790 lines
32 KiB
Rust
790 lines
32 KiB
Rust
use std::borrow::Cow;
|
|
|
|
use ruff_python_trivia::PythonWhitespace;
|
|
use {
|
|
ruff_formatter::{write, Printed},
|
|
ruff_source_file::Locator,
|
|
ruff_text_size::{Ranged, TextLen, TextRange, TextSize},
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
use crate::{prelude::*, FormatModuleError, QuoteStyle};
|
|
|
|
use super::NormalizedString;
|
|
|
|
/// Format a docstring by trimming whitespace and adjusting the indentation.
|
|
///
|
|
/// Summary of changes we make:
|
|
/// * Normalize the string like all other strings
|
|
/// * Ignore docstring that have an escaped newline
|
|
/// * Trim all trailing whitespace, except for a chaperone space that avoids quotes or backslashes
|
|
/// in the last line.
|
|
/// * Trim leading whitespace on the first line, again except for a chaperone space
|
|
/// * If there is only content in the first line and after that only whitespace, collapse the
|
|
/// docstring into one line
|
|
/// * Adjust the indentation (see below)
|
|
///
|
|
/// # Docstring indentation
|
|
///
|
|
/// Unlike any other string, like black we change the indentation of docstring lines.
|
|
///
|
|
/// We want to preserve the indentation inside the docstring relative to the suite statement/block
|
|
/// indent that the docstring statement is in, but also want to apply the change of the outer
|
|
/// indentation in the docstring, e.g.
|
|
/// ```python
|
|
/// def sparkle_sky():
|
|
/// """Make a pretty sparkly sky.
|
|
/// * * ✨ *. .
|
|
/// * * ✨ .
|
|
/// . * . ✨ * . .
|
|
/// """
|
|
/// ```
|
|
/// should become
|
|
/// ```python
|
|
/// def sparkle_sky():
|
|
/// """Make a pretty sparkly sky.
|
|
/// * * ✨ *. .
|
|
/// * * ✨ .
|
|
/// . * . ✨ * . .
|
|
/// """
|
|
/// ```
|
|
/// We can't compute the full indentation here since we don't know what the block indent of
|
|
/// the doc comment will be yet and which we can only have added by formatting each line
|
|
/// separately with a hard line break. This means we need to strip shared indentation from
|
|
/// docstring while preserving the in-docstring bigger-than-suite-statement indentation. Example:
|
|
/// ```python
|
|
/// def f():
|
|
/// """first line
|
|
/// line a
|
|
/// line b
|
|
/// """
|
|
/// ```
|
|
/// The docstring indentation is 2, the block indents will change this to 4 (but we can't
|
|
/// determine this at this point). The indentation of line a is 2, so we trim ` line a`
|
|
/// to `line a`. For line b it's 5, so we trim it to `line b` and pad with 5-2=3 spaces to
|
|
/// ` line b`. The closing quotes, being on their own line, are stripped get only the
|
|
/// default indentation. Fully formatted:
|
|
/// ```python
|
|
/// def f():
|
|
/// """first line
|
|
/// line a
|
|
/// line b
|
|
/// """
|
|
/// ```
|
|
///
|
|
/// Tabs are counted by padding them to the next multiple of 8 according to
|
|
/// [`str.expandtabs`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/stdtypes.html#str.expandtabs). When
|
|
/// we see indentation that contains a tab or any other none ascii-space whitespace we rewrite the
|
|
/// string.
|
|
///
|
|
/// Additionally, if any line in the docstring has less indentation than the docstring
|
|
/// (effectively a negative indentation wrt. to the current level), we pad all lines to the
|
|
/// level of the docstring with spaces.
|
|
/// ```python
|
|
/// def f():
|
|
/// """first line
|
|
/// line a
|
|
/// line b
|
|
/// line c
|
|
/// """
|
|
/// ```
|
|
/// Here line a is 3 columns negatively indented, so we pad all lines by an extra 3 spaces:
|
|
/// ```python
|
|
/// def f():
|
|
/// """first line
|
|
/// line a
|
|
/// line b
|
|
/// line c
|
|
/// """
|
|
/// ```
|
|
pub(super) fn format(normalized: &NormalizedString, f: &mut PyFormatter) -> FormatResult<()> {
|
|
let docstring = &normalized.text;
|
|
|
|
// Black doesn't change the indentation of docstrings that contain an escaped newline
|
|
if contains_unescaped_newline(docstring) {
|
|
return normalized.fmt(f);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// is_borrowed is unstable :/
|
|
let already_normalized = matches!(docstring, Cow::Borrowed(_));
|
|
|
|
let mut lines = docstring.lines().peekable();
|
|
|
|
// Start the string
|
|
write!(
|
|
f,
|
|
[
|
|
normalized.prefix,
|
|
normalized.quotes,
|
|
source_position(normalized.start()),
|
|
]
|
|
)?;
|
|
// We track where in the source docstring we are (in source code byte offsets)
|
|
let mut offset = normalized.start();
|
|
|
|
// The first line directly after the opening quotes has different rules than the rest, mainly
|
|
// that we remove all leading whitespace as there's no indentation
|
|
let first = lines.next().unwrap_or_default();
|
|
// Black trims whitespace using [`str.strip()`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/stdtypes.html#str.strip)
|
|
// https://github.com/psf/black/blob/b4dca26c7d93f930bbd5a7b552807370b60d4298/src/black/strings.py#L77-L85
|
|
// So we use the unicode whitespace definition through `trim_{start,end}` instead of the python
|
|
// tokenizer whitespace definition in `trim_whitespace_{start,end}`.
|
|
let trim_end = first.trim_end();
|
|
let trim_both = trim_end.trim_start();
|
|
|
|
// Edge case: The first line is `""" "content`, so we need to insert chaperone space that keep
|
|
// inner quotes and closing quotes from getting to close to avoid `""""content`
|
|
if trim_both.starts_with(normalized.quotes.style.as_char()) {
|
|
space().fmt(f)?;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if !trim_end.is_empty() {
|
|
// For the first line of the docstring we strip the leading and trailing whitespace, e.g.
|
|
// `""" content ` to `"""content`
|
|
let leading_whitespace = trim_end.text_len() - trim_both.text_len();
|
|
let trimmed_line_range =
|
|
TextRange::at(offset, trim_end.text_len()).add_start(leading_whitespace);
|
|
if already_normalized {
|
|
source_text_slice(trimmed_line_range).fmt(f)?;
|
|
} else {
|
|
text(trim_both, Some(trimmed_line_range.start())).fmt(f)?;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
offset += first.text_len();
|
|
|
|
// Check if we have a single line (or empty) docstring
|
|
if docstring[first.len()..].trim().is_empty() {
|
|
// For `"""\n"""` or other whitespace between the quotes, black keeps a single whitespace,
|
|
// but `""""""` doesn't get one inserted.
|
|
if needs_chaperone_space(normalized, trim_end)
|
|
|| (trim_end.is_empty() && !docstring.is_empty())
|
|
{
|
|
space().fmt(f)?;
|
|
}
|
|
normalized.quotes.fmt(f)?;
|
|
return Ok(());
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
hard_line_break().fmt(f)?;
|
|
// We know that the normalized string has \n line endings
|
|
offset += "\n".text_len();
|
|
|
|
// If some line of the docstring is less indented than the function body, we pad all lines to
|
|
// align it with the docstring statement. Conversely, if all lines are over-indented, we strip
|
|
// the extra indentation. We call this stripped indentation since it's relative to the block
|
|
// indent printer-made indentation.
|
|
let stripped_indentation_length = lines
|
|
.clone()
|
|
// We don't want to count whitespace-only lines as miss-indented
|
|
.filter(|line| !line.trim().is_empty())
|
|
.map(indentation_length)
|
|
.min()
|
|
.unwrap_or_default();
|
|
|
|
DocstringLinePrinter {
|
|
f,
|
|
offset,
|
|
stripped_indentation_length,
|
|
already_normalized,
|
|
quote_style: normalized.quotes.style,
|
|
code_example: CodeExample::default(),
|
|
}
|
|
.add_iter(lines)?;
|
|
|
|
// Same special case in the last line as for the first line
|
|
let trim_end = docstring
|
|
.as_ref()
|
|
.trim_end_matches(|c: char| c.is_whitespace() && c != '\n');
|
|
if needs_chaperone_space(normalized, trim_end) {
|
|
space().fmt(f)?;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
write!(f, [source_position(normalized.end()), normalized.quotes])
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fn contains_unescaped_newline(haystack: &str) -> bool {
|
|
let mut rest = haystack;
|
|
|
|
while let Some(index) = memchr::memchr(b'\\', rest.as_bytes()) {
|
|
rest = &rest[index + 1..].trim_whitespace_start();
|
|
|
|
if rest.starts_with('\n') {
|
|
return true;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
false
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// An abstraction for printing each line of a docstring.
|
|
struct DocstringLinePrinter<'ast, 'buf, 'fmt, 'src> {
|
|
f: &'fmt mut PyFormatter<'ast, 'buf>,
|
|
/// The source offset of the beginning of the line that is currently being
|
|
/// printed.
|
|
offset: TextSize,
|
|
/// Indentation alignment based on the least indented line in the
|
|
/// docstring.
|
|
stripped_indentation_length: TextSize,
|
|
/// Whether the docstring is overall already considered normalized. When it
|
|
/// is, the formatter can take a fast path.
|
|
already_normalized: bool,
|
|
/// The quote style used by the docstring being printed.
|
|
quote_style: QuoteStyle,
|
|
/// The current code example detected in the docstring.
|
|
code_example: CodeExample<'src>,
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
impl<'ast, 'buf, 'fmt, 'src> DocstringLinePrinter<'ast, 'buf, 'fmt, 'src> {
|
|
/// Print all of the lines in the given iterator to this
|
|
/// printer's formatter.
|
|
///
|
|
/// Note that callers may treat the first line specially, such that the
|
|
/// iterator given contains all lines except for the first.
|
|
fn add_iter(
|
|
&mut self,
|
|
mut lines: std::iter::Peekable<std::str::Lines<'src>>,
|
|
) -> FormatResult<()> {
|
|
while let Some(line) = lines.next() {
|
|
let line = DocstringLine {
|
|
line: Cow::Borrowed(line),
|
|
offset: self.offset,
|
|
is_last: lines.peek().is_none(),
|
|
};
|
|
// We know that the normalized string has \n line endings.
|
|
self.offset += line.line.text_len() + "\n".text_len();
|
|
self.add_one(line)?;
|
|
}
|
|
Ok(())
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Adds the given line to this printer.
|
|
///
|
|
/// Depending on what's in the line, this may or may not print the line
|
|
/// immediately to the underlying buffer. If the line starts or is part
|
|
/// of an existing code snippet, then the lines will get buffered until
|
|
/// the code snippet is complete.
|
|
fn add_one(&mut self, line: DocstringLine<'src>) -> FormatResult<()> {
|
|
// Just pass through the line as-is without looking for a code snippet
|
|
// when docstring code formatting is disabled. And also when we are
|
|
// formatting a code snippet so as to avoid arbitrarily nested code
|
|
// snippet formatting. We avoid this because it's likely quite tricky
|
|
// to get right 100% of the time, although perhaps not impossible. It's
|
|
// not clear that it's worth the effort to support.
|
|
if !self.f.options().docstring_code().is_enabled() || self.f.context().docstring().is_some()
|
|
{
|
|
return self.print_one(&line);
|
|
}
|
|
match self.code_example.add(line) {
|
|
CodeExampleAddAction::Print { original } => self.print_one(&original)?,
|
|
CodeExampleAddAction::Kept => {}
|
|
CodeExampleAddAction::Format {
|
|
kind,
|
|
code,
|
|
original,
|
|
} => {
|
|
let Some(formatted_lines) = self.format(&code)? else {
|
|
// If formatting failed in a way that should not be
|
|
// allowed, we back out what we're doing and print the
|
|
// original lines we found as-is as if we did nothing.
|
|
for codeline in code {
|
|
self.print_one(&codeline.original)?;
|
|
}
|
|
if let Some(original) = original {
|
|
self.print_one(&original)?;
|
|
}
|
|
return Ok(());
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
self.already_normalized = false;
|
|
match kind {
|
|
CodeExampleKind::Doctest(CodeExampleDoctest { indent }) => {
|
|
let mut lines = formatted_lines.into_iter();
|
|
if let Some(first) = lines.next() {
|
|
self.print_one(&first.map(|line| std::format!("{indent}>>> {line}")))?;
|
|
for docline in lines {
|
|
self.print_one(
|
|
&docline.map(|line| std::format!("{indent}... {line}")),
|
|
)?;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
if let Some(original) = original {
|
|
self.print_one(&original)?;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
Ok(())
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Prints the single line given.
|
|
///
|
|
/// This mostly just handles indentation and ensuring line breaks are
|
|
/// inserted as appropriate before passing it on to the formatter to
|
|
/// print to the buffer.
|
|
fn print_one(&mut self, line: &DocstringLine<'_>) -> FormatResult<()> {
|
|
let trim_end = line.line.trim_end();
|
|
if trim_end.is_empty() {
|
|
return if line.is_last {
|
|
// If the doc string ends with ` """`, the last line is
|
|
// ` `, but we don't want to insert an empty line (but close
|
|
// the docstring).
|
|
Ok(())
|
|
} else {
|
|
empty_line().fmt(self.f)
|
|
};
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
let tab_or_non_ascii_space = trim_end
|
|
.chars()
|
|
.take_while(|c| c.is_whitespace())
|
|
.any(|c| c != ' ');
|
|
|
|
if tab_or_non_ascii_space {
|
|
// We strip the indentation that is shared with the docstring
|
|
// statement, unless a line was indented less than the docstring
|
|
// statement, in which case we strip only this much indentation to
|
|
// implicitly pad all lines by the difference, or all lines were
|
|
// overindented, in which case we strip the additional whitespace
|
|
// (see example in [`format_docstring`] doc comment). We then
|
|
// prepend the in-docstring indentation to the string.
|
|
let indent_len = indentation_length(trim_end) - self.stripped_indentation_length;
|
|
let in_docstring_indent = " ".repeat(usize::from(indent_len)) + trim_end.trim_start();
|
|
text(&in_docstring_indent, Some(line.offset)).fmt(self.f)?;
|
|
} else {
|
|
// Take the string with the trailing whitespace removed, then also
|
|
// skip the leading whitespace.
|
|
let trimmed_line_range = TextRange::at(line.offset, trim_end.text_len())
|
|
.add_start(self.stripped_indentation_length);
|
|
if self.already_normalized {
|
|
source_text_slice(trimmed_line_range).fmt(self.f)?;
|
|
} else {
|
|
// All indents are ascii spaces, so the slicing is correct.
|
|
text(
|
|
&trim_end[usize::from(self.stripped_indentation_length)..],
|
|
Some(trimmed_line_range.start()),
|
|
)
|
|
.fmt(self.f)?;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// We handled the case that the closing quotes are on their own line
|
|
// above (the last line is empty except for whitespace). If they are on
|
|
// the same line as content, we don't insert a line break.
|
|
if !line.is_last {
|
|
hard_line_break().fmt(self.f)?;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
Ok(())
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Given a sequence of lines from a code snippet, format them and return
|
|
/// the formatted code as a sequence of owned docstring lines.
|
|
///
|
|
/// This routine generally only returns an error when the recursive call
|
|
/// to the formatter itself returns a `FormatError`. In all other cases
|
|
/// (for example, if the code snippet is invalid Python or even if the
|
|
/// resulting reformatted code snippet is invalid Python), then `Ok(None)`
|
|
/// is returned. In this case, callers should assume that a reformatted
|
|
/// code snippet is unavailable and bail out of trying to format it.
|
|
///
|
|
/// Currently, when the above cases happen and `Ok(None)` is returned, the
|
|
/// routine is silent about it. So from the user's perspective, this will
|
|
/// fail silently. Ideally, this would at least emit a warning message,
|
|
/// but at time of writing, it wasn't clear to me how to best do that.
|
|
fn format(
|
|
&mut self,
|
|
code: &[CodeExampleLine<'src>],
|
|
) -> FormatResult<Option<Vec<DocstringLine<'static>>>> {
|
|
use ruff_python_parser::AsMode;
|
|
|
|
let offset = code
|
|
.get(0)
|
|
.expect("code blob must be non-empty")
|
|
.original
|
|
.offset;
|
|
let last_line_is_last = code
|
|
.last()
|
|
.expect("code blob must be non-empty")
|
|
.original
|
|
.is_last;
|
|
let codeblob = code
|
|
.iter()
|
|
.map(|line| &*line.code)
|
|
.collect::<Vec<&str>>()
|
|
.join("\n");
|
|
let printed = match docstring_format_source(self.f.options(), self.quote_style, &codeblob) {
|
|
Ok(printed) => printed,
|
|
Err(FormatModuleError::FormatError(err)) => return Err(err),
|
|
Err(
|
|
FormatModuleError::LexError(_)
|
|
| FormatModuleError::ParseError(_)
|
|
| FormatModuleError::PrintError(_),
|
|
) => {
|
|
return Ok(None);
|
|
}
|
|
};
|
|
// This is a little hokey, but we want to determine whether the
|
|
// reformatted code snippet will lead to an overall invalid docstring.
|
|
// So attempt to parse it as Python code, but ensure it is wrapped
|
|
// within a docstring using the same quotes as the docstring we're in
|
|
// right now.
|
|
//
|
|
// This is an unfortunate stop-gap to attempt to prevent us from
|
|
// writing invalid Python due to some oddity of the code snippet within
|
|
// a docstring. As we fix corner cases over time, we can perhaps
|
|
// remove this check. See the `doctest_invalid_skipped` tests in
|
|
// `docstring_code_examples.py` for when this check is relevant.
|
|
let wrapped = match self.quote_style {
|
|
QuoteStyle::Single => std::format!("'''{}'''", printed.as_code()),
|
|
QuoteStyle::Double => std::format!(r#""""{}""""#, printed.as_code()),
|
|
};
|
|
let result = ruff_python_parser::parse(
|
|
&wrapped,
|
|
self.f.options().source_type().as_mode(),
|
|
"<filename>",
|
|
);
|
|
// If the resulting code is not valid, then reset and pass through
|
|
// the docstring lines as-is.
|
|
if result.is_err() {
|
|
return Ok(None);
|
|
}
|
|
let mut lines = printed
|
|
.as_code()
|
|
.lines()
|
|
.map(|line| DocstringLine {
|
|
line: Cow::Owned(line.into()),
|
|
offset,
|
|
is_last: false,
|
|
})
|
|
.collect::<Vec<_>>();
|
|
if let Some(last) = lines.last_mut() {
|
|
last.is_last = last_line_is_last;
|
|
}
|
|
Ok(Some(lines))
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Represents a single line in a docstring.
|
|
///
|
|
/// This type is used to both represent the original lines in a docstring
|
|
/// (the line will be borrowed) and also the newly formatted lines from code
|
|
/// snippets (the line will be owned).
|
|
#[derive(Clone, Debug)]
|
|
struct DocstringLine<'src> {
|
|
/// The actual text of the line, not including the line terminator.
|
|
///
|
|
/// In practice, this line is borrowed when it corresponds to an original
|
|
/// unformatted line in a docstring, and owned when it corresponds to a
|
|
/// reformatted line (e.g., from a code snippet) in a docstring.
|
|
line: Cow<'src, str>,
|
|
/// The offset into the source document which this line corresponds to.
|
|
offset: TextSize,
|
|
/// Whether this is the last line in a docstring or not. "Last" lines have
|
|
/// some special treatment when printing.
|
|
is_last: bool,
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
impl<'src> DocstringLine<'src> {
|
|
/// Return this line, but with the given function applied to the text of
|
|
/// the line.
|
|
fn map(self, mut map: impl FnMut(&str) -> String) -> DocstringLine<'static> {
|
|
DocstringLine {
|
|
line: Cow::Owned(map(&self.line)),
|
|
..self
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// A single code example extracted from a docstring.
|
|
///
|
|
/// This represents an intermediate state from when the code example was first
|
|
/// found all the way up until the point at which the code example has finished
|
|
/// and is reformatted.
|
|
///
|
|
/// Its default state is "empty." That is, that no code example is currently
|
|
/// being collected.
|
|
#[derive(Debug, Default)]
|
|
struct CodeExample<'src> {
|
|
/// The kind of code example being collected, or `None` if no code example
|
|
/// has been observed.
|
|
kind: Option<CodeExampleKind>,
|
|
/// The lines that have been seen so far that make up the code example.
|
|
lines: Vec<CodeExampleLine<'src>>,
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
impl<'src> CodeExample<'src> {
|
|
/// Attempt to add an original line from a docstring to this code example.
|
|
///
|
|
/// Based on the line and the internal state of whether a code example is
|
|
/// currently being collected or not, this will return an "action" for
|
|
/// the caller to perform. The typical case is a "print" action, which
|
|
/// instructs the caller to just print the line as though it were not part
|
|
/// of a code snippet.
|
|
fn add(&mut self, original: DocstringLine<'src>) -> CodeExampleAddAction<'src> {
|
|
match self.kind.take() {
|
|
// There's no existing code example being built, so we look for
|
|
// the start of one or otherwise tell the caller we couldn't find
|
|
// anything.
|
|
None => match self.add_start(original) {
|
|
None => CodeExampleAddAction::Kept,
|
|
Some(original) => CodeExampleAddAction::Print { original },
|
|
},
|
|
Some(CodeExampleKind::Doctest(doctest)) => {
|
|
if let Some(code) = doctest_find_ps2_prompt(&doctest.indent, &original.line) {
|
|
let code = code.to_string();
|
|
self.lines.push(CodeExampleLine { original, code });
|
|
// Stay with the doctest kind while we accumulate all
|
|
// PS2 prompts.
|
|
self.kind = Some(CodeExampleKind::Doctest(doctest));
|
|
return CodeExampleAddAction::Kept;
|
|
}
|
|
let code = std::mem::take(&mut self.lines);
|
|
let original = self.add_start(original);
|
|
CodeExampleAddAction::Format {
|
|
code,
|
|
kind: CodeExampleKind::Doctest(doctest),
|
|
original,
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Looks for the start of a code example. If one was found, then the given
|
|
/// line is kept and added as part of the code example. Otherwise, the line
|
|
/// is returned unchanged and no code example was found.
|
|
///
|
|
/// # Panics
|
|
///
|
|
/// This panics when the existing code-example is any non-None value. That
|
|
/// is, this routine assumes that there is no ongoing code example being
|
|
/// collected and looks for the beginning of another code example.
|
|
fn add_start(&mut self, original: DocstringLine<'src>) -> Option<DocstringLine<'src>> {
|
|
assert_eq!(None, self.kind, "expected no existing code example");
|
|
if let Some((indent, code)) = doctest_find_ps1_prompt(&original.line) {
|
|
let indent = indent.to_string();
|
|
let code = code.to_string();
|
|
self.lines.push(CodeExampleLine { original, code });
|
|
self.kind = Some(CodeExampleKind::Doctest(CodeExampleDoctest { indent }));
|
|
return None;
|
|
}
|
|
Some(original)
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// The kind of code example observed in a docstring.
|
|
#[derive(Clone, Debug, Eq, PartialEq)]
|
|
enum CodeExampleKind {
|
|
/// Code found in Python "doctests."
|
|
///
|
|
/// Documentation describing doctests and how they're recognized can be
|
|
/// found as part of the Python standard library:
|
|
/// https://docs.python.org/3/library/doctest.html.
|
|
///
|
|
/// (You'll likely need to read the [regex matching] used internally by the
|
|
/// doctest module to determine more precisely how it works.)
|
|
///
|
|
/// [regex matching]: https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/0ff6368519ed7542ad8b443de01108690102420a/Lib/doctest.py#L611-L622
|
|
Doctest(CodeExampleDoctest),
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// State corresponding to a single doctest code example found in a docstring.
|
|
#[derive(Clone, Debug, Eq, PartialEq)]
|
|
struct CodeExampleDoctest {
|
|
/// The indent observed in the first doctest line.
|
|
///
|
|
/// More precisely, this corresponds to the whitespace observed before
|
|
/// the starting `>>> ` (the "PS1 prompt").
|
|
indent: String,
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// A single line in a code example found in a docstring.
|
|
///
|
|
/// A code example line exists prior to formatting, and is thus in full
|
|
/// correspondence with the original lines from the docstring. Indeed, a
|
|
/// code example line includes both the original line *and* the actual code
|
|
/// extracted from the line. For example, if a line in a docstring is `>>>
|
|
/// foo(x)`, then the original line is `>>> foo(x)` and the code portion is
|
|
/// `foo(x)`.
|
|
///
|
|
/// The original line is kept for things like offset information, but also
|
|
/// because it may still be needed if it turns out that the code snippet is
|
|
/// not valid or otherwise could not be formatted. In which case, the original
|
|
/// lines are printed as-is.
|
|
#[derive(Debug)]
|
|
struct CodeExampleLine<'src> {
|
|
/// The normalized (but original) line from the doc string. This might, for
|
|
/// example, contain a `>>> ` or `... ` prefix if this code example is a
|
|
/// doctest.
|
|
original: DocstringLine<'src>,
|
|
/// The code extracted from the line.
|
|
code: String,
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// An action that a caller should perform after attempting to add a line from
|
|
/// a docstring to a code example.
|
|
///
|
|
/// Callers are expected to add every line from a docstring to a code example,
|
|
/// and the state of the code example (and the line itself) will determine
|
|
/// how the caller should react.
|
|
#[derive(Debug)]
|
|
enum CodeExampleAddAction<'src> {
|
|
/// The line added was ignored by `CodeExample` and the caller should print
|
|
/// it to the formatter as-is.
|
|
///
|
|
/// This is the common case. That is, most lines in most docstrings are not
|
|
/// part of a code example.
|
|
Print { original: DocstringLine<'src> },
|
|
/// The line added was kept by `CodeExample` as part of a new or existing
|
|
/// code example.
|
|
///
|
|
/// When this occurs, callers should not try to format the line and instead
|
|
/// move on to the next line.
|
|
Kept,
|
|
/// The line added indicated that the code example is finished and should
|
|
/// be formatted and printed. The line added is not treated as part of
|
|
/// the code example. If the line added indicated the start of another
|
|
/// code example, then is won't be returned to the caller here. Otherwise,
|
|
/// callers should pass it through to the formatter as-is.
|
|
Format {
|
|
/// The kind of code example that was found.
|
|
kind: CodeExampleKind,
|
|
/// The Python code that should be formatted, indented and printed.
|
|
///
|
|
/// This is guaranteed to be non-empty.
|
|
code: Vec<CodeExampleLine<'src>>,
|
|
/// When set, the line is considered not part of any code example and
|
|
/// should be formatted as if the [`Print`] action were returned.
|
|
/// Otherwise, if there is no line, then either one does not exist
|
|
/// or it is part of another code example and should be treated as a
|
|
/// [`Kept`] action.
|
|
original: Option<DocstringLine<'src>>,
|
|
},
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Looks for a valid doctest PS1 prompt in the line given.
|
|
///
|
|
/// If one was found, then the indentation prior to the prompt is returned
|
|
/// along with the code portion of the line.
|
|
fn doctest_find_ps1_prompt(line: &str) -> Option<(&str, &str)> {
|
|
let trim_start = line.trim_start();
|
|
// Prompts must be followed by an ASCII space character[1].
|
|
//
|
|
// [1]: https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/0ff6368519ed7542ad8b443de01108690102420a/Lib/doctest.py#L809-L812
|
|
let code = trim_start.strip_prefix(">>> ")?;
|
|
let indent_len = line
|
|
.len()
|
|
.checked_sub(trim_start.len())
|
|
.expect("suffix is <= original");
|
|
let indent = &line[..indent_len];
|
|
Some((indent, code))
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Looks for a valid doctest PS2 prompt in the line given.
|
|
///
|
|
/// If one is found, then the code portion of the line following the PS2 prompt
|
|
/// is returned.
|
|
///
|
|
/// Callers must provide a string containing the original indentation of the
|
|
/// PS1 prompt that started the doctest containing the potential PS2 prompt
|
|
/// in the line given. If the line contains a PS2 prompt, its indentation must
|
|
/// match the indentation used for the corresponding PS1 prompt (otherwise
|
|
/// `None` will be returned).
|
|
fn doctest_find_ps2_prompt<'src>(ps1_indent: &str, line: &'src str) -> Option<&'src str> {
|
|
let (ps2_indent, ps2_after) = line.split_once("...")?;
|
|
// PS2 prompts must have the same indentation as their
|
|
// corresponding PS1 prompt.[1] While the 'doctest' Python
|
|
// module will error in this case, we just treat this line as a
|
|
// non-doctest line.
|
|
//
|
|
// [1]: https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/0ff6368519ed7542ad8b443de01108690102420a/Lib/doctest.py#L733
|
|
if ps1_indent != ps2_indent {
|
|
return None;
|
|
}
|
|
// PS2 prompts must be followed by an ASCII space character unless
|
|
// it's an otherwise empty line[1].
|
|
//
|
|
// [1]: https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/0ff6368519ed7542ad8b443de01108690102420a/Lib/doctest.py#L809-L812
|
|
match ps2_after.strip_prefix(' ') {
|
|
None if ps2_after.is_empty() => Some(""),
|
|
None => None,
|
|
Some(code) => Some(code),
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// Formats the given source code using the given options.
|
|
///
|
|
/// The given quote style should correspond to the style used by the docstring
|
|
/// containing the code snippet being formatted. The formatter will use this
|
|
/// information to invert the quote style of any such strings contained within
|
|
/// the code snippet in order to avoid writing invalid Python code.
|
|
///
|
|
/// This is similar to the top-level formatting entrypoint, except this
|
|
/// explicitly sets the context to indicate that formatting is taking place
|
|
/// inside of a docstring.
|
|
fn docstring_format_source(
|
|
options: &crate::PyFormatOptions,
|
|
docstring_quote_style: QuoteStyle,
|
|
source: &str,
|
|
) -> Result<Printed, FormatModuleError> {
|
|
use ruff_python_parser::AsMode;
|
|
|
|
let source_type = options.source_type();
|
|
let (tokens, comment_ranges) = ruff_python_index::tokens_and_ranges(source, source_type)?;
|
|
let module =
|
|
ruff_python_parser::parse_ok_tokens(tokens, source, source_type.as_mode(), "<filename>")?;
|
|
let source_code = ruff_formatter::SourceCode::new(source);
|
|
let comments = crate::Comments::from_ast(&module, source_code, &comment_ranges);
|
|
let locator = Locator::new(source);
|
|
|
|
let ctx = PyFormatContext::new(options.clone(), locator.contents(), comments)
|
|
.in_docstring(docstring_quote_style);
|
|
let formatted = crate::format!(ctx, [module.format()])?;
|
|
formatted
|
|
.context()
|
|
.comments()
|
|
.assert_all_formatted(source_code);
|
|
Ok(formatted.print()?)
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// If the last line of the docstring is `content" """` or `content\ """`, we need a chaperone space
|
|
/// that avoids `content""""` and `content\"""`. This does only applies to un-escaped backslashes,
|
|
/// so `content\\ """` doesn't need a space while `content\\\ """` does.
|
|
fn needs_chaperone_space(normalized: &NormalizedString, trim_end: &str) -> bool {
|
|
trim_end.ends_with(normalized.quotes.style.as_char())
|
|
|| trim_end.chars().rev().take_while(|c| *c == '\\').count() % 2 == 1
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// For docstring indentation, black counts spaces as 1 and tabs by increasing the indentation up
|
|
/// to the next multiple of 8. This is effectively a port of
|
|
/// [`str.expandtabs`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/stdtypes.html#str.expandtabs),
|
|
/// which black [calls with the default tab width of 8](https://github.com/psf/black/blob/c36e468794f9256d5e922c399240d49782ba04f1/src/black/strings.py#L61).
|
|
fn indentation_length(line: &str) -> TextSize {
|
|
let mut indentation = 0u32;
|
|
for char in line.chars() {
|
|
if char == '\t' {
|
|
// Pad to the next multiple of tab_width
|
|
indentation += 8 - (indentation.rem_euclid(8));
|
|
} else if char.is_whitespace() {
|
|
indentation += u32::from(char.text_len());
|
|
} else {
|
|
break;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
TextSize::new(indentation)
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
#[cfg(test)]
|
|
mod tests {
|
|
use ruff_text_size::TextSize;
|
|
|
|
use super::indentation_length;
|
|
|
|
#[test]
|
|
fn test_indentation_like_black() {
|
|
assert_eq!(indentation_length("\t \t \t"), TextSize::new(24));
|
|
assert_eq!(indentation_length("\t \t"), TextSize::new(24));
|
|
assert_eq!(indentation_length("\t\t\t"), TextSize::new(24));
|
|
assert_eq!(indentation_length(" "), TextSize::new(4));
|
|
}
|
|
}
|