--jI8keyz6grp/JLjh Content-Type: text/plain; charset=unknown-8bit Content-Disposition: inline Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Hi all -- since my ISP seems to be taking a holiday today, I was able to polish off my proposed text-wrapping module. Of course, it'll sit in my mail queue until my link to the outside world is back, but never mind. Anyways, the code is attached. I don't care if this becomes textwrap.py, wraptext.py, text/wrap.py, or whatever -- let's concentrate on the code for now. I'll also attach my test script, so you can see what TextWrapper can and cannot do. Things to note: * The code is not locale-aware; it should be to detect sentence endings, which it needs to do to ensure that there are two spaces after each sentence ending. Eg. it fixes "I have eaten. And you?" but not "Moi, j'ai mangé. Et toi?" * The code is not Unicode-aware. I have no idea what will happen if you pass Unicode strings to it. * However, it is hyphen-aware. Please spend a few minutes gawping at the enormity of wordsep_re -- that took a while to get right. ;-) * Despite occasional complaints (hello, Jeremy and Neil), I still write "def foo (a, b)" rather than "def foo(a, b)". I'll (begrudgingly) fix this before checking anything in. * I'm not sure if exposing flags to make whitespace-munging optional is a good idea. Opinions? * need to convert the test suite to unittest (I guess) BTW, as an exercise I implemented Mailman's wrap() function on top of TextWrapper, and it seems to have worked fine. I tried to implement regrtest's printlist(), but it's not a good fit (as I mentioned in my last post). Greg -- Greg Ward - nerd gward@python.net http://starship.python.net/~gward/ Support bacteria -- it's the only culture some people have! --jI8keyz6grp/JLjh Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="textwrap.py" """ Utilities for wrapping text strings and filling text paragraphs. """ __revision__ = "$Id$" import string, re # XXX is this going to be implemented properly somewhere in 2.3? def islower (c): return c in string.lowercase class TextWrapper: """ Object for wrapping/filling text. The public interface consists of the wrap() and fill() methods; the other methods are just there for subclasses to override in order to tweak the default behaviour. If you want to completely replace the main wrapping algorithm, you'll probably have to override _wrap_chunks(). Several instance attributes control various aspects of wrapping: expand_tabs if true (default), tabs in input text will be expanded to spaces before further processing. Each tab will become 1 .. 8 spaces, depending on its position in its line. If false, each tab is treated as a single character. replace_whitespace if true (default), all whitespace characters in the input text are replaced by spaces after tab expansion. Note that expand_tabs is false and replace_whitespace is true, every tab will be converted to a single space! break_long_words if true (default), words longer than the line width constraint will be broken. If false, those words will not be broken, and some lines might be longer than the width constraint. """ whitespace_trans = string.maketrans(string.whitespace, ' ' * len(string.whitespace)) # This funky little regex is just the trick for splitting # text up into word-wrappable chunks. E.g. # "Hello there -- you goof-ball, use the -b option!" # splits into # Hello/ /there/ /--/ /you/ /goof-/ball,/ /use/ /the/ /-b/ /option! # (after stripping out empty strings). wordsep_re = re.compile(r'(\s+|' # any whitespace r'\w{2,}-(?=\w{2,})|' # hyphenated words r'(?<=\w)-{2,}(?=\w))') # em-dash def __init__ (self): self.expand_tabs = 1 self.replace_whitespace = 1 self.break_long_words = 1 # -- Private methods ----------------------------------------------- # (possibly useful for subclasses to override) def _munge_whitespace (self, text): """_munge_whitespace(text : string) -> string Munge whitespace in text: expand tabs and convert all other whitespace characters to spaces. Eg. " foo\tbar\n\nbaz" becomes " foo bar baz". """ if self.expand_tabs: text = text.expandtabs() if self.replace_whitespace: text = text.translate(self.whitespace_trans) return text def _split (self, text): """_split(text : string) -> [string] Split the text to wrap into indivisible chunks. Chunks are not quite the same as words; see wrap_chunks() for full details. As an example, the text Look, goof-ball -- use the -b option! breaks into the following chunks: 'Look,', ' ', 'goof-', 'ball', ' ', '--', ' ', 'use', ' ', 'the', ' ', '-b', ' ', 'option!' """ chunks = self.wordsep_re.split(text) chunks = filter(None, chunks) return chunks def _fix_sentence_endings (self, chunks): """_fix_sentence_endings(chunks : [string]) Correct for sentence endings buried in 'chunks'. Eg. when the original text contains "... foo.\nBar ...", munge_whitespace() and split() will convert that to [..., "foo.", " ", "Bar", ...] which has one too few spaces; this method simply changes the one space to two. """ i = 0 while i < len(chunks)-1: # chunks[i] looks like the last word of a sentence, # and it's followed by a single space. if (chunks[i][-1] == "." and chunks[i+1] == " " and islower(chunks[i][-2])): chunks[i+1] = " " i += 2 else: i += 1 def _handle_long_word (self, chunks, cur_line, cur_len, width): """_handle_long_word(chunks : [string], cur_line : [string], cur_len : int, width : int) Handle a chunk of text (most likely a word, not whitespace) that is too long to fit in any line. """ space_left = width - cur_len # If we're allowed to break long words, then do so: put as much # of the next chunk onto the current line as will fit. if self.break_long_words: cur_line.append(chunks[0][0:space_left]) chunks[0] = chunks[0][space_left:] # Otherwise, we have to preserve the long word intact. Only add # it to the current line if there's nothing already there -- # that minimizes how much we violate the width constraint. elif not cur_line: cur_line.append(chunks.pop(0)) # If we're not allowed to break long words, and there's already # text on the current line, do nothing. Next time through the # main loop of _wrap_chunks(), we'll wind up here again, but # cur_len will be zero, so the next line will be entirely # devoted to the long word that we can't handle right now. def _wrap_chunks (self, chunks, width): """_wrap_chunks(chunks : [string], width : int) -> [string] Wrap a sequence of text chunks and return a list of lines of length 'width' or less. (If 'break_long_words' is false, some lines may be longer than 'width'.) Chunks correspond roughly to words and the whitespace between them: each chunk is indivisible (modulo 'break_long_words'), but a line break can come between any two chunks. Chunks should not have internal whitespace; ie. a chunk is either all whitespace or a "word". Whitespace chunks will be removed from the beginning and end of lines, but apart from that whitespace is preserved. """ lines = [] while chunks: cur_line = [] # list of chunks (to-be-joined) cur_len = 0 # length of current line # First chunk on line is whitespace -- drop it. if chunks[0].strip() == '': del chunks[0] while chunks: l = len(chunks[0]) # Can at least squeeze this chunk onto the current line. if cur_len + l <= width: cur_line.append(chunks.pop(0)) cur_len += l # Nope, this line is full. else: break # The current line is full, and the next chunk is too big to # fit on *any* line (not just this one). if chunks and len(chunks[0]) > width: self._handle_long_word(chunks, cur_line, cur_len, width) # If the last chunk on this line is all whitespace, drop it. if cur_line and cur_line[-1].strip() == '': del cur_line[-1] # Convert current line back to a string and store it in list # of all lines (return value). if cur_line: lines.append(''.join(cur_line)) return lines # -- Public interface ---------------------------------------------- def wrap (self, text, width): """wrap(text : string, width : int) -> [string] Split 'text' into multiple lines of no more than 'width' characters each, and return the list of strings that results. Tabs in 'text' are expanded with string.expandtabs(), and all other whitespace characters (including newline) are converted to space. """ text = self._munge_whitespace(text) if len(text) <= width: return [text] chunks = self._split(text) self._fix_sentence_endings(chunks) return self._wrap_chunks(chunks, width) def fill (self, text, width, initial_tab="", subsequent_tab=""): """fill(text : string, width : int, initial_tab : string = "", subsequent_tab : string = "") -> string Reformat the paragraph in 'text' to fit in lines of no more than 'width' columns. The first line is prefixed with 'initial_tab', and subsequent lines are prefixed with 'subsequent_tab'; the lengths of the tab strings are accounted for when wrapping lines to fit in 'width' columns. """ lines = self.wrap(text, width) sep = "\n" + subsequent_tab return initial_tab + sep.join(lines) # Convenience interface _wrapper = TextWrapper() def wrap (text, width): return _wrapper.wrap(text, width) def fill (text, width, initial_tab="", subsequent_tab=""): return _wrapper.fill(text, width, initial_tab, subsequent_tab) --jI8keyz6grp/JLjh Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="test_textwrap.py" #!/usr/bin/env python from textwrap import TextWrapper num = 0 def test (result, expect): global num num += 1 if result == expect: print "%d: ok" % num else: print "%d: not ok, expected:" % num for i in range(len(expect)): print " %d: %r" % (i, expect[i]) print "but got:" for i in range(len(result)): print " %d: %r" % (i, result[i]) wrapper = TextWrapper() wrap = wrapper.wrap # Simple case: just words, spaces, and a bit of punctuation. t = "Hello there, how are you this fine day? I'm glad to hear it!" test(wrap(t, 12), ["Hello there,", "how are you", "this fine", "day? I'm", "glad to hear", "it!"]) test(wrap(t, 42), ["Hello there, how are you this fine day?", "I'm glad to hear it!"]) test(wrap(t, 80), [t]) # Whitespace munging and end-of-sentence detection. t = """\ This is a paragraph that already has line breaks. But some of its lines are much longer than the others, so it needs to be wrapped. Some lines are \ttabbed too. What a mess! """ test(wrap(t, 45), ["This is a paragraph that already has line", "breaks. But some of its lines are much", "longer than the others, so it needs to be", "wrapped. Some lines are tabbed too. What a", "mess!"]) # Wrapping to make short lines longer. t = "This is a\nshort paragraph." test(wrap(t, 20), ["This is a short", "paragraph."]) test(wrap(t, 40), ["This is a short paragraph."]) # Test breaking hyphenated words. t = "this-is-a-useful-feature-for-reformatting-posts-from-tim-peters'ly" test(wrap(t, 40), ["this-is-a-useful-feature-for-", "reformatting-posts-from-tim-peters'ly"]) test(wrap(t, 41), ["this-is-a-useful-feature-for-", "reformatting-posts-from-tim-peters'ly"]) test(wrap(t, 42), ["this-is-a-useful-feature-for-reformatting-", "posts-from-tim-peters'ly"]) # Ensure that the standard _split() method works as advertised in # the comments (don't you hate it when code and comments diverge?). t = "Hello there -- you goof-ball, use the -b option!" test(wrapper._split(t), ["Hello", " ", "there", " ", "--", " ", "you", " ", "goof-", "ball,", " ", "use", " ", "the", " ", "-b", " ", "option!"]) text = ''' Did you say "supercalifragilisticexpialidocious?" How *do* you spell that odd word, anyways? ''' # XXX sentence ending not detected because of quotes test(wrap(text, 30), ['Did you say "supercalifragilis', 'ticexpialidocious?" How *do*', 'you spell that odd word,', 'anyways?']) test(wrap(text, 50), ['Did you say "supercalifragilisticexpialidocious?"', 'How *do* you spell that odd word, anyways?']) wrapper.break_long_words = 0 test(wrap(text, 30), ['Did you say', '"supercalifragilisticexpialidocious?"', 'How *do* you spell that odd', 'word, anyways?']) --jI8keyz6grp/JLjh--
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