import os import types import shlex import sys import codecs import tempfile import tkinter.filedialog as tkFileDialog import tkinter.messagebox as tkMessageBox import re from tkinter import * from tkinter.simpledialog import askstring from idlelib.configHandler import idleConf from codecs import BOM_UTF8 # Try setting the locale, so that we can find out # what encoding to use try: import locale locale.setlocale(locale.LC_CTYPE, "") except (ImportError, locale.Error): pass # Encoding for file names filesystemencoding = sys.getfilesystemencoding() ### currently unused locale_encoding = 'ascii' if sys.platform == 'win32': # On Windows, we could use "mbcs". However, to give the user # a portable encoding name, we need to find the code page try: locale_encoding = locale.getdefaultlocale()[1] codecs.lookup(locale_encoding) except LookupError: pass else: try: # Different things can fail here: the locale module may not be # loaded, it may not offer nl_langinfo, or CODESET, or the # resulting codeset may be unknown to Python. We ignore all # these problems, falling back to ASCII locale_encoding = locale.nl_langinfo(locale.CODESET) if locale_encoding is None or locale_encoding is '': # situation occurs on Mac OS X locale_encoding = 'ascii' codecs.lookup(locale_encoding) except (NameError, AttributeError, LookupError): # Try getdefaultlocale: it parses environment variables, # which may give a clue. Unfortunately, getdefaultlocale has # bugs that can cause ValueError. try: locale_encoding = locale.getdefaultlocale()[1] if locale_encoding is None or locale_encoding is '': # situation occurs on Mac OS X locale_encoding = 'ascii' codecs.lookup(locale_encoding) except (ValueError, LookupError): pass locale_encoding = locale_encoding.lower() encoding = locale_encoding ### KBK 07Sep07 This is used all over IDLE, check! ### 'encoding' is used below in encode(), check! coding_re = re.compile(r'^[ \t\f]*#.*coding[:=][ \t]*([-\w.]+)', re.ASCII) def coding_spec(data): """Return the encoding declaration according to PEP 263. When checking encoded data, only the first two lines should be passed in to avoid a UnicodeDecodeError if the rest of the data is not unicode. The first two lines would contain the encoding specification. Raise a LookupError if the encoding is declared but unknown. """ if isinstance(data, bytes): # This encoding might be wrong. However, the coding # spec must be ASCII-only, so any non-ASCII characters # around here will be ignored. Decoding to Latin-1 should # never fail (except for memory outage) lines = data.decode('iso-8859-1') else: lines = data # consider only the first two lines if '\n' in lines: lst = lines.split('\n', 2)[:2] elif '\r' in lines: lst = lines.split('\r', 2)[:2] else: lst = [lines] for line in lst: match = coding_re.match(line) if match is not None: break else: return None name = match.group(1) try: codecs.lookup(name) except LookupError: # The standard encoding error does not indicate the encoding raise LookupError("Unknown encoding: "+name) return name class IOBinding: def __init__(self, editwin): self.editwin = editwin self.text = editwin.text self.__id_open = self.text.bind("<>", self.open) self.__id_save = self.text.bind("<>", self.save) self.__id_saveas = self.text.bind("<>", self.save_as) self.__id_savecopy = self.text.bind("<>", self.save_a_copy) self.fileencoding = None self.__id_print = self.text.bind("<>", self.print_window) def close(self): # Undo command bindings self.text.unbind("<>", self.__id_open) self.text.unbind("<>", self.__id_save) self.text.unbind("<>",self.__id_saveas) self.text.unbind("<>", self.__id_savecopy) self.text.unbind("<>", self.__id_print) # Break cycles self.editwin = None self.text = None self.filename_change_hook = None def get_saved(self): return self.editwin.get_saved() def set_saved(self, flag): self.editwin.set_saved(flag) def reset_undo(self): self.editwin.reset_undo() filename_change_hook = None def set_filename_change_hook(self, hook): self.filename_change_hook = hook filename = None dirname = None def set_filename(self, filename): if filename and os.path.isdir(filename): self.filename = None self.dirname = filename else: self.filename = filename self.dirname = None self.set_saved(1) if self.filename_change_hook: self.filename_change_hook() def open(self, event=None, editFile=None): flist = self.editwin.flist # Save in case parent window is closed (ie, during askopenfile()). if flist: if not editFile: filename = self.askopenfile() else: filename=editFile if filename: # If editFile is valid and already open, flist.open will # shift focus to its existing window. # If the current window exists and is a fresh unnamed, # unmodified editor window (not an interpreter shell), # pass self.loadfile to flist.open so it will load the file # in the current window (if the file is not already open) # instead of a new window. if (self.editwin and not getattr(self.editwin, 'interp', None) and not self.filename and self.get_saved()): flist.open(filename, self.loadfile) else: flist.open(filename) else: if self.text: self.text.focus_set() return "break" # Code for use outside IDLE: if self.get_saved(): reply = self.maybesave() if reply == "cancel": self.text.focus_set() return "break" if not editFile: filename = self.askopenfile() else: filename=editFile if filename: self.loadfile(filename) else: self.text.focus_set() return "break" eol = r"(\r\n)|\n|\r" # \r\n (Windows), \n (UNIX), or \r (Mac) eol_re = re.compile(eol) eol_convention = os.linesep # default def loadfile(self, filename): try: # open the file in binary mode so that we can handle # end-of-line convention ourselves. with open(filename, 'rb') as f: two_lines = f.readline() + f.readline() f.seek(0) bytes = f.read() except OSError as msg: tkMessageBox.showerror("I/O Error", str(msg), master=self.text) return False chars, converted = self._decode(two_lines, bytes) if chars is None: tkMessageBox.showerror("Decoding Error", "File %s\nFailed to Decode" % filename, parent=self.text) return False # We now convert all end-of-lines to '\n's firsteol = self.eol_re.search(chars) if firsteol: self.eol_convention = firsteol.group(0) chars = self.eol_re.sub(r"\n", chars) self.text.delete("1.0", "end") self.set_filename(None) self.text.insert("1.0", chars) self.reset_undo() self.set_filename(filename) if converted: # We need to save the conversion results first # before being able to execute the code self.set_saved(False) self.text.mark_set("insert", "1.0") self.text.yview("insert") self.updaterecentfileslist(filename) return True def _decode(self, two_lines, bytes): "Create a Unicode string." chars = None # Check presence of a UTF-8 signature first if bytes.startswith(BOM_UTF8): try: chars = bytes[3:].decode("utf-8") except UnicodeDecodeError: # has UTF-8 signature, but fails to decode... return None, False else: # Indicates that this file originally had a BOM self.fileencoding = 'BOM' return chars, False # Next look for coding specification try: enc = coding_spec(two_lines) except LookupError as name: tkMessageBox.showerror( title="Error loading the file", message="The encoding '%s' is not known to this Python "\ "installation. The file may not display correctly" % name, master = self.text) enc = None except UnicodeDecodeError: return None, False if enc: try: chars = str(bytes, enc) self.fileencoding = enc return chars, False except UnicodeDecodeError: pass # Try ascii: try: chars = str(bytes, 'ascii') self.fileencoding = None return chars, False except UnicodeDecodeError: pass # Try utf-8: try: chars = str(bytes, 'utf-8') self.fileencoding = 'utf-8' return chars, False except UnicodeDecodeError: pass # Finally, try the locale's encoding. This is deprecated; # the user should declare a non-ASCII encoding try: # Wait for the editor window to appear self.editwin.text.update() enc = askstring( "Specify file encoding", "The file's encoding is invalid for Python 3.x.\n" "IDLE will convert it to UTF-8.\n" "What is the current encoding of the file?", initialvalue = locale_encoding, parent = self.editwin.text) if enc: chars = str(bytes, enc) self.fileencoding = None return chars, True except (UnicodeDecodeError, LookupError): pass return None, False # None on failure def maybesave(self): if self.get_saved(): return "yes" message = "Do you want to save %s before closing?" % ( self.filename or "this untitled document") confirm = tkMessageBox.askyesnocancel( title="Save On Close", message=message, default=tkMessageBox.YES, master=self.text) if confirm: reply = "yes" self.save(None) if not self.get_saved(): reply = "cancel" elif confirm is None: reply = "cancel" else: reply = "no" self.text.focus_set() return reply def save(self, event): if not self.filename: self.save_as(event) else: if self.writefile(self.filename): self.set_saved(True) try: self.editwin.store_file_breaks() except AttributeError: # may be a PyShell pass self.text.focus_set() return "break" def save_as(self, event): filename = self.asksavefile() if filename: if self.writefile(filename): self.set_filename(filename) self.set_saved(1) try: self.editwin.store_file_breaks() except AttributeError: pass self.text.focus_set() self.updaterecentfileslist(filename) return "break" def save_a_copy(self, event): filename = self.asksavefile() if filename: self.writefile(filename) self.text.focus_set() self.updaterecentfileslist(filename) return "break" def writefile(self, filename): self.fixlastline() text = self.text.get("1.0", "end-1c") if self.eol_convention != "\n": text = text.replace("\n", self.eol_convention) chars = self.encode(text) try: with open(filename, "wb") as f: f.write(chars) return True except OSError as msg: tkMessageBox.showerror("I/O Error", str(msg), master=self.text) return False def encode(self, chars): if isinstance(chars, bytes): # This is either plain ASCII, or Tk was returning mixed-encoding # text to us. Don't try to guess further. return chars # Preserve a BOM that might have been present on opening if self.fileencoding == 'BOM': return BOM_UTF8 + chars.encode("utf-8") # See whether there is anything non-ASCII in it. # If not, no need to figure out the encoding. try: return chars.encode('ascii') except UnicodeError: pass # Check if there is an encoding declared try: # a string, let coding_spec slice it to the first two lines enc = coding_spec(chars) failed = None except LookupError as msg: failed = msg enc = None else: if not enc: # PEP 3120: default source encoding is UTF-8 enc = 'utf-8' if enc: try: return chars.encode(enc) except UnicodeError: failed = "Invalid encoding '%s'" % enc tkMessageBox.showerror( "I/O Error", "%s.\nSaving as UTF-8" % failed, master = self.text) # Fallback: save as UTF-8, with BOM - ignoring the incorrect # declared encoding return BOM_UTF8 + chars.encode("utf-8") def fixlastline(self): c = self.text.get("end-2c") if c != '\n': self.text.insert("end-1c", "\n") def print_window(self, event): confirm = tkMessageBox.askokcancel( title="Print", message="Print to Default Printer", default=tkMessageBox.OK, master=self.text) if not confirm: self.text.focus_set() return "break" tempfilename = None saved = self.get_saved() if saved: filename = self.filename # shell undo is reset after every prompt, looks saved, probably isn't if not saved or filename is None: (tfd, tempfilename) = tempfile.mkstemp(prefix='IDLE_tmp_') filename = tempfilename os.close(tfd) if not self.writefile(tempfilename): os.unlink(tempfilename) return "break" platform = os.name printPlatform = True if platform == 'posix': #posix platform command = idleConf.GetOption('main','General', 'print-command-posix') command = command + " 2>&1" elif platform == 'nt': #win32 platform command = idleConf.GetOption('main','General','print-command-win') else: #no printing for this platform printPlatform = False if printPlatform: #we can try to print for this platform command = command % shlex.quote(filename) pipe = os.popen(command, "r") # things can get ugly on NT if there is no printer available. output = pipe.read().strip() status = pipe.close() if status: output = "Printing failed (exit status 0x%x)\n" % \ status + output if output: output = "Printing command: %s\n" % repr(command) + output tkMessageBox.showerror("Print status", output, master=self.text) else: #no printing for this platform message = "Printing is not enabled for this platform: %s" % platform tkMessageBox.showinfo("Print status", message, master=self.text) if tempfilename: os.unlink(tempfilename) return "break" opendialog = None savedialog = None filetypes = [ ("Python files", "*.py *.pyw", "TEXT"), ("Text files", "*.txt", "TEXT"), ("All files", "*"), ] defaultextension = '.py' if sys.platform == 'darwin' else '' def askopenfile(self): dir, base = self.defaultfilename("open") if not self.opendialog: self.opendialog = tkFileDialog.Open(master=self.text, filetypes=self.filetypes) filename = self.opendialog.show(initialdir=dir, initialfile=base) return filename def defaultfilename(self, mode="open"): if self.filename: return os.path.split(self.filename) elif self.dirname: return self.dirname, "" else: try: pwd = os.getcwd() except os.error: pwd = "" return pwd, "" def asksavefile(self): dir, base = self.defaultfilename("save") if not self.savedialog: self.savedialog = tkFileDialog.SaveAs( master=self.text, filetypes=self.filetypes, defaultextension=self.defaultextension) filename = self.savedialog.show(initialdir=dir, initialfile=base) return filename def updaterecentfileslist(self,filename): "Update recent file list on all editor windows" if self.editwin.flist: self.editwin.update_recent_files_list(filename) def test(): root = Tk() class MyEditWin: def __init__(self, text): self.text = text self.flist = None self.text.bind("", self.open) self.text.bind("", self.save) self.text.bind("", self.save_as) self.text.bind("", self.save_a_copy) def get_saved(self): return 0 def set_saved(self, flag): pass def reset_undo(self): pass def open(self, event): self.text.event_generate("<>") def save(self, event): self.text.event_generate("<>") def save_as(self, event): self.text.event_generate("<>") def save_a_copy(self, event): self.text.event_generate("<>") text = Text(root) text.pack() text.focus_set() editwin = MyEditWin(text) io = IOBinding(editwin) root.mainloop() if __name__ == "__main__": test()