (forward-line -1) ; always true -- side effect
3433 (looking-at py-continued-re))))
3435 (defun py-continuation-line-p ()
3436 "Return t iff current line is a continuation line."
3437 (save-excursion
3438 (beginning-of-line)
3439 (or (py-backslash-continuation-line-p)
3440 (py-nesting-level))))
3442 (defun py-goto-beginning-of-tqs (delim)
3443 "Go to the beginning of the triple quoted string we find ourselves in.
3444 DELIM is the TQS string delimiter character we're searching backwards
3445 for."
3446 (let ((skip (and delim (make-string 1 delim)))
3447 (continue t))
3448 (when skip
3449 (save-excursion
3450 (while continue
3451 (py-safe (search-backward skip))
3452 (setq continue (and (not (bobp))
3453 (= (char-before) ?\\))))
3454 (if (and (= (char-before) delim)
3455 (= (char-before (1- (point))) delim))
3456 (setq skip (make-string 3 delim))))
3457 ;; we're looking at a triple-quoted string
3458 (py-safe (search-backward skip)))))
3460 (defun py-goto-initial-line ()
3461 "Go to the initial line of the current statement.
3462 Usually this is the line we're on, but if we're on the 2nd or
3463 following lines of a continuation block, we need to go up to the first
3464 line of the block."
3465 ;; Tricky: We want to avoid quadratic-time behavior for long
3466 ;; continued blocks, whether of the backslash or open-bracket
3467 ;; varieties, or a mix of the two. The following manages to do that
3468 ;; in the usual cases.
3470 ;; Also, if we're sitting inside a triple quoted string, this will
3471 ;; drop us at the line that begins the string.
3472 (let (open-bracket-pos)
3473 (while (py-continuation-line-p)
3474 (beginning-of-line)
3475 (if (py-backslash-continuation-line-p)
3476 (while (py-backslash-continuation-line-p)
3477 (forward-line -1))
3478 ;; else zip out of nested brackets/braces/parens
3479 (while (setq open-bracket-pos (py-nesting-level))
3480 (goto-char open-bracket-pos)))))
3481 (beginning-of-line))
3483 (defun py-goto-beyond-final-line ()
3484 "Go to the point just beyond the fine line of the current statement.
3485 Usually this is the start of the next line, but if this is a
3486 multi-line statement we need to skip over the continuation lines."
3487 ;; Tricky: Again we need to be clever to avoid quadratic time
3488 ;; behavior.
3490 ;; XXX: Not quite the right solution, but deals with multi-line doc
3491 ;; strings
3492 (if (looking-at (concat "[ \t]*\\(" py-stringlit-re "\\)"))
3493 (goto-char (match-end 0)))
3495 (forward-line 1)
3496 (let (state)
3497 (while (and (py-continuation-line-p)
3498 (not (eobp)))
3499 ;; skip over the backslash flavor
3500 (while (and (py-backslash-continuation-line-p)
3501 (not (eobp)))
3502 (forward-line 1))
3503 ;; if in nest, zip to the end of the nest
3504 (setq state (py-parse-state))
3505 (if (and (not (zerop (car state)))
3506 (not (eobp)))
3507 (progn
3508 (parse-partial-sexp (point) (point-max) 0 nil state)
3509 (forward-line 1))))))
3511 (defun py-statement-opens-block-p ()
3512 "Return t iff the current statement opens a block.
3513 I.e., iff it ends with a colon that is not in a comment. Point should
3514 be at the start of a statement."
3515 (save-excursion
3516 (let ((start (point))
3517 (finish (progn (py-goto-beyond-final-line) (1- (point))))
3518 (searching t)
3519 (answer nil)
3520 state)
3521 (goto-char start)
3522 (while searching
3523 ;; look for a colon with nothing after it except whitespace, and
3524 ;; maybe a comment
3525 (if (re-search-forward ":\\([ \t]\\|\\\\\n\\)*\\(#.*\\)?$"
3526 finish t)
3527 (if (eq (point) finish) ; note: no `else' clause; just
3528 ; keep searching if we're not at
3529 ; the end yet
3530 ;; sure looks like it opens a block -- but it might
3531 ;; be in a comment
3532 (progn
3533 (setq searching nil) ; search is done either way
3534 (setq state (parse-partial-sexp start
3535 (match-beginning 0)))
3536 (setq answer (not (nth 4 state)))))
3537 ;; search failed: couldn't find another interesting colon
3538 (setq searching nil)))
3539 answer)))
3541 (defun py-statement-closes-block-p ()
3542 "Return t iff the current statement closes a block.
3543 I.e., if the line starts with `return', `raise', `break', `continue',
3544 and `pass'. This doesn't catch embedded statements."
3545 (let ((here (point)))
3546 (py-goto-initial-line)
3547 (back-to-indentation)
3548 (prog1
3549 (looking-at (concat py-block-closing-keywords-re "\\>"))
3550 (goto-char here))))
3552 (defun py-goto-beyond-block ()
3553 "Go to point just beyond the final line of block begun by the current line.
3554 This is the same as where `py-goto-beyond-final-line' goes unless
3555 we're on colon line, in which case we go to the end of the block.
3556 Assumes point is at the beginning of the line."
3557 (if (py-statement-opens-block-p)
3558 (py-mark-block nil 'just-move)
3559 (py-goto-beyond-final-line)))
3561 (defun py-goto-statement-at-or-above ()
3562 "Go to the start of the first statement at or preceding point.
3563 Return t if there is such a statement, otherwise nil. `Statement'
3564 does not include blank lines, comments, or continuation lines."
3565 (py-goto-initial-line)
3566 (if (looking-at py-blank-or-comment-re)
3567 ;; skip back over blank & comment lines
3568 ;; note: will skip a blank or comment line that happens to be
3569 ;; a continuation line too
3570 (if (re-search-backward "^[ \t]*[^ \t#\n]" nil t)
3571 (progn (py-goto-initial-line) t)
3572 nil)
3575 (defun py-goto-statement-below ()
3576 "Go to start of the first statement following the statement containing point.
3577 Return t if there is such a statement, otherwise nil. `Statement'
3578 does not include blank lines, comments, or continuation lines."
3579 (beginning-of-line)
3580 (let ((start (point)))
3581 (py-goto-beyond-final-line)
3582 (while (and
3583 (or (looking-at py-blank-or-comment-re)
3584 (py-in-literal))
3585 (not (eobp)))
3586 (forward-line 1))
3587 (if (eobp)
3588 (progn (goto-char start) nil)
3589 t)))
3591 (defun py-go-up-tree-to-keyword (key)
3592 "Go to begining of statement starting with KEY, at or preceding point.
3594 KEY is a regular expression describing a Python keyword. Skip blank
3595 lines and non-indenting comments. If the statement found starts with
3596 KEY, then stop, otherwise go back to first enclosing block starting
3597 with KEY. If successful, leave point at the start of the KEY line and
3598 return t. Otherwise, leave point at an undefined place and return nil."
3599 ;; skip blanks and non-indenting #
3600 (py-goto-initial-line)
3601 (while (and
3602 (looking-at "[ \t]*\\($\\|#[^ \t\n]\\)")
3603 (zerop (forward-line -1))) ; go back
3604 nil)
3605 (py-goto-initial-line)
3606 (let* ((re (concat "[ \t]*" key "\\>"))
3607 (case-fold-search nil) ; let* so looking-at sees this
3608 (found (looking-at re))
3609 (dead nil))
3610 (while (not (or found dead))
3611 (condition-case nil ; in case no enclosing block
3612 (py-goto-block-up 'no-mark)
3613 (error (setq dead t)))
3614 (or dead (setq found (looking-at re))))
3615 (beginning-of-line)
3616 found))
3618 (defun py-suck-up-leading-text ()
3619 "Return string in buffer from start of indentation to end of line.
3620 Prefix with \"...\" if leading whitespace was skipped."
3621 (save-excursion
3622 (back-to-indentation)
3623 (concat
3624 (if (bolp) "" "...")
3625 (buffer-substring (point) (progn (end-of-line) (point))))))
3627 (defun py-suck-up-first-keyword ()
3628 "Return first keyword on the line as a Lisp symbol.
3629 `Keyword' is defined (essentially) as the regular expression
3630 ([a-z]+). Returns nil if none was found."
3631 (let ((case-fold-search nil))
3632 (if (looking-at "[ \t]*\\([a-z]+\\)\\>")
3633 (intern (buffer-substring (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1)))
3634 nil)))
3636 (defun py-current-defun ()
3637 "Python value for `add-log-current-defun-function'.
3638 This tells add-log.el how to find the current function/method/variable."
3639 (save-excursion
3641 ;; Move back to start of the current statement.
3643 (py-goto-initial-line)
3644 (back-to-indentation)
3645 (while (and (or (looking-at py-blank-or-comment-re)
3646 (py-in-literal))
3647 (not (bobp)))
3648 (backward-to-indentation 1))
3649 (py-goto-initial-line)
3651 (let ((scopes "")
3652 (sep "")
3653 dead assignment)
3655 ;; Check for an assignment. If this assignment exists inside a
3656 ;; def, it will be overwritten inside the while loop. If it
3657 ;; exists at top lever or inside a class, it will be preserved.
3659 (when (looking-at "[ \t]*\\([a-zA-Z0-9_]+\\)[ \t]*=")
3660 (setq scopes (buffer-substring (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1)))
3661 (setq assignment t)
3662 (setq sep "."))
3664 ;; Prepend the name of each outer socpe (def or class).
3666 (while (not dead)
3667 (if (and (py-go-up-tree-to-keyword "\\(class\\|def\\)")
3668 (looking-at
3669 "[ \t]*\\(class\\|def\\)[ \t]*\\([a-zA-Z0-9_]+\\)[ \t]*"))
3670 (let ((name (buffer-substring (match-beginning 2) (match-end 2))))
3671 (if (and assignment (looking-at "[ \t]*def"))
3672 (setq scopes name)
3673 (setq scopes (concat name sep scopes))
3674 (setq sep "."))))
3675 (setq assignment nil)
3676 (condition-case nil ; Terminate nicely at top level.
3677 (py-goto-block-up 'no-mark)
3678 (error (setq dead t))))
3679 (if (string= scopes "")
3681 scopes))))
3685 (defconst py-help-address "python-mode@python.org"
3686 "Address accepting submission of bug reports.")
3688 (defun py-version ()
3689 "Echo the current version of `python-mode' in the minibuffer."
3690 (interactive)
3691 (message "Using `python-mode' version %s" py-version)
3692 (py-keep-region-active))
3694 ;; only works under Emacs 19
3695 ;(eval-when-compile
3696 ; (require 'reporter))
3698 (defun py-submit-bug-report (enhancement-p)
3699 "Submit via mail a bug report on `python-mode'.
3700 With \\[universal-argument] (programmatically, argument ENHANCEMENT-P
3701 non-nil) just submit an enhancement request."
3702 (interactive
3703 (list (not (y-or-n-p
3704 "Is this a bug report (hit `n' to send other comments)? "))))
3705 (let ((reporter-prompt-for-summary-p (if enhancement-p
3706 "(Very) brief summary: "
3707 t)))
3708 (require 'reporter)
3709 (reporter-submit-bug-report
3710 py-help-address ;address
3711 (concat "python-mode " py-version) ;pkgname
3712 ;; varlist
3713 (if enhancement-p nil
3714 '(py-python-command
3715 py-indent-offset
3716 py-block-comment-prefix
3717 py-temp-directory
3718 py-beep-if-tab-change))
3719 nil ;pre-hooks
3720 nil ;post-hooks
3721 "Dear Barry,") ;salutation
3722 (if enhancement-p nil
3723 (set-mark (point))
3724 (insert
3725 "Please replace this text with a sufficiently large code sample\n\
3726 and an exact recipe so that I can reproduce your problem. Failure\n\
3727 to do so may mean a greater delay in fixing your bug.\n\n")
3728 (exchange-point-and-mark)
3729 (py-keep-region-active))))
3732 (defun py-kill-emacs-hook ()
3733 "Delete files in `py-file-queue'.
3734 These are Python temporary files awaiting execution."
3735 (mapcar #'(lambda (filename)
3736 (py-safe (delete-file filename)))
3737 py-file-queue))
3739 ;; arrange to kill temp files when Emacs exists
3740 (add-hook 'kill-emacs-hook 'py-kill-emacs-hook)
3741 (add-hook 'comint-output-filter-functions 'py-pdbtrack-track-stack-file)
3743 ;; Add a designator to the minor mode strings
3744 (or (assq 'py-pdbtrack-is-tracking-p minor-mode-alist)
3745 (push '(py-pdbtrack-is-tracking-p py-pdbtrack-minor-mode-string)
3746 minor-mode-alist))
3750 ;;; paragraph and string filling code from Bernhard Herzog
3751 ;;; see http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-list/2002-May/103189.html
3753 (defun py-fill-comment (&optional justify)
3754 "Fill the comment paragraph around point"
3755 (let (;; Non-nil if the current line contains a comment.
3756 has-comment
3758 ;; If has-comment, the appropriate fill-prefix for the comment.
3759 comment-fill-prefix)
3761 ;; Figure out what kind of comment we are looking at.
3762 (save-excursion
3763 (beginning-of-line)
3764 (cond
3765 ;; A line with nothing but a comment on it?
3766 ((looking-at "[ \t]*#[# \t]*")
3767 (setq has-comment t
3768 comment-fill-prefix (buffer-substring (match-beginning 0)
3769 (match-end 0))))
3771 ;; A line with some code, followed by a comment? Remember that the hash
3772 ;; which starts the comment shouldn't be part of a string or character.
3773 ((progn
3774 (while (not (looking-at "#\\|$"))
3775 (skip-chars-forward "^#\n\"'\\")
3776 (cond
3777 ((eq (char-after (point)) ?\\) (forward-char 2))
3778 ((memq (char-after (point)) '(?\" ?')) (forward-sexp 1))))
3779 (looking-at "#+[\t ]*"))
3780 (setq has-comment t)
3781 (setq comment-fill-prefix
3782 (concat (make-string (current-column) ? )
3783 (buffer-substring (match-beginning 0) (match-end 0)))))))
3785 (if (not has-comment)
3786 (fill-paragraph justify)
3788 ;; Narrow to include only the comment, and then fill the region.
3789 (save-restriction
3790 (narrow-to-region
3792 ;; Find the first line we should include in the region to fill.
3793 (save-excursion
3794 (while (and (zerop (forward-line -1))
3795 (looking-at "^[ \t]*#")))
3797 ;; We may have gone to far. Go forward again.
3798 (or (looking-at "^[ \t]*#")
3799 (forward-line 1))
3800 (point))
3802 ;; Find the beginning of the first line past the region to fill.
3803 (save-excursion
3804 (while (progn (forward-line 1)
3805 (looking-at "^[ \t]*#")))
3806 (point)))
3808 ;; Lines with only hashes on them can be paragraph boundaries.
3809 (let ((paragraph-start (concat paragraph-start "\\|[ \t#]*$"))
3810 (paragraph-separate (concat paragraph-separate "\\|[ \t#]*$"))
3811 (fill-prefix comment-fill-prefix))
3812 ;;(message "paragraph-start %S paragraph-separate %S"
3813 ;;paragraph-start paragraph-separate)
3814 (fill-paragraph justify))))
3818 (defun py-fill-string (start &optional justify)
3819 "Fill the paragraph around (point) in the string starting at start"
3820 ;; basic strategy: narrow to the string and call the default
3821 ;; implementation
3822 (let (;; the start of the string's contents
3823 string-start
3824 ;; the end of the string's contents
3825 string-end
3826 ;; length of the string's delimiter
3827 delim-length
3828 ;; The string delimiter
3829 delim
3832 (save-excursion
3833 (goto-char start)
3834 (if (looking-at "\\('''\\|\"\"\"\\|'\\|\"\\)\\\\?\n?")
3835 (setq string-start (match-end 0)
3836 delim-length (- (match-end 1) (match-beginning 1))
3837 delim (buffer-substring-no-properties (match-beginning 1)
3838 (match-end 1)))
3839 (error "The parameter start is not the beginning of a python string"))
3841 ;; if the string is the first token on a line and doesn't start with
3842 ;; a newline, fill as if the string starts at the beginning of the
3843 ;; line. this helps with one line docstrings
3844 (save-excursion
3845 (beginning-of-line)
3846 (and (/= (char-before string-start) ?\n)
3847 (looking-at (concat "[ \t]*" delim))
3848 (setq string-start (point))))
3850 (forward-sexp (if (= delim-length 3) 2 1))
3852 ;; with both triple quoted strings and single/double quoted strings
3853 ;; we're now directly behind the first char of the end delimiter
3854 ;; (this doesn't work correctly when the triple quoted string
3855 ;; contains the quote mark itself). The end of the string's contents
3856 ;; is one less than point
3857 (setq string-end (1- (point))))
3859 ;; Narrow to the string's contents and fill the current paragraph
3860 (save-restriction
3861 (narrow-to-region string-start string-end)
3862 (let ((ends-with-newline (= (char-before (point-max)) ?\n)))
3863 (fill-paragraph justify)
3864 (if (and (not ends-with-newline)
3865 (= (char-before (point-max)) ?\n))
3866 ;; the default fill-paragraph implementation has inserted a
3867 ;; newline at the end. Remove it again.
3868 (save-excursion
3869 (goto-char (point-max))
3870 (delete-char -1)))))
3872 ;; return t to indicate that we've done our work
3875 (defun py-fill-paragraph (&optional justify)
3876 "Like \\[fill-paragraph], but handle Python comments and strings.
3877 If any of the current line is a comment, fill the comment or the
3878 paragraph of it that point is in, preserving the comment's indentation
3879 and initial `#'s.
3880 If point is inside a string, narrow to that string and fill.
3882 (interactive "P")
3883 ;; fill-paragraph will narrow incorrectly
3884 (save-restriction
3885 (widen)
3886 (let* ((bod (py-point 'bod))
3887 (pps (parse-partial-sexp bod (point))))
3888 (cond
3889 ;; are we inside a comment or on a line with only whitespace before
3890 ;; the comment start?
3891 ((or (nth 4 pps)
3892 (save-excursion (beginning-of-line) (looking-at "[ \t]*#")))
3893 (py-fill-comment justify))
3894 ;; are we inside a string?
3895 ((nth 3 pps)
3896 (py-fill-string (nth 8 pps)))
3897 ;; are we at the opening quote of a string, or in the indentation?
3898 ((save-excursion
3899 (forward-word 1)
3900 (eq (py-in-literal) 'string))
3901 (save-excursion
3902 (py-fill-string (py-point 'boi))))
3903 ;; are we at or after the closing quote of a string?
3904 ((save-excursion
3905 (backward-word 1)
3906 (eq (py-in-literal) 'string))
3907 (save-excursion
3908 (py-fill-string (py-point 'boi))))
3909 ;; otherwise use the default
3911 (fill-paragraph justify))))))
3915 (provide 'python-mode)
3916 ;;; python-mode.el ends here