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authorTim Peters <tim.peters@gmail.com>2001-08-12 22:25:01 (GMT)
committerTim Peters <tim.peters@gmail.com>2001-08-12 22:25:01 (GMT)
commit5e824c37d36c062bcc267453541a99e59c084c2a (patch)
treefe504e024b6770c1293ef63d5cf846fd6b3d5b1a /Tools/scripts
parent39f77bc90e16a6f3fffc7f770bc7bc6bd2c7a0a8 (diff)
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SF patch #445412 extract ndiff functionality to difflib, from
David Goodger.
Diffstat (limited to 'Tools/scripts')
-rwxr-xr-xTools/scripts/ndiff.py241
1 files changed, 15 insertions, 226 deletions
diff --git a/Tools/scripts/ndiff.py b/Tools/scripts/ndiff.py
index ddca07d..a5468f6 100755
--- a/Tools/scripts/ndiff.py
+++ b/Tools/scripts/ndiff.py
@@ -1,11 +1,16 @@
#! /usr/bin/env python
-# Module ndiff version 1.6.0
+# Module ndiff version 1.7.0
# Released to the public domain 08-Dec-2000,
# by Tim Peters (tim.one@home.com).
# Provided as-is; use at your own risk; no warranty; no promises; enjoy!
+# ndiff.py is now simply a front-end to the difflib.ndiff() function.
+# Originally, it contained the difflib.SequenceMatcher class as well.
+# This completes the raiding of reusable code from this formerly
+# self-contained script.
+
"""ndiff [-q] file1 file2
or
ndiff (-r1 | -r2) < ndiff_output > file1_or_file2
@@ -39,217 +44,13 @@ The second file can be recovered similarly, but by retaining only " " and
recovered by piping the output through
sed -n '/^[+ ] /s/^..//p'
-
-See module comments for details and programmatic interface.
"""
-__version__ = 1, 5, 0
-
-# SequenceMatcher tries to compute a "human-friendly diff" between
-# two sequences (chiefly picturing a file as a sequence of lines,
-# and a line as a sequence of characters, here). Unlike e.g. UNIX(tm)
-# diff, the fundamental notion is the longest *contiguous* & junk-free
-# matching subsequence. That's what catches peoples' eyes. The
-# Windows(tm) windiff has another interesting notion, pairing up elements
-# that appear uniquely in each sequence. That, and the method here,
-# appear to yield more intuitive difference reports than does diff. This
-# method appears to be the least vulnerable to synching up on blocks
-# of "junk lines", though (like blank lines in ordinary text files,
-# or maybe "<P>" lines in HTML files). That may be because this is
-# the only method of the 3 that has a *concept* of "junk" <wink>.
-#
-# Note that ndiff makes no claim to produce a *minimal* diff. To the
-# contrary, minimal diffs are often counter-intuitive, because they
-# synch up anywhere possible, sometimes accidental matches 100 pages
-# apart. Restricting synch points to contiguous matches preserves some
-# notion of locality, at the occasional cost of producing a longer diff.
-#
-# With respect to junk, an earlier version of ndiff simply refused to
-# *start* a match with a junk element. The result was cases like this:
-# before: private Thread currentThread;
-# after: private volatile Thread currentThread;
-# If you consider whitespace to be junk, the longest contiguous match
-# not starting with junk is "e Thread currentThread". So ndiff reported
-# that "e volatil" was inserted between the 't' and the 'e' in "private".
-# While an accurate view, to people that's absurd. The current version
-# looks for matching blocks that are entirely junk-free, then extends the
-# longest one of those as far as possible but only with matching junk.
-# So now "currentThread" is matched, then extended to suck up the
-# preceding blank; then "private" is matched, and extended to suck up the
-# following blank; then "Thread" is matched; and finally ndiff reports
-# that "volatile " was inserted before "Thread". The only quibble
-# remaining is that perhaps it was really the case that " volatile"
-# was inserted after "private". I can live with that <wink>.
-#
-# NOTE on junk: the module-level names
-# IS_LINE_JUNK
-# IS_CHARACTER_JUNK
-# can be set to any functions you like. The first one should accept
-# a single string argument, and return true iff the string is junk.
-# The default is whether the regexp r"\s*#?\s*$" matches (i.e., a
-# line without visible characters, except for at most one splat).
-# The second should accept a string of length 1 etc. The default is
-# whether the character is a blank or tab (note: bad idea to include
-# newline in this!).
-#
-# After setting those, you can call fcompare(f1name, f2name) with the
-# names of the files you want to compare. The difference report
-# is sent to stdout. Or you can call main(args), passing what would
-# have been in sys.argv[1:] had the cmd-line form been used.
-
-from difflib import SequenceMatcher
-
-import string
-TRACE = 0
-
-# define what "junk" means
-import re
-
-def IS_LINE_JUNK(line, pat=re.compile(r"\s*#?\s*$").match):
- return pat(line) is not None
-
-def IS_CHARACTER_JUNK(ch, ws=" \t"):
- return ch in ws
-
-del re
-
-# meant for dumping lines
-def dump(tag, x, lo, hi):
- for i in xrange(lo, hi):
- print tag, x[i],
-
-def plain_replace(a, alo, ahi, b, blo, bhi):
- assert alo < ahi and blo < bhi
- # dump the shorter block first -- reduces the burden on short-term
- # memory if the blocks are of very different sizes
- if bhi - blo < ahi - alo:
- dump('+', b, blo, bhi)
- dump('-', a, alo, ahi)
- else:
- dump('-', a, alo, ahi)
- dump('+', b, blo, bhi)
-
-# When replacing one block of lines with another, this guy searches
-# the blocks for *similar* lines; the best-matching pair (if any) is
-# used as a synch point, and intraline difference marking is done on
-# the similar pair. Lots of work, but often worth it.
+__version__ = 1, 7, 0
-def fancy_replace(a, alo, ahi, b, blo, bhi):
- if TRACE:
- print '*** fancy_replace', alo, ahi, blo, bhi
- dump('>', a, alo, ahi)
- dump('<', b, blo, bhi)
-
- # don't synch up unless the lines have a similarity score of at
- # least cutoff; best_ratio tracks the best score seen so far
- best_ratio, cutoff = 0.74, 0.75
- cruncher = SequenceMatcher(IS_CHARACTER_JUNK)
- eqi, eqj = None, None # 1st indices of equal lines (if any)
-
- # search for the pair that matches best without being identical
- # (identical lines must be junk lines, & we don't want to synch up
- # on junk -- unless we have to)
- for j in xrange(blo, bhi):
- bj = b[j]
- cruncher.set_seq2(bj)
- for i in xrange(alo, ahi):
- ai = a[i]
- if ai == bj:
- if eqi is None:
- eqi, eqj = i, j
- continue
- cruncher.set_seq1(ai)
- # computing similarity is expensive, so use the quick
- # upper bounds first -- have seen this speed up messy
- # compares by a factor of 3.
- # note that ratio() is only expensive to compute the first
- # time it's called on a sequence pair; the expensive part
- # of the computation is cached by cruncher
- if cruncher.real_quick_ratio() > best_ratio and \
- cruncher.quick_ratio() > best_ratio and \
- cruncher.ratio() > best_ratio:
- best_ratio, best_i, best_j = cruncher.ratio(), i, j
- if best_ratio < cutoff:
- # no non-identical "pretty close" pair
- if eqi is None:
- # no identical pair either -- treat it as a straight replace
- plain_replace(a, alo, ahi, b, blo, bhi)
- return
- # no close pair, but an identical pair -- synch up on that
- best_i, best_j, best_ratio = eqi, eqj, 1.0
- else:
- # there's a close pair, so forget the identical pair (if any)
- eqi = None
-
- # a[best_i] very similar to b[best_j]; eqi is None iff they're not
- # identical
- if TRACE:
- print '*** best_ratio', best_ratio, best_i, best_j
- dump('>', a, best_i, best_i+1)
- dump('<', b, best_j, best_j+1)
-
- # pump out diffs from before the synch point
- fancy_helper(a, alo, best_i, b, blo, best_j)
-
- # do intraline marking on the synch pair
- aelt, belt = a[best_i], b[best_j]
- if eqi is None:
- # pump out a '-', '?', '+', '?' quad for the synched lines
- atags = btags = ""
- cruncher.set_seqs(aelt, belt)
- for tag, ai1, ai2, bj1, bj2 in cruncher.get_opcodes():
- la, lb = ai2 - ai1, bj2 - bj1
- if tag == 'replace':
- atags += '^' * la
- btags += '^' * lb
- elif tag == 'delete':
- atags += '-' * la
- elif tag == 'insert':
- btags += '+' * lb
- elif tag == 'equal':
- atags += ' ' * la
- btags += ' ' * lb
- else:
- raise ValueError, 'unknown tag ' + `tag`
- printq(aelt, belt, atags, btags)
- else:
- # the synch pair is identical
- print ' ', aelt,
-
- # pump out diffs from after the synch point
- fancy_helper(a, best_i+1, ahi, b, best_j+1, bhi)
-
-def fancy_helper(a, alo, ahi, b, blo, bhi):
- if alo < ahi:
- if blo < bhi:
- fancy_replace(a, alo, ahi, b, blo, bhi)
- else:
- dump('-', a, alo, ahi)
- elif blo < bhi:
- dump('+', b, blo, bhi)
-
-# Crap to deal with leading tabs in "?" output. Can hurt, but will
-# probably help most of the time.
-
-def printq(aline, bline, atags, btags):
- common = min(count_leading(aline, "\t"),
- count_leading(bline, "\t"))
- common = min(common, count_leading(atags[:common], " "))
- print "-", aline,
- if count_leading(atags, " ") < len(atags):
- print "?", "\t" * common + atags[common:]
- print "+", bline,
- if count_leading(btags, " ") < len(btags):
- print "?", "\t" * common + btags[common:]
-
-def count_leading(line, ch):
- i, n = 0, len(line)
- while i < n and line[i] == ch:
- i += 1
- return i
+import difflib, sys
def fail(msg):
- import sys
out = sys.stderr.write
out(msg + "\n\n")
out(__doc__)
@@ -273,18 +74,8 @@ def fcompare(f1name, f2name):
a = f1.readlines(); f1.close()
b = f2.readlines(); f2.close()
- cruncher = SequenceMatcher(IS_LINE_JUNK, a, b)
- for tag, alo, ahi, blo, bhi in cruncher.get_opcodes():
- if tag == 'replace':
- fancy_replace(a, alo, ahi, b, blo, bhi)
- elif tag == 'delete':
- dump('-', a, alo, ahi)
- elif tag == 'insert':
- dump('+', b, blo, bhi)
- elif tag == 'equal':
- dump(' ', a, alo, ahi)
- else:
- raise ValueError, 'unknown tag ' + `tag`
+ diff = difflib.ndiff(a, b)
+ sys.stdout.writelines(diff)
return 1
@@ -323,16 +114,14 @@ def main(args):
print '+:', f2name
return fcompare(f1name, f2name)
+# read ndiff output from stdin, and print file1 (which=='1') or
+# file2 (which=='2') to stdout
+
def restore(which):
- import sys
- tag = {"1": "- ", "2": "+ "}[which]
- prefixes = (" ", tag)
- for line in sys.stdin.readlines():
- if line[:2] in prefixes:
- print line[2:],
+ restored = difflib.restore(sys.stdin.readlines(), which)
+ sys.stdout.writelines(restored)
if __name__ == '__main__':
- import sys
args = sys.argv[1:]
if "-profile" in args:
import profile, pstats