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from __future__ import unicode_literals
import inspect
import os
import signal
import sys
import threading
import weakref
from wcwidth import wcwidth
from six.moves import range
__all__ = (
'Event',
'DummyContext',
'get_cwidth',
'suspend_to_background_supported',
'is_conemu_ansi',
'is_windows',
'in_main_thread',
'take_using_weights',
'test_callable_args',
)
class Event(object):
"""
Simple event to which event handlers can be attached. For instance::
class Cls:
def __init__(self):
# Define event. The first parameter is the sender.
self.event = Event(self)
obj = Cls()
def handler(sender):
pass
# Add event handler by using the += operator.
obj.event += handler
# Fire event.
obj.event()
"""
def __init__(self, sender, handler=None):
self.sender = sender
self._handlers = []
if handler is not None:
self += handler
def __call__(self):
" Fire event. "
for handler in self._handlers:
handler(self.sender)
def fire(self):
" Alias for just calling the event. "
self()
def __iadd__(self, handler):
"""
Add another handler to this callback.
(Handler should be a callable that takes exactly one parameter: the
sender object.)
"""
# Test handler.
assert callable(handler)
if not test_callable_args(handler, [None]):
raise TypeError("%r doesn't take exactly one argument." % handler)
# Add to list of event handlers.
self._handlers.append(handler)
return self
def __isub__(self, handler):
"""
Remove a handler from this callback.
"""
self._handlers.remove(handler)
return self
# Cache of signatures. Improves the performance of `test_callable_args`.
_signatures_cache = weakref.WeakKeyDictionary()
def test_callable_args(func, args):
"""
Return True when this function can be called with the given arguments.
"""
assert isinstance(args, (list, tuple))
signature = getattr(inspect, 'signature', None)
if signature is not None:
# For Python 3, use inspect.signature.
try:
sig = _signatures_cache[func]
except KeyError:
sig = signature(func)
_signatures_cache[func] = sig
try:
sig.bind(*args)
except TypeError:
return False
else:
return True
else:
# For older Python versions, fall back to using getargspec.
spec = inspect.getargspec(func)
# Drop the 'self'
def drop_self(spec):
args, varargs, varkw, defaults = spec
if args[0:1] == ['self']:
args = args[1:]
return inspect.ArgSpec(args, varargs, varkw, defaults)
spec = drop_self(spec)
# When taking *args, always return True.
if spec.varargs is not None:
return True
# Test whether the given amount of args is between the min and max
# accepted argument counts.
return len(spec.args) - len(spec.defaults or []) <= len(args) <= len(spec.args)
class DummyContext(object):
"""
(contextlib.nested is not available on Py3)
"""
def __enter__(self):
pass
def __exit__(self, *a):
pass
class _CharSizesCache(dict):
"""
Cache for wcwidth sizes.
"""
def __missing__(self, string):
# Note: We use the `max(0, ...` because some non printable control
# characters, like e.g. Ctrl-underscore get a -1 wcwidth value.
# It can be possible that these characters end up in the input
# text.
if len(string) == 1:
result = max(0, wcwidth(string))
else:
result = sum(max(0, wcwidth(c)) for c in string)
# Cache for short strings.
# (It's hard to tell what we can consider short...)
if len(string) < 256:
self[string] = result
return result
_CHAR_SIZES_CACHE = _CharSizesCache()
def get_cwidth(string):
"""
Return width of a string. Wrapper around ``wcwidth``.
"""
return _CHAR_SIZES_CACHE[string]
def suspend_to_background_supported():
"""
Returns `True` when the Python implementation supports
suspend-to-background. This is typically `False' on Windows systems.
"""
return hasattr(signal, 'SIGTSTP')
def is_windows():
"""
True when we are using Windows.
"""
return sys.platform.startswith('win') # E.g. 'win32', not 'darwin' or 'linux2'
def is_conemu_ansi():
"""
True when the ConEmu Windows console is used.
"""
return is_windows() and os.environ.get('ConEmuANSI', 'OFF') == 'ON'
def in_main_thread():
"""
True when the current thread is the main thread.
"""
return threading.current_thread().__class__.__name__ == '_MainThread'
def take_using_weights(items, weights):
"""
Generator that keeps yielding items from the items list, in proportion to
their weight. For instance::
# Getting the first 70 items from this generator should have yielded 10
# times A, 20 times B and 40 times C, all distributed equally..
take_using_weights(['A', 'B', 'C'], [5, 10, 20])
:param items: List of items to take from.
:param weights: Integers representing the weight. (Numbers have to be
integers, not floats.)
"""
assert isinstance(items, list)
assert isinstance(weights, list)
assert all(isinstance(i, int) for i in weights)
assert len(items) == len(weights)
assert len(items) > 0
already_taken = [0 for i in items]
item_count = len(items)
max_weight = max(weights)
i = 0
while True:
# Each iteration of this loop, we fill up until by (total_weight/max_weight).
adding = True
while adding:
adding = False
for item_i, item, weight in zip(range(item_count), items, weights):
if already_taken[item_i] < i * weight / float(max_weight):
yield item
already_taken[item_i] += 1
adding = True
i += 1
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