codeop
--- Compile Python codeThe codeop
module provides utilities upon which the Python
read-eval-print loop can be emulated, as is done in the code
module. As
a result, you probably don't want to use the module directly; if you want to
include such a loop in your program you probably want to use the code
module instead.
There are two parts to this job:
- Being able to tell if a line of input completes a Python statement: in
short, telling whether to print '
>>>
' or '...
' next. - Remembering which future statements the user has entered, so subsequent input can be compiled with these in effect.
The codeop
module provides a way of doing each of these things, and a way
of doing them both.
To do just the former:
codeop.compile_command(source[, filename[, symbol]])[source]
Tries to compile source, which should be a string of Python code and return a
code object if source is valid Python code. In that case, the filename
attribute of the code object will be filename, which defaults to
'<input>'
. Returns None
if source is not valid Python code, but is a
prefix of valid Python code.
If there is a problem with source, an exception will be raised.
SyntaxError
is raised if there is invalid Python syntax, and
OverflowError
or ValueError
if there is an invalid literal.
The symbol argument determines whether source is compiled as a statement
('single'
, the default) or as an expression ('eval'
). Any
other value will cause ValueError
to be raised.
Note
It is possible (but not likely) that the parser stops parsing with a successful outcome before reaching the end of the source; in this case, trailing symbols may be ignored instead of causing an error. For example, a backslash followed by two newlines may be followed by arbitrary garbage. This will be fixed once the API for the parser is better.
class codeop.Compile[source]
Instances of this class have __call__()
methods identical in signature to
the built-in function compile()
, but with the difference that if the
instance compiles program text containing a __future__
statement, the
instance 'remembers' and compiles all subsequent program texts with the
statement in force.
class codeop.CommandCompiler[source]
Instances of this class have __call__()
methods identical in signature to
compile_command()
; the difference is that if the instance compiles program
text containing a __future__
statement, the instance 'remembers' and
compiles all subsequent program texts with the statement in force.
A note on version compatibility: the Compile
and
CommandCompiler
are new in Python 2.2. If you want to enable the
future-tracking features of 2.2 but also retain compatibility with 2.1 and
earlier versions of Python you can either write
try:
from codeop import CommandCompiler
compile_command = CommandCompiler()
del CommandCompiler
except ImportError:
from codeop import compile_command
which is a low-impact change, but introduces possibly unwanted global state into your program, or you can write:
try:
from codeop import CommandCompiler
except ImportError:
def CommandCompiler():
from codeop import compile_command
return compile_command
and then call CommandCompiler
every time you need a fresh compiler object.