1#!/usr/bin/env python 2 3r""" 4This module provides argument manipulation functions like pop_arg. 5""" 6 7import gen_print as gp 8import collections 9 10 11def pop_arg(pop_arg_default=None, *args, **kwargs): 12 r""" 13 Pop a named argument from the args/kwargs and return a tuple consisting of the argument value, the 14 modified args and the modified kwargs. 15 16 The name of the argument is determined automatically by this function by examining the source code which 17 calls it (see examples below). If no suitable argument can be found, the default value passed to this 18 function will be returned as the argument value. This function is useful for wrapper functions that wish 19 to process arguments in some way before calling subordinate function. 20 21 Examples: 22 23 Given this code: 24 25 def func1(*args, **kwargs): 26 27 last_name, args, kwargs = pop_arg('Doe', *args, **kwargs) 28 some_function(last_name.capitalize(), *args, **kwargs) 29 30 Consider this call to func1: 31 32 func1('Johnson', ssn='111-11-1111') 33 34 The pop_arg in func1 would return the following: 35 36 'Johnson', [], {'ssn': "111-11-1111"} 37 38 Notice that the 'args' value returned is an empty list. Since last_name was assumed to be the first 39 positional argument, it was popped from args. 40 41 Now consider this call to func1: 42 43 func1(last_name='Johnson', ssn='111-11-1111') 44 45 The pop_arg in func1 would return the same last_name value as in the previous example. The only 46 difference being that the last_name value was popped from kwargs rather than from args. 47 48 Description of argument(s): 49 pop_arg_default The value to return if the named argument is not present in args/kwargs. 50 args The positional arguments passed to the calling function. 51 kwargs The keyword arguments passed to the calling function. 52 """ 53 54 # Retrieve the argument name by examining the source code. 55 arg_name = gp.get_arg_name(None, arg_num=-3, stack_frame_ix=2) 56 if arg_name in kwargs: 57 arg_value = kwargs.pop(arg_name) 58 else: 59 # Convert args from a tuple to a list. 60 args = list(args) 61 if args: 62 arg_value = args.pop(0) 63 else: 64 arg_value = pop_arg_default 65 66 return arg_value, args, kwargs 67 68 69def source_to_object(value): 70 r""" 71 Evaluate string value as python source code and return the resulting object. 72 73 If value is NOT a string or can not be interpreted as a python source object definition, simply return 74 value. 75 76 The idea is to convert python object definition source code (e.g. for lists, dictionaries, tuples, etc.) 77 into an object. 78 79 Example: 80 81 Note that this first example is a special case in that it is a short-cut for specifying a 82 collections.OrderedDict. 83 84 result = source_to_object("[('one', 1), ('two', 2), ('three', 3)]") 85 86 The result is a collections.OrderedDict object: 87 88 result: 89 [one]: 1 90 [two]: 2 91 [three]: 3 92 93 This is a short-cut for the long form shown here: 94 95 result = source_to_object("collections.OrderedDict([ 96 ('one', 1), 97 ('two', 2), 98 ('three', 3)])") 99 100 Also note that support for this special-case short-cut precludes the possibility of interpreting such a 101 string as a list of tuples. 102 103 Example: 104 105 In this example, the result will be a list: 106 107 result = source_to_object("[1, 2, 3]") 108 109 result: 110 result[0]: 1 111 result[1]: 2 112 result[2]: 3 113 114 Example: 115 116 In this example, the value passed to this function is not a string, so it is simply returned. 117 118 result = source_to_object(1) 119 120 More examples: 121 result = source_to_object("dict(one=1, two=2, three=3)") 122 result = source_to_object("{'one':1, 'two':2, 'three':3}") 123 result = source_to_object(True) 124 etc. 125 126 Description of argument(s): 127 value If value is a string, it will be evaluated as a python statement. If the 128 statement is valid, the resulting object will be returned. In all other 129 cases, the value will simply be returned. 130 """ 131 132 if type(value) not in gp.get_string_types(): 133 return value 134 135 # Strip white space prior to attempting to interpret the string as python code. 136 value = value.strip() 137 138 # Try special case of collections.OrderedDict which accepts a list of tuple pairs. 139 if value.startswith("[("): 140 try: 141 return eval("collections.OrderedDict(" + value + ")") 142 except (TypeError, NameError, ValueError): 143 pass 144 145 try: 146 return eval(value) 147 except (NameError, SyntaxError): 148 pass 149 150 return value 151 152 153def args_to_objects(args): 154 r""" 155 Run source_to_object() on each element in args and return the result. 156 157 Description of argument(s): 158 args A type of dictionary, list, set, tuple or simple object whose elements 159 are to be converted via a call to source_to_object(). 160 """ 161 162 type_of_dict = gp.is_dict(args) 163 if type_of_dict: 164 if type_of_dict == gp.dict_type(): 165 return {k: source_to_object(v) for (k, v) in args.items()} 166 elif type_of_dict == gp.ordered_dict_type(): 167 return collections.OrderedDict((k, v) for (k, v) in args.items()) 168 elif type_of_dict == gp.dot_dict_type(): 169 return DotDict((k, v) for (k, v) in args.items()) 170 elif type_of_dict == gp.normalized_dict_type(): 171 return NormalizedDict((k, v) for (k, v) in args.items()) 172 # Assume args is list, tuple or set. 173 if type(args) in (list, set): 174 return [source_to_object(arg) for arg in args] 175 elif type(args) is tuple: 176 return tuple([source_to_object(arg) for arg in args]) 177 178 return source_to_object(args) 179