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Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/library/shlex.rst')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/library/shlex.rst | 111 |
1 files changed, 100 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/library/shlex.rst b/Doc/library/shlex.rst index e81f982..1a89bf6 100644 --- a/Doc/library/shlex.rst +++ b/Doc/library/shlex.rst @@ -73,11 +73,11 @@ The :mod:`shlex` module defines the following functions: The :mod:`shlex` module defines the following class: -.. class:: shlex(instream=None, infile=None, posix=False) +.. class:: shlex(instream=None, infile=None, posix=False, punctuation_chars=False) A :class:`~shlex.shlex` instance or subclass instance is a lexical analyzer object. The initialization argument, if present, specifies where to read - characters from. It must be a file-/stream-like object with + characters from. It must be a file-/stream-like object with :meth:`~io.TextIOBase.read` and :meth:`~io.TextIOBase.readline` methods, or a string. If no argument is given, input will be taken from ``sys.stdin``. The second optional argument is a filename string, which sets the initial @@ -87,8 +87,19 @@ The :mod:`shlex` module defines the following class: when *posix* is not true (default), the :class:`~shlex.shlex` instance will operate in compatibility mode. When operating in POSIX mode, :class:`~shlex.shlex` will try to be as close as possible to the POSIX shell - parsing rules. - + parsing rules. The *punctuation_chars* argument provides a way to make the + behaviour even closer to how real shells parse. This can take a number of + values: the default value, ``False``, preserves the behaviour seen under + Python 3.5 and earlier. If set to ``True``, then parsing of the characters + ``();<>|&`` is changed: any run of these characters (considered punctuation + characters) is returned as a single token. If set to a non-empty string of + characters, those characters will be used as the punctuation characters. Any + characters in the :attr:`wordchars` attribute that appear in + *punctuation_chars* will be removed from :attr:`wordchars`. See + :ref:`improved-shell-compatibility` for more information. + + .. versionchanged:: 3.6 + The *punctuation_chars* parameter was added. .. seealso:: @@ -191,7 +202,13 @@ variables which either control lexical analysis or can be used for debugging: .. attribute:: shlex.wordchars The string of characters that will accumulate into multi-character tokens. By - default, includes all ASCII alphanumerics and underscore. + default, includes all ASCII alphanumerics and underscore. In POSIX mode, the + accented characters in the Latin-1 set are also included. If + :attr:`punctuation_chars` is not empty, the characters ``~-./*?=``, which can + appear in filename specifications and command line parameters, will also be + included in this attribute, and any characters which appear in + ``punctuation_chars`` will be removed from ``wordchars`` if they are present + there. .. attribute:: shlex.whitespace @@ -222,9 +239,13 @@ variables which either control lexical analysis or can be used for debugging: .. attribute:: shlex.whitespace_split - If ``True``, tokens will only be split in whitespaces. This is useful, for + If ``True``, tokens will only be split in whitespaces. This is useful, for example, for parsing command lines with :class:`~shlex.shlex`, getting - tokens in a similar way to shell arguments. + tokens in a similar way to shell arguments. If this attribute is ``True``, + :attr:`punctuation_chars` will have no effect, and splitting will happen + only on whitespaces. When using :attr:`punctuation_chars`, which is + intended to provide parsing closer to that implemented by shells, it is + advisable to leave ``whitespace_split`` as ``False`` (the default value). .. attribute:: shlex.infile @@ -245,10 +266,9 @@ variables which either control lexical analysis or can be used for debugging: This attribute is ``None`` by default. If you assign a string to it, that string will be recognized as a lexical-level inclusion request similar to the ``source`` keyword in various shells. That is, the immediately following token - will be opened as a filename and input will - be taken from that stream until EOF, at which - point the :meth:`~io.IOBase.close` method of that stream will be called and - the input source will again become the original input stream. Source + will be opened as a filename and input will be taken from that stream until + EOF, at which point the :meth:`~io.IOBase.close` method of that stream will be + called and the input source will again become the original input stream. Source requests may be stacked any number of levels deep. @@ -275,6 +295,16 @@ variables which either control lexical analysis or can be used for debugging: (``''``), in non-POSIX mode, and to ``None`` in POSIX mode. +.. attribute:: shlex.punctuation_chars + + Characters that will be considered punctuation. Runs of punctuation + characters will be returned as a single token. However, note that no + semantic validity checking will be performed: for example, '>>>' could be + returned as a token, even though it may not be recognised as such by shells. + + .. versionadded:: 3.6 + + .. _shlex-parsing-rules: Parsing Rules @@ -327,3 +357,62 @@ following parsing rules. * EOF is signaled with a :const:`None` value; * Quoted empty strings (``''``) are allowed. + +.. _improved-shell-compatibility: + +Improved Compatibility with Shells +---------------------------------- + +.. versionadded:: 3.6 + +The :class:`shlex` class provides compatibility with the parsing performed by +common Unix shells like ``bash``, ``dash``, and ``sh``. To take advantage of +this compatibility, specify the ``punctuation_chars`` argument in the +constructor. This defaults to ``False``, which preserves pre-3.6 behaviour. +However, if it is set to ``True``, then parsing of the characters ``();<>|&`` +is changed: any run of these characters is returned as a single token. While +this is short of a full parser for shells (which would be out of scope for the +standard library, given the multiplicity of shells out there), it does allow +you to perform processing of command lines more easily than you could +otherwise. To illustrate, you can see the difference in the following snippet:: + + import shlex + + for punct in (False, True): + if punct: + message = 'Old' + else: + message = 'New' + text = "a && b; c && d || e; f >'abc'; (def \"ghi\")" + s = shlex.shlex(text, punctuation_chars=punct) + print('%s: %s' % (message, list(s))) + +which prints out:: + + Old: ['a', '&', '&', 'b', ';', 'c', '&', '&', 'd', '|', '|', 'e', ';', 'f', '>', "'abc'", ';', '(', 'def', '"ghi"', ')'] + New: ['a', '&&', 'b', ';', 'c', '&&', 'd', '||', 'e', ';', 'f', '>', "'abc'", ';', '(', 'def', '"ghi"', ')'] + +Of course, tokens will be returned which are not valid for shells, and you'll +need to implement your own error checks on the returned tokens. + +Instead of passing ``True`` as the value for the punctuation_chars parameter, +you can pass a string with specific characters, which will be used to determine +which characters constitute punctuation. For example:: + + >>> import shlex + >>> s = shlex.shlex("a && b || c", punctuation_chars="|") + >>> list(s) + ['a', '&', '&', 'b', '||', 'c'] + +.. note:: When ``punctuation_chars`` is specified, the :attr:`~shlex.wordchars` + attribute is augmented with the characters ``~-./*?=``. That is because these + characters can appear in file names (including wildcards) and command-line + arguments (e.g. ``--color=auto``). Hence:: + + >>> import shlex + >>> s = shlex.shlex('~/a && b-c --color=auto || d *.py?', + ... punctuation_chars=True) + >>> list(s) + ['~/a', '&&', 'b-c', '--color=auto', '||', 'd', '*.py?'] + + |