system_assignation/venv/lib/python3.7/site-packages/jedi/utils.py

136 lines
4.6 KiB
Python

"""
Utilities for end-users.
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
import __main__
from collections import namedtuple
import logging
import traceback
import re
import os
import sys
from jedi import Interpreter
READLINE_DEBUG = False
def setup_readline(namespace_module=__main__, fuzzy=False):
"""
This function sets up :mod:`readline` to use Jedi in a Python interactive
shell.
If you want to use a custom ``PYTHONSTARTUP`` file (typically
``$HOME/.pythonrc.py``), you can add this piece of code::
try:
from jedi.utils import setup_readline
except ImportError:
# Fallback to the stdlib readline completer if it is installed.
# Taken from http://docs.python.org/2/library/rlcompleter.html
print("Jedi is not installed, falling back to readline")
try:
import readline
import rlcompleter
readline.parse_and_bind("tab: complete")
except ImportError:
print("Readline is not installed either. No tab completion is enabled.")
else:
setup_readline()
This will fallback to the readline completer if Jedi is not installed.
The readline completer will only complete names in the global namespace,
so for example::
ran<TAB>
will complete to ``range``.
With Jedi the following code::
range(10).cou<TAB>
will complete to ``range(10).count``, this does not work with the default
cPython :mod:`readline` completer.
You will also need to add ``export PYTHONSTARTUP=$HOME/.pythonrc.py`` to
your shell profile (usually ``.bash_profile`` or ``.profile`` if you use
bash).
"""
if READLINE_DEBUG:
logging.basicConfig(
filename='/tmp/jedi.log',
filemode='a',
level=logging.DEBUG
)
class JediRL(object):
def complete(self, text, state):
"""
This complete stuff is pretty weird, a generator would make
a lot more sense, but probably due to backwards compatibility
this is still the way how it works.
The only important part is stuff in the ``state == 0`` flow,
everything else has been copied from the ``rlcompleter`` std.
library module.
"""
if state == 0:
sys.path.insert(0, os.getcwd())
# Calling python doesn't have a path, so add to sys.path.
try:
logging.debug("Start REPL completion: " + repr(text))
interpreter = Interpreter(text, [namespace_module.__dict__])
completions = interpreter.complete(fuzzy=fuzzy)
logging.debug("REPL completions: %s", completions)
self.matches = [
text[:len(text) - c._like_name_length] + c.name_with_symbols
for c in completions
]
except:
logging.error("REPL Completion error:\n" + traceback.format_exc())
raise
finally:
sys.path.pop(0)
try:
return self.matches[state]
except IndexError:
return None
try:
# Need to import this one as well to make sure it's executed before
# this code. This didn't use to be an issue until 3.3. Starting with
# 3.4 this is different, it always overwrites the completer if it's not
# already imported here.
import rlcompleter # noqa: F401
import readline
except ImportError:
print("Jedi: Module readline not available.")
else:
readline.set_completer(JediRL().complete)
readline.parse_and_bind("tab: complete")
# jedi itself does the case matching
readline.parse_and_bind("set completion-ignore-case on")
# because it's easier to hit the tab just once
readline.parse_and_bind("set show-all-if-unmodified")
readline.parse_and_bind("set show-all-if-ambiguous on")
# don't repeat all the things written in the readline all the time
readline.parse_and_bind("set completion-prefix-display-length 2")
# No delimiters, Jedi handles that.
readline.set_completer_delims('')
def version_info():
"""
Returns a namedtuple of Jedi's version, similar to Python's
``sys.version_info``.
"""
Version = namedtuple('Version', 'major, minor, micro')
from jedi import __version__
tupl = re.findall(r'[a-z]+|\d+', __version__)
return Version(*[x if i == 3 else int(x) for i, x in enumerate(tupl)])