From 45eb989f4283210e8abe11d8bd1ccc425284acba Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Nick Fitzgerald Date: Thu, 8 Jul 2010 09:59:49 -0700 Subject: Renaming Pocco to Pycco --- pycco | 219 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 219 insertions(+) create mode 100755 pycco (limited to 'pycco') diff --git a/pycco b/pycco new file mode 100755 index 0000000..bc1ce3f --- /dev/null +++ b/pycco @@ -0,0 +1,219 @@ +#!/usr/bin/env python + +# **Pycco** is a Python port of [Docco](http://jashkenas.github.com/docco/ ): +# the original quick-and-dirty, hundred-line-long, literate-programming-style +# documentation generator. It produces HTML that displays your comments +# alongside your code. Comments are passed through +# [Markdown](http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax), and code is +# passed through [Pygments](http://pygments.org/) syntax highlighting. This +# page is the result of running Pycco against its own source file. +# +# If you install Pycco, you can run it from the command-line: +# +# pycco src/*.py +# +# ...will generate linked HTML documentation for the named source files, saving +# it into a `docs` folder. +# +# To install Pycco, simply +# +# sudo setup.py install +# + +#### Main Documentation Generation Functions + +# Generate the documentation for a source file by reading it in, splitting it +# up into comment/code sections, highlighting them for the appropriate language, +# and merging them into an HTML template. +def generate_documentation(source): + fh = open(source, "r") + sections = parse(source, fh.read()) + highlight(source, + sections) + generate_html(source, sections) + +# Given a string of source code, parse out each comment and the code that +# follows it, and create an individual **section** for it. +# Sections take the form: +# +# { "docs_text": ..., +# "docs_html": ..., +# "code_text": ..., +# "code_html": ..., +# "num": ... +# } +# +def parse(source, code): + lines = code.split("\n") + sections = [] + language = get_language(source) + has_code = docs_text = code_text = "" + + if lines[0].startswith("#!"): + lines.pop(0) + + def save(docs, code): + sections.append({ + "docs_text": docs, + "code_text": code + }) + + for line in lines: + if re.match(language["comment_matcher"], line): + if has_code: + save(docs_text, code_text) + has_code = docs_text = code_text = '' + docs_text += re.sub(language["comment_matcher"], "", line) + "\n" + else: + has_code = True + code_text += line + '\n' + save(docs_text, code_text) + return sections + +# Highlights a single chunk of code using the **Pygments** module, and runs the +# text of its corresponding comment through **Markdown**. +# +# We process the entire file in a single call to Pygments by inserting little +# marker comments between each section and then splitting the result string +# wherever our markers occur. +def highlight(source, sections): + language = get_language(source) + + output = pygments.highlight(language["divider_text"].join(section["code_text"] for section in sections), + language["lexer"], + formatters.get_formatter_by_name("html")) + + output = output.replace(highlight_start, "").replace(highlight_end, "") + fragments = re.split(language["divider_html"], output) + for i, section in enumerate(sections): + section["code_html"] = highlight_start + shift(fragments, "") + highlight_end + section["docs_html"] = markdown(section["docs_text"]) + section["num"] = i + +# Once all of the code is finished highlighting, we can generate the HTML file +# and write out the documentation. Pass the completed sections into the template +# found in `resources/pycco.html` +def generate_html(source, sections): + title = path.basename(source) + dest = destination(source) + html = pycco_template({ + "title": title, + "sections": sections, + "sources": sources, + "path": path, + "destination": destination + }) + print "pycco = %s -> %s" % (source, dest) + fh = open(dest, "w") + fh.write(html) + fh.close() + +#### Helpers & Setup + +# Import our external dependencies. +import pygments +import pystache +import re +import sys +from markdown import markdown +from os import path +from pygments import lexers, formatters +from subprocess import Popen, PIPE + +# A list of the languages that Pycco supports, mapping the file extension to +# the name of the Pygments lexer and the symbol that indicates a comment. To +# add another language to Pycco's repertoire, add it here. +languages = { + ".coffee": { "name": "coffee-script", "symbol": "#" }, + ".js": { "name": "javascript", "symbol": "//" }, + ".rb": { "name": "ruby", "symbol": "#" }, + ".py": { "name": "python", "symbol": "#" }, + ".scm": { "name": "scheme", "symbol": ";;" }, + ".lua": { "name": "lua", "symbol": "--" }, +} + +# Build out the appropriate matchers and delimiters for each language. +for ext, l in languages.items(): + # Does the line begin with a comment? + l["comment_matcher"] = re.compile(r"^\s*" + l["symbol"] + "\s?") + + # The dividing token we feed into Pygments, to delimit the boundaries between + # sections. + l["divider_text"] = "\n" + l["symbol"] + "DIVIDER\n" + + # The mirror of `divider_text` that we expect Pygments to return. We can split + # on this to recover the original sections. + l["divider_html"] = re.compile(r'\n*' + l["symbol"] + 'DIVIDER\n*') + + # Get the Pygments Lexer for this language. + l["lexer"] = lexers.get_lexer_by_name(l["name"]) + +# Get the current language we're documenting, based on the extension. +def get_language(source): + try: + return languages[ source[source.rindex("."):] ] + except ValueError: + source = open(source, "r") + code = source.read() + source.close() + lang = lexers.guess_lexer(code).name.lower() + for l in languages.values(): + if l["name"] == lang: + return l + else: + raise ValueError("Can't figure out the language!") + +# Compute the destination HTML path for an input source file path. If the source +# is `lib/example.py`, the HTML will be at `docs/example.html` +def destination(filepath): + try: + name = filepath.replace(filepath[ filepath.rindex("."): ], "") + except ValueError: + name = filepath + return "docs/" + path.basename(name) + ".html" + +# Shift items off the front of the `list` until it is empty, then return +# `default`. +def shift(list, default): + try: + return list.pop(0) + except IndexError: + return default + +# Ensure that the destination directory exists. +def ensure_directory(): + Popen(["mkdir", "-p", "docs"]).wait() + +def template(source): + return lambda context: pystache.render(source, context) + +# Create the template that we will use to generate the Pycco HTML page. +pycco_template = template(open(path.join(path.dirname(__file__), + "resources/pycco.html")).read()) + +# The CSS styles we"d like to apply to the documentation. +pycco_styles = open(path.join(path.dirname(__file__), + "resources/pycco.css")).read() + +# The start of each Pygments highlight block. +highlight_start = "
"
+
+# The end of each Pygments highlight block.
+highlight_end = "
" + +# Run the script. +# For each source file passed in as an argument, generate the documentation. +if __name__ == "__main__": + sources = list(sys.argv[1:]) + sources.sort() + if sources: + ensure_directory() + css = open("docs/pycco.css", "w") + css.write(pycco_styles) + css.close() + + def next_file(): + generate_documentation(sources.pop(0)) + if sources: + next_file() + next_file() -- cgit v1.2.3