diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/__init__.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/__init__.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..a2c19c06fe14476a9bfa4f1f60de7a997a41191c --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/__init__.py @@ -0,0 +1,24 @@ +# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- +import sys + +try: + from ._version import version as __version__ +except ImportError: + __version__ = 'unknown' + +__all__ = ['easter', 'parser', 'relativedelta', 'rrule', 'tz', + 'utils', 'zoneinfo'] + +def __getattr__(name): + import importlib + + if name in __all__: + return importlib.import_module("." + name, __name__) + raise AttributeError( + "module {!r} has not attribute {!r}".format(__name__, name) + ) + + +def __dir__(): + # __dir__ should include all the lazy-importable modules as well. + return [x for x in globals() if x not in sys.modules] + __all__ diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/__pycache__/__init__.cpython-310.pyc b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/__pycache__/__init__.cpython-310.pyc new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..f8feacbb0172be5a85a1125329c44a7627919975 Binary files /dev/null and b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/__pycache__/__init__.cpython-310.pyc differ diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/__pycache__/_common.cpython-310.pyc b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/__pycache__/_common.cpython-310.pyc new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..1fade9620e1705c63a7357b1ef39aff80cf30415 Binary files /dev/null and b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/__pycache__/_common.cpython-310.pyc differ diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/_common.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/_common.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..4eb2659bd2986125fcfb4afea5bae9efc2dcd1a0 --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/_common.py @@ -0,0 +1,43 @@ +""" +Common code used in multiple modules. +""" + + +class weekday(object): + __slots__ = ["weekday", "n"] + + def __init__(self, weekday, n=None): + self.weekday = weekday + self.n = n + + def __call__(self, n): + if n == self.n: + return self + else: + return self.__class__(self.weekday, n) + + def __eq__(self, other): + try: + if self.weekday != other.weekday or self.n != other.n: + return False + except AttributeError: + return False + return True + + def __hash__(self): + return hash(( + self.weekday, + self.n, + )) + + def __ne__(self, other): + return not (self == other) + + def __repr__(self): + s = ("MO", "TU", "WE", "TH", "FR", "SA", "SU")[self.weekday] + if not self.n: + return s + else: + return "%s(%+d)" % (s, self.n) + +# vim:ts=4:sw=4:et diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/relativedelta.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/relativedelta.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..cd323a549e0f182541ebcde2d2ea1adfbbd9701e --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/relativedelta.py @@ -0,0 +1,599 @@ +# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- +import datetime +import calendar + +import operator +from math import copysign + +from six import integer_types +from warnings import warn + +from ._common import weekday + +MO, TU, WE, TH, FR, SA, SU = weekdays = tuple(weekday(x) for x in range(7)) + +__all__ = ["relativedelta", "MO", "TU", "WE", "TH", "FR", "SA", "SU"] + + +class relativedelta(object): + """ + The relativedelta type is designed to be applied to an existing datetime and + can replace specific components of that datetime, or represents an interval + of time. + + It is based on the specification of the excellent work done by M.-A. Lemburg + in his + `mx.DateTime `_ extension. + However, notice that this type does *NOT* implement the same algorithm as + his work. Do *NOT* expect it to behave like mx.DateTime's counterpart. + + There are two different ways to build a relativedelta instance. The + first one is passing it two date/datetime classes:: + + relativedelta(datetime1, datetime2) + + The second one is passing it any number of the following keyword arguments:: + + relativedelta(arg1=x,arg2=y,arg3=z...) + + year, month, day, hour, minute, second, microsecond: + Absolute information (argument is singular); adding or subtracting a + relativedelta with absolute information does not perform an arithmetic + operation, but rather REPLACES the corresponding value in the + original datetime with the value(s) in relativedelta. + + years, months, weeks, days, hours, minutes, seconds, microseconds: + Relative information, may be negative (argument is plural); adding + or subtracting a relativedelta with relative information performs + the corresponding arithmetic operation on the original datetime value + with the information in the relativedelta. + + weekday: + One of the weekday instances (MO, TU, etc) available in the + relativedelta module. These instances may receive a parameter N, + specifying the Nth weekday, which could be positive or negative + (like MO(+1) or MO(-2)). Not specifying it is the same as specifying + +1. You can also use an integer, where 0=MO. This argument is always + relative e.g. if the calculated date is already Monday, using MO(1) + or MO(-1) won't change the day. To effectively make it absolute, use + it in combination with the day argument (e.g. day=1, MO(1) for first + Monday of the month). + + leapdays: + Will add given days to the date found, if year is a leap + year, and the date found is post 28 of february. + + yearday, nlyearday: + Set the yearday or the non-leap year day (jump leap days). + These are converted to day/month/leapdays information. + + There are relative and absolute forms of the keyword + arguments. The plural is relative, and the singular is + absolute. For each argument in the order below, the absolute form + is applied first (by setting each attribute to that value) and + then the relative form (by adding the value to the attribute). + + The order of attributes considered when this relativedelta is + added to a datetime is: + + 1. Year + 2. Month + 3. Day + 4. Hours + 5. Minutes + 6. Seconds + 7. Microseconds + + Finally, weekday is applied, using the rule described above. + + For example + + >>> from datetime import datetime + >>> from dateutil.relativedelta import relativedelta, MO + >>> dt = datetime(2018, 4, 9, 13, 37, 0) + >>> delta = relativedelta(hours=25, day=1, weekday=MO(1)) + >>> dt + delta + datetime.datetime(2018, 4, 2, 14, 37) + + First, the day is set to 1 (the first of the month), then 25 hours + are added, to get to the 2nd day and 14th hour, finally the + weekday is applied, but since the 2nd is already a Monday there is + no effect. + + """ + + def __init__(self, dt1=None, dt2=None, + years=0, months=0, days=0, leapdays=0, weeks=0, + hours=0, minutes=0, seconds=0, microseconds=0, + year=None, month=None, day=None, weekday=None, + yearday=None, nlyearday=None, + hour=None, minute=None, second=None, microsecond=None): + + if dt1 and dt2: + # datetime is a subclass of date. So both must be date + if not (isinstance(dt1, datetime.date) and + isinstance(dt2, datetime.date)): + raise TypeError("relativedelta only diffs datetime/date") + + # We allow two dates, or two datetimes, so we coerce them to be + # of the same type + if (isinstance(dt1, datetime.datetime) != + isinstance(dt2, datetime.datetime)): + if not isinstance(dt1, datetime.datetime): + dt1 = datetime.datetime.fromordinal(dt1.toordinal()) + elif not isinstance(dt2, datetime.datetime): + dt2 = datetime.datetime.fromordinal(dt2.toordinal()) + + self.years = 0 + self.months = 0 + self.days = 0 + self.leapdays = 0 + self.hours = 0 + self.minutes = 0 + self.seconds = 0 + self.microseconds = 0 + self.year = None + self.month = None + self.day = None + self.weekday = None + self.hour = None + self.minute = None + self.second = None + self.microsecond = None + self._has_time = 0 + + # Get year / month delta between the two + months = (dt1.year - dt2.year) * 12 + (dt1.month - dt2.month) + self._set_months(months) + + # Remove the year/month delta so the timedelta is just well-defined + # time units (seconds, days and microseconds) + dtm = self.__radd__(dt2) + + # If we've overshot our target, make an adjustment + if dt1 < dt2: + compare = operator.gt + increment = 1 + else: + compare = operator.lt + increment = -1 + + while compare(dt1, dtm): + months += increment + self._set_months(months) + dtm = self.__radd__(dt2) + + # Get the timedelta between the "months-adjusted" date and dt1 + delta = dt1 - dtm + self.seconds = delta.seconds + delta.days * 86400 + self.microseconds = delta.microseconds + else: + # Check for non-integer values in integer-only quantities + if any(x is not None and x != int(x) for x in (years, months)): + raise ValueError("Non-integer years and months are " + "ambiguous and not currently supported.") + + # Relative information + self.years = int(years) + self.months = int(months) + self.days = days + weeks * 7 + self.leapdays = leapdays + self.hours = hours + self.minutes = minutes + self.seconds = seconds + self.microseconds = microseconds + + # Absolute information + self.year = year + self.month = month + self.day = day + self.hour = hour + self.minute = minute + self.second = second + self.microsecond = microsecond + + if any(x is not None and int(x) != x + for x in (year, month, day, hour, + minute, second, microsecond)): + # For now we'll deprecate floats - later it'll be an error. + warn("Non-integer value passed as absolute information. " + + "This is not a well-defined condition and will raise " + + "errors in future versions.", DeprecationWarning) + + if isinstance(weekday, integer_types): + self.weekday = weekdays[weekday] + else: + self.weekday = weekday + + yday = 0 + if nlyearday: + yday = nlyearday + elif yearday: + yday = yearday + if yearday > 59: + self.leapdays = -1 + if yday: + ydayidx = [31, 59, 90, 120, 151, 181, 212, + 243, 273, 304, 334, 366] + for idx, ydays in enumerate(ydayidx): + if yday <= ydays: + self.month = idx+1 + if idx == 0: + self.day = yday + else: + self.day = yday-ydayidx[idx-1] + break + else: + raise ValueError("invalid year day (%d)" % yday) + + self._fix() + + def _fix(self): + if abs(self.microseconds) > 999999: + s = _sign(self.microseconds) + div, mod = divmod(self.microseconds * s, 1000000) + self.microseconds = mod * s + self.seconds += div * s + if abs(self.seconds) > 59: + s = _sign(self.seconds) + div, mod = divmod(self.seconds * s, 60) + self.seconds = mod * s + self.minutes += div * s + if abs(self.minutes) > 59: + s = _sign(self.minutes) + div, mod = divmod(self.minutes * s, 60) + self.minutes = mod * s + self.hours += div * s + if abs(self.hours) > 23: + s = _sign(self.hours) + div, mod = divmod(self.hours * s, 24) + self.hours = mod * s + self.days += div * s + if abs(self.months) > 11: + s = _sign(self.months) + div, mod = divmod(self.months * s, 12) + self.months = mod * s + self.years += div * s + if (self.hours or self.minutes or self.seconds or self.microseconds + or self.hour is not None or self.minute is not None or + self.second is not None or self.microsecond is not None): + self._has_time = 1 + else: + self._has_time = 0 + + @property + def weeks(self): + return int(self.days / 7.0) + + @weeks.setter + def weeks(self, value): + self.days = self.days - (self.weeks * 7) + value * 7 + + def _set_months(self, months): + self.months = months + if abs(self.months) > 11: + s = _sign(self.months) + div, mod = divmod(self.months * s, 12) + self.months = mod * s + self.years = div * s + else: + self.years = 0 + + def normalized(self): + """ + Return a version of this object represented entirely using integer + values for the relative attributes. + + >>> relativedelta(days=1.5, hours=2).normalized() + relativedelta(days=+1, hours=+14) + + :return: + Returns a :class:`dateutil.relativedelta.relativedelta` object. + """ + # Cascade remainders down (rounding each to roughly nearest microsecond) + days = int(self.days) + + hours_f = round(self.hours + 24 * (self.days - days), 11) + hours = int(hours_f) + + minutes_f = round(self.minutes + 60 * (hours_f - hours), 10) + minutes = int(minutes_f) + + seconds_f = round(self.seconds + 60 * (minutes_f - minutes), 8) + seconds = int(seconds_f) + + microseconds = round(self.microseconds + 1e6 * (seconds_f - seconds)) + + # Constructor carries overflow back up with call to _fix() + return self.__class__(years=self.years, months=self.months, + days=days, hours=hours, minutes=minutes, + seconds=seconds, microseconds=microseconds, + leapdays=self.leapdays, year=self.year, + month=self.month, day=self.day, + weekday=self.weekday, hour=self.hour, + minute=self.minute, second=self.second, + microsecond=self.microsecond) + + def __add__(self, other): + if isinstance(other, relativedelta): + return self.__class__(years=other.years + self.years, + months=other.months + self.months, + days=other.days + self.days, + hours=other.hours + self.hours, + minutes=other.minutes + self.minutes, + seconds=other.seconds + self.seconds, + microseconds=(other.microseconds + + self.microseconds), + leapdays=other.leapdays or self.leapdays, + year=(other.year if other.year is not None + else self.year), + month=(other.month if other.month is not None + else self.month), + day=(other.day if other.day is not None + else self.day), + weekday=(other.weekday if other.weekday is not None + else self.weekday), + hour=(other.hour if other.hour is not None + else self.hour), + minute=(other.minute if other.minute is not None + else self.minute), + second=(other.second if other.second is not None + else self.second), + microsecond=(other.microsecond if other.microsecond + is not None else + self.microsecond)) + if isinstance(other, datetime.timedelta): + return self.__class__(years=self.years, + months=self.months, + days=self.days + other.days, + hours=self.hours, + minutes=self.minutes, + seconds=self.seconds + other.seconds, + microseconds=self.microseconds + other.microseconds, + leapdays=self.leapdays, + year=self.year, + month=self.month, + day=self.day, + weekday=self.weekday, + hour=self.hour, + minute=self.minute, + second=self.second, + microsecond=self.microsecond) + if not isinstance(other, datetime.date): + return NotImplemented + elif self._has_time and not isinstance(other, datetime.datetime): + other = datetime.datetime.fromordinal(other.toordinal()) + year = (self.year or other.year)+self.years + month = self.month or other.month + if self.months: + assert 1 <= abs(self.months) <= 12 + month += self.months + if month > 12: + year += 1 + month -= 12 + elif month < 1: + year -= 1 + month += 12 + day = min(calendar.monthrange(year, month)[1], + self.day or other.day) + repl = {"year": year, "month": month, "day": day} + for attr in ["hour", "minute", "second", "microsecond"]: + value = getattr(self, attr) + if value is not None: + repl[attr] = value + days = self.days + if self.leapdays and month > 2 and calendar.isleap(year): + days += self.leapdays + ret = (other.replace(**repl) + + datetime.timedelta(days=days, + hours=self.hours, + minutes=self.minutes, + seconds=self.seconds, + microseconds=self.microseconds)) + if self.weekday: + weekday, nth = self.weekday.weekday, self.weekday.n or 1 + jumpdays = (abs(nth) - 1) * 7 + if nth > 0: + jumpdays += (7 - ret.weekday() + weekday) % 7 + else: + jumpdays += (ret.weekday() - weekday) % 7 + jumpdays *= -1 + ret += datetime.timedelta(days=jumpdays) + return ret + + def __radd__(self, other): + return self.__add__(other) + + def __rsub__(self, other): + return self.__neg__().__radd__(other) + + def __sub__(self, other): + if not isinstance(other, relativedelta): + return NotImplemented # In case the other object defines __rsub__ + return self.__class__(years=self.years - other.years, + months=self.months - other.months, + days=self.days - other.days, + hours=self.hours - other.hours, + minutes=self.minutes - other.minutes, + seconds=self.seconds - other.seconds, + microseconds=self.microseconds - other.microseconds, + leapdays=self.leapdays or other.leapdays, + year=(self.year if self.year is not None + else other.year), + month=(self.month if self.month is not None else + other.month), + day=(self.day if self.day is not None else + other.day), + weekday=(self.weekday if self.weekday is not None else + other.weekday), + hour=(self.hour if self.hour is not None else + other.hour), + minute=(self.minute if self.minute is not None else + other.minute), + second=(self.second if self.second is not None else + other.second), + microsecond=(self.microsecond if self.microsecond + is not None else + other.microsecond)) + + def __abs__(self): + return self.__class__(years=abs(self.years), + months=abs(self.months), + days=abs(self.days), + hours=abs(self.hours), + minutes=abs(self.minutes), + seconds=abs(self.seconds), + microseconds=abs(self.microseconds), + leapdays=self.leapdays, + year=self.year, + month=self.month, + day=self.day, + weekday=self.weekday, + hour=self.hour, + minute=self.minute, + second=self.second, + microsecond=self.microsecond) + + def __neg__(self): + return self.__class__(years=-self.years, + months=-self.months, + days=-self.days, + hours=-self.hours, + minutes=-self.minutes, + seconds=-self.seconds, + microseconds=-self.microseconds, + leapdays=self.leapdays, + year=self.year, + month=self.month, + day=self.day, + weekday=self.weekday, + hour=self.hour, + minute=self.minute, + second=self.second, + microsecond=self.microsecond) + + def __bool__(self): + return not (not self.years and + not self.months and + not self.days and + not self.hours and + not self.minutes and + not self.seconds and + not self.microseconds and + not self.leapdays and + self.year is None and + self.month is None and + self.day is None and + self.weekday is None and + self.hour is None and + self.minute is None and + self.second is None and + self.microsecond is None) + # Compatibility with Python 2.x + __nonzero__ = __bool__ + + def __mul__(self, other): + try: + f = float(other) + except TypeError: + return NotImplemented + + return self.__class__(years=int(self.years * f), + months=int(self.months * f), + days=int(self.days * f), + hours=int(self.hours * f), + minutes=int(self.minutes * f), + seconds=int(self.seconds * f), + microseconds=int(self.microseconds * f), + leapdays=self.leapdays, + year=self.year, + month=self.month, + day=self.day, + weekday=self.weekday, + hour=self.hour, + minute=self.minute, + second=self.second, + microsecond=self.microsecond) + + __rmul__ = __mul__ + + def __eq__(self, other): + if not isinstance(other, relativedelta): + return NotImplemented + if self.weekday or other.weekday: + if not self.weekday or not other.weekday: + return False + if self.weekday.weekday != other.weekday.weekday: + return False + n1, n2 = self.weekday.n, other.weekday.n + if n1 != n2 and not ((not n1 or n1 == 1) and (not n2 or n2 == 1)): + return False + return (self.years == other.years and + self.months == other.months and + self.days == other.days and + self.hours == other.hours and + self.minutes == other.minutes and + self.seconds == other.seconds and + self.microseconds == other.microseconds and + self.leapdays == other.leapdays and + self.year == other.year and + self.month == other.month and + self.day == other.day and + self.hour == other.hour and + self.minute == other.minute and + self.second == other.second and + self.microsecond == other.microsecond) + + def __hash__(self): + return hash(( + self.weekday, + self.years, + self.months, + self.days, + self.hours, + self.minutes, + self.seconds, + self.microseconds, + self.leapdays, + self.year, + self.month, + self.day, + self.hour, + self.minute, + self.second, + self.microsecond, + )) + + def __ne__(self, other): + return not self.__eq__(other) + + def __div__(self, other): + try: + reciprocal = 1 / float(other) + except TypeError: + return NotImplemented + + return self.__mul__(reciprocal) + + __truediv__ = __div__ + + def __repr__(self): + l = [] + for attr in ["years", "months", "days", "leapdays", + "hours", "minutes", "seconds", "microseconds"]: + value = getattr(self, attr) + if value: + l.append("{attr}={value:+g}".format(attr=attr, value=value)) + for attr in ["year", "month", "day", "weekday", + "hour", "minute", "second", "microsecond"]: + value = getattr(self, attr) + if value is not None: + l.append("{attr}={value}".format(attr=attr, value=repr(value))) + return "{classname}({attrs})".format(classname=self.__class__.__name__, + attrs=", ".join(l)) + + +def _sign(x): + return int(copysign(1, x)) + +# vim:ts=4:sw=4:et diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/rrule.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/rrule.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..571a0d2bc886a7ea4c06196b2f52e740c2ed6e9f --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/rrule.py @@ -0,0 +1,1737 @@ +# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- +""" +The rrule module offers a small, complete, and very fast, implementation of +the recurrence rules documented in the +`iCalendar RFC `_, +including support for caching of results. +""" +import calendar +import datetime +import heapq +import itertools +import re +import sys +from functools import wraps +# For warning about deprecation of until and count +from warnings import warn + +from six import advance_iterator, integer_types + +from six.moves import _thread, range + +from ._common import weekday as weekdaybase + +try: + from math import gcd +except ImportError: + from fractions import gcd + +__all__ = ["rrule", "rruleset", "rrulestr", + "YEARLY", "MONTHLY", "WEEKLY", "DAILY", + "HOURLY", "MINUTELY", "SECONDLY", + "MO", "TU", "WE", "TH", "FR", "SA", "SU"] + +# Every mask is 7 days longer to handle cross-year weekly periods. +M366MASK = tuple([1]*31+[2]*29+[3]*31+[4]*30+[5]*31+[6]*30 + + [7]*31+[8]*31+[9]*30+[10]*31+[11]*30+[12]*31+[1]*7) +M365MASK = list(M366MASK) +M29, M30, M31 = list(range(1, 30)), list(range(1, 31)), list(range(1, 32)) +MDAY366MASK = tuple(M31+M29+M31+M30+M31+M30+M31+M31+M30+M31+M30+M31+M31[:7]) +MDAY365MASK = list(MDAY366MASK) +M29, M30, M31 = list(range(-29, 0)), list(range(-30, 0)), list(range(-31, 0)) +NMDAY366MASK = tuple(M31+M29+M31+M30+M31+M30+M31+M31+M30+M31+M30+M31+M31[:7]) +NMDAY365MASK = list(NMDAY366MASK) +M366RANGE = (0, 31, 60, 91, 121, 152, 182, 213, 244, 274, 305, 335, 366) +M365RANGE = (0, 31, 59, 90, 120, 151, 181, 212, 243, 273, 304, 334, 365) +WDAYMASK = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]*55 +del M29, M30, M31, M365MASK[59], MDAY365MASK[59], NMDAY365MASK[31] +MDAY365MASK = tuple(MDAY365MASK) +M365MASK = tuple(M365MASK) + +FREQNAMES = ['YEARLY', 'MONTHLY', 'WEEKLY', 'DAILY', 'HOURLY', 'MINUTELY', 'SECONDLY'] + +(YEARLY, + MONTHLY, + WEEKLY, + DAILY, + HOURLY, + MINUTELY, + SECONDLY) = list(range(7)) + +# Imported on demand. +easter = None +parser = None + + +class weekday(weekdaybase): + """ + This version of weekday does not allow n = 0. + """ + def __init__(self, wkday, n=None): + if n == 0: + raise ValueError("Can't create weekday with n==0") + + super(weekday, self).__init__(wkday, n) + + +MO, TU, WE, TH, FR, SA, SU = weekdays = tuple(weekday(x) for x in range(7)) + + +def _invalidates_cache(f): + """ + Decorator for rruleset methods which may invalidate the + cached length. + """ + @wraps(f) + def inner_func(self, *args, **kwargs): + rv = f(self, *args, **kwargs) + self._invalidate_cache() + return rv + + return inner_func + + +class rrulebase(object): + def __init__(self, cache=False): + if cache: + self._cache = [] + self._cache_lock = _thread.allocate_lock() + self._invalidate_cache() + else: + self._cache = None + self._cache_complete = False + self._len = None + + def __iter__(self): + if self._cache_complete: + return iter(self._cache) + elif self._cache is None: + return self._iter() + else: + return self._iter_cached() + + def _invalidate_cache(self): + if self._cache is not None: + self._cache = [] + self._cache_complete = False + self._cache_gen = self._iter() + + if self._cache_lock.locked(): + self._cache_lock.release() + + self._len = None + + def _iter_cached(self): + i = 0 + gen = self._cache_gen + cache = self._cache + acquire = self._cache_lock.acquire + release = self._cache_lock.release + while gen: + if i == len(cache): + acquire() + if self._cache_complete: + break + try: + for j in range(10): + cache.append(advance_iterator(gen)) + except StopIteration: + self._cache_gen = gen = None + self._cache_complete = True + break + release() + yield cache[i] + i += 1 + while i < self._len: + yield cache[i] + i += 1 + + def __getitem__(self, item): + if self._cache_complete: + return self._cache[item] + elif isinstance(item, slice): + if item.step and item.step < 0: + return list(iter(self))[item] + else: + return list(itertools.islice(self, + item.start or 0, + item.stop or sys.maxsize, + item.step or 1)) + elif item >= 0: + gen = iter(self) + try: + for i in range(item+1): + res = advance_iterator(gen) + except StopIteration: + raise IndexError + return res + else: + return list(iter(self))[item] + + def __contains__(self, item): + if self._cache_complete: + return item in self._cache + else: + for i in self: + if i == item: + return True + elif i > item: + return False + return False + + # __len__() introduces a large performance penalty. + def count(self): + """ Returns the number of recurrences in this set. It will have go + through the whole recurrence, if this hasn't been done before. """ + if self._len is None: + for x in self: + pass + return self._len + + def before(self, dt, inc=False): + """ Returns the last recurrence before the given datetime instance. The + inc keyword defines what happens if dt is an occurrence. With + inc=True, if dt itself is an occurrence, it will be returned. """ + if self._cache_complete: + gen = self._cache + else: + gen = self + last = None + if inc: + for i in gen: + if i > dt: + break + last = i + else: + for i in gen: + if i >= dt: + break + last = i + return last + + def after(self, dt, inc=False): + """ Returns the first recurrence after the given datetime instance. The + inc keyword defines what happens if dt is an occurrence. With + inc=True, if dt itself is an occurrence, it will be returned. """ + if self._cache_complete: + gen = self._cache + else: + gen = self + if inc: + for i in gen: + if i >= dt: + return i + else: + for i in gen: + if i > dt: + return i + return None + + def xafter(self, dt, count=None, inc=False): + """ + Generator which yields up to `count` recurrences after the given + datetime instance, equivalent to `after`. + + :param dt: + The datetime at which to start generating recurrences. + + :param count: + The maximum number of recurrences to generate. If `None` (default), + dates are generated until the recurrence rule is exhausted. + + :param inc: + If `dt` is an instance of the rule and `inc` is `True`, it is + included in the output. + + :yields: Yields a sequence of `datetime` objects. + """ + + if self._cache_complete: + gen = self._cache + else: + gen = self + + # Select the comparison function + if inc: + comp = lambda dc, dtc: dc >= dtc + else: + comp = lambda dc, dtc: dc > dtc + + # Generate dates + n = 0 + for d in gen: + if comp(d, dt): + if count is not None: + n += 1 + if n > count: + break + + yield d + + def between(self, after, before, inc=False, count=1): + """ Returns all the occurrences of the rrule between after and before. + The inc keyword defines what happens if after and/or before are + themselves occurrences. With inc=True, they will be included in the + list, if they are found in the recurrence set. """ + if self._cache_complete: + gen = self._cache + else: + gen = self + started = False + l = [] + if inc: + for i in gen: + if i > before: + break + elif not started: + if i >= after: + started = True + l.append(i) + else: + l.append(i) + else: + for i in gen: + if i >= before: + break + elif not started: + if i > after: + started = True + l.append(i) + else: + l.append(i) + return l + + +class rrule(rrulebase): + """ + That's the base of the rrule operation. It accepts all the keywords + defined in the RFC as its constructor parameters (except byday, + which was renamed to byweekday) and more. The constructor prototype is:: + + rrule(freq) + + Where freq must be one of YEARLY, MONTHLY, WEEKLY, DAILY, HOURLY, MINUTELY, + or SECONDLY. + + .. note:: + Per RFC section 3.3.10, recurrence instances falling on invalid dates + and times are ignored rather than coerced: + + Recurrence rules may generate recurrence instances with an invalid + date (e.g., February 30) or nonexistent local time (e.g., 1:30 AM + on a day where the local time is moved forward by an hour at 1:00 + AM). Such recurrence instances MUST be ignored and MUST NOT be + counted as part of the recurrence set. + + This can lead to possibly surprising behavior when, for example, the + start date occurs at the end of the month: + + >>> from dateutil.rrule import rrule, MONTHLY + >>> from datetime import datetime + >>> start_date = datetime(2014, 12, 31) + >>> list(rrule(freq=MONTHLY, count=4, dtstart=start_date)) + ... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE + [datetime.datetime(2014, 12, 31, 0, 0), + datetime.datetime(2015, 1, 31, 0, 0), + datetime.datetime(2015, 3, 31, 0, 0), + datetime.datetime(2015, 5, 31, 0, 0)] + + Additionally, it supports the following keyword arguments: + + :param dtstart: + The recurrence start. Besides being the base for the recurrence, + missing parameters in the final recurrence instances will also be + extracted from this date. If not given, datetime.now() will be used + instead. + :param interval: + The interval between each freq iteration. For example, when using + YEARLY, an interval of 2 means once every two years, but with HOURLY, + it means once every two hours. The default interval is 1. + :param wkst: + The week start day. Must be one of the MO, TU, WE constants, or an + integer, specifying the first day of the week. This will affect + recurrences based on weekly periods. The default week start is got + from calendar.firstweekday(), and may be modified by + calendar.setfirstweekday(). + :param count: + If given, this determines how many occurrences will be generated. + + .. note:: + As of version 2.5.0, the use of the keyword ``until`` in conjunction + with ``count`` is deprecated, to make sure ``dateutil`` is fully + compliant with `RFC-5545 Sec. 3.3.10 `_. Therefore, ``until`` and ``count`` + **must not** occur in the same call to ``rrule``. + :param until: + If given, this must be a datetime instance specifying the upper-bound + limit of the recurrence. The last recurrence in the rule is the greatest + datetime that is less than or equal to the value specified in the + ``until`` parameter. + + .. note:: + As of version 2.5.0, the use of the keyword ``until`` in conjunction + with ``count`` is deprecated, to make sure ``dateutil`` is fully + compliant with `RFC-5545 Sec. 3.3.10 `_. Therefore, ``until`` and ``count`` + **must not** occur in the same call to ``rrule``. + :param bysetpos: + If given, it must be either an integer, or a sequence of integers, + positive or negative. Each given integer will specify an occurrence + number, corresponding to the nth occurrence of the rule inside the + frequency period. For example, a bysetpos of -1 if combined with a + MONTHLY frequency, and a byweekday of (MO, TU, WE, TH, FR), will + result in the last work day of every month. + :param bymonth: + If given, it must be either an integer, or a sequence of integers, + meaning the months to apply the recurrence to. + :param bymonthday: + If given, it must be either an integer, or a sequence of integers, + meaning the month days to apply the recurrence to. + :param byyearday: + If given, it must be either an integer, or a sequence of integers, + meaning the year days to apply the recurrence to. + :param byeaster: + If given, it must be either an integer, or a sequence of integers, + positive or negative. Each integer will define an offset from the + Easter Sunday. Passing the offset 0 to byeaster will yield the Easter + Sunday itself. This is an extension to the RFC specification. + :param byweekno: + If given, it must be either an integer, or a sequence of integers, + meaning the week numbers to apply the recurrence to. Week numbers + have the meaning described in ISO8601, that is, the first week of + the year is that containing at least four days of the new year. + :param byweekday: + If given, it must be either an integer (0 == MO), a sequence of + integers, one of the weekday constants (MO, TU, etc), or a sequence + of these constants. When given, these variables will define the + weekdays where the recurrence will be applied. It's also possible to + use an argument n for the weekday instances, which will mean the nth + occurrence of this weekday in the period. For example, with MONTHLY, + or with YEARLY and BYMONTH, using FR(+1) in byweekday will specify the + first friday of the month where the recurrence happens. Notice that in + the RFC documentation, this is specified as BYDAY, but was renamed to + avoid the ambiguity of that keyword. + :param byhour: + If given, it must be either an integer, or a sequence of integers, + meaning the hours to apply the recurrence to. + :param byminute: + If given, it must be either an integer, or a sequence of integers, + meaning the minutes to apply the recurrence to. + :param bysecond: + If given, it must be either an integer, or a sequence of integers, + meaning the seconds to apply the recurrence to. + :param cache: + If given, it must be a boolean value specifying to enable or disable + caching of results. If you will use the same rrule instance multiple + times, enabling caching will improve the performance considerably. + """ + def __init__(self, freq, dtstart=None, + interval=1, wkst=None, count=None, until=None, bysetpos=None, + bymonth=None, bymonthday=None, byyearday=None, byeaster=None, + byweekno=None, byweekday=None, + byhour=None, byminute=None, bysecond=None, + cache=False): + super(rrule, self).__init__(cache) + global easter + if not dtstart: + if until and until.tzinfo: + dtstart = datetime.datetime.now(tz=until.tzinfo).replace(microsecond=0) + else: + dtstart = datetime.datetime.now().replace(microsecond=0) + elif not isinstance(dtstart, datetime.datetime): + dtstart = datetime.datetime.fromordinal(dtstart.toordinal()) + else: + dtstart = dtstart.replace(microsecond=0) + self._dtstart = dtstart + self._tzinfo = dtstart.tzinfo + self._freq = freq + self._interval = interval + self._count = count + + # Cache the original byxxx rules, if they are provided, as the _byxxx + # attributes do not necessarily map to the inputs, and this can be + # a problem in generating the strings. Only store things if they've + # been supplied (the string retrieval will just use .get()) + self._original_rule = {} + + if until and not isinstance(until, datetime.datetime): + until = datetime.datetime.fromordinal(until.toordinal()) + self._until = until + + if self._dtstart and self._until: + if (self._dtstart.tzinfo is not None) != (self._until.tzinfo is not None): + # According to RFC5545 Section 3.3.10: + # https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5545#section-3.3.10 + # + # > If the "DTSTART" property is specified as a date with UTC + # > time or a date with local time and time zone reference, + # > then the UNTIL rule part MUST be specified as a date with + # > UTC time. + raise ValueError( + 'RRULE UNTIL values must be specified in UTC when DTSTART ' + 'is timezone-aware' + ) + + if count is not None and until: + warn("Using both 'count' and 'until' is inconsistent with RFC 5545" + " and has been deprecated in dateutil. Future versions will " + "raise an error.", DeprecationWarning) + + if wkst is None: + self._wkst = calendar.firstweekday() + elif isinstance(wkst, integer_types): + self._wkst = wkst + else: + self._wkst = wkst.weekday + + if bysetpos is None: + self._bysetpos = None + elif isinstance(bysetpos, integer_types): + if bysetpos == 0 or not (-366 <= bysetpos <= 366): + raise ValueError("bysetpos must be between 1 and 366, " + "or between -366 and -1") + self._bysetpos = (bysetpos,) + else: + self._bysetpos = tuple(bysetpos) + for pos in self._bysetpos: + if pos == 0 or not (-366 <= pos <= 366): + raise ValueError("bysetpos must be between 1 and 366, " + "or between -366 and -1") + + if self._bysetpos: + self._original_rule['bysetpos'] = self._bysetpos + + if (byweekno is None and byyearday is None and bymonthday is None and + byweekday is None and byeaster is None): + if freq == YEARLY: + if bymonth is None: + bymonth = dtstart.month + self._original_rule['bymonth'] = None + bymonthday = dtstart.day + self._original_rule['bymonthday'] = None + elif freq == MONTHLY: + bymonthday = dtstart.day + self._original_rule['bymonthday'] = None + elif freq == WEEKLY: + byweekday = dtstart.weekday() + self._original_rule['byweekday'] = None + + # bymonth + if bymonth is None: + self._bymonth = None + else: + if isinstance(bymonth, integer_types): + bymonth = (bymonth,) + + self._bymonth = tuple(sorted(set(bymonth))) + + if 'bymonth' not in self._original_rule: + self._original_rule['bymonth'] = self._bymonth + + # byyearday + if byyearday is None: + self._byyearday = None + else: + if isinstance(byyearday, integer_types): + byyearday = (byyearday,) + + self._byyearday = tuple(sorted(set(byyearday))) + self._original_rule['byyearday'] = self._byyearday + + # byeaster + if byeaster is not None: + if not easter: + from dateutil import easter + if isinstance(byeaster, integer_types): + self._byeaster = (byeaster,) + else: + self._byeaster = tuple(sorted(byeaster)) + + self._original_rule['byeaster'] = self._byeaster + else: + self._byeaster = None + + # bymonthday + if bymonthday is None: + self._bymonthday = () + self._bynmonthday = () + else: + if isinstance(bymonthday, integer_types): + bymonthday = (bymonthday,) + + bymonthday = set(bymonthday) # Ensure it's unique + + self._bymonthday = tuple(sorted(x for x in bymonthday if x > 0)) + self._bynmonthday = tuple(sorted(x for x in bymonthday if x < 0)) + + # Storing positive numbers first, then negative numbers + if 'bymonthday' not in self._original_rule: + self._original_rule['bymonthday'] = tuple( + itertools.chain(self._bymonthday, self._bynmonthday)) + + # byweekno + if byweekno is None: + self._byweekno = None + else: + if isinstance(byweekno, integer_types): + byweekno = (byweekno,) + + self._byweekno = tuple(sorted(set(byweekno))) + + self._original_rule['byweekno'] = self._byweekno + + # byweekday / bynweekday + if byweekday is None: + self._byweekday = None + self._bynweekday = None + else: + # If it's one of the valid non-sequence types, convert to a + # single-element sequence before the iterator that builds the + # byweekday set. + if isinstance(byweekday, integer_types) or hasattr(byweekday, "n"): + byweekday = (byweekday,) + + self._byweekday = set() + self._bynweekday = set() + for wday in byweekday: + if isinstance(wday, integer_types): + self._byweekday.add(wday) + elif not wday.n or freq > MONTHLY: + self._byweekday.add(wday.weekday) + else: + self._bynweekday.add((wday.weekday, wday.n)) + + if not self._byweekday: + self._byweekday = None + elif not self._bynweekday: + self._bynweekday = None + + if self._byweekday is not None: + self._byweekday = tuple(sorted(self._byweekday)) + orig_byweekday = [weekday(x) for x in self._byweekday] + else: + orig_byweekday = () + + if self._bynweekday is not None: + self._bynweekday = tuple(sorted(self._bynweekday)) + orig_bynweekday = [weekday(*x) for x in self._bynweekday] + else: + orig_bynweekday = () + + if 'byweekday' not in self._original_rule: + self._original_rule['byweekday'] = tuple(itertools.chain( + orig_byweekday, orig_bynweekday)) + + # byhour + if byhour is None: + if freq < HOURLY: + self._byhour = {dtstart.hour} + else: + self._byhour = None + else: + if isinstance(byhour, integer_types): + byhour = (byhour,) + + if freq == HOURLY: + self._byhour = self.__construct_byset(start=dtstart.hour, + byxxx=byhour, + base=24) + else: + self._byhour = set(byhour) + + self._byhour = tuple(sorted(self._byhour)) + self._original_rule['byhour'] = self._byhour + + # byminute + if byminute is None: + if freq < MINUTELY: + self._byminute = {dtstart.minute} + else: + self._byminute = None + else: + if isinstance(byminute, integer_types): + byminute = (byminute,) + + if freq == MINUTELY: + self._byminute = self.__construct_byset(start=dtstart.minute, + byxxx=byminute, + base=60) + else: + self._byminute = set(byminute) + + self._byminute = tuple(sorted(self._byminute)) + self._original_rule['byminute'] = self._byminute + + # bysecond + if bysecond is None: + if freq < SECONDLY: + self._bysecond = ((dtstart.second,)) + else: + self._bysecond = None + else: + if isinstance(bysecond, integer_types): + bysecond = (bysecond,) + + self._bysecond = set(bysecond) + + if freq == SECONDLY: + self._bysecond = self.__construct_byset(start=dtstart.second, + byxxx=bysecond, + base=60) + else: + self._bysecond = set(bysecond) + + self._bysecond = tuple(sorted(self._bysecond)) + self._original_rule['bysecond'] = self._bysecond + + if self._freq >= HOURLY: + self._timeset = None + else: + self._timeset = [] + for hour in self._byhour: + for minute in self._byminute: + for second in self._bysecond: + self._timeset.append( + datetime.time(hour, minute, second, + tzinfo=self._tzinfo)) + self._timeset.sort() + self._timeset = tuple(self._timeset) + + def __str__(self): + """ + Output a string that would generate this RRULE if passed to rrulestr. + This is mostly compatible with RFC5545, except for the + dateutil-specific extension BYEASTER. + """ + + output = [] + h, m, s = [None] * 3 + if self._dtstart: + output.append(self._dtstart.strftime('DTSTART:%Y%m%dT%H%M%S')) + h, m, s = self._dtstart.timetuple()[3:6] + + parts = ['FREQ=' + FREQNAMES[self._freq]] + if self._interval != 1: + parts.append('INTERVAL=' + str(self._interval)) + + if self._wkst: + parts.append('WKST=' + repr(weekday(self._wkst))[0:2]) + + if self._count is not None: + parts.append('COUNT=' + str(self._count)) + + if self._until: + parts.append(self._until.strftime('UNTIL=%Y%m%dT%H%M%S')) + + if self._original_rule.get('byweekday') is not None: + # The str() method on weekday objects doesn't generate + # RFC5545-compliant strings, so we should modify that. + original_rule = dict(self._original_rule) + wday_strings = [] + for wday in original_rule['byweekday']: + if wday.n: + wday_strings.append('{n:+d}{wday}'.format( + n=wday.n, + wday=repr(wday)[0:2])) + else: + wday_strings.append(repr(wday)) + + original_rule['byweekday'] = wday_strings + else: + original_rule = self._original_rule + + partfmt = '{name}={vals}' + for name, key in [('BYSETPOS', 'bysetpos'), + ('BYMONTH', 'bymonth'), + ('BYMONTHDAY', 'bymonthday'), + ('BYYEARDAY', 'byyearday'), + ('BYWEEKNO', 'byweekno'), + ('BYDAY', 'byweekday'), + ('BYHOUR', 'byhour'), + ('BYMINUTE', 'byminute'), + ('BYSECOND', 'bysecond'), + ('BYEASTER', 'byeaster')]: + value = original_rule.get(key) + if value: + parts.append(partfmt.format(name=name, vals=(','.join(str(v) + for v in value)))) + + output.append('RRULE:' + ';'.join(parts)) + return '\n'.join(output) + + def replace(self, **kwargs): + """Return new rrule with same attributes except for those attributes given new + values by whichever keyword arguments are specified.""" + new_kwargs = {"interval": self._interval, + "count": self._count, + "dtstart": self._dtstart, + "freq": self._freq, + "until": self._until, + "wkst": self._wkst, + "cache": False if self._cache is None else True } + new_kwargs.update(self._original_rule) + new_kwargs.update(kwargs) + return rrule(**new_kwargs) + + def _iter(self): + year, month, day, hour, minute, second, weekday, yearday, _ = \ + self._dtstart.timetuple() + + # Some local variables to speed things up a bit + freq = self._freq + interval = self._interval + wkst = self._wkst + until = self._until + bymonth = self._bymonth + byweekno = self._byweekno + byyearday = self._byyearday + byweekday = self._byweekday + byeaster = self._byeaster + bymonthday = self._bymonthday + bynmonthday = self._bynmonthday + bysetpos = self._bysetpos + byhour = self._byhour + byminute = self._byminute + bysecond = self._bysecond + + ii = _iterinfo(self) + ii.rebuild(year, month) + + getdayset = {YEARLY: ii.ydayset, + MONTHLY: ii.mdayset, + WEEKLY: ii.wdayset, + DAILY: ii.ddayset, + HOURLY: ii.ddayset, + MINUTELY: ii.ddayset, + SECONDLY: ii.ddayset}[freq] + + if freq < HOURLY: + timeset = self._timeset + else: + gettimeset = {HOURLY: ii.htimeset, + MINUTELY: ii.mtimeset, + SECONDLY: ii.stimeset}[freq] + if ((freq >= HOURLY and + self._byhour and hour not in self._byhour) or + (freq >= MINUTELY and + self._byminute and minute not in self._byminute) or + (freq >= SECONDLY and + self._bysecond and second not in self._bysecond)): + timeset = () + else: + timeset = gettimeset(hour, minute, second) + + total = 0 + count = self._count + while True: + # Get dayset with the right frequency + dayset, start, end = getdayset(year, month, day) + + # Do the "hard" work ;-) + filtered = False + for i in dayset[start:end]: + if ((bymonth and ii.mmask[i] not in bymonth) or + (byweekno and not ii.wnomask[i]) or + (byweekday and ii.wdaymask[i] not in byweekday) or + (ii.nwdaymask and not ii.nwdaymask[i]) or + (byeaster and not ii.eastermask[i]) or + ((bymonthday or bynmonthday) and + ii.mdaymask[i] not in bymonthday and + ii.nmdaymask[i] not in bynmonthday) or + (byyearday and + ((i < ii.yearlen and i+1 not in byyearday and + -ii.yearlen+i not in byyearday) or + (i >= ii.yearlen and i+1-ii.yearlen not in byyearday and + -ii.nextyearlen+i-ii.yearlen not in byyearday)))): + dayset[i] = None + filtered = True + + # Output results + if bysetpos and timeset: + poslist = [] + for pos in bysetpos: + if pos < 0: + daypos, timepos = divmod(pos, len(timeset)) + else: + daypos, timepos = divmod(pos-1, len(timeset)) + try: + i = [x for x in dayset[start:end] + if x is not None][daypos] + time = timeset[timepos] + except IndexError: + pass + else: + date = datetime.date.fromordinal(ii.yearordinal+i) + res = datetime.datetime.combine(date, time) + if res not in poslist: + poslist.append(res) + poslist.sort() + for res in poslist: + if until and res > until: + self._len = total + return + elif res >= self._dtstart: + if count is not None: + count -= 1 + if count < 0: + self._len = total + return + total += 1 + yield res + else: + for i in dayset[start:end]: + if i is not None: + date = datetime.date.fromordinal(ii.yearordinal + i) + for time in timeset: + res = datetime.datetime.combine(date, time) + if until and res > until: + self._len = total + return + elif res >= self._dtstart: + if count is not None: + count -= 1 + if count < 0: + self._len = total + return + + total += 1 + yield res + + # Handle frequency and interval + fixday = False + if freq == YEARLY: + year += interval + if year > datetime.MAXYEAR: + self._len = total + return + ii.rebuild(year, month) + elif freq == MONTHLY: + month += interval + if month > 12: + div, mod = divmod(month, 12) + month = mod + year += div + if month == 0: + month = 12 + year -= 1 + if year > datetime.MAXYEAR: + self._len = total + return + ii.rebuild(year, month) + elif freq == WEEKLY: + if wkst > weekday: + day += -(weekday+1+(6-wkst))+self._interval*7 + else: + day += -(weekday-wkst)+self._interval*7 + weekday = wkst + fixday = True + elif freq == DAILY: + day += interval + fixday = True + elif freq == HOURLY: + if filtered: + # Jump to one iteration before next day + hour += ((23-hour)//interval)*interval + + if byhour: + ndays, hour = self.__mod_distance(value=hour, + byxxx=self._byhour, + base=24) + else: + ndays, hour = divmod(hour+interval, 24) + + if ndays: + day += ndays + fixday = True + + timeset = gettimeset(hour, minute, second) + elif freq == MINUTELY: + if filtered: + # Jump to one iteration before next day + minute += ((1439-(hour*60+minute))//interval)*interval + + valid = False + rep_rate = (24*60) + for j in range(rep_rate // gcd(interval, rep_rate)): + if byminute: + nhours, minute = \ + self.__mod_distance(value=minute, + byxxx=self._byminute, + base=60) + else: + nhours, minute = divmod(minute+interval, 60) + + div, hour = divmod(hour+nhours, 24) + if div: + day += div + fixday = True + filtered = False + + if not byhour or hour in byhour: + valid = True + break + + if not valid: + raise ValueError('Invalid combination of interval and ' + + 'byhour resulting in empty rule.') + + timeset = gettimeset(hour, minute, second) + elif freq == SECONDLY: + if filtered: + # Jump to one iteration before next day + second += (((86399 - (hour * 3600 + minute * 60 + second)) + // interval) * interval) + + rep_rate = (24 * 3600) + valid = False + for j in range(0, rep_rate // gcd(interval, rep_rate)): + if bysecond: + nminutes, second = \ + self.__mod_distance(value=second, + byxxx=self._bysecond, + base=60) + else: + nminutes, second = divmod(second+interval, 60) + + div, minute = divmod(minute+nminutes, 60) + if div: + hour += div + div, hour = divmod(hour, 24) + if div: + day += div + fixday = True + + if ((not byhour or hour in byhour) and + (not byminute or minute in byminute) and + (not bysecond or second in bysecond)): + valid = True + break + + if not valid: + raise ValueError('Invalid combination of interval, ' + + 'byhour and byminute resulting in empty' + + ' rule.') + + timeset = gettimeset(hour, minute, second) + + if fixday and day > 28: + daysinmonth = calendar.monthrange(year, month)[1] + if day > daysinmonth: + while day > daysinmonth: + day -= daysinmonth + month += 1 + if month == 13: + month = 1 + year += 1 + if year > datetime.MAXYEAR: + self._len = total + return + daysinmonth = calendar.monthrange(year, month)[1] + ii.rebuild(year, month) + + def __construct_byset(self, start, byxxx, base): + """ + If a `BYXXX` sequence is passed to the constructor at the same level as + `FREQ` (e.g. `FREQ=HOURLY,BYHOUR={2,4,7},INTERVAL=3`), there are some + specifications which cannot be reached given some starting conditions. + + This occurs whenever the interval is not coprime with the base of a + given unit and the difference between the starting position and the + ending position is not coprime with the greatest common denominator + between the interval and the base. For example, with a FREQ of hourly + starting at 17:00 and an interval of 4, the only valid values for + BYHOUR would be {21, 1, 5, 9, 13, 17}, because 4 and 24 are not + coprime. + + :param start: + Specifies the starting position. + :param byxxx: + An iterable containing the list of allowed values. + :param base: + The largest allowable value for the specified frequency (e.g. + 24 hours, 60 minutes). + + This does not preserve the type of the iterable, returning a set, since + the values should be unique and the order is irrelevant, this will + speed up later lookups. + + In the event of an empty set, raises a :exception:`ValueError`, as this + results in an empty rrule. + """ + + cset = set() + + # Support a single byxxx value. + if isinstance(byxxx, integer_types): + byxxx = (byxxx, ) + + for num in byxxx: + i_gcd = gcd(self._interval, base) + # Use divmod rather than % because we need to wrap negative nums. + if i_gcd == 1 or divmod(num - start, i_gcd)[1] == 0: + cset.add(num) + + if len(cset) == 0: + raise ValueError("Invalid rrule byxxx generates an empty set.") + + return cset + + def __mod_distance(self, value, byxxx, base): + """ + Calculates the next value in a sequence where the `FREQ` parameter is + specified along with a `BYXXX` parameter at the same "level" + (e.g. `HOURLY` specified with `BYHOUR`). + + :param value: + The old value of the component. + :param byxxx: + The `BYXXX` set, which should have been generated by + `rrule._construct_byset`, or something else which checks that a + valid rule is present. + :param base: + The largest allowable value for the specified frequency (e.g. + 24 hours, 60 minutes). + + If a valid value is not found after `base` iterations (the maximum + number before the sequence would start to repeat), this raises a + :exception:`ValueError`, as no valid values were found. + + This returns a tuple of `divmod(n*interval, base)`, where `n` is the + smallest number of `interval` repetitions until the next specified + value in `byxxx` is found. + """ + accumulator = 0 + for ii in range(1, base + 1): + # Using divmod() over % to account for negative intervals + div, value = divmod(value + self._interval, base) + accumulator += div + if value in byxxx: + return (accumulator, value) + + +class _iterinfo(object): + __slots__ = ["rrule", "lastyear", "lastmonth", + "yearlen", "nextyearlen", "yearordinal", "yearweekday", + "mmask", "mrange", "mdaymask", "nmdaymask", + "wdaymask", "wnomask", "nwdaymask", "eastermask"] + + def __init__(self, rrule): + for attr in self.__slots__: + setattr(self, attr, None) + self.rrule = rrule + + def rebuild(self, year, month): + # Every mask is 7 days longer to handle cross-year weekly periods. + rr = self.rrule + if year != self.lastyear: + self.yearlen = 365 + calendar.isleap(year) + self.nextyearlen = 365 + calendar.isleap(year + 1) + firstyday = datetime.date(year, 1, 1) + self.yearordinal = firstyday.toordinal() + self.yearweekday = firstyday.weekday() + + wday = datetime.date(year, 1, 1).weekday() + if self.yearlen == 365: + self.mmask = M365MASK + self.mdaymask = MDAY365MASK + self.nmdaymask = NMDAY365MASK + self.wdaymask = WDAYMASK[wday:] + self.mrange = M365RANGE + else: + self.mmask = M366MASK + self.mdaymask = MDAY366MASK + self.nmdaymask = NMDAY366MASK + self.wdaymask = WDAYMASK[wday:] + self.mrange = M366RANGE + + if not rr._byweekno: + self.wnomask = None + else: + self.wnomask = [0]*(self.yearlen+7) + # no1wkst = firstwkst = self.wdaymask.index(rr._wkst) + no1wkst = firstwkst = (7-self.yearweekday+rr._wkst) % 7 + if no1wkst >= 4: + no1wkst = 0 + # Number of days in the year, plus the days we got + # from last year. + wyearlen = self.yearlen+(self.yearweekday-rr._wkst) % 7 + else: + # Number of days in the year, minus the days we + # left in last year. + wyearlen = self.yearlen-no1wkst + div, mod = divmod(wyearlen, 7) + numweeks = div+mod//4 + for n in rr._byweekno: + if n < 0: + n += numweeks+1 + if not (0 < n <= numweeks): + continue + if n > 1: + i = no1wkst+(n-1)*7 + if no1wkst != firstwkst: + i -= 7-firstwkst + else: + i = no1wkst + for j in range(7): + self.wnomask[i] = 1 + i += 1 + if self.wdaymask[i] == rr._wkst: + break + if 1 in rr._byweekno: + # Check week number 1 of next year as well + # TODO: Check -numweeks for next year. + i = no1wkst+numweeks*7 + if no1wkst != firstwkst: + i -= 7-firstwkst + if i < self.yearlen: + # If week starts in next year, we + # don't care about it. + for j in range(7): + self.wnomask[i] = 1 + i += 1 + if self.wdaymask[i] == rr._wkst: + break + if no1wkst: + # Check last week number of last year as + # well. If no1wkst is 0, either the year + # started on week start, or week number 1 + # got days from last year, so there are no + # days from last year's last week number in + # this year. + if -1 not in rr._byweekno: + lyearweekday = datetime.date(year-1, 1, 1).weekday() + lno1wkst = (7-lyearweekday+rr._wkst) % 7 + lyearlen = 365+calendar.isleap(year-1) + if lno1wkst >= 4: + lno1wkst = 0 + lnumweeks = 52+(lyearlen + + (lyearweekday-rr._wkst) % 7) % 7//4 + else: + lnumweeks = 52+(self.yearlen-no1wkst) % 7//4 + else: + lnumweeks = -1 + if lnumweeks in rr._byweekno: + for i in range(no1wkst): + self.wnomask[i] = 1 + + if (rr._bynweekday and (month != self.lastmonth or + year != self.lastyear)): + ranges = [] + if rr._freq == YEARLY: + if rr._bymonth: + for month in rr._bymonth: + ranges.append(self.mrange[month-1:month+1]) + else: + ranges = [(0, self.yearlen)] + elif rr._freq == MONTHLY: + ranges = [self.mrange[month-1:month+1]] + if ranges: + # Weekly frequency won't get here, so we may not + # care about cross-year weekly periods. + self.nwdaymask = [0]*self.yearlen + for first, last in ranges: + last -= 1 + for wday, n in rr._bynweekday: + if n < 0: + i = last+(n+1)*7 + i -= (self.wdaymask[i]-wday) % 7 + else: + i = first+(n-1)*7 + i += (7-self.wdaymask[i]+wday) % 7 + if first <= i <= last: + self.nwdaymask[i] = 1 + + if rr._byeaster: + self.eastermask = [0]*(self.yearlen+7) + eyday = easter.easter(year).toordinal()-self.yearordinal + for offset in rr._byeaster: + self.eastermask[eyday+offset] = 1 + + self.lastyear = year + self.lastmonth = month + + def ydayset(self, year, month, day): + return list(range(self.yearlen)), 0, self.yearlen + + def mdayset(self, year, month, day): + dset = [None]*self.yearlen + start, end = self.mrange[month-1:month+1] + for i in range(start, end): + dset[i] = i + return dset, start, end + + def wdayset(self, year, month, day): + # We need to handle cross-year weeks here. + dset = [None]*(self.yearlen+7) + i = datetime.date(year, month, day).toordinal()-self.yearordinal + start = i + for j in range(7): + dset[i] = i + i += 1 + # if (not (0 <= i < self.yearlen) or + # self.wdaymask[i] == self.rrule._wkst): + # This will cross the year boundary, if necessary. + if self.wdaymask[i] == self.rrule._wkst: + break + return dset, start, i + + def ddayset(self, year, month, day): + dset = [None] * self.yearlen + i = datetime.date(year, month, day).toordinal() - self.yearordinal + dset[i] = i + return dset, i, i + 1 + + def htimeset(self, hour, minute, second): + tset = [] + rr = self.rrule + for minute in rr._byminute: + for second in rr._bysecond: + tset.append(datetime.time(hour, minute, second, + tzinfo=rr._tzinfo)) + tset.sort() + return tset + + def mtimeset(self, hour, minute, second): + tset = [] + rr = self.rrule + for second in rr._bysecond: + tset.append(datetime.time(hour, minute, second, tzinfo=rr._tzinfo)) + tset.sort() + return tset + + def stimeset(self, hour, minute, second): + return (datetime.time(hour, minute, second, + tzinfo=self.rrule._tzinfo),) + + +class rruleset(rrulebase): + """ The rruleset type allows more complex recurrence setups, mixing + multiple rules, dates, exclusion rules, and exclusion dates. The type + constructor takes the following keyword arguments: + + :param cache: If True, caching of results will be enabled, improving + performance of multiple queries considerably. """ + + class _genitem(object): + def __init__(self, genlist, gen): + try: + self.dt = advance_iterator(gen) + genlist.append(self) + except StopIteration: + pass + self.genlist = genlist + self.gen = gen + + def __next__(self): + try: + self.dt = advance_iterator(self.gen) + except StopIteration: + if self.genlist[0] is self: + heapq.heappop(self.genlist) + else: + self.genlist.remove(self) + heapq.heapify(self.genlist) + + next = __next__ + + def __lt__(self, other): + return self.dt < other.dt + + def __gt__(self, other): + return self.dt > other.dt + + def __eq__(self, other): + return self.dt == other.dt + + def __ne__(self, other): + return self.dt != other.dt + + def __init__(self, cache=False): + super(rruleset, self).__init__(cache) + self._rrule = [] + self._rdate = [] + self._exrule = [] + self._exdate = [] + + @_invalidates_cache + def rrule(self, rrule): + """ Include the given :py:class:`rrule` instance in the recurrence set + generation. """ + self._rrule.append(rrule) + + @_invalidates_cache + def rdate(self, rdate): + """ Include the given :py:class:`datetime` instance in the recurrence + set generation. """ + self._rdate.append(rdate) + + @_invalidates_cache + def exrule(self, exrule): + """ Include the given rrule instance in the recurrence set exclusion + list. Dates which are part of the given recurrence rules will not + be generated, even if some inclusive rrule or rdate matches them. + """ + self._exrule.append(exrule) + + @_invalidates_cache + def exdate(self, exdate): + """ Include the given datetime instance in the recurrence set + exclusion list. Dates included that way will not be generated, + even if some inclusive rrule or rdate matches them. """ + self._exdate.append(exdate) + + def _iter(self): + rlist = [] + self._rdate.sort() + self._genitem(rlist, iter(self._rdate)) + for gen in [iter(x) for x in self._rrule]: + self._genitem(rlist, gen) + exlist = [] + self._exdate.sort() + self._genitem(exlist, iter(self._exdate)) + for gen in [iter(x) for x in self._exrule]: + self._genitem(exlist, gen) + lastdt = None + total = 0 + heapq.heapify(rlist) + heapq.heapify(exlist) + while rlist: + ritem = rlist[0] + if not lastdt or lastdt != ritem.dt: + while exlist and exlist[0] < ritem: + exitem = exlist[0] + advance_iterator(exitem) + if exlist and exlist[0] is exitem: + heapq.heapreplace(exlist, exitem) + if not exlist or ritem != exlist[0]: + total += 1 + yield ritem.dt + lastdt = ritem.dt + advance_iterator(ritem) + if rlist and rlist[0] is ritem: + heapq.heapreplace(rlist, ritem) + self._len = total + + + + +class _rrulestr(object): + """ Parses a string representation of a recurrence rule or set of + recurrence rules. + + :param s: + Required, a string defining one or more recurrence rules. + + :param dtstart: + If given, used as the default recurrence start if not specified in the + rule string. + + :param cache: + If set ``True`` caching of results will be enabled, improving + performance of multiple queries considerably. + + :param unfold: + If set ``True`` indicates that a rule string is split over more + than one line and should be joined before processing. + + :param forceset: + If set ``True`` forces a :class:`dateutil.rrule.rruleset` to + be returned. + + :param compatible: + If set ``True`` forces ``unfold`` and ``forceset`` to be ``True``. + + :param ignoretz: + If set ``True``, time zones in parsed strings are ignored and a naive + :class:`datetime.datetime` object is returned. + + :param tzids: + If given, a callable or mapping used to retrieve a + :class:`datetime.tzinfo` from a string representation. + Defaults to :func:`dateutil.tz.gettz`. + + :param tzinfos: + Additional time zone names / aliases which may be present in a string + representation. See :func:`dateutil.parser.parse` for more + information. + + :return: + Returns a :class:`dateutil.rrule.rruleset` or + :class:`dateutil.rrule.rrule` + """ + + _freq_map = {"YEARLY": YEARLY, + "MONTHLY": MONTHLY, + "WEEKLY": WEEKLY, + "DAILY": DAILY, + "HOURLY": HOURLY, + "MINUTELY": MINUTELY, + "SECONDLY": SECONDLY} + + _weekday_map = {"MO": 0, "TU": 1, "WE": 2, "TH": 3, + "FR": 4, "SA": 5, "SU": 6} + + def _handle_int(self, rrkwargs, name, value, **kwargs): + rrkwargs[name.lower()] = int(value) + + def _handle_int_list(self, rrkwargs, name, value, **kwargs): + rrkwargs[name.lower()] = [int(x) for x in value.split(',')] + + _handle_INTERVAL = _handle_int + _handle_COUNT = _handle_int + _handle_BYSETPOS = _handle_int_list + _handle_BYMONTH = _handle_int_list + _handle_BYMONTHDAY = _handle_int_list + _handle_BYYEARDAY = _handle_int_list + _handle_BYEASTER = _handle_int_list + _handle_BYWEEKNO = _handle_int_list + _handle_BYHOUR = _handle_int_list + _handle_BYMINUTE = _handle_int_list + _handle_BYSECOND = _handle_int_list + + def _handle_FREQ(self, rrkwargs, name, value, **kwargs): + rrkwargs["freq"] = self._freq_map[value] + + def _handle_UNTIL(self, rrkwargs, name, value, **kwargs): + global parser + if not parser: + from dateutil import parser + try: + rrkwargs["until"] = parser.parse(value, + ignoretz=kwargs.get("ignoretz"), + tzinfos=kwargs.get("tzinfos")) + except ValueError: + raise ValueError("invalid until date") + + def _handle_WKST(self, rrkwargs, name, value, **kwargs): + rrkwargs["wkst"] = self._weekday_map[value] + + def _handle_BYWEEKDAY(self, rrkwargs, name, value, **kwargs): + """ + Two ways to specify this: +1MO or MO(+1) + """ + l = [] + for wday in value.split(','): + if '(' in wday: + # If it's of the form TH(+1), etc. + splt = wday.split('(') + w = splt[0] + n = int(splt[1][:-1]) + elif len(wday): + # If it's of the form +1MO + for i in range(len(wday)): + if wday[i] not in '+-0123456789': + break + n = wday[:i] or None + w = wday[i:] + if n: + n = int(n) + else: + raise ValueError("Invalid (empty) BYDAY specification.") + + l.append(weekdays[self._weekday_map[w]](n)) + rrkwargs["byweekday"] = l + + _handle_BYDAY = _handle_BYWEEKDAY + + def _parse_rfc_rrule(self, line, + dtstart=None, + cache=False, + ignoretz=False, + tzinfos=None): + if line.find(':') != -1: + name, value = line.split(':') + if name != "RRULE": + raise ValueError("unknown parameter name") + else: + value = line + rrkwargs = {} + for pair in value.split(';'): + name, value = pair.split('=') + name = name.upper() + value = value.upper() + try: + getattr(self, "_handle_"+name)(rrkwargs, name, value, + ignoretz=ignoretz, + tzinfos=tzinfos) + except AttributeError: + raise ValueError("unknown parameter '%s'" % name) + except (KeyError, ValueError): + raise ValueError("invalid '%s': %s" % (name, value)) + return rrule(dtstart=dtstart, cache=cache, **rrkwargs) + + def _parse_date_value(self, date_value, parms, rule_tzids, + ignoretz, tzids, tzinfos): + global parser + if not parser: + from dateutil import parser + + datevals = [] + value_found = False + TZID = None + + for parm in parms: + if parm.startswith("TZID="): + try: + tzkey = rule_tzids[parm.split('TZID=')[-1]] + except KeyError: + continue + if tzids is None: + from . import tz + tzlookup = tz.gettz + elif callable(tzids): + tzlookup = tzids + else: + tzlookup = getattr(tzids, 'get', None) + if tzlookup is None: + msg = ('tzids must be a callable, mapping, or None, ' + 'not %s' % tzids) + raise ValueError(msg) + + TZID = tzlookup(tzkey) + continue + + # RFC 5445 3.8.2.4: The VALUE parameter is optional, but may be found + # only once. + if parm not in {"VALUE=DATE-TIME", "VALUE=DATE"}: + raise ValueError("unsupported parm: " + parm) + else: + if value_found: + msg = ("Duplicate value parameter found in: " + parm) + raise ValueError(msg) + value_found = True + + for datestr in date_value.split(','): + date = parser.parse(datestr, ignoretz=ignoretz, tzinfos=tzinfos) + if TZID is not None: + if date.tzinfo is None: + date = date.replace(tzinfo=TZID) + else: + raise ValueError('DTSTART/EXDATE specifies multiple timezone') + datevals.append(date) + + return datevals + + def _parse_rfc(self, s, + dtstart=None, + cache=False, + unfold=False, + forceset=False, + compatible=False, + ignoretz=False, + tzids=None, + tzinfos=None): + global parser + if compatible: + forceset = True + unfold = True + + TZID_NAMES = dict(map( + lambda x: (x.upper(), x), + re.findall('TZID=(?P[^:]+):', s) + )) + s = s.upper() + if not s.strip(): + raise ValueError("empty string") + if unfold: + lines = s.splitlines() + i = 0 + while i < len(lines): + line = lines[i].rstrip() + if not line: + del lines[i] + elif i > 0 and line[0] == " ": + lines[i-1] += line[1:] + del lines[i] + else: + i += 1 + else: + lines = s.split() + if (not forceset and len(lines) == 1 and (s.find(':') == -1 or + s.startswith('RRULE:'))): + return self._parse_rfc_rrule(lines[0], cache=cache, + dtstart=dtstart, ignoretz=ignoretz, + tzinfos=tzinfos) + else: + rrulevals = [] + rdatevals = [] + exrulevals = [] + exdatevals = [] + for line in lines: + if not line: + continue + if line.find(':') == -1: + name = "RRULE" + value = line + else: + name, value = line.split(':', 1) + parms = name.split(';') + if not parms: + raise ValueError("empty property name") + name = parms[0] + parms = parms[1:] + if name == "RRULE": + for parm in parms: + raise ValueError("unsupported RRULE parm: "+parm) + rrulevals.append(value) + elif name == "RDATE": + for parm in parms: + if parm != "VALUE=DATE-TIME": + raise ValueError("unsupported RDATE parm: "+parm) + rdatevals.append(value) + elif name == "EXRULE": + for parm in parms: + raise ValueError("unsupported EXRULE parm: "+parm) + exrulevals.append(value) + elif name == "EXDATE": + exdatevals.extend( + self._parse_date_value(value, parms, + TZID_NAMES, ignoretz, + tzids, tzinfos) + ) + elif name == "DTSTART": + dtvals = self._parse_date_value(value, parms, TZID_NAMES, + ignoretz, tzids, tzinfos) + if len(dtvals) != 1: + raise ValueError("Multiple DTSTART values specified:" + + value) + dtstart = dtvals[0] + else: + raise ValueError("unsupported property: "+name) + if (forceset or len(rrulevals) > 1 or rdatevals + or exrulevals or exdatevals): + if not parser and (rdatevals or exdatevals): + from dateutil import parser + rset = rruleset(cache=cache) + for value in rrulevals: + rset.rrule(self._parse_rfc_rrule(value, dtstart=dtstart, + ignoretz=ignoretz, + tzinfos=tzinfos)) + for value in rdatevals: + for datestr in value.split(','): + rset.rdate(parser.parse(datestr, + ignoretz=ignoretz, + tzinfos=tzinfos)) + for value in exrulevals: + rset.exrule(self._parse_rfc_rrule(value, dtstart=dtstart, + ignoretz=ignoretz, + tzinfos=tzinfos)) + for value in exdatevals: + rset.exdate(value) + if compatible and dtstart: + rset.rdate(dtstart) + return rset + else: + return self._parse_rfc_rrule(rrulevals[0], + dtstart=dtstart, + cache=cache, + ignoretz=ignoretz, + tzinfos=tzinfos) + + def __call__(self, s, **kwargs): + return self._parse_rfc(s, **kwargs) + + +rrulestr = _rrulestr() + +# vim:ts=4:sw=4:et diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/tz/__init__.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/tz/__init__.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..af1352c47292f4eebc5cae8da45641b5544558e3 --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/tz/__init__.py @@ -0,0 +1,12 @@ +# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- +from .tz import * +from .tz import __doc__ + +__all__ = ["tzutc", "tzoffset", "tzlocal", "tzfile", "tzrange", + "tzstr", "tzical", "tzwin", "tzwinlocal", "gettz", + "enfold", "datetime_ambiguous", "datetime_exists", + "resolve_imaginary", "UTC", "DeprecatedTzFormatWarning"] + + +class DeprecatedTzFormatWarning(Warning): + """Warning raised when time zones are parsed from deprecated formats.""" diff --git 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0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..6e1e8bf57c1934b9c7793381f229edbf1ba849d8 Binary files /dev/null and b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/tz/__pycache__/win.cpython-310.pyc differ diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/tz/_common.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/tz/_common.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..e6ac11831522b266114d5b68ee1da298e3aeb14a --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/tz/_common.py @@ -0,0 +1,419 @@ +from six import PY2 + +from functools import wraps + +from datetime import datetime, timedelta, tzinfo + + +ZERO = timedelta(0) + +__all__ = ['tzname_in_python2', 'enfold'] + + +def tzname_in_python2(namefunc): + """Change unicode output into bytestrings in Python 2 + + tzname() API changed in Python 3. It used to return bytes, but was changed + to unicode strings + """ + if PY2: + @wraps(namefunc) + def adjust_encoding(*args, **kwargs): + name = namefunc(*args, **kwargs) + if name is not None: + name = name.encode() + + return name + + return adjust_encoding + else: + return namefunc + + +# The following is adapted from Alexander Belopolsky's tz library +# https://github.com/abalkin/tz +if hasattr(datetime, 'fold'): + # This is the pre-python 3.6 fold situation + def enfold(dt, fold=1): + """ + Provides a unified interface for assigning the ``fold`` attribute to + datetimes both before and after the implementation of PEP-495. + + :param fold: + The value for the ``fold`` attribute in the returned datetime. This + should be either 0 or 1. + + :return: + Returns an object for which ``getattr(dt, 'fold', 0)`` returns + ``fold`` for all versions of Python. In versions prior to + Python 3.6, this is a ``_DatetimeWithFold`` object, which is a + subclass of :py:class:`datetime.datetime` with the ``fold`` + attribute added, if ``fold`` is 1. + + .. versionadded:: 2.6.0 + """ + return dt.replace(fold=fold) + +else: + class _DatetimeWithFold(datetime): + """ + This is a class designed to provide a PEP 495-compliant interface for + Python versions before 3.6. It is used only for dates in a fold, so + the ``fold`` attribute is fixed at ``1``. + + .. versionadded:: 2.6.0 + """ + __slots__ = () + + def replace(self, *args, **kwargs): + """ + Return a datetime with the same attributes, except for those + attributes given new values by whichever keyword arguments are + specified. Note that tzinfo=None can be specified to create a naive + datetime from an aware datetime with no conversion of date and time + data. + + This is reimplemented in ``_DatetimeWithFold`` because pypy3 will + return a ``datetime.datetime`` even if ``fold`` is unchanged. + """ + argnames = ( + 'year', 'month', 'day', 'hour', 'minute', 'second', + 'microsecond', 'tzinfo' + ) + + for arg, argname in zip(args, argnames): + if argname in kwargs: + raise TypeError('Duplicate argument: {}'.format(argname)) + + kwargs[argname] = arg + + for argname in argnames: + if argname not in kwargs: + kwargs[argname] = getattr(self, argname) + + dt_class = self.__class__ if kwargs.get('fold', 1) else datetime + + return dt_class(**kwargs) + + @property + def fold(self): + return 1 + + def enfold(dt, fold=1): + """ + Provides a unified interface for assigning the ``fold`` attribute to + datetimes both before and after the implementation of PEP-495. + + :param fold: + The value for the ``fold`` attribute in the returned datetime. This + should be either 0 or 1. + + :return: + Returns an object for which ``getattr(dt, 'fold', 0)`` returns + ``fold`` for all versions of Python. In versions prior to + Python 3.6, this is a ``_DatetimeWithFold`` object, which is a + subclass of :py:class:`datetime.datetime` with the ``fold`` + attribute added, if ``fold`` is 1. + + .. versionadded:: 2.6.0 + """ + if getattr(dt, 'fold', 0) == fold: + return dt + + args = dt.timetuple()[:6] + args += (dt.microsecond, dt.tzinfo) + + if fold: + return _DatetimeWithFold(*args) + else: + return datetime(*args) + + +def _validate_fromutc_inputs(f): + """ + The CPython version of ``fromutc`` checks that the input is a ``datetime`` + object and that ``self`` is attached as its ``tzinfo``. + """ + @wraps(f) + def fromutc(self, dt): + if not isinstance(dt, datetime): + raise TypeError("fromutc() requires a datetime argument") + if dt.tzinfo is not self: + raise ValueError("dt.tzinfo is not self") + + return f(self, dt) + + return fromutc + + +class _tzinfo(tzinfo): + """ + Base class for all ``dateutil`` ``tzinfo`` objects. + """ + + def is_ambiguous(self, dt): + """ + Whether or not the "wall time" of a given datetime is ambiguous in this + zone. + + :param dt: + A :py:class:`datetime.datetime`, naive or time zone aware. + + + :return: + Returns ``True`` if ambiguous, ``False`` otherwise. + + .. versionadded:: 2.6.0 + """ + + dt = dt.replace(tzinfo=self) + + wall_0 = enfold(dt, fold=0) + wall_1 = enfold(dt, fold=1) + + same_offset = wall_0.utcoffset() == wall_1.utcoffset() + same_dt = wall_0.replace(tzinfo=None) == wall_1.replace(tzinfo=None) + + return same_dt and not same_offset + + def _fold_status(self, dt_utc, dt_wall): + """ + Determine the fold status of a "wall" datetime, given a representation + of the same datetime as a (naive) UTC datetime. This is calculated based + on the assumption that ``dt.utcoffset() - dt.dst()`` is constant for all + datetimes, and that this offset is the actual number of hours separating + ``dt_utc`` and ``dt_wall``. + + :param dt_utc: + Representation of the datetime as UTC + + :param dt_wall: + Representation of the datetime as "wall time". This parameter must + either have a `fold` attribute or have a fold-naive + :class:`datetime.tzinfo` attached, otherwise the calculation may + fail. + """ + if self.is_ambiguous(dt_wall): + delta_wall = dt_wall - dt_utc + _fold = int(delta_wall == (dt_utc.utcoffset() - dt_utc.dst())) + else: + _fold = 0 + + return _fold + + def _fold(self, dt): + return getattr(dt, 'fold', 0) + + def _fromutc(self, dt): + """ + Given a timezone-aware datetime in a given timezone, calculates a + timezone-aware datetime in a new timezone. + + Since this is the one time that we *know* we have an unambiguous + datetime object, we take this opportunity to determine whether the + datetime is ambiguous and in a "fold" state (e.g. if it's the first + occurrence, chronologically, of the ambiguous datetime). + + :param dt: + A timezone-aware :class:`datetime.datetime` object. + """ + + # Re-implement the algorithm from Python's datetime.py + dtoff = dt.utcoffset() + if dtoff is None: + raise ValueError("fromutc() requires a non-None utcoffset() " + "result") + + # The original datetime.py code assumes that `dst()` defaults to + # zero during ambiguous times. PEP 495 inverts this presumption, so + # for pre-PEP 495 versions of python, we need to tweak the algorithm. + dtdst = dt.dst() + if dtdst is None: + raise ValueError("fromutc() requires a non-None dst() result") + delta = dtoff - dtdst + + dt += delta + # Set fold=1 so we can default to being in the fold for + # ambiguous dates. + dtdst = enfold(dt, fold=1).dst() + if dtdst is None: + raise ValueError("fromutc(): dt.dst gave inconsistent " + "results; cannot convert") + return dt + dtdst + + @_validate_fromutc_inputs + def fromutc(self, dt): + """ + Given a timezone-aware datetime in a given timezone, calculates a + timezone-aware datetime in a new timezone. + + Since this is the one time that we *know* we have an unambiguous + datetime object, we take this opportunity to determine whether the + datetime is ambiguous and in a "fold" state (e.g. if it's the first + occurrence, chronologically, of the ambiguous datetime). + + :param dt: + A timezone-aware :class:`datetime.datetime` object. + """ + dt_wall = self._fromutc(dt) + + # Calculate the fold status given the two datetimes. + _fold = self._fold_status(dt, dt_wall) + + # Set the default fold value for ambiguous dates + return enfold(dt_wall, fold=_fold) + + +class tzrangebase(_tzinfo): + """ + This is an abstract base class for time zones represented by an annual + transition into and out of DST. Child classes should implement the following + methods: + + * ``__init__(self, *args, **kwargs)`` + * ``transitions(self, year)`` - this is expected to return a tuple of + datetimes representing the DST on and off transitions in standard + time. + + A fully initialized ``tzrangebase`` subclass should also provide the + following attributes: + * ``hasdst``: Boolean whether or not the zone uses DST. + * ``_dst_offset`` / ``_std_offset``: :class:`datetime.timedelta` objects + representing the respective UTC offsets. + * ``_dst_abbr`` / ``_std_abbr``: Strings representing the timezone short + abbreviations in DST and STD, respectively. + * ``_hasdst``: Whether or not the zone has DST. + + .. versionadded:: 2.6.0 + """ + def __init__(self): + raise NotImplementedError('tzrangebase is an abstract base class') + + def utcoffset(self, dt): + isdst = self._isdst(dt) + + if isdst is None: + return None + elif isdst: + return self._dst_offset + else: + return self._std_offset + + def dst(self, dt): + isdst = self._isdst(dt) + + if isdst is None: + return None + elif isdst: + return self._dst_base_offset + else: + return ZERO + + @tzname_in_python2 + def tzname(self, dt): + if self._isdst(dt): + return self._dst_abbr + else: + return self._std_abbr + + def fromutc(self, dt): + """ Given a datetime in UTC, return local time """ + if not isinstance(dt, datetime): + raise TypeError("fromutc() requires a datetime argument") + + if dt.tzinfo is not self: + raise ValueError("dt.tzinfo is not self") + + # Get transitions - if there are none, fixed offset + transitions = self.transitions(dt.year) + if transitions is None: + return dt + self.utcoffset(dt) + + # Get the transition times in UTC + dston, dstoff = transitions + + dston -= self._std_offset + dstoff -= self._std_offset + + utc_transitions = (dston, dstoff) + dt_utc = dt.replace(tzinfo=None) + + isdst = self._naive_isdst(dt_utc, utc_transitions) + + if isdst: + dt_wall = dt + self._dst_offset + else: + dt_wall = dt + self._std_offset + + _fold = int(not isdst and self.is_ambiguous(dt_wall)) + + return enfold(dt_wall, fold=_fold) + + def is_ambiguous(self, dt): + """ + Whether or not the "wall time" of a given datetime is ambiguous in this + zone. + + :param dt: + A :py:class:`datetime.datetime`, naive or time zone aware. + + + :return: + Returns ``True`` if ambiguous, ``False`` otherwise. + + .. versionadded:: 2.6.0 + """ + if not self.hasdst: + return False + + start, end = self.transitions(dt.year) + + dt = dt.replace(tzinfo=None) + return (end <= dt < end + self._dst_base_offset) + + def _isdst(self, dt): + if not self.hasdst: + return False + elif dt is None: + return None + + transitions = self.transitions(dt.year) + + if transitions is None: + return False + + dt = dt.replace(tzinfo=None) + + isdst = self._naive_isdst(dt, transitions) + + # Handle ambiguous dates + if not isdst and self.is_ambiguous(dt): + return not self._fold(dt) + else: + return isdst + + def _naive_isdst(self, dt, transitions): + dston, dstoff = transitions + + dt = dt.replace(tzinfo=None) + + if dston < dstoff: + isdst = dston <= dt < dstoff + else: + isdst = not dstoff <= dt < dston + + return isdst + + @property + def _dst_base_offset(self): + return self._dst_offset - self._std_offset + + __hash__ = None + + def __ne__(self, other): + return not (self == other) + + def __repr__(self): + return "%s(...)" % self.__class__.__name__ + + __reduce__ = object.__reduce__ diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/tz/_factories.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/tz/_factories.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..f8a65891a023ebf9eb0c24d391ba67541b7133f1 --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/tz/_factories.py @@ -0,0 +1,80 @@ +from datetime import timedelta +import weakref +from collections import OrderedDict + +from six.moves import _thread + + +class _TzSingleton(type): + def __init__(cls, *args, **kwargs): + cls.__instance = None + super(_TzSingleton, cls).__init__(*args, **kwargs) + + def __call__(cls): + if cls.__instance is None: + cls.__instance = super(_TzSingleton, cls).__call__() + return cls.__instance + + +class _TzFactory(type): + def instance(cls, *args, **kwargs): + """Alternate constructor that returns a fresh instance""" + return type.__call__(cls, *args, **kwargs) + + +class _TzOffsetFactory(_TzFactory): + def __init__(cls, *args, **kwargs): + cls.__instances = weakref.WeakValueDictionary() + cls.__strong_cache = OrderedDict() + cls.__strong_cache_size = 8 + + cls._cache_lock = _thread.allocate_lock() + + def __call__(cls, name, offset): + if isinstance(offset, timedelta): + key = (name, offset.total_seconds()) + else: + key = (name, offset) + + instance = cls.__instances.get(key, None) + if instance is None: + instance = cls.__instances.setdefault(key, + cls.instance(name, offset)) + + # This lock may not be necessary in Python 3. See GH issue #901 + with cls._cache_lock: + cls.__strong_cache[key] = cls.__strong_cache.pop(key, instance) + + # Remove an item if the strong cache is overpopulated + if len(cls.__strong_cache) > cls.__strong_cache_size: + cls.__strong_cache.popitem(last=False) + + return instance + + +class _TzStrFactory(_TzFactory): + def __init__(cls, *args, **kwargs): + cls.__instances = weakref.WeakValueDictionary() + cls.__strong_cache = OrderedDict() + cls.__strong_cache_size = 8 + + cls.__cache_lock = _thread.allocate_lock() + + def __call__(cls, s, posix_offset=False): + key = (s, posix_offset) + instance = cls.__instances.get(key, None) + + if instance is None: + instance = cls.__instances.setdefault(key, + cls.instance(s, posix_offset)) + + # This lock may not be necessary in Python 3. See GH issue #901 + with cls.__cache_lock: + cls.__strong_cache[key] = cls.__strong_cache.pop(key, instance) + + # Remove an item if the strong cache is overpopulated + if len(cls.__strong_cache) > cls.__strong_cache_size: + cls.__strong_cache.popitem(last=False) + + return instance + diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/tz/tz.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/tz/tz.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..617591446bd92eb1cc7b7d67fa3f17435e691cdd --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/tz/tz.py @@ -0,0 +1,1849 @@ +# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- +""" +This module offers timezone implementations subclassing the abstract +:py:class:`datetime.tzinfo` type. There are classes to handle tzfile format +files (usually are in :file:`/etc/localtime`, :file:`/usr/share/zoneinfo`, +etc), TZ environment string (in all known formats), given ranges (with help +from relative deltas), local machine timezone, fixed offset timezone, and UTC +timezone. +""" +import datetime +import struct +import time +import sys +import os +import bisect +import weakref +from collections import OrderedDict + +import six +from six import string_types +from six.moves import _thread +from ._common import tzname_in_python2, _tzinfo +from ._common import tzrangebase, enfold +from ._common import _validate_fromutc_inputs + +from ._factories import _TzSingleton, _TzOffsetFactory +from ._factories import _TzStrFactory +try: + from .win import tzwin, tzwinlocal +except ImportError: + tzwin = tzwinlocal = None + +# For warning about rounding tzinfo +from warnings import warn + +ZERO = datetime.timedelta(0) +EPOCH = datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0) +EPOCHORDINAL = EPOCH.toordinal() + + +@six.add_metaclass(_TzSingleton) +class tzutc(datetime.tzinfo): + """ + This is a tzinfo object that represents the UTC time zone. + + **Examples:** + + .. doctest:: + + >>> from datetime import * + >>> from dateutil.tz import * + + >>> datetime.now() + datetime.datetime(2003, 9, 27, 9, 40, 1, 521290) + + >>> datetime.now(tzutc()) + datetime.datetime(2003, 9, 27, 12, 40, 12, 156379, tzinfo=tzutc()) + + >>> datetime.now(tzutc()).tzname() + 'UTC' + + .. versionchanged:: 2.7.0 + ``tzutc()`` is now a singleton, so the result of ``tzutc()`` will + always return the same object. + + .. doctest:: + + >>> from dateutil.tz import tzutc, UTC + >>> tzutc() is tzutc() + True + >>> tzutc() is UTC + True + """ + def utcoffset(self, dt): + return ZERO + + def dst(self, dt): + return ZERO + + @tzname_in_python2 + def tzname(self, dt): + return "UTC" + + def is_ambiguous(self, dt): + """ + Whether or not the "wall time" of a given datetime is ambiguous in this + zone. + + :param dt: + A :py:class:`datetime.datetime`, naive or time zone aware. + + + :return: + Returns ``True`` if ambiguous, ``False`` otherwise. + + .. versionadded:: 2.6.0 + """ + return False + + @_validate_fromutc_inputs + def fromutc(self, dt): + """ + Fast track version of fromutc() returns the original ``dt`` object for + any valid :py:class:`datetime.datetime` object. + """ + return dt + + def __eq__(self, other): + if not isinstance(other, (tzutc, tzoffset)): + return NotImplemented + + return (isinstance(other, tzutc) or + (isinstance(other, tzoffset) and other._offset == ZERO)) + + __hash__ = None + + def __ne__(self, other): + return not (self == other) + + def __repr__(self): + return "%s()" % self.__class__.__name__ + + __reduce__ = object.__reduce__ + + +#: Convenience constant providing a :class:`tzutc()` instance +#: +#: .. versionadded:: 2.7.0 +UTC = tzutc() + + +@six.add_metaclass(_TzOffsetFactory) +class tzoffset(datetime.tzinfo): + """ + A simple class for representing a fixed offset from UTC. + + :param name: + The timezone name, to be returned when ``tzname()`` is called. + :param offset: + The time zone offset in seconds, or (since version 2.6.0, represented + as a :py:class:`datetime.timedelta` object). + """ + def __init__(self, name, offset): + self._name = name + + try: + # Allow a timedelta + offset = offset.total_seconds() + except (TypeError, AttributeError): + pass + + self._offset = datetime.timedelta(seconds=_get_supported_offset(offset)) + + def utcoffset(self, dt): + return self._offset + + def dst(self, dt): + return ZERO + + @tzname_in_python2 + def tzname(self, dt): + return self._name + + @_validate_fromutc_inputs + def fromutc(self, dt): + return dt + self._offset + + def is_ambiguous(self, dt): + """ + Whether or not the "wall time" of a given datetime is ambiguous in this + zone. + + :param dt: + A :py:class:`datetime.datetime`, naive or time zone aware. + :return: + Returns ``True`` if ambiguous, ``False`` otherwise. + + .. versionadded:: 2.6.0 + """ + return False + + def __eq__(self, other): + if not isinstance(other, tzoffset): + return NotImplemented + + return self._offset == other._offset + + __hash__ = None + + def __ne__(self, other): + return not (self == other) + + def __repr__(self): + return "%s(%s, %s)" % (self.__class__.__name__, + repr(self._name), + int(self._offset.total_seconds())) + + __reduce__ = object.__reduce__ + + +class tzlocal(_tzinfo): + """ + A :class:`tzinfo` subclass built around the ``time`` timezone functions. + """ + def __init__(self): + super(tzlocal, self).__init__() + + self._std_offset = datetime.timedelta(seconds=-time.timezone) + if time.daylight: + self._dst_offset = datetime.timedelta(seconds=-time.altzone) + else: + self._dst_offset = self._std_offset + + self._dst_saved = self._dst_offset - self._std_offset + self._hasdst = bool(self._dst_saved) + self._tznames = tuple(time.tzname) + + def utcoffset(self, dt): + if dt is None and self._hasdst: + return None + + if self._isdst(dt): + return self._dst_offset + else: + return self._std_offset + + def dst(self, dt): + if dt is None and self._hasdst: + return None + + if self._isdst(dt): + return self._dst_offset - self._std_offset + else: + return ZERO + + @tzname_in_python2 + def tzname(self, dt): + return self._tznames[self._isdst(dt)] + + def is_ambiguous(self, dt): + """ + Whether or not the "wall time" of a given datetime is ambiguous in this + zone. + + :param dt: + A :py:class:`datetime.datetime`, naive or time zone aware. + + + :return: + Returns ``True`` if ambiguous, ``False`` otherwise. + + .. versionadded:: 2.6.0 + """ + naive_dst = self._naive_is_dst(dt) + return (not naive_dst and + (naive_dst != self._naive_is_dst(dt - self._dst_saved))) + + def _naive_is_dst(self, dt): + timestamp = _datetime_to_timestamp(dt) + return time.localtime(timestamp + time.timezone).tm_isdst + + def _isdst(self, dt, fold_naive=True): + # We can't use mktime here. It is unstable when deciding if + # the hour near to a change is DST or not. + # + # timestamp = time.mktime((dt.year, dt.month, dt.day, dt.hour, + # dt.minute, dt.second, dt.weekday(), 0, -1)) + # return time.localtime(timestamp).tm_isdst + # + # The code above yields the following result: + # + # >>> import tz, datetime + # >>> t = tz.tzlocal() + # >>> datetime.datetime(2003,2,15,23,tzinfo=t).tzname() + # 'BRDT' + # >>> datetime.datetime(2003,2,16,0,tzinfo=t).tzname() + # 'BRST' + # >>> datetime.datetime(2003,2,15,23,tzinfo=t).tzname() + # 'BRST' + # >>> datetime.datetime(2003,2,15,22,tzinfo=t).tzname() + # 'BRDT' + # >>> datetime.datetime(2003,2,15,23,tzinfo=t).tzname() + # 'BRDT' + # + # Here is a more stable implementation: + # + if not self._hasdst: + return False + + # Check for ambiguous times: + dstval = self._naive_is_dst(dt) + fold = getattr(dt, 'fold', None) + + if self.is_ambiguous(dt): + if fold is not None: + return not self._fold(dt) + else: + return True + + return dstval + + def __eq__(self, other): + if isinstance(other, tzlocal): + return (self._std_offset == other._std_offset and + self._dst_offset == other._dst_offset) + elif isinstance(other, tzutc): + return (not self._hasdst and + self._tznames[0] in {'UTC', 'GMT'} and + self._std_offset == ZERO) + elif isinstance(other, tzoffset): + return (not self._hasdst and + self._tznames[0] == other._name and + self._std_offset == other._offset) + else: + return NotImplemented + + __hash__ = None + + def __ne__(self, other): + return not (self == other) + + def __repr__(self): + return "%s()" % self.__class__.__name__ + + __reduce__ = object.__reduce__ + + +class _ttinfo(object): + __slots__ = ["offset", "delta", "isdst", "abbr", + "isstd", "isgmt", "dstoffset"] + + def __init__(self): + for attr in self.__slots__: + setattr(self, attr, None) + + def __repr__(self): + l = [] + for attr in self.__slots__: + value = getattr(self, attr) + if value is not None: + l.append("%s=%s" % (attr, repr(value))) + return "%s(%s)" % (self.__class__.__name__, ", ".join(l)) + + def __eq__(self, other): + if not isinstance(other, _ttinfo): + return NotImplemented + + return (self.offset == other.offset and + self.delta == other.delta and + self.isdst == other.isdst and + self.abbr == other.abbr and + self.isstd == other.isstd and + self.isgmt == other.isgmt and + self.dstoffset == other.dstoffset) + + __hash__ = None + + def __ne__(self, other): + return not (self == other) + + def __getstate__(self): + state = {} + for name in self.__slots__: + state[name] = getattr(self, name, None) + return state + + def __setstate__(self, state): + for name in self.__slots__: + if name in state: + setattr(self, name, state[name]) + + +class _tzfile(object): + """ + Lightweight class for holding the relevant transition and time zone + information read from binary tzfiles. + """ + attrs = ['trans_list', 'trans_list_utc', 'trans_idx', 'ttinfo_list', + 'ttinfo_std', 'ttinfo_dst', 'ttinfo_before', 'ttinfo_first'] + + def __init__(self, **kwargs): + for attr in self.attrs: + setattr(self, attr, kwargs.get(attr, None)) + + +class tzfile(_tzinfo): + """ + This is a ``tzinfo`` subclass that allows one to use the ``tzfile(5)`` + format timezone files to extract current and historical zone information. + + :param fileobj: + This can be an opened file stream or a file name that the time zone + information can be read from. + + :param filename: + This is an optional parameter specifying the source of the time zone + information in the event that ``fileobj`` is a file object. If omitted + and ``fileobj`` is a file stream, this parameter will be set either to + ``fileobj``'s ``name`` attribute or to ``repr(fileobj)``. + + See `Sources for Time Zone and Daylight Saving Time Data + `_ for more information. + Time zone files can be compiled from the `IANA Time Zone database files + `_ with the `zic time zone compiler + `_ + + .. note:: + + Only construct a ``tzfile`` directly if you have a specific timezone + file on disk that you want to read into a Python ``tzinfo`` object. + If you want to get a ``tzfile`` representing a specific IANA zone, + (e.g. ``'America/New_York'``), you should call + :func:`dateutil.tz.gettz` with the zone identifier. + + + **Examples:** + + Using the US Eastern time zone as an example, we can see that a ``tzfile`` + provides time zone information for the standard Daylight Saving offsets: + + .. testsetup:: tzfile + + from dateutil.tz import gettz + from datetime import datetime + + .. doctest:: tzfile + + >>> NYC = gettz('America/New_York') + >>> NYC + tzfile('/usr/share/zoneinfo/America/New_York') + + >>> print(datetime(2016, 1, 3, tzinfo=NYC)) # EST + 2016-01-03 00:00:00-05:00 + + >>> print(datetime(2016, 7, 7, tzinfo=NYC)) # EDT + 2016-07-07 00:00:00-04:00 + + + The ``tzfile`` structure contains a fully history of the time zone, + so historical dates will also have the right offsets. For example, before + the adoption of the UTC standards, New York used local solar mean time: + + .. doctest:: tzfile + + >>> print(datetime(1901, 4, 12, tzinfo=NYC)) # LMT + 1901-04-12 00:00:00-04:56 + + And during World War II, New York was on "Eastern War Time", which was a + state of permanent daylight saving time: + + .. doctest:: tzfile + + >>> print(datetime(1944, 2, 7, tzinfo=NYC)) # EWT + 1944-02-07 00:00:00-04:00 + + """ + + def __init__(self, fileobj, filename=None): + super(tzfile, self).__init__() + + file_opened_here = False + if isinstance(fileobj, string_types): + self._filename = fileobj + fileobj = open(fileobj, 'rb') + file_opened_here = True + elif filename is not None: + self._filename = filename + elif hasattr(fileobj, "name"): + self._filename = fileobj.name + else: + self._filename = repr(fileobj) + + if fileobj is not None: + if not file_opened_here: + fileobj = _nullcontext(fileobj) + + with fileobj as file_stream: + tzobj = self._read_tzfile(file_stream) + + self._set_tzdata(tzobj) + + def _set_tzdata(self, tzobj): + """ Set the time zone data of this object from a _tzfile object """ + # Copy the relevant attributes over as private attributes + for attr in _tzfile.attrs: + setattr(self, '_' + attr, getattr(tzobj, attr)) + + def _read_tzfile(self, fileobj): + out = _tzfile() + + # From tzfile(5): + # + # The time zone information files used by tzset(3) + # begin with the magic characters "TZif" to identify + # them as time zone information files, followed by + # sixteen bytes reserved for future use, followed by + # six four-byte values of type long, written in a + # ``standard'' byte order (the high-order byte + # of the value is written first). + if fileobj.read(4).decode() != "TZif": + raise ValueError("magic not found") + + fileobj.read(16) + + ( + # The number of UTC/local indicators stored in the file. + ttisgmtcnt, + + # The number of standard/wall indicators stored in the file. + ttisstdcnt, + + # The number of leap seconds for which data is + # stored in the file. + leapcnt, + + # The number of "transition times" for which data + # is stored in the file. + timecnt, + + # The number of "local time types" for which data + # is stored in the file (must not be zero). + typecnt, + + # The number of characters of "time zone + # abbreviation strings" stored in the file. + charcnt, + + ) = struct.unpack(">6l", fileobj.read(24)) + + # The above header is followed by tzh_timecnt four-byte + # values of type long, sorted in ascending order. + # These values are written in ``standard'' byte order. + # Each is used as a transition time (as returned by + # time(2)) at which the rules for computing local time + # change. + + if timecnt: + out.trans_list_utc = list(struct.unpack(">%dl" % timecnt, + fileobj.read(timecnt*4))) + else: + out.trans_list_utc = [] + + # Next come tzh_timecnt one-byte values of type unsigned + # char; each one tells which of the different types of + # ``local time'' types described in the file is associated + # with the same-indexed transition time. These values + # serve as indices into an array of ttinfo structures that + # appears next in the file. + + if timecnt: + out.trans_idx = struct.unpack(">%dB" % timecnt, + fileobj.read(timecnt)) + else: + out.trans_idx = [] + + # Each ttinfo structure is written as a four-byte value + # for tt_gmtoff of type long, in a standard byte + # order, followed by a one-byte value for tt_isdst + # and a one-byte value for tt_abbrind. In each + # structure, tt_gmtoff gives the number of + # seconds to be added to UTC, tt_isdst tells whether + # tm_isdst should be set by localtime(3), and + # tt_abbrind serves as an index into the array of + # time zone abbreviation characters that follow the + # ttinfo structure(s) in the file. + + ttinfo = [] + + for i in range(typecnt): + ttinfo.append(struct.unpack(">lbb", fileobj.read(6))) + + abbr = fileobj.read(charcnt).decode() + + # Then there are tzh_leapcnt pairs of four-byte + # values, written in standard byte order; the + # first value of each pair gives the time (as + # returned by time(2)) at which a leap second + # occurs; the second gives the total number of + # leap seconds to be applied after the given time. + # The pairs of values are sorted in ascending order + # by time. + + # Not used, for now (but seek for correct file position) + if leapcnt: + fileobj.seek(leapcnt * 8, os.SEEK_CUR) + + # Then there are tzh_ttisstdcnt standard/wall + # indicators, each stored as a one-byte value; + # they tell whether the transition times associated + # with local time types were specified as standard + # time or wall clock time, and are used when + # a time zone file is used in handling POSIX-style + # time zone environment variables. + + if ttisstdcnt: + isstd = struct.unpack(">%db" % ttisstdcnt, + fileobj.read(ttisstdcnt)) + + # Finally, there are tzh_ttisgmtcnt UTC/local + # indicators, each stored as a one-byte value; + # they tell whether the transition times associated + # with local time types were specified as UTC or + # local time, and are used when a time zone file + # is used in handling POSIX-style time zone envi- + # ronment variables. + + if ttisgmtcnt: + isgmt = struct.unpack(">%db" % ttisgmtcnt, + fileobj.read(ttisgmtcnt)) + + # Build ttinfo list + out.ttinfo_list = [] + for i in range(typecnt): + gmtoff, isdst, abbrind = ttinfo[i] + gmtoff = _get_supported_offset(gmtoff) + tti = _ttinfo() + tti.offset = gmtoff + tti.dstoffset = datetime.timedelta(0) + tti.delta = datetime.timedelta(seconds=gmtoff) + tti.isdst = isdst + tti.abbr = abbr[abbrind:abbr.find('\x00', abbrind)] + tti.isstd = (ttisstdcnt > i and isstd[i] != 0) + tti.isgmt = (ttisgmtcnt > i and isgmt[i] != 0) + out.ttinfo_list.append(tti) + + # Replace ttinfo indexes for ttinfo objects. + out.trans_idx = [out.ttinfo_list[idx] for idx in out.trans_idx] + + # Set standard, dst, and before ttinfos. before will be + # used when a given time is before any transitions, + # and will be set to the first non-dst ttinfo, or to + # the first dst, if all of them are dst. + out.ttinfo_std = None + out.ttinfo_dst = None + out.ttinfo_before = None + if out.ttinfo_list: + if not out.trans_list_utc: + out.ttinfo_std = out.ttinfo_first = out.ttinfo_list[0] + else: + for i in range(timecnt-1, -1, -1): + tti = out.trans_idx[i] + if not out.ttinfo_std and not tti.isdst: + out.ttinfo_std = tti + elif not out.ttinfo_dst and tti.isdst: + out.ttinfo_dst = tti + + if out.ttinfo_std and out.ttinfo_dst: + break + else: + if out.ttinfo_dst and not out.ttinfo_std: + out.ttinfo_std = out.ttinfo_dst + + for tti in out.ttinfo_list: + if not tti.isdst: + out.ttinfo_before = tti + break + else: + out.ttinfo_before = out.ttinfo_list[0] + + # Now fix transition times to become relative to wall time. + # + # I'm not sure about this. In my tests, the tz source file + # is setup to wall time, and in the binary file isstd and + # isgmt are off, so it should be in wall time. OTOH, it's + # always in gmt time. Let me know if you have comments + # about this. + lastdst = None + lastoffset = None + lastdstoffset = None + lastbaseoffset = None + out.trans_list = [] + + for i, tti in enumerate(out.trans_idx): + offset = tti.offset + dstoffset = 0 + + if lastdst is not None: + if tti.isdst: + if not lastdst: + dstoffset = offset - lastoffset + + if not dstoffset and lastdstoffset: + dstoffset = lastdstoffset + + tti.dstoffset = datetime.timedelta(seconds=dstoffset) + lastdstoffset = dstoffset + + # If a time zone changes its base offset during a DST transition, + # then you need to adjust by the previous base offset to get the + # transition time in local time. Otherwise you use the current + # base offset. Ideally, I would have some mathematical proof of + # why this is true, but I haven't really thought about it enough. + baseoffset = offset - dstoffset + adjustment = baseoffset + if (lastbaseoffset is not None and baseoffset != lastbaseoffset + and tti.isdst != lastdst): + # The base DST has changed + adjustment = lastbaseoffset + + lastdst = tti.isdst + lastoffset = offset + lastbaseoffset = baseoffset + + out.trans_list.append(out.trans_list_utc[i] + adjustment) + + out.trans_idx = tuple(out.trans_idx) + out.trans_list = tuple(out.trans_list) + out.trans_list_utc = tuple(out.trans_list_utc) + + return out + + def _find_last_transition(self, dt, in_utc=False): + # If there's no list, there are no transitions to find + if not self._trans_list: + return None + + timestamp = _datetime_to_timestamp(dt) + + # Find where the timestamp fits in the transition list - if the + # timestamp is a transition time, it's part of the "after" period. + trans_list = self._trans_list_utc if in_utc else self._trans_list + idx = bisect.bisect_right(trans_list, timestamp) + + # We want to know when the previous transition was, so subtract off 1 + return idx - 1 + + def _get_ttinfo(self, idx): + # For no list or after the last transition, default to _ttinfo_std + if idx is None or (idx + 1) >= len(self._trans_list): + return self._ttinfo_std + + # If there is a list and the time is before it, return _ttinfo_before + if idx < 0: + return self._ttinfo_before + + return self._trans_idx[idx] + + def _find_ttinfo(self, dt): + idx = self._resolve_ambiguous_time(dt) + + return self._get_ttinfo(idx) + + def fromutc(self, dt): + """ + The ``tzfile`` implementation of :py:func:`datetime.tzinfo.fromutc`. + + :param dt: + A :py:class:`datetime.datetime` object. + + :raises TypeError: + Raised if ``dt`` is not a :py:class:`datetime.datetime` object. + + :raises ValueError: + Raised if this is called with a ``dt`` which does not have this + ``tzinfo`` attached. + + :return: + Returns a :py:class:`datetime.datetime` object representing the + wall time in ``self``'s time zone. + """ + # These isinstance checks are in datetime.tzinfo, so we'll preserve + # them, even if we don't care about duck typing. + if not isinstance(dt, datetime.datetime): + raise TypeError("fromutc() requires a datetime argument") + + if dt.tzinfo is not self: + raise ValueError("dt.tzinfo is not self") + + # First treat UTC as wall time and get the transition we're in. + idx = self._find_last_transition(dt, in_utc=True) + tti = self._get_ttinfo(idx) + + dt_out = dt + datetime.timedelta(seconds=tti.offset) + + fold = self.is_ambiguous(dt_out, idx=idx) + + return enfold(dt_out, fold=int(fold)) + + def is_ambiguous(self, dt, idx=None): + """ + Whether or not the "wall time" of a given datetime is ambiguous in this + zone. + + :param dt: + A :py:class:`datetime.datetime`, naive or time zone aware. + + + :return: + Returns ``True`` if ambiguous, ``False`` otherwise. + + .. versionadded:: 2.6.0 + """ + if idx is None: + idx = self._find_last_transition(dt) + + # Calculate the difference in offsets from current to previous + timestamp = _datetime_to_timestamp(dt) + tti = self._get_ttinfo(idx) + + if idx is None or idx <= 0: + return False + + od = self._get_ttinfo(idx - 1).offset - tti.offset + tt = self._trans_list[idx] # Transition time + + return timestamp < tt + od + + def _resolve_ambiguous_time(self, dt): + idx = self._find_last_transition(dt) + + # If we have no transitions, return the index + _fold = self._fold(dt) + if idx is None or idx == 0: + return idx + + # If it's ambiguous and we're in a fold, shift to a different index. + idx_offset = int(not _fold and self.is_ambiguous(dt, idx)) + + return idx - idx_offset + + def utcoffset(self, dt): + if dt is None: + return None + + if not self._ttinfo_std: + return ZERO + + return self._find_ttinfo(dt).delta + + def dst(self, dt): + if dt is None: + return None + + if not self._ttinfo_dst: + return ZERO + + tti = self._find_ttinfo(dt) + + if not tti.isdst: + return ZERO + + # The documentation says that utcoffset()-dst() must + # be constant for every dt. + return tti.dstoffset + + @tzname_in_python2 + def tzname(self, dt): + if not self._ttinfo_std or dt is None: + return None + return self._find_ttinfo(dt).abbr + + def __eq__(self, other): + if not isinstance(other, tzfile): + return NotImplemented + return (self._trans_list == other._trans_list and + self._trans_idx == other._trans_idx and + self._ttinfo_list == other._ttinfo_list) + + __hash__ = None + + def __ne__(self, other): + return not (self == other) + + def __repr__(self): + return "%s(%s)" % (self.__class__.__name__, repr(self._filename)) + + def __reduce__(self): + return self.__reduce_ex__(None) + + def __reduce_ex__(self, protocol): + return (self.__class__, (None, self._filename), self.__dict__) + + +class tzrange(tzrangebase): + """ + The ``tzrange`` object is a time zone specified by a set of offsets and + abbreviations, equivalent to the way the ``TZ`` variable can be specified + in POSIX-like systems, but using Python delta objects to specify DST + start, end and offsets. + + :param stdabbr: + The abbreviation for standard time (e.g. ``'EST'``). + + :param stdoffset: + An integer or :class:`datetime.timedelta` object or equivalent + specifying the base offset from UTC. + + If unspecified, +00:00 is used. + + :param dstabbr: + The abbreviation for DST / "Summer" time (e.g. ``'EDT'``). + + If specified, with no other DST information, DST is assumed to occur + and the default behavior or ``dstoffset``, ``start`` and ``end`` is + used. If unspecified and no other DST information is specified, it + is assumed that this zone has no DST. + + If this is unspecified and other DST information is *is* specified, + DST occurs in the zone but the time zone abbreviation is left + unchanged. + + :param dstoffset: + A an integer or :class:`datetime.timedelta` object or equivalent + specifying the UTC offset during DST. If unspecified and any other DST + information is specified, it is assumed to be the STD offset +1 hour. + + :param start: + A :class:`relativedelta.relativedelta` object or equivalent specifying + the time and time of year that daylight savings time starts. To + specify, for example, that DST starts at 2AM on the 2nd Sunday in + March, pass: + + ``relativedelta(hours=2, month=3, day=1, weekday=SU(+2))`` + + If unspecified and any other DST information is specified, the default + value is 2 AM on the first Sunday in April. + + :param end: + A :class:`relativedelta.relativedelta` object or equivalent + representing the time and time of year that daylight savings time + ends, with the same specification method as in ``start``. One note is + that this should point to the first time in the *standard* zone, so if + a transition occurs at 2AM in the DST zone and the clocks are set back + 1 hour to 1AM, set the ``hours`` parameter to +1. + + + **Examples:** + + .. testsetup:: tzrange + + from dateutil.tz import tzrange, tzstr + + .. doctest:: tzrange + + >>> tzstr('EST5EDT') == tzrange("EST", -18000, "EDT") + True + + >>> from dateutil.relativedelta import * + >>> range1 = tzrange("EST", -18000, "EDT") + >>> range2 = tzrange("EST", -18000, "EDT", -14400, + ... relativedelta(hours=+2, month=4, day=1, + ... weekday=SU(+1)), + ... relativedelta(hours=+1, month=10, day=31, + ... weekday=SU(-1))) + >>> tzstr('EST5EDT') == range1 == range2 + True + + """ + def __init__(self, stdabbr, stdoffset=None, + dstabbr=None, dstoffset=None, + start=None, end=None): + + global relativedelta + from dateutil import relativedelta + + self._std_abbr = stdabbr + self._dst_abbr = dstabbr + + try: + stdoffset = stdoffset.total_seconds() + except (TypeError, AttributeError): + pass + + try: + dstoffset = dstoffset.total_seconds() + except (TypeError, AttributeError): + pass + + if stdoffset is not None: + self._std_offset = datetime.timedelta(seconds=stdoffset) + else: + self._std_offset = ZERO + + if dstoffset is not None: + self._dst_offset = datetime.timedelta(seconds=dstoffset) + elif dstabbr and stdoffset is not None: + self._dst_offset = self._std_offset + datetime.timedelta(hours=+1) + else: + self._dst_offset = ZERO + + if dstabbr and start is None: + self._start_delta = relativedelta.relativedelta( + hours=+2, month=4, day=1, weekday=relativedelta.SU(+1)) + else: + self._start_delta = start + + if dstabbr and end is None: + self._end_delta = relativedelta.relativedelta( + hours=+1, month=10, day=31, weekday=relativedelta.SU(-1)) + else: + self._end_delta = end + + self._dst_base_offset_ = self._dst_offset - self._std_offset + self.hasdst = bool(self._start_delta) + + def transitions(self, year): + """ + For a given year, get the DST on and off transition times, expressed + always on the standard time side. For zones with no transitions, this + function returns ``None``. + + :param year: + The year whose transitions you would like to query. + + :return: + Returns a :class:`tuple` of :class:`datetime.datetime` objects, + ``(dston, dstoff)`` for zones with an annual DST transition, or + ``None`` for fixed offset zones. + """ + if not self.hasdst: + return None + + base_year = datetime.datetime(year, 1, 1) + + start = base_year + self._start_delta + end = base_year + self._end_delta + + return (start, end) + + def __eq__(self, other): + if not isinstance(other, tzrange): + return NotImplemented + + return (self._std_abbr == other._std_abbr and + self._dst_abbr == other._dst_abbr and + self._std_offset == other._std_offset and + self._dst_offset == other._dst_offset and + self._start_delta == other._start_delta and + self._end_delta == other._end_delta) + + @property + def _dst_base_offset(self): + return self._dst_base_offset_ + + +@six.add_metaclass(_TzStrFactory) +class tzstr(tzrange): + """ + ``tzstr`` objects are time zone objects specified by a time-zone string as + it would be passed to a ``TZ`` variable on POSIX-style systems (see + the `GNU C Library: TZ Variable`_ for more details). + + There is one notable exception, which is that POSIX-style time zones use an + inverted offset format, so normally ``GMT+3`` would be parsed as an offset + 3 hours *behind* GMT. The ``tzstr`` time zone object will parse this as an + offset 3 hours *ahead* of GMT. If you would like to maintain the POSIX + behavior, pass a ``True`` value to ``posix_offset``. + + The :class:`tzrange` object provides the same functionality, but is + specified using :class:`relativedelta.relativedelta` objects. rather than + strings. + + :param s: + A time zone string in ``TZ`` variable format. This can be a + :class:`bytes` (2.x: :class:`str`), :class:`str` (2.x: + :class:`unicode`) or a stream emitting unicode characters + (e.g. :class:`StringIO`). + + :param posix_offset: + Optional. If set to ``True``, interpret strings such as ``GMT+3`` or + ``UTC+3`` as being 3 hours *behind* UTC rather than ahead, per the + POSIX standard. + + .. caution:: + + Prior to version 2.7.0, this function also supported time zones + in the format: + + * ``EST5EDT,4,0,6,7200,10,0,26,7200,3600`` + * ``EST5EDT,4,1,0,7200,10,-1,0,7200,3600`` + + This format is non-standard and has been deprecated; this function + will raise a :class:`DeprecatedTZFormatWarning` until + support is removed in a future version. + + .. _`GNU C Library: TZ Variable`: + https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/TZ-Variable.html + """ + def __init__(self, s, posix_offset=False): + global parser + from dateutil.parser import _parser as parser + + self._s = s + + res = parser._parsetz(s) + if res is None or res.any_unused_tokens: + raise ValueError("unknown string format") + + # Here we break the compatibility with the TZ variable handling. + # GMT-3 actually *means* the timezone -3. + if res.stdabbr in ("GMT", "UTC") and not posix_offset: + res.stdoffset *= -1 + + # We must initialize it first, since _delta() needs + # _std_offset and _dst_offset set. Use False in start/end + # to avoid building it two times. + tzrange.__init__(self, res.stdabbr, res.stdoffset, + res.dstabbr, res.dstoffset, + start=False, end=False) + + if not res.dstabbr: + self._start_delta = None + self._end_delta = None + else: + self._start_delta = self._delta(res.start) + if self._start_delta: + self._end_delta = self._delta(res.end, isend=1) + + self.hasdst = bool(self._start_delta) + + def _delta(self, x, isend=0): + from dateutil import relativedelta + kwargs = {} + if x.month is not None: + kwargs["month"] = x.month + if x.weekday is not None: + kwargs["weekday"] = relativedelta.weekday(x.weekday, x.week) + if x.week > 0: + kwargs["day"] = 1 + else: + kwargs["day"] = 31 + elif x.day: + kwargs["day"] = x.day + elif x.yday is not None: + kwargs["yearday"] = x.yday + elif x.jyday is not None: + kwargs["nlyearday"] = x.jyday + if not kwargs: + # Default is to start on first sunday of april, and end + # on last sunday of october. + if not isend: + kwargs["month"] = 4 + kwargs["day"] = 1 + kwargs["weekday"] = relativedelta.SU(+1) + else: + kwargs["month"] = 10 + kwargs["day"] = 31 + kwargs["weekday"] = relativedelta.SU(-1) + if x.time is not None: + kwargs["seconds"] = x.time + else: + # Default is 2AM. + kwargs["seconds"] = 7200 + if isend: + # Convert to standard time, to follow the documented way + # of working with the extra hour. See the documentation + # of the tzinfo class. + delta = self._dst_offset - self._std_offset + kwargs["seconds"] -= delta.seconds + delta.days * 86400 + return relativedelta.relativedelta(**kwargs) + + def __repr__(self): + return "%s(%s)" % (self.__class__.__name__, repr(self._s)) + + +class _tzicalvtzcomp(object): + def __init__(self, tzoffsetfrom, tzoffsetto, isdst, + tzname=None, rrule=None): + self.tzoffsetfrom = datetime.timedelta(seconds=tzoffsetfrom) + self.tzoffsetto = datetime.timedelta(seconds=tzoffsetto) + self.tzoffsetdiff = self.tzoffsetto - self.tzoffsetfrom + self.isdst = isdst + self.tzname = tzname + self.rrule = rrule + + +class _tzicalvtz(_tzinfo): + def __init__(self, tzid, comps=[]): + super(_tzicalvtz, self).__init__() + + self._tzid = tzid + self._comps = comps + self._cachedate = [] + self._cachecomp = [] + self._cache_lock = _thread.allocate_lock() + + def _find_comp(self, dt): + if len(self._comps) == 1: + return self._comps[0] + + dt = dt.replace(tzinfo=None) + + try: + with self._cache_lock: + return self._cachecomp[self._cachedate.index( + (dt, self._fold(dt)))] + except ValueError: + pass + + lastcompdt = None + lastcomp = None + + for comp in self._comps: + compdt = self._find_compdt(comp, dt) + + if compdt and (not lastcompdt or lastcompdt < compdt): + lastcompdt = compdt + lastcomp = comp + + if not lastcomp: + # RFC says nothing about what to do when a given + # time is before the first onset date. We'll look for the + # first standard component, or the first component, if + # none is found. + for comp in self._comps: + if not comp.isdst: + lastcomp = comp + break + else: + lastcomp = comp[0] + + with self._cache_lock: + self._cachedate.insert(0, (dt, self._fold(dt))) + self._cachecomp.insert(0, lastcomp) + + if len(self._cachedate) > 10: + self._cachedate.pop() + self._cachecomp.pop() + + return lastcomp + + def _find_compdt(self, comp, dt): + if comp.tzoffsetdiff < ZERO and self._fold(dt): + dt -= comp.tzoffsetdiff + + compdt = comp.rrule.before(dt, inc=True) + + return compdt + + def utcoffset(self, dt): + if dt is None: + return None + + return self._find_comp(dt).tzoffsetto + + def dst(self, dt): + comp = self._find_comp(dt) + if comp.isdst: + return comp.tzoffsetdiff + else: + return ZERO + + @tzname_in_python2 + def tzname(self, dt): + return self._find_comp(dt).tzname + + def __repr__(self): + return "" % repr(self._tzid) + + __reduce__ = object.__reduce__ + + +class tzical(object): + """ + This object is designed to parse an iCalendar-style ``VTIMEZONE`` structure + as set out in `RFC 5545`_ Section 4.6.5 into one or more `tzinfo` objects. + + :param `fileobj`: + A file or stream in iCalendar format, which should be UTF-8 encoded + with CRLF endings. + + .. _`RFC 5545`: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5545 + """ + def __init__(self, fileobj): + global rrule + from dateutil import rrule + + if isinstance(fileobj, string_types): + self._s = fileobj + # ical should be encoded in UTF-8 with CRLF + fileobj = open(fileobj, 'r') + else: + self._s = getattr(fileobj, 'name', repr(fileobj)) + fileobj = _nullcontext(fileobj) + + self._vtz = {} + + with fileobj as fobj: + self._parse_rfc(fobj.read()) + + def keys(self): + """ + Retrieves the available time zones as a list. + """ + return list(self._vtz.keys()) + + def get(self, tzid=None): + """ + Retrieve a :py:class:`datetime.tzinfo` object by its ``tzid``. + + :param tzid: + If there is exactly one time zone available, omitting ``tzid`` + or passing :py:const:`None` value returns it. Otherwise a valid + key (which can be retrieved from :func:`keys`) is required. + + :raises ValueError: + Raised if ``tzid`` is not specified but there are either more + or fewer than 1 zone defined. + + :returns: + Returns either a :py:class:`datetime.tzinfo` object representing + the relevant time zone or :py:const:`None` if the ``tzid`` was + not found. + """ + if tzid is None: + if len(self._vtz) == 0: + raise ValueError("no timezones defined") + elif len(self._vtz) > 1: + raise ValueError("more than one timezone available") + tzid = next(iter(self._vtz)) + + return self._vtz.get(tzid) + + def _parse_offset(self, s): + s = s.strip() + if not s: + raise ValueError("empty offset") + if s[0] in ('+', '-'): + signal = (-1, +1)[s[0] == '+'] + s = s[1:] + else: + signal = +1 + if len(s) == 4: + return (int(s[:2]) * 3600 + int(s[2:]) * 60) * signal + elif len(s) == 6: + return (int(s[:2]) * 3600 + int(s[2:4]) * 60 + int(s[4:])) * signal + else: + raise ValueError("invalid offset: " + s) + + def _parse_rfc(self, s): + lines = s.splitlines() + if not lines: + raise ValueError("empty string") + + # Unfold + i = 0 + while i < len(lines): + line = lines[i].rstrip() + if not line: + del lines[i] + elif i > 0 and line[0] == " ": + lines[i-1] += line[1:] + del lines[i] + else: + i += 1 + + tzid = None + comps = [] + invtz = False + comptype = None + for line in lines: + if not line: + continue + name, value = line.split(':', 1) + parms = name.split(';') + if not parms: + raise ValueError("empty property name") + name = parms[0].upper() + parms = parms[1:] + if invtz: + if name == "BEGIN": + if value in ("STANDARD", "DAYLIGHT"): + # Process component + pass + else: + raise ValueError("unknown component: "+value) + comptype = value + founddtstart = False + tzoffsetfrom = None + tzoffsetto = None + rrulelines = [] + tzname = None + elif name == "END": + if value == "VTIMEZONE": + if comptype: + raise ValueError("component not closed: "+comptype) + if not tzid: + raise ValueError("mandatory TZID not found") + if not comps: + raise ValueError( + "at least one component is needed") + # Process vtimezone + self._vtz[tzid] = _tzicalvtz(tzid, comps) + invtz = False + elif value == comptype: + if not founddtstart: + raise ValueError("mandatory DTSTART not found") + if tzoffsetfrom is None: + raise ValueError( + "mandatory TZOFFSETFROM not found") + if tzoffsetto is None: + raise ValueError( + "mandatory TZOFFSETFROM not found") + # Process component + rr = None + if rrulelines: + rr = rrule.rrulestr("\n".join(rrulelines), + compatible=True, + ignoretz=True, + cache=True) + comp = _tzicalvtzcomp(tzoffsetfrom, tzoffsetto, + (comptype == "DAYLIGHT"), + tzname, rr) + comps.append(comp) + comptype = None + else: + raise ValueError("invalid component end: "+value) + elif comptype: + if name == "DTSTART": + # DTSTART in VTIMEZONE takes a subset of valid RRULE + # values under RFC 5545. + for parm in parms: + if parm != 'VALUE=DATE-TIME': + msg = ('Unsupported DTSTART param in ' + + 'VTIMEZONE: ' + parm) + raise ValueError(msg) + rrulelines.append(line) + founddtstart = True + elif name in ("RRULE", "RDATE", "EXRULE", "EXDATE"): + rrulelines.append(line) + elif name == "TZOFFSETFROM": + if parms: + raise ValueError( + "unsupported %s parm: %s " % (name, parms[0])) + tzoffsetfrom = self._parse_offset(value) + elif name == "TZOFFSETTO": + if parms: + raise ValueError( + "unsupported TZOFFSETTO parm: "+parms[0]) + tzoffsetto = self._parse_offset(value) + elif name == "TZNAME": + if parms: + raise ValueError( + "unsupported TZNAME parm: "+parms[0]) + tzname = value + elif name == "COMMENT": + pass + else: + raise ValueError("unsupported property: "+name) + else: + if name == "TZID": + if parms: + raise ValueError( + "unsupported TZID parm: "+parms[0]) + tzid = value + elif name in ("TZURL", "LAST-MODIFIED", "COMMENT"): + pass + else: + raise ValueError("unsupported property: "+name) + elif name == "BEGIN" and value == "VTIMEZONE": + tzid = None + comps = [] + invtz = True + + def __repr__(self): + return "%s(%s)" % (self.__class__.__name__, repr(self._s)) + + +if sys.platform != "win32": + TZFILES = ["/etc/localtime", "localtime"] + TZPATHS = ["/usr/share/zoneinfo", + "/usr/lib/zoneinfo", + "/usr/share/lib/zoneinfo", + "/etc/zoneinfo"] +else: + TZFILES = [] + TZPATHS = [] + + +def __get_gettz(): + tzlocal_classes = (tzlocal,) + if tzwinlocal is not None: + tzlocal_classes += (tzwinlocal,) + + class GettzFunc(object): + """ + Retrieve a time zone object from a string representation + + This function is intended to retrieve the :py:class:`tzinfo` subclass + that best represents the time zone that would be used if a POSIX + `TZ variable`_ were set to the same value. + + If no argument or an empty string is passed to ``gettz``, local time + is returned: + + .. code-block:: python3 + + >>> gettz() + tzfile('/etc/localtime') + + This function is also the preferred way to map IANA tz database keys + to :class:`tzfile` objects: + + .. code-block:: python3 + + >>> gettz('Pacific/Kiritimati') + tzfile('/usr/share/zoneinfo/Pacific/Kiritimati') + + On Windows, the standard is extended to include the Windows-specific + zone names provided by the operating system: + + .. code-block:: python3 + + >>> gettz('Egypt Standard Time') + tzwin('Egypt Standard Time') + + Passing a GNU ``TZ`` style string time zone specification returns a + :class:`tzstr` object: + + .. code-block:: python3 + + >>> gettz('AEST-10AEDT-11,M10.1.0/2,M4.1.0/3') + tzstr('AEST-10AEDT-11,M10.1.0/2,M4.1.0/3') + + :param name: + A time zone name (IANA, or, on Windows, Windows keys), location of + a ``tzfile(5)`` zoneinfo file or ``TZ`` variable style time zone + specifier. An empty string, no argument or ``None`` is interpreted + as local time. + + :return: + Returns an instance of one of ``dateutil``'s :py:class:`tzinfo` + subclasses. + + .. versionchanged:: 2.7.0 + + After version 2.7.0, any two calls to ``gettz`` using the same + input strings will return the same object: + + .. code-block:: python3 + + >>> tz.gettz('America/Chicago') is tz.gettz('America/Chicago') + True + + In addition to improving performance, this ensures that + `"same zone" semantics`_ are used for datetimes in the same zone. + + + .. _`TZ variable`: + https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/TZ-Variable.html + + .. _`"same zone" semantics`: + https://blog.ganssle.io/articles/2018/02/aware-datetime-arithmetic.html + """ + def __init__(self): + + self.__instances = weakref.WeakValueDictionary() + self.__strong_cache_size = 8 + self.__strong_cache = OrderedDict() + self._cache_lock = _thread.allocate_lock() + + def __call__(self, name=None): + with self._cache_lock: + rv = self.__instances.get(name, None) + + if rv is None: + rv = self.nocache(name=name) + if not (name is None + or isinstance(rv, tzlocal_classes) + or rv is None): + # tzlocal is slightly more complicated than the other + # time zone providers because it depends on environment + # at construction time, so don't cache that. + # + # We also cannot store weak references to None, so we + # will also not store that. + self.__instances[name] = rv + else: + # No need for strong caching, return immediately + return rv + + self.__strong_cache[name] = self.__strong_cache.pop(name, rv) + + if len(self.__strong_cache) > self.__strong_cache_size: + self.__strong_cache.popitem(last=False) + + return rv + + def set_cache_size(self, size): + with self._cache_lock: + self.__strong_cache_size = size + while len(self.__strong_cache) > size: + self.__strong_cache.popitem(last=False) + + def cache_clear(self): + with self._cache_lock: + self.__instances = weakref.WeakValueDictionary() + self.__strong_cache.clear() + + @staticmethod + def nocache(name=None): + """A non-cached version of gettz""" + tz = None + if not name: + try: + name = os.environ["TZ"] + except KeyError: + pass + if name is None or name in ("", ":"): + for filepath in TZFILES: + if not os.path.isabs(filepath): + filename = filepath + for path in TZPATHS: + filepath = os.path.join(path, filename) + if os.path.isfile(filepath): + break + else: + continue + if os.path.isfile(filepath): + try: + tz = tzfile(filepath) + break + except (IOError, OSError, ValueError): + pass + else: + tz = tzlocal() + else: + try: + if name.startswith(":"): + name = name[1:] + except TypeError as e: + if isinstance(name, bytes): + new_msg = "gettz argument should be str, not bytes" + six.raise_from(TypeError(new_msg), e) + else: + raise + if os.path.isabs(name): + if os.path.isfile(name): + tz = tzfile(name) + else: + tz = None + else: + for path in TZPATHS: + filepath = os.path.join(path, name) + if not os.path.isfile(filepath): + filepath = filepath.replace(' ', '_') + if not os.path.isfile(filepath): + continue + try: + tz = tzfile(filepath) + break + except (IOError, OSError, ValueError): + pass + else: + tz = None + if tzwin is not None: + try: + tz = tzwin(name) + except (WindowsError, UnicodeEncodeError): + # UnicodeEncodeError is for Python 2.7 compat + tz = None + + if not tz: + from dateutil.zoneinfo import get_zonefile_instance + tz = get_zonefile_instance().get(name) + + if not tz: + for c in name: + # name is not a tzstr unless it has at least + # one offset. For short values of "name", an + # explicit for loop seems to be the fastest way + # To determine if a string contains a digit + if c in "0123456789": + try: + tz = tzstr(name) + except ValueError: + pass + break + else: + if name in ("GMT", "UTC"): + tz = UTC + elif name in time.tzname: + tz = tzlocal() + return tz + + return GettzFunc() + + +gettz = __get_gettz() +del __get_gettz + + +def datetime_exists(dt, tz=None): + """ + Given a datetime and a time zone, determine whether or not a given datetime + would fall in a gap. + + :param dt: + A :class:`datetime.datetime` (whose time zone will be ignored if ``tz`` + is provided.) + + :param tz: + A :class:`datetime.tzinfo` with support for the ``fold`` attribute. If + ``None`` or not provided, the datetime's own time zone will be used. + + :return: + Returns a boolean value whether or not the "wall time" exists in + ``tz``. + + .. versionadded:: 2.7.0 + """ + if tz is None: + if dt.tzinfo is None: + raise ValueError('Datetime is naive and no time zone provided.') + tz = dt.tzinfo + + dt = dt.replace(tzinfo=None) + + # This is essentially a test of whether or not the datetime can survive + # a round trip to UTC. + dt_rt = dt.replace(tzinfo=tz).astimezone(UTC).astimezone(tz) + dt_rt = dt_rt.replace(tzinfo=None) + + return dt == dt_rt + + +def datetime_ambiguous(dt, tz=None): + """ + Given a datetime and a time zone, determine whether or not a given datetime + is ambiguous (i.e if there are two times differentiated only by their DST + status). + + :param dt: + A :class:`datetime.datetime` (whose time zone will be ignored if ``tz`` + is provided.) + + :param tz: + A :class:`datetime.tzinfo` with support for the ``fold`` attribute. If + ``None`` or not provided, the datetime's own time zone will be used. + + :return: + Returns a boolean value whether or not the "wall time" is ambiguous in + ``tz``. + + .. versionadded:: 2.6.0 + """ + if tz is None: + if dt.tzinfo is None: + raise ValueError('Datetime is naive and no time zone provided.') + + tz = dt.tzinfo + + # If a time zone defines its own "is_ambiguous" function, we'll use that. + is_ambiguous_fn = getattr(tz, 'is_ambiguous', None) + if is_ambiguous_fn is not None: + try: + return tz.is_ambiguous(dt) + except Exception: + pass + + # If it doesn't come out and tell us it's ambiguous, we'll just check if + # the fold attribute has any effect on this particular date and time. + dt = dt.replace(tzinfo=tz) + wall_0 = enfold(dt, fold=0) + wall_1 = enfold(dt, fold=1) + + same_offset = wall_0.utcoffset() == wall_1.utcoffset() + same_dst = wall_0.dst() == wall_1.dst() + + return not (same_offset and same_dst) + + +def resolve_imaginary(dt): + """ + Given a datetime that may be imaginary, return an existing datetime. + + This function assumes that an imaginary datetime represents what the + wall time would be in a zone had the offset transition not occurred, so + it will always fall forward by the transition's change in offset. + + .. doctest:: + + >>> from dateutil import tz + >>> from datetime import datetime + >>> NYC = tz.gettz('America/New_York') + >>> print(tz.resolve_imaginary(datetime(2017, 3, 12, 2, 30, tzinfo=NYC))) + 2017-03-12 03:30:00-04:00 + + >>> KIR = tz.gettz('Pacific/Kiritimati') + >>> print(tz.resolve_imaginary(datetime(1995, 1, 1, 12, 30, tzinfo=KIR))) + 1995-01-02 12:30:00+14:00 + + As a note, :func:`datetime.astimezone` is guaranteed to produce a valid, + existing datetime, so a round-trip to and from UTC is sufficient to get + an extant datetime, however, this generally "falls back" to an earlier time + rather than falling forward to the STD side (though no guarantees are made + about this behavior). + + :param dt: + A :class:`datetime.datetime` which may or may not exist. + + :return: + Returns an existing :class:`datetime.datetime`. If ``dt`` was not + imaginary, the datetime returned is guaranteed to be the same object + passed to the function. + + .. versionadded:: 2.7.0 + """ + if dt.tzinfo is not None and not datetime_exists(dt): + + curr_offset = (dt + datetime.timedelta(hours=24)).utcoffset() + old_offset = (dt - datetime.timedelta(hours=24)).utcoffset() + + dt += curr_offset - old_offset + + return dt + + +def _datetime_to_timestamp(dt): + """ + Convert a :class:`datetime.datetime` object to an epoch timestamp in + seconds since January 1, 1970, ignoring the time zone. + """ + return (dt.replace(tzinfo=None) - EPOCH).total_seconds() + + +if sys.version_info >= (3, 6): + def _get_supported_offset(second_offset): + return second_offset +else: + def _get_supported_offset(second_offset): + # For python pre-3.6, round to full-minutes if that's not the case. + # Python's datetime doesn't accept sub-minute timezones. Check + # http://python.org/sf/1447945 or https://bugs.python.org/issue5288 + # for some information. + old_offset = second_offset + calculated_offset = 60 * ((second_offset + 30) // 60) + return calculated_offset + + +try: + # Python 3.7 feature + from contextlib import nullcontext as _nullcontext +except ImportError: + class _nullcontext(object): + """ + Class for wrapping contexts so that they are passed through in a + with statement. + """ + def __init__(self, context): + self.context = context + + def __enter__(self): + return self.context + + def __exit__(*args, **kwargs): + pass + +# vim:ts=4:sw=4:et diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/tz/win.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/tz/win.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..cde07ba792c40903f0c334839140173b39fd8124 --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/dateutil/tz/win.py @@ -0,0 +1,370 @@ +# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- +""" +This module provides an interface to the native time zone data on Windows, +including :py:class:`datetime.tzinfo` implementations. + +Attempting to import this module on a non-Windows platform will raise an +:py:obj:`ImportError`. +""" +# This code was originally contributed by Jeffrey Harris. +import datetime +import struct + +from six.moves import winreg +from six import text_type + +try: + import ctypes + from ctypes import wintypes +except ValueError: + # ValueError is raised on non-Windows systems for some horrible reason. + raise ImportError("Running tzwin on non-Windows system") + +from ._common import tzrangebase + +__all__ = ["tzwin", "tzwinlocal", "tzres"] + +ONEWEEK = datetime.timedelta(7) + +TZKEYNAMENT = r"SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Time Zones" +TZKEYNAME9X = r"SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Time Zones" +TZLOCALKEYNAME = r"SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\TimeZoneInformation" + + +def _settzkeyname(): + handle = winreg.ConnectRegistry(None, winreg.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE) + try: + winreg.OpenKey(handle, TZKEYNAMENT).Close() + TZKEYNAME = TZKEYNAMENT + except WindowsError: + TZKEYNAME = TZKEYNAME9X + handle.Close() + return TZKEYNAME + + +TZKEYNAME = _settzkeyname() + + +class tzres(object): + """ + Class for accessing ``tzres.dll``, which contains timezone name related + resources. + + .. versionadded:: 2.5.0 + """ + p_wchar = ctypes.POINTER(wintypes.WCHAR) # Pointer to a wide char + + def __init__(self, tzres_loc='tzres.dll'): + # Load the user32 DLL so we can load strings from tzres + user32 = ctypes.WinDLL('user32') + + # Specify the LoadStringW function + user32.LoadStringW.argtypes = (wintypes.HINSTANCE, + wintypes.UINT, + wintypes.LPWSTR, + ctypes.c_int) + + self.LoadStringW = user32.LoadStringW + self._tzres = ctypes.WinDLL(tzres_loc) + self.tzres_loc = tzres_loc + + def load_name(self, offset): + """ + Load a timezone name from a DLL offset (integer). + + >>> from dateutil.tzwin import tzres + >>> tzr = tzres() + >>> print(tzr.load_name(112)) + 'Eastern Standard Time' + + :param offset: + A positive integer value referring to a string from the tzres dll. + + .. note:: + + Offsets found in the registry are generally of the form + ``@tzres.dll,-114``. The offset in this case is 114, not -114. + + """ + resource = self.p_wchar() + lpBuffer = ctypes.cast(ctypes.byref(resource), wintypes.LPWSTR) + nchar = self.LoadStringW(self._tzres._handle, offset, lpBuffer, 0) + return resource[:nchar] + + def name_from_string(self, tzname_str): + """ + Parse strings as returned from the Windows registry into the time zone + name as defined in the registry. + + >>> from dateutil.tzwin import tzres + >>> tzr = tzres() + >>> print(tzr.name_from_string('@tzres.dll,-251')) + 'Dateline Daylight Time' + >>> print(tzr.name_from_string('Eastern Standard Time')) + 'Eastern Standard Time' + + :param tzname_str: + A timezone name string as returned from a Windows registry key. + + :return: + Returns the localized timezone string from tzres.dll if the string + is of the form `@tzres.dll,-offset`, else returns the input string. + """ + if not tzname_str.startswith('@'): + return tzname_str + + name_splt = tzname_str.split(',-') + try: + offset = int(name_splt[1]) + except: + raise ValueError("Malformed timezone string.") + + return self.load_name(offset) + + +class tzwinbase(tzrangebase): + """tzinfo class based on win32's timezones available in the registry.""" + def __init__(self): + raise NotImplementedError('tzwinbase is an abstract base class') + + def __eq__(self, other): + # Compare on all relevant dimensions, including name. + if not isinstance(other, tzwinbase): + return NotImplemented + + return (self._std_offset == other._std_offset and + self._dst_offset == other._dst_offset and + self._stddayofweek == other._stddayofweek and + self._dstdayofweek == other._dstdayofweek and + self._stdweeknumber == other._stdweeknumber and + self._dstweeknumber == other._dstweeknumber and + self._stdhour == other._stdhour and + self._dsthour == other._dsthour and + self._stdminute == other._stdminute and + self._dstminute == other._dstminute and + self._std_abbr == other._std_abbr and + self._dst_abbr == other._dst_abbr) + + @staticmethod + def list(): + """Return a list of all time zones known to the system.""" + with winreg.ConnectRegistry(None, winreg.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE) as handle: + with winreg.OpenKey(handle, TZKEYNAME) as tzkey: + result = [winreg.EnumKey(tzkey, i) + for i in range(winreg.QueryInfoKey(tzkey)[0])] + return result + + def display(self): + """ + Return the display name of the time zone. + """ + return self._display + + def transitions(self, year): + """ + For a given year, get the DST on and off transition times, expressed + always on the standard time side. For zones with no transitions, this + function returns ``None``. + + :param year: + The year whose transitions you would like to query. + + :return: + Returns a :class:`tuple` of :class:`datetime.datetime` objects, + ``(dston, dstoff)`` for zones with an annual DST transition, or + ``None`` for fixed offset zones. + """ + + if not self.hasdst: + return None + + dston = picknthweekday(year, self._dstmonth, self._dstdayofweek, + self._dsthour, self._dstminute, + self._dstweeknumber) + + dstoff = picknthweekday(year, self._stdmonth, self._stddayofweek, + self._stdhour, self._stdminute, + self._stdweeknumber) + + # Ambiguous dates default to the STD side + dstoff -= self._dst_base_offset + + return dston, dstoff + + def _get_hasdst(self): + return self._dstmonth != 0 + + @property + def _dst_base_offset(self): + return self._dst_base_offset_ + + +class tzwin(tzwinbase): + """ + Time zone object created from the zone info in the Windows registry + + These are similar to :py:class:`dateutil.tz.tzrange` objects in that + the time zone data is provided in the format of a single offset rule + for either 0 or 2 time zone transitions per year. + + :param: name + The name of a Windows time zone key, e.g. "Eastern Standard Time". + The full list of keys can be retrieved with :func:`tzwin.list`. + """ + + def __init__(self, name): + self._name = name + + with winreg.ConnectRegistry(None, winreg.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE) as handle: + tzkeyname = text_type("{kn}\\{name}").format(kn=TZKEYNAME, name=name) + with winreg.OpenKey(handle, tzkeyname) as tzkey: + keydict = valuestodict(tzkey) + + self._std_abbr = keydict["Std"] + self._dst_abbr = keydict["Dlt"] + + self._display = keydict["Display"] + + # See http://ww_winreg.jsiinc.com/SUBA/tip0300/rh0398.htm + tup = struct.unpack("=3l16h", keydict["TZI"]) + stdoffset = -tup[0]-tup[1] # Bias + StandardBias * -1 + dstoffset = stdoffset-tup[2] # + DaylightBias * -1 + self._std_offset = datetime.timedelta(minutes=stdoffset) + self._dst_offset = datetime.timedelta(minutes=dstoffset) + + # for the meaning see the win32 TIME_ZONE_INFORMATION structure docs + # http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms725481(v=vs.85).aspx + (self._stdmonth, + self._stddayofweek, # Sunday = 0 + self._stdweeknumber, # Last = 5 + self._stdhour, + self._stdminute) = tup[4:9] + + (self._dstmonth, + self._dstdayofweek, # Sunday = 0 + self._dstweeknumber, # Last = 5 + self._dsthour, + self._dstminute) = tup[12:17] + + self._dst_base_offset_ = self._dst_offset - self._std_offset + self.hasdst = self._get_hasdst() + + def __repr__(self): + return "tzwin(%s)" % repr(self._name) + + def __reduce__(self): + return (self.__class__, (self._name,)) + + +class tzwinlocal(tzwinbase): + """ + Class representing the local time zone information in the Windows registry + + While :class:`dateutil.tz.tzlocal` makes system calls (via the :mod:`time` + module) to retrieve time zone information, ``tzwinlocal`` retrieves the + rules directly from the Windows registry and creates an object like + :class:`dateutil.tz.tzwin`. + + Because Windows does not have an equivalent of :func:`time.tzset`, on + Windows, :class:`dateutil.tz.tzlocal` instances will always reflect the + time zone settings *at the time that the process was started*, meaning + changes to the machine's time zone settings during the run of a program + on Windows will **not** be reflected by :class:`dateutil.tz.tzlocal`. + Because ``tzwinlocal`` reads the registry directly, it is unaffected by + this issue. + """ + def __init__(self): + with winreg.ConnectRegistry(None, winreg.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE) as handle: + with winreg.OpenKey(handle, TZLOCALKEYNAME) as tzlocalkey: + keydict = valuestodict(tzlocalkey) + + self._std_abbr = keydict["StandardName"] + self._dst_abbr = keydict["DaylightName"] + + try: + tzkeyname = text_type('{kn}\\{sn}').format(kn=TZKEYNAME, + sn=self._std_abbr) + with winreg.OpenKey(handle, tzkeyname) as tzkey: + _keydict = valuestodict(tzkey) + self._display = _keydict["Display"] + except OSError: + self._display = None + + stdoffset = -keydict["Bias"]-keydict["StandardBias"] + dstoffset = stdoffset-keydict["DaylightBias"] + + self._std_offset = datetime.timedelta(minutes=stdoffset) + self._dst_offset = datetime.timedelta(minutes=dstoffset) + + # For reasons unclear, in this particular key, the day of week has been + # moved to the END of the SYSTEMTIME structure. + tup = struct.unpack("=8h", keydict["StandardStart"]) + + (self._stdmonth, + self._stdweeknumber, # Last = 5 + self._stdhour, + self._stdminute) = tup[1:5] + + self._stddayofweek = tup[7] + + tup = struct.unpack("=8h", keydict["DaylightStart"]) + + (self._dstmonth, + self._dstweeknumber, # Last = 5 + self._dsthour, + self._dstminute) = tup[1:5] + + self._dstdayofweek = tup[7] + + self._dst_base_offset_ = self._dst_offset - self._std_offset + self.hasdst = self._get_hasdst() + + def __repr__(self): + return "tzwinlocal()" + + def __str__(self): + # str will return the standard name, not the daylight name. + return "tzwinlocal(%s)" % repr(self._std_abbr) + + def __reduce__(self): + return (self.__class__, ()) + + +def picknthweekday(year, month, dayofweek, hour, minute, whichweek): + """ dayofweek == 0 means Sunday, whichweek 5 means last instance """ + first = datetime.datetime(year, month, 1, hour, minute) + + # This will work if dayofweek is ISO weekday (1-7) or Microsoft-style (0-6), + # Because 7 % 7 = 0 + weekdayone = first.replace(day=((dayofweek - first.isoweekday()) % 7) + 1) + wd = weekdayone + ((whichweek - 1) * ONEWEEK) + if (wd.month != month): + wd -= ONEWEEK + + return wd + + +def valuestodict(key): + """Convert a registry key's values to a dictionary.""" + dout = {} + size = winreg.QueryInfoKey(key)[1] + tz_res = None + + for i in range(size): + key_name, value, dtype = winreg.EnumValue(key, i) + if dtype == winreg.REG_DWORD or dtype == winreg.REG_DWORD_LITTLE_ENDIAN: + # If it's a DWORD (32-bit integer), it's 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0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..0f7d282aa5df08f3e2692bf1e51dfaaea60ae4ea --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/more.py @@ -0,0 +1,3825 @@ +import warnings + +from collections import Counter, defaultdict, deque, abc +from collections.abc import Sequence +from concurrent.futures import ThreadPoolExecutor +from functools import partial, reduce, wraps +from heapq import merge, heapify, heapreplace, heappop +from itertools import ( + chain, + compress, + count, + cycle, + dropwhile, + groupby, + islice, + repeat, + starmap, + takewhile, + tee, + zip_longest, +) +from math import exp, factorial, floor, log +from queue import Empty, Queue +from random import random, randrange, uniform +from operator import itemgetter, mul, sub, gt, lt +from sys import hexversion, maxsize +from time import monotonic + +from .recipes import ( + consume, + flatten, + pairwise, + powerset, + take, + unique_everseen, +) + +__all__ = [ + 'AbortThread', + 'adjacent', + 'always_iterable', + 'always_reversible', + 'bucket', + 'callback_iter', + 'chunked', + 'circular_shifts', + 'collapse', + 'collate', + 'consecutive_groups', + 'consumer', + 'countable', + 'count_cycle', + 'mark_ends', + 'difference', + 'distinct_combinations', + 'distinct_permutations', + 'distribute', + 'divide', + 'exactly_n', + 'filter_except', + 'first', + 'groupby_transform', + 'ilen', + 'interleave_longest', + 'interleave', + 'intersperse', + 'islice_extended', + 'iterate', + 'ichunked', + 'is_sorted', + 'last', + 'locate', + 'lstrip', + 'make_decorator', + 'map_except', + 'map_reduce', + 'nth_or_last', + 'nth_permutation', + 'nth_product', + 'numeric_range', + 'one', + 'only', + 'padded', + 'partitions', + 'set_partitions', + 'peekable', + 'repeat_last', + 'replace', + 'rlocate', + 'rstrip', + 'run_length', + 'sample', + 'seekable', + 'SequenceView', + 'side_effect', + 'sliced', + 'sort_together', + 'split_at', + 'split_after', + 'split_before', + 'split_when', + 'split_into', + 'spy', + 'stagger', + 'strip', + 'substrings', + 'substrings_indexes', + 'time_limited', + 'unique_to_each', + 'unzip', + 'windowed', + 'with_iter', + 'UnequalIterablesError', + 'zip_equal', + 'zip_offset', + 'windowed_complete', + 'all_unique', + 'value_chain', + 'product_index', + 'combination_index', + 'permutation_index', +] + +_marker = object() + + +def chunked(iterable, n, strict=False): + """Break *iterable* into lists of length *n*: + + >>> list(chunked([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6], 3)) + [[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6]] + + By the default, the last yielded list will have fewer than *n* elements + if the length of *iterable* is not divisible by *n*: + + >>> list(chunked([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8], 3)) + [[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6], [7, 8]] + + To use a fill-in value instead, see the :func:`grouper` recipe. + + If the length of *iterable* is not divisible by *n* and *strict* is + ``True``, then ``ValueError`` will be raised before the last + list is yielded. + + """ + iterator = iter(partial(take, n, iter(iterable)), []) + if strict: + + def ret(): + for chunk in iterator: + if len(chunk) != n: + raise ValueError('iterable is not divisible by n.') + yield chunk + + return iter(ret()) + else: + return iterator + + +def first(iterable, default=_marker): + """Return the first item of *iterable*, or *default* if *iterable* is + empty. + + >>> first([0, 1, 2, 3]) + 0 + >>> first([], 'some default') + 'some default' + + If *default* is not provided and there are no items in the iterable, + raise ``ValueError``. + + :func:`first` is useful when you have a generator of expensive-to-retrieve + values and want any arbitrary one. It is marginally shorter than + ``next(iter(iterable), default)``. + + """ + try: + return next(iter(iterable)) + except StopIteration as e: + if default is _marker: + raise ValueError( + 'first() was called on an empty iterable, and no ' + 'default value was provided.' + ) from e + return default + + +def last(iterable, default=_marker): + """Return the last item of *iterable*, or *default* if *iterable* is + empty. + + >>> last([0, 1, 2, 3]) + 3 + >>> last([], 'some default') + 'some default' + + If *default* is not provided and there are no items in the iterable, + raise ``ValueError``. + """ + try: + if isinstance(iterable, Sequence): + return iterable[-1] + # Work around https://bugs.python.org/issue38525 + elif hasattr(iterable, '__reversed__') and (hexversion != 0x030800F0): + return next(reversed(iterable)) + else: + return deque(iterable, maxlen=1)[-1] + except (IndexError, TypeError, StopIteration): + if default is _marker: + raise ValueError( + 'last() was called on an empty iterable, and no default was ' + 'provided.' + ) + return default + + +def nth_or_last(iterable, n, default=_marker): + """Return the nth or the last item of *iterable*, + or *default* if *iterable* is empty. + + >>> nth_or_last([0, 1, 2, 3], 2) + 2 + >>> nth_or_last([0, 1], 2) + 1 + >>> nth_or_last([], 0, 'some default') + 'some default' + + If *default* is not provided and there are no items in the iterable, + raise ``ValueError``. + """ + return last(islice(iterable, n + 1), default=default) + + +class peekable: + """Wrap an iterator to allow lookahead and prepending elements. + + Call :meth:`peek` on the result to get the value that will be returned + by :func:`next`. This won't advance the iterator: + + >>> p = peekable(['a', 'b']) + >>> p.peek() + 'a' + >>> next(p) + 'a' + + Pass :meth:`peek` a default value to return that instead of raising + ``StopIteration`` when the iterator is exhausted. + + >>> p = peekable([]) + >>> p.peek('hi') + 'hi' + + peekables also offer a :meth:`prepend` method, which "inserts" items + at the head of the iterable: + + >>> p = peekable([1, 2, 3]) + >>> p.prepend(10, 11, 12) + >>> next(p) + 10 + >>> p.peek() + 11 + >>> list(p) + [11, 12, 1, 2, 3] + + peekables can be indexed. Index 0 is the item that will be returned by + :func:`next`, index 1 is the item after that, and so on: + The values up to the given index will be cached. + + >>> p = peekable(['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']) + >>> p[0] + 'a' + >>> p[1] + 'b' + >>> next(p) + 'a' + + Negative indexes are supported, but be aware that they will cache the + remaining items in the source iterator, which may require significant + storage. + + To check whether a peekable is exhausted, check its truth value: + + >>> p = peekable(['a', 'b']) + >>> if p: # peekable has items + ... list(p) + ['a', 'b'] + >>> if not p: # peekable is exhausted + ... list(p) + [] + + """ + + def __init__(self, iterable): + self._it = iter(iterable) + self._cache = deque() + + def __iter__(self): + return self + + def __bool__(self): + try: + self.peek() + except StopIteration: + return False + return True + + def peek(self, default=_marker): + """Return the item that will be next returned from ``next()``. + + Return ``default`` if there are no items left. If ``default`` is not + provided, raise ``StopIteration``. + + """ + if not self._cache: + try: + self._cache.append(next(self._it)) + except StopIteration: + if default is _marker: + raise + return default + return self._cache[0] + + def prepend(self, *items): + """Stack up items to be the next ones returned from ``next()`` or + ``self.peek()``. The items will be returned in + first in, first out order:: + + >>> p = peekable([1, 2, 3]) + >>> p.prepend(10, 11, 12) + >>> next(p) + 10 + >>> list(p) + [11, 12, 1, 2, 3] + + It is possible, by prepending items, to "resurrect" a peekable that + previously raised ``StopIteration``. + + >>> p = peekable([]) + >>> next(p) + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + StopIteration + >>> p.prepend(1) + >>> next(p) + 1 + >>> next(p) + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + StopIteration + + """ + self._cache.extendleft(reversed(items)) + + def __next__(self): + if self._cache: + return self._cache.popleft() + + return next(self._it) + + def _get_slice(self, index): + # Normalize the slice's arguments + step = 1 if (index.step is None) else index.step + if step > 0: + start = 0 if (index.start is None) else index.start + stop = maxsize if (index.stop is None) else index.stop + elif step < 0: + start = -1 if (index.start is None) else index.start + stop = (-maxsize - 1) if (index.stop is None) else index.stop + else: + raise ValueError('slice step cannot be zero') + + # If either the start or stop index is negative, we'll need to cache + # the rest of the iterable in order to slice from the right side. + if (start < 0) or (stop < 0): + self._cache.extend(self._it) + # Otherwise we'll need to find the rightmost index and cache to that + # point. + else: + n = min(max(start, stop) + 1, maxsize) + cache_len = len(self._cache) + if n >= cache_len: + self._cache.extend(islice(self._it, n - cache_len)) + + return list(self._cache)[index] + + def __getitem__(self, index): + if isinstance(index, slice): + return self._get_slice(index) + + cache_len = len(self._cache) + if index < 0: + self._cache.extend(self._it) + elif index >= cache_len: + self._cache.extend(islice(self._it, index + 1 - cache_len)) + + return self._cache[index] + + +def collate(*iterables, **kwargs): + """Return a sorted merge of the items from each of several already-sorted + *iterables*. + + >>> list(collate('ACDZ', 'AZ', 'JKL')) + ['A', 'A', 'C', 'D', 'J', 'K', 'L', 'Z', 'Z'] + + Works lazily, keeping only the next value from each iterable in memory. Use + :func:`collate` to, for example, perform a n-way mergesort of items that + don't fit in memory. + + If a *key* function is specified, the iterables will be sorted according + to its result: + + >>> key = lambda s: int(s) # Sort by numeric value, not by string + >>> list(collate(['1', '10'], ['2', '11'], key=key)) + ['1', '2', '10', '11'] + + + If the *iterables* are sorted in descending order, set *reverse* to + ``True``: + + >>> list(collate([5, 3, 1], [4, 2, 0], reverse=True)) + [5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0] + + If the elements of the passed-in iterables are out of order, you might get + unexpected results. + + On Python 3.5+, this function is an alias for :func:`heapq.merge`. + + """ + warnings.warn( + "collate is no longer part of more_itertools, use heapq.merge", + DeprecationWarning, + ) + return merge(*iterables, **kwargs) + + +def consumer(func): + """Decorator that automatically advances a PEP-342-style "reverse iterator" + to its first yield point so you don't have to call ``next()`` on it + manually. + + >>> @consumer + ... def tally(): + ... i = 0 + ... while True: + ... print('Thing number %s is %s.' % (i, (yield))) + ... i += 1 + ... + >>> t = tally() + >>> t.send('red') + Thing number 0 is red. + >>> t.send('fish') + Thing number 1 is fish. + + Without the decorator, you would have to call ``next(t)`` before + ``t.send()`` could be used. + + """ + + @wraps(func) + def wrapper(*args, **kwargs): + gen = func(*args, **kwargs) + next(gen) + return gen + + return wrapper + + +def ilen(iterable): + """Return the number of items in *iterable*. + + >>> ilen(x for x in range(1000000) if x % 3 == 0) + 333334 + + This consumes the iterable, so handle with care. + + """ + # This approach was selected because benchmarks showed it's likely the + # fastest of the known implementations at the time of writing. + # See GitHub tracker: #236, #230. + counter = count() + deque(zip(iterable, counter), maxlen=0) + return next(counter) + + +def iterate(func, start): + """Return ``start``, ``func(start)``, ``func(func(start))``, ... + + >>> from itertools import islice + >>> list(islice(iterate(lambda x: 2*x, 1), 10)) + [1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512] + + """ + while True: + yield start + start = func(start) + + +def with_iter(context_manager): + """Wrap an iterable in a ``with`` statement, so it closes once exhausted. + + For example, this will close the file when the iterator is exhausted:: + + upper_lines = (line.upper() for line in with_iter(open('foo'))) + + Any context manager which returns an iterable is a candidate for + ``with_iter``. + + """ + with context_manager as iterable: + yield from iterable + + +def one(iterable, too_short=None, too_long=None): + """Return the first item from *iterable*, which is expected to contain only + that item. Raise an exception if *iterable* is empty or has more than one + item. + + :func:`one` is useful for ensuring that an iterable contains only one item. + For example, it can be used to retrieve the result of a database query + that is expected to return a single row. + + If *iterable* is empty, ``ValueError`` will be raised. You may specify a + different exception with the *too_short* keyword: + + >>> it = [] + >>> one(it) # doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + ValueError: too many items in iterable (expected 1)' + >>> too_short = IndexError('too few items') + >>> one(it, too_short=too_short) # doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + IndexError: too few items + + Similarly, if *iterable* contains more than one item, ``ValueError`` will + be raised. You may specify a different exception with the *too_long* + keyword: + + >>> it = ['too', 'many'] + >>> one(it) # doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + ValueError: Expected exactly one item in iterable, but got 'too', + 'many', and perhaps more. + >>> too_long = RuntimeError + >>> one(it, too_long=too_long) # doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + RuntimeError + + Note that :func:`one` attempts to advance *iterable* twice to ensure there + is only one item. See :func:`spy` or :func:`peekable` to check iterable + contents less destructively. + + """ + it = iter(iterable) + + try: + first_value = next(it) + except StopIteration as e: + raise ( + too_short or ValueError('too few items in iterable (expected 1)') + ) from e + + try: + second_value = next(it) + except StopIteration: + pass + else: + msg = ( + 'Expected exactly one item in iterable, but got {!r}, {!r}, ' + 'and perhaps more.'.format(first_value, second_value) + ) + raise too_long or ValueError(msg) + + return first_value + + +def distinct_permutations(iterable, r=None): + """Yield successive distinct permutations of the elements in *iterable*. + + >>> sorted(distinct_permutations([1, 0, 1])) + [(0, 1, 1), (1, 0, 1), (1, 1, 0)] + + Equivalent to ``set(permutations(iterable))``, except duplicates are not + generated and thrown away. For larger input sequences this is much more + efficient. + + Duplicate permutations arise when there are duplicated elements in the + input iterable. The number of items returned is + `n! / (x_1! * x_2! * ... * x_n!)`, where `n` is the total number of + items input, and each `x_i` is the count of a distinct item in the input + sequence. + + If *r* is given, only the *r*-length permutations are yielded. + + >>> sorted(distinct_permutations([1, 0, 1], r=2)) + [(0, 1), (1, 0), (1, 1)] + >>> sorted(distinct_permutations(range(3), r=2)) + [(0, 1), (0, 2), (1, 0), (1, 2), (2, 0), (2, 1)] + + """ + # Algorithm: https://w.wiki/Qai + def _full(A): + while True: + # Yield the permutation we have + yield tuple(A) + + # Find the largest index i such that A[i] < A[i + 1] + for i in range(size - 2, -1, -1): + if A[i] < A[i + 1]: + break + # If no such index exists, this permutation is the last one + else: + return + + # Find the largest index j greater than j such that A[i] < A[j] + for j in range(size - 1, i, -1): + if A[i] < A[j]: + break + + # Swap the value of A[i] with that of A[j], then reverse the + # sequence from A[i + 1] to form the new permutation + A[i], A[j] = A[j], A[i] + A[i + 1 :] = A[: i - size : -1] # A[i + 1:][::-1] + + # Algorithm: modified from the above + def _partial(A, r): + # Split A into the first r items and the last r items + head, tail = A[:r], A[r:] + right_head_indexes = range(r - 1, -1, -1) + left_tail_indexes = range(len(tail)) + + while True: + # Yield the permutation we have + yield tuple(head) + + # Starting from the right, find the first index of the head with + # value smaller than the maximum value of the tail - call it i. + pivot = tail[-1] + for i in right_head_indexes: + if head[i] < pivot: + break + pivot = head[i] + else: + return + + # Starting from the left, find the first value of the tail + # with a value greater than head[i] and swap. + for j in left_tail_indexes: + if tail[j] > head[i]: + head[i], tail[j] = tail[j], head[i] + break + # If we didn't find one, start from the right and find the first + # index of the head with a value greater than head[i] and swap. + else: + for j in right_head_indexes: + if head[j] > head[i]: + head[i], head[j] = head[j], head[i] + break + + # Reverse head[i + 1:] and swap it with tail[:r - (i + 1)] + tail += head[: i - r : -1] # head[i + 1:][::-1] + i += 1 + head[i:], tail[:] = tail[: r - i], tail[r - i :] + + items = sorted(iterable) + + size = len(items) + if r is None: + r = size + + if 0 < r <= size: + return _full(items) if (r == size) else _partial(items, r) + + return iter(() if r else ((),)) + + +def intersperse(e, iterable, n=1): + """Intersperse filler element *e* among the items in *iterable*, leaving + *n* items between each filler element. + + >>> list(intersperse('!', [1, 2, 3, 4, 5])) + [1, '!', 2, '!', 3, '!', 4, '!', 5] + + >>> list(intersperse(None, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5], n=2)) + [1, 2, None, 3, 4, None, 5] + + """ + if n == 0: + raise ValueError('n must be > 0') + elif n == 1: + # interleave(repeat(e), iterable) -> e, x_0, e, e, x_1, e, x_2... + # islice(..., 1, None) -> x_0, e, e, x_1, e, x_2... + return islice(interleave(repeat(e), iterable), 1, None) + else: + # interleave(filler, chunks) -> [e], [x_0, x_1], [e], [x_2, x_3]... + # islice(..., 1, None) -> [x_0, x_1], [e], [x_2, x_3]... + # flatten(...) -> x_0, x_1, e, x_2, x_3... + filler = repeat([e]) + chunks = chunked(iterable, n) + return flatten(islice(interleave(filler, chunks), 1, None)) + + +def unique_to_each(*iterables): + """Return the elements from each of the input iterables that aren't in the + other input iterables. + + For example, suppose you have a set of packages, each with a set of + dependencies:: + + {'pkg_1': {'A', 'B'}, 'pkg_2': {'B', 'C'}, 'pkg_3': {'B', 'D'}} + + If you remove one package, which dependencies can also be removed? + + If ``pkg_1`` is removed, then ``A`` is no longer necessary - it is not + associated with ``pkg_2`` or ``pkg_3``. Similarly, ``C`` is only needed for + ``pkg_2``, and ``D`` is only needed for ``pkg_3``:: + + >>> unique_to_each({'A', 'B'}, {'B', 'C'}, {'B', 'D'}) + [['A'], ['C'], ['D']] + + If there are duplicates in one input iterable that aren't in the others + they will be duplicated in the output. Input order is preserved:: + + >>> unique_to_each("mississippi", "missouri") + [['p', 'p'], ['o', 'u', 'r']] + + It is assumed that the elements of each iterable are hashable. + + """ + pool = [list(it) for it in iterables] + counts = Counter(chain.from_iterable(map(set, pool))) + uniques = {element for element in counts if counts[element] == 1} + return [list(filter(uniques.__contains__, it)) for it in pool] + + +def windowed(seq, n, fillvalue=None, step=1): + """Return a sliding window of width *n* over the given iterable. + + >>> all_windows = windowed([1, 2, 3, 4, 5], 3) + >>> list(all_windows) + [(1, 2, 3), (2, 3, 4), (3, 4, 5)] + + When the window is larger than the iterable, *fillvalue* is used in place + of missing values: + + >>> list(windowed([1, 2, 3], 4)) + [(1, 2, 3, None)] + + Each window will advance in increments of *step*: + + >>> list(windowed([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6], 3, fillvalue='!', step=2)) + [(1, 2, 3), (3, 4, 5), (5, 6, '!')] + + To slide into the iterable's items, use :func:`chain` to add filler items + to the left: + + >>> iterable = [1, 2, 3, 4] + >>> n = 3 + >>> padding = [None] * (n - 1) + >>> list(windowed(chain(padding, iterable), 3)) + [(None, None, 1), (None, 1, 2), (1, 2, 3), (2, 3, 4)] + """ + if n < 0: + raise ValueError('n must be >= 0') + if n == 0: + yield tuple() + return + if step < 1: + raise ValueError('step must be >= 1') + + window = deque(maxlen=n) + i = n + for _ in map(window.append, seq): + i -= 1 + if not i: + i = step + yield tuple(window) + + size = len(window) + if size < n: + yield tuple(chain(window, repeat(fillvalue, n - size))) + elif 0 < i < min(step, n): + window += (fillvalue,) * i + yield tuple(window) + + +def substrings(iterable): + """Yield all of the substrings of *iterable*. + + >>> [''.join(s) for s in substrings('more')] + ['m', 'o', 'r', 'e', 'mo', 'or', 're', 'mor', 'ore', 'more'] + + Note that non-string iterables can also be subdivided. + + >>> list(substrings([0, 1, 2])) + [(0,), (1,), (2,), (0, 1), (1, 2), (0, 1, 2)] + + """ + # The length-1 substrings + seq = [] + for item in iter(iterable): + seq.append(item) + yield (item,) + seq = tuple(seq) + item_count = len(seq) + + # And the rest + for n in range(2, item_count + 1): + for i in range(item_count - n + 1): + yield seq[i : i + n] + + +def substrings_indexes(seq, reverse=False): + """Yield all substrings and their positions in *seq* + + The items yielded will be a tuple of the form ``(substr, i, j)``, where + ``substr == seq[i:j]``. + + This function only works for iterables that support slicing, such as + ``str`` objects. + + >>> for item in substrings_indexes('more'): + ... print(item) + ('m', 0, 1) + ('o', 1, 2) + ('r', 2, 3) + ('e', 3, 4) + ('mo', 0, 2) + ('or', 1, 3) + ('re', 2, 4) + ('mor', 0, 3) + ('ore', 1, 4) + ('more', 0, 4) + + Set *reverse* to ``True`` to yield the same items in the opposite order. + + + """ + r = range(1, len(seq) + 1) + if reverse: + r = reversed(r) + return ( + (seq[i : i + L], i, i + L) for L in r for i in range(len(seq) - L + 1) + ) + + +class bucket: + """Wrap *iterable* and return an object that buckets it iterable into + child iterables based on a *key* function. + + >>> iterable = ['a1', 'b1', 'c1', 'a2', 'b2', 'c2', 'b3'] + >>> s = bucket(iterable, key=lambda x: x[0]) # Bucket by 1st character + >>> sorted(list(s)) # Get the keys + ['a', 'b', 'c'] + >>> a_iterable = s['a'] + >>> next(a_iterable) + 'a1' + >>> next(a_iterable) + 'a2' + >>> list(s['b']) + ['b1', 'b2', 'b3'] + + The original iterable will be advanced and its items will be cached until + they are used by the child iterables. This may require significant storage. + + By default, attempting to select a bucket to which no items belong will + exhaust the iterable and cache all values. + If you specify a *validator* function, selected buckets will instead be + checked against it. + + >>> from itertools import count + >>> it = count(1, 2) # Infinite sequence of odd numbers + >>> key = lambda x: x % 10 # Bucket by last digit + >>> validator = lambda x: x in {1, 3, 5, 7, 9} # Odd digits only + >>> s = bucket(it, key=key, validator=validator) + >>> 2 in s + False + >>> list(s[2]) + [] + + """ + + def __init__(self, iterable, key, validator=None): + self._it = iter(iterable) + self._key = key + self._cache = defaultdict(deque) + self._validator = validator or (lambda x: True) + + def __contains__(self, value): + if not self._validator(value): + return False + + try: + item = next(self[value]) + except StopIteration: + return False + else: + self._cache[value].appendleft(item) + + return True + + def _get_values(self, value): + """ + Helper to yield items from the parent iterator that match *value*. + Items that don't match are stored in the local cache as they + are encountered. + """ + while True: + # If we've cached some items that match the target value, emit + # the first one and evict it from the cache. + if self._cache[value]: + yield self._cache[value].popleft() + # Otherwise we need to advance the parent iterator to search for + # a matching item, caching the rest. + else: + while True: + try: + item = next(self._it) + except StopIteration: + return + item_value = self._key(item) + if item_value == value: + yield item + break + elif self._validator(item_value): + self._cache[item_value].append(item) + + def __iter__(self): + for item in self._it: + item_value = self._key(item) + if self._validator(item_value): + self._cache[item_value].append(item) + + yield from self._cache.keys() + + def __getitem__(self, value): + if not self._validator(value): + return iter(()) + + return self._get_values(value) + + +def spy(iterable, n=1): + """Return a 2-tuple with a list containing the first *n* elements of + *iterable*, and an iterator with the same items as *iterable*. + This allows you to "look ahead" at the items in the iterable without + advancing it. + + There is one item in the list by default: + + >>> iterable = 'abcdefg' + >>> head, iterable = spy(iterable) + >>> head + ['a'] + >>> list(iterable) + ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f', 'g'] + + You may use unpacking to retrieve items instead of lists: + + >>> (head,), iterable = spy('abcdefg') + >>> head + 'a' + >>> (first, second), iterable = spy('abcdefg', 2) + >>> first + 'a' + >>> second + 'b' + + The number of items requested can be larger than the number of items in + the iterable: + + >>> iterable = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] + >>> head, iterable = spy(iterable, 10) + >>> head + [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] + >>> list(iterable) + [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] + + """ + it = iter(iterable) + head = take(n, it) + + return head.copy(), chain(head, it) + + +def interleave(*iterables): + """Return a new iterable yielding from each iterable in turn, + until the shortest is exhausted. + + >>> list(interleave([1, 2, 3], [4, 5], [6, 7, 8])) + [1, 4, 6, 2, 5, 7] + + For a version that doesn't terminate after the shortest iterable is + exhausted, see :func:`interleave_longest`. + + """ + return chain.from_iterable(zip(*iterables)) + + +def interleave_longest(*iterables): + """Return a new iterable yielding from each iterable in turn, + skipping any that are exhausted. + + >>> list(interleave_longest([1, 2, 3], [4, 5], [6, 7, 8])) + [1, 4, 6, 2, 5, 7, 3, 8] + + This function produces the same output as :func:`roundrobin`, but may + perform better for some inputs (in particular when the number of iterables + is large). + + """ + i = chain.from_iterable(zip_longest(*iterables, fillvalue=_marker)) + return (x for x in i if x is not _marker) + + +def collapse(iterable, base_type=None, levels=None): + """Flatten an iterable with multiple levels of nesting (e.g., a list of + lists of tuples) into non-iterable types. + + >>> iterable = [(1, 2), ([3, 4], [[5], [6]])] + >>> list(collapse(iterable)) + [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] + + Binary and text strings are not considered iterable and + will not be collapsed. + + To avoid collapsing other types, specify *base_type*: + + >>> iterable = ['ab', ('cd', 'ef'), ['gh', 'ij']] + >>> list(collapse(iterable, base_type=tuple)) + ['ab', ('cd', 'ef'), 'gh', 'ij'] + + Specify *levels* to stop flattening after a certain level: + + >>> iterable = [('a', ['b']), ('c', ['d'])] + >>> list(collapse(iterable)) # Fully flattened + ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] + >>> list(collapse(iterable, levels=1)) # Only one level flattened + ['a', ['b'], 'c', ['d']] + + """ + + def walk(node, level): + if ( + ((levels is not None) and (level > levels)) + or isinstance(node, (str, bytes)) + or ((base_type is not None) and isinstance(node, base_type)) + ): + yield node + return + + try: + tree = iter(node) + except TypeError: + yield node + return + else: + for child in tree: + yield from walk(child, level + 1) + + yield from walk(iterable, 0) + + +def side_effect(func, iterable, chunk_size=None, before=None, after=None): + """Invoke *func* on each item in *iterable* (or on each *chunk_size* group + of items) before yielding the item. + + `func` must be a function that takes a single argument. Its return value + will be discarded. + + *before* and *after* are optional functions that take no arguments. They + will be executed before iteration starts and after it ends, respectively. + + `side_effect` can be used for logging, updating progress bars, or anything + that is not functionally "pure." + + Emitting a status message: + + >>> from more_itertools import consume + >>> func = lambda item: print('Received {}'.format(item)) + >>> consume(side_effect(func, range(2))) + Received 0 + Received 1 + + Operating on chunks of items: + + >>> pair_sums = [] + >>> func = lambda chunk: pair_sums.append(sum(chunk)) + >>> list(side_effect(func, [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5], 2)) + [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5] + >>> list(pair_sums) + [1, 5, 9] + + Writing to a file-like object: + + >>> from io import StringIO + >>> from more_itertools import consume + >>> f = StringIO() + >>> func = lambda x: print(x, file=f) + >>> before = lambda: print(u'HEADER', file=f) + >>> after = f.close + >>> it = [u'a', u'b', u'c'] + >>> consume(side_effect(func, it, before=before, after=after)) + >>> f.closed + True + + """ + try: + if before is not None: + before() + + if chunk_size is None: + for item in iterable: + func(item) + yield item + else: + for chunk in chunked(iterable, chunk_size): + func(chunk) + yield from chunk + finally: + if after is not None: + after() + + +def sliced(seq, n, strict=False): + """Yield slices of length *n* from the sequence *seq*. + + >>> list(sliced((1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6), 3)) + [(1, 2, 3), (4, 5, 6)] + + By the default, the last yielded slice will have fewer than *n* elements + if the length of *seq* is not divisible by *n*: + + >>> list(sliced((1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8), 3)) + [(1, 2, 3), (4, 5, 6), (7, 8)] + + If the length of *seq* is not divisible by *n* and *strict* is + ``True``, then ``ValueError`` will be raised before the last + slice is yielded. + + This function will only work for iterables that support slicing. + For non-sliceable iterables, see :func:`chunked`. + + """ + iterator = takewhile(len, (seq[i : i + n] for i in count(0, n))) + if strict: + + def ret(): + for _slice in iterator: + if len(_slice) != n: + raise ValueError("seq is not divisible by n.") + yield _slice + + return iter(ret()) + else: + return iterator + + +def split_at(iterable, pred, maxsplit=-1, keep_separator=False): + """Yield lists of items from *iterable*, where each list is delimited by + an item where callable *pred* returns ``True``. + + >>> list(split_at('abcdcba', lambda x: x == 'b')) + [['a'], ['c', 'd', 'c'], ['a']] + + >>> list(split_at(range(10), lambda n: n % 2 == 1)) + [[0], [2], [4], [6], [8], []] + + At most *maxsplit* splits are done. If *maxsplit* is not specified or -1, + then there is no limit on the number of splits: + + >>> list(split_at(range(10), lambda n: n % 2 == 1, maxsplit=2)) + [[0], [2], [4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]] + + By default, the delimiting items are not included in the output. + The include them, set *keep_separator* to ``True``. + + >>> list(split_at('abcdcba', lambda x: x == 'b', keep_separator=True)) + [['a'], ['b'], ['c', 'd', 'c'], ['b'], ['a']] + + """ + if maxsplit == 0: + yield list(iterable) + return + + buf = [] + it = iter(iterable) + for item in it: + if pred(item): + yield buf + if keep_separator: + yield [item] + if maxsplit == 1: + yield list(it) + return + buf = [] + maxsplit -= 1 + else: + buf.append(item) + yield buf + + +def split_before(iterable, pred, maxsplit=-1): + """Yield lists of items from *iterable*, where each list ends just before + an item for which callable *pred* returns ``True``: + + >>> list(split_before('OneTwo', lambda s: s.isupper())) + [['O', 'n', 'e'], ['T', 'w', 'o']] + + >>> list(split_before(range(10), lambda n: n % 3 == 0)) + [[0, 1, 2], [3, 4, 5], [6, 7, 8], [9]] + + At most *maxsplit* splits are done. If *maxsplit* is not specified or -1, + then there is no limit on the number of splits: + + >>> list(split_before(range(10), lambda n: n % 3 == 0, maxsplit=2)) + [[0, 1, 2], [3, 4, 5], [6, 7, 8, 9]] + """ + if maxsplit == 0: + yield list(iterable) + return + + buf = [] + it = iter(iterable) + for item in it: + if pred(item) and buf: + yield buf + if maxsplit == 1: + yield [item] + list(it) + return + buf = [] + maxsplit -= 1 + buf.append(item) + if buf: + yield buf + + +def split_after(iterable, pred, maxsplit=-1): + """Yield lists of items from *iterable*, where each list ends with an + item where callable *pred* returns ``True``: + + >>> list(split_after('one1two2', lambda s: s.isdigit())) + [['o', 'n', 'e', '1'], ['t', 'w', 'o', '2']] + + >>> list(split_after(range(10), lambda n: n % 3 == 0)) + [[0], [1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6], [7, 8, 9]] + + At most *maxsplit* splits are done. If *maxsplit* is not specified or -1, + then there is no limit on the number of splits: + + >>> list(split_after(range(10), lambda n: n % 3 == 0, maxsplit=2)) + [[0], [1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]] + + """ + if maxsplit == 0: + yield list(iterable) + return + + buf = [] + it = iter(iterable) + for item in it: + buf.append(item) + if pred(item) and buf: + yield buf + if maxsplit == 1: + yield list(it) + return + buf = [] + maxsplit -= 1 + if buf: + yield buf + + +def split_when(iterable, pred, maxsplit=-1): + """Split *iterable* into pieces based on the output of *pred*. + *pred* should be a function that takes successive pairs of items and + returns ``True`` if the iterable should be split in between them. + + For example, to find runs of increasing numbers, split the iterable when + element ``i`` is larger than element ``i + 1``: + + >>> list(split_when([1, 2, 3, 3, 2, 5, 2, 4, 2], lambda x, y: x > y)) + [[1, 2, 3, 3], [2, 5], [2, 4], [2]] + + At most *maxsplit* splits are done. If *maxsplit* is not specified or -1, + then there is no limit on the number of splits: + + >>> list(split_when([1, 2, 3, 3, 2, 5, 2, 4, 2], + ... lambda x, y: x > y, maxsplit=2)) + [[1, 2, 3, 3], [2, 5], [2, 4, 2]] + + """ + if maxsplit == 0: + yield list(iterable) + return + + it = iter(iterable) + try: + cur_item = next(it) + except StopIteration: + return + + buf = [cur_item] + for next_item in it: + if pred(cur_item, next_item): + yield buf + if maxsplit == 1: + yield [next_item] + list(it) + return + buf = [] + maxsplit -= 1 + + buf.append(next_item) + cur_item = next_item + + yield buf + + +def split_into(iterable, sizes): + """Yield a list of sequential items from *iterable* of length 'n' for each + integer 'n' in *sizes*. + + >>> list(split_into([1,2,3,4,5,6], [1,2,3])) + [[1], [2, 3], [4, 5, 6]] + + If the sum of *sizes* is smaller than the length of *iterable*, then the + remaining items of *iterable* will not be returned. + + >>> list(split_into([1,2,3,4,5,6], [2,3])) + [[1, 2], [3, 4, 5]] + + If the sum of *sizes* is larger than the length of *iterable*, fewer items + will be returned in the iteration that overruns *iterable* and further + lists will be empty: + + >>> list(split_into([1,2,3,4], [1,2,3,4])) + [[1], [2, 3], [4], []] + + When a ``None`` object is encountered in *sizes*, the returned list will + contain items up to the end of *iterable* the same way that itertools.slice + does: + + >>> list(split_into([1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,0], [2,3,None])) + [[1, 2], [3, 4, 5], [6, 7, 8, 9, 0]] + + :func:`split_into` can be useful for grouping a series of items where the + sizes of the groups are not uniform. An example would be where in a row + from a table, multiple columns represent elements of the same feature + (e.g. a point represented by x,y,z) but, the format is not the same for + all columns. + """ + # convert the iterable argument into an iterator so its contents can + # be consumed by islice in case it is a generator + it = iter(iterable) + + for size in sizes: + if size is None: + yield list(it) + return + else: + yield list(islice(it, size)) + + +def padded(iterable, fillvalue=None, n=None, next_multiple=False): + """Yield the elements from *iterable*, followed by *fillvalue*, such that + at least *n* items are emitted. + + >>> list(padded([1, 2, 3], '?', 5)) + [1, 2, 3, '?', '?'] + + If *next_multiple* is ``True``, *fillvalue* will be emitted until the + number of items emitted is a multiple of *n*:: + + >>> list(padded([1, 2, 3, 4], n=3, next_multiple=True)) + [1, 2, 3, 4, None, None] + + If *n* is ``None``, *fillvalue* will be emitted indefinitely. + + """ + it = iter(iterable) + if n is None: + yield from chain(it, repeat(fillvalue)) + elif n < 1: + raise ValueError('n must be at least 1') + else: + item_count = 0 + for item in it: + yield item + item_count += 1 + + remaining = (n - item_count) % n if next_multiple else n - item_count + for _ in range(remaining): + yield fillvalue + + +def repeat_last(iterable, default=None): + """After the *iterable* is exhausted, keep yielding its last element. + + >>> list(islice(repeat_last(range(3)), 5)) + [0, 1, 2, 2, 2] + + If the iterable is empty, yield *default* forever:: + + >>> list(islice(repeat_last(range(0), 42), 5)) + [42, 42, 42, 42, 42] + + """ + item = _marker + for item in iterable: + yield item + final = default if item is _marker else item + yield from repeat(final) + + +def distribute(n, iterable): + """Distribute the items from *iterable* among *n* smaller iterables. + + >>> group_1, group_2 = distribute(2, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]) + >>> list(group_1) + [1, 3, 5] + >>> list(group_2) + [2, 4, 6] + + If the length of *iterable* is not evenly divisible by *n*, then the + length of the returned iterables will not be identical: + + >>> children = distribute(3, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]) + >>> [list(c) for c in children] + [[1, 4, 7], [2, 5], [3, 6]] + + If the length of *iterable* is smaller than *n*, then the last returned + iterables will be empty: + + >>> children = distribute(5, [1, 2, 3]) + >>> [list(c) for c in children] + [[1], [2], [3], [], []] + + This function uses :func:`itertools.tee` and may require significant + storage. If you need the order items in the smaller iterables to match the + original iterable, see :func:`divide`. + + """ + if n < 1: + raise ValueError('n must be at least 1') + + children = tee(iterable, n) + return [islice(it, index, None, n) for index, it in enumerate(children)] + + +def stagger(iterable, offsets=(-1, 0, 1), longest=False, fillvalue=None): + """Yield tuples whose elements are offset from *iterable*. + The amount by which the `i`-th item in each tuple is offset is given by + the `i`-th item in *offsets*. + + >>> list(stagger([0, 1, 2, 3])) + [(None, 0, 1), (0, 1, 2), (1, 2, 3)] + >>> list(stagger(range(8), offsets=(0, 2, 4))) + [(0, 2, 4), (1, 3, 5), (2, 4, 6), (3, 5, 7)] + + By default, the sequence will end when the final element of a tuple is the + last item in the iterable. To continue until the first element of a tuple + is the last item in the iterable, set *longest* to ``True``:: + + >>> list(stagger([0, 1, 2, 3], longest=True)) + [(None, 0, 1), (0, 1, 2), (1, 2, 3), (2, 3, None), (3, None, None)] + + By default, ``None`` will be used to replace offsets beyond the end of the + sequence. Specify *fillvalue* to use some other value. + + """ + children = tee(iterable, len(offsets)) + + return zip_offset( + *children, offsets=offsets, longest=longest, fillvalue=fillvalue + ) + + +class UnequalIterablesError(ValueError): + def __init__(self, details=None): + msg = 'Iterables have different lengths' + if details is not None: + msg += (': index 0 has length {}; index {} has length {}').format( + *details + ) + + super().__init__(msg) + + +def _zip_equal_generator(iterables): + for combo in zip_longest(*iterables, fillvalue=_marker): + for val in combo: + if val is _marker: + raise UnequalIterablesError() + yield combo + + +def zip_equal(*iterables): + """``zip`` the input *iterables* together, but raise + ``UnequalIterablesError`` if they aren't all the same length. + + >>> it_1 = range(3) + >>> it_2 = iter('abc') + >>> list(zip_equal(it_1, it_2)) + [(0, 'a'), (1, 'b'), (2, 'c')] + + >>> it_1 = range(3) + >>> it_2 = iter('abcd') + >>> list(zip_equal(it_1, it_2)) # doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + more_itertools.more.UnequalIterablesError: Iterables have different + lengths + + """ + if hexversion >= 0x30A00A6: + warnings.warn( + ( + 'zip_equal will be removed in a future version of ' + 'more-itertools. Use the builtin zip function with ' + 'strict=True instead.' + ), + DeprecationWarning, + ) + # Check whether the iterables are all the same size. + try: + first_size = len(iterables[0]) + for i, it in enumerate(iterables[1:], 1): + size = len(it) + if size != first_size: + break + else: + # If we didn't break out, we can use the built-in zip. + return zip(*iterables) + + # If we did break out, there was a mismatch. + raise UnequalIterablesError(details=(first_size, i, size)) + # If any one of the iterables didn't have a length, start reading + # them until one runs out. + except TypeError: + return _zip_equal_generator(iterables) + + +def zip_offset(*iterables, offsets, longest=False, fillvalue=None): + """``zip`` the input *iterables* together, but offset the `i`-th iterable + by the `i`-th item in *offsets*. + + >>> list(zip_offset('0123', 'abcdef', offsets=(0, 1))) + [('0', 'b'), ('1', 'c'), ('2', 'd'), ('3', 'e')] + + This can be used as a lightweight alternative to SciPy or pandas to analyze + data sets in which some series have a lead or lag relationship. + + By default, the sequence will end when the shortest iterable is exhausted. + To continue until the longest iterable is exhausted, set *longest* to + ``True``. + + >>> list(zip_offset('0123', 'abcdef', offsets=(0, 1), longest=True)) + [('0', 'b'), ('1', 'c'), ('2', 'd'), ('3', 'e'), (None, 'f')] + + By default, ``None`` will be used to replace offsets beyond the end of the + sequence. Specify *fillvalue* to use some other value. + + """ + if len(iterables) != len(offsets): + raise ValueError("Number of iterables and offsets didn't match") + + staggered = [] + for it, n in zip(iterables, offsets): + if n < 0: + staggered.append(chain(repeat(fillvalue, -n), it)) + elif n > 0: + staggered.append(islice(it, n, None)) + else: + staggered.append(it) + + if longest: + return zip_longest(*staggered, fillvalue=fillvalue) + + return zip(*staggered) + + +def sort_together(iterables, key_list=(0,), key=None, reverse=False): + """Return the input iterables sorted together, with *key_list* as the + priority for sorting. All iterables are trimmed to the length of the + shortest one. + + This can be used like the sorting function in a spreadsheet. If each + iterable represents a column of data, the key list determines which + columns are used for sorting. + + By default, all iterables are sorted using the ``0``-th iterable:: + + >>> iterables = [(4, 3, 2, 1), ('a', 'b', 'c', 'd')] + >>> sort_together(iterables) + [(1, 2, 3, 4), ('d', 'c', 'b', 'a')] + + Set a different key list to sort according to another iterable. + Specifying multiple keys dictates how ties are broken:: + + >>> iterables = [(3, 1, 2), (0, 1, 0), ('c', 'b', 'a')] + >>> sort_together(iterables, key_list=(1, 2)) + [(2, 3, 1), (0, 0, 1), ('a', 'c', 'b')] + + To sort by a function of the elements of the iterable, pass a *key* + function. Its arguments are the elements of the iterables corresponding to + the key list:: + + >>> names = ('a', 'b', 'c') + >>> lengths = (1, 2, 3) + >>> widths = (5, 2, 1) + >>> def area(length, width): + ... return length * width + >>> sort_together([names, lengths, widths], key_list=(1, 2), key=area) + [('c', 'b', 'a'), (3, 2, 1), (1, 2, 5)] + + Set *reverse* to ``True`` to sort in descending order. + + >>> sort_together([(1, 2, 3), ('c', 'b', 'a')], reverse=True) + [(3, 2, 1), ('a', 'b', 'c')] + + """ + if key is None: + # if there is no key function, the key argument to sorted is an + # itemgetter + key_argument = itemgetter(*key_list) + else: + # if there is a key function, call it with the items at the offsets + # specified by the key function as arguments + key_list = list(key_list) + if len(key_list) == 1: + # if key_list contains a single item, pass the item at that offset + # as the only argument to the key function + key_offset = key_list[0] + key_argument = lambda zipped_items: key(zipped_items[key_offset]) + else: + # if key_list contains multiple items, use itemgetter to return a + # tuple of items, which we pass as *args to the key function + get_key_items = itemgetter(*key_list) + key_argument = lambda zipped_items: key( + *get_key_items(zipped_items) + ) + + return list( + zip(*sorted(zip(*iterables), key=key_argument, reverse=reverse)) + ) + + +def unzip(iterable): + """The inverse of :func:`zip`, this function disaggregates the elements + of the zipped *iterable*. + + The ``i``-th iterable contains the ``i``-th element from each element + of the zipped iterable. The first element is used to to determine the + length of the remaining elements. + + >>> iterable = [('a', 1), ('b', 2), ('c', 3), ('d', 4)] + >>> letters, numbers = unzip(iterable) + >>> list(letters) + ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] + >>> list(numbers) + [1, 2, 3, 4] + + This is similar to using ``zip(*iterable)``, but it avoids reading + *iterable* into memory. Note, however, that this function uses + :func:`itertools.tee` and thus may require significant storage. + + """ + head, iterable = spy(iter(iterable)) + if not head: + # empty iterable, e.g. zip([], [], []) + return () + # spy returns a one-length iterable as head + head = head[0] + iterables = tee(iterable, len(head)) + + def itemgetter(i): + def getter(obj): + try: + return obj[i] + except IndexError: + # basically if we have an iterable like + # iter([(1, 2, 3), (4, 5), (6,)]) + # the second unzipped iterable would fail at the third tuple + # since it would try to access tup[1] + # same with the third unzipped iterable and the second tuple + # to support these "improperly zipped" iterables, + # we create a custom itemgetter + # which just stops the unzipped iterables + # at first length mismatch + raise StopIteration + + return getter + + return tuple(map(itemgetter(i), it) for i, it in enumerate(iterables)) + + +def divide(n, iterable): + """Divide the elements from *iterable* into *n* parts, maintaining + order. + + >>> group_1, group_2 = divide(2, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]) + >>> list(group_1) + [1, 2, 3] + >>> list(group_2) + [4, 5, 6] + + If the length of *iterable* is not evenly divisible by *n*, then the + length of the returned iterables will not be identical: + + >>> children = divide(3, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]) + >>> [list(c) for c in children] + [[1, 2, 3], [4, 5], [6, 7]] + + If the length of the iterable is smaller than n, then the last returned + iterables will be empty: + + >>> children = divide(5, [1, 2, 3]) + >>> [list(c) for c in children] + [[1], [2], [3], [], []] + + This function will exhaust the iterable before returning and may require + significant storage. If order is not important, see :func:`distribute`, + which does not first pull the iterable into memory. + + """ + if n < 1: + raise ValueError('n must be at least 1') + + try: + iterable[:0] + except TypeError: + seq = tuple(iterable) + else: + seq = iterable + + q, r = divmod(len(seq), n) + + ret = [] + stop = 0 + for i in range(1, n + 1): + start = stop + stop += q + 1 if i <= r else q + ret.append(iter(seq[start:stop])) + + return ret + + +def always_iterable(obj, base_type=(str, bytes)): + """If *obj* is iterable, return an iterator over its items:: + + >>> obj = (1, 2, 3) + >>> list(always_iterable(obj)) + [1, 2, 3] + + If *obj* is not iterable, return a one-item iterable containing *obj*:: + + >>> obj = 1 + >>> list(always_iterable(obj)) + [1] + + If *obj* is ``None``, return an empty iterable: + + >>> obj = None + >>> list(always_iterable(None)) + [] + + By default, binary and text strings are not considered iterable:: + + >>> obj = 'foo' + >>> list(always_iterable(obj)) + ['foo'] + + If *base_type* is set, objects for which ``isinstance(obj, base_type)`` + returns ``True`` won't be considered iterable. + + >>> obj = {'a': 1} + >>> list(always_iterable(obj)) # Iterate over the dict's keys + ['a'] + >>> list(always_iterable(obj, base_type=dict)) # Treat dicts as a unit + [{'a': 1}] + + Set *base_type* to ``None`` to avoid any special handling and treat objects + Python considers iterable as iterable: + + >>> obj = 'foo' + >>> list(always_iterable(obj, base_type=None)) + ['f', 'o', 'o'] + """ + if obj is None: + return iter(()) + + if (base_type is not None) and isinstance(obj, base_type): + return iter((obj,)) + + try: + return iter(obj) + except TypeError: + return iter((obj,)) + + +def adjacent(predicate, iterable, distance=1): + """Return an iterable over `(bool, item)` tuples where the `item` is + drawn from *iterable* and the `bool` indicates whether + that item satisfies the *predicate* or is adjacent to an item that does. + + For example, to find whether items are adjacent to a ``3``:: + + >>> list(adjacent(lambda x: x == 3, range(6))) + [(False, 0), (False, 1), (True, 2), (True, 3), (True, 4), (False, 5)] + + Set *distance* to change what counts as adjacent. For example, to find + whether items are two places away from a ``3``: + + >>> list(adjacent(lambda x: x == 3, range(6), distance=2)) + [(False, 0), (True, 1), (True, 2), (True, 3), (True, 4), (True, 5)] + + This is useful for contextualizing the results of a search function. + For example, a code comparison tool might want to identify lines that + have changed, but also surrounding lines to give the viewer of the diff + context. + + The predicate function will only be called once for each item in the + iterable. + + See also :func:`groupby_transform`, which can be used with this function + to group ranges of items with the same `bool` value. + + """ + # Allow distance=0 mainly for testing that it reproduces results with map() + if distance < 0: + raise ValueError('distance must be at least 0') + + i1, i2 = tee(iterable) + padding = [False] * distance + selected = chain(padding, map(predicate, i1), padding) + adjacent_to_selected = map(any, windowed(selected, 2 * distance + 1)) + return zip(adjacent_to_selected, i2) + + +def groupby_transform(iterable, keyfunc=None, valuefunc=None, reducefunc=None): + """An extension of :func:`itertools.groupby` that can apply transformations + to the grouped data. + + * *keyfunc* is a function computing a key value for each item in *iterable* + * *valuefunc* is a function that transforms the individual items from + *iterable* after grouping + * *reducefunc* is a function that transforms each group of items + + >>> iterable = 'aAAbBBcCC' + >>> keyfunc = lambda k: k.upper() + >>> valuefunc = lambda v: v.lower() + >>> reducefunc = lambda g: ''.join(g) + >>> list(groupby_transform(iterable, keyfunc, valuefunc, reducefunc)) + [('A', 'aaa'), ('B', 'bbb'), ('C', 'ccc')] + + Each optional argument defaults to an identity function if not specified. + + :func:`groupby_transform` is useful when grouping elements of an iterable + using a separate iterable as the key. To do this, :func:`zip` the iterables + and pass a *keyfunc* that extracts the first element and a *valuefunc* + that extracts the second element:: + + >>> from operator import itemgetter + >>> keys = [0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2, 3] + >>> values = 'abcdefghi' + >>> iterable = zip(keys, values) + >>> grouper = groupby_transform(iterable, itemgetter(0), itemgetter(1)) + >>> [(k, ''.join(g)) for k, g in grouper] + [(0, 'ab'), (1, 'cde'), (2, 'fgh'), (3, 'i')] + + Note that the order of items in the iterable is significant. + Only adjacent items are grouped together, so if you don't want any + duplicate groups, you should sort the iterable by the key function. + + """ + ret = groupby(iterable, keyfunc) + if valuefunc: + ret = ((k, map(valuefunc, g)) for k, g in ret) + if reducefunc: + ret = ((k, reducefunc(g)) for k, g in ret) + + return ret + + +class numeric_range(abc.Sequence, abc.Hashable): + """An extension of the built-in ``range()`` function whose arguments can + be any orderable numeric type. + + With only *stop* specified, *start* defaults to ``0`` and *step* + defaults to ``1``. The output items will match the type of *stop*: + + >>> list(numeric_range(3.5)) + [0.0, 1.0, 2.0, 3.0] + + With only *start* and *stop* specified, *step* defaults to ``1``. The + output items will match the type of *start*: + + >>> from decimal import Decimal + >>> start = Decimal('2.1') + >>> stop = Decimal('5.1') + >>> list(numeric_range(start, stop)) + [Decimal('2.1'), Decimal('3.1'), Decimal('4.1')] + + With *start*, *stop*, and *step* specified the output items will match + the type of ``start + step``: + + >>> from fractions import Fraction + >>> start = Fraction(1, 2) # Start at 1/2 + >>> stop = Fraction(5, 2) # End at 5/2 + >>> step = Fraction(1, 2) # Count by 1/2 + >>> list(numeric_range(start, stop, step)) + [Fraction(1, 2), Fraction(1, 1), Fraction(3, 2), Fraction(2, 1)] + + If *step* is zero, ``ValueError`` is raised. Negative steps are supported: + + >>> list(numeric_range(3, -1, -1.0)) + [3.0, 2.0, 1.0, 0.0] + + Be aware of the limitations of floating point numbers; the representation + of the yielded numbers may be surprising. + + ``datetime.datetime`` objects can be used for *start* and *stop*, if *step* + is a ``datetime.timedelta`` object: + + >>> import datetime + >>> start = datetime.datetime(2019, 1, 1) + >>> stop = datetime.datetime(2019, 1, 3) + >>> step = datetime.timedelta(days=1) + >>> items = iter(numeric_range(start, stop, step)) + >>> next(items) + datetime.datetime(2019, 1, 1, 0, 0) + >>> next(items) + datetime.datetime(2019, 1, 2, 0, 0) + + """ + + _EMPTY_HASH = hash(range(0, 0)) + + def __init__(self, *args): + argc = len(args) + if argc == 1: + (self._stop,) = args + self._start = type(self._stop)(0) + self._step = type(self._stop - self._start)(1) + elif argc == 2: + self._start, self._stop = args + self._step = type(self._stop - self._start)(1) + elif argc == 3: + self._start, self._stop, self._step = args + elif argc == 0: + raise TypeError( + 'numeric_range expected at least ' + '1 argument, got {}'.format(argc) + ) + else: + raise TypeError( + 'numeric_range expected at most ' + '3 arguments, got {}'.format(argc) + ) + + self._zero = type(self._step)(0) + if self._step == self._zero: + raise ValueError('numeric_range() arg 3 must not be zero') + self._growing = self._step > self._zero + self._init_len() + + def __bool__(self): + if self._growing: + return self._start < self._stop + else: + return self._start > self._stop + + def __contains__(self, elem): + if self._growing: + if self._start <= elem < self._stop: + return (elem - self._start) % self._step == self._zero + else: + if self._start >= elem > self._stop: + return (self._start - elem) % (-self._step) == self._zero + + return False + + def __eq__(self, other): + if isinstance(other, numeric_range): + empty_self = not bool(self) + empty_other = not bool(other) + if empty_self or empty_other: + return empty_self and empty_other # True if both empty + else: + return ( + self._start == other._start + and self._step == other._step + and self._get_by_index(-1) == other._get_by_index(-1) + ) + else: + return False + + def __getitem__(self, key): + if isinstance(key, int): + return self._get_by_index(key) + elif isinstance(key, slice): + step = self._step if key.step is None else key.step * self._step + + if key.start is None or key.start <= -self._len: + start = self._start + elif key.start >= self._len: + start = self._stop + else: # -self._len < key.start < self._len + start = self._get_by_index(key.start) + + if key.stop is None or key.stop >= self._len: + stop = self._stop + elif key.stop <= -self._len: + stop = self._start + else: # -self._len < key.stop < self._len + stop = self._get_by_index(key.stop) + + return numeric_range(start, stop, step) + else: + raise TypeError( + 'numeric range indices must be ' + 'integers or slices, not {}'.format(type(key).__name__) + ) + + def __hash__(self): + if self: + return hash((self._start, self._get_by_index(-1), self._step)) + else: + return self._EMPTY_HASH + + def __iter__(self): + values = (self._start + (n * self._step) for n in count()) + if self._growing: + return takewhile(partial(gt, self._stop), values) + else: + return takewhile(partial(lt, self._stop), values) + + def __len__(self): + return self._len + + def _init_len(self): + if self._growing: + start = self._start + stop = self._stop + step = self._step + else: + start = self._stop + stop = self._start + step = -self._step + distance = stop - start + if distance <= self._zero: + self._len = 0 + else: # distance > 0 and step > 0: regular euclidean division + q, r = divmod(distance, step) + self._len = int(q) + int(r != self._zero) + + def __reduce__(self): + return numeric_range, (self._start, self._stop, self._step) + + def __repr__(self): + if self._step == 1: + return "numeric_range({}, {})".format( + repr(self._start), repr(self._stop) + ) + else: + return "numeric_range({}, {}, {})".format( + repr(self._start), repr(self._stop), repr(self._step) + ) + + def __reversed__(self): + return iter( + numeric_range( + self._get_by_index(-1), self._start - self._step, -self._step + ) + ) + + def count(self, value): + return int(value in self) + + def index(self, value): + if self._growing: + if self._start <= value < self._stop: + q, r = divmod(value - self._start, self._step) + if r == self._zero: + return int(q) + else: + if self._start >= value > self._stop: + q, r = divmod(self._start - value, -self._step) + if r == self._zero: + return int(q) + + raise ValueError("{} is not in numeric range".format(value)) + + def _get_by_index(self, i): + if i < 0: + i += self._len + if i < 0 or i >= self._len: + raise IndexError("numeric range object index out of range") + return self._start + i * self._step + + +def count_cycle(iterable, n=None): + """Cycle through the items from *iterable* up to *n* times, yielding + the number of completed cycles along with each item. If *n* is omitted the + process repeats indefinitely. + + >>> list(count_cycle('AB', 3)) + [(0, 'A'), (0, 'B'), (1, 'A'), (1, 'B'), (2, 'A'), (2, 'B')] + + """ + iterable = tuple(iterable) + if not iterable: + return iter(()) + counter = count() if n is None else range(n) + return ((i, item) for i in counter for item in iterable) + + +def mark_ends(iterable): + """Yield 3-tuples of the form ``(is_first, is_last, item)``. + + >>> list(mark_ends('ABC')) + [(True, False, 'A'), (False, False, 'B'), (False, True, 'C')] + + Use this when looping over an iterable to take special action on its first + and/or last items: + + >>> iterable = ['Header', 100, 200, 'Footer'] + >>> total = 0 + >>> for is_first, is_last, item in mark_ends(iterable): + ... if is_first: + ... continue # Skip the header + ... if is_last: + ... continue # Skip the footer + ... total += item + >>> print(total) + 300 + """ + it = iter(iterable) + + try: + b = next(it) + except StopIteration: + return + + try: + for i in count(): + a = b + b = next(it) + yield i == 0, False, a + + except StopIteration: + yield i == 0, True, a + + +def locate(iterable, pred=bool, window_size=None): + """Yield the index of each item in *iterable* for which *pred* returns + ``True``. + + *pred* defaults to :func:`bool`, which will select truthy items: + + >>> list(locate([0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0])) + [1, 2, 4] + + Set *pred* to a custom function to, e.g., find the indexes for a particular + item. + + >>> list(locate(['a', 'b', 'c', 'b'], lambda x: x == 'b')) + [1, 3] + + If *window_size* is given, then the *pred* function will be called with + that many items. This enables searching for sub-sequences: + + >>> iterable = [0, 1, 2, 3, 0, 1, 2, 3, 0, 1, 2, 3] + >>> pred = lambda *args: args == (1, 2, 3) + >>> list(locate(iterable, pred=pred, window_size=3)) + [1, 5, 9] + + Use with :func:`seekable` to find indexes and then retrieve the associated + items: + + >>> from itertools import count + >>> from more_itertools import seekable + >>> source = (3 * n + 1 if (n % 2) else n // 2 for n in count()) + >>> it = seekable(source) + >>> pred = lambda x: x > 100 + >>> indexes = locate(it, pred=pred) + >>> i = next(indexes) + >>> it.seek(i) + >>> next(it) + 106 + + """ + if window_size is None: + return compress(count(), map(pred, iterable)) + + if window_size < 1: + raise ValueError('window size must be at least 1') + + it = windowed(iterable, window_size, fillvalue=_marker) + return compress(count(), starmap(pred, it)) + + +def lstrip(iterable, pred): + """Yield the items from *iterable*, but strip any from the beginning + for which *pred* returns ``True``. + + For example, to remove a set of items from the start of an iterable: + + >>> iterable = (None, False, None, 1, 2, None, 3, False, None) + >>> pred = lambda x: x in {None, False, ''} + >>> list(lstrip(iterable, pred)) + [1, 2, None, 3, False, None] + + This function is analogous to to :func:`str.lstrip`, and is essentially + an wrapper for :func:`itertools.dropwhile`. + + """ + return dropwhile(pred, iterable) + + +def rstrip(iterable, pred): + """Yield the items from *iterable*, but strip any from the end + for which *pred* returns ``True``. + + For example, to remove a set of items from the end of an iterable: + + >>> iterable = (None, False, None, 1, 2, None, 3, False, None) + >>> pred = lambda x: x in {None, False, ''} + >>> list(rstrip(iterable, pred)) + [None, False, None, 1, 2, None, 3] + + This function is analogous to :func:`str.rstrip`. + + """ + cache = [] + cache_append = cache.append + cache_clear = cache.clear + for x in iterable: + if pred(x): + cache_append(x) + else: + yield from cache + cache_clear() + yield x + + +def strip(iterable, pred): + """Yield the items from *iterable*, but strip any from the + beginning and end for which *pred* returns ``True``. + + For example, to remove a set of items from both ends of an iterable: + + >>> iterable = (None, False, None, 1, 2, None, 3, False, None) + >>> pred = lambda x: x in {None, False, ''} + >>> list(strip(iterable, pred)) + [1, 2, None, 3] + + This function is analogous to :func:`str.strip`. + + """ + return rstrip(lstrip(iterable, pred), pred) + + +class islice_extended: + """An extension of :func:`itertools.islice` that supports negative values + for *stop*, *start*, and *step*. + + >>> iterable = iter('abcdefgh') + >>> list(islice_extended(iterable, -4, -1)) + ['e', 'f', 'g'] + + Slices with negative values require some caching of *iterable*, but this + function takes care to minimize the amount of memory required. + + For example, you can use a negative step with an infinite iterator: + + >>> from itertools import count + >>> list(islice_extended(count(), 110, 99, -2)) + [110, 108, 106, 104, 102, 100] + + You can also use slice notation directly: + + >>> iterable = map(str, count()) + >>> it = islice_extended(iterable)[10:20:2] + >>> list(it) + ['10', '12', '14', '16', '18'] + + """ + + def __init__(self, iterable, *args): + it = iter(iterable) + if args: + self._iterable = _islice_helper(it, slice(*args)) + else: + self._iterable = it + + def __iter__(self): + return self + + def __next__(self): + return next(self._iterable) + + def __getitem__(self, key): + if isinstance(key, slice): + return islice_extended(_islice_helper(self._iterable, key)) + + raise TypeError('islice_extended.__getitem__ argument must be a slice') + + +def _islice_helper(it, s): + start = s.start + stop = s.stop + if s.step == 0: + raise ValueError('step argument must be a non-zero integer or None.') + step = s.step or 1 + + if step > 0: + start = 0 if (start is None) else start + + if start < 0: + # Consume all but the last -start items + cache = deque(enumerate(it, 1), maxlen=-start) + len_iter = cache[-1][0] if cache else 0 + + # Adjust start to be positive + i = max(len_iter + start, 0) + + # Adjust stop to be positive + if stop is None: + j = len_iter + elif stop >= 0: + j = min(stop, len_iter) + else: + j = max(len_iter + stop, 0) + + # Slice the cache + n = j - i + if n <= 0: + return + + for index, item in islice(cache, 0, n, step): + yield item + elif (stop is not None) and (stop < 0): + # Advance to the start position + next(islice(it, start, start), None) + + # When stop is negative, we have to carry -stop items while + # iterating + cache = deque(islice(it, -stop), maxlen=-stop) + + for index, item in enumerate(it): + cached_item = cache.popleft() + if index % step == 0: + yield cached_item + cache.append(item) + else: + # When both start and stop are positive we have the normal case + yield from islice(it, start, stop, step) + else: + start = -1 if (start is None) else start + + if (stop is not None) and (stop < 0): + # Consume all but the last items + n = -stop - 1 + cache = deque(enumerate(it, 1), maxlen=n) + len_iter = cache[-1][0] if cache else 0 + + # If start and stop are both negative they are comparable and + # we can just slice. Otherwise we can adjust start to be negative + # and then slice. + if start < 0: + i, j = start, stop + else: + i, j = min(start - len_iter, -1), None + + for index, item in list(cache)[i:j:step]: + yield item + else: + # Advance to the stop position + if stop is not None: + m = stop + 1 + next(islice(it, m, m), None) + + # stop is positive, so if start is negative they are not comparable + # and we need the rest of the items. + if start < 0: + i = start + n = None + # stop is None and start is positive, so we just need items up to + # the start index. + elif stop is None: + i = None + n = start + 1 + # Both stop and start are positive, so they are comparable. + else: + i = None + n = start - stop + if n <= 0: + return + + cache = list(islice(it, n)) + + yield from cache[i::step] + + +def always_reversible(iterable): + """An extension of :func:`reversed` that supports all iterables, not + just those which implement the ``Reversible`` or ``Sequence`` protocols. + + >>> print(*always_reversible(x for x in range(3))) + 2 1 0 + + If the iterable is already reversible, this function returns the + result of :func:`reversed()`. If the iterable is not reversible, + this function will cache the remaining items in the iterable and + yield them in reverse order, which may require significant storage. + """ + try: + return reversed(iterable) + except TypeError: + return reversed(list(iterable)) + + +def consecutive_groups(iterable, ordering=lambda x: x): + """Yield groups of consecutive items using :func:`itertools.groupby`. + The *ordering* function determines whether two items are adjacent by + returning their position. + + By default, the ordering function is the identity function. This is + suitable for finding runs of numbers: + + >>> iterable = [1, 10, 11, 12, 20, 30, 31, 32, 33, 40] + >>> for group in consecutive_groups(iterable): + ... print(list(group)) + [1] + [10, 11, 12] + [20] + [30, 31, 32, 33] + [40] + + For finding runs of adjacent letters, try using the :meth:`index` method + of a string of letters: + + >>> from string import ascii_lowercase + >>> iterable = 'abcdfgilmnop' + >>> ordering = ascii_lowercase.index + >>> for group in consecutive_groups(iterable, ordering): + ... print(list(group)) + ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] + ['f', 'g'] + ['i'] + ['l', 'm', 'n', 'o', 'p'] + + Each group of consecutive items is an iterator that shares it source with + *iterable*. When an an output group is advanced, the previous group is + no longer available unless its elements are copied (e.g., into a ``list``). + + >>> iterable = [1, 2, 11, 12, 21, 22] + >>> saved_groups = [] + >>> for group in consecutive_groups(iterable): + ... saved_groups.append(list(group)) # Copy group elements + >>> saved_groups + [[1, 2], [11, 12], [21, 22]] + + """ + for k, g in groupby( + enumerate(iterable), key=lambda x: x[0] - ordering(x[1]) + ): + yield map(itemgetter(1), g) + + +def difference(iterable, func=sub, *, initial=None): + """This function is the inverse of :func:`itertools.accumulate`. By default + it will compute the first difference of *iterable* using + :func:`operator.sub`: + + >>> from itertools import accumulate + >>> iterable = accumulate([0, 1, 2, 3, 4]) # produces 0, 1, 3, 6, 10 + >>> list(difference(iterable)) + [0, 1, 2, 3, 4] + + *func* defaults to :func:`operator.sub`, but other functions can be + specified. They will be applied as follows:: + + A, B, C, D, ... --> A, func(B, A), func(C, B), func(D, C), ... + + For example, to do progressive division: + + >>> iterable = [1, 2, 6, 24, 120] + >>> func = lambda x, y: x // y + >>> list(difference(iterable, func)) + [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] + + If the *initial* keyword is set, the first element will be skipped when + computing successive differences. + + >>> it = [10, 11, 13, 16] # from accumulate([1, 2, 3], initial=10) + >>> list(difference(it, initial=10)) + [1, 2, 3] + + """ + a, b = tee(iterable) + try: + first = [next(b)] + except StopIteration: + return iter([]) + + if initial is not None: + first = [] + + return chain(first, starmap(func, zip(b, a))) + + +class SequenceView(Sequence): + """Return a read-only view of the sequence object *target*. + + :class:`SequenceView` objects are analogous to Python's built-in + "dictionary view" types. They provide a dynamic view of a sequence's items, + meaning that when the sequence updates, so does the view. + + >>> seq = ['0', '1', '2'] + >>> view = SequenceView(seq) + >>> view + SequenceView(['0', '1', '2']) + >>> seq.append('3') + >>> view + SequenceView(['0', '1', '2', '3']) + + Sequence views support indexing, slicing, and length queries. They act + like the underlying sequence, except they don't allow assignment: + + >>> view[1] + '1' + >>> view[1:-1] + ['1', '2'] + >>> len(view) + 4 + + Sequence views are useful as an alternative to copying, as they don't + require (much) extra storage. + + """ + + def __init__(self, target): + if not isinstance(target, Sequence): + raise TypeError + self._target = target + + def __getitem__(self, index): + return self._target[index] + + def __len__(self): + return len(self._target) + + def __repr__(self): + return '{}({})'.format(self.__class__.__name__, repr(self._target)) + + +class seekable: + """Wrap an iterator to allow for seeking backward and forward. This + progressively caches the items in the source iterable so they can be + re-visited. + + Call :meth:`seek` with an index to seek to that position in the source + iterable. + + To "reset" an iterator, seek to ``0``: + + >>> from itertools import count + >>> it = seekable((str(n) for n in count())) + >>> next(it), next(it), next(it) + ('0', '1', '2') + >>> it.seek(0) + >>> next(it), next(it), next(it) + ('0', '1', '2') + >>> next(it) + '3' + + You can also seek forward: + + >>> it = seekable((str(n) for n in range(20))) + >>> it.seek(10) + >>> next(it) + '10' + >>> it.seek(20) # Seeking past the end of the source isn't a problem + >>> list(it) + [] + >>> it.seek(0) # Resetting works even after hitting the end + >>> next(it), next(it), next(it) + ('0', '1', '2') + + Call :meth:`peek` to look ahead one item without advancing the iterator: + + >>> it = seekable('1234') + >>> it.peek() + '1' + >>> list(it) + ['1', '2', '3', '4'] + >>> it.peek(default='empty') + 'empty' + + Before the iterator is at its end, calling :func:`bool` on it will return + ``True``. After it will return ``False``: + + >>> it = seekable('5678') + >>> bool(it) + True + >>> list(it) + ['5', '6', '7', '8'] + >>> bool(it) + False + + You may view the contents of the cache with the :meth:`elements` method. + That returns a :class:`SequenceView`, a view that updates automatically: + + >>> it = seekable((str(n) for n in range(10))) + >>> next(it), next(it), next(it) + ('0', '1', '2') + >>> elements = it.elements() + >>> elements + SequenceView(['0', '1', '2']) + >>> next(it) + '3' + >>> elements + SequenceView(['0', '1', '2', '3']) + + By default, the cache grows as the source iterable progresses, so beware of + wrapping very large or infinite iterables. Supply *maxlen* to limit the + size of the cache (this of course limits how far back you can seek). + + >>> from itertools import count + >>> it = seekable((str(n) for n in count()), maxlen=2) + >>> next(it), next(it), next(it), next(it) + ('0', '1', '2', '3') + >>> list(it.elements()) + ['2', '3'] + >>> it.seek(0) + >>> next(it), next(it), next(it), next(it) + ('2', '3', '4', '5') + >>> next(it) + '6' + + """ + + def __init__(self, iterable, maxlen=None): + self._source = iter(iterable) + if maxlen is None: + self._cache = [] + else: + self._cache = deque([], maxlen) + self._index = None + + def __iter__(self): + return self + + def __next__(self): + if self._index is not None: + try: + item = self._cache[self._index] + except IndexError: + self._index = None + else: + self._index += 1 + return item + + item = next(self._source) + self._cache.append(item) + return item + + def __bool__(self): + try: + self.peek() + except StopIteration: + return False + return True + + def peek(self, default=_marker): + try: + peeked = next(self) + except StopIteration: + if default is _marker: + raise + return default + if self._index is None: + self._index = len(self._cache) + self._index -= 1 + return peeked + + def elements(self): + return SequenceView(self._cache) + + def seek(self, index): + self._index = index + remainder = index - len(self._cache) + if remainder > 0: + consume(self, remainder) + + +class run_length: + """ + :func:`run_length.encode` compresses an iterable with run-length encoding. + It yields groups of repeated items with the count of how many times they + were repeated: + + >>> uncompressed = 'abbcccdddd' + >>> list(run_length.encode(uncompressed)) + [('a', 1), ('b', 2), ('c', 3), ('d', 4)] + + :func:`run_length.decode` decompresses an iterable that was previously + compressed with run-length encoding. It yields the items of the + decompressed iterable: + + >>> compressed = [('a', 1), ('b', 2), ('c', 3), ('d', 4)] + >>> list(run_length.decode(compressed)) + ['a', 'b', 'b', 'c', 'c', 'c', 'd', 'd', 'd', 'd'] + + """ + + @staticmethod + def encode(iterable): + return ((k, ilen(g)) for k, g in groupby(iterable)) + + @staticmethod + def decode(iterable): + return chain.from_iterable(repeat(k, n) for k, n in iterable) + + +def exactly_n(iterable, n, predicate=bool): + """Return ``True`` if exactly ``n`` items in the iterable are ``True`` + according to the *predicate* function. + + >>> exactly_n([True, True, False], 2) + True + >>> exactly_n([True, True, False], 1) + False + >>> exactly_n([0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5], 3, lambda x: x < 3) + True + + The iterable will be advanced until ``n + 1`` truthy items are encountered, + so avoid calling it on infinite iterables. + + """ + return len(take(n + 1, filter(predicate, iterable))) == n + + +def circular_shifts(iterable): + """Return a list of circular shifts of *iterable*. + + >>> circular_shifts(range(4)) + [(0, 1, 2, 3), (1, 2, 3, 0), (2, 3, 0, 1), (3, 0, 1, 2)] + """ + lst = list(iterable) + return take(len(lst), windowed(cycle(lst), len(lst))) + + +def make_decorator(wrapping_func, result_index=0): + """Return a decorator version of *wrapping_func*, which is a function that + modifies an iterable. *result_index* is the position in that function's + signature where the iterable goes. + + This lets you use itertools on the "production end," i.e. at function + definition. This can augment what the function returns without changing the + function's code. + + For example, to produce a decorator version of :func:`chunked`: + + >>> from more_itertools import chunked + >>> chunker = make_decorator(chunked, result_index=0) + >>> @chunker(3) + ... def iter_range(n): + ... return iter(range(n)) + ... + >>> list(iter_range(9)) + [[0, 1, 2], [3, 4, 5], [6, 7, 8]] + + To only allow truthy items to be returned: + + >>> truth_serum = make_decorator(filter, result_index=1) + >>> @truth_serum(bool) + ... def boolean_test(): + ... return [0, 1, '', ' ', False, True] + ... + >>> list(boolean_test()) + [1, ' ', True] + + The :func:`peekable` and :func:`seekable` wrappers make for practical + decorators: + + >>> from more_itertools import peekable + >>> peekable_function = make_decorator(peekable) + >>> @peekable_function() + ... def str_range(*args): + ... return (str(x) for x in range(*args)) + ... + >>> it = str_range(1, 20, 2) + >>> next(it), next(it), next(it) + ('1', '3', '5') + >>> it.peek() + '7' + >>> next(it) + '7' + + """ + # See https://sites.google.com/site/bbayles/index/decorator_factory for + # notes on how this works. + def decorator(*wrapping_args, **wrapping_kwargs): + def outer_wrapper(f): + def inner_wrapper(*args, **kwargs): + result = f(*args, **kwargs) + wrapping_args_ = list(wrapping_args) + wrapping_args_.insert(result_index, result) + return wrapping_func(*wrapping_args_, **wrapping_kwargs) + + return inner_wrapper + + return outer_wrapper + + return decorator + + +def map_reduce(iterable, keyfunc, valuefunc=None, reducefunc=None): + """Return a dictionary that maps the items in *iterable* to categories + defined by *keyfunc*, transforms them with *valuefunc*, and + then summarizes them by category with *reducefunc*. + + *valuefunc* defaults to the identity function if it is unspecified. + If *reducefunc* is unspecified, no summarization takes place: + + >>> keyfunc = lambda x: x.upper() + >>> result = map_reduce('abbccc', keyfunc) + >>> sorted(result.items()) + [('A', ['a']), ('B', ['b', 'b']), ('C', ['c', 'c', 'c'])] + + Specifying *valuefunc* transforms the categorized items: + + >>> keyfunc = lambda x: x.upper() + >>> valuefunc = lambda x: 1 + >>> result = map_reduce('abbccc', keyfunc, valuefunc) + >>> sorted(result.items()) + [('A', [1]), ('B', [1, 1]), ('C', [1, 1, 1])] + + Specifying *reducefunc* summarizes the categorized items: + + >>> keyfunc = lambda x: x.upper() + >>> valuefunc = lambda x: 1 + >>> reducefunc = sum + >>> result = map_reduce('abbccc', keyfunc, valuefunc, reducefunc) + >>> sorted(result.items()) + [('A', 1), ('B', 2), ('C', 3)] + + You may want to filter the input iterable before applying the map/reduce + procedure: + + >>> all_items = range(30) + >>> items = [x for x in all_items if 10 <= x <= 20] # Filter + >>> keyfunc = lambda x: x % 2 # Evens map to 0; odds to 1 + >>> categories = map_reduce(items, keyfunc=keyfunc) + >>> sorted(categories.items()) + [(0, [10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20]), (1, [11, 13, 15, 17, 19])] + >>> summaries = map_reduce(items, keyfunc=keyfunc, reducefunc=sum) + >>> sorted(summaries.items()) + [(0, 90), (1, 75)] + + Note that all items in the iterable are gathered into a list before the + summarization step, which may require significant storage. + + The returned object is a :obj:`collections.defaultdict` with the + ``default_factory`` set to ``None``, such that it behaves like a normal + dictionary. + + """ + valuefunc = (lambda x: x) if (valuefunc is None) else valuefunc + + ret = defaultdict(list) + for item in iterable: + key = keyfunc(item) + value = valuefunc(item) + ret[key].append(value) + + if reducefunc is not None: + for key, value_list in ret.items(): + ret[key] = reducefunc(value_list) + + ret.default_factory = None + return ret + + +def rlocate(iterable, pred=bool, window_size=None): + """Yield the index of each item in *iterable* for which *pred* returns + ``True``, starting from the right and moving left. + + *pred* defaults to :func:`bool`, which will select truthy items: + + >>> list(rlocate([0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0])) # Truthy at 1, 2, and 4 + [4, 2, 1] + + Set *pred* to a custom function to, e.g., find the indexes for a particular + item: + + >>> iterable = iter('abcb') + >>> pred = lambda x: x == 'b' + >>> list(rlocate(iterable, pred)) + [3, 1] + + If *window_size* is given, then the *pred* function will be called with + that many items. This enables searching for sub-sequences: + + >>> iterable = [0, 1, 2, 3, 0, 1, 2, 3, 0, 1, 2, 3] + >>> pred = lambda *args: args == (1, 2, 3) + >>> list(rlocate(iterable, pred=pred, window_size=3)) + [9, 5, 1] + + Beware, this function won't return anything for infinite iterables. + If *iterable* is reversible, ``rlocate`` will reverse it and search from + the right. Otherwise, it will search from the left and return the results + in reverse order. + + See :func:`locate` to for other example applications. + + """ + if window_size is None: + try: + len_iter = len(iterable) + return (len_iter - i - 1 for i in locate(reversed(iterable), pred)) + except TypeError: + pass + + return reversed(list(locate(iterable, pred, window_size))) + + +def replace(iterable, pred, substitutes, count=None, window_size=1): + """Yield the items from *iterable*, replacing the items for which *pred* + returns ``True`` with the items from the iterable *substitutes*. + + >>> iterable = [1, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 1] + >>> pred = lambda x: x == 0 + >>> substitutes = (2, 3) + >>> list(replace(iterable, pred, substitutes)) + [1, 1, 2, 3, 1, 1, 2, 3, 1, 1] + + If *count* is given, the number of replacements will be limited: + + >>> iterable = [1, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0] + >>> pred = lambda x: x == 0 + >>> substitutes = [None] + >>> list(replace(iterable, pred, substitutes, count=2)) + [1, 1, None, 1, 1, None, 1, 1, 0] + + Use *window_size* to control the number of items passed as arguments to + *pred*. This allows for locating and replacing subsequences. + + >>> iterable = [0, 1, 2, 5, 0, 1, 2, 5] + >>> window_size = 3 + >>> pred = lambda *args: args == (0, 1, 2) # 3 items passed to pred + >>> substitutes = [3, 4] # Splice in these items + >>> list(replace(iterable, pred, substitutes, window_size=window_size)) + [3, 4, 5, 3, 4, 5] + + """ + if window_size < 1: + raise ValueError('window_size must be at least 1') + + # Save the substitutes iterable, since it's used more than once + substitutes = tuple(substitutes) + + # Add padding such that the number of windows matches the length of the + # iterable + it = chain(iterable, [_marker] * (window_size - 1)) + windows = windowed(it, window_size) + + n = 0 + for w in windows: + # If the current window matches our predicate (and we haven't hit + # our maximum number of replacements), splice in the substitutes + # and then consume the following windows that overlap with this one. + # For example, if the iterable is (0, 1, 2, 3, 4...) + # and the window size is 2, we have (0, 1), (1, 2), (2, 3)... + # If the predicate matches on (0, 1), we need to zap (0, 1) and (1, 2) + if pred(*w): + if (count is None) or (n < count): + n += 1 + yield from substitutes + consume(windows, window_size - 1) + continue + + # If there was no match (or we've reached the replacement limit), + # yield the first item from the window. + if w and (w[0] is not _marker): + yield w[0] + + +def partitions(iterable): + """Yield all possible order-preserving partitions of *iterable*. + + >>> iterable = 'abc' + >>> for part in partitions(iterable): + ... print([''.join(p) for p in part]) + ['abc'] + ['a', 'bc'] + ['ab', 'c'] + ['a', 'b', 'c'] + + This is unrelated to :func:`partition`. + + """ + sequence = list(iterable) + n = len(sequence) + for i in powerset(range(1, n)): + yield [sequence[i:j] for i, j in zip((0,) + i, i + (n,))] + + +def set_partitions(iterable, k=None): + """ + Yield the set partitions of *iterable* into *k* parts. Set partitions are + not order-preserving. + + >>> iterable = 'abc' + >>> for part in set_partitions(iterable, 2): + ... print([''.join(p) for p in part]) + ['a', 'bc'] + ['ab', 'c'] + ['b', 'ac'] + + + If *k* is not given, every set partition is generated. + + >>> iterable = 'abc' + >>> for part in set_partitions(iterable): + ... print([''.join(p) for p in part]) + ['abc'] + ['a', 'bc'] + ['ab', 'c'] + ['b', 'ac'] + ['a', 'b', 'c'] + + """ + L = list(iterable) + n = len(L) + if k is not None: + if k < 1: + raise ValueError( + "Can't partition in a negative or zero number of groups" + ) + elif k > n: + return + + def set_partitions_helper(L, k): + n = len(L) + if k == 1: + yield [L] + elif n == k: + yield [[s] for s in L] + else: + e, *M = L + for p in set_partitions_helper(M, k - 1): + yield [[e], *p] + for p in set_partitions_helper(M, k): + for i in range(len(p)): + yield p[:i] + [[e] + p[i]] + p[i + 1 :] + + if k is None: + for k in range(1, n + 1): + yield from set_partitions_helper(L, k) + else: + yield from set_partitions_helper(L, k) + + +class time_limited: + """ + Yield items from *iterable* until *limit_seconds* have passed. + If the time limit expires before all items have been yielded, the + ``timed_out`` parameter will be set to ``True``. + + >>> from time import sleep + >>> def generator(): + ... yield 1 + ... yield 2 + ... sleep(0.2) + ... yield 3 + >>> iterable = time_limited(0.1, generator()) + >>> list(iterable) + [1, 2] + >>> iterable.timed_out + True + + Note that the time is checked before each item is yielded, and iteration + stops if the time elapsed is greater than *limit_seconds*. If your time + limit is 1 second, but it takes 2 seconds to generate the first item from + the iterable, the function will run for 2 seconds and not yield anything. + + """ + + def __init__(self, limit_seconds, iterable): + if limit_seconds < 0: + raise ValueError('limit_seconds must be positive') + self.limit_seconds = limit_seconds + self._iterable = iter(iterable) + self._start_time = monotonic() + self.timed_out = False + + def __iter__(self): + return self + + def __next__(self): + item = next(self._iterable) + if monotonic() - self._start_time > self.limit_seconds: + self.timed_out = True + raise StopIteration + + return item + + +def only(iterable, default=None, too_long=None): + """If *iterable* has only one item, return it. + If it has zero items, return *default*. + If it has more than one item, raise the exception given by *too_long*, + which is ``ValueError`` by default. + + >>> only([], default='missing') + 'missing' + >>> only([1]) + 1 + >>> only([1, 2]) # doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + ValueError: Expected exactly one item in iterable, but got 1, 2, + and perhaps more.' + >>> only([1, 2], too_long=TypeError) # doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + TypeError + + Note that :func:`only` attempts to advance *iterable* twice to ensure there + is only one item. See :func:`spy` or :func:`peekable` to check + iterable contents less destructively. + """ + it = iter(iterable) + first_value = next(it, default) + + try: + second_value = next(it) + except StopIteration: + pass + else: + msg = ( + 'Expected exactly one item in iterable, but got {!r}, {!r}, ' + 'and perhaps more.'.format(first_value, second_value) + ) + raise too_long or ValueError(msg) + + return first_value + + +def ichunked(iterable, n): + """Break *iterable* into sub-iterables with *n* elements each. + :func:`ichunked` is like :func:`chunked`, but it yields iterables + instead of lists. + + If the sub-iterables are read in order, the elements of *iterable* + won't be stored in memory. + If they are read out of order, :func:`itertools.tee` is used to cache + elements as necessary. + + >>> from itertools import count + >>> all_chunks = ichunked(count(), 4) + >>> c_1, c_2, c_3 = next(all_chunks), next(all_chunks), next(all_chunks) + >>> list(c_2) # c_1's elements have been cached; c_3's haven't been + [4, 5, 6, 7] + >>> list(c_1) + [0, 1, 2, 3] + >>> list(c_3) + [8, 9, 10, 11] + + """ + source = iter(iterable) + + while True: + # Check to see whether we're at the end of the source iterable + item = next(source, _marker) + if item is _marker: + return + + # Clone the source and yield an n-length slice + source, it = tee(chain([item], source)) + yield islice(it, n) + + # Advance the source iterable + consume(source, n) + + +def distinct_combinations(iterable, r): + """Yield the distinct combinations of *r* items taken from *iterable*. + + >>> list(distinct_combinations([0, 0, 1], 2)) + [(0, 0), (0, 1)] + + Equivalent to ``set(combinations(iterable))``, except duplicates are not + generated and thrown away. For larger input sequences this is much more + efficient. + + """ + if r < 0: + raise ValueError('r must be non-negative') + elif r == 0: + yield () + return + pool = tuple(iterable) + generators = [unique_everseen(enumerate(pool), key=itemgetter(1))] + current_combo = [None] * r + level = 0 + while generators: + try: + cur_idx, p = next(generators[-1]) + except StopIteration: + generators.pop() + level -= 1 + continue + current_combo[level] = p + if level + 1 == r: + yield tuple(current_combo) + else: + generators.append( + unique_everseen( + enumerate(pool[cur_idx + 1 :], cur_idx + 1), + key=itemgetter(1), + ) + ) + level += 1 + + +def filter_except(validator, iterable, *exceptions): + """Yield the items from *iterable* for which the *validator* function does + not raise one of the specified *exceptions*. + + *validator* is called for each item in *iterable*. + It should be a function that accepts one argument and raises an exception + if that item is not valid. + + >>> iterable = ['1', '2', 'three', '4', None] + >>> list(filter_except(int, iterable, ValueError, TypeError)) + ['1', '2', '4'] + + If an exception other than one given by *exceptions* is raised by + *validator*, it is raised like normal. + """ + for item in iterable: + try: + validator(item) + except exceptions: + pass + else: + yield item + + +def map_except(function, iterable, *exceptions): + """Transform each item from *iterable* with *function* and yield the + result, unless *function* raises one of the specified *exceptions*. + + *function* is called to transform each item in *iterable*. + It should be a accept one argument. + + >>> iterable = ['1', '2', 'three', '4', None] + >>> list(map_except(int, iterable, ValueError, TypeError)) + [1, 2, 4] + + If an exception other than one given by *exceptions* is raised by + *function*, it is raised like normal. + """ + for item in iterable: + try: + yield function(item) + except exceptions: + pass + + +def _sample_unweighted(iterable, k): + # Implementation of "Algorithm L" from the 1994 paper by Kim-Hung Li: + # "Reservoir-Sampling Algorithms of Time Complexity O(n(1+log(N/n)))". + + # Fill up the reservoir (collection of samples) with the first `k` samples + reservoir = take(k, iterable) + + # Generate random number that's the largest in a sample of k U(0,1) numbers + # Largest order statistic: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_statistic + W = exp(log(random()) / k) + + # The number of elements to skip before changing the reservoir is a random + # number with a geometric distribution. Sample it using random() and logs. + next_index = k + floor(log(random()) / log(1 - W)) + + for index, element in enumerate(iterable, k): + + if index == next_index: + reservoir[randrange(k)] = element + # The new W is the largest in a sample of k U(0, `old_W`) numbers + W *= exp(log(random()) / k) + next_index += floor(log(random()) / log(1 - W)) + 1 + + return reservoir + + +def _sample_weighted(iterable, k, weights): + # Implementation of "A-ExpJ" from the 2006 paper by Efraimidis et al. : + # "Weighted random sampling with a reservoir". + + # Log-transform for numerical stability for weights that are small/large + weight_keys = (log(random()) / weight for weight in weights) + + # Fill up the reservoir (collection of samples) with the first `k` + # weight-keys and elements, then heapify the list. + reservoir = take(k, zip(weight_keys, iterable)) + heapify(reservoir) + + # The number of jumps before changing the reservoir is a random variable + # with an exponential distribution. Sample it using random() and logs. + smallest_weight_key, _ = reservoir[0] + weights_to_skip = log(random()) / smallest_weight_key + + for weight, element in zip(weights, iterable): + if weight >= weights_to_skip: + # The notation here is consistent with the paper, but we store + # the weight-keys in log-space for better numerical stability. + smallest_weight_key, _ = reservoir[0] + t_w = exp(weight * smallest_weight_key) + r_2 = uniform(t_w, 1) # generate U(t_w, 1) + weight_key = log(r_2) / weight + heapreplace(reservoir, (weight_key, element)) + smallest_weight_key, _ = reservoir[0] + weights_to_skip = log(random()) / smallest_weight_key + else: + weights_to_skip -= weight + + # Equivalent to [element for weight_key, element in sorted(reservoir)] + return [heappop(reservoir)[1] for _ in range(k)] + + +def sample(iterable, k, weights=None): + """Return a *k*-length list of elements chosen (without replacement) + from the *iterable*. Like :func:`random.sample`, but works on iterables + of unknown length. + + >>> iterable = range(100) + >>> sample(iterable, 5) # doctest: +SKIP + [81, 60, 96, 16, 4] + + An iterable with *weights* may also be given: + + >>> iterable = range(100) + >>> weights = (i * i + 1 for i in range(100)) + >>> sampled = sample(iterable, 5, weights=weights) # doctest: +SKIP + [79, 67, 74, 66, 78] + + The algorithm can also be used to generate weighted random permutations. + The relative weight of each item determines the probability that it + appears late in the permutation. + + >>> data = "abcdefgh" + >>> weights = range(1, len(data) + 1) + >>> sample(data, k=len(data), weights=weights) # doctest: +SKIP + ['c', 'a', 'b', 'e', 'g', 'd', 'h', 'f'] + """ + if k == 0: + return [] + + iterable = iter(iterable) + if weights is None: + return _sample_unweighted(iterable, k) + else: + weights = iter(weights) + return _sample_weighted(iterable, k, weights) + + +def is_sorted(iterable, key=None, reverse=False): + """Returns ``True`` if the items of iterable are in sorted order, and + ``False`` otherwise. *key* and *reverse* have the same meaning that they do + in the built-in :func:`sorted` function. + + >>> is_sorted(['1', '2', '3', '4', '5'], key=int) + True + >>> is_sorted([5, 4, 3, 1, 2], reverse=True) + False + + The function returns ``False`` after encountering the first out-of-order + item. If there are no out-of-order items, the iterable is exhausted. + """ + + compare = lt if reverse else gt + it = iterable if (key is None) else map(key, iterable) + return not any(starmap(compare, pairwise(it))) + + +class AbortThread(BaseException): + pass + + +class callback_iter: + """Convert a function that uses callbacks to an iterator. + + Let *func* be a function that takes a `callback` keyword argument. + For example: + + >>> def func(callback=None): + ... for i, c in [(1, 'a'), (2, 'b'), (3, 'c')]: + ... if callback: + ... callback(i, c) + ... return 4 + + + Use ``with callback_iter(func)`` to get an iterator over the parameters + that are delivered to the callback. + + >>> with callback_iter(func) as it: + ... for args, kwargs in it: + ... print(args) + (1, 'a') + (2, 'b') + (3, 'c') + + The function will be called in a background thread. The ``done`` property + indicates whether it has completed execution. + + >>> it.done + True + + If it completes successfully, its return value will be available + in the ``result`` property. + + >>> it.result + 4 + + Notes: + + * If the function uses some keyword argument besides ``callback``, supply + *callback_kwd*. + * If it finished executing, but raised an exception, accessing the + ``result`` property will raise the same exception. + * If it hasn't finished executing, accessing the ``result`` + property from within the ``with`` block will raise ``RuntimeError``. + * If it hasn't finished executing, accessing the ``result`` property from + outside the ``with`` block will raise a + ``more_itertools.AbortThread`` exception. + * Provide *wait_seconds* to adjust how frequently the it is polled for + output. + + """ + + def __init__(self, func, callback_kwd='callback', wait_seconds=0.1): + self._func = func + self._callback_kwd = callback_kwd + self._aborted = False + self._future = None + self._wait_seconds = wait_seconds + self._executor = ThreadPoolExecutor(max_workers=1) + self._iterator = self._reader() + + def __enter__(self): + return self + + def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback): + self._aborted = True + self._executor.shutdown() + + def __iter__(self): + return self + + def __next__(self): + return next(self._iterator) + + @property + def done(self): + if self._future is None: + return False + return self._future.done() + + @property + def result(self): + if not self.done: + raise RuntimeError('Function has not yet completed') + + return self._future.result() + + def _reader(self): + q = Queue() + + def callback(*args, **kwargs): + if self._aborted: + raise AbortThread('canceled by user') + + q.put((args, kwargs)) + + self._future = self._executor.submit( + self._func, **{self._callback_kwd: callback} + ) + + while True: + try: + item = q.get(timeout=self._wait_seconds) + except Empty: + pass + else: + q.task_done() + yield item + + if self._future.done(): + break + + remaining = [] + while True: + try: + item = q.get_nowait() + except Empty: + break + else: + q.task_done() + remaining.append(item) + q.join() + yield from remaining + + +def windowed_complete(iterable, n): + """ + Yield ``(beginning, middle, end)`` tuples, where: + + * Each ``middle`` has *n* items from *iterable* + * Each ``beginning`` has the items before the ones in ``middle`` + * Each ``end`` has the items after the ones in ``middle`` + + >>> iterable = range(7) + >>> n = 3 + >>> for beginning, middle, end in windowed_complete(iterable, n): + ... print(beginning, middle, end) + () (0, 1, 2) (3, 4, 5, 6) + (0,) (1, 2, 3) (4, 5, 6) + (0, 1) (2, 3, 4) (5, 6) + (0, 1, 2) (3, 4, 5) (6,) + (0, 1, 2, 3) (4, 5, 6) () + + Note that *n* must be at least 0 and most equal to the length of + *iterable*. + + This function will exhaust the iterable and may require significant + storage. + """ + if n < 0: + raise ValueError('n must be >= 0') + + seq = tuple(iterable) + size = len(seq) + + if n > size: + raise ValueError('n must be <= len(seq)') + + for i in range(size - n + 1): + beginning = seq[:i] + middle = seq[i : i + n] + end = seq[i + n :] + yield beginning, middle, end + + +def all_unique(iterable, key=None): + """ + Returns ``True`` if all the elements of *iterable* are unique (no two + elements are equal). + + >>> all_unique('ABCB') + False + + If a *key* function is specified, it will be used to make comparisons. + + >>> all_unique('ABCb') + True + >>> all_unique('ABCb', str.lower) + False + + The function returns as soon as the first non-unique element is + encountered. Iterables with a mix of hashable and unhashable items can + be used, but the function will be slower for unhashable items. + """ + seenset = set() + seenset_add = seenset.add + seenlist = [] + seenlist_add = seenlist.append + for element in map(key, iterable) if key else iterable: + try: + if element in seenset: + return False + seenset_add(element) + except TypeError: + if element in seenlist: + return False + seenlist_add(element) + return True + + +def nth_product(index, *args): + """Equivalent to ``list(product(*args))[index]``. + + The products of *args* can be ordered lexicographically. + :func:`nth_product` computes the product at sort position *index* without + computing the previous products. + + >>> nth_product(8, range(2), range(2), range(2), range(2)) + (1, 0, 0, 0) + + ``IndexError`` will be raised if the given *index* is invalid. + """ + pools = list(map(tuple, reversed(args))) + ns = list(map(len, pools)) + + c = reduce(mul, ns) + + if index < 0: + index += c + + if not 0 <= index < c: + raise IndexError + + result = [] + for pool, n in zip(pools, ns): + result.append(pool[index % n]) + index //= n + + return tuple(reversed(result)) + + +def nth_permutation(iterable, r, index): + """Equivalent to ``list(permutations(iterable, r))[index]``` + + The subsequences of *iterable* that are of length *r* where order is + important can be ordered lexicographically. :func:`nth_permutation` + computes the subsequence at sort position *index* directly, without + computing the previous subsequences. + + >>> nth_permutation('ghijk', 2, 5) + ('h', 'i') + + ``ValueError`` will be raised If *r* is negative or greater than the length + of *iterable*. + ``IndexError`` will be raised if the given *index* is invalid. + """ + pool = list(iterable) + n = len(pool) + + if r is None or r == n: + r, c = n, factorial(n) + elif not 0 <= r < n: + raise ValueError + else: + c = factorial(n) // factorial(n - r) + + if index < 0: + index += c + + if not 0 <= index < c: + raise IndexError + + if c == 0: + return tuple() + + result = [0] * r + q = index * factorial(n) // c if r < n else index + for d in range(1, n + 1): + q, i = divmod(q, d) + if 0 <= n - d < r: + result[n - d] = i + if q == 0: + break + + return tuple(map(pool.pop, result)) + + +def value_chain(*args): + """Yield all arguments passed to the function in the same order in which + they were passed. If an argument itself is iterable then iterate over its + values. + + >>> list(value_chain(1, 2, 3, [4, 5, 6])) + [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] + + Binary and text strings are not considered iterable and are emitted + as-is: + + >>> list(value_chain('12', '34', ['56', '78'])) + ['12', '34', '56', '78'] + + + Multiple levels of nesting are not flattened. + + """ + for value in args: + if isinstance(value, (str, bytes)): + yield value + continue + try: + yield from value + except TypeError: + yield value + + +def product_index(element, *args): + """Equivalent to ``list(product(*args)).index(element)`` + + The products of *args* can be ordered lexicographically. + :func:`product_index` computes the first index of *element* without + computing the previous products. + + >>> product_index([8, 2], range(10), range(5)) + 42 + + ``ValueError`` will be raised if the given *element* isn't in the product + of *args*. + """ + index = 0 + + for x, pool in zip_longest(element, args, fillvalue=_marker): + if x is _marker or pool is _marker: + raise ValueError('element is not a product of args') + + pool = tuple(pool) + index = index * len(pool) + pool.index(x) + + return index + + +def combination_index(element, iterable): + """Equivalent to ``list(combinations(iterable, r)).index(element)`` + + The subsequences of *iterable* that are of length *r* can be ordered + lexicographically. :func:`combination_index` computes the index of the + first *element*, without computing the previous combinations. + + >>> combination_index('adf', 'abcdefg') + 10 + + ``ValueError`` will be raised if the given *element* isn't one of the + combinations of *iterable*. + """ + element = enumerate(element) + k, y = next(element, (None, None)) + if k is None: + return 0 + + indexes = [] + pool = enumerate(iterable) + for n, x in pool: + if x == y: + indexes.append(n) + tmp, y = next(element, (None, None)) + if tmp is None: + break + else: + k = tmp + else: + raise ValueError('element is not a combination of iterable') + + n, _ = last(pool, default=(n, None)) + + # Python versiosn below 3.8 don't have math.comb + index = 1 + for i, j in enumerate(reversed(indexes), start=1): + j = n - j + if i <= j: + index += factorial(j) // (factorial(i) * factorial(j - i)) + + return factorial(n + 1) // (factorial(k + 1) * factorial(n - k)) - index + + +def permutation_index(element, iterable): + """Equivalent to ``list(permutations(iterable, r)).index(element)``` + + The subsequences of *iterable* that are of length *r* where order is + important can be ordered lexicographically. :func:`permutation_index` + computes the index of the first *element* directly, without computing + the previous permutations. + + >>> permutation_index([1, 3, 2], range(5)) + 19 + + ``ValueError`` will be raised if the given *element* isn't one of the + permutations of *iterable*. + """ + index = 0 + pool = list(iterable) + for i, x in zip(range(len(pool), -1, -1), element): + r = pool.index(x) + index = index * i + r + del pool[r] + + return index + + +class countable: + """Wrap *iterable* and keep a count of how many items have been consumed. + + The ``items_seen`` attribute starts at ``0`` and increments as the iterable + is consumed: + + >>> iterable = map(str, range(10)) + >>> it = countable(iterable) + >>> it.items_seen + 0 + >>> next(it), next(it) + ('0', '1') + >>> list(it) + ['2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9'] + >>> it.items_seen + 10 + """ + + def __init__(self, iterable): + self._it = iter(iterable) + self.items_seen = 0 + + def __iter__(self): + return self + + def __next__(self): + item = next(self._it) + self.items_seen += 1 + + return item diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/recipes.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/recipes.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..521abd7c2ca633f90a5ba13a8060c5c3d0c32205 --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/recipes.py @@ -0,0 +1,620 @@ +"""Imported from the recipes section of the itertools documentation. + +All functions taken from the recipes section of the itertools library docs +[1]_. +Some backward-compatible usability improvements have been made. + +.. [1] http://docs.python.org/library/itertools.html#recipes + +""" +import warnings +from collections import deque +from itertools import ( + chain, + combinations, + count, + cycle, + groupby, + islice, + repeat, + starmap, + tee, + zip_longest, +) +import operator +from random import randrange, sample, choice + +__all__ = [ + 'all_equal', + 'consume', + 'convolve', + 'dotproduct', + 'first_true', + 'flatten', + 'grouper', + 'iter_except', + 'ncycles', + 'nth', + 'nth_combination', + 'padnone', + 'pad_none', + 'pairwise', + 'partition', + 'powerset', + 'prepend', + 'quantify', + 'random_combination_with_replacement', + 'random_combination', + 'random_permutation', + 'random_product', + 'repeatfunc', + 'roundrobin', + 'tabulate', + 'tail', + 'take', + 'unique_everseen', + 'unique_justseen', +] + + +def take(n, iterable): + """Return first *n* items of the iterable as a list. + + >>> take(3, range(10)) + [0, 1, 2] + + If there are fewer than *n* items in the iterable, all of them are + returned. + + >>> take(10, range(3)) + [0, 1, 2] + + """ + return list(islice(iterable, n)) + + +def tabulate(function, start=0): + """Return an iterator over the results of ``func(start)``, + ``func(start + 1)``, ``func(start + 2)``... + + *func* should be a function that accepts one integer argument. + + If *start* is not specified it defaults to 0. It will be incremented each + time the iterator is advanced. + + >>> square = lambda x: x ** 2 + >>> iterator = tabulate(square, -3) + >>> take(4, iterator) + [9, 4, 1, 0] + + """ + return map(function, count(start)) + + +def tail(n, iterable): + """Return an iterator over the last *n* items of *iterable*. + + >>> t = tail(3, 'ABCDEFG') + >>> list(t) + ['E', 'F', 'G'] + + """ + return iter(deque(iterable, maxlen=n)) + + +def consume(iterator, n=None): + """Advance *iterable* by *n* steps. If *n* is ``None``, consume it + entirely. + + Efficiently exhausts an iterator without returning values. Defaults to + consuming the whole iterator, but an optional second argument may be + provided to limit consumption. + + >>> i = (x for x in range(10)) + >>> next(i) + 0 + >>> consume(i, 3) + >>> next(i) + 4 + >>> consume(i) + >>> next(i) + Traceback (most recent call last): + File "", line 1, in + StopIteration + + If the iterator has fewer items remaining than the provided limit, the + whole iterator will be consumed. + + >>> i = (x for x in range(3)) + >>> consume(i, 5) + >>> next(i) + Traceback (most recent call last): + File "", line 1, in + StopIteration + + """ + # Use functions that consume iterators at C speed. + if n is None: + # feed the entire iterator into a zero-length deque + deque(iterator, maxlen=0) + else: + # advance to the empty slice starting at position n + next(islice(iterator, n, n), None) + + +def nth(iterable, n, default=None): + """Returns the nth item or a default value. + + >>> l = range(10) + >>> nth(l, 3) + 3 + >>> nth(l, 20, "zebra") + 'zebra' + + """ + return next(islice(iterable, n, None), default) + + +def all_equal(iterable): + """ + Returns ``True`` if all the elements are equal to each other. + + >>> all_equal('aaaa') + True + >>> all_equal('aaab') + False + + """ + g = groupby(iterable) + return next(g, True) and not next(g, False) + + +def quantify(iterable, pred=bool): + """Return the how many times the predicate is true. + + >>> quantify([True, False, True]) + 2 + + """ + return sum(map(pred, iterable)) + + +def pad_none(iterable): + """Returns the sequence of elements and then returns ``None`` indefinitely. + + >>> take(5, pad_none(range(3))) + [0, 1, 2, None, None] + + Useful for emulating the behavior of the built-in :func:`map` function. + + See also :func:`padded`. + + """ + return chain(iterable, repeat(None)) + + +padnone = pad_none + + +def ncycles(iterable, n): + """Returns the sequence elements *n* times + + >>> list(ncycles(["a", "b"], 3)) + ['a', 'b', 'a', 'b', 'a', 'b'] + + """ + return chain.from_iterable(repeat(tuple(iterable), n)) + + +def dotproduct(vec1, vec2): + """Returns the dot product of the two iterables. + + >>> dotproduct([10, 10], [20, 20]) + 400 + + """ + return sum(map(operator.mul, vec1, vec2)) + + +def flatten(listOfLists): + """Return an iterator flattening one level of nesting in a list of lists. + + >>> list(flatten([[0, 1], [2, 3]])) + [0, 1, 2, 3] + + See also :func:`collapse`, which can flatten multiple levels of nesting. + + """ + return chain.from_iterable(listOfLists) + + +def repeatfunc(func, times=None, *args): + """Call *func* with *args* repeatedly, returning an iterable over the + results. + + If *times* is specified, the iterable will terminate after that many + repetitions: + + >>> from operator import add + >>> times = 4 + >>> args = 3, 5 + >>> list(repeatfunc(add, times, *args)) + [8, 8, 8, 8] + + If *times* is ``None`` the iterable will not terminate: + + >>> from random import randrange + >>> times = None + >>> args = 1, 11 + >>> take(6, repeatfunc(randrange, times, *args)) # doctest:+SKIP + [2, 4, 8, 1, 8, 4] + + """ + if times is None: + return starmap(func, repeat(args)) + return starmap(func, repeat(args, times)) + + +def _pairwise(iterable): + """Returns an iterator of paired items, overlapping, from the original + + >>> take(4, pairwise(count())) + [(0, 1), (1, 2), (2, 3), (3, 4)] + + On Python 3.10 and above, this is an alias for :func:`itertools.pairwise`. + + """ + a, b = tee(iterable) + next(b, None) + yield from zip(a, b) + + +try: + from itertools import pairwise as itertools_pairwise +except ImportError: + pairwise = _pairwise +else: + + def pairwise(iterable): + yield from itertools_pairwise(iterable) + + pairwise.__doc__ = _pairwise.__doc__ + + +def grouper(iterable, n, fillvalue=None): + """Collect data into fixed-length chunks or blocks. + + >>> list(grouper('ABCDEFG', 3, 'x')) + [('A', 'B', 'C'), ('D', 'E', 'F'), ('G', 'x', 'x')] + + """ + if isinstance(iterable, int): + warnings.warn( + "grouper expects iterable as first parameter", DeprecationWarning + ) + n, iterable = iterable, n + args = [iter(iterable)] * n + return zip_longest(fillvalue=fillvalue, *args) + + +def roundrobin(*iterables): + """Yields an item from each iterable, alternating between them. + + >>> list(roundrobin('ABC', 'D', 'EF')) + ['A', 'D', 'E', 'B', 'F', 'C'] + + This function produces the same output as :func:`interleave_longest`, but + may perform better for some inputs (in particular when the number of + iterables is small). + + """ + # Recipe credited to George Sakkis + pending = len(iterables) + nexts = cycle(iter(it).__next__ for it in iterables) + while pending: + try: + for next in nexts: + yield next() + except StopIteration: + pending -= 1 + nexts = cycle(islice(nexts, pending)) + + +def partition(pred, iterable): + """ + Returns a 2-tuple of iterables derived from the input iterable. + The first yields the items that have ``pred(item) == False``. + The second yields the items that have ``pred(item) == True``. + + >>> is_odd = lambda x: x % 2 != 0 + >>> iterable = range(10) + >>> even_items, odd_items = partition(is_odd, iterable) + >>> list(even_items), list(odd_items) + ([0, 2, 4, 6, 8], [1, 3, 5, 7, 9]) + + If *pred* is None, :func:`bool` is used. + + >>> iterable = [0, 1, False, True, '', ' '] + >>> false_items, true_items = partition(None, iterable) + >>> list(false_items), list(true_items) + ([0, False, ''], [1, True, ' ']) + + """ + if pred is None: + pred = bool + + evaluations = ((pred(x), x) for x in iterable) + t1, t2 = tee(evaluations) + return ( + (x for (cond, x) in t1 if not cond), + (x for (cond, x) in t2 if cond), + ) + + +def powerset(iterable): + """Yields all possible subsets of the iterable. + + >>> list(powerset([1, 2, 3])) + [(), (1,), (2,), (3,), (1, 2), (1, 3), (2, 3), (1, 2, 3)] + + :func:`powerset` will operate on iterables that aren't :class:`set` + instances, so repeated elements in the input will produce repeated elements + in the output. Use :func:`unique_everseen` on the input to avoid generating + duplicates: + + >>> seq = [1, 1, 0] + >>> list(powerset(seq)) + [(), (1,), (1,), (0,), (1, 1), (1, 0), (1, 0), (1, 1, 0)] + >>> from more_itertools import unique_everseen + >>> list(powerset(unique_everseen(seq))) + [(), (1,), (0,), (1, 0)] + + """ + s = list(iterable) + return chain.from_iterable(combinations(s, r) for r in range(len(s) + 1)) + + +def unique_everseen(iterable, key=None): + """ + Yield unique elements, preserving order. + + >>> list(unique_everseen('AAAABBBCCDAABBB')) + ['A', 'B', 'C', 'D'] + >>> list(unique_everseen('ABBCcAD', str.lower)) + ['A', 'B', 'C', 'D'] + + Sequences with a mix of hashable and unhashable items can be used. + The function will be slower (i.e., `O(n^2)`) for unhashable items. + + Remember that ``list`` objects are unhashable - you can use the *key* + parameter to transform the list to a tuple (which is hashable) to + avoid a slowdown. + + >>> iterable = ([1, 2], [2, 3], [1, 2]) + >>> list(unique_everseen(iterable)) # Slow + [[1, 2], [2, 3]] + >>> list(unique_everseen(iterable, key=tuple)) # Faster + [[1, 2], [2, 3]] + + Similary, you may want to convert unhashable ``set`` objects with + ``key=frozenset``. For ``dict`` objects, + ``key=lambda x: frozenset(x.items())`` can be used. + + """ + seenset = set() + seenset_add = seenset.add + seenlist = [] + seenlist_add = seenlist.append + use_key = key is not None + + for element in iterable: + k = key(element) if use_key else element + try: + if k not in seenset: + seenset_add(k) + yield element + except TypeError: + if k not in seenlist: + seenlist_add(k) + yield element + + +def unique_justseen(iterable, key=None): + """Yields elements in order, ignoring serial duplicates + + >>> list(unique_justseen('AAAABBBCCDAABBB')) + ['A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'A', 'B'] + >>> list(unique_justseen('ABBCcAD', str.lower)) + ['A', 'B', 'C', 'A', 'D'] + + """ + return map(next, map(operator.itemgetter(1), groupby(iterable, key))) + + +def iter_except(func, exception, first=None): + """Yields results from a function repeatedly until an exception is raised. + + Converts a call-until-exception interface to an iterator interface. + Like ``iter(func, sentinel)``, but uses an exception instead of a sentinel + to end the loop. + + >>> l = [0, 1, 2] + >>> list(iter_except(l.pop, IndexError)) + [2, 1, 0] + + """ + try: + if first is not None: + yield first() + while 1: + yield func() + except exception: + pass + + +def first_true(iterable, default=None, pred=None): + """ + Returns the first true value in the iterable. + + If no true value is found, returns *default* + + If *pred* is not None, returns the first item for which + ``pred(item) == True`` . + + >>> first_true(range(10)) + 1 + >>> first_true(range(10), pred=lambda x: x > 5) + 6 + >>> first_true(range(10), default='missing', pred=lambda x: x > 9) + 'missing' + + """ + return next(filter(pred, iterable), default) + + +def random_product(*args, repeat=1): + """Draw an item at random from each of the input iterables. + + >>> random_product('abc', range(4), 'XYZ') # doctest:+SKIP + ('c', 3, 'Z') + + If *repeat* is provided as a keyword argument, that many items will be + drawn from each iterable. + + >>> random_product('abcd', range(4), repeat=2) # doctest:+SKIP + ('a', 2, 'd', 3) + + This equivalent to taking a random selection from + ``itertools.product(*args, **kwarg)``. + + """ + pools = [tuple(pool) for pool in args] * repeat + return tuple(choice(pool) for pool in pools) + + +def random_permutation(iterable, r=None): + """Return a random *r* length permutation of the elements in *iterable*. + + If *r* is not specified or is ``None``, then *r* defaults to the length of + *iterable*. + + >>> random_permutation(range(5)) # doctest:+SKIP + (3, 4, 0, 1, 2) + + This equivalent to taking a random selection from + ``itertools.permutations(iterable, r)``. + + """ + pool = tuple(iterable) + r = len(pool) if r is None else r + return tuple(sample(pool, r)) + + +def random_combination(iterable, r): + """Return a random *r* length subsequence of the elements in *iterable*. + + >>> random_combination(range(5), 3) # doctest:+SKIP + (2, 3, 4) + + This equivalent to taking a random selection from + ``itertools.combinations(iterable, r)``. + + """ + pool = tuple(iterable) + n = len(pool) + indices = sorted(sample(range(n), r)) + return tuple(pool[i] for i in indices) + + +def random_combination_with_replacement(iterable, r): + """Return a random *r* length subsequence of elements in *iterable*, + allowing individual elements to be repeated. + + >>> random_combination_with_replacement(range(3), 5) # doctest:+SKIP + (0, 0, 1, 2, 2) + + This equivalent to taking a random selection from + ``itertools.combinations_with_replacement(iterable, r)``. + + """ + pool = tuple(iterable) + n = len(pool) + indices = sorted(randrange(n) for i in range(r)) + return tuple(pool[i] for i in indices) + + +def nth_combination(iterable, r, index): + """Equivalent to ``list(combinations(iterable, r))[index]``. + + The subsequences of *iterable* that are of length *r* can be ordered + lexicographically. :func:`nth_combination` computes the subsequence at + sort position *index* directly, without computing the previous + subsequences. + + >>> nth_combination(range(5), 3, 5) + (0, 3, 4) + + ``ValueError`` will be raised If *r* is negative or greater than the length + of *iterable*. + ``IndexError`` will be raised if the given *index* is invalid. + """ + pool = tuple(iterable) + n = len(pool) + if (r < 0) or (r > n): + raise ValueError + + c = 1 + k = min(r, n - r) + for i in range(1, k + 1): + c = c * (n - k + i) // i + + if index < 0: + index += c + + if (index < 0) or (index >= c): + raise IndexError + + result = [] + while r: + c, n, r = c * r // n, n - 1, r - 1 + while index >= c: + index -= c + c, n = c * (n - r) // n, n - 1 + result.append(pool[-1 - n]) + + return tuple(result) + + +def prepend(value, iterator): + """Yield *value*, followed by the elements in *iterator*. + + >>> value = '0' + >>> iterator = ['1', '2', '3'] + >>> list(prepend(value, iterator)) + ['0', '1', '2', '3'] + + To prepend multiple values, see :func:`itertools.chain` + or :func:`value_chain`. + + """ + return chain([value], iterator) + + +def convolve(signal, kernel): + """Convolve the iterable *signal* with the iterable *kernel*. + + >>> signal = (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) + >>> kernel = [3, 2, 1] + >>> list(convolve(signal, kernel)) + [3, 8, 14, 20, 26, 14, 5] + + Note: the input arguments are not interchangeable, as the *kernel* + is immediately consumed and stored. + + """ + kernel = tuple(kernel)[::-1] + n = len(kernel) + window = deque([0], maxlen=n) * n + for x in chain(signal, repeat(0, n - 1)): + window.append(x) + yield sum(map(operator.mul, kernel, window)) diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/ordered_set.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/ordered_set.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..14876000de895a609d5b9f3de39c3c8fc44ef1fc --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/ordered_set.py @@ -0,0 +1,488 @@ +""" +An OrderedSet is a custom MutableSet that remembers its order, so that every +entry has an index that can be looked up. + +Based on a recipe originally posted to ActiveState Recipes by Raymond Hettiger, +and released under the MIT license. +""" +import itertools as it +from collections import deque + +try: + # Python 3 + from collections.abc import MutableSet, Sequence +except ImportError: + # Python 2.7 + from collections import MutableSet, Sequence + +SLICE_ALL = slice(None) +__version__ = "3.1" + + +def is_iterable(obj): + """ + Are we being asked to look up a list of things, instead of a single thing? + We check for the `__iter__` attribute so that this can cover types that + don't have to be known by this module, such as NumPy arrays. + + Strings, however, should be considered as atomic values to look up, not + iterables. The same goes for tuples, since they are immutable and therefore + valid entries. + + We don't need to check for the Python 2 `unicode` type, because it doesn't + have an `__iter__` attribute anyway. + """ + return ( + hasattr(obj, "__iter__") + and not isinstance(obj, str) + and not isinstance(obj, tuple) + ) + + +class OrderedSet(MutableSet, Sequence): + """ + An OrderedSet is a custom MutableSet that remembers its order, so that + every entry has an index that can be looked up. + + Example: + >>> OrderedSet([1, 1, 2, 3, 2]) + OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) + """ + + def __init__(self, iterable=None): + self.items = [] + self.map = {} + if iterable is not None: + self |= iterable + + def __len__(self): + """ + Returns the number of unique elements in the ordered set + + Example: + >>> len(OrderedSet([])) + 0 + >>> len(OrderedSet([1, 2])) + 2 + """ + return len(self.items) + + def __getitem__(self, index): + """ + Get the item at a given index. + + If `index` is a slice, you will get back that slice of items, as a + new OrderedSet. + + If `index` is a list or a similar iterable, you'll get a list of + items corresponding to those indices. This is similar to NumPy's + "fancy indexing". The result is not an OrderedSet because you may ask + for duplicate indices, and the number of elements returned should be + the number of elements asked for. + + Example: + >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) + >>> oset[1] + 2 + """ + if isinstance(index, slice) and index == SLICE_ALL: + return self.copy() + elif is_iterable(index): + return [self.items[i] for i in index] + elif hasattr(index, "__index__") or isinstance(index, slice): + result = self.items[index] + if isinstance(result, list): + return self.__class__(result) + else: + return result + else: + raise TypeError("Don't know how to index an OrderedSet by %r" % index) + + def copy(self): + """ + Return a shallow copy of this object. + + Example: + >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) + >>> other = this.copy() + >>> this == other + True + >>> this is other + False + """ + return self.__class__(self) + + def __getstate__(self): + if len(self) == 0: + # The state can't be an empty list. + # We need to return a truthy value, or else __setstate__ won't be run. + # + # This could have been done more gracefully by always putting the state + # in a tuple, but this way is backwards- and forwards- compatible with + # previous versions of OrderedSet. + return (None,) + else: + return list(self) + + def __setstate__(self, state): + if state == (None,): + self.__init__([]) + else: + self.__init__(state) + + def __contains__(self, key): + """ + Test if the item is in this ordered set + + Example: + >>> 1 in OrderedSet([1, 3, 2]) + True + >>> 5 in OrderedSet([1, 3, 2]) + False + """ + return key in self.map + + def add(self, key): + """ + Add `key` as an item to this OrderedSet, then return its index. + + If `key` is already in the OrderedSet, return the index it already + had. + + Example: + >>> oset = OrderedSet() + >>> oset.append(3) + 0 + >>> print(oset) + OrderedSet([3]) + """ + if key not in self.map: + self.map[key] = len(self.items) + self.items.append(key) + return self.map[key] + + append = add + + def update(self, sequence): + """ + Update the set with the given iterable sequence, then return the index + of the last element inserted. + + Example: + >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) + >>> oset.update([3, 1, 5, 1, 4]) + 4 + >>> print(oset) + OrderedSet([1, 2, 3, 5, 4]) + """ + item_index = None + try: + for item in sequence: + item_index = self.add(item) + except TypeError: + raise ValueError( + "Argument needs to be an iterable, got %s" % type(sequence) + ) + return item_index + + def index(self, key): + """ + Get the index of a given entry, raising an IndexError if it's not + present. + + `key` can be an iterable of entries that is not a string, in which case + this returns a list of indices. + + Example: + >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) + >>> oset.index(2) + 1 + """ + if is_iterable(key): + return [self.index(subkey) for subkey in key] + return self.map[key] + + # Provide some compatibility with pd.Index + get_loc = index + get_indexer = index + + def pop(self): + """ + Remove and return the last element from the set. + + Raises KeyError if the set is empty. + + Example: + >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) + >>> oset.pop() + 3 + """ + if not self.items: + raise KeyError("Set is empty") + + elem = self.items[-1] + del self.items[-1] + del self.map[elem] + return elem + + def discard(self, key): + """ + Remove an element. Do not raise an exception if absent. + + The MutableSet mixin uses this to implement the .remove() method, which + *does* raise an error when asked to remove a non-existent item. + + Example: + >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) + >>> oset.discard(2) + >>> print(oset) + OrderedSet([1, 3]) + >>> oset.discard(2) + >>> print(oset) + OrderedSet([1, 3]) + """ + if key in self: + i = self.map[key] + del self.items[i] + del self.map[key] + for k, v in self.map.items(): + if v >= i: + self.map[k] = v - 1 + + def clear(self): + """ + Remove all items from this OrderedSet. + """ + del self.items[:] + self.map.clear() + + def __iter__(self): + """ + Example: + >>> list(iter(OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]))) + [1, 2, 3] + """ + return iter(self.items) + + def __reversed__(self): + """ + Example: + >>> list(reversed(OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]))) + [3, 2, 1] + """ + return reversed(self.items) + + def __repr__(self): + if not self: + return "%s()" % (self.__class__.__name__,) + return "%s(%r)" % (self.__class__.__name__, list(self)) + + def __eq__(self, other): + """ + Returns true if the containers have the same items. If `other` is a + Sequence, then order is checked, otherwise it is ignored. + + Example: + >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 3, 2]) + >>> oset == [1, 3, 2] + True + >>> oset == [1, 2, 3] + False + >>> oset == [2, 3] + False + >>> oset == OrderedSet([3, 2, 1]) + False + """ + # In Python 2 deque is not a Sequence, so treat it as one for + # consistent behavior with Python 3. + if isinstance(other, (Sequence, deque)): + # Check that this OrderedSet contains the same elements, in the + # same order, as the other object. + return list(self) == list(other) + try: + other_as_set = set(other) + except TypeError: + # If `other` can't be converted into a set, it's not equal. + return False + else: + return set(self) == other_as_set + + def union(self, *sets): + """ + Combines all unique items. + Each items order is defined by its first appearance. + + Example: + >>> oset = OrderedSet.union(OrderedSet([3, 1, 4, 1, 5]), [1, 3], [2, 0]) + >>> print(oset) + OrderedSet([3, 1, 4, 5, 2, 0]) + >>> oset.union([8, 9]) + OrderedSet([3, 1, 4, 5, 2, 0, 8, 9]) + >>> oset | {10} + OrderedSet([3, 1, 4, 5, 2, 0, 10]) + """ + cls = self.__class__ if isinstance(self, OrderedSet) else OrderedSet + containers = map(list, it.chain([self], sets)) + items = it.chain.from_iterable(containers) + return cls(items) + + def __and__(self, other): + # the parent implementation of this is backwards + return self.intersection(other) + + def intersection(self, *sets): + """ + Returns elements in common between all sets. Order is defined only + by the first set. + + Example: + >>> oset = OrderedSet.intersection(OrderedSet([0, 1, 2, 3]), [1, 2, 3]) + >>> print(oset) + OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) + >>> oset.intersection([2, 4, 5], [1, 2, 3, 4]) + OrderedSet([2]) + >>> oset.intersection() + OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) + """ + cls = self.__class__ if isinstance(self, OrderedSet) else OrderedSet + if sets: + common = set.intersection(*map(set, sets)) + items = (item for item in self if item in common) + else: + items = self + return cls(items) + + def difference(self, *sets): + """ + Returns all elements that are in this set but not the others. + + Example: + >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).difference(OrderedSet([2])) + OrderedSet([1, 3]) + >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).difference(OrderedSet([2]), OrderedSet([3])) + OrderedSet([1]) + >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) - OrderedSet([2]) + OrderedSet([1, 3]) + >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).difference() + OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) + """ + cls = self.__class__ + if sets: + other = set.union(*map(set, sets)) + items = (item for item in self if item not in other) + else: + items = self + return cls(items) + + def issubset(self, other): + """ + Report whether another set contains this set. + + Example: + >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).issubset({1, 2}) + False + >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).issubset({1, 2, 3, 4}) + True + >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).issubset({1, 4, 3, 5}) + False + """ + if len(self) > len(other): # Fast check for obvious cases + return False + return all(item in other for item in self) + + def issuperset(self, other): + """ + Report whether this set contains another set. + + Example: + >>> OrderedSet([1, 2]).issuperset([1, 2, 3]) + False + >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3, 4]).issuperset({1, 2, 3}) + True + >>> OrderedSet([1, 4, 3, 5]).issuperset({1, 2, 3}) + False + """ + if len(self) < len(other): # Fast check for obvious cases + return False + return all(item in self for item in other) + + def symmetric_difference(self, other): + """ + Return the symmetric difference of two OrderedSets as a new set. + That is, the new set will contain all elements that are in exactly + one of the sets. + + Their order will be preserved, with elements from `self` preceding + elements from `other`. + + Example: + >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 4, 3, 5, 7]) + >>> other = OrderedSet([9, 7, 1, 3, 2]) + >>> this.symmetric_difference(other) + OrderedSet([4, 5, 9, 2]) + """ + cls = self.__class__ if isinstance(self, OrderedSet) else OrderedSet + diff1 = cls(self).difference(other) + diff2 = cls(other).difference(self) + return diff1.union(diff2) + + def _update_items(self, items): + """ + Replace the 'items' list of this OrderedSet with a new one, updating + self.map accordingly. + """ + self.items = items + self.map = {item: idx for (idx, item) in enumerate(items)} + + def difference_update(self, *sets): + """ + Update this OrderedSet to remove items from one or more other sets. + + Example: + >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) + >>> this.difference_update(OrderedSet([2, 4])) + >>> print(this) + OrderedSet([1, 3]) + + >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]) + >>> this.difference_update(OrderedSet([2, 4]), OrderedSet([1, 4, 6])) + >>> print(this) + OrderedSet([3, 5]) + """ + items_to_remove = set() + for other in sets: + items_to_remove |= set(other) + self._update_items([item for item in self.items if item not in items_to_remove]) + + def intersection_update(self, other): + """ + Update this OrderedSet to keep only items in another set, preserving + their order in this set. + + Example: + >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 4, 3, 5, 7]) + >>> other = OrderedSet([9, 7, 1, 3, 2]) + >>> this.intersection_update(other) + >>> print(this) + OrderedSet([1, 3, 7]) + """ + other = set(other) + self._update_items([item for item in self.items if item in other]) + + def symmetric_difference_update(self, other): + """ + Update this OrderedSet to remove items from another set, then + add items from the other set that were not present in this set. + + Example: + >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 4, 3, 5, 7]) + >>> other = OrderedSet([9, 7, 1, 3, 2]) + >>> this.symmetric_difference_update(other) + >>> print(this) + OrderedSet([4, 5, 9, 2]) + """ + items_to_add = [item for item in other if item not in self] + items_to_remove = set(other) + self._update_items( + [item for item in self.items if item not in items_to_remove] + items_to_add + ) diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__about__.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__about__.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..c359122f97125ed630760029f7fd0689f1caefd3 --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__about__.py @@ -0,0 +1,26 @@ +# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version +# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository +# for complete details. + +__all__ = [ + "__title__", + "__summary__", + "__uri__", + "__version__", + "__author__", + "__email__", + "__license__", + "__copyright__", +] + +__title__ = "packaging" +__summary__ = "Core utilities for Python packages" +__uri__ = "https://github.com/pypa/packaging" + +__version__ = "21.2" + +__author__ = "Donald Stufft and individual contributors" +__email__ = "donald@stufft.io" + +__license__ = "BSD-2-Clause or Apache-2.0" +__copyright__ = "2014-2019 %s" % __author__ diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__init__.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__init__.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..3c50c5dcfeeda2efed282200a5c5cc8c5f7542f7 --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__init__.py @@ -0,0 +1,25 @@ +# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version +# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository +# for complete details. + +from .__about__ import ( + __author__, + __copyright__, + __email__, + __license__, + __summary__, + __title__, + __uri__, + __version__, +) + +__all__ = [ + "__title__", + "__summary__", + "__uri__", + "__version__", + "__author__", + "__email__", + "__license__", + "__copyright__", +] diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__pycache__/__about__.cpython-310.pyc b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__pycache__/__about__.cpython-310.pyc new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..b7c87375d6853215530ebe2d8e3d22b438e50f24 Binary files /dev/null and b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__pycache__/__about__.cpython-310.pyc differ diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__pycache__/__init__.cpython-310.pyc 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b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_manylinux.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..4c379aa6f69ff56c8f19612002c6e3e939ea6012 --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_manylinux.py @@ -0,0 +1,301 @@ +import collections +import functools +import os +import re +import struct +import sys +import warnings +from typing import IO, Dict, Iterator, NamedTuple, Optional, Tuple + + +# Python does not provide platform information at sufficient granularity to +# identify the architecture of the running executable in some cases, so we +# determine it dynamically by reading the information from the running +# process. This only applies on Linux, which uses the ELF format. +class _ELFFileHeader: + # https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Executable_and_Linkable_Format#File_header + class _InvalidELFFileHeader(ValueError): + """ + An invalid ELF file header was found. + """ + + ELF_MAGIC_NUMBER = 0x7F454C46 + ELFCLASS32 = 1 + ELFCLASS64 = 2 + ELFDATA2LSB = 1 + ELFDATA2MSB = 2 + EM_386 = 3 + EM_S390 = 22 + EM_ARM = 40 + EM_X86_64 = 62 + EF_ARM_ABIMASK = 0xFF000000 + EF_ARM_ABI_VER5 = 0x05000000 + EF_ARM_ABI_FLOAT_HARD = 0x00000400 + + def __init__(self, file: IO[bytes]) -> None: + def unpack(fmt: str) -> int: + try: + data = file.read(struct.calcsize(fmt)) + result: Tuple[int, ...] = struct.unpack(fmt, data) + except struct.error: + raise _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader() + return result[0] + + self.e_ident_magic = unpack(">I") + if self.e_ident_magic != self.ELF_MAGIC_NUMBER: + raise _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader() + self.e_ident_class = unpack("B") + if self.e_ident_class not in {self.ELFCLASS32, self.ELFCLASS64}: + raise _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader() + self.e_ident_data = unpack("B") + if self.e_ident_data not in {self.ELFDATA2LSB, self.ELFDATA2MSB}: + raise _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader() + self.e_ident_version = unpack("B") + self.e_ident_osabi = unpack("B") + self.e_ident_abiversion = unpack("B") + self.e_ident_pad = file.read(7) + format_h = "H" + format_i = "I" + format_q = "Q" + format_p = format_i if self.e_ident_class == self.ELFCLASS32 else format_q + self.e_type = unpack(format_h) + self.e_machine = unpack(format_h) + self.e_version = unpack(format_i) + self.e_entry = unpack(format_p) + self.e_phoff = unpack(format_p) + self.e_shoff = unpack(format_p) + self.e_flags = unpack(format_i) + self.e_ehsize = unpack(format_h) + self.e_phentsize = unpack(format_h) + self.e_phnum = unpack(format_h) + self.e_shentsize = unpack(format_h) + self.e_shnum = unpack(format_h) + self.e_shstrndx = unpack(format_h) + + +def _get_elf_header() -> Optional[_ELFFileHeader]: + try: + with open(sys.executable, "rb") as f: + elf_header = _ELFFileHeader(f) + except (OSError, TypeError, _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader): + return None + return elf_header + + +def _is_linux_armhf() -> bool: + # hard-float ABI can be detected from the ELF header of the running + # process + # https://static.docs.arm.com/ihi0044/g/aaelf32.pdf + elf_header = _get_elf_header() + if elf_header is None: + return False + result = elf_header.e_ident_class == elf_header.ELFCLASS32 + result &= elf_header.e_ident_data == elf_header.ELFDATA2LSB + result &= elf_header.e_machine == elf_header.EM_ARM + result &= ( + elf_header.e_flags & elf_header.EF_ARM_ABIMASK + ) == elf_header.EF_ARM_ABI_VER5 + result &= ( + elf_header.e_flags & elf_header.EF_ARM_ABI_FLOAT_HARD + ) == elf_header.EF_ARM_ABI_FLOAT_HARD + return result + + +def _is_linux_i686() -> bool: + elf_header = _get_elf_header() + if elf_header is None: + return False + result = elf_header.e_ident_class == elf_header.ELFCLASS32 + result &= elf_header.e_ident_data == elf_header.ELFDATA2LSB + result &= elf_header.e_machine == elf_header.EM_386 + return result + + +def _have_compatible_abi(arch: str) -> bool: + if arch == "armv7l": + return _is_linux_armhf() + if arch == "i686": + return _is_linux_i686() + return arch in {"x86_64", "aarch64", "ppc64", "ppc64le", "s390x"} + + +# If glibc ever changes its major version, we need to know what the last +# minor version was, so we can build the complete list of all versions. +# For now, guess what the highest minor version might be, assume it will +# be 50 for testing. Once this actually happens, update the dictionary +# with the actual value. +_LAST_GLIBC_MINOR: Dict[int, int] = collections.defaultdict(lambda: 50) + + +class _GLibCVersion(NamedTuple): + major: int + minor: int + + +def _glibc_version_string_confstr() -> Optional[str]: + """ + Primary implementation of glibc_version_string using os.confstr. + """ + # os.confstr is quite a bit faster than ctypes.DLL. It's also less likely + # to be broken or missing. This strategy is used in the standard library + # platform module. + # https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/fcf1d003bf4f0100c/Lib/platform.py#L175-L183 + try: + # os.confstr("CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION") returns a string like "glibc 2.17". + version_string = os.confstr("CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION") + assert version_string is not None + _, version = version_string.split() + except (AssertionError, AttributeError, OSError, ValueError): + # os.confstr() or CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION not available (or a bad value)... + return None + return version + + +def _glibc_version_string_ctypes() -> Optional[str]: + """ + Fallback implementation of glibc_version_string using ctypes. + """ + try: + import ctypes + except ImportError: + return None + + # ctypes.CDLL(None) internally calls dlopen(NULL), and as the dlopen + # manpage says, "If filename is NULL, then the returned handle is for the + # main program". This way we can let the linker do the work to figure out + # which libc our process is actually using. + # + # We must also handle the special case where the executable is not a + # dynamically linked executable. This can occur when using musl libc, + # for example. In this situation, dlopen() will error, leading to an + # OSError. Interestingly, at least in the case of musl, there is no + # errno set on the OSError. The single string argument used to construct + # OSError comes from libc itself and is therefore not portable to + # hard code here. In any case, failure to call dlopen() means we + # can proceed, so we bail on our attempt. + try: + process_namespace = ctypes.CDLL(None) + except OSError: + return None + + try: + gnu_get_libc_version = process_namespace.gnu_get_libc_version + except AttributeError: + # Symbol doesn't exist -> therefore, we are not linked to + # glibc. + return None + + # Call gnu_get_libc_version, which returns a string like "2.5" + gnu_get_libc_version.restype = ctypes.c_char_p + version_str: str = gnu_get_libc_version() + # py2 / py3 compatibility: + if not isinstance(version_str, str): + version_str = version_str.decode("ascii") + + return version_str + + +def _glibc_version_string() -> Optional[str]: + """Returns glibc version string, or None if not using glibc.""" + return _glibc_version_string_confstr() or _glibc_version_string_ctypes() + + +def _parse_glibc_version(version_str: str) -> Tuple[int, int]: + """Parse glibc version. + + We use a regexp instead of str.split because we want to discard any + random junk that might come after the minor version -- this might happen + in patched/forked versions of glibc (e.g. Linaro's version of glibc + uses version strings like "2.20-2014.11"). See gh-3588. + """ + m = re.match(r"(?P[0-9]+)\.(?P[0-9]+)", version_str) + if not m: + warnings.warn( + "Expected glibc version with 2 components major.minor," + " got: %s" % version_str, + RuntimeWarning, + ) + return -1, -1 + return int(m.group("major")), int(m.group("minor")) + + +@functools.lru_cache() +def _get_glibc_version() -> Tuple[int, int]: + version_str = _glibc_version_string() + if version_str is None: + return (-1, -1) + return _parse_glibc_version(version_str) + + +# From PEP 513, PEP 600 +def _is_compatible(name: str, arch: str, version: _GLibCVersion) -> bool: + sys_glibc = _get_glibc_version() + if sys_glibc < version: + return False + # Check for presence of _manylinux module. + try: + import _manylinux # noqa + except ImportError: + return True + if hasattr(_manylinux, "manylinux_compatible"): + result = _manylinux.manylinux_compatible(version[0], version[1], arch) + if result is not None: + return bool(result) + return True + if version == _GLibCVersion(2, 5): + if hasattr(_manylinux, "manylinux1_compatible"): + return bool(_manylinux.manylinux1_compatible) + if version == _GLibCVersion(2, 12): + if hasattr(_manylinux, "manylinux2010_compatible"): + return bool(_manylinux.manylinux2010_compatible) + if version == _GLibCVersion(2, 17): + if hasattr(_manylinux, "manylinux2014_compatible"): + return bool(_manylinux.manylinux2014_compatible) + return True + + +_LEGACY_MANYLINUX_MAP = { + # CentOS 7 w/ glibc 2.17 (PEP 599) + (2, 17): "manylinux2014", + # CentOS 6 w/ glibc 2.12 (PEP 571) + (2, 12): "manylinux2010", + # CentOS 5 w/ glibc 2.5 (PEP 513) + (2, 5): "manylinux1", +} + + +def platform_tags(linux: str, arch: str) -> Iterator[str]: + if not _have_compatible_abi(arch): + return + # Oldest glibc to be supported regardless of architecture is (2, 17). + too_old_glibc2 = _GLibCVersion(2, 16) + if arch in {"x86_64", "i686"}: + # On x86/i686 also oldest glibc to be supported is (2, 5). + too_old_glibc2 = _GLibCVersion(2, 4) + current_glibc = _GLibCVersion(*_get_glibc_version()) + glibc_max_list = [current_glibc] + # We can assume compatibility across glibc major versions. + # https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=24636 + # + # Build a list of maximum glibc versions so that we can + # output the canonical list of all glibc from current_glibc + # down to too_old_glibc2, including all intermediary versions. + for glibc_major in range(current_glibc.major - 1, 1, -1): + glibc_minor = _LAST_GLIBC_MINOR[glibc_major] + glibc_max_list.append(_GLibCVersion(glibc_major, glibc_minor)) + for glibc_max in glibc_max_list: + if glibc_max.major == too_old_glibc2.major: + min_minor = too_old_glibc2.minor + else: + # For other glibc major versions oldest supported is (x, 0). + min_minor = -1 + for glibc_minor in range(glibc_max.minor, min_minor, -1): + glibc_version = _GLibCVersion(glibc_max.major, glibc_minor) + tag = "manylinux_{}_{}".format(*glibc_version) + if _is_compatible(tag, arch, glibc_version): + yield linux.replace("linux", tag) + # Handle the legacy manylinux1, manylinux2010, manylinux2014 tags. + if glibc_version in _LEGACY_MANYLINUX_MAP: + legacy_tag = _LEGACY_MANYLINUX_MAP[glibc_version] + if _is_compatible(legacy_tag, arch, glibc_version): + yield linux.replace("linux", legacy_tag) diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_musllinux.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_musllinux.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..85450fafa34733d81dd8d5c52637a464e5399efa --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_musllinux.py @@ -0,0 +1,136 @@ +"""PEP 656 support. + +This module implements logic to detect if the currently running Python is +linked against musl, and what musl version is used. +""" + +import contextlib +import functools +import operator +import os +import re +import struct +import subprocess +import sys +from typing import IO, Iterator, NamedTuple, Optional, Tuple + + +def _read_unpacked(f: IO[bytes], fmt: str) -> Tuple[int, ...]: + return struct.unpack(fmt, f.read(struct.calcsize(fmt))) + + +def _parse_ld_musl_from_elf(f: IO[bytes]) -> Optional[str]: + """Detect musl libc location by parsing the Python executable. + + Based on: https://gist.github.com/lyssdod/f51579ae8d93c8657a5564aefc2ffbca + ELF header: https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/elf/gabi4+/ch4.eheader.html + """ + f.seek(0) + try: + ident = _read_unpacked(f, "16B") + except struct.error: + return None + if ident[:4] != tuple(b"\x7fELF"): # Invalid magic, not ELF. + return None + f.seek(struct.calcsize("HHI"), 1) # Skip file type, machine, and version. + + try: + # e_fmt: Format for program header. + # p_fmt: Format for section header. + # p_idx: Indexes to find p_type, p_offset, and p_filesz. + e_fmt, p_fmt, p_idx = { + 1: ("IIIIHHH", "IIIIIIII", (0, 1, 4)), # 32-bit. + 2: ("QQQIHHH", "IIQQQQQQ", (0, 2, 5)), # 64-bit. + }[ident[4]] + except KeyError: + return None + else: + p_get = operator.itemgetter(*p_idx) + + # Find the interpreter section and return its content. + try: + _, e_phoff, _, _, _, e_phentsize, e_phnum = _read_unpacked(f, e_fmt) + except struct.error: + return None + for i in range(e_phnum + 1): + f.seek(e_phoff + e_phentsize * i) + try: + p_type, p_offset, p_filesz = p_get(_read_unpacked(f, p_fmt)) + except struct.error: + return None + if p_type != 3: # Not PT_INTERP. + continue + f.seek(p_offset) + interpreter = os.fsdecode(f.read(p_filesz)).strip("\0") + if "musl" not in interpreter: + return None + return interpreter + return None + + +class _MuslVersion(NamedTuple): + major: int + minor: int + + +def _parse_musl_version(output: str) -> Optional[_MuslVersion]: + lines = [n for n in (n.strip() for n in output.splitlines()) if n] + if len(lines) < 2 or lines[0][:4] != "musl": + return None + m = re.match(r"Version (\d+)\.(\d+)", lines[1]) + if not m: + return None + return _MuslVersion(major=int(m.group(1)), minor=int(m.group(2))) + + +@functools.lru_cache() +def _get_musl_version(executable: str) -> Optional[_MuslVersion]: + """Detect currently-running musl runtime version. + + This is done by checking the specified executable's dynamic linking + information, and invoking the loader to parse its output for a version + string. If the loader is musl, the output would be something like:: + + musl libc (x86_64) + Version 1.2.2 + Dynamic Program Loader + """ + with contextlib.ExitStack() as stack: + try: + f = stack.enter_context(open(executable, "rb")) + except IOError: + return None + ld = _parse_ld_musl_from_elf(f) + if not ld: + return None + proc = subprocess.run([ld], stderr=subprocess.PIPE, universal_newlines=True) + return _parse_musl_version(proc.stderr) + + +def platform_tags(arch: str) -> Iterator[str]: + """Generate musllinux tags compatible to the current platform. + + :param arch: Should be the part of platform tag after the ``linux_`` + prefix, e.g. ``x86_64``. The ``linux_`` prefix is assumed as a + prerequisite for the current platform to be musllinux-compatible. + + :returns: An iterator of compatible musllinux tags. + """ + sys_musl = _get_musl_version(sys.executable) + if sys_musl is None: # Python not dynamically linked against musl. + return + for minor in range(sys_musl.minor, -1, -1): + yield f"musllinux_{sys_musl.major}_{minor}_{arch}" + + +if __name__ == "__main__": # pragma: no cover + import sysconfig + + plat = sysconfig.get_platform() + assert plat.startswith("linux-"), "not linux" + + print("plat:", plat) + print("musl:", _get_musl_version(sys.executable)) + print("tags:", end=" ") + for t in platform_tags(re.sub(r"[.-]", "_", plat.split("-", 1)[-1])): + print(t, end="\n ") diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_structures.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_structures.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..951549753afa255148c7c60d868303963f8c1813 --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_structures.py @@ -0,0 +1,67 @@ +# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version +# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository +# for complete details. + + +class InfinityType: + def __repr__(self) -> str: + return "Infinity" + + def __hash__(self) -> int: + return hash(repr(self)) + + def __lt__(self, other: object) -> bool: + return False + + def __le__(self, other: object) -> bool: + return False + + def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool: + return isinstance(other, self.__class__) + + def __ne__(self, other: object) -> bool: + return not isinstance(other, self.__class__) + + def __gt__(self, other: object) -> bool: + return True + + def __ge__(self, other: object) -> bool: + return True + + def __neg__(self: object) -> "NegativeInfinityType": + return NegativeInfinity + + +Infinity = InfinityType() + + +class NegativeInfinityType: + def __repr__(self) -> str: + return "-Infinity" + + def __hash__(self) -> int: + return hash(repr(self)) + + def __lt__(self, other: object) -> bool: + return True + + def __le__(self, other: object) -> bool: + return True + + def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool: + return isinstance(other, self.__class__) + + def __ne__(self, other: object) -> bool: + return not isinstance(other, self.__class__) + + def __gt__(self, other: object) -> bool: + return False + + def __ge__(self, other: object) -> bool: + return False + + def __neg__(self: object) -> InfinityType: + return Infinity + + +NegativeInfinity = NegativeInfinityType() diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/markers.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/markers.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..eb0541b83a77f09f5e598bf88eeb38a84e305ae0 --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/markers.py @@ -0,0 +1,304 @@ +# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version +# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository +# for complete details. + +import operator +import os +import platform +import sys +from typing import Any, Callable, Dict, List, Optional, Tuple, Union + +from setuptools.extern.pyparsing import ( # noqa: N817 + Forward, + Group, + Literal as L, + ParseException, + ParseResults, + QuotedString, + ZeroOrMore, + stringEnd, + stringStart, +) + +from .specifiers import InvalidSpecifier, Specifier + +__all__ = [ + "InvalidMarker", + "UndefinedComparison", + "UndefinedEnvironmentName", + "Marker", + "default_environment", +] + +Operator = Callable[[str, str], bool] + + +class InvalidMarker(ValueError): + """ + An invalid marker was found, users should refer to PEP 508. + """ + + +class UndefinedComparison(ValueError): + """ + An invalid operation was attempted on a value that doesn't support it. + """ + + +class UndefinedEnvironmentName(ValueError): + """ + A name was attempted to be used that does not exist inside of the + environment. + """ + + +class Node: + def __init__(self, value: Any) -> None: + self.value = value + + def __str__(self) -> str: + return str(self.value) + + def __repr__(self) -> str: + return f"<{self.__class__.__name__}('{self}')>" + + def serialize(self) -> str: + raise NotImplementedError + + +class Variable(Node): + def serialize(self) -> str: + return str(self) + + +class Value(Node): + def serialize(self) -> str: + return f'"{self}"' + + +class Op(Node): + def serialize(self) -> str: + return str(self) + + +VARIABLE = ( + L("implementation_version") + | L("platform_python_implementation") + | L("implementation_name") + | L("python_full_version") + | L("platform_release") + | L("platform_version") + | L("platform_machine") + | L("platform_system") + | L("python_version") + | L("sys_platform") + | L("os_name") + | L("os.name") # PEP-345 + | L("sys.platform") # PEP-345 + | L("platform.version") # PEP-345 + | L("platform.machine") # PEP-345 + | L("platform.python_implementation") # PEP-345 + | L("python_implementation") # undocumented setuptools legacy + | L("extra") # PEP-508 +) +ALIASES = { + "os.name": "os_name", + "sys.platform": "sys_platform", + "platform.version": "platform_version", + "platform.machine": "platform_machine", + "platform.python_implementation": "platform_python_implementation", + "python_implementation": "platform_python_implementation", +} +VARIABLE.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: Variable(ALIASES.get(t[0], t[0]))) + +VERSION_CMP = ( + L("===") | L("==") | L(">=") | L("<=") | L("!=") | L("~=") | L(">") | L("<") +) + +MARKER_OP = VERSION_CMP | L("not in") | L("in") +MARKER_OP.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: Op(t[0])) + +MARKER_VALUE = QuotedString("'") | QuotedString('"') +MARKER_VALUE.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: Value(t[0])) + +BOOLOP = L("and") | L("or") + +MARKER_VAR = VARIABLE | MARKER_VALUE + +MARKER_ITEM = Group(MARKER_VAR + MARKER_OP + MARKER_VAR) +MARKER_ITEM.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: tuple(t[0])) + +LPAREN = L("(").suppress() +RPAREN = L(")").suppress() + +MARKER_EXPR = Forward() +MARKER_ATOM = MARKER_ITEM | Group(LPAREN + MARKER_EXPR + RPAREN) +MARKER_EXPR << MARKER_ATOM + ZeroOrMore(BOOLOP + MARKER_EXPR) + +MARKER = stringStart + MARKER_EXPR + stringEnd + + +def _coerce_parse_result(results: Union[ParseResults, List[Any]]) -> List[Any]: + if isinstance(results, ParseResults): + return [_coerce_parse_result(i) for i in results] + else: + return results + + +def _format_marker( + marker: Union[List[str], Tuple[Node, ...], str], first: Optional[bool] = True +) -> str: + + assert isinstance(marker, (list, tuple, str)) + + # Sometimes we have a structure like [[...]] which is a single item list + # where the single item is itself it's own list. In that case we want skip + # the rest of this function so that we don't get extraneous () on the + # outside. + if ( + isinstance(marker, list) + and len(marker) == 1 + and isinstance(marker[0], (list, tuple)) + ): + return _format_marker(marker[0]) + + if isinstance(marker, list): + inner = (_format_marker(m, first=False) for m in marker) + if first: + return " ".join(inner) + else: + return "(" + " ".join(inner) + ")" + elif isinstance(marker, tuple): + return " ".join([m.serialize() for m in marker]) + else: + return marker + + +_operators: Dict[str, Operator] = { + "in": lambda lhs, rhs: lhs in rhs, + "not in": lambda lhs, rhs: lhs not in rhs, + "<": operator.lt, + "<=": operator.le, + "==": operator.eq, + "!=": operator.ne, + ">=": operator.ge, + ">": operator.gt, +} + + +def _eval_op(lhs: str, op: Op, rhs: str) -> bool: + try: + spec = Specifier("".join([op.serialize(), rhs])) + except InvalidSpecifier: + pass + else: + return spec.contains(lhs) + + oper: Optional[Operator] = _operators.get(op.serialize()) + if oper is None: + raise UndefinedComparison(f"Undefined {op!r} on {lhs!r} and {rhs!r}.") + + return oper(lhs, rhs) + + +class Undefined: + pass + + +_undefined = Undefined() + + +def _get_env(environment: Dict[str, str], name: str) -> str: + value: Union[str, Undefined] = environment.get(name, _undefined) + + if isinstance(value, Undefined): + raise UndefinedEnvironmentName( + f"{name!r} does not exist in evaluation environment." + ) + + return value + + +def _evaluate_markers(markers: List[Any], environment: Dict[str, str]) -> bool: + groups: List[List[bool]] = [[]] + + for marker in markers: + assert isinstance(marker, (list, tuple, str)) + + if isinstance(marker, list): + groups[-1].append(_evaluate_markers(marker, environment)) + elif isinstance(marker, tuple): + lhs, op, rhs = marker + + if isinstance(lhs, Variable): + lhs_value = _get_env(environment, lhs.value) + rhs_value = rhs.value + else: + lhs_value = lhs.value + rhs_value = _get_env(environment, rhs.value) + + groups[-1].append(_eval_op(lhs_value, op, rhs_value)) + else: + assert marker in ["and", "or"] + if marker == "or": + groups.append([]) + + return any(all(item) for item in groups) + + +def format_full_version(info: "sys._version_info") -> str: + version = "{0.major}.{0.minor}.{0.micro}".format(info) + kind = info.releaselevel + if kind != "final": + version += kind[0] + str(info.serial) + return version + + +def default_environment() -> Dict[str, str]: + iver = format_full_version(sys.implementation.version) + implementation_name = sys.implementation.name + return { + "implementation_name": implementation_name, + "implementation_version": iver, + "os_name": os.name, + "platform_machine": platform.machine(), + "platform_release": platform.release(), + "platform_system": platform.system(), + "platform_version": platform.version(), + "python_full_version": platform.python_version(), + "platform_python_implementation": platform.python_implementation(), + "python_version": ".".join(platform.python_version_tuple()[:2]), + "sys_platform": sys.platform, + } + + +class Marker: + def __init__(self, marker: str) -> None: + try: + self._markers = _coerce_parse_result(MARKER.parseString(marker)) + except ParseException as e: + raise InvalidMarker( + f"Invalid marker: {marker!r}, parse error at " + f"{marker[e.loc : e.loc + 8]!r}" + ) + + def __str__(self) -> str: + return _format_marker(self._markers) + + def __repr__(self) -> str: + return f"" + + def evaluate(self, environment: Optional[Dict[str, str]] = None) -> bool: + """Evaluate a marker. + + Return the boolean from evaluating the given marker against the + environment. environment is an optional argument to override all or + part of the determined environment. + + The environment is determined from the current Python process. + """ + current_environment = default_environment() + if environment is not None: + current_environment.update(environment) + + return _evaluate_markers(self._markers, current_environment) diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/requirements.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/requirements.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..0d93231b4613b27acd2bf7c1283d4ae99d595bdc --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/requirements.py @@ -0,0 +1,146 @@ +# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version +# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository +# for complete details. + +import re +import string +import urllib.parse +from typing import List, Optional as TOptional, Set + +from setuptools.extern.pyparsing import ( # noqa + Combine, + Literal as L, + Optional, + ParseException, + Regex, + Word, + ZeroOrMore, + originalTextFor, + stringEnd, + stringStart, +) + +from .markers import MARKER_EXPR, Marker +from .specifiers import LegacySpecifier, Specifier, SpecifierSet + + +class InvalidRequirement(ValueError): + """ + An invalid requirement was found, users should refer to PEP 508. + """ + + +ALPHANUM = Word(string.ascii_letters + string.digits) + +LBRACKET = L("[").suppress() +RBRACKET = L("]").suppress() +LPAREN = L("(").suppress() +RPAREN = L(")").suppress() +COMMA = L(",").suppress() +SEMICOLON = L(";").suppress() +AT = L("@").suppress() + +PUNCTUATION = Word("-_.") +IDENTIFIER_END = ALPHANUM | (ZeroOrMore(PUNCTUATION) + ALPHANUM) +IDENTIFIER = Combine(ALPHANUM + ZeroOrMore(IDENTIFIER_END)) + +NAME = IDENTIFIER("name") +EXTRA = IDENTIFIER + +URI = Regex(r"[^ ]+")("url") +URL = AT + URI + +EXTRAS_LIST = EXTRA + ZeroOrMore(COMMA + EXTRA) +EXTRAS = (LBRACKET + Optional(EXTRAS_LIST) + RBRACKET)("extras") + +VERSION_PEP440 = Regex(Specifier._regex_str, re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE) +VERSION_LEGACY = Regex(LegacySpecifier._regex_str, re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE) + +VERSION_ONE = VERSION_PEP440 ^ VERSION_LEGACY +VERSION_MANY = Combine( + VERSION_ONE + ZeroOrMore(COMMA + VERSION_ONE), joinString=",", adjacent=False +)("_raw_spec") +_VERSION_SPEC = Optional((LPAREN + VERSION_MANY + RPAREN) | VERSION_MANY) +_VERSION_SPEC.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: t._raw_spec or "") + +VERSION_SPEC = originalTextFor(_VERSION_SPEC)("specifier") +VERSION_SPEC.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: t[1]) + +MARKER_EXPR = originalTextFor(MARKER_EXPR())("marker") +MARKER_EXPR.setParseAction( + lambda s, l, t: Marker(s[t._original_start : t._original_end]) +) +MARKER_SEPARATOR = SEMICOLON +MARKER = MARKER_SEPARATOR + MARKER_EXPR + +VERSION_AND_MARKER = VERSION_SPEC + Optional(MARKER) +URL_AND_MARKER = URL + Optional(MARKER) + +NAMED_REQUIREMENT = NAME + Optional(EXTRAS) + (URL_AND_MARKER | VERSION_AND_MARKER) + +REQUIREMENT = stringStart + NAMED_REQUIREMENT + stringEnd +# setuptools.extern.pyparsing isn't thread safe during initialization, so we do it eagerly, see +# issue #104 +REQUIREMENT.parseString("x[]") + + +class Requirement: + """Parse a requirement. + + Parse a given requirement string into its parts, such as name, specifier, + URL, and extras. Raises InvalidRequirement on a badly-formed requirement + string. + """ + + # TODO: Can we test whether something is contained within a requirement? + # If so how do we do that? Do we need to test against the _name_ of + # the thing as well as the version? What about the markers? + # TODO: Can we normalize the name and extra name? + + def __init__(self, requirement_string: str) -> None: + try: + req = REQUIREMENT.parseString(requirement_string) + except ParseException as e: + raise InvalidRequirement( + f'Parse error at "{ requirement_string[e.loc : e.loc + 8]!r}": {e.msg}' + ) + + self.name: str = req.name + if req.url: + parsed_url = urllib.parse.urlparse(req.url) + if parsed_url.scheme == "file": + if urllib.parse.urlunparse(parsed_url) != req.url: + raise InvalidRequirement("Invalid URL given") + elif not (parsed_url.scheme and parsed_url.netloc) or ( + not parsed_url.scheme and not parsed_url.netloc + ): + raise InvalidRequirement(f"Invalid URL: {req.url}") + self.url: TOptional[str] = req.url + else: + self.url = None + self.extras: Set[str] = set(req.extras.asList() if req.extras else []) + self.specifier: SpecifierSet = SpecifierSet(req.specifier) + self.marker: TOptional[Marker] = req.marker if req.marker else None + + def __str__(self) -> str: + parts: List[str] = [self.name] + + if self.extras: + formatted_extras = ",".join(sorted(self.extras)) + parts.append(f"[{formatted_extras}]") + + if self.specifier: + parts.append(str(self.specifier)) + + if self.url: + parts.append(f"@ {self.url}") + if self.marker: + parts.append(" ") + + if self.marker: + parts.append(f"; {self.marker}") + + return "".join(parts) + + def __repr__(self) -> str: + return f"" diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/specifiers.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/specifiers.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..ce66bd4addbde1e332e9a42f6eb62adc471193e5 --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/specifiers.py @@ -0,0 +1,828 @@ +# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version +# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository +# for complete details. + +import abc +import functools +import itertools +import re +import warnings +from typing import ( + Callable, + Dict, + Iterable, + Iterator, + List, + Optional, + Pattern, + Set, + Tuple, + TypeVar, + Union, +) + +from .utils import canonicalize_version +from .version import LegacyVersion, Version, parse + +ParsedVersion = Union[Version, LegacyVersion] +UnparsedVersion = Union[Version, LegacyVersion, str] +VersionTypeVar = TypeVar("VersionTypeVar", bound=UnparsedVersion) +CallableOperator = Callable[[ParsedVersion, str], bool] + + +class InvalidSpecifier(ValueError): + """ + An invalid specifier was found, users should refer to PEP 440. + """ + + +class BaseSpecifier(metaclass=abc.ABCMeta): + @abc.abstractmethod + def __str__(self) -> str: + """ + Returns the str representation of this Specifier like object. This + should be representative of the Specifier itself. + """ + + @abc.abstractmethod + def __hash__(self) -> int: + """ + Returns a hash value for this Specifier like object. + """ + + @abc.abstractmethod + def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool: + """ + Returns a boolean representing whether or not the two Specifier like + objects are equal. + """ + + @abc.abstractmethod + def __ne__(self, other: object) -> bool: + """ + Returns a boolean representing whether or not the two Specifier like + objects are not equal. + """ + + @abc.abstractproperty + def prereleases(self) -> Optional[bool]: + """ + Returns whether or not pre-releases as a whole are allowed by this + specifier. + """ + + @prereleases.setter + def prereleases(self, value: bool) -> None: + """ + Sets whether or not pre-releases as a whole are allowed by this + specifier. + """ + + @abc.abstractmethod + def contains(self, item: str, prereleases: Optional[bool] = None) -> bool: + """ + Determines if the given item is contained within this specifier. + """ + + @abc.abstractmethod + def filter( + self, iterable: Iterable[VersionTypeVar], prereleases: Optional[bool] = None + ) -> Iterable[VersionTypeVar]: + """ + Takes an iterable of items and filters them so that only items which + are contained within this specifier are allowed in it. + """ + + +class _IndividualSpecifier(BaseSpecifier): + + _operators: Dict[str, str] = {} + _regex: Pattern[str] + + def __init__(self, spec: str = "", prereleases: Optional[bool] = None) -> None: + match = self._regex.search(spec) + if not match: + raise InvalidSpecifier(f"Invalid specifier: '{spec}'") + + self._spec: Tuple[str, str] = ( + match.group("operator").strip(), + match.group("version").strip(), + ) + + # Store whether or not this Specifier should accept prereleases + self._prereleases = prereleases + + def __repr__(self) -> str: + pre = ( + f", prereleases={self.prereleases!r}" + if self._prereleases is not None + else "" + ) + + return "<{}({!r}{})>".format(self.__class__.__name__, str(self), pre) + + def __str__(self) -> str: + return "{}{}".format(*self._spec) + + @property + def _canonical_spec(self) -> Tuple[str, str]: + return self._spec[0], canonicalize_version(self._spec[1]) + + def __hash__(self) -> int: + return hash(self._canonical_spec) + + def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool: + if isinstance(other, str): + try: + other = self.__class__(str(other)) + except InvalidSpecifier: + return NotImplemented + elif not isinstance(other, self.__class__): + return NotImplemented + + return self._canonical_spec == other._canonical_spec + + def __ne__(self, other: object) -> bool: + if isinstance(other, str): + try: + other = self.__class__(str(other)) + except InvalidSpecifier: + return NotImplemented + elif not isinstance(other, self.__class__): + return NotImplemented + + return self._spec != other._spec + + def _get_operator(self, op: str) -> CallableOperator: + operator_callable: CallableOperator = getattr( + self, f"_compare_{self._operators[op]}" + ) + return operator_callable + + def _coerce_version(self, version: UnparsedVersion) -> ParsedVersion: + if not isinstance(version, (LegacyVersion, Version)): + version = parse(version) + return version + + @property + def operator(self) -> str: + return self._spec[0] + + @property + def version(self) -> str: + return self._spec[1] + + @property + def prereleases(self) -> Optional[bool]: + return self._prereleases + + @prereleases.setter + def prereleases(self, value: bool) -> None: + self._prereleases = value + + def __contains__(self, item: str) -> bool: + return self.contains(item) + + def contains( + self, item: UnparsedVersion, prereleases: Optional[bool] = None + ) -> bool: + + # Determine if prereleases are to be allowed or not. + if prereleases is None: + prereleases = self.prereleases + + # Normalize item to a Version or LegacyVersion, this allows us to have + # a shortcut for ``"2.0" in Specifier(">=2") + normalized_item = self._coerce_version(item) + + # Determine if we should be supporting prereleases in this specifier + # or not, if we do not support prereleases than we can short circuit + # logic if this version is a prereleases. + if normalized_item.is_prerelease and not prereleases: + return False + + # Actually do the comparison to determine if this item is contained + # within this Specifier or not. + operator_callable: CallableOperator = self._get_operator(self.operator) + return operator_callable(normalized_item, self.version) + + def filter( + self, iterable: Iterable[VersionTypeVar], prereleases: Optional[bool] = None + ) -> Iterable[VersionTypeVar]: + + yielded = False + found_prereleases = [] + + kw = {"prereleases": prereleases if prereleases is not None else True} + + # Attempt to iterate over all the values in the iterable and if any of + # them match, yield them. + for version in iterable: + parsed_version = self._coerce_version(version) + + if self.contains(parsed_version, **kw): + # If our version is a prerelease, and we were not set to allow + # prereleases, then we'll store it for later in case nothing + # else matches this specifier. + if parsed_version.is_prerelease and not ( + prereleases or self.prereleases + ): + found_prereleases.append(version) + # Either this is not a prerelease, or we should have been + # accepting prereleases from the beginning. + else: + yielded = True + yield version + + # Now that we've iterated over everything, determine if we've yielded + # any values, and if we have not and we have any prereleases stored up + # then we will go ahead and yield the prereleases. + if not yielded and found_prereleases: + for version in found_prereleases: + yield version + + +class LegacySpecifier(_IndividualSpecifier): + + _regex_str = r""" + (?P(==|!=|<=|>=|<|>)) + \s* + (?P + [^,;\s)]* # Since this is a "legacy" specifier, and the version + # string can be just about anything, we match everything + # except for whitespace, a semi-colon for marker support, + # a closing paren since versions can be enclosed in + # them, and a comma since it's a version separator. + ) + """ + + _regex = re.compile(r"^\s*" + _regex_str + r"\s*$", re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE) + + _operators = { + "==": "equal", + "!=": "not_equal", + "<=": "less_than_equal", + ">=": "greater_than_equal", + "<": "less_than", + ">": "greater_than", + } + + def __init__(self, spec: str = "", prereleases: Optional[bool] = None) -> None: + super().__init__(spec, prereleases) + + warnings.warn( + "Creating a LegacyVersion has been deprecated and will be " + "removed in the next major release", + DeprecationWarning, + ) + + def _coerce_version(self, version: UnparsedVersion) -> LegacyVersion: + if not isinstance(version, LegacyVersion): + version = LegacyVersion(str(version)) + return version + + def _compare_equal(self, prospective: LegacyVersion, spec: str) -> bool: + return prospective == self._coerce_version(spec) + + def _compare_not_equal(self, prospective: LegacyVersion, spec: str) -> bool: + return prospective != self._coerce_version(spec) + + def _compare_less_than_equal(self, prospective: LegacyVersion, spec: str) -> bool: + return prospective <= self._coerce_version(spec) + + def _compare_greater_than_equal( + self, prospective: LegacyVersion, spec: str + ) -> bool: + return prospective >= self._coerce_version(spec) + + def _compare_less_than(self, prospective: LegacyVersion, spec: str) -> bool: + return prospective < self._coerce_version(spec) + + def _compare_greater_than(self, prospective: LegacyVersion, spec: str) -> bool: + return prospective > self._coerce_version(spec) + + +def _require_version_compare( + fn: Callable[["Specifier", ParsedVersion, str], bool] +) -> Callable[["Specifier", ParsedVersion, str], bool]: + @functools.wraps(fn) + def wrapped(self: "Specifier", prospective: ParsedVersion, spec: str) -> bool: + if not isinstance(prospective, Version): + return False + return fn(self, prospective, spec) + + return wrapped + + +class Specifier(_IndividualSpecifier): + + _regex_str = r""" + (?P(~=|==|!=|<=|>=|<|>|===)) + (?P + (?: + # The identity operators allow for an escape hatch that will + # do an exact string match of the version you wish to install. + # This will not be parsed by PEP 440 and we cannot determine + # any semantic meaning from it. This operator is discouraged + # but included entirely as an escape hatch. + (?<====) # Only match for the identity operator + \s* + [^\s]* # We just match everything, except for whitespace + # since we are only testing for strict identity. + ) + | + (?: + # The (non)equality operators allow for wild card and local + # versions to be specified so we have to define these two + # operators separately to enable that. + (?<===|!=) # Only match for equals and not equals + + \s* + v? + (?:[0-9]+!)? # epoch + [0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)* # release + (?: # pre release + [-_\.]? + (a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview) + [-_\.]? + [0-9]* + )? + (?: # post release + (?:-[0-9]+)|(?:[-_\.]?(post|rev|r)[-_\.]?[0-9]*) + )? + + # You cannot use a wild card and a dev or local version + # together so group them with a | and make them optional. + (?: + (?:[-_\.]?dev[-_\.]?[0-9]*)? # dev release + (?:\+[a-z0-9]+(?:[-_\.][a-z0-9]+)*)? # local + | + \.\* # Wild card syntax of .* + )? + ) + | + (?: + # The compatible operator requires at least two digits in the + # release segment. + (?<=~=) # Only match for the compatible operator + + \s* + v? + (?:[0-9]+!)? # epoch + [0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)+ # release (We have a + instead of a *) + (?: # pre release + [-_\.]? + (a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview) + [-_\.]? + [0-9]* + )? + (?: # post release + (?:-[0-9]+)|(?:[-_\.]?(post|rev|r)[-_\.]?[0-9]*) + )? + (?:[-_\.]?dev[-_\.]?[0-9]*)? # dev release + ) + | + (?: + # All other operators only allow a sub set of what the + # (non)equality operators do. Specifically they do not allow + # local versions to be specified nor do they allow the prefix + # matching wild cards. + (?=": "greater_than_equal", + "<": "less_than", + ">": "greater_than", + "===": "arbitrary", + } + + @_require_version_compare + def _compare_compatible(self, prospective: ParsedVersion, spec: str) -> bool: + + # Compatible releases have an equivalent combination of >= and ==. That + # is that ~=2.2 is equivalent to >=2.2,==2.*. This allows us to + # implement this in terms of the other specifiers instead of + # implementing it ourselves. The only thing we need to do is construct + # the other specifiers. + + # We want everything but the last item in the version, but we want to + # ignore suffix segments. + prefix = ".".join( + list(itertools.takewhile(_is_not_suffix, _version_split(spec)))[:-1] + ) + + # Add the prefix notation to the end of our string + prefix += ".*" + + return self._get_operator(">=")(prospective, spec) and self._get_operator("==")( + prospective, prefix + ) + + @_require_version_compare + def _compare_equal(self, prospective: ParsedVersion, spec: str) -> bool: + + # We need special logic to handle prefix matching + if spec.endswith(".*"): + # In the case of prefix matching we want to ignore local segment. + prospective = Version(prospective.public) + # Split the spec out by dots, and pretend that there is an implicit + # dot in between a release segment and a pre-release segment. + split_spec = _version_split(spec[:-2]) # Remove the trailing .* + + # Split the prospective version out by dots, and pretend that there + # is an implicit dot in between a release segment and a pre-release + # segment. + split_prospective = _version_split(str(prospective)) + + # Shorten the prospective version to be the same length as the spec + # so that we can determine if the specifier is a prefix of the + # prospective version or not. + shortened_prospective = split_prospective[: len(split_spec)] + + # Pad out our two sides with zeros so that they both equal the same + # length. + padded_spec, padded_prospective = _pad_version( + split_spec, shortened_prospective + ) + + return padded_prospective == padded_spec + else: + # Convert our spec string into a Version + spec_version = Version(spec) + + # If the specifier does not have a local segment, then we want to + # act as if the prospective version also does not have a local + # segment. + if not spec_version.local: + prospective = Version(prospective.public) + + return prospective == spec_version + + @_require_version_compare + def _compare_not_equal(self, prospective: ParsedVersion, spec: str) -> bool: + return not self._compare_equal(prospective, spec) + + @_require_version_compare + def _compare_less_than_equal(self, prospective: ParsedVersion, spec: str) -> bool: + + # NB: Local version identifiers are NOT permitted in the version + # specifier, so local version labels can be universally removed from + # the prospective version. + return Version(prospective.public) <= Version(spec) + + @_require_version_compare + def _compare_greater_than_equal( + self, prospective: ParsedVersion, spec: str + ) -> bool: + + # NB: Local version identifiers are NOT permitted in the version + # specifier, so local version labels can be universally removed from + # the prospective version. + return Version(prospective.public) >= Version(spec) + + @_require_version_compare + def _compare_less_than(self, prospective: ParsedVersion, spec_str: str) -> bool: + + # Convert our spec to a Version instance, since we'll want to work with + # it as a version. + spec = Version(spec_str) + + # Check to see if the prospective version is less than the spec + # version. If it's not we can short circuit and just return False now + # instead of doing extra unneeded work. + if not prospective < spec: + return False + + # This special case is here so that, unless the specifier itself + # includes is a pre-release version, that we do not accept pre-release + # versions for the version mentioned in the specifier (e.g. <3.1 should + # not match 3.1.dev0, but should match 3.0.dev0). + if not spec.is_prerelease and prospective.is_prerelease: + if Version(prospective.base_version) == Version(spec.base_version): + return False + + # If we've gotten to here, it means that prospective version is both + # less than the spec version *and* it's not a pre-release of the same + # version in the spec. + return True + + @_require_version_compare + def _compare_greater_than(self, prospective: ParsedVersion, spec_str: str) -> bool: + + # Convert our spec to a Version instance, since we'll want to work with + # it as a version. + spec = Version(spec_str) + + # Check to see if the prospective version is greater than the spec + # version. If it's not we can short circuit and just return False now + # instead of doing extra unneeded work. + if not prospective > spec: + return False + + # This special case is here so that, unless the specifier itself + # includes is a post-release version, that we do not accept + # post-release versions for the version mentioned in the specifier + # (e.g. >3.1 should not match 3.0.post0, but should match 3.2.post0). + if not spec.is_postrelease and prospective.is_postrelease: + if Version(prospective.base_version) == Version(spec.base_version): + return False + + # Ensure that we do not allow a local version of the version mentioned + # in the specifier, which is technically greater than, to match. + if prospective.local is not None: + if Version(prospective.base_version) == Version(spec.base_version): + return False + + # If we've gotten to here, it means that prospective version is both + # greater than the spec version *and* it's not a pre-release of the + # same version in the spec. + return True + + def _compare_arbitrary(self, prospective: Version, spec: str) -> bool: + return str(prospective).lower() == str(spec).lower() + + @property + def prereleases(self) -> bool: + + # If there is an explicit prereleases set for this, then we'll just + # blindly use that. + if self._prereleases is not None: + return self._prereleases + + # Look at all of our specifiers and determine if they are inclusive + # operators, and if they are if they are including an explicit + # prerelease. + operator, version = self._spec + if operator in ["==", ">=", "<=", "~=", "==="]: + # The == specifier can include a trailing .*, if it does we + # want to remove before parsing. + if operator == "==" and version.endswith(".*"): + version = version[:-2] + + # Parse the version, and if it is a pre-release than this + # specifier allows pre-releases. + if parse(version).is_prerelease: + return True + + return False + + @prereleases.setter + def prereleases(self, value: bool) -> None: + self._prereleases = value + + +_prefix_regex = re.compile(r"^([0-9]+)((?:a|b|c|rc)[0-9]+)$") + + +def _version_split(version: str) -> List[str]: + result: List[str] = [] + for item in version.split("."): + match = _prefix_regex.search(item) + if match: + result.extend(match.groups()) + else: + result.append(item) + return result + + +def _is_not_suffix(segment: str) -> bool: + return not any( + segment.startswith(prefix) for prefix in ("dev", "a", "b", "rc", "post") + ) + + +def _pad_version(left: List[str], right: List[str]) -> Tuple[List[str], List[str]]: + left_split, right_split = [], [] + + # Get the release segment of our versions + left_split.append(list(itertools.takewhile(lambda x: x.isdigit(), left))) + right_split.append(list(itertools.takewhile(lambda x: x.isdigit(), right))) + + # Get the rest of our versions + left_split.append(left[len(left_split[0]) :]) + right_split.append(right[len(right_split[0]) :]) + + # Insert our padding + left_split.insert(1, ["0"] * max(0, len(right_split[0]) - len(left_split[0]))) + right_split.insert(1, ["0"] * max(0, len(left_split[0]) - len(right_split[0]))) + + return (list(itertools.chain(*left_split)), list(itertools.chain(*right_split))) + + +class SpecifierSet(BaseSpecifier): + def __init__( + self, specifiers: str = "", prereleases: Optional[bool] = None + ) -> None: + + # Split on , to break each individual specifier into it's own item, and + # strip each item to remove leading/trailing whitespace. + split_specifiers = [s.strip() for s in specifiers.split(",") if s.strip()] + + # Parsed each individual specifier, attempting first to make it a + # Specifier and falling back to a LegacySpecifier. + parsed: Set[_IndividualSpecifier] = set() + for specifier in split_specifiers: + try: + parsed.add(Specifier(specifier)) + except InvalidSpecifier: + parsed.add(LegacySpecifier(specifier)) + + # Turn our parsed specifiers into a frozen set and save them for later. + self._specs = frozenset(parsed) + + # Store our prereleases value so we can use it later to determine if + # we accept prereleases or not. + self._prereleases = prereleases + + def __repr__(self) -> str: + pre = ( + f", prereleases={self.prereleases!r}" + if self._prereleases is not None + else "" + ) + + return "".format(str(self), pre) + + def __str__(self) -> str: + return ",".join(sorted(str(s) for s in self._specs)) + + def __hash__(self) -> int: + return hash(self._specs) + + def __and__(self, other: Union["SpecifierSet", str]) -> "SpecifierSet": + if isinstance(other, str): + other = SpecifierSet(other) + elif not isinstance(other, SpecifierSet): + return NotImplemented + + specifier = SpecifierSet() + specifier._specs = frozenset(self._specs | other._specs) + + if self._prereleases is None and other._prereleases is not None: + specifier._prereleases = other._prereleases + elif self._prereleases is not None and other._prereleases is None: + specifier._prereleases = self._prereleases + elif self._prereleases == other._prereleases: + specifier._prereleases = self._prereleases + else: + raise ValueError( + "Cannot combine SpecifierSets with True and False prerelease " + "overrides." + ) + + return specifier + + def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool: + if isinstance(other, (str, _IndividualSpecifier)): + other = SpecifierSet(str(other)) + elif not isinstance(other, SpecifierSet): + return NotImplemented + + return self._specs == other._specs + + def __ne__(self, other: object) -> bool: + if isinstance(other, (str, _IndividualSpecifier)): + other = SpecifierSet(str(other)) + elif not isinstance(other, SpecifierSet): + return NotImplemented + + return self._specs != other._specs + + def __len__(self) -> int: + return len(self._specs) + + def __iter__(self) -> Iterator[_IndividualSpecifier]: + return iter(self._specs) + + @property + def prereleases(self) -> Optional[bool]: + + # If we have been given an explicit prerelease modifier, then we'll + # pass that through here. + if self._prereleases is not None: + return self._prereleases + + # If we don't have any specifiers, and we don't have a forced value, + # then we'll just return None since we don't know if this should have + # pre-releases or not. + if not self._specs: + return None + + # Otherwise we'll see if any of the given specifiers accept + # prereleases, if any of them do we'll return True, otherwise False. + return any(s.prereleases for s in self._specs) + + @prereleases.setter + def prereleases(self, value: bool) -> None: + self._prereleases = value + + def __contains__(self, item: UnparsedVersion) -> bool: + return self.contains(item) + + def contains( + self, item: UnparsedVersion, prereleases: Optional[bool] = None + ) -> bool: + + # Ensure that our item is a Version or LegacyVersion instance. + if not isinstance(item, (LegacyVersion, Version)): + item = parse(item) + + # Determine if we're forcing a prerelease or not, if we're not forcing + # one for this particular filter call, then we'll use whatever the + # SpecifierSet thinks for whether or not we should support prereleases. + if prereleases is None: + prereleases = self.prereleases + + # We can determine if we're going to allow pre-releases by looking to + # see if any of the underlying items supports them. If none of them do + # and this item is a pre-release then we do not allow it and we can + # short circuit that here. + # Note: This means that 1.0.dev1 would not be contained in something + # like >=1.0.devabc however it would be in >=1.0.debabc,>0.0.dev0 + if not prereleases and item.is_prerelease: + return False + + # We simply dispatch to the underlying specs here to make sure that the + # given version is contained within all of them. + # Note: This use of all() here means that an empty set of specifiers + # will always return True, this is an explicit design decision. + return all(s.contains(item, prereleases=prereleases) for s in self._specs) + + def filter( + self, iterable: Iterable[VersionTypeVar], prereleases: Optional[bool] = None + ) -> Iterable[VersionTypeVar]: + + # Determine if we're forcing a prerelease or not, if we're not forcing + # one for this particular filter call, then we'll use whatever the + # SpecifierSet thinks for whether or not we should support prereleases. + if prereleases is None: + prereleases = self.prereleases + + # If we have any specifiers, then we want to wrap our iterable in the + # filter method for each one, this will act as a logical AND amongst + # each specifier. + if self._specs: + for spec in self._specs: + iterable = spec.filter(iterable, prereleases=bool(prereleases)) + return iterable + # If we do not have any specifiers, then we need to have a rough filter + # which will filter out any pre-releases, unless there are no final + # releases, and which will filter out LegacyVersion in general. + else: + filtered: List[VersionTypeVar] = [] + found_prereleases: List[VersionTypeVar] = [] + + item: UnparsedVersion + parsed_version: Union[Version, LegacyVersion] + + for item in iterable: + # Ensure that we some kind of Version class for this item. + if not isinstance(item, (LegacyVersion, Version)): + parsed_version = parse(item) + else: + parsed_version = item + + # Filter out any item which is parsed as a LegacyVersion + if isinstance(parsed_version, LegacyVersion): + continue + + # Store any item which is a pre-release for later unless we've + # already found a final version or we are accepting prereleases + if parsed_version.is_prerelease and not prereleases: + if not filtered: + found_prereleases.append(item) + else: + filtered.append(item) + + # If we've found no items except for pre-releases, then we'll go + # ahead and use the pre-releases + if not filtered and found_prereleases and prereleases is None: + return found_prereleases + + return filtered diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/tags.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/tags.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..e65890a90cd709489865750e953bf347720c75cd --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/tags.py @@ -0,0 +1,484 @@ +# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version +# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository +# for complete details. + +import logging +import platform +import sys +import sysconfig +from importlib.machinery import EXTENSION_SUFFIXES +from typing import ( + Dict, + FrozenSet, + Iterable, + Iterator, + List, + Optional, + Sequence, + Tuple, + Union, + cast, +) + +from . import _manylinux, _musllinux + +logger = logging.getLogger(__name__) + +PythonVersion = Sequence[int] +MacVersion = Tuple[int, int] + +INTERPRETER_SHORT_NAMES: Dict[str, str] = { + "python": "py", # Generic. + "cpython": "cp", + "pypy": "pp", + "ironpython": "ip", + "jython": "jy", +} + + +_32_BIT_INTERPRETER = sys.maxsize <= 2 ** 32 + + +class Tag: + """ + A representation of the tag triple for a wheel. + + Instances are considered immutable and thus are hashable. Equality checking + is also supported. + """ + + __slots__ = ["_interpreter", "_abi", "_platform", "_hash"] + + def __init__(self, interpreter: str, abi: str, platform: str) -> None: + self._interpreter = interpreter.lower() + self._abi = abi.lower() + self._platform = platform.lower() + # The __hash__ of every single element in a Set[Tag] will be evaluated each time + # that a set calls its `.disjoint()` method, which may be called hundreds of + # times when scanning a page of links for packages with tags matching that + # Set[Tag]. Pre-computing the value here produces significant speedups for + # downstream consumers. + self._hash = hash((self._interpreter, self._abi, self._platform)) + + @property + def interpreter(self) -> str: + return self._interpreter + + @property + def abi(self) -> str: + return self._abi + + @property + def platform(self) -> str: + return self._platform + + def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool: + if not isinstance(other, Tag): + return NotImplemented + + return ( + (self._hash == other._hash) # Short-circuit ASAP for perf reasons. + and (self._platform == other._platform) + and (self._abi == other._abi) + and (self._interpreter == other._interpreter) + ) + + def __hash__(self) -> int: + return self._hash + + def __str__(self) -> str: + return f"{self._interpreter}-{self._abi}-{self._platform}" + + def __repr__(self) -> str: + return "<{self} @ {self_id}>".format(self=self, self_id=id(self)) + + +def parse_tag(tag: str) -> FrozenSet[Tag]: + """ + Parses the provided tag (e.g. `py3-none-any`) into a frozenset of Tag instances. + + Returning a set is required due to the possibility that the tag is a + compressed tag set. + """ + tags = set() + interpreters, abis, platforms = tag.split("-") + for interpreter in interpreters.split("."): + for abi in abis.split("."): + for platform_ in platforms.split("."): + tags.add(Tag(interpreter, abi, platform_)) + return frozenset(tags) + + +def _get_config_var(name: str, warn: bool = False) -> Union[int, str, None]: + value = sysconfig.get_config_var(name) + if value is None and warn: + logger.debug( + "Config variable '%s' is unset, Python ABI tag may be incorrect", name + ) + return value + + +def _normalize_string(string: str) -> str: + return string.replace(".", "_").replace("-", "_") + + +def _abi3_applies(python_version: PythonVersion) -> bool: + """ + Determine if the Python version supports abi3. + + PEP 384 was first implemented in Python 3.2. + """ + return len(python_version) > 1 and tuple(python_version) >= (3, 2) + + +def _cpython_abis(py_version: PythonVersion, warn: bool = False) -> List[str]: + py_version = tuple(py_version) # To allow for version comparison. + abis = [] + version = _version_nodot(py_version[:2]) + debug = pymalloc = ucs4 = "" + with_debug = _get_config_var("Py_DEBUG", warn) + has_refcount = hasattr(sys, "gettotalrefcount") + # Windows doesn't set Py_DEBUG, so checking for support of debug-compiled + # extension modules is the best option. + # https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/3383#issuecomment-173267692 + has_ext = "_d.pyd" in EXTENSION_SUFFIXES + if with_debug or (with_debug is None and (has_refcount or has_ext)): + debug = "d" + if py_version < (3, 8): + with_pymalloc = _get_config_var("WITH_PYMALLOC", warn) + if with_pymalloc or with_pymalloc is None: + pymalloc = "m" + if py_version < (3, 3): + unicode_size = _get_config_var("Py_UNICODE_SIZE", warn) + if unicode_size == 4 or ( + unicode_size is None and sys.maxunicode == 0x10FFFF + ): + ucs4 = "u" + elif debug: + # Debug builds can also load "normal" extension modules. + # We can also assume no UCS-4 or pymalloc requirement. + abis.append(f"cp{version}") + abis.insert( + 0, + "cp{version}{debug}{pymalloc}{ucs4}".format( + version=version, debug=debug, pymalloc=pymalloc, ucs4=ucs4 + ), + ) + return abis + + +def cpython_tags( + python_version: Optional[PythonVersion] = None, + abis: Optional[Iterable[str]] = None, + platforms: Optional[Iterable[str]] = None, + *, + warn: bool = False, +) -> Iterator[Tag]: + """ + Yields the tags for a CPython interpreter. + + The tags consist of: + - cp-- + - cp-abi3- + - cp-none- + - cp-abi3- # Older Python versions down to 3.2. + + If python_version only specifies a major version then user-provided ABIs and + the 'none' ABItag will be used. + + If 'abi3' or 'none' are specified in 'abis' then they will be yielded at + their normal position and not at the beginning. + """ + if not python_version: + python_version = sys.version_info[:2] + + interpreter = "cp{}".format(_version_nodot(python_version[:2])) + + if abis is None: + if len(python_version) > 1: + abis = _cpython_abis(python_version, warn) + else: + abis = [] + abis = list(abis) + # 'abi3' and 'none' are explicitly handled later. + for explicit_abi in ("abi3", "none"): + try: + abis.remove(explicit_abi) + except ValueError: + pass + + platforms = list(platforms or platform_tags()) + for abi in abis: + for platform_ in platforms: + yield Tag(interpreter, abi, platform_) + if _abi3_applies(python_version): + yield from (Tag(interpreter, "abi3", platform_) for platform_ in platforms) + yield from (Tag(interpreter, "none", platform_) for platform_ in platforms) + + if _abi3_applies(python_version): + for minor_version in range(python_version[1] - 1, 1, -1): + for platform_ in platforms: + interpreter = "cp{version}".format( + version=_version_nodot((python_version[0], minor_version)) + ) + yield Tag(interpreter, "abi3", platform_) + + +def _generic_abi() -> Iterator[str]: + abi = sysconfig.get_config_var("SOABI") + if abi: + yield _normalize_string(abi) + + +def generic_tags( + interpreter: Optional[str] = None, + abis: Optional[Iterable[str]] = None, + platforms: Optional[Iterable[str]] = None, + *, + warn: bool = False, +) -> Iterator[Tag]: + """ + Yields the tags for a generic interpreter. + + The tags consist of: + - -- + + The "none" ABI will be added if it was not explicitly provided. + """ + if not interpreter: + interp_name = interpreter_name() + interp_version = interpreter_version(warn=warn) + interpreter = "".join([interp_name, interp_version]) + if abis is None: + abis = _generic_abi() + platforms = list(platforms or platform_tags()) + abis = list(abis) + if "none" not in abis: + abis.append("none") + for abi in abis: + for platform_ in platforms: + yield Tag(interpreter, abi, platform_) + + +def _py_interpreter_range(py_version: PythonVersion) -> Iterator[str]: + """ + Yields Python versions in descending order. + + After the latest version, the major-only version will be yielded, and then + all previous versions of that major version. + """ + if len(py_version) > 1: + yield "py{version}".format(version=_version_nodot(py_version[:2])) + yield "py{major}".format(major=py_version[0]) + if len(py_version) > 1: + for minor in range(py_version[1] - 1, -1, -1): + yield "py{version}".format(version=_version_nodot((py_version[0], minor))) + + +def compatible_tags( + python_version: Optional[PythonVersion] = None, + interpreter: Optional[str] = None, + platforms: Optional[Iterable[str]] = None, +) -> Iterator[Tag]: + """ + Yields the sequence of tags that are compatible with a specific version of Python. + + The tags consist of: + - py*-none- + - -none-any # ... if `interpreter` is provided. + - py*-none-any + """ + if not python_version: + python_version = sys.version_info[:2] + platforms = list(platforms or platform_tags()) + for version in _py_interpreter_range(python_version): + for platform_ in platforms: + yield Tag(version, "none", platform_) + if interpreter: + yield Tag(interpreter, "none", "any") + for version in _py_interpreter_range(python_version): + yield Tag(version, "none", "any") + + +def _mac_arch(arch: str, is_32bit: bool = _32_BIT_INTERPRETER) -> str: + if not is_32bit: + return arch + + if arch.startswith("ppc"): + return "ppc" + + return "i386" + + +def _mac_binary_formats(version: MacVersion, cpu_arch: str) -> List[str]: + formats = [cpu_arch] + if cpu_arch == "x86_64": + if version < (10, 4): + return [] + formats.extend(["intel", "fat64", "fat32"]) + + elif cpu_arch == "i386": + if version < (10, 4): + return [] + formats.extend(["intel", "fat32", "fat"]) + + elif cpu_arch == "ppc64": + # TODO: Need to care about 32-bit PPC for ppc64 through 10.2? + if version > (10, 5) or version < (10, 4): + return [] + formats.append("fat64") + + elif cpu_arch == "ppc": + if version > (10, 6): + return [] + formats.extend(["fat32", "fat"]) + + if cpu_arch in {"arm64", "x86_64"}: + formats.append("universal2") + + if cpu_arch in {"x86_64", "i386", "ppc64", "ppc", "intel"}: + formats.append("universal") + + return formats + + +def mac_platforms( + version: Optional[MacVersion] = None, arch: Optional[str] = None +) -> Iterator[str]: + """ + Yields the platform tags for a macOS system. + + The `version` parameter is a two-item tuple specifying the macOS version to + generate platform tags for. The `arch` parameter is the CPU architecture to + generate platform tags for. Both parameters default to the appropriate value + for the current system. + """ + version_str, _, cpu_arch = platform.mac_ver() + if version is None: + version = cast("MacVersion", tuple(map(int, version_str.split(".")[:2]))) + else: + version = version + if arch is None: + arch = _mac_arch(cpu_arch) + else: + arch = arch + + if (10, 0) <= version and version < (11, 0): + # Prior to Mac OS 11, each yearly release of Mac OS bumped the + # "minor" version number. The major version was always 10. + for minor_version in range(version[1], -1, -1): + compat_version = 10, minor_version + binary_formats = _mac_binary_formats(compat_version, arch) + for binary_format in binary_formats: + yield "macosx_{major}_{minor}_{binary_format}".format( + major=10, minor=minor_version, binary_format=binary_format + ) + + if version >= (11, 0): + # Starting with Mac OS 11, each yearly release bumps the major version + # number. The minor versions are now the midyear updates. + for major_version in range(version[0], 10, -1): + compat_version = major_version, 0 + binary_formats = _mac_binary_formats(compat_version, arch) + for binary_format in binary_formats: + yield "macosx_{major}_{minor}_{binary_format}".format( + major=major_version, minor=0, binary_format=binary_format + ) + + if version >= (11, 0): + # Mac OS 11 on x86_64 is compatible with binaries from previous releases. + # Arm64 support was introduced in 11.0, so no Arm binaries from previous + # releases exist. + # + # However, the "universal2" binary format can have a + # macOS version earlier than 11.0 when the x86_64 part of the binary supports + # that version of macOS. + if arch == "x86_64": + for minor_version in range(16, 3, -1): + compat_version = 10, minor_version + binary_formats = _mac_binary_formats(compat_version, arch) + for binary_format in binary_formats: + yield "macosx_{major}_{minor}_{binary_format}".format( + major=compat_version[0], + minor=compat_version[1], + binary_format=binary_format, + ) + else: + for minor_version in range(16, 3, -1): + compat_version = 10, minor_version + binary_format = "universal2" + yield "macosx_{major}_{minor}_{binary_format}".format( + major=compat_version[0], + minor=compat_version[1], + binary_format=binary_format, + ) + + +def _linux_platforms(is_32bit: bool = _32_BIT_INTERPRETER) -> Iterator[str]: + linux = _normalize_string(sysconfig.get_platform()) + if is_32bit: + if linux == "linux_x86_64": + linux = "linux_i686" + elif linux == "linux_aarch64": + linux = "linux_armv7l" + _, arch = linux.split("_", 1) + yield from _manylinux.platform_tags(linux, arch) + yield from _musllinux.platform_tags(arch) + yield linux + + +def _generic_platforms() -> Iterator[str]: + yield _normalize_string(sysconfig.get_platform()) + + +def platform_tags() -> Iterator[str]: + """ + Provides the platform tags for this installation. + """ + if platform.system() == "Darwin": + return mac_platforms() + elif platform.system() == "Linux": + return _linux_platforms() + else: + return _generic_platforms() + + +def interpreter_name() -> str: + """ + Returns the name of the running interpreter. + """ + name = sys.implementation.name + return INTERPRETER_SHORT_NAMES.get(name) or name + + +def interpreter_version(*, warn: bool = False) -> str: + """ + Returns the version of the running interpreter. + """ + version = _get_config_var("py_version_nodot", warn=warn) + if version: + version = str(version) + else: + version = _version_nodot(sys.version_info[:2]) + return version + + +def _version_nodot(version: PythonVersion) -> str: + return "".join(map(str, version)) + + +def sys_tags(*, warn: bool = False) -> Iterator[Tag]: + """ + Returns the sequence of tag triples for the running interpreter. + + The order of the sequence corresponds to priority order for the + interpreter, from most to least important. + """ + + interp_name = interpreter_name() + if interp_name == "cp": + yield from cpython_tags(warn=warn) + else: + yield from generic_tags() + + yield from compatible_tags() diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/utils.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/utils.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..bab11b80c60f10a4f3bccb12eb5b17c48a449767 --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/utils.py @@ -0,0 +1,136 @@ +# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version +# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository +# for complete details. + +import re +from typing import FrozenSet, NewType, Tuple, Union, cast + +from .tags import Tag, parse_tag +from .version import InvalidVersion, Version + +BuildTag = Union[Tuple[()], Tuple[int, str]] +NormalizedName = NewType("NormalizedName", str) + + +class InvalidWheelFilename(ValueError): + """ + An invalid wheel filename was found, users should refer to PEP 427. + """ + + +class InvalidSdistFilename(ValueError): + """ + An invalid sdist filename was found, users should refer to the packaging user guide. + """ + + +_canonicalize_regex = re.compile(r"[-_.]+") +# PEP 427: The build number must start with a digit. +_build_tag_regex = re.compile(r"(\d+)(.*)") + + +def canonicalize_name(name: str) -> NormalizedName: + # This is taken from PEP 503. + value = _canonicalize_regex.sub("-", name).lower() + return cast(NormalizedName, value) + + +def canonicalize_version(version: Union[Version, str]) -> str: + """ + This is very similar to Version.__str__, but has one subtle difference + with the way it handles the release segment. + """ + if isinstance(version, str): + try: + parsed = Version(version) + except InvalidVersion: + # Legacy versions cannot be normalized + return version + else: + parsed = version + + parts = [] + + # Epoch + if parsed.epoch != 0: + parts.append(f"{parsed.epoch}!") + + # Release segment + # NB: This strips trailing '.0's to normalize + parts.append(re.sub(r"(\.0)+$", "", ".".join(str(x) for x in parsed.release))) + + # Pre-release + if parsed.pre is not None: + parts.append("".join(str(x) for x in parsed.pre)) + + # Post-release + if parsed.post is not None: + parts.append(f".post{parsed.post}") + + # Development release + if parsed.dev is not None: + parts.append(f".dev{parsed.dev}") + + # Local version segment + if parsed.local is not None: + parts.append(f"+{parsed.local}") + + return "".join(parts) + + +def parse_wheel_filename( + filename: str, +) -> Tuple[NormalizedName, Version, BuildTag, FrozenSet[Tag]]: + if not filename.endswith(".whl"): + raise InvalidWheelFilename( + f"Invalid wheel filename (extension must be '.whl'): {filename}" + ) + + filename = filename[:-4] + dashes = filename.count("-") + if dashes not in (4, 5): + raise InvalidWheelFilename( + f"Invalid wheel filename (wrong number of parts): {filename}" + ) + + parts = filename.split("-", dashes - 2) + name_part = parts[0] + # See PEP 427 for the rules on escaping the project name + if "__" in name_part or re.match(r"^[\w\d._]*$", name_part, re.UNICODE) is None: + raise InvalidWheelFilename(f"Invalid project name: {filename}") + name = canonicalize_name(name_part) + version = Version(parts[1]) + if dashes == 5: + build_part = parts[2] + build_match = _build_tag_regex.match(build_part) + if build_match is None: + raise InvalidWheelFilename( + f"Invalid build number: {build_part} in '{filename}'" + ) + build = cast(BuildTag, (int(build_match.group(1)), build_match.group(2))) + else: + build = () + tags = parse_tag(parts[-1]) + return (name, version, build, tags) + + +def parse_sdist_filename(filename: str) -> Tuple[NormalizedName, Version]: + if filename.endswith(".tar.gz"): + file_stem = filename[: -len(".tar.gz")] + elif filename.endswith(".zip"): + file_stem = filename[: -len(".zip")] + else: + raise InvalidSdistFilename( + f"Invalid sdist filename (extension must be '.tar.gz' or '.zip'):" + f" {filename}" + ) + + # We are requiring a PEP 440 version, which cannot contain dashes, + # so we split on the last dash. + name_part, sep, version_part = file_stem.rpartition("-") + if not sep: + raise InvalidSdistFilename(f"Invalid sdist filename: {filename}") + + name = canonicalize_name(name_part) + version = Version(version_part) + return (name, version) diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/version.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/version.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..de9a09a4ed3b078b37e7490a6686f660ae935aca --- /dev/null +++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/version.py @@ -0,0 +1,504 @@ +# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version +# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository +# for complete details. + +import collections +import itertools +import re +import warnings +from typing import Callable, Iterator, List, Optional, SupportsInt, Tuple, Union + +from ._structures import Infinity, InfinityType, NegativeInfinity, NegativeInfinityType + +__all__ = ["parse", "Version", "LegacyVersion", "InvalidVersion", "VERSION_PATTERN"] + +InfiniteTypes = Union[InfinityType, NegativeInfinityType] +PrePostDevType = Union[InfiniteTypes, Tuple[str, int]] +SubLocalType = Union[InfiniteTypes, int, str] +LocalType = Union[ + NegativeInfinityType, + Tuple[ + Union[ + SubLocalType, + Tuple[SubLocalType, str], + Tuple[NegativeInfinityType, SubLocalType], + ], + ..., + ], +] +CmpKey = Tuple[ + int, Tuple[int, ...], PrePostDevType, PrePostDevType, PrePostDevType, LocalType +] +LegacyCmpKey = Tuple[int, Tuple[str, ...]] +VersionComparisonMethod = Callable[ + [Union[CmpKey, LegacyCmpKey], Union[CmpKey, LegacyCmpKey]], bool +] + +_Version = collections.namedtuple( + "_Version", ["epoch", "release", "dev", "pre", "post", "local"] +) + + +def parse(version: str) -> Union["LegacyVersion", "Version"]: + """ + Parse the given version string and return either a :class:`Version` object + or a :class:`LegacyVersion` object depending on if the given version is + a valid PEP 440 version or a legacy version. + """ + try: + return Version(version) + except InvalidVersion: + return LegacyVersion(version) + + +class InvalidVersion(ValueError): + """ + An invalid version was found, users should refer to PEP 440. + """ + + +class _BaseVersion: + _key: Union[CmpKey, LegacyCmpKey] + + def __hash__(self) -> int: + return hash(self._key) + + # Please keep the duplicated `isinstance` check + # in the six comparisons hereunder + # unless you find a way to avoid adding overhead function calls. + def __lt__(self, other: "_BaseVersion") -> bool: + if not isinstance(other, _BaseVersion): + return NotImplemented + + return self._key < other._key + + def __le__(self, other: "_BaseVersion") -> bool: + if not isinstance(other, _BaseVersion): + return NotImplemented + + return self._key <= other._key + + def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool: + if not isinstance(other, _BaseVersion): + return NotImplemented + + return self._key == other._key + + def __ge__(self, other: "_BaseVersion") -> bool: + if not isinstance(other, _BaseVersion): + return NotImplemented + + return self._key >= other._key + + def __gt__(self, other: "_BaseVersion") -> bool: + if not isinstance(other, _BaseVersion): + return NotImplemented + + return self._key > other._key + + def __ne__(self, other: object) -> bool: + if not isinstance(other, _BaseVersion): + return NotImplemented + + return self._key != other._key + + +class LegacyVersion(_BaseVersion): + def __init__(self, version: str) -> None: + self._version = str(version) + self._key = _legacy_cmpkey(self._version) + + warnings.warn( + "Creating a LegacyVersion has been deprecated and will be " + "removed in the next major release", + DeprecationWarning, + ) + + def __str__(self) -> str: + return self._version + + def __repr__(self) -> str: + return f"" + + @property + def public(self) -> str: + return self._version + + @property + def base_version(self) -> str: + return self._version + + @property + def epoch(self) -> int: + return -1 + + @property + def release(self) -> None: + return None + + @property + def pre(self) -> None: + return None + + @property + def post(self) -> None: + return None + + @property + def dev(self) -> None: + return None + + @property + def local(self) -> None: + return None + + @property + def is_prerelease(self) -> bool: + return False + + @property + def is_postrelease(self) -> bool: + return False + + @property + def is_devrelease(self) -> bool: + return False + + +_legacy_version_component_re = re.compile(r"(\d+ | [a-z]+ | \.| -)", re.VERBOSE) + +_legacy_version_replacement_map = { + "pre": "c", + "preview": "c", + "-": "final-", + "rc": "c", + "dev": "@", +} + + +def _parse_version_parts(s: str) -> Iterator[str]: + for part in _legacy_version_component_re.split(s): + part = _legacy_version_replacement_map.get(part, part) + + if not part or part == ".": + continue + + if part[:1] in "0123456789": + # pad for numeric comparison + yield part.zfill(8) + else: + yield "*" + part + + # ensure that alpha/beta/candidate are before final + yield "*final" + + +def _legacy_cmpkey(version: str) -> LegacyCmpKey: + + # We hardcode an epoch of -1 here. A PEP 440 version can only have a epoch + # greater than or equal to 0. This will effectively put the LegacyVersion, + # which uses the defacto standard originally implemented by setuptools, + # as before all PEP 440 versions. + epoch = -1 + + # This scheme is taken from pkg_resources.parse_version setuptools prior to + # it's adoption of the packaging library. + parts: List[str] = [] + for part in _parse_version_parts(version.lower()): + if part.startswith("*"): + # remove "-" before a prerelease tag + if part < "*final": + while parts and parts[-1] == "*final-": + parts.pop() + + # remove trailing zeros from each series of numeric parts + while parts and parts[-1] == "00000000": + parts.pop() + + parts.append(part) + + return epoch, tuple(parts) + + +# Deliberately not anchored to the start and end of the string, to make it +# easier for 3rd party code to reuse +VERSION_PATTERN = r""" + v? + (?: + (?:(?P[0-9]+)!)? # epoch + (?P[0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)*) # release segment + (?P
                                          # pre-release
+            [-_\.]?
+            (?P(a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview))
+            [-_\.]?
+            (?P[0-9]+)?
+        )?
+        (?P                                         # post release
+            (?:-(?P[0-9]+))
+            |
+            (?:
+                [-_\.]?
+                (?Ppost|rev|r)
+                [-_\.]?
+                (?P[0-9]+)?
+            )
+        )?
+        (?P                                          # dev release
+            [-_\.]?
+            (?Pdev)
+            [-_\.]?
+            (?P[0-9]+)?
+        )?
+    )
+    (?:\+(?P[a-z0-9]+(?:[-_\.][a-z0-9]+)*))?       # local version
+"""
+
+
+class Version(_BaseVersion):
+
+    _regex = re.compile(r"^\s*" + VERSION_PATTERN + r"\s*$", re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE)
+
+    def __init__(self, version: str) -> None:
+
+        # Validate the version and parse it into pieces
+        match = self._regex.search(version)
+        if not match:
+            raise InvalidVersion(f"Invalid version: '{version}'")
+
+        # Store the parsed out pieces of the version
+        self._version = _Version(
+            epoch=int(match.group("epoch")) if match.group("epoch") else 0,
+            release=tuple(int(i) for i in match.group("release").split(".")),
+            pre=_parse_letter_version(match.group("pre_l"), match.group("pre_n")),
+            post=_parse_letter_version(
+                match.group("post_l"), match.group("post_n1") or match.group("post_n2")
+            ),
+            dev=_parse_letter_version(match.group("dev_l"), match.group("dev_n")),
+            local=_parse_local_version(match.group("local")),
+        )
+
+        # Generate a key which will be used for sorting
+        self._key = _cmpkey(
+            self._version.epoch,
+            self._version.release,
+            self._version.pre,
+            self._version.post,
+            self._version.dev,
+            self._version.local,
+        )
+
+    def __repr__(self) -> str:
+        return f""
+
+    def __str__(self) -> str:
+        parts = []
+
+        # Epoch
+        if self.epoch != 0:
+            parts.append(f"{self.epoch}!")
+
+        # Release segment
+        parts.append(".".join(str(x) for x in self.release))
+
+        # Pre-release
+        if self.pre is not None:
+            parts.append("".join(str(x) for x in self.pre))
+
+        # Post-release
+        if self.post is not None:
+            parts.append(f".post{self.post}")
+
+        # Development release
+        if self.dev is not None:
+            parts.append(f".dev{self.dev}")
+
+        # Local version segment
+        if self.local is not None:
+            parts.append(f"+{self.local}")
+
+        return "".join(parts)
+
+    @property
+    def epoch(self) -> int:
+        _epoch: int = self._version.epoch
+        return _epoch
+
+    @property
+    def release(self) -> Tuple[int, ...]:
+        _release: Tuple[int, ...] = self._version.release
+        return _release
+
+    @property
+    def pre(self) -> Optional[Tuple[str, int]]:
+        _pre: Optional[Tuple[str, int]] = self._version.pre
+        return _pre
+
+    @property
+    def post(self) -> Optional[int]:
+        return self._version.post[1] if self._version.post else None
+
+    @property
+    def dev(self) -> Optional[int]:
+        return self._version.dev[1] if self._version.dev else None
+
+    @property
+    def local(self) -> Optional[str]:
+        if self._version.local:
+            return ".".join(str(x) for x in self._version.local)
+        else:
+            return None
+
+    @property
+    def public(self) -> str:
+        return str(self).split("+", 1)[0]
+
+    @property
+    def base_version(self) -> str:
+        parts = []
+
+        # Epoch
+        if self.epoch != 0:
+            parts.append(f"{self.epoch}!")
+
+        # Release segment
+        parts.append(".".join(str(x) for x in self.release))
+
+        return "".join(parts)
+
+    @property
+    def is_prerelease(self) -> bool:
+        return self.dev is not None or self.pre is not None
+
+    @property
+    def is_postrelease(self) -> bool:
+        return self.post is not None
+
+    @property
+    def is_devrelease(self) -> bool:
+        return self.dev is not None
+
+    @property
+    def major(self) -> int:
+        return self.release[0] if len(self.release) >= 1 else 0
+
+    @property
+    def minor(self) -> int:
+        return self.release[1] if len(self.release) >= 2 else 0
+
+    @property
+    def micro(self) -> int:
+        return self.release[2] if len(self.release) >= 3 else 0
+
+
+def _parse_letter_version(
+    letter: str, number: Union[str, bytes, SupportsInt]
+) -> Optional[Tuple[str, int]]:
+
+    if letter:
+        # We consider there to be an implicit 0 in a pre-release if there is
+        # not a numeral associated with it.
+        if number is None:
+            number = 0
+
+        # We normalize any letters to their lower case form
+        letter = letter.lower()
+
+        # We consider some words to be alternate spellings of other words and
+        # in those cases we want to normalize the spellings to our preferred
+        # spelling.
+        if letter == "alpha":
+            letter = "a"
+        elif letter == "beta":
+            letter = "b"
+        elif letter in ["c", "pre", "preview"]:
+            letter = "rc"
+        elif letter in ["rev", "r"]:
+            letter = "post"
+
+        return letter, int(number)
+    if not letter and number:
+        # We assume if we are given a number, but we are not given a letter
+        # then this is using the implicit post release syntax (e.g. 1.0-1)
+        letter = "post"
+
+        return letter, int(number)
+
+    return None
+
+
+_local_version_separators = re.compile(r"[\._-]")
+
+
+def _parse_local_version(local: str) -> Optional[LocalType]:
+    """
+    Takes a string like abc.1.twelve and turns it into ("abc", 1, "twelve").
+    """
+    if local is not None:
+        return tuple(
+            part.lower() if not part.isdigit() else int(part)
+            for part in _local_version_separators.split(local)
+        )
+    return None
+
+
+def _cmpkey(
+    epoch: int,
+    release: Tuple[int, ...],
+    pre: Optional[Tuple[str, int]],
+    post: Optional[Tuple[str, int]],
+    dev: Optional[Tuple[str, int]],
+    local: Optional[Tuple[SubLocalType]],
+) -> CmpKey:
+
+    # When we compare a release version, we want to compare it with all of the
+    # trailing zeros removed. So we'll use a reverse the list, drop all the now
+    # leading zeros until we come to something non zero, then take the rest
+    # re-reverse it back into the correct order and make it a tuple and use
+    # that for our sorting key.
+    _release = tuple(
+        reversed(list(itertools.dropwhile(lambda x: x == 0, reversed(release))))
+    )
+
+    # We need to "trick" the sorting algorithm to put 1.0.dev0 before 1.0a0.
+    # We'll do this by abusing the pre segment, but we _only_ want to do this
+    # if there is not a pre or a post segment. If we have one of those then
+    # the normal sorting rules will handle this case correctly.
+    if pre is None and post is None and dev is not None:
+        _pre: PrePostDevType = NegativeInfinity
+    # Versions without a pre-release (except as noted above) should sort after
+    # those with one.
+    elif pre is None:
+        _pre = Infinity
+    else:
+        _pre = pre
+
+    # Versions without a post segment should sort before those with one.
+    if post is None:
+        _post: PrePostDevType = NegativeInfinity
+
+    else:
+        _post = post
+
+    # Versions without a development segment should sort after those with one.
+    if dev is None:
+        _dev: PrePostDevType = Infinity
+
+    else:
+        _dev = dev
+
+    if local is None:
+        # Versions without a local segment should sort before those with one.
+        _local: LocalType = NegativeInfinity
+    else:
+        # Versions with a local segment need that segment parsed to implement
+        # the sorting rules in PEP440.
+        # - Alpha numeric segments sort before numeric segments
+        # - Alpha numeric segments sort lexicographically
+        # - Numeric segments sort numerically
+        # - Shorter versions sort before longer versions when the prefixes
+        #   match exactly
+        _local = tuple(
+            (i, "") if isinstance(i, int) else (NegativeInfinity, i) for i in local
+        )
+
+    return epoch, _release, _pre, _post, _dev, _local
diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/pyparsing.py b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/pyparsing.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..cf75e1e5fcbfe7eac41d2a9e446c5c980741087b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/pyparsing.py
@@ -0,0 +1,5742 @@
+# module pyparsing.py
+#
+# Copyright (c) 2003-2018  Paul T. McGuire
+#
+# Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
+# a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
+# "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
+# without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
+# distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
+# permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
+# the following conditions:
+#
+# The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
+# included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
+#
+# THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
+# EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
+# MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
+# IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY
+# CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,
+# TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE
+# SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
+#
+
+__doc__ = \
+"""
+pyparsing module - Classes and methods to define and execute parsing grammars
+=============================================================================
+
+The pyparsing module is an alternative approach to creating and executing simple grammars,
+vs. the traditional lex/yacc approach, or the use of regular expressions.  With pyparsing, you
+don't need to learn a new syntax for defining grammars or matching expressions - the parsing module
+provides a library of classes that you use to construct the grammar directly in Python.
+
+Here is a program to parse "Hello, World!" (or any greeting of the form 
+C{", !"}), built up using L{Word}, L{Literal}, and L{And} elements 
+(L{'+'} operator gives L{And} expressions, strings are auto-converted to
+L{Literal} expressions)::
+
+    from pyparsing import Word, alphas
+
+    # define grammar of a greeting
+    greet = Word(alphas) + "," + Word(alphas) + "!"
+
+    hello = "Hello, World!"
+    print (hello, "->", greet.parseString(hello))
+
+The program outputs the following::
+
+    Hello, World! -> ['Hello', ',', 'World', '!']
+
+The Python representation of the grammar is quite readable, owing to the self-explanatory
+class names, and the use of '+', '|' and '^' operators.
+
+The L{ParseResults} object returned from L{ParserElement.parseString} can be accessed as a nested list, a dictionary, or an
+object with named attributes.
+
+The pyparsing module handles some of the problems that are typically vexing when writing text parsers:
+ - extra or missing whitespace (the above program will also handle "Hello,World!", "Hello  ,  World  !", etc.)
+ - quoted strings
+ - embedded comments
+
+
+Getting Started -
+-----------------
+Visit the classes L{ParserElement} and L{ParseResults} to see the base classes that most other pyparsing
+classes inherit from. Use the docstrings for examples of how to:
+ - construct literal match expressions from L{Literal} and L{CaselessLiteral} classes
+ - construct character word-group expressions using the L{Word} class
+ - see how to create repetitive expressions using L{ZeroOrMore} and L{OneOrMore} classes
+ - use L{'+'}, L{'|'}, L{'^'}, and L{'&'} operators to combine simple expressions into more complex ones
+ - associate names with your parsed results using L{ParserElement.setResultsName}
+ - find some helpful expression short-cuts like L{delimitedList} and L{oneOf}
+ - find more useful common expressions in the L{pyparsing_common} namespace class
+"""
+
+__version__ = "2.2.1"
+__versionTime__ = "18 Sep 2018 00:49 UTC"
+__author__ = "Paul McGuire "
+
+import string
+from weakref import ref as wkref
+import copy
+import sys
+import warnings
+import re
+import sre_constants
+import collections
+import pprint
+import traceback
+import types
+from datetime import datetime
+
+try:
+    from _thread import RLock
+except ImportError:
+    from threading import RLock
+
+try:
+    # Python 3
+    from collections.abc import Iterable
+    from collections.abc import MutableMapping
+except ImportError:
+    # Python 2.7
+    from collections import Iterable
+    from collections import MutableMapping
+
+try:
+    from collections import OrderedDict as _OrderedDict
+except ImportError:
+    try:
+        from ordereddict import OrderedDict as _OrderedDict
+    except ImportError:
+        _OrderedDict = None
+
+#~ sys.stderr.write( "testing pyparsing module, version %s, %s\n" % (__version__,__versionTime__ ) )
+
+__all__ = [
+'And', 'CaselessKeyword', 'CaselessLiteral', 'CharsNotIn', 'Combine', 'Dict', 'Each', 'Empty',
+'FollowedBy', 'Forward', 'GoToColumn', 'Group', 'Keyword', 'LineEnd', 'LineStart', 'Literal',
+'MatchFirst', 'NoMatch', 'NotAny', 'OneOrMore', 'OnlyOnce', 'Optional', 'Or',
+'ParseBaseException', 'ParseElementEnhance', 'ParseException', 'ParseExpression', 'ParseFatalException',
+'ParseResults', 'ParseSyntaxException', 'ParserElement', 'QuotedString', 'RecursiveGrammarException',
+'Regex', 'SkipTo', 'StringEnd', 'StringStart', 'Suppress', 'Token', 'TokenConverter', 
+'White', 'Word', 'WordEnd', 'WordStart', 'ZeroOrMore',
+'alphanums', 'alphas', 'alphas8bit', 'anyCloseTag', 'anyOpenTag', 'cStyleComment', 'col',
+'commaSeparatedList', 'commonHTMLEntity', 'countedArray', 'cppStyleComment', 'dblQuotedString',
+'dblSlashComment', 'delimitedList', 'dictOf', 'downcaseTokens', 'empty', 'hexnums',
+'htmlComment', 'javaStyleComment', 'line', 'lineEnd', 'lineStart', 'lineno',
+'makeHTMLTags', 'makeXMLTags', 'matchOnlyAtCol', 'matchPreviousExpr', 'matchPreviousLiteral',
+'nestedExpr', 'nullDebugAction', 'nums', 'oneOf', 'opAssoc', 'operatorPrecedence', 'printables',
+'punc8bit', 'pythonStyleComment', 'quotedString', 'removeQuotes', 'replaceHTMLEntity', 
+'replaceWith', 'restOfLine', 'sglQuotedString', 'srange', 'stringEnd',
+'stringStart', 'traceParseAction', 'unicodeString', 'upcaseTokens', 'withAttribute',
+'indentedBlock', 'originalTextFor', 'ungroup', 'infixNotation','locatedExpr', 'withClass',
+'CloseMatch', 'tokenMap', 'pyparsing_common',
+]
+
+system_version = tuple(sys.version_info)[:3]
+PY_3 = system_version[0] == 3
+if PY_3:
+    _MAX_INT = sys.maxsize
+    basestring = str
+    unichr = chr
+    _ustr = str
+
+    # build list of single arg builtins, that can be used as parse actions
+    singleArgBuiltins = [sum, len, sorted, reversed, list, tuple, set, any, all, min, max]
+
+else:
+    _MAX_INT = sys.maxint
+    range = xrange
+
+    def _ustr(obj):
+        """Drop-in replacement for str(obj) that tries to be Unicode friendly. It first tries
+           str(obj). If that fails with a UnicodeEncodeError, then it tries unicode(obj). It
+           then < returns the unicode object | encodes it with the default encoding | ... >.
+        """
+        if isinstance(obj,unicode):
+            return obj
+
+        try:
+            # If this works, then _ustr(obj) has the same behaviour as str(obj), so
+            # it won't break any existing code.
+            return str(obj)
+
+        except UnicodeEncodeError:
+            # Else encode it
+            ret = unicode(obj).encode(sys.getdefaultencoding(), 'xmlcharrefreplace')
+            xmlcharref = Regex(r'&#\d+;')
+            xmlcharref.setParseAction(lambda t: '\\u' + hex(int(t[0][2:-1]))[2:])
+            return xmlcharref.transformString(ret)
+
+    # build list of single arg builtins, tolerant of Python version, that can be used as parse actions
+    singleArgBuiltins = []
+    import __builtin__
+    for fname in "sum len sorted reversed list tuple set any all min max".split():
+        try:
+            singleArgBuiltins.append(getattr(__builtin__,fname))
+        except AttributeError:
+            continue
+            
+_generatorType = type((y for y in range(1)))
+ 
+def _xml_escape(data):
+    """Escape &, <, >, ", ', etc. in a string of data."""
+
+    # ampersand must be replaced first
+    from_symbols = '&><"\''
+    to_symbols = ('&'+s+';' for s in "amp gt lt quot apos".split())
+    for from_,to_ in zip(from_symbols, to_symbols):
+        data = data.replace(from_, to_)
+    return data
+
+class _Constants(object):
+    pass
+
+alphas     = string.ascii_uppercase + string.ascii_lowercase
+nums       = "0123456789"
+hexnums    = nums + "ABCDEFabcdef"
+alphanums  = alphas + nums
+_bslash    = chr(92)
+printables = "".join(c for c in string.printable if c not in string.whitespace)
+
+class ParseBaseException(Exception):
+    """base exception class for all parsing runtime exceptions"""
+    # Performance tuning: we construct a *lot* of these, so keep this
+    # constructor as small and fast as possible
+    def __init__( self, pstr, loc=0, msg=None, elem=None ):
+        self.loc = loc
+        if msg is None:
+            self.msg = pstr
+            self.pstr = ""
+        else:
+            self.msg = msg
+            self.pstr = pstr
+        self.parserElement = elem
+        self.args = (pstr, loc, msg)
+
+    @classmethod
+    def _from_exception(cls, pe):
+        """
+        internal factory method to simplify creating one type of ParseException 
+        from another - avoids having __init__ signature conflicts among subclasses
+        """
+        return cls(pe.pstr, pe.loc, pe.msg, pe.parserElement)
+
+    def __getattr__( self, aname ):
+        """supported attributes by name are:
+            - lineno - returns the line number of the exception text
+            - col - returns the column number of the exception text
+            - line - returns the line containing the exception text
+        """
+        if( aname == "lineno" ):
+            return lineno( self.loc, self.pstr )
+        elif( aname in ("col", "column") ):
+            return col( self.loc, self.pstr )
+        elif( aname == "line" ):
+            return line( self.loc, self.pstr )
+        else:
+            raise AttributeError(aname)
+
+    def __str__( self ):
+        return "%s (at char %d), (line:%d, col:%d)" % \
+                ( self.msg, self.loc, self.lineno, self.column )
+    def __repr__( self ):
+        return _ustr(self)
+    def markInputline( self, markerString = ">!<" ):
+        """Extracts the exception line from the input string, and marks
+           the location of the exception with a special symbol.
+        """
+        line_str = self.line
+        line_column = self.column - 1
+        if markerString:
+            line_str = "".join((line_str[:line_column],
+                                markerString, line_str[line_column:]))
+        return line_str.strip()
+    def __dir__(self):
+        return "lineno col line".split() + dir(type(self))
+
+class ParseException(ParseBaseException):
+    """
+    Exception thrown when parse expressions don't match class;
+    supported attributes by name are:
+     - lineno - returns the line number of the exception text
+     - col - returns the column number of the exception text
+     - line - returns the line containing the exception text
+        
+    Example::
+        try:
+            Word(nums).setName("integer").parseString("ABC")
+        except ParseException as pe:
+            print(pe)
+            print("column: {}".format(pe.col))
+            
+    prints::
+       Expected integer (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+        column: 1
+    """
+    pass
+
+class ParseFatalException(ParseBaseException):
+    """user-throwable exception thrown when inconsistent parse content
+       is found; stops all parsing immediately"""
+    pass
+
+class ParseSyntaxException(ParseFatalException):
+    """just like L{ParseFatalException}, but thrown internally when an
+       L{ErrorStop} ('-' operator) indicates that parsing is to stop 
+       immediately because an unbacktrackable syntax error has been found"""
+    pass
+
+#~ class ReparseException(ParseBaseException):
+    #~ """Experimental class - parse actions can raise this exception to cause
+       #~ pyparsing to reparse the input string:
+        #~ - with a modified input string, and/or
+        #~ - with a modified start location
+       #~ Set the values of the ReparseException in the constructor, and raise the
+       #~ exception in a parse action to cause pyparsing to use the new string/location.
+       #~ Setting the values as None causes no change to be made.
+       #~ """
+    #~ def __init_( self, newstring, restartLoc ):
+        #~ self.newParseText = newstring
+        #~ self.reparseLoc = restartLoc
+
+class RecursiveGrammarException(Exception):
+    """exception thrown by L{ParserElement.validate} if the grammar could be improperly recursive"""
+    def __init__( self, parseElementList ):
+        self.parseElementTrace = parseElementList
+
+    def __str__( self ):
+        return "RecursiveGrammarException: %s" % self.parseElementTrace
+
+class _ParseResultsWithOffset(object):
+    def __init__(self,p1,p2):
+        self.tup = (p1,p2)
+    def __getitem__(self,i):
+        return self.tup[i]
+    def __repr__(self):
+        return repr(self.tup[0])
+    def setOffset(self,i):
+        self.tup = (self.tup[0],i)
+
+class ParseResults(object):
+    """
+    Structured parse results, to provide multiple means of access to the parsed data:
+       - as a list (C{len(results)})
+       - by list index (C{results[0], results[1]}, etc.)
+       - by attribute (C{results.} - see L{ParserElement.setResultsName})
+
+    Example::
+        integer = Word(nums)
+        date_str = (integer.setResultsName("year") + '/' 
+                        + integer.setResultsName("month") + '/' 
+                        + integer.setResultsName("day"))
+        # equivalent form:
+        # date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+
+        # parseString returns a ParseResults object
+        result = date_str.parseString("1999/12/31")
+
+        def test(s, fn=repr):
+            print("%s -> %s" % (s, fn(eval(s))))
+        test("list(result)")
+        test("result[0]")
+        test("result['month']")
+        test("result.day")
+        test("'month' in result")
+        test("'minutes' in result")
+        test("result.dump()", str)
+    prints::
+        list(result) -> ['1999', '/', '12', '/', '31']
+        result[0] -> '1999'
+        result['month'] -> '12'
+        result.day -> '31'
+        'month' in result -> True
+        'minutes' in result -> False
+        result.dump() -> ['1999', '/', '12', '/', '31']
+        - day: 31
+        - month: 12
+        - year: 1999
+    """
+    def __new__(cls, toklist=None, name=None, asList=True, modal=True ):
+        if isinstance(toklist, cls):
+            return toklist
+        retobj = object.__new__(cls)
+        retobj.__doinit = True
+        return retobj
+
+    # Performance tuning: we construct a *lot* of these, so keep this
+    # constructor as small and fast as possible
+    def __init__( self, toklist=None, name=None, asList=True, modal=True, isinstance=isinstance ):
+        if self.__doinit:
+            self.__doinit = False
+            self.__name = None
+            self.__parent = None
+            self.__accumNames = {}
+            self.__asList = asList
+            self.__modal = modal
+            if toklist is None:
+                toklist = []
+            if isinstance(toklist, list):
+                self.__toklist = toklist[:]
+            elif isinstance(toklist, _generatorType):
+                self.__toklist = list(toklist)
+            else:
+                self.__toklist = [toklist]
+            self.__tokdict = dict()
+
+        if name is not None and name:
+            if not modal:
+                self.__accumNames[name] = 0
+            if isinstance(name,int):
+                name = _ustr(name) # will always return a str, but use _ustr for consistency
+            self.__name = name
+            if not (isinstance(toklist, (type(None), basestring, list)) and toklist in (None,'',[])):
+                if isinstance(toklist,basestring):
+                    toklist = [ toklist ]
+                if asList:
+                    if isinstance(toklist,ParseResults):
+                        self[name] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(toklist.copy(),0)
+                    else:
+                        self[name] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(ParseResults(toklist[0]),0)
+                    self[name].__name = name
+                else:
+                    try:
+                        self[name] = toklist[0]
+                    except (KeyError,TypeError,IndexError):
+                        self[name] = toklist
+
+    def __getitem__( self, i ):
+        if isinstance( i, (int,slice) ):
+            return self.__toklist[i]
+        else:
+            if i not in self.__accumNames:
+                return self.__tokdict[i][-1][0]
+            else:
+                return ParseResults([ v[0] for v in self.__tokdict[i] ])
+
+    def __setitem__( self, k, v, isinstance=isinstance ):
+        if isinstance(v,_ParseResultsWithOffset):
+            self.__tokdict[k] = self.__tokdict.get(k,list()) + [v]
+            sub = v[0]
+        elif isinstance(k,(int,slice)):
+            self.__toklist[k] = v
+            sub = v
+        else:
+            self.__tokdict[k] = self.__tokdict.get(k,list()) + [_ParseResultsWithOffset(v,0)]
+            sub = v
+        if isinstance(sub,ParseResults):
+            sub.__parent = wkref(self)
+
+    def __delitem__( self, i ):
+        if isinstance(i,(int,slice)):
+            mylen = len( self.__toklist )
+            del self.__toklist[i]
+
+            # convert int to slice
+            if isinstance(i, int):
+                if i < 0:
+                    i += mylen
+                i = slice(i, i+1)
+            # get removed indices
+            removed = list(range(*i.indices(mylen)))
+            removed.reverse()
+            # fixup indices in token dictionary
+            for name,occurrences in self.__tokdict.items():
+                for j in removed:
+                    for k, (value, position) in enumerate(occurrences):
+                        occurrences[k] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(value, position - (position > j))
+        else:
+            del self.__tokdict[i]
+
+    def __contains__( self, k ):
+        return k in self.__tokdict
+
+    def __len__( self ): return len( self.__toklist )
+    def __bool__(self): return ( not not self.__toklist )
+    __nonzero__ = __bool__
+    def __iter__( self ): return iter( self.__toklist )
+    def __reversed__( self ): return iter( self.__toklist[::-1] )
+    def _iterkeys( self ):
+        if hasattr(self.__tokdict, "iterkeys"):
+            return self.__tokdict.iterkeys()
+        else:
+            return iter(self.__tokdict)
+
+    def _itervalues( self ):
+        return (self[k] for k in self._iterkeys())
+            
+    def _iteritems( self ):
+        return ((k, self[k]) for k in self._iterkeys())
+
+    if PY_3:
+        keys = _iterkeys       
+        """Returns an iterator of all named result keys (Python 3.x only)."""
+
+        values = _itervalues
+        """Returns an iterator of all named result values (Python 3.x only)."""
+
+        items = _iteritems
+        """Returns an iterator of all named result key-value tuples (Python 3.x only)."""
+
+    else:
+        iterkeys = _iterkeys
+        """Returns an iterator of all named result keys (Python 2.x only)."""
+
+        itervalues = _itervalues
+        """Returns an iterator of all named result values (Python 2.x only)."""
+
+        iteritems = _iteritems
+        """Returns an iterator of all named result key-value tuples (Python 2.x only)."""
+
+        def keys( self ):
+            """Returns all named result keys (as a list in Python 2.x, as an iterator in Python 3.x)."""
+            return list(self.iterkeys())
+
+        def values( self ):
+            """Returns all named result values (as a list in Python 2.x, as an iterator in Python 3.x)."""
+            return list(self.itervalues())
+                
+        def items( self ):
+            """Returns all named result key-values (as a list of tuples in Python 2.x, as an iterator in Python 3.x)."""
+            return list(self.iteritems())
+
+    def haskeys( self ):
+        """Since keys() returns an iterator, this method is helpful in bypassing
+           code that looks for the existence of any defined results names."""
+        return bool(self.__tokdict)
+        
+    def pop( self, *args, **kwargs):
+        """
+        Removes and returns item at specified index (default=C{last}).
+        Supports both C{list} and C{dict} semantics for C{pop()}. If passed no
+        argument or an integer argument, it will use C{list} semantics
+        and pop tokens from the list of parsed tokens. If passed a 
+        non-integer argument (most likely a string), it will use C{dict}
+        semantics and pop the corresponding value from any defined 
+        results names. A second default return value argument is 
+        supported, just as in C{dict.pop()}.
+
+        Example::
+            def remove_first(tokens):
+                tokens.pop(0)
+            print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['0', '123', '321']
+            print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).addParseAction(remove_first).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['123', '321']
+
+            label = Word(alphas)
+            patt = label("LABEL") + OneOrMore(Word(nums))
+            print(patt.parseString("AAB 123 321").dump())
+
+            # Use pop() in a parse action to remove named result (note that corresponding value is not
+            # removed from list form of results)
+            def remove_LABEL(tokens):
+                tokens.pop("LABEL")
+                return tokens
+            patt.addParseAction(remove_LABEL)
+            print(patt.parseString("AAB 123 321").dump())
+        prints::
+            ['AAB', '123', '321']
+            - LABEL: AAB
+
+            ['AAB', '123', '321']
+        """
+        if not args:
+            args = [-1]
+        for k,v in kwargs.items():
+            if k == 'default':
+                args = (args[0], v)
+            else:
+                raise TypeError("pop() got an unexpected keyword argument '%s'" % k)
+        if (isinstance(args[0], int) or 
+                        len(args) == 1 or 
+                        args[0] in self):
+            index = args[0]
+            ret = self[index]
+            del self[index]
+            return ret
+        else:
+            defaultvalue = args[1]
+            return defaultvalue
+
+    def get(self, key, defaultValue=None):
+        """
+        Returns named result matching the given key, or if there is no
+        such name, then returns the given C{defaultValue} or C{None} if no
+        C{defaultValue} is specified.
+
+        Similar to C{dict.get()}.
+        
+        Example::
+            integer = Word(nums)
+            date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")           
+
+            result = date_str.parseString("1999/12/31")
+            print(result.get("year")) # -> '1999'
+            print(result.get("hour", "not specified")) # -> 'not specified'
+            print(result.get("hour")) # -> None
+        """
+        if key in self:
+            return self[key]
+        else:
+            return defaultValue
+
+    def insert( self, index, insStr ):
+        """
+        Inserts new element at location index in the list of parsed tokens.
+        
+        Similar to C{list.insert()}.
+
+        Example::
+            print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['0', '123', '321']
+
+            # use a parse action to insert the parse location in the front of the parsed results
+            def insert_locn(locn, tokens):
+                tokens.insert(0, locn)
+            print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).addParseAction(insert_locn).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> [0, '0', '123', '321']
+        """
+        self.__toklist.insert(index, insStr)
+        # fixup indices in token dictionary
+        for name,occurrences in self.__tokdict.items():
+            for k, (value, position) in enumerate(occurrences):
+                occurrences[k] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(value, position + (position > index))
+
+    def append( self, item ):
+        """
+        Add single element to end of ParseResults list of elements.
+
+        Example::
+            print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['0', '123', '321']
+            
+            # use a parse action to compute the sum of the parsed integers, and add it to the end
+            def append_sum(tokens):
+                tokens.append(sum(map(int, tokens)))
+            print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).addParseAction(append_sum).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['0', '123', '321', 444]
+        """
+        self.__toklist.append(item)
+
+    def extend( self, itemseq ):
+        """
+        Add sequence of elements to end of ParseResults list of elements.
+
+        Example::
+            patt = OneOrMore(Word(alphas))
+            
+            # use a parse action to append the reverse of the matched strings, to make a palindrome
+            def make_palindrome(tokens):
+                tokens.extend(reversed([t[::-1] for t in tokens]))
+                return ''.join(tokens)
+            print(patt.addParseAction(make_palindrome).parseString("lskdj sdlkjf lksd")) # -> 'lskdjsdlkjflksddsklfjkldsjdksl'
+        """
+        if isinstance(itemseq, ParseResults):
+            self += itemseq
+        else:
+            self.__toklist.extend(itemseq)
+
+    def clear( self ):
+        """
+        Clear all elements and results names.
+        """
+        del self.__toklist[:]
+        self.__tokdict.clear()
+
+    def __getattr__( self, name ):
+        try:
+            return self[name]
+        except KeyError:
+            return ""
+            
+        if name in self.__tokdict:
+            if name not in self.__accumNames:
+                return self.__tokdict[name][-1][0]
+            else:
+                return ParseResults([ v[0] for v in self.__tokdict[name] ])
+        else:
+            return ""
+
+    def __add__( self, other ):
+        ret = self.copy()
+        ret += other
+        return ret
+
+    def __iadd__( self, other ):
+        if other.__tokdict:
+            offset = len(self.__toklist)
+            addoffset = lambda a: offset if a<0 else a+offset
+            otheritems = other.__tokdict.items()
+            otherdictitems = [(k, _ParseResultsWithOffset(v[0],addoffset(v[1])) )
+                                for (k,vlist) in otheritems for v in vlist]
+            for k,v in otherdictitems:
+                self[k] = v
+                if isinstance(v[0],ParseResults):
+                    v[0].__parent = wkref(self)
+            
+        self.__toklist += other.__toklist
+        self.__accumNames.update( other.__accumNames )
+        return self
+
+    def __radd__(self, other):
+        if isinstance(other,int) and other == 0:
+            # useful for merging many ParseResults using sum() builtin
+            return self.copy()
+        else:
+            # this may raise a TypeError - so be it
+            return other + self
+        
+    def __repr__( self ):
+        return "(%s, %s)" % ( repr( self.__toklist ), repr( self.__tokdict ) )
+
+    def __str__( self ):
+        return '[' + ', '.join(_ustr(i) if isinstance(i, ParseResults) else repr(i) for i in self.__toklist) + ']'
+
+    def _asStringList( self, sep='' ):
+        out = []
+        for item in self.__toklist:
+            if out and sep:
+                out.append(sep)
+            if isinstance( item, ParseResults ):
+                out += item._asStringList()
+            else:
+                out.append( _ustr(item) )
+        return out
+
+    def asList( self ):
+        """
+        Returns the parse results as a nested list of matching tokens, all converted to strings.
+
+        Example::
+            patt = OneOrMore(Word(alphas))
+            result = patt.parseString("sldkj lsdkj sldkj")
+            # even though the result prints in string-like form, it is actually a pyparsing ParseResults
+            print(type(result), result) # ->  ['sldkj', 'lsdkj', 'sldkj']
+            
+            # Use asList() to create an actual list
+            result_list = result.asList()
+            print(type(result_list), result_list) # ->  ['sldkj', 'lsdkj', 'sldkj']
+        """
+        return [res.asList() if isinstance(res,ParseResults) else res for res in self.__toklist]
+
+    def asDict( self ):
+        """
+        Returns the named parse results as a nested dictionary.
+
+        Example::
+            integer = Word(nums)
+            date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+            
+            result = date_str.parseString('12/31/1999')
+            print(type(result), repr(result)) # ->  (['12', '/', '31', '/', '1999'], {'day': [('1999', 4)], 'year': [('12', 0)], 'month': [('31', 2)]})
+            
+            result_dict = result.asDict()
+            print(type(result_dict), repr(result_dict)) # ->  {'day': '1999', 'year': '12', 'month': '31'}
+
+            # even though a ParseResults supports dict-like access, sometime you just need to have a dict
+            import json
+            print(json.dumps(result)) # -> Exception: TypeError: ... is not JSON serializable
+            print(json.dumps(result.asDict())) # -> {"month": "31", "day": "1999", "year": "12"}
+        """
+        if PY_3:
+            item_fn = self.items
+        else:
+            item_fn = self.iteritems
+            
+        def toItem(obj):
+            if isinstance(obj, ParseResults):
+                if obj.haskeys():
+                    return obj.asDict()
+                else:
+                    return [toItem(v) for v in obj]
+            else:
+                return obj
+                
+        return dict((k,toItem(v)) for k,v in item_fn())
+
+    def copy( self ):
+        """
+        Returns a new copy of a C{ParseResults} object.
+        """
+        ret = ParseResults( self.__toklist )
+        ret.__tokdict = self.__tokdict.copy()
+        ret.__parent = self.__parent
+        ret.__accumNames.update( self.__accumNames )
+        ret.__name = self.__name
+        return ret
+
+    def asXML( self, doctag=None, namedItemsOnly=False, indent="", formatted=True ):
+        """
+        (Deprecated) Returns the parse results as XML. Tags are created for tokens and lists that have defined results names.
+        """
+        nl = "\n"
+        out = []
+        namedItems = dict((v[1],k) for (k,vlist) in self.__tokdict.items()
+                                                            for v in vlist)
+        nextLevelIndent = indent + "  "
+
+        # collapse out indents if formatting is not desired
+        if not formatted:
+            indent = ""
+            nextLevelIndent = ""
+            nl = ""
+
+        selfTag = None
+        if doctag is not None:
+            selfTag = doctag
+        else:
+            if self.__name:
+                selfTag = self.__name
+
+        if not selfTag:
+            if namedItemsOnly:
+                return ""
+            else:
+                selfTag = "ITEM"
+
+        out += [ nl, indent, "<", selfTag, ">" ]
+
+        for i,res in enumerate(self.__toklist):
+            if isinstance(res,ParseResults):
+                if i in namedItems:
+                    out += [ res.asXML(namedItems[i],
+                                        namedItemsOnly and doctag is None,
+                                        nextLevelIndent,
+                                        formatted)]
+                else:
+                    out += [ res.asXML(None,
+                                        namedItemsOnly and doctag is None,
+                                        nextLevelIndent,
+                                        formatted)]
+            else:
+                # individual token, see if there is a name for it
+                resTag = None
+                if i in namedItems:
+                    resTag = namedItems[i]
+                if not resTag:
+                    if namedItemsOnly:
+                        continue
+                    else:
+                        resTag = "ITEM"
+                xmlBodyText = _xml_escape(_ustr(res))
+                out += [ nl, nextLevelIndent, "<", resTag, ">",
+                                                xmlBodyText,
+                                                "" ]
+
+        out += [ nl, indent, "" ]
+        return "".join(out)
+
+    def __lookup(self,sub):
+        for k,vlist in self.__tokdict.items():
+            for v,loc in vlist:
+                if sub is v:
+                    return k
+        return None
+
+    def getName(self):
+        r"""
+        Returns the results name for this token expression. Useful when several 
+        different expressions might match at a particular location.
+
+        Example::
+            integer = Word(nums)
+            ssn_expr = Regex(r"\d\d\d-\d\d-\d\d\d\d")
+            house_number_expr = Suppress('#') + Word(nums, alphanums)
+            user_data = (Group(house_number_expr)("house_number") 
+                        | Group(ssn_expr)("ssn")
+                        | Group(integer)("age"))
+            user_info = OneOrMore(user_data)
+            
+            result = user_info.parseString("22 111-22-3333 #221B")
+            for item in result:
+                print(item.getName(), ':', item[0])
+        prints::
+            age : 22
+            ssn : 111-22-3333
+            house_number : 221B
+        """
+        if self.__name:
+            return self.__name
+        elif self.__parent:
+            par = self.__parent()
+            if par:
+                return par.__lookup(self)
+            else:
+                return None
+        elif (len(self) == 1 and
+               len(self.__tokdict) == 1 and
+               next(iter(self.__tokdict.values()))[0][1] in (0,-1)):
+            return next(iter(self.__tokdict.keys()))
+        else:
+            return None
+
+    def dump(self, indent='', depth=0, full=True):
+        """
+        Diagnostic method for listing out the contents of a C{ParseResults}.
+        Accepts an optional C{indent} argument so that this string can be embedded
+        in a nested display of other data.
+
+        Example::
+            integer = Word(nums)
+            date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+            
+            result = date_str.parseString('12/31/1999')
+            print(result.dump())
+        prints::
+            ['12', '/', '31', '/', '1999']
+            - day: 1999
+            - month: 31
+            - year: 12
+        """
+        out = []
+        NL = '\n'
+        out.append( indent+_ustr(self.asList()) )
+        if full:
+            if self.haskeys():
+                items = sorted((str(k), v) for k,v in self.items())
+                for k,v in items:
+                    if out:
+                        out.append(NL)
+                    out.append( "%s%s- %s: " % (indent,('  '*depth), k) )
+                    if isinstance(v,ParseResults):
+                        if v:
+                            out.append( v.dump(indent,depth+1) )
+                        else:
+                            out.append(_ustr(v))
+                    else:
+                        out.append(repr(v))
+            elif any(isinstance(vv,ParseResults) for vv in self):
+                v = self
+                for i,vv in enumerate(v):
+                    if isinstance(vv,ParseResults):
+                        out.append("\n%s%s[%d]:\n%s%s%s" % (indent,('  '*(depth)),i,indent,('  '*(depth+1)),vv.dump(indent,depth+1) ))
+                    else:
+                        out.append("\n%s%s[%d]:\n%s%s%s" % (indent,('  '*(depth)),i,indent,('  '*(depth+1)),_ustr(vv)))
+            
+        return "".join(out)
+
+    def pprint(self, *args, **kwargs):
+        """
+        Pretty-printer for parsed results as a list, using the C{pprint} module.
+        Accepts additional positional or keyword args as defined for the 
+        C{pprint.pprint} method. (U{http://docs.python.org/3/library/pprint.html#pprint.pprint})
+
+        Example::
+            ident = Word(alphas, alphanums)
+            num = Word(nums)
+            func = Forward()
+            term = ident | num | Group('(' + func + ')')
+            func <<= ident + Group(Optional(delimitedList(term)))
+            result = func.parseString("fna a,b,(fnb c,d,200),100")
+            result.pprint(width=40)
+        prints::
+            ['fna',
+             ['a',
+              'b',
+              ['(', 'fnb', ['c', 'd', '200'], ')'],
+              '100']]
+        """
+        pprint.pprint(self.asList(), *args, **kwargs)
+
+    # add support for pickle protocol
+    def __getstate__(self):
+        return ( self.__toklist,
+                 ( self.__tokdict.copy(),
+                   self.__parent is not None and self.__parent() or None,
+                   self.__accumNames,
+                   self.__name ) )
+
+    def __setstate__(self,state):
+        self.__toklist = state[0]
+        (self.__tokdict,
+         par,
+         inAccumNames,
+         self.__name) = state[1]
+        self.__accumNames = {}
+        self.__accumNames.update(inAccumNames)
+        if par is not None:
+            self.__parent = wkref(par)
+        else:
+            self.__parent = None
+
+    def __getnewargs__(self):
+        return self.__toklist, self.__name, self.__asList, self.__modal
+
+    def __dir__(self):
+        return (dir(type(self)) + list(self.keys()))
+
+MutableMapping.register(ParseResults)
+
+def col (loc,strg):
+    """Returns current column within a string, counting newlines as line separators.
+   The first column is number 1.
+
+   Note: the default parsing behavior is to expand tabs in the input string
+   before starting the parsing process.  See L{I{ParserElement.parseString}} for more information
+   on parsing strings containing C{}s, and suggested methods to maintain a
+   consistent view of the parsed string, the parse location, and line and column
+   positions within the parsed string.
+   """
+    s = strg
+    return 1 if 0} for more information
+   on parsing strings containing C{}s, and suggested methods to maintain a
+   consistent view of the parsed string, the parse location, and line and column
+   positions within the parsed string.
+   """
+    return strg.count("\n",0,loc) + 1
+
+def line( loc, strg ):
+    """Returns the line of text containing loc within a string, counting newlines as line separators.
+       """
+    lastCR = strg.rfind("\n", 0, loc)
+    nextCR = strg.find("\n", loc)
+    if nextCR >= 0:
+        return strg[lastCR+1:nextCR]
+    else:
+        return strg[lastCR+1:]
+
+def _defaultStartDebugAction( instring, loc, expr ):
+    print (("Match " + _ustr(expr) + " at loc " + _ustr(loc) + "(%d,%d)" % ( lineno(loc,instring), col(loc,instring) )))
+
+def _defaultSuccessDebugAction( instring, startloc, endloc, expr, toks ):
+    print ("Matched " + _ustr(expr) + " -> " + str(toks.asList()))
+
+def _defaultExceptionDebugAction( instring, loc, expr, exc ):
+    print ("Exception raised:" + _ustr(exc))
+
+def nullDebugAction(*args):
+    """'Do-nothing' debug action, to suppress debugging output during parsing."""
+    pass
+
+# Only works on Python 3.x - nonlocal is toxic to Python 2 installs
+#~ 'decorator to trim function calls to match the arity of the target'
+#~ def _trim_arity(func, maxargs=3):
+    #~ if func in singleArgBuiltins:
+        #~ return lambda s,l,t: func(t)
+    #~ limit = 0
+    #~ foundArity = False
+    #~ def wrapper(*args):
+        #~ nonlocal limit,foundArity
+        #~ while 1:
+            #~ try:
+                #~ ret = func(*args[limit:])
+                #~ foundArity = True
+                #~ return ret
+            #~ except TypeError:
+                #~ if limit == maxargs or foundArity:
+                    #~ raise
+                #~ limit += 1
+                #~ continue
+    #~ return wrapper
+
+# this version is Python 2.x-3.x cross-compatible
+'decorator to trim function calls to match the arity of the target'
+def _trim_arity(func, maxargs=2):
+    if func in singleArgBuiltins:
+        return lambda s,l,t: func(t)
+    limit = [0]
+    foundArity = [False]
+    
+    # traceback return data structure changed in Py3.5 - normalize back to plain tuples
+    if system_version[:2] >= (3,5):
+        def extract_stack(limit=0):
+            # special handling for Python 3.5.0 - extra deep call stack by 1
+            offset = -3 if system_version == (3,5,0) else -2
+            frame_summary = traceback.extract_stack(limit=-offset+limit-1)[offset]
+            return [frame_summary[:2]]
+        def extract_tb(tb, limit=0):
+            frames = traceback.extract_tb(tb, limit=limit)
+            frame_summary = frames[-1]
+            return [frame_summary[:2]]
+    else:
+        extract_stack = traceback.extract_stack
+        extract_tb = traceback.extract_tb
+    
+    # synthesize what would be returned by traceback.extract_stack at the call to 
+    # user's parse action 'func', so that we don't incur call penalty at parse time
+    
+    LINE_DIFF = 6
+    # IF ANY CODE CHANGES, EVEN JUST COMMENTS OR BLANK LINES, BETWEEN THE NEXT LINE AND 
+    # THE CALL TO FUNC INSIDE WRAPPER, LINE_DIFF MUST BE MODIFIED!!!!
+    this_line = extract_stack(limit=2)[-1]
+    pa_call_line_synth = (this_line[0], this_line[1]+LINE_DIFF)
+
+    def wrapper(*args):
+        while 1:
+            try:
+                ret = func(*args[limit[0]:])
+                foundArity[0] = True
+                return ret
+            except TypeError:
+                # re-raise TypeErrors if they did not come from our arity testing
+                if foundArity[0]:
+                    raise
+                else:
+                    try:
+                        tb = sys.exc_info()[-1]
+                        if not extract_tb(tb, limit=2)[-1][:2] == pa_call_line_synth:
+                            raise
+                    finally:
+                        del tb
+
+                if limit[0] <= maxargs:
+                    limit[0] += 1
+                    continue
+                raise
+
+    # copy func name to wrapper for sensible debug output
+    func_name = ""
+    try:
+        func_name = getattr(func, '__name__', 
+                            getattr(func, '__class__').__name__)
+    except Exception:
+        func_name = str(func)
+    wrapper.__name__ = func_name
+
+    return wrapper
+
+class ParserElement(object):
+    """Abstract base level parser element class."""
+    DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS = " \n\t\r"
+    verbose_stacktrace = False
+
+    @staticmethod
+    def setDefaultWhitespaceChars( chars ):
+        r"""
+        Overrides the default whitespace chars
+
+        Example::
+            # default whitespace chars are space,  and newline
+            OneOrMore(Word(alphas)).parseString("abc def\nghi jkl")  # -> ['abc', 'def', 'ghi', 'jkl']
+            
+            # change to just treat newline as significant
+            ParserElement.setDefaultWhitespaceChars(" \t")
+            OneOrMore(Word(alphas)).parseString("abc def\nghi jkl")  # -> ['abc', 'def']
+        """
+        ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS = chars
+
+    @staticmethod
+    def inlineLiteralsUsing(cls):
+        """
+        Set class to be used for inclusion of string literals into a parser.
+        
+        Example::
+            # default literal class used is Literal
+            integer = Word(nums)
+            date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")           
+
+            date_str.parseString("1999/12/31")  # -> ['1999', '/', '12', '/', '31']
+
+
+            # change to Suppress
+            ParserElement.inlineLiteralsUsing(Suppress)
+            date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")           
+
+            date_str.parseString("1999/12/31")  # -> ['1999', '12', '31']
+        """
+        ParserElement._literalStringClass = cls
+
+    def __init__( self, savelist=False ):
+        self.parseAction = list()
+        self.failAction = None
+        #~ self.name = ""  # don't define self.name, let subclasses try/except upcall
+        self.strRepr = None
+        self.resultsName = None
+        self.saveAsList = savelist
+        self.skipWhitespace = True
+        self.whiteChars = ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS
+        self.copyDefaultWhiteChars = True
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = False # used when checking for left-recursion
+        self.keepTabs = False
+        self.ignoreExprs = list()
+        self.debug = False
+        self.streamlined = False
+        self.mayIndexError = True # used to optimize exception handling for subclasses that don't advance parse index
+        self.errmsg = ""
+        self.modalResults = True # used to mark results names as modal (report only last) or cumulative (list all)
+        self.debugActions = ( None, None, None ) #custom debug actions
+        self.re = None
+        self.callPreparse = True # used to avoid redundant calls to preParse
+        self.callDuringTry = False
+
+    def copy( self ):
+        """
+        Make a copy of this C{ParserElement}.  Useful for defining different parse actions
+        for the same parsing pattern, using copies of the original parse element.
+        
+        Example::
+            integer = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda toks: int(toks[0]))
+            integerK = integer.copy().addParseAction(lambda toks: toks[0]*1024) + Suppress("K")
+            integerM = integer.copy().addParseAction(lambda toks: toks[0]*1024*1024) + Suppress("M")
+            
+            print(OneOrMore(integerK | integerM | integer).parseString("5K 100 640K 256M"))
+        prints::
+            [5120, 100, 655360, 268435456]
+        Equivalent form of C{expr.copy()} is just C{expr()}::
+            integerM = integer().addParseAction(lambda toks: toks[0]*1024*1024) + Suppress("M")
+        """
+        cpy = copy.copy( self )
+        cpy.parseAction = self.parseAction[:]
+        cpy.ignoreExprs = self.ignoreExprs[:]
+        if self.copyDefaultWhiteChars:
+            cpy.whiteChars = ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS
+        return cpy
+
+    def setName( self, name ):
+        """
+        Define name for this expression, makes debugging and exception messages clearer.
+        
+        Example::
+            Word(nums).parseString("ABC")  # -> Exception: Expected W:(0123...) (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+            Word(nums).setName("integer").parseString("ABC")  # -> Exception: Expected integer (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+        """
+        self.name = name
+        self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+        if hasattr(self,"exception"):
+            self.exception.msg = self.errmsg
+        return self
+
+    def setResultsName( self, name, listAllMatches=False ):
+        """
+        Define name for referencing matching tokens as a nested attribute
+        of the returned parse results.
+        NOTE: this returns a *copy* of the original C{ParserElement} object;
+        this is so that the client can define a basic element, such as an
+        integer, and reference it in multiple places with different names.
+
+        You can also set results names using the abbreviated syntax,
+        C{expr("name")} in place of C{expr.setResultsName("name")} - 
+        see L{I{__call__}<__call__>}.
+
+        Example::
+            date_str = (integer.setResultsName("year") + '/' 
+                        + integer.setResultsName("month") + '/' 
+                        + integer.setResultsName("day"))
+
+            # equivalent form:
+            date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+        """
+        newself = self.copy()
+        if name.endswith("*"):
+            name = name[:-1]
+            listAllMatches=True
+        newself.resultsName = name
+        newself.modalResults = not listAllMatches
+        return newself
+
+    def setBreak(self,breakFlag = True):
+        """Method to invoke the Python pdb debugger when this element is
+           about to be parsed. Set C{breakFlag} to True to enable, False to
+           disable.
+        """
+        if breakFlag:
+            _parseMethod = self._parse
+            def breaker(instring, loc, doActions=True, callPreParse=True):
+                import pdb
+                pdb.set_trace()
+                return _parseMethod( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse )
+            breaker._originalParseMethod = _parseMethod
+            self._parse = breaker
+        else:
+            if hasattr(self._parse,"_originalParseMethod"):
+                self._parse = self._parse._originalParseMethod
+        return self
+
+    def setParseAction( self, *fns, **kwargs ):
+        """
+        Define one or more actions to perform when successfully matching parse element definition.
+        Parse action fn is a callable method with 0-3 arguments, called as C{fn(s,loc,toks)},
+        C{fn(loc,toks)}, C{fn(toks)}, or just C{fn()}, where:
+         - s   = the original string being parsed (see note below)
+         - loc = the location of the matching substring
+         - toks = a list of the matched tokens, packaged as a C{L{ParseResults}} object
+        If the functions in fns modify the tokens, they can return them as the return
+        value from fn, and the modified list of tokens will replace the original.
+        Otherwise, fn does not need to return any value.
+
+        Optional keyword arguments:
+         - callDuringTry = (default=C{False}) indicate if parse action should be run during lookaheads and alternate testing
+
+        Note: the default parsing behavior is to expand tabs in the input string
+        before starting the parsing process.  See L{I{parseString}} for more information
+        on parsing strings containing C{}s, and suggested methods to maintain a
+        consistent view of the parsed string, the parse location, and line and column
+        positions within the parsed string.
+        
+        Example::
+            integer = Word(nums)
+            date_str = integer + '/' + integer + '/' + integer
+
+            date_str.parseString("1999/12/31")  # -> ['1999', '/', '12', '/', '31']
+
+            # use parse action to convert to ints at parse time
+            integer = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda toks: int(toks[0]))
+            date_str = integer + '/' + integer + '/' + integer
+
+            # note that integer fields are now ints, not strings
+            date_str.parseString("1999/12/31")  # -> [1999, '/', 12, '/', 31]
+        """
+        self.parseAction = list(map(_trim_arity, list(fns)))
+        self.callDuringTry = kwargs.get("callDuringTry", False)
+        return self
+
+    def addParseAction( self, *fns, **kwargs ):
+        """
+        Add one or more parse actions to expression's list of parse actions. See L{I{setParseAction}}.
+        
+        See examples in L{I{copy}}.
+        """
+        self.parseAction += list(map(_trim_arity, list(fns)))
+        self.callDuringTry = self.callDuringTry or kwargs.get("callDuringTry", False)
+        return self
+
+    def addCondition(self, *fns, **kwargs):
+        """Add a boolean predicate function to expression's list of parse actions. See 
+        L{I{setParseAction}} for function call signatures. Unlike C{setParseAction}, 
+        functions passed to C{addCondition} need to return boolean success/fail of the condition.
+
+        Optional keyword arguments:
+         - message = define a custom message to be used in the raised exception
+         - fatal   = if True, will raise ParseFatalException to stop parsing immediately; otherwise will raise ParseException
+         
+        Example::
+            integer = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda toks: int(toks[0]))
+            year_int = integer.copy()
+            year_int.addCondition(lambda toks: toks[0] >= 2000, message="Only support years 2000 and later")
+            date_str = year_int + '/' + integer + '/' + integer
+
+            result = date_str.parseString("1999/12/31")  # -> Exception: Only support years 2000 and later (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+        """
+        msg = kwargs.get("message", "failed user-defined condition")
+        exc_type = ParseFatalException if kwargs.get("fatal", False) else ParseException
+        for fn in fns:
+            def pa(s,l,t):
+                if not bool(_trim_arity(fn)(s,l,t)):
+                    raise exc_type(s,l,msg)
+            self.parseAction.append(pa)
+        self.callDuringTry = self.callDuringTry or kwargs.get("callDuringTry", False)
+        return self
+
+    def setFailAction( self, fn ):
+        """Define action to perform if parsing fails at this expression.
+           Fail acton fn is a callable function that takes the arguments
+           C{fn(s,loc,expr,err)} where:
+            - s = string being parsed
+            - loc = location where expression match was attempted and failed
+            - expr = the parse expression that failed
+            - err = the exception thrown
+           The function returns no value.  It may throw C{L{ParseFatalException}}
+           if it is desired to stop parsing immediately."""
+        self.failAction = fn
+        return self
+
+    def _skipIgnorables( self, instring, loc ):
+        exprsFound = True
+        while exprsFound:
+            exprsFound = False
+            for e in self.ignoreExprs:
+                try:
+                    while 1:
+                        loc,dummy = e._parse( instring, loc )
+                        exprsFound = True
+                except ParseException:
+                    pass
+        return loc
+
+    def preParse( self, instring, loc ):
+        if self.ignoreExprs:
+            loc = self._skipIgnorables( instring, loc )
+
+        if self.skipWhitespace:
+            wt = self.whiteChars
+            instrlen = len(instring)
+            while loc < instrlen and instring[loc] in wt:
+                loc += 1
+
+        return loc
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        return loc, []
+
+    def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ):
+        return tokenlist
+
+    #~ @profile
+    def _parseNoCache( self, instring, loc, doActions=True, callPreParse=True ):
+        debugging = ( self.debug ) #and doActions )
+
+        if debugging or self.failAction:
+            #~ print ("Match",self,"at loc",loc,"(%d,%d)" % ( lineno(loc,instring), col(loc,instring) ))
+            if (self.debugActions[0] ):
+                self.debugActions[0]( instring, loc, self )
+            if callPreParse and self.callPreparse:
+                preloc = self.preParse( instring, loc )
+            else:
+                preloc = loc
+            tokensStart = preloc
+            try:
+                try:
+                    loc,tokens = self.parseImpl( instring, preloc, doActions )
+                except IndexError:
+                    raise ParseException( instring, len(instring), self.errmsg, self )
+            except ParseBaseException as err:
+                #~ print ("Exception raised:", err)
+                if self.debugActions[2]:
+                    self.debugActions[2]( instring, tokensStart, self, err )
+                if self.failAction:
+                    self.failAction( instring, tokensStart, self, err )
+                raise
+        else:
+            if callPreParse and self.callPreparse:
+                preloc = self.preParse( instring, loc )
+            else:
+                preloc = loc
+            tokensStart = preloc
+            if self.mayIndexError or preloc >= len(instring):
+                try:
+                    loc,tokens = self.parseImpl( instring, preloc, doActions )
+                except IndexError:
+                    raise ParseException( instring, len(instring), self.errmsg, self )
+            else:
+                loc,tokens = self.parseImpl( instring, preloc, doActions )
+
+        tokens = self.postParse( instring, loc, tokens )
+
+        retTokens = ParseResults( tokens, self.resultsName, asList=self.saveAsList, modal=self.modalResults )
+        if self.parseAction and (doActions or self.callDuringTry):
+            if debugging:
+                try:
+                    for fn in self.parseAction:
+                        tokens = fn( instring, tokensStart, retTokens )
+                        if tokens is not None:
+                            retTokens = ParseResults( tokens,
+                                                      self.resultsName,
+                                                      asList=self.saveAsList and isinstance(tokens,(ParseResults,list)),
+                                                      modal=self.modalResults )
+                except ParseBaseException as err:
+                    #~ print "Exception raised in user parse action:", err
+                    if (self.debugActions[2] ):
+                        self.debugActions[2]( instring, tokensStart, self, err )
+                    raise
+            else:
+                for fn in self.parseAction:
+                    tokens = fn( instring, tokensStart, retTokens )
+                    if tokens is not None:
+                        retTokens = ParseResults( tokens,
+                                                  self.resultsName,
+                                                  asList=self.saveAsList and isinstance(tokens,(ParseResults,list)),
+                                                  modal=self.modalResults )
+        if debugging:
+            #~ print ("Matched",self,"->",retTokens.asList())
+            if (self.debugActions[1] ):
+                self.debugActions[1]( instring, tokensStart, loc, self, retTokens )
+
+        return loc, retTokens
+
+    def tryParse( self, instring, loc ):
+        try:
+            return self._parse( instring, loc, doActions=False )[0]
+        except ParseFatalException:
+            raise ParseException( instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+    
+    def canParseNext(self, instring, loc):
+        try:
+            self.tryParse(instring, loc)
+        except (ParseException, IndexError):
+            return False
+        else:
+            return True
+
+    class _UnboundedCache(object):
+        def __init__(self):
+            cache = {}
+            self.not_in_cache = not_in_cache = object()
+
+            def get(self, key):
+                return cache.get(key, not_in_cache)
+
+            def set(self, key, value):
+                cache[key] = value
+
+            def clear(self):
+                cache.clear()
+                
+            def cache_len(self):
+                return len(cache)
+
+            self.get = types.MethodType(get, self)
+            self.set = types.MethodType(set, self)
+            self.clear = types.MethodType(clear, self)
+            self.__len__ = types.MethodType(cache_len, self)
+
+    if _OrderedDict is not None:
+        class _FifoCache(object):
+            def __init__(self, size):
+                self.not_in_cache = not_in_cache = object()
+
+                cache = _OrderedDict()
+
+                def get(self, key):
+                    return cache.get(key, not_in_cache)
+
+                def set(self, key, value):
+                    cache[key] = value
+                    while len(cache) > size:
+                        try:
+                            cache.popitem(False)
+                        except KeyError:
+                            pass
+
+                def clear(self):
+                    cache.clear()
+
+                def cache_len(self):
+                    return len(cache)
+
+                self.get = types.MethodType(get, self)
+                self.set = types.MethodType(set, self)
+                self.clear = types.MethodType(clear, self)
+                self.__len__ = types.MethodType(cache_len, self)
+
+    else:
+        class _FifoCache(object):
+            def __init__(self, size):
+                self.not_in_cache = not_in_cache = object()
+
+                cache = {}
+                key_fifo = collections.deque([], size)
+
+                def get(self, key):
+                    return cache.get(key, not_in_cache)
+
+                def set(self, key, value):
+                    cache[key] = value
+                    while len(key_fifo) > size:
+                        cache.pop(key_fifo.popleft(), None)
+                    key_fifo.append(key)
+
+                def clear(self):
+                    cache.clear()
+                    key_fifo.clear()
+
+                def cache_len(self):
+                    return len(cache)
+
+                self.get = types.MethodType(get, self)
+                self.set = types.MethodType(set, self)
+                self.clear = types.MethodType(clear, self)
+                self.__len__ = types.MethodType(cache_len, self)
+
+    # argument cache for optimizing repeated calls when backtracking through recursive expressions
+    packrat_cache = {} # this is set later by enabledPackrat(); this is here so that resetCache() doesn't fail
+    packrat_cache_lock = RLock()
+    packrat_cache_stats = [0, 0]
+
+    # this method gets repeatedly called during backtracking with the same arguments -
+    # we can cache these arguments and save ourselves the trouble of re-parsing the contained expression
+    def _parseCache( self, instring, loc, doActions=True, callPreParse=True ):
+        HIT, MISS = 0, 1
+        lookup = (self, instring, loc, callPreParse, doActions)
+        with ParserElement.packrat_cache_lock:
+            cache = ParserElement.packrat_cache
+            value = cache.get(lookup)
+            if value is cache.not_in_cache:
+                ParserElement.packrat_cache_stats[MISS] += 1
+                try:
+                    value = self._parseNoCache(instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse)
+                except ParseBaseException as pe:
+                    # cache a copy of the exception, without the traceback
+                    cache.set(lookup, pe.__class__(*pe.args))
+                    raise
+                else:
+                    cache.set(lookup, (value[0], value[1].copy()))
+                    return value
+            else:
+                ParserElement.packrat_cache_stats[HIT] += 1
+                if isinstance(value, Exception):
+                    raise value
+                return (value[0], value[1].copy())
+
+    _parse = _parseNoCache
+
+    @staticmethod
+    def resetCache():
+        ParserElement.packrat_cache.clear()
+        ParserElement.packrat_cache_stats[:] = [0] * len(ParserElement.packrat_cache_stats)
+
+    _packratEnabled = False
+    @staticmethod
+    def enablePackrat(cache_size_limit=128):
+        """Enables "packrat" parsing, which adds memoizing to the parsing logic.
+           Repeated parse attempts at the same string location (which happens
+           often in many complex grammars) can immediately return a cached value,
+           instead of re-executing parsing/validating code.  Memoizing is done of
+           both valid results and parsing exceptions.
+           
+           Parameters:
+            - cache_size_limit - (default=C{128}) - if an integer value is provided
+              will limit the size of the packrat cache; if None is passed, then
+              the cache size will be unbounded; if 0 is passed, the cache will
+              be effectively disabled.
+            
+           This speedup may break existing programs that use parse actions that
+           have side-effects.  For this reason, packrat parsing is disabled when
+           you first import pyparsing.  To activate the packrat feature, your
+           program must call the class method C{ParserElement.enablePackrat()}.  If
+           your program uses C{psyco} to "compile as you go", you must call
+           C{enablePackrat} before calling C{psyco.full()}.  If you do not do this,
+           Python will crash.  For best results, call C{enablePackrat()} immediately
+           after importing pyparsing.
+           
+           Example::
+               import pyparsing
+               pyparsing.ParserElement.enablePackrat()
+        """
+        if not ParserElement._packratEnabled:
+            ParserElement._packratEnabled = True
+            if cache_size_limit is None:
+                ParserElement.packrat_cache = ParserElement._UnboundedCache()
+            else:
+                ParserElement.packrat_cache = ParserElement._FifoCache(cache_size_limit)
+            ParserElement._parse = ParserElement._parseCache
+
+    def parseString( self, instring, parseAll=False ):
+        """
+        Execute the parse expression with the given string.
+        This is the main interface to the client code, once the complete
+        expression has been built.
+
+        If you want the grammar to require that the entire input string be
+        successfully parsed, then set C{parseAll} to True (equivalent to ending
+        the grammar with C{L{StringEnd()}}).
+
+        Note: C{parseString} implicitly calls C{expandtabs()} on the input string,
+        in order to report proper column numbers in parse actions.
+        If the input string contains tabs and
+        the grammar uses parse actions that use the C{loc} argument to index into the
+        string being parsed, you can ensure you have a consistent view of the input
+        string by:
+         - calling C{parseWithTabs} on your grammar before calling C{parseString}
+           (see L{I{parseWithTabs}})
+         - define your parse action using the full C{(s,loc,toks)} signature, and
+           reference the input string using the parse action's C{s} argument
+         - explictly expand the tabs in your input string before calling
+           C{parseString}
+        
+        Example::
+            Word('a').parseString('aaaaabaaa')  # -> ['aaaaa']
+            Word('a').parseString('aaaaabaaa', parseAll=True)  # -> Exception: Expected end of text
+        """
+        ParserElement.resetCache()
+        if not self.streamlined:
+            self.streamline()
+            #~ self.saveAsList = True
+        for e in self.ignoreExprs:
+            e.streamline()
+        if not self.keepTabs:
+            instring = instring.expandtabs()
+        try:
+            loc, tokens = self._parse( instring, 0 )
+            if parseAll:
+                loc = self.preParse( instring, loc )
+                se = Empty() + StringEnd()
+                se._parse( instring, loc )
+        except ParseBaseException as exc:
+            if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace:
+                raise
+            else:
+                # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace
+                raise exc
+        else:
+            return tokens
+
+    def scanString( self, instring, maxMatches=_MAX_INT, overlap=False ):
+        """
+        Scan the input string for expression matches.  Each match will return the
+        matching tokens, start location, and end location.  May be called with optional
+        C{maxMatches} argument, to clip scanning after 'n' matches are found.  If
+        C{overlap} is specified, then overlapping matches will be reported.
+
+        Note that the start and end locations are reported relative to the string
+        being parsed.  See L{I{parseString}} for more information on parsing
+        strings with embedded tabs.
+
+        Example::
+            source = "sldjf123lsdjjkf345sldkjf879lkjsfd987"
+            print(source)
+            for tokens,start,end in Word(alphas).scanString(source):
+                print(' '*start + '^'*(end-start))
+                print(' '*start + tokens[0])
+        
+        prints::
+        
+            sldjf123lsdjjkf345sldkjf879lkjsfd987
+            ^^^^^
+            sldjf
+                    ^^^^^^^
+                    lsdjjkf
+                              ^^^^^^
+                              sldkjf
+                                       ^^^^^^
+                                       lkjsfd
+        """
+        if not self.streamlined:
+            self.streamline()
+        for e in self.ignoreExprs:
+            e.streamline()
+
+        if not self.keepTabs:
+            instring = _ustr(instring).expandtabs()
+        instrlen = len(instring)
+        loc = 0
+        preparseFn = self.preParse
+        parseFn = self._parse
+        ParserElement.resetCache()
+        matches = 0
+        try:
+            while loc <= instrlen and matches < maxMatches:
+                try:
+                    preloc = preparseFn( instring, loc )
+                    nextLoc,tokens = parseFn( instring, preloc, callPreParse=False )
+                except ParseException:
+                    loc = preloc+1
+                else:
+                    if nextLoc > loc:
+                        matches += 1
+                        yield tokens, preloc, nextLoc
+                        if overlap:
+                            nextloc = preparseFn( instring, loc )
+                            if nextloc > loc:
+                                loc = nextLoc
+                            else:
+                                loc += 1
+                        else:
+                            loc = nextLoc
+                    else:
+                        loc = preloc+1
+        except ParseBaseException as exc:
+            if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace:
+                raise
+            else:
+                # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace
+                raise exc
+
+    def transformString( self, instring ):
+        """
+        Extension to C{L{scanString}}, to modify matching text with modified tokens that may
+        be returned from a parse action.  To use C{transformString}, define a grammar and
+        attach a parse action to it that modifies the returned token list.
+        Invoking C{transformString()} on a target string will then scan for matches,
+        and replace the matched text patterns according to the logic in the parse
+        action.  C{transformString()} returns the resulting transformed string.
+        
+        Example::
+            wd = Word(alphas)
+            wd.setParseAction(lambda toks: toks[0].title())
+            
+            print(wd.transformString("now is the winter of our discontent made glorious summer by this sun of york."))
+        Prints::
+            Now Is The Winter Of Our Discontent Made Glorious Summer By This Sun Of York.
+        """
+        out = []
+        lastE = 0
+        # force preservation of s, to minimize unwanted transformation of string, and to
+        # keep string locs straight between transformString and scanString
+        self.keepTabs = True
+        try:
+            for t,s,e in self.scanString( instring ):
+                out.append( instring[lastE:s] )
+                if t:
+                    if isinstance(t,ParseResults):
+                        out += t.asList()
+                    elif isinstance(t,list):
+                        out += t
+                    else:
+                        out.append(t)
+                lastE = e
+            out.append(instring[lastE:])
+            out = [o for o in out if o]
+            return "".join(map(_ustr,_flatten(out)))
+        except ParseBaseException as exc:
+            if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace:
+                raise
+            else:
+                # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace
+                raise exc
+
+    def searchString( self, instring, maxMatches=_MAX_INT ):
+        """
+        Another extension to C{L{scanString}}, simplifying the access to the tokens found
+        to match the given parse expression.  May be called with optional
+        C{maxMatches} argument, to clip searching after 'n' matches are found.
+        
+        Example::
+            # a capitalized word starts with an uppercase letter, followed by zero or more lowercase letters
+            cap_word = Word(alphas.upper(), alphas.lower())
+            
+            print(cap_word.searchString("More than Iron, more than Lead, more than Gold I need Electricity"))
+
+            # the sum() builtin can be used to merge results into a single ParseResults object
+            print(sum(cap_word.searchString("More than Iron, more than Lead, more than Gold I need Electricity")))
+        prints::
+            [['More'], ['Iron'], ['Lead'], ['Gold'], ['I'], ['Electricity']]
+            ['More', 'Iron', 'Lead', 'Gold', 'I', 'Electricity']
+        """
+        try:
+            return ParseResults([ t for t,s,e in self.scanString( instring, maxMatches ) ])
+        except ParseBaseException as exc:
+            if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace:
+                raise
+            else:
+                # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace
+                raise exc
+
+    def split(self, instring, maxsplit=_MAX_INT, includeSeparators=False):
+        """
+        Generator method to split a string using the given expression as a separator.
+        May be called with optional C{maxsplit} argument, to limit the number of splits;
+        and the optional C{includeSeparators} argument (default=C{False}), if the separating
+        matching text should be included in the split results.
+        
+        Example::        
+            punc = oneOf(list(".,;:/-!?"))
+            print(list(punc.split("This, this?, this sentence, is badly punctuated!")))
+        prints::
+            ['This', ' this', '', ' this sentence', ' is badly punctuated', '']
+        """
+        splits = 0
+        last = 0
+        for t,s,e in self.scanString(instring, maxMatches=maxsplit):
+            yield instring[last:s]
+            if includeSeparators:
+                yield t[0]
+            last = e
+        yield instring[last:]
+
+    def __add__(self, other ):
+        """
+        Implementation of + operator - returns C{L{And}}. Adding strings to a ParserElement
+        converts them to L{Literal}s by default.
+        
+        Example::
+            greet = Word(alphas) + "," + Word(alphas) + "!"
+            hello = "Hello, World!"
+            print (hello, "->", greet.parseString(hello))
+        Prints::
+            Hello, World! -> ['Hello', ',', 'World', '!']
+        """
+        if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+            other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+        if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+            warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+                    SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+            return None
+        return And( [ self, other ] )
+
+    def __radd__(self, other ):
+        """
+        Implementation of + operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}}
+        """
+        if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+            other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+        if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+            warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+                    SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+            return None
+        return other + self
+
+    def __sub__(self, other):
+        """
+        Implementation of - operator, returns C{L{And}} with error stop
+        """
+        if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+            other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+        if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+            warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+                    SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+            return None
+        return self + And._ErrorStop() + other
+
+    def __rsub__(self, other ):
+        """
+        Implementation of - operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}}
+        """
+        if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+            other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+        if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+            warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+                    SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+            return None
+        return other - self
+
+    def __mul__(self,other):
+        """
+        Implementation of * operator, allows use of C{expr * 3} in place of
+        C{expr + expr + expr}.  Expressions may also me multiplied by a 2-integer
+        tuple, similar to C{{min,max}} multipliers in regular expressions.  Tuples
+        may also include C{None} as in:
+         - C{expr*(n,None)} or C{expr*(n,)} is equivalent
+              to C{expr*n + L{ZeroOrMore}(expr)}
+              (read as "at least n instances of C{expr}")
+         - C{expr*(None,n)} is equivalent to C{expr*(0,n)}
+              (read as "0 to n instances of C{expr}")
+         - C{expr*(None,None)} is equivalent to C{L{ZeroOrMore}(expr)}
+         - C{expr*(1,None)} is equivalent to C{L{OneOrMore}(expr)}
+
+        Note that C{expr*(None,n)} does not raise an exception if
+        more than n exprs exist in the input stream; that is,
+        C{expr*(None,n)} does not enforce a maximum number of expr
+        occurrences.  If this behavior is desired, then write
+        C{expr*(None,n) + ~expr}
+        """
+        if isinstance(other,int):
+            minElements, optElements = other,0
+        elif isinstance(other,tuple):
+            other = (other + (None, None))[:2]
+            if other[0] is None:
+                other = (0, other[1])
+            if isinstance(other[0],int) and other[1] is None:
+                if other[0] == 0:
+                    return ZeroOrMore(self)
+                if other[0] == 1:
+                    return OneOrMore(self)
+                else:
+                    return self*other[0] + ZeroOrMore(self)
+            elif isinstance(other[0],int) and isinstance(other[1],int):
+                minElements, optElements = other
+                optElements -= minElements
+            else:
+                raise TypeError("cannot multiply 'ParserElement' and ('%s','%s') objects", type(other[0]),type(other[1]))
+        else:
+            raise TypeError("cannot multiply 'ParserElement' and '%s' objects", type(other))
+
+        if minElements < 0:
+            raise ValueError("cannot multiply ParserElement by negative value")
+        if optElements < 0:
+            raise ValueError("second tuple value must be greater or equal to first tuple value")
+        if minElements == optElements == 0:
+            raise ValueError("cannot multiply ParserElement by 0 or (0,0)")
+
+        if (optElements):
+            def makeOptionalList(n):
+                if n>1:
+                    return Optional(self + makeOptionalList(n-1))
+                else:
+                    return Optional(self)
+            if minElements:
+                if minElements == 1:
+                    ret = self + makeOptionalList(optElements)
+                else:
+                    ret = And([self]*minElements) + makeOptionalList(optElements)
+            else:
+                ret = makeOptionalList(optElements)
+        else:
+            if minElements == 1:
+                ret = self
+            else:
+                ret = And([self]*minElements)
+        return ret
+
+    def __rmul__(self, other):
+        return self.__mul__(other)
+
+    def __or__(self, other ):
+        """
+        Implementation of | operator - returns C{L{MatchFirst}}
+        """
+        if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+            other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+        if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+            warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+                    SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+            return None
+        return MatchFirst( [ self, other ] )
+
+    def __ror__(self, other ):
+        """
+        Implementation of | operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}}
+        """
+        if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+            other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+        if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+            warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+                    SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+            return None
+        return other | self
+
+    def __xor__(self, other ):
+        """
+        Implementation of ^ operator - returns C{L{Or}}
+        """
+        if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+            other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+        if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+            warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+                    SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+            return None
+        return Or( [ self, other ] )
+
+    def __rxor__(self, other ):
+        """
+        Implementation of ^ operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}}
+        """
+        if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+            other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+        if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+            warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+                    SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+            return None
+        return other ^ self
+
+    def __and__(self, other ):
+        """
+        Implementation of & operator - returns C{L{Each}}
+        """
+        if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+            other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+        if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+            warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+                    SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+            return None
+        return Each( [ self, other ] )
+
+    def __rand__(self, other ):
+        """
+        Implementation of & operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}}
+        """
+        if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+            other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+        if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+            warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+                    SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+            return None
+        return other & self
+
+    def __invert__( self ):
+        """
+        Implementation of ~ operator - returns C{L{NotAny}}
+        """
+        return NotAny( self )
+
+    def __call__(self, name=None):
+        """
+        Shortcut for C{L{setResultsName}}, with C{listAllMatches=False}.
+        
+        If C{name} is given with a trailing C{'*'} character, then C{listAllMatches} will be
+        passed as C{True}.
+           
+        If C{name} is omitted, same as calling C{L{copy}}.
+
+        Example::
+            # these are equivalent
+            userdata = Word(alphas).setResultsName("name") + Word(nums+"-").setResultsName("socsecno")
+            userdata = Word(alphas)("name") + Word(nums+"-")("socsecno")             
+        """
+        if name is not None:
+            return self.setResultsName(name)
+        else:
+            return self.copy()
+
+    def suppress( self ):
+        """
+        Suppresses the output of this C{ParserElement}; useful to keep punctuation from
+        cluttering up returned output.
+        """
+        return Suppress( self )
+
+    def leaveWhitespace( self ):
+        """
+        Disables the skipping of whitespace before matching the characters in the
+        C{ParserElement}'s defined pattern.  This is normally only used internally by
+        the pyparsing module, but may be needed in some whitespace-sensitive grammars.
+        """
+        self.skipWhitespace = False
+        return self
+
+    def setWhitespaceChars( self, chars ):
+        """
+        Overrides the default whitespace chars
+        """
+        self.skipWhitespace = True
+        self.whiteChars = chars
+        self.copyDefaultWhiteChars = False
+        return self
+
+    def parseWithTabs( self ):
+        """
+        Overrides default behavior to expand C{}s to spaces before parsing the input string.
+        Must be called before C{parseString} when the input grammar contains elements that
+        match C{} characters.
+        """
+        self.keepTabs = True
+        return self
+
+    def ignore( self, other ):
+        """
+        Define expression to be ignored (e.g., comments) while doing pattern
+        matching; may be called repeatedly, to define multiple comment or other
+        ignorable patterns.
+        
+        Example::
+            patt = OneOrMore(Word(alphas))
+            patt.parseString('ablaj /* comment */ lskjd') # -> ['ablaj']
+            
+            patt.ignore(cStyleComment)
+            patt.parseString('ablaj /* comment */ lskjd') # -> ['ablaj', 'lskjd']
+        """
+        if isinstance(other, basestring):
+            other = Suppress(other)
+
+        if isinstance( other, Suppress ):
+            if other not in self.ignoreExprs:
+                self.ignoreExprs.append(other)
+        else:
+            self.ignoreExprs.append( Suppress( other.copy() ) )
+        return self
+
+    def setDebugActions( self, startAction, successAction, exceptionAction ):
+        """
+        Enable display of debugging messages while doing pattern matching.
+        """
+        self.debugActions = (startAction or _defaultStartDebugAction,
+                             successAction or _defaultSuccessDebugAction,
+                             exceptionAction or _defaultExceptionDebugAction)
+        self.debug = True
+        return self
+
+    def setDebug( self, flag=True ):
+        """
+        Enable display of debugging messages while doing pattern matching.
+        Set C{flag} to True to enable, False to disable.
+
+        Example::
+            wd = Word(alphas).setName("alphaword")
+            integer = Word(nums).setName("numword")
+            term = wd | integer
+            
+            # turn on debugging for wd
+            wd.setDebug()
+
+            OneOrMore(term).parseString("abc 123 xyz 890")
+        
+        prints::
+            Match alphaword at loc 0(1,1)
+            Matched alphaword -> ['abc']
+            Match alphaword at loc 3(1,4)
+            Exception raised:Expected alphaword (at char 4), (line:1, col:5)
+            Match alphaword at loc 7(1,8)
+            Matched alphaword -> ['xyz']
+            Match alphaword at loc 11(1,12)
+            Exception raised:Expected alphaword (at char 12), (line:1, col:13)
+            Match alphaword at loc 15(1,16)
+            Exception raised:Expected alphaword (at char 15), (line:1, col:16)
+
+        The output shown is that produced by the default debug actions - custom debug actions can be
+        specified using L{setDebugActions}. Prior to attempting
+        to match the C{wd} expression, the debugging message C{"Match  at loc (,)"}
+        is shown. Then if the parse succeeds, a C{"Matched"} message is shown, or an C{"Exception raised"}
+        message is shown. Also note the use of L{setName} to assign a human-readable name to the expression,
+        which makes debugging and exception messages easier to understand - for instance, the default
+        name created for the C{Word} expression without calling C{setName} is C{"W:(ABCD...)"}.
+        """
+        if flag:
+            self.setDebugActions( _defaultStartDebugAction, _defaultSuccessDebugAction, _defaultExceptionDebugAction )
+        else:
+            self.debug = False
+        return self
+
+    def __str__( self ):
+        return self.name
+
+    def __repr__( self ):
+        return _ustr(self)
+
+    def streamline( self ):
+        self.streamlined = True
+        self.strRepr = None
+        return self
+
+    def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ):
+        pass
+
+    def validate( self, validateTrace=[] ):
+        """
+        Check defined expressions for valid structure, check for infinite recursive definitions.
+        """
+        self.checkRecursion( [] )
+
+    def parseFile( self, file_or_filename, parseAll=False ):
+        """
+        Execute the parse expression on the given file or filename.
+        If a filename is specified (instead of a file object),
+        the entire file is opened, read, and closed before parsing.
+        """
+        try:
+            file_contents = file_or_filename.read()
+        except AttributeError:
+            with open(file_or_filename, "r") as f:
+                file_contents = f.read()
+        try:
+            return self.parseString(file_contents, parseAll)
+        except ParseBaseException as exc:
+            if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace:
+                raise
+            else:
+                # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace
+                raise exc
+
+    def __eq__(self,other):
+        if isinstance(other, ParserElement):
+            return self is other or vars(self) == vars(other)
+        elif isinstance(other, basestring):
+            return self.matches(other)
+        else:
+            return super(ParserElement,self)==other
+
+    def __ne__(self,other):
+        return not (self == other)
+
+    def __hash__(self):
+        return hash(id(self))
+
+    def __req__(self,other):
+        return self == other
+
+    def __rne__(self,other):
+        return not (self == other)
+
+    def matches(self, testString, parseAll=True):
+        """
+        Method for quick testing of a parser against a test string. Good for simple 
+        inline microtests of sub expressions while building up larger parser.
+           
+        Parameters:
+         - testString - to test against this expression for a match
+         - parseAll - (default=C{True}) - flag to pass to C{L{parseString}} when running tests
+            
+        Example::
+            expr = Word(nums)
+            assert expr.matches("100")
+        """
+        try:
+            self.parseString(_ustr(testString), parseAll=parseAll)
+            return True
+        except ParseBaseException:
+            return False
+                
+    def runTests(self, tests, parseAll=True, comment='#', fullDump=True, printResults=True, failureTests=False):
+        """
+        Execute the parse expression on a series of test strings, showing each
+        test, the parsed results or where the parse failed. Quick and easy way to
+        run a parse expression against a list of sample strings.
+           
+        Parameters:
+         - tests - a list of separate test strings, or a multiline string of test strings
+         - parseAll - (default=C{True}) - flag to pass to C{L{parseString}} when running tests           
+         - comment - (default=C{'#'}) - expression for indicating embedded comments in the test 
+              string; pass None to disable comment filtering
+         - fullDump - (default=C{True}) - dump results as list followed by results names in nested outline;
+              if False, only dump nested list
+         - printResults - (default=C{True}) prints test output to stdout
+         - failureTests - (default=C{False}) indicates if these tests are expected to fail parsing
+
+        Returns: a (success, results) tuple, where success indicates that all tests succeeded
+        (or failed if C{failureTests} is True), and the results contain a list of lines of each 
+        test's output
+        
+        Example::
+            number_expr = pyparsing_common.number.copy()
+
+            result = number_expr.runTests('''
+                # unsigned integer
+                100
+                # negative integer
+                -100
+                # float with scientific notation
+                6.02e23
+                # integer with scientific notation
+                1e-12
+                ''')
+            print("Success" if result[0] else "Failed!")
+
+            result = number_expr.runTests('''
+                # stray character
+                100Z
+                # missing leading digit before '.'
+                -.100
+                # too many '.'
+                3.14.159
+                ''', failureTests=True)
+            print("Success" if result[0] else "Failed!")
+        prints::
+            # unsigned integer
+            100
+            [100]
+
+            # negative integer
+            -100
+            [-100]
+
+            # float with scientific notation
+            6.02e23
+            [6.02e+23]
+
+            # integer with scientific notation
+            1e-12
+            [1e-12]
+
+            Success
+            
+            # stray character
+            100Z
+               ^
+            FAIL: Expected end of text (at char 3), (line:1, col:4)
+
+            # missing leading digit before '.'
+            -.100
+            ^
+            FAIL: Expected {real number with scientific notation | real number | signed integer} (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+
+            # too many '.'
+            3.14.159
+                ^
+            FAIL: Expected end of text (at char 4), (line:1, col:5)
+
+            Success
+
+        Each test string must be on a single line. If you want to test a string that spans multiple
+        lines, create a test like this::
+
+            expr.runTest(r"this is a test\\n of strings that spans \\n 3 lines")
+        
+        (Note that this is a raw string literal, you must include the leading 'r'.)
+        """
+        if isinstance(tests, basestring):
+            tests = list(map(str.strip, tests.rstrip().splitlines()))
+        if isinstance(comment, basestring):
+            comment = Literal(comment)
+        allResults = []
+        comments = []
+        success = True
+        for t in tests:
+            if comment is not None and comment.matches(t, False) or comments and not t:
+                comments.append(t)
+                continue
+            if not t:
+                continue
+            out = ['\n'.join(comments), t]
+            comments = []
+            try:
+                t = t.replace(r'\n','\n')
+                result = self.parseString(t, parseAll=parseAll)
+                out.append(result.dump(full=fullDump))
+                success = success and not failureTests
+            except ParseBaseException as pe:
+                fatal = "(FATAL)" if isinstance(pe, ParseFatalException) else ""
+                if '\n' in t:
+                    out.append(line(pe.loc, t))
+                    out.append(' '*(col(pe.loc,t)-1) + '^' + fatal)
+                else:
+                    out.append(' '*pe.loc + '^' + fatal)
+                out.append("FAIL: " + str(pe))
+                success = success and failureTests
+                result = pe
+            except Exception as exc:
+                out.append("FAIL-EXCEPTION: " + str(exc))
+                success = success and failureTests
+                result = exc
+
+            if printResults:
+                if fullDump:
+                    out.append('')
+                print('\n'.join(out))
+
+            allResults.append((t, result))
+        
+        return success, allResults
+
+        
+class Token(ParserElement):
+    """
+    Abstract C{ParserElement} subclass, for defining atomic matching patterns.
+    """
+    def __init__( self ):
+        super(Token,self).__init__( savelist=False )
+
+
+class Empty(Token):
+    """
+    An empty token, will always match.
+    """
+    def __init__( self ):
+        super(Empty,self).__init__()
+        self.name = "Empty"
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+        self.mayIndexError = False
+
+
+class NoMatch(Token):
+    """
+    A token that will never match.
+    """
+    def __init__( self ):
+        super(NoMatch,self).__init__()
+        self.name = "NoMatch"
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+        self.mayIndexError = False
+        self.errmsg = "Unmatchable token"
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+
+class Literal(Token):
+    """
+    Token to exactly match a specified string.
+    
+    Example::
+        Literal('blah').parseString('blah')  # -> ['blah']
+        Literal('blah').parseString('blahfooblah')  # -> ['blah']
+        Literal('blah').parseString('bla')  # -> Exception: Expected "blah"
+    
+    For case-insensitive matching, use L{CaselessLiteral}.
+    
+    For keyword matching (force word break before and after the matched string),
+    use L{Keyword} or L{CaselessKeyword}.
+    """
+    def __init__( self, matchString ):
+        super(Literal,self).__init__()
+        self.match = matchString
+        self.matchLen = len(matchString)
+        try:
+            self.firstMatchChar = matchString[0]
+        except IndexError:
+            warnings.warn("null string passed to Literal; use Empty() instead",
+                            SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+            self.__class__ = Empty
+        self.name = '"%s"' % _ustr(self.match)
+        self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = False
+        self.mayIndexError = False
+
+    # Performance tuning: this routine gets called a *lot*
+    # if this is a single character match string  and the first character matches,
+    # short-circuit as quickly as possible, and avoid calling startswith
+    #~ @profile
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        if (instring[loc] == self.firstMatchChar and
+            (self.matchLen==1 or instring.startswith(self.match,loc)) ):
+            return loc+self.matchLen, self.match
+        raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+_L = Literal
+ParserElement._literalStringClass = Literal
+
+class Keyword(Token):
+    """
+    Token to exactly match a specified string as a keyword, that is, it must be
+    immediately followed by a non-keyword character.  Compare with C{L{Literal}}:
+     - C{Literal("if")} will match the leading C{'if'} in C{'ifAndOnlyIf'}.
+     - C{Keyword("if")} will not; it will only match the leading C{'if'} in C{'if x=1'}, or C{'if(y==2)'}
+    Accepts two optional constructor arguments in addition to the keyword string:
+     - C{identChars} is a string of characters that would be valid identifier characters,
+          defaulting to all alphanumerics + "_" and "$"
+     - C{caseless} allows case-insensitive matching, default is C{False}.
+       
+    Example::
+        Keyword("start").parseString("start")  # -> ['start']
+        Keyword("start").parseString("starting")  # -> Exception
+
+    For case-insensitive matching, use L{CaselessKeyword}.
+    """
+    DEFAULT_KEYWORD_CHARS = alphanums+"_$"
+
+    def __init__( self, matchString, identChars=None, caseless=False ):
+        super(Keyword,self).__init__()
+        if identChars is None:
+            identChars = Keyword.DEFAULT_KEYWORD_CHARS
+        self.match = matchString
+        self.matchLen = len(matchString)
+        try:
+            self.firstMatchChar = matchString[0]
+        except IndexError:
+            warnings.warn("null string passed to Keyword; use Empty() instead",
+                            SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+        self.name = '"%s"' % self.match
+        self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = False
+        self.mayIndexError = False
+        self.caseless = caseless
+        if caseless:
+            self.caselessmatch = matchString.upper()
+            identChars = identChars.upper()
+        self.identChars = set(identChars)
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        if self.caseless:
+            if ( (instring[ loc:loc+self.matchLen ].upper() == self.caselessmatch) and
+                 (loc >= len(instring)-self.matchLen or instring[loc+self.matchLen].upper() not in self.identChars) and
+                 (loc == 0 or instring[loc-1].upper() not in self.identChars) ):
+                return loc+self.matchLen, self.match
+        else:
+            if (instring[loc] == self.firstMatchChar and
+                (self.matchLen==1 or instring.startswith(self.match,loc)) and
+                (loc >= len(instring)-self.matchLen or instring[loc+self.matchLen] not in self.identChars) and
+                (loc == 0 or instring[loc-1] not in self.identChars) ):
+                return loc+self.matchLen, self.match
+        raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+    def copy(self):
+        c = super(Keyword,self).copy()
+        c.identChars = Keyword.DEFAULT_KEYWORD_CHARS
+        return c
+
+    @staticmethod
+    def setDefaultKeywordChars( chars ):
+        """Overrides the default Keyword chars
+        """
+        Keyword.DEFAULT_KEYWORD_CHARS = chars
+
+class CaselessLiteral(Literal):
+    """
+    Token to match a specified string, ignoring case of letters.
+    Note: the matched results will always be in the case of the given
+    match string, NOT the case of the input text.
+
+    Example::
+        OneOrMore(CaselessLiteral("CMD")).parseString("cmd CMD Cmd10") # -> ['CMD', 'CMD', 'CMD']
+        
+    (Contrast with example for L{CaselessKeyword}.)
+    """
+    def __init__( self, matchString ):
+        super(CaselessLiteral,self).__init__( matchString.upper() )
+        # Preserve the defining literal.
+        self.returnString = matchString
+        self.name = "'%s'" % self.returnString
+        self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        if instring[ loc:loc+self.matchLen ].upper() == self.match:
+            return loc+self.matchLen, self.returnString
+        raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+class CaselessKeyword(Keyword):
+    """
+    Caseless version of L{Keyword}.
+
+    Example::
+        OneOrMore(CaselessKeyword("CMD")).parseString("cmd CMD Cmd10") # -> ['CMD', 'CMD']
+        
+    (Contrast with example for L{CaselessLiteral}.)
+    """
+    def __init__( self, matchString, identChars=None ):
+        super(CaselessKeyword,self).__init__( matchString, identChars, caseless=True )
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        if ( (instring[ loc:loc+self.matchLen ].upper() == self.caselessmatch) and
+             (loc >= len(instring)-self.matchLen or instring[loc+self.matchLen].upper() not in self.identChars) ):
+            return loc+self.matchLen, self.match
+        raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+class CloseMatch(Token):
+    """
+    A variation on L{Literal} which matches "close" matches, that is, 
+    strings with at most 'n' mismatching characters. C{CloseMatch} takes parameters:
+     - C{match_string} - string to be matched
+     - C{maxMismatches} - (C{default=1}) maximum number of mismatches allowed to count as a match
+    
+    The results from a successful parse will contain the matched text from the input string and the following named results:
+     - C{mismatches} - a list of the positions within the match_string where mismatches were found
+     - C{original} - the original match_string used to compare against the input string
+    
+    If C{mismatches} is an empty list, then the match was an exact match.
+    
+    Example::
+        patt = CloseMatch("ATCATCGAATGGA")
+        patt.parseString("ATCATCGAAXGGA") # -> (['ATCATCGAAXGGA'], {'mismatches': [[9]], 'original': ['ATCATCGAATGGA']})
+        patt.parseString("ATCAXCGAAXGGA") # -> Exception: Expected 'ATCATCGAATGGA' (with up to 1 mismatches) (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+
+        # exact match
+        patt.parseString("ATCATCGAATGGA") # -> (['ATCATCGAATGGA'], {'mismatches': [[]], 'original': ['ATCATCGAATGGA']})
+
+        # close match allowing up to 2 mismatches
+        patt = CloseMatch("ATCATCGAATGGA", maxMismatches=2)
+        patt.parseString("ATCAXCGAAXGGA") # -> (['ATCAXCGAAXGGA'], {'mismatches': [[4, 9]], 'original': ['ATCATCGAATGGA']})
+    """
+    def __init__(self, match_string, maxMismatches=1):
+        super(CloseMatch,self).__init__()
+        self.name = match_string
+        self.match_string = match_string
+        self.maxMismatches = maxMismatches
+        self.errmsg = "Expected %r (with up to %d mismatches)" % (self.match_string, self.maxMismatches)
+        self.mayIndexError = False
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = False
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        start = loc
+        instrlen = len(instring)
+        maxloc = start + len(self.match_string)
+
+        if maxloc <= instrlen:
+            match_string = self.match_string
+            match_stringloc = 0
+            mismatches = []
+            maxMismatches = self.maxMismatches
+
+            for match_stringloc,s_m in enumerate(zip(instring[loc:maxloc], self.match_string)):
+                src,mat = s_m
+                if src != mat:
+                    mismatches.append(match_stringloc)
+                    if len(mismatches) > maxMismatches:
+                        break
+            else:
+                loc = match_stringloc + 1
+                results = ParseResults([instring[start:loc]])
+                results['original'] = self.match_string
+                results['mismatches'] = mismatches
+                return loc, results
+
+        raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+
+class Word(Token):
+    """
+    Token for matching words composed of allowed character sets.
+    Defined with string containing all allowed initial characters,
+    an optional string containing allowed body characters (if omitted,
+    defaults to the initial character set), and an optional minimum,
+    maximum, and/or exact length.  The default value for C{min} is 1 (a
+    minimum value < 1 is not valid); the default values for C{max} and C{exact}
+    are 0, meaning no maximum or exact length restriction. An optional
+    C{excludeChars} parameter can list characters that might be found in 
+    the input C{bodyChars} string; useful to define a word of all printables
+    except for one or two characters, for instance.
+    
+    L{srange} is useful for defining custom character set strings for defining 
+    C{Word} expressions, using range notation from regular expression character sets.
+    
+    A common mistake is to use C{Word} to match a specific literal string, as in 
+    C{Word("Address")}. Remember that C{Word} uses the string argument to define
+    I{sets} of matchable characters. This expression would match "Add", "AAA",
+    "dAred", or any other word made up of the characters 'A', 'd', 'r', 'e', and 's'.
+    To match an exact literal string, use L{Literal} or L{Keyword}.
+
+    pyparsing includes helper strings for building Words:
+     - L{alphas}
+     - L{nums}
+     - L{alphanums}
+     - L{hexnums}
+     - L{alphas8bit} (alphabetic characters in ASCII range 128-255 - accented, tilded, umlauted, etc.)
+     - L{punc8bit} (non-alphabetic characters in ASCII range 128-255 - currency, symbols, superscripts, diacriticals, etc.)
+     - L{printables} (any non-whitespace character)
+
+    Example::
+        # a word composed of digits
+        integer = Word(nums) # equivalent to Word("0123456789") or Word(srange("0-9"))
+        
+        # a word with a leading capital, and zero or more lowercase
+        capital_word = Word(alphas.upper(), alphas.lower())
+
+        # hostnames are alphanumeric, with leading alpha, and '-'
+        hostname = Word(alphas, alphanums+'-')
+        
+        # roman numeral (not a strict parser, accepts invalid mix of characters)
+        roman = Word("IVXLCDM")
+        
+        # any string of non-whitespace characters, except for ','
+        csv_value = Word(printables, excludeChars=",")
+    """
+    def __init__( self, initChars, bodyChars=None, min=1, max=0, exact=0, asKeyword=False, excludeChars=None ):
+        super(Word,self).__init__()
+        if excludeChars:
+            initChars = ''.join(c for c in initChars if c not in excludeChars)
+            if bodyChars:
+                bodyChars = ''.join(c for c in bodyChars if c not in excludeChars)
+        self.initCharsOrig = initChars
+        self.initChars = set(initChars)
+        if bodyChars :
+            self.bodyCharsOrig = bodyChars
+            self.bodyChars = set(bodyChars)
+        else:
+            self.bodyCharsOrig = initChars
+            self.bodyChars = set(initChars)
+
+        self.maxSpecified = max > 0
+
+        if min < 1:
+            raise ValueError("cannot specify a minimum length < 1; use Optional(Word()) if zero-length word is permitted")
+
+        self.minLen = min
+
+        if max > 0:
+            self.maxLen = max
+        else:
+            self.maxLen = _MAX_INT
+
+        if exact > 0:
+            self.maxLen = exact
+            self.minLen = exact
+
+        self.name = _ustr(self)
+        self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+        self.mayIndexError = False
+        self.asKeyword = asKeyword
+
+        if ' ' not in self.initCharsOrig+self.bodyCharsOrig and (min==1 and max==0 and exact==0):
+            if self.bodyCharsOrig == self.initCharsOrig:
+                self.reString = "[%s]+" % _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.initCharsOrig)
+            elif len(self.initCharsOrig) == 1:
+                self.reString = "%s[%s]*" % \
+                                      (re.escape(self.initCharsOrig),
+                                      _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.bodyCharsOrig),)
+            else:
+                self.reString = "[%s][%s]*" % \
+                                      (_escapeRegexRangeChars(self.initCharsOrig),
+                                      _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.bodyCharsOrig),)
+            if self.asKeyword:
+                self.reString = r"\b"+self.reString+r"\b"
+            try:
+                self.re = re.compile( self.reString )
+            except Exception:
+                self.re = None
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        if self.re:
+            result = self.re.match(instring,loc)
+            if not result:
+                raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+            loc = result.end()
+            return loc, result.group()
+
+        if not(instring[ loc ] in self.initChars):
+            raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+        start = loc
+        loc += 1
+        instrlen = len(instring)
+        bodychars = self.bodyChars
+        maxloc = start + self.maxLen
+        maxloc = min( maxloc, instrlen )
+        while loc < maxloc and instring[loc] in bodychars:
+            loc += 1
+
+        throwException = False
+        if loc - start < self.minLen:
+            throwException = True
+        if self.maxSpecified and loc < instrlen and instring[loc] in bodychars:
+            throwException = True
+        if self.asKeyword:
+            if (start>0 and instring[start-1] in bodychars) or (loc4:
+                    return s[:4]+"..."
+                else:
+                    return s
+
+            if ( self.initCharsOrig != self.bodyCharsOrig ):
+                self.strRepr = "W:(%s,%s)" % ( charsAsStr(self.initCharsOrig), charsAsStr(self.bodyCharsOrig) )
+            else:
+                self.strRepr = "W:(%s)" % charsAsStr(self.initCharsOrig)
+
+        return self.strRepr
+
+
+class Regex(Token):
+    r"""
+    Token for matching strings that match a given regular expression.
+    Defined with string specifying the regular expression in a form recognized by the inbuilt Python re module.
+    If the given regex contains named groups (defined using C{(?P...)}), these will be preserved as 
+    named parse results.
+
+    Example::
+        realnum = Regex(r"[+-]?\d+\.\d*")
+        date = Regex(r'(?P\d{4})-(?P\d\d?)-(?P\d\d?)')
+        # ref: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/267399/how-do-you-match-only-valid-roman-numerals-with-a-regular-expression
+        roman = Regex(r"M{0,4}(CM|CD|D?C{0,3})(XC|XL|L?X{0,3})(IX|IV|V?I{0,3})")
+    """
+    compiledREtype = type(re.compile("[A-Z]"))
+    def __init__( self, pattern, flags=0):
+        """The parameters C{pattern} and C{flags} are passed to the C{re.compile()} function as-is. See the Python C{re} module for an explanation of the acceptable patterns and flags."""
+        super(Regex,self).__init__()
+
+        if isinstance(pattern, basestring):
+            if not pattern:
+                warnings.warn("null string passed to Regex; use Empty() instead",
+                        SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+
+            self.pattern = pattern
+            self.flags = flags
+
+            try:
+                self.re = re.compile(self.pattern, self.flags)
+                self.reString = self.pattern
+            except sre_constants.error:
+                warnings.warn("invalid pattern (%s) passed to Regex" % pattern,
+                    SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+                raise
+
+        elif isinstance(pattern, Regex.compiledREtype):
+            self.re = pattern
+            self.pattern = \
+            self.reString = str(pattern)
+            self.flags = flags
+            
+        else:
+            raise ValueError("Regex may only be constructed with a string or a compiled RE object")
+
+        self.name = _ustr(self)
+        self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+        self.mayIndexError = False
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        result = self.re.match(instring,loc)
+        if not result:
+            raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+        loc = result.end()
+        d = result.groupdict()
+        ret = ParseResults(result.group())
+        if d:
+            for k in d:
+                ret[k] = d[k]
+        return loc,ret
+
+    def __str__( self ):
+        try:
+            return super(Regex,self).__str__()
+        except Exception:
+            pass
+
+        if self.strRepr is None:
+            self.strRepr = "Re:(%s)" % repr(self.pattern)
+
+        return self.strRepr
+
+
+class QuotedString(Token):
+    r"""
+    Token for matching strings that are delimited by quoting characters.
+    
+    Defined with the following parameters:
+        - quoteChar - string of one or more characters defining the quote delimiting string
+        - escChar - character to escape quotes, typically backslash (default=C{None})
+        - escQuote - special quote sequence to escape an embedded quote string (such as SQL's "" to escape an embedded ") (default=C{None})
+        - multiline - boolean indicating whether quotes can span multiple lines (default=C{False})
+        - unquoteResults - boolean indicating whether the matched text should be unquoted (default=C{True})
+        - endQuoteChar - string of one or more characters defining the end of the quote delimited string (default=C{None} => same as quoteChar)
+        - convertWhitespaceEscapes - convert escaped whitespace (C{'\t'}, C{'\n'}, etc.) to actual whitespace (default=C{True})
+
+    Example::
+        qs = QuotedString('"')
+        print(qs.searchString('lsjdf "This is the quote" sldjf'))
+        complex_qs = QuotedString('{{', endQuoteChar='}}')
+        print(complex_qs.searchString('lsjdf {{This is the "quote"}} sldjf'))
+        sql_qs = QuotedString('"', escQuote='""')
+        print(sql_qs.searchString('lsjdf "This is the quote with ""embedded"" quotes" sldjf'))
+    prints::
+        [['This is the quote']]
+        [['This is the "quote"']]
+        [['This is the quote with "embedded" quotes']]
+    """
+    def __init__( self, quoteChar, escChar=None, escQuote=None, multiline=False, unquoteResults=True, endQuoteChar=None, convertWhitespaceEscapes=True):
+        super(QuotedString,self).__init__()
+
+        # remove white space from quote chars - wont work anyway
+        quoteChar = quoteChar.strip()
+        if not quoteChar:
+            warnings.warn("quoteChar cannot be the empty string",SyntaxWarning,stacklevel=2)
+            raise SyntaxError()
+
+        if endQuoteChar is None:
+            endQuoteChar = quoteChar
+        else:
+            endQuoteChar = endQuoteChar.strip()
+            if not endQuoteChar:
+                warnings.warn("endQuoteChar cannot be the empty string",SyntaxWarning,stacklevel=2)
+                raise SyntaxError()
+
+        self.quoteChar = quoteChar
+        self.quoteCharLen = len(quoteChar)
+        self.firstQuoteChar = quoteChar[0]
+        self.endQuoteChar = endQuoteChar
+        self.endQuoteCharLen = len(endQuoteChar)
+        self.escChar = escChar
+        self.escQuote = escQuote
+        self.unquoteResults = unquoteResults
+        self.convertWhitespaceEscapes = convertWhitespaceEscapes
+
+        if multiline:
+            self.flags = re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL
+            self.pattern = r'%s(?:[^%s%s]' % \
+                ( re.escape(self.quoteChar),
+                  _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.endQuoteChar[0]),
+                  (escChar is not None and _escapeRegexRangeChars(escChar) or '') )
+        else:
+            self.flags = 0
+            self.pattern = r'%s(?:[^%s\n\r%s]' % \
+                ( re.escape(self.quoteChar),
+                  _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.endQuoteChar[0]),
+                  (escChar is not None and _escapeRegexRangeChars(escChar) or '') )
+        if len(self.endQuoteChar) > 1:
+            self.pattern += (
+                '|(?:' + ')|(?:'.join("%s[^%s]" % (re.escape(self.endQuoteChar[:i]),
+                                               _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.endQuoteChar[i]))
+                                    for i in range(len(self.endQuoteChar)-1,0,-1)) + ')'
+                )
+        if escQuote:
+            self.pattern += (r'|(?:%s)' % re.escape(escQuote))
+        if escChar:
+            self.pattern += (r'|(?:%s.)' % re.escape(escChar))
+            self.escCharReplacePattern = re.escape(self.escChar)+"(.)"
+        self.pattern += (r')*%s' % re.escape(self.endQuoteChar))
+
+        try:
+            self.re = re.compile(self.pattern, self.flags)
+            self.reString = self.pattern
+        except sre_constants.error:
+            warnings.warn("invalid pattern (%s) passed to Regex" % self.pattern,
+                SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+            raise
+
+        self.name = _ustr(self)
+        self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+        self.mayIndexError = False
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        result = instring[loc] == self.firstQuoteChar and self.re.match(instring,loc) or None
+        if not result:
+            raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+        loc = result.end()
+        ret = result.group()
+
+        if self.unquoteResults:
+
+            # strip off quotes
+            ret = ret[self.quoteCharLen:-self.endQuoteCharLen]
+
+            if isinstance(ret,basestring):
+                # replace escaped whitespace
+                if '\\' in ret and self.convertWhitespaceEscapes:
+                    ws_map = {
+                        r'\t' : '\t',
+                        r'\n' : '\n',
+                        r'\f' : '\f',
+                        r'\r' : '\r',
+                    }
+                    for wslit,wschar in ws_map.items():
+                        ret = ret.replace(wslit, wschar)
+
+                # replace escaped characters
+                if self.escChar:
+                    ret = re.sub(self.escCharReplacePattern, r"\g<1>", ret)
+
+                # replace escaped quotes
+                if self.escQuote:
+                    ret = ret.replace(self.escQuote, self.endQuoteChar)
+
+        return loc, ret
+
+    def __str__( self ):
+        try:
+            return super(QuotedString,self).__str__()
+        except Exception:
+            pass
+
+        if self.strRepr is None:
+            self.strRepr = "quoted string, starting with %s ending with %s" % (self.quoteChar, self.endQuoteChar)
+
+        return self.strRepr
+
+
+class CharsNotIn(Token):
+    """
+    Token for matching words composed of characters I{not} in a given set (will
+    include whitespace in matched characters if not listed in the provided exclusion set - see example).
+    Defined with string containing all disallowed characters, and an optional
+    minimum, maximum, and/or exact length.  The default value for C{min} is 1 (a
+    minimum value < 1 is not valid); the default values for C{max} and C{exact}
+    are 0, meaning no maximum or exact length restriction.
+
+    Example::
+        # define a comma-separated-value as anything that is not a ','
+        csv_value = CharsNotIn(',')
+        print(delimitedList(csv_value).parseString("dkls,lsdkjf,s12 34,@!#,213"))
+    prints::
+        ['dkls', 'lsdkjf', 's12 34', '@!#', '213']
+    """
+    def __init__( self, notChars, min=1, max=0, exact=0 ):
+        super(CharsNotIn,self).__init__()
+        self.skipWhitespace = False
+        self.notChars = notChars
+
+        if min < 1:
+            raise ValueError("cannot specify a minimum length < 1; use Optional(CharsNotIn()) if zero-length char group is permitted")
+
+        self.minLen = min
+
+        if max > 0:
+            self.maxLen = max
+        else:
+            self.maxLen = _MAX_INT
+
+        if exact > 0:
+            self.maxLen = exact
+            self.minLen = exact
+
+        self.name = _ustr(self)
+        self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = ( self.minLen == 0 )
+        self.mayIndexError = False
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        if instring[loc] in self.notChars:
+            raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+        start = loc
+        loc += 1
+        notchars = self.notChars
+        maxlen = min( start+self.maxLen, len(instring) )
+        while loc < maxlen and \
+              (instring[loc] not in notchars):
+            loc += 1
+
+        if loc - start < self.minLen:
+            raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+        return loc, instring[start:loc]
+
+    def __str__( self ):
+        try:
+            return super(CharsNotIn, self).__str__()
+        except Exception:
+            pass
+
+        if self.strRepr is None:
+            if len(self.notChars) > 4:
+                self.strRepr = "!W:(%s...)" % self.notChars[:4]
+            else:
+                self.strRepr = "!W:(%s)" % self.notChars
+
+        return self.strRepr
+
+class White(Token):
+    """
+    Special matching class for matching whitespace.  Normally, whitespace is ignored
+    by pyparsing grammars.  This class is included when some whitespace structures
+    are significant.  Define with a string containing the whitespace characters to be
+    matched; default is C{" \\t\\r\\n"}.  Also takes optional C{min}, C{max}, and C{exact} arguments,
+    as defined for the C{L{Word}} class.
+    """
+    whiteStrs = {
+        " " : "",
+        "\t": "",
+        "\n": "",
+        "\r": "",
+        "\f": "",
+        }
+    def __init__(self, ws=" \t\r\n", min=1, max=0, exact=0):
+        super(White,self).__init__()
+        self.matchWhite = ws
+        self.setWhitespaceChars( "".join(c for c in self.whiteChars if c not in self.matchWhite) )
+        #~ self.leaveWhitespace()
+        self.name = ("".join(White.whiteStrs[c] for c in self.matchWhite))
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+        self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+
+        self.minLen = min
+
+        if max > 0:
+            self.maxLen = max
+        else:
+            self.maxLen = _MAX_INT
+
+        if exact > 0:
+            self.maxLen = exact
+            self.minLen = exact
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        if not(instring[ loc ] in self.matchWhite):
+            raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+        start = loc
+        loc += 1
+        maxloc = start + self.maxLen
+        maxloc = min( maxloc, len(instring) )
+        while loc < maxloc and instring[loc] in self.matchWhite:
+            loc += 1
+
+        if loc - start < self.minLen:
+            raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+        return loc, instring[start:loc]
+
+
+class _PositionToken(Token):
+    def __init__( self ):
+        super(_PositionToken,self).__init__()
+        self.name=self.__class__.__name__
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+        self.mayIndexError = False
+
+class GoToColumn(_PositionToken):
+    """
+    Token to advance to a specific column of input text; useful for tabular report scraping.
+    """
+    def __init__( self, colno ):
+        super(GoToColumn,self).__init__()
+        self.col = colno
+
+    def preParse( self, instring, loc ):
+        if col(loc,instring) != self.col:
+            instrlen = len(instring)
+            if self.ignoreExprs:
+                loc = self._skipIgnorables( instring, loc )
+            while loc < instrlen and instring[loc].isspace() and col( loc, instring ) != self.col :
+                loc += 1
+        return loc
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        thiscol = col( loc, instring )
+        if thiscol > self.col:
+            raise ParseException( instring, loc, "Text not in expected column", self )
+        newloc = loc + self.col - thiscol
+        ret = instring[ loc: newloc ]
+        return newloc, ret
+
+
+class LineStart(_PositionToken):
+    """
+    Matches if current position is at the beginning of a line within the parse string
+    
+    Example::
+    
+        test = '''\
+        AAA this line
+        AAA and this line
+          AAA but not this one
+        B AAA and definitely not this one
+        '''
+
+        for t in (LineStart() + 'AAA' + restOfLine).searchString(test):
+            print(t)
+    
+    Prints::
+        ['AAA', ' this line']
+        ['AAA', ' and this line']    
+
+    """
+    def __init__( self ):
+        super(LineStart,self).__init__()
+        self.errmsg = "Expected start of line"
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        if col(loc, instring) == 1:
+            return loc, []
+        raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+class LineEnd(_PositionToken):
+    """
+    Matches if current position is at the end of a line within the parse string
+    """
+    def __init__( self ):
+        super(LineEnd,self).__init__()
+        self.setWhitespaceChars( ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS.replace("\n","") )
+        self.errmsg = "Expected end of line"
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        if loc len(instring):
+            return loc, []
+        else:
+            raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+class WordStart(_PositionToken):
+    """
+    Matches if the current position is at the beginning of a Word, and
+    is not preceded by any character in a given set of C{wordChars}
+    (default=C{printables}). To emulate the C{\b} behavior of regular expressions,
+    use C{WordStart(alphanums)}. C{WordStart} will also match at the beginning of
+    the string being parsed, or at the beginning of a line.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, wordChars = printables):
+        super(WordStart,self).__init__()
+        self.wordChars = set(wordChars)
+        self.errmsg = "Not at the start of a word"
+
+    def parseImpl(self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        if loc != 0:
+            if (instring[loc-1] in self.wordChars or
+                instring[loc] not in self.wordChars):
+                raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+        return loc, []
+
+class WordEnd(_PositionToken):
+    """
+    Matches if the current position is at the end of a Word, and
+    is not followed by any character in a given set of C{wordChars}
+    (default=C{printables}). To emulate the C{\b} behavior of regular expressions,
+    use C{WordEnd(alphanums)}. C{WordEnd} will also match at the end of
+    the string being parsed, or at the end of a line.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, wordChars = printables):
+        super(WordEnd,self).__init__()
+        self.wordChars = set(wordChars)
+        self.skipWhitespace = False
+        self.errmsg = "Not at the end of a word"
+
+    def parseImpl(self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        instrlen = len(instring)
+        if instrlen>0 and loc maxExcLoc:
+                    maxException = err
+                    maxExcLoc = err.loc
+            except IndexError:
+                if len(instring) > maxExcLoc:
+                    maxException = ParseException(instring,len(instring),e.errmsg,self)
+                    maxExcLoc = len(instring)
+            else:
+                # save match among all matches, to retry longest to shortest
+                matches.append((loc2, e))
+
+        if matches:
+            matches.sort(key=lambda x: -x[0])
+            for _,e in matches:
+                try:
+                    return e._parse( instring, loc, doActions )
+                except ParseException as err:
+                    err.__traceback__ = None
+                    if err.loc > maxExcLoc:
+                        maxException = err
+                        maxExcLoc = err.loc
+
+        if maxException is not None:
+            maxException.msg = self.errmsg
+            raise maxException
+        else:
+            raise ParseException(instring, loc, "no defined alternatives to match", self)
+
+
+    def __ixor__(self, other ):
+        if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+            other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+        return self.append( other ) #Or( [ self, other ] )
+
+    def __str__( self ):
+        if hasattr(self,"name"):
+            return self.name
+
+        if self.strRepr is None:
+            self.strRepr = "{" + " ^ ".join(_ustr(e) for e in self.exprs) + "}"
+
+        return self.strRepr
+
+    def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ):
+        subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ]
+        for e in self.exprs:
+            e.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList )
+
+
+class MatchFirst(ParseExpression):
+    """
+    Requires that at least one C{ParseExpression} is found.
+    If two expressions match, the first one listed is the one that will match.
+    May be constructed using the C{'|'} operator.
+
+    Example::
+        # construct MatchFirst using '|' operator
+        
+        # watch the order of expressions to match
+        number = Word(nums) | Combine(Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums))
+        print(number.searchString("123 3.1416 789")) #  Fail! -> [['123'], ['3'], ['1416'], ['789']]
+
+        # put more selective expression first
+        number = Combine(Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums)) | Word(nums)
+        print(number.searchString("123 3.1416 789")) #  Better -> [['123'], ['3.1416'], ['789']]
+    """
+    def __init__( self, exprs, savelist = False ):
+        super(MatchFirst,self).__init__(exprs, savelist)
+        if self.exprs:
+            self.mayReturnEmpty = any(e.mayReturnEmpty for e in self.exprs)
+        else:
+            self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        maxExcLoc = -1
+        maxException = None
+        for e in self.exprs:
+            try:
+                ret = e._parse( instring, loc, doActions )
+                return ret
+            except ParseException as err:
+                if err.loc > maxExcLoc:
+                    maxException = err
+                    maxExcLoc = err.loc
+            except IndexError:
+                if len(instring) > maxExcLoc:
+                    maxException = ParseException(instring,len(instring),e.errmsg,self)
+                    maxExcLoc = len(instring)
+
+        # only got here if no expression matched, raise exception for match that made it the furthest
+        else:
+            if maxException is not None:
+                maxException.msg = self.errmsg
+                raise maxException
+            else:
+                raise ParseException(instring, loc, "no defined alternatives to match", self)
+
+    def __ior__(self, other ):
+        if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+            other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+        return self.append( other ) #MatchFirst( [ self, other ] )
+
+    def __str__( self ):
+        if hasattr(self,"name"):
+            return self.name
+
+        if self.strRepr is None:
+            self.strRepr = "{" + " | ".join(_ustr(e) for e in self.exprs) + "}"
+
+        return self.strRepr
+
+    def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ):
+        subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ]
+        for e in self.exprs:
+            e.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList )
+
+
+class Each(ParseExpression):
+    """
+    Requires all given C{ParseExpression}s to be found, but in any order.
+    Expressions may be separated by whitespace.
+    May be constructed using the C{'&'} operator.
+
+    Example::
+        color = oneOf("RED ORANGE YELLOW GREEN BLUE PURPLE BLACK WHITE BROWN")
+        shape_type = oneOf("SQUARE CIRCLE TRIANGLE STAR HEXAGON OCTAGON")
+        integer = Word(nums)
+        shape_attr = "shape:" + shape_type("shape")
+        posn_attr = "posn:" + Group(integer("x") + ',' + integer("y"))("posn")
+        color_attr = "color:" + color("color")
+        size_attr = "size:" + integer("size")
+
+        # use Each (using operator '&') to accept attributes in any order 
+        # (shape and posn are required, color and size are optional)
+        shape_spec = shape_attr & posn_attr & Optional(color_attr) & Optional(size_attr)
+
+        shape_spec.runTests('''
+            shape: SQUARE color: BLACK posn: 100, 120
+            shape: CIRCLE size: 50 color: BLUE posn: 50,80
+            color:GREEN size:20 shape:TRIANGLE posn:20,40
+            '''
+            )
+    prints::
+        shape: SQUARE color: BLACK posn: 100, 120
+        ['shape:', 'SQUARE', 'color:', 'BLACK', 'posn:', ['100', ',', '120']]
+        - color: BLACK
+        - posn: ['100', ',', '120']
+          - x: 100
+          - y: 120
+        - shape: SQUARE
+
+
+        shape: CIRCLE size: 50 color: BLUE posn: 50,80
+        ['shape:', 'CIRCLE', 'size:', '50', 'color:', 'BLUE', 'posn:', ['50', ',', '80']]
+        - color: BLUE
+        - posn: ['50', ',', '80']
+          - x: 50
+          - y: 80
+        - shape: CIRCLE
+        - size: 50
+
+
+        color: GREEN size: 20 shape: TRIANGLE posn: 20,40
+        ['color:', 'GREEN', 'size:', '20', 'shape:', 'TRIANGLE', 'posn:', ['20', ',', '40']]
+        - color: GREEN
+        - posn: ['20', ',', '40']
+          - x: 20
+          - y: 40
+        - shape: TRIANGLE
+        - size: 20
+    """
+    def __init__( self, exprs, savelist = True ):
+        super(Each,self).__init__(exprs, savelist)
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = all(e.mayReturnEmpty for e in self.exprs)
+        self.skipWhitespace = True
+        self.initExprGroups = True
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        if self.initExprGroups:
+            self.opt1map = dict((id(e.expr),e) for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,Optional))
+            opt1 = [ e.expr for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,Optional) ]
+            opt2 = [ e for e in self.exprs if e.mayReturnEmpty and not isinstance(e,Optional)]
+            self.optionals = opt1 + opt2
+            self.multioptionals = [ e.expr for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,ZeroOrMore) ]
+            self.multirequired = [ e.expr for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,OneOrMore) ]
+            self.required = [ e for e in self.exprs if not isinstance(e,(Optional,ZeroOrMore,OneOrMore)) ]
+            self.required += self.multirequired
+            self.initExprGroups = False
+        tmpLoc = loc
+        tmpReqd = self.required[:]
+        tmpOpt  = self.optionals[:]
+        matchOrder = []
+
+        keepMatching = True
+        while keepMatching:
+            tmpExprs = tmpReqd + tmpOpt + self.multioptionals + self.multirequired
+            failed = []
+            for e in tmpExprs:
+                try:
+                    tmpLoc = e.tryParse( instring, tmpLoc )
+                except ParseException:
+                    failed.append(e)
+                else:
+                    matchOrder.append(self.opt1map.get(id(e),e))
+                    if e in tmpReqd:
+                        tmpReqd.remove(e)
+                    elif e in tmpOpt:
+                        tmpOpt.remove(e)
+            if len(failed) == len(tmpExprs):
+                keepMatching = False
+
+        if tmpReqd:
+            missing = ", ".join(_ustr(e) for e in tmpReqd)
+            raise ParseException(instring,loc,"Missing one or more required elements (%s)" % missing )
+
+        # add any unmatched Optionals, in case they have default values defined
+        matchOrder += [e for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,Optional) and e.expr in tmpOpt]
+
+        resultlist = []
+        for e in matchOrder:
+            loc,results = e._parse(instring,loc,doActions)
+            resultlist.append(results)
+
+        finalResults = sum(resultlist, ParseResults([]))
+        return loc, finalResults
+
+    def __str__( self ):
+        if hasattr(self,"name"):
+            return self.name
+
+        if self.strRepr is None:
+            self.strRepr = "{" + " & ".join(_ustr(e) for e in self.exprs) + "}"
+
+        return self.strRepr
+
+    def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ):
+        subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ]
+        for e in self.exprs:
+            e.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList )
+
+
+class ParseElementEnhance(ParserElement):
+    """
+    Abstract subclass of C{ParserElement}, for combining and post-processing parsed tokens.
+    """
+    def __init__( self, expr, savelist=False ):
+        super(ParseElementEnhance,self).__init__(savelist)
+        if isinstance( expr, basestring ):
+            if issubclass(ParserElement._literalStringClass, Token):
+                expr = ParserElement._literalStringClass(expr)
+            else:
+                expr = ParserElement._literalStringClass(Literal(expr))
+        self.expr = expr
+        self.strRepr = None
+        if expr is not None:
+            self.mayIndexError = expr.mayIndexError
+            self.mayReturnEmpty = expr.mayReturnEmpty
+            self.setWhitespaceChars( expr.whiteChars )
+            self.skipWhitespace = expr.skipWhitespace
+            self.saveAsList = expr.saveAsList
+            self.callPreparse = expr.callPreparse
+            self.ignoreExprs.extend(expr.ignoreExprs)
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        if self.expr is not None:
+            return self.expr._parse( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse=False )
+        else:
+            raise ParseException("",loc,self.errmsg,self)
+
+    def leaveWhitespace( self ):
+        self.skipWhitespace = False
+        self.expr = self.expr.copy()
+        if self.expr is not None:
+            self.expr.leaveWhitespace()
+        return self
+
+    def ignore( self, other ):
+        if isinstance( other, Suppress ):
+            if other not in self.ignoreExprs:
+                super( ParseElementEnhance, self).ignore( other )
+                if self.expr is not None:
+                    self.expr.ignore( self.ignoreExprs[-1] )
+        else:
+            super( ParseElementEnhance, self).ignore( other )
+            if self.expr is not None:
+                self.expr.ignore( self.ignoreExprs[-1] )
+        return self
+
+    def streamline( self ):
+        super(ParseElementEnhance,self).streamline()
+        if self.expr is not None:
+            self.expr.streamline()
+        return self
+
+    def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ):
+        if self in parseElementList:
+            raise RecursiveGrammarException( parseElementList+[self] )
+        subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ]
+        if self.expr is not None:
+            self.expr.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList )
+
+    def validate( self, validateTrace=[] ):
+        tmp = validateTrace[:]+[self]
+        if self.expr is not None:
+            self.expr.validate(tmp)
+        self.checkRecursion( [] )
+
+    def __str__( self ):
+        try:
+            return super(ParseElementEnhance,self).__str__()
+        except Exception:
+            pass
+
+        if self.strRepr is None and self.expr is not None:
+            self.strRepr = "%s:(%s)" % ( self.__class__.__name__, _ustr(self.expr) )
+        return self.strRepr
+
+
+class FollowedBy(ParseElementEnhance):
+    """
+    Lookahead matching of the given parse expression.  C{FollowedBy}
+    does I{not} advance the parsing position within the input string, it only
+    verifies that the specified parse expression matches at the current
+    position.  C{FollowedBy} always returns a null token list.
+
+    Example::
+        # use FollowedBy to match a label only if it is followed by a ':'
+        data_word = Word(alphas)
+        label = data_word + FollowedBy(':')
+        attr_expr = Group(label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join))
+        
+        OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString("shape: SQUARE color: BLACK posn: upper left").pprint()
+    prints::
+        [['shape', 'SQUARE'], ['color', 'BLACK'], ['posn', 'upper left']]
+    """
+    def __init__( self, expr ):
+        super(FollowedBy,self).__init__(expr)
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        self.expr.tryParse( instring, loc )
+        return loc, []
+
+
+class NotAny(ParseElementEnhance):
+    """
+    Lookahead to disallow matching with the given parse expression.  C{NotAny}
+    does I{not} advance the parsing position within the input string, it only
+    verifies that the specified parse expression does I{not} match at the current
+    position.  Also, C{NotAny} does I{not} skip over leading whitespace. C{NotAny}
+    always returns a null token list.  May be constructed using the '~' operator.
+
+    Example::
+        
+    """
+    def __init__( self, expr ):
+        super(NotAny,self).__init__(expr)
+        #~ self.leaveWhitespace()
+        self.skipWhitespace = False  # do NOT use self.leaveWhitespace(), don't want to propagate to exprs
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+        self.errmsg = "Found unwanted token, "+_ustr(self.expr)
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        if self.expr.canParseNext(instring, loc):
+            raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+        return loc, []
+
+    def __str__( self ):
+        if hasattr(self,"name"):
+            return self.name
+
+        if self.strRepr is None:
+            self.strRepr = "~{" + _ustr(self.expr) + "}"
+
+        return self.strRepr
+
+class _MultipleMatch(ParseElementEnhance):
+    def __init__( self, expr, stopOn=None):
+        super(_MultipleMatch, self).__init__(expr)
+        self.saveAsList = True
+        ender = stopOn
+        if isinstance(ender, basestring):
+            ender = ParserElement._literalStringClass(ender)
+        self.not_ender = ~ender if ender is not None else None
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        self_expr_parse = self.expr._parse
+        self_skip_ignorables = self._skipIgnorables
+        check_ender = self.not_ender is not None
+        if check_ender:
+            try_not_ender = self.not_ender.tryParse
+        
+        # must be at least one (but first see if we are the stopOn sentinel;
+        # if so, fail)
+        if check_ender:
+            try_not_ender(instring, loc)
+        loc, tokens = self_expr_parse( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse=False )
+        try:
+            hasIgnoreExprs = (not not self.ignoreExprs)
+            while 1:
+                if check_ender:
+                    try_not_ender(instring, loc)
+                if hasIgnoreExprs:
+                    preloc = self_skip_ignorables( instring, loc )
+                else:
+                    preloc = loc
+                loc, tmptokens = self_expr_parse( instring, preloc, doActions )
+                if tmptokens or tmptokens.haskeys():
+                    tokens += tmptokens
+        except (ParseException,IndexError):
+            pass
+
+        return loc, tokens
+        
+class OneOrMore(_MultipleMatch):
+    """
+    Repetition of one or more of the given expression.
+    
+    Parameters:
+     - expr - expression that must match one or more times
+     - stopOn - (default=C{None}) - expression for a terminating sentinel
+          (only required if the sentinel would ordinarily match the repetition 
+          expression)          
+
+    Example::
+        data_word = Word(alphas)
+        label = data_word + FollowedBy(':')
+        attr_expr = Group(label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word).setParseAction(' '.join))
+
+        text = "shape: SQUARE posn: upper left color: BLACK"
+        OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString(text).pprint()  # Fail! read 'color' as data instead of next label -> [['shape', 'SQUARE color']]
+
+        # use stopOn attribute for OneOrMore to avoid reading label string as part of the data
+        attr_expr = Group(label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join))
+        OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString(text).pprint() # Better -> [['shape', 'SQUARE'], ['posn', 'upper left'], ['color', 'BLACK']]
+        
+        # could also be written as
+        (attr_expr * (1,)).parseString(text).pprint()
+    """
+
+    def __str__( self ):
+        if hasattr(self,"name"):
+            return self.name
+
+        if self.strRepr is None:
+            self.strRepr = "{" + _ustr(self.expr) + "}..."
+
+        return self.strRepr
+
+class ZeroOrMore(_MultipleMatch):
+    """
+    Optional repetition of zero or more of the given expression.
+    
+    Parameters:
+     - expr - expression that must match zero or more times
+     - stopOn - (default=C{None}) - expression for a terminating sentinel
+          (only required if the sentinel would ordinarily match the repetition 
+          expression)          
+
+    Example: similar to L{OneOrMore}
+    """
+    def __init__( self, expr, stopOn=None):
+        super(ZeroOrMore,self).__init__(expr, stopOn=stopOn)
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+        
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        try:
+            return super(ZeroOrMore, self).parseImpl(instring, loc, doActions)
+        except (ParseException,IndexError):
+            return loc, []
+
+    def __str__( self ):
+        if hasattr(self,"name"):
+            return self.name
+
+        if self.strRepr is None:
+            self.strRepr = "[" + _ustr(self.expr) + "]..."
+
+        return self.strRepr
+
+class _NullToken(object):
+    def __bool__(self):
+        return False
+    __nonzero__ = __bool__
+    def __str__(self):
+        return ""
+
+_optionalNotMatched = _NullToken()
+class Optional(ParseElementEnhance):
+    """
+    Optional matching of the given expression.
+
+    Parameters:
+     - expr - expression that must match zero or more times
+     - default (optional) - value to be returned if the optional expression is not found.
+
+    Example::
+        # US postal code can be a 5-digit zip, plus optional 4-digit qualifier
+        zip = Combine(Word(nums, exact=5) + Optional('-' + Word(nums, exact=4)))
+        zip.runTests('''
+            # traditional ZIP code
+            12345
+            
+            # ZIP+4 form
+            12101-0001
+            
+            # invalid ZIP
+            98765-
+            ''')
+    prints::
+        # traditional ZIP code
+        12345
+        ['12345']
+
+        # ZIP+4 form
+        12101-0001
+        ['12101-0001']
+
+        # invalid ZIP
+        98765-
+             ^
+        FAIL: Expected end of text (at char 5), (line:1, col:6)
+    """
+    def __init__( self, expr, default=_optionalNotMatched ):
+        super(Optional,self).__init__( expr, savelist=False )
+        self.saveAsList = self.expr.saveAsList
+        self.defaultValue = default
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        try:
+            loc, tokens = self.expr._parse( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse=False )
+        except (ParseException,IndexError):
+            if self.defaultValue is not _optionalNotMatched:
+                if self.expr.resultsName:
+                    tokens = ParseResults([ self.defaultValue ])
+                    tokens[self.expr.resultsName] = self.defaultValue
+                else:
+                    tokens = [ self.defaultValue ]
+            else:
+                tokens = []
+        return loc, tokens
+
+    def __str__( self ):
+        if hasattr(self,"name"):
+            return self.name
+
+        if self.strRepr is None:
+            self.strRepr = "[" + _ustr(self.expr) + "]"
+
+        return self.strRepr
+
+class SkipTo(ParseElementEnhance):
+    """
+    Token for skipping over all undefined text until the matched expression is found.
+
+    Parameters:
+     - expr - target expression marking the end of the data to be skipped
+     - include - (default=C{False}) if True, the target expression is also parsed 
+          (the skipped text and target expression are returned as a 2-element list).
+     - ignore - (default=C{None}) used to define grammars (typically quoted strings and 
+          comments) that might contain false matches to the target expression
+     - failOn - (default=C{None}) define expressions that are not allowed to be 
+          included in the skipped test; if found before the target expression is found, 
+          the SkipTo is not a match
+
+    Example::
+        report = '''
+            Outstanding Issues Report - 1 Jan 2000
+
+               # | Severity | Description                               |  Days Open
+            -----+----------+-------------------------------------------+-----------
+             101 | Critical | Intermittent system crash                 |          6
+              94 | Cosmetic | Spelling error on Login ('log|n')         |         14
+              79 | Minor    | System slow when running too many reports |         47
+            '''
+        integer = Word(nums)
+        SEP = Suppress('|')
+        # use SkipTo to simply match everything up until the next SEP
+        # - ignore quoted strings, so that a '|' character inside a quoted string does not match
+        # - parse action will call token.strip() for each matched token, i.e., the description body
+        string_data = SkipTo(SEP, ignore=quotedString)
+        string_data.setParseAction(tokenMap(str.strip))
+        ticket_expr = (integer("issue_num") + SEP 
+                      + string_data("sev") + SEP 
+                      + string_data("desc") + SEP 
+                      + integer("days_open"))
+        
+        for tkt in ticket_expr.searchString(report):
+            print tkt.dump()
+    prints::
+        ['101', 'Critical', 'Intermittent system crash', '6']
+        - days_open: 6
+        - desc: Intermittent system crash
+        - issue_num: 101
+        - sev: Critical
+        ['94', 'Cosmetic', "Spelling error on Login ('log|n')", '14']
+        - days_open: 14
+        - desc: Spelling error on Login ('log|n')
+        - issue_num: 94
+        - sev: Cosmetic
+        ['79', 'Minor', 'System slow when running too many reports', '47']
+        - days_open: 47
+        - desc: System slow when running too many reports
+        - issue_num: 79
+        - sev: Minor
+    """
+    def __init__( self, other, include=False, ignore=None, failOn=None ):
+        super( SkipTo, self ).__init__( other )
+        self.ignoreExpr = ignore
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+        self.mayIndexError = False
+        self.includeMatch = include
+        self.asList = False
+        if isinstance(failOn, basestring):
+            self.failOn = ParserElement._literalStringClass(failOn)
+        else:
+            self.failOn = failOn
+        self.errmsg = "No match found for "+_ustr(self.expr)
+
+    def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+        startloc = loc
+        instrlen = len(instring)
+        expr = self.expr
+        expr_parse = self.expr._parse
+        self_failOn_canParseNext = self.failOn.canParseNext if self.failOn is not None else None
+        self_ignoreExpr_tryParse = self.ignoreExpr.tryParse if self.ignoreExpr is not None else None
+        
+        tmploc = loc
+        while tmploc <= instrlen:
+            if self_failOn_canParseNext is not None:
+                # break if failOn expression matches
+                if self_failOn_canParseNext(instring, tmploc):
+                    break
+                    
+            if self_ignoreExpr_tryParse is not None:
+                # advance past ignore expressions
+                while 1:
+                    try:
+                        tmploc = self_ignoreExpr_tryParse(instring, tmploc)
+                    except ParseBaseException:
+                        break
+            
+            try:
+                expr_parse(instring, tmploc, doActions=False, callPreParse=False)
+            except (ParseException, IndexError):
+                # no match, advance loc in string
+                tmploc += 1
+            else:
+                # matched skipto expr, done
+                break
+
+        else:
+            # ran off the end of the input string without matching skipto expr, fail
+            raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+        # build up return values
+        loc = tmploc
+        skiptext = instring[startloc:loc]
+        skipresult = ParseResults(skiptext)
+        
+        if self.includeMatch:
+            loc, mat = expr_parse(instring,loc,doActions,callPreParse=False)
+            skipresult += mat
+
+        return loc, skipresult
+
+class Forward(ParseElementEnhance):
+    """
+    Forward declaration of an expression to be defined later -
+    used for recursive grammars, such as algebraic infix notation.
+    When the expression is known, it is assigned to the C{Forward} variable using the '<<' operator.
+
+    Note: take care when assigning to C{Forward} not to overlook precedence of operators.
+    Specifically, '|' has a lower precedence than '<<', so that::
+        fwdExpr << a | b | c
+    will actually be evaluated as::
+        (fwdExpr << a) | b | c
+    thereby leaving b and c out as parseable alternatives.  It is recommended that you
+    explicitly group the values inserted into the C{Forward}::
+        fwdExpr << (a | b | c)
+    Converting to use the '<<=' operator instead will avoid this problem.
+
+    See L{ParseResults.pprint} for an example of a recursive parser created using
+    C{Forward}.
+    """
+    def __init__( self, other=None ):
+        super(Forward,self).__init__( other, savelist=False )
+
+    def __lshift__( self, other ):
+        if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+            other = ParserElement._literalStringClass(other)
+        self.expr = other
+        self.strRepr = None
+        self.mayIndexError = self.expr.mayIndexError
+        self.mayReturnEmpty = self.expr.mayReturnEmpty
+        self.setWhitespaceChars( self.expr.whiteChars )
+        self.skipWhitespace = self.expr.skipWhitespace
+        self.saveAsList = self.expr.saveAsList
+        self.ignoreExprs.extend(self.expr.ignoreExprs)
+        return self
+        
+    def __ilshift__(self, other):
+        return self << other
+    
+    def leaveWhitespace( self ):
+        self.skipWhitespace = False
+        return self
+
+    def streamline( self ):
+        if not self.streamlined:
+            self.streamlined = True
+            if self.expr is not None:
+                self.expr.streamline()
+        return self
+
+    def validate( self, validateTrace=[] ):
+        if self not in validateTrace:
+            tmp = validateTrace[:]+[self]
+            if self.expr is not None:
+                self.expr.validate(tmp)
+        self.checkRecursion([])
+
+    def __str__( self ):
+        if hasattr(self,"name"):
+            return self.name
+        return self.__class__.__name__ + ": ..."
+
+        # stubbed out for now - creates awful memory and perf issues
+        self._revertClass = self.__class__
+        self.__class__ = _ForwardNoRecurse
+        try:
+            if self.expr is not None:
+                retString = _ustr(self.expr)
+            else:
+                retString = "None"
+        finally:
+            self.__class__ = self._revertClass
+        return self.__class__.__name__ + ": " + retString
+
+    def copy(self):
+        if self.expr is not None:
+            return super(Forward,self).copy()
+        else:
+            ret = Forward()
+            ret <<= self
+            return ret
+
+class _ForwardNoRecurse(Forward):
+    def __str__( self ):
+        return "..."
+
+class TokenConverter(ParseElementEnhance):
+    """
+    Abstract subclass of C{ParseExpression}, for converting parsed results.
+    """
+    def __init__( self, expr, savelist=False ):
+        super(TokenConverter,self).__init__( expr )#, savelist )
+        self.saveAsList = False
+
+class Combine(TokenConverter):
+    """
+    Converter to concatenate all matching tokens to a single string.
+    By default, the matching patterns must also be contiguous in the input string;
+    this can be disabled by specifying C{'adjacent=False'} in the constructor.
+
+    Example::
+        real = Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums)
+        print(real.parseString('3.1416')) # -> ['3', '.', '1416']
+        # will also erroneously match the following
+        print(real.parseString('3. 1416')) # -> ['3', '.', '1416']
+
+        real = Combine(Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums))
+        print(real.parseString('3.1416')) # -> ['3.1416']
+        # no match when there are internal spaces
+        print(real.parseString('3. 1416')) # -> Exception: Expected W:(0123...)
+    """
+    def __init__( self, expr, joinString="", adjacent=True ):
+        super(Combine,self).__init__( expr )
+        # suppress whitespace-stripping in contained parse expressions, but re-enable it on the Combine itself
+        if adjacent:
+            self.leaveWhitespace()
+        self.adjacent = adjacent
+        self.skipWhitespace = True
+        self.joinString = joinString
+        self.callPreparse = True
+
+    def ignore( self, other ):
+        if self.adjacent:
+            ParserElement.ignore(self, other)
+        else:
+            super( Combine, self).ignore( other )
+        return self
+
+    def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ):
+        retToks = tokenlist.copy()
+        del retToks[:]
+        retToks += ParseResults([ "".join(tokenlist._asStringList(self.joinString)) ], modal=self.modalResults)
+
+        if self.resultsName and retToks.haskeys():
+            return [ retToks ]
+        else:
+            return retToks
+
+class Group(TokenConverter):
+    """
+    Converter to return the matched tokens as a list - useful for returning tokens of C{L{ZeroOrMore}} and C{L{OneOrMore}} expressions.
+
+    Example::
+        ident = Word(alphas)
+        num = Word(nums)
+        term = ident | num
+        func = ident + Optional(delimitedList(term))
+        print(func.parseString("fn a,b,100"))  # -> ['fn', 'a', 'b', '100']
+
+        func = ident + Group(Optional(delimitedList(term)))
+        print(func.parseString("fn a,b,100"))  # -> ['fn', ['a', 'b', '100']]
+    """
+    def __init__( self, expr ):
+        super(Group,self).__init__( expr )
+        self.saveAsList = True
+
+    def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ):
+        return [ tokenlist ]
+
+class Dict(TokenConverter):
+    """
+    Converter to return a repetitive expression as a list, but also as a dictionary.
+    Each element can also be referenced using the first token in the expression as its key.
+    Useful for tabular report scraping when the first column can be used as a item key.
+
+    Example::
+        data_word = Word(alphas)
+        label = data_word + FollowedBy(':')
+        attr_expr = Group(label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word).setParseAction(' '.join))
+
+        text = "shape: SQUARE posn: upper left color: light blue texture: burlap"
+        attr_expr = (label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join))
+        
+        # print attributes as plain groups
+        print(OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString(text).dump())
+        
+        # instead of OneOrMore(expr), parse using Dict(OneOrMore(Group(expr))) - Dict will auto-assign names
+        result = Dict(OneOrMore(Group(attr_expr))).parseString(text)
+        print(result.dump())
+        
+        # access named fields as dict entries, or output as dict
+        print(result['shape'])        
+        print(result.asDict())
+    prints::
+        ['shape', 'SQUARE', 'posn', 'upper left', 'color', 'light blue', 'texture', 'burlap']
+
+        [['shape', 'SQUARE'], ['posn', 'upper left'], ['color', 'light blue'], ['texture', 'burlap']]
+        - color: light blue
+        - posn: upper left
+        - shape: SQUARE
+        - texture: burlap
+        SQUARE
+        {'color': 'light blue', 'posn': 'upper left', 'texture': 'burlap', 'shape': 'SQUARE'}
+    See more examples at L{ParseResults} of accessing fields by results name.
+    """
+    def __init__( self, expr ):
+        super(Dict,self).__init__( expr )
+        self.saveAsList = True
+
+    def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ):
+        for i,tok in enumerate(tokenlist):
+            if len(tok) == 0:
+                continue
+            ikey = tok[0]
+            if isinstance(ikey,int):
+                ikey = _ustr(tok[0]).strip()
+            if len(tok)==1:
+                tokenlist[ikey] = _ParseResultsWithOffset("",i)
+            elif len(tok)==2 and not isinstance(tok[1],ParseResults):
+                tokenlist[ikey] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(tok[1],i)
+            else:
+                dictvalue = tok.copy() #ParseResults(i)
+                del dictvalue[0]
+                if len(dictvalue)!= 1 or (isinstance(dictvalue,ParseResults) and dictvalue.haskeys()):
+                    tokenlist[ikey] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(dictvalue,i)
+                else:
+                    tokenlist[ikey] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(dictvalue[0],i)
+
+        if self.resultsName:
+            return [ tokenlist ]
+        else:
+            return tokenlist
+
+
+class Suppress(TokenConverter):
+    """
+    Converter for ignoring the results of a parsed expression.
+
+    Example::
+        source = "a, b, c,d"
+        wd = Word(alphas)
+        wd_list1 = wd + ZeroOrMore(',' + wd)
+        print(wd_list1.parseString(source))
+
+        # often, delimiters that are useful during parsing are just in the
+        # way afterward - use Suppress to keep them out of the parsed output
+        wd_list2 = wd + ZeroOrMore(Suppress(',') + wd)
+        print(wd_list2.parseString(source))
+    prints::
+        ['a', ',', 'b', ',', 'c', ',', 'd']
+        ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']
+    (See also L{delimitedList}.)
+    """
+    def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ):
+        return []
+
+    def suppress( self ):
+        return self
+
+
+class OnlyOnce(object):
+    """
+    Wrapper for parse actions, to ensure they are only called once.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, methodCall):
+        self.callable = _trim_arity(methodCall)
+        self.called = False
+    def __call__(self,s,l,t):
+        if not self.called:
+            results = self.callable(s,l,t)
+            self.called = True
+            return results
+        raise ParseException(s,l,"")
+    def reset(self):
+        self.called = False
+
+def traceParseAction(f):
+    """
+    Decorator for debugging parse actions. 
+    
+    When the parse action is called, this decorator will print C{">> entering I{method-name}(line:I{current_source_line}, I{parse_location}, I{matched_tokens})".}
+    When the parse action completes, the decorator will print C{"<<"} followed by the returned value, or any exception that the parse action raised.
+
+    Example::
+        wd = Word(alphas)
+
+        @traceParseAction
+        def remove_duplicate_chars(tokens):
+            return ''.join(sorted(set(''.join(tokens))))
+
+        wds = OneOrMore(wd).setParseAction(remove_duplicate_chars)
+        print(wds.parseString("slkdjs sld sldd sdlf sdljf"))
+    prints::
+        >>entering remove_duplicate_chars(line: 'slkdjs sld sldd sdlf sdljf', 0, (['slkdjs', 'sld', 'sldd', 'sdlf', 'sdljf'], {}))
+        <3:
+            thisFunc = paArgs[0].__class__.__name__ + '.' + thisFunc
+        sys.stderr.write( ">>entering %s(line: '%s', %d, %r)\n" % (thisFunc,line(l,s),l,t) )
+        try:
+            ret = f(*paArgs)
+        except Exception as exc:
+            sys.stderr.write( "< ['aa', 'bb', 'cc']
+        delimitedList(Word(hexnums), delim=':', combine=True).parseString("AA:BB:CC:DD:EE") # -> ['AA:BB:CC:DD:EE']
+    """
+    dlName = _ustr(expr)+" ["+_ustr(delim)+" "+_ustr(expr)+"]..."
+    if combine:
+        return Combine( expr + ZeroOrMore( delim + expr ) ).setName(dlName)
+    else:
+        return ( expr + ZeroOrMore( Suppress( delim ) + expr ) ).setName(dlName)
+
+def countedArray( expr, intExpr=None ):
+    """
+    Helper to define a counted list of expressions.
+    This helper defines a pattern of the form::
+        integer expr expr expr...
+    where the leading integer tells how many expr expressions follow.
+    The matched tokens returns the array of expr tokens as a list - the leading count token is suppressed.
+    
+    If C{intExpr} is specified, it should be a pyparsing expression that produces an integer value.
+
+    Example::
+        countedArray(Word(alphas)).parseString('2 ab cd ef')  # -> ['ab', 'cd']
+
+        # in this parser, the leading integer value is given in binary,
+        # '10' indicating that 2 values are in the array
+        binaryConstant = Word('01').setParseAction(lambda t: int(t[0], 2))
+        countedArray(Word(alphas), intExpr=binaryConstant).parseString('10 ab cd ef')  # -> ['ab', 'cd']
+    """
+    arrayExpr = Forward()
+    def countFieldParseAction(s,l,t):
+        n = t[0]
+        arrayExpr << (n and Group(And([expr]*n)) or Group(empty))
+        return []
+    if intExpr is None:
+        intExpr = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda t:int(t[0]))
+    else:
+        intExpr = intExpr.copy()
+    intExpr.setName("arrayLen")
+    intExpr.addParseAction(countFieldParseAction, callDuringTry=True)
+    return ( intExpr + arrayExpr ).setName('(len) ' + _ustr(expr) + '...')
+
+def _flatten(L):
+    ret = []
+    for i in L:
+        if isinstance(i,list):
+            ret.extend(_flatten(i))
+        else:
+            ret.append(i)
+    return ret
+
+def matchPreviousLiteral(expr):
+    """
+    Helper to define an expression that is indirectly defined from
+    the tokens matched in a previous expression, that is, it looks
+    for a 'repeat' of a previous expression.  For example::
+        first = Word(nums)
+        second = matchPreviousLiteral(first)
+        matchExpr = first + ":" + second
+    will match C{"1:1"}, but not C{"1:2"}.  Because this matches a
+    previous literal, will also match the leading C{"1:1"} in C{"1:10"}.
+    If this is not desired, use C{matchPreviousExpr}.
+    Do I{not} use with packrat parsing enabled.
+    """
+    rep = Forward()
+    def copyTokenToRepeater(s,l,t):
+        if t:
+            if len(t) == 1:
+                rep << t[0]
+            else:
+                # flatten t tokens
+                tflat = _flatten(t.asList())
+                rep << And(Literal(tt) for tt in tflat)
+        else:
+            rep << Empty()
+    expr.addParseAction(copyTokenToRepeater, callDuringTry=True)
+    rep.setName('(prev) ' + _ustr(expr))
+    return rep
+
+def matchPreviousExpr(expr):
+    """
+    Helper to define an expression that is indirectly defined from
+    the tokens matched in a previous expression, that is, it looks
+    for a 'repeat' of a previous expression.  For example::
+        first = Word(nums)
+        second = matchPreviousExpr(first)
+        matchExpr = first + ":" + second
+    will match C{"1:1"}, but not C{"1:2"}.  Because this matches by
+    expressions, will I{not} match the leading C{"1:1"} in C{"1:10"};
+    the expressions are evaluated first, and then compared, so
+    C{"1"} is compared with C{"10"}.
+    Do I{not} use with packrat parsing enabled.
+    """
+    rep = Forward()
+    e2 = expr.copy()
+    rep <<= e2
+    def copyTokenToRepeater(s,l,t):
+        matchTokens = _flatten(t.asList())
+        def mustMatchTheseTokens(s,l,t):
+            theseTokens = _flatten(t.asList())
+            if  theseTokens != matchTokens:
+                raise ParseException("",0,"")
+        rep.setParseAction( mustMatchTheseTokens, callDuringTry=True )
+    expr.addParseAction(copyTokenToRepeater, callDuringTry=True)
+    rep.setName('(prev) ' + _ustr(expr))
+    return rep
+
+def _escapeRegexRangeChars(s):
+    #~  escape these chars: ^-]
+    for c in r"\^-]":
+        s = s.replace(c,_bslash+c)
+    s = s.replace("\n",r"\n")
+    s = s.replace("\t",r"\t")
+    return _ustr(s)
+
+def oneOf( strs, caseless=False, useRegex=True ):
+    """
+    Helper to quickly define a set of alternative Literals, and makes sure to do
+    longest-first testing when there is a conflict, regardless of the input order,
+    but returns a C{L{MatchFirst}} for best performance.
+
+    Parameters:
+     - strs - a string of space-delimited literals, or a collection of string literals
+     - caseless - (default=C{False}) - treat all literals as caseless
+     - useRegex - (default=C{True}) - as an optimization, will generate a Regex
+          object; otherwise, will generate a C{MatchFirst} object (if C{caseless=True}, or
+          if creating a C{Regex} raises an exception)
+
+    Example::
+        comp_oper = oneOf("< = > <= >= !=")
+        var = Word(alphas)
+        number = Word(nums)
+        term = var | number
+        comparison_expr = term + comp_oper + term
+        print(comparison_expr.searchString("B = 12  AA=23 B<=AA AA>12"))
+    prints::
+        [['B', '=', '12'], ['AA', '=', '23'], ['B', '<=', 'AA'], ['AA', '>', '12']]
+    """
+    if caseless:
+        isequal = ( lambda a,b: a.upper() == b.upper() )
+        masks = ( lambda a,b: b.upper().startswith(a.upper()) )
+        parseElementClass = CaselessLiteral
+    else:
+        isequal = ( lambda a,b: a == b )
+        masks = ( lambda a,b: b.startswith(a) )
+        parseElementClass = Literal
+
+    symbols = []
+    if isinstance(strs,basestring):
+        symbols = strs.split()
+    elif isinstance(strs, Iterable):
+        symbols = list(strs)
+    else:
+        warnings.warn("Invalid argument to oneOf, expected string or iterable",
+                SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+    if not symbols:
+        return NoMatch()
+
+    i = 0
+    while i < len(symbols)-1:
+        cur = symbols[i]
+        for j,other in enumerate(symbols[i+1:]):
+            if ( isequal(other, cur) ):
+                del symbols[i+j+1]
+                break
+            elif ( masks(cur, other) ):
+                del symbols[i+j+1]
+                symbols.insert(i,other)
+                cur = other
+                break
+        else:
+            i += 1
+
+    if not caseless and useRegex:
+        #~ print (strs,"->", "|".join( [ _escapeRegexChars(sym) for sym in symbols] ))
+        try:
+            if len(symbols)==len("".join(symbols)):
+                return Regex( "[%s]" % "".join(_escapeRegexRangeChars(sym) for sym in symbols) ).setName(' | '.join(symbols))
+            else:
+                return Regex( "|".join(re.escape(sym) for sym in symbols) ).setName(' | '.join(symbols))
+        except Exception:
+            warnings.warn("Exception creating Regex for oneOf, building MatchFirst",
+                    SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+
+
+    # last resort, just use MatchFirst
+    return MatchFirst(parseElementClass(sym) for sym in symbols).setName(' | '.join(symbols))
+
+def dictOf( key, value ):
+    """
+    Helper to easily and clearly define a dictionary by specifying the respective patterns
+    for the key and value.  Takes care of defining the C{L{Dict}}, C{L{ZeroOrMore}}, and C{L{Group}} tokens
+    in the proper order.  The key pattern can include delimiting markers or punctuation,
+    as long as they are suppressed, thereby leaving the significant key text.  The value
+    pattern can include named results, so that the C{Dict} results can include named token
+    fields.
+
+    Example::
+        text = "shape: SQUARE posn: upper left color: light blue texture: burlap"
+        attr_expr = (label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join))
+        print(OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString(text).dump())
+        
+        attr_label = label
+        attr_value = Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join)
+
+        # similar to Dict, but simpler call format
+        result = dictOf(attr_label, attr_value).parseString(text)
+        print(result.dump())
+        print(result['shape'])
+        print(result.shape)  # object attribute access works too
+        print(result.asDict())
+    prints::
+        [['shape', 'SQUARE'], ['posn', 'upper left'], ['color', 'light blue'], ['texture', 'burlap']]
+        - color: light blue
+        - posn: upper left
+        - shape: SQUARE
+        - texture: burlap
+        SQUARE
+        SQUARE
+        {'color': 'light blue', 'shape': 'SQUARE', 'posn': 'upper left', 'texture': 'burlap'}
+    """
+    return Dict( ZeroOrMore( Group ( key + value ) ) )
+
+def originalTextFor(expr, asString=True):
+    """
+    Helper to return the original, untokenized text for a given expression.  Useful to
+    restore the parsed fields of an HTML start tag into the raw tag text itself, or to
+    revert separate tokens with intervening whitespace back to the original matching
+    input text. By default, returns astring containing the original parsed text.  
+       
+    If the optional C{asString} argument is passed as C{False}, then the return value is a 
+    C{L{ParseResults}} containing any results names that were originally matched, and a 
+    single token containing the original matched text from the input string.  So if 
+    the expression passed to C{L{originalTextFor}} contains expressions with defined
+    results names, you must set C{asString} to C{False} if you want to preserve those
+    results name values.
+
+    Example::
+        src = "this is test  bold text  normal text "
+        for tag in ("b","i"):
+            opener,closer = makeHTMLTags(tag)
+            patt = originalTextFor(opener + SkipTo(closer) + closer)
+            print(patt.searchString(src)[0])
+    prints::
+        [' bold text ']
+        ['text']
+    """
+    locMarker = Empty().setParseAction(lambda s,loc,t: loc)
+    endlocMarker = locMarker.copy()
+    endlocMarker.callPreparse = False
+    matchExpr = locMarker("_original_start") + expr + endlocMarker("_original_end")
+    if asString:
+        extractText = lambda s,l,t: s[t._original_start:t._original_end]
+    else:
+        def extractText(s,l,t):
+            t[:] = [s[t.pop('_original_start'):t.pop('_original_end')]]
+    matchExpr.setParseAction(extractText)
+    matchExpr.ignoreExprs = expr.ignoreExprs
+    return matchExpr
+
+def ungroup(expr): 
+    """
+    Helper to undo pyparsing's default grouping of And expressions, even
+    if all but one are non-empty.
+    """
+    return TokenConverter(expr).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0])
+
+def locatedExpr(expr):
+    """
+    Helper to decorate a returned token with its starting and ending locations in the input string.
+    This helper adds the following results names:
+     - locn_start = location where matched expression begins
+     - locn_end = location where matched expression ends
+     - value = the actual parsed results
+
+    Be careful if the input text contains C{} characters, you may want to call
+    C{L{ParserElement.parseWithTabs}}
+
+    Example::
+        wd = Word(alphas)
+        for match in locatedExpr(wd).searchString("ljsdf123lksdjjf123lkkjj1222"):
+            print(match)
+    prints::
+        [[0, 'ljsdf', 5]]
+        [[8, 'lksdjjf', 15]]
+        [[18, 'lkkjj', 23]]
+    """
+    locator = Empty().setParseAction(lambda s,l,t: l)
+    return Group(locator("locn_start") + expr("value") + locator.copy().leaveWhitespace()("locn_end"))
+
+
+# convenience constants for positional expressions
+empty       = Empty().setName("empty")
+lineStart   = LineStart().setName("lineStart")
+lineEnd     = LineEnd().setName("lineEnd")
+stringStart = StringStart().setName("stringStart")
+stringEnd   = StringEnd().setName("stringEnd")
+
+_escapedPunc = Word( _bslash, r"\[]-*.$+^?()~ ", exact=2 ).setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:t[0][1])
+_escapedHexChar = Regex(r"\\0?[xX][0-9a-fA-F]+").setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:unichr(int(t[0].lstrip(r'\0x'),16)))
+_escapedOctChar = Regex(r"\\0[0-7]+").setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:unichr(int(t[0][1:],8)))
+_singleChar = _escapedPunc | _escapedHexChar | _escapedOctChar | CharsNotIn(r'\]', exact=1)
+_charRange = Group(_singleChar + Suppress("-") + _singleChar)
+_reBracketExpr = Literal("[") + Optional("^").setResultsName("negate") + Group( OneOrMore( _charRange | _singleChar ) ).setResultsName("body") + "]"
+
+def srange(s):
+    r"""
+    Helper to easily define string ranges for use in Word construction.  Borrows
+    syntax from regexp '[]' string range definitions::
+        srange("[0-9]")   -> "0123456789"
+        srange("[a-z]")   -> "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"
+        srange("[a-z$_]") -> "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz$_"
+    The input string must be enclosed in []'s, and the returned string is the expanded
+    character set joined into a single string.
+    The values enclosed in the []'s may be:
+     - a single character
+     - an escaped character with a leading backslash (such as C{\-} or C{\]})
+     - an escaped hex character with a leading C{'\x'} (C{\x21}, which is a C{'!'} character) 
+         (C{\0x##} is also supported for backwards compatibility) 
+     - an escaped octal character with a leading C{'\0'} (C{\041}, which is a C{'!'} character)
+     - a range of any of the above, separated by a dash (C{'a-z'}, etc.)
+     - any combination of the above (C{'aeiouy'}, C{'a-zA-Z0-9_$'}, etc.)
+    """
+    _expanded = lambda p: p if not isinstance(p,ParseResults) else ''.join(unichr(c) for c in range(ord(p[0]),ord(p[1])+1))
+    try:
+        return "".join(_expanded(part) for part in _reBracketExpr.parseString(s).body)
+    except Exception:
+        return ""
+
+def matchOnlyAtCol(n):
+    """
+    Helper method for defining parse actions that require matching at a specific
+    column in the input text.
+    """
+    def verifyCol(strg,locn,toks):
+        if col(locn,strg) != n:
+            raise ParseException(strg,locn,"matched token not at column %d" % n)
+    return verifyCol
+
+def replaceWith(replStr):
+    """
+    Helper method for common parse actions that simply return a literal value.  Especially
+    useful when used with C{L{transformString}()}.
+
+    Example::
+        num = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda toks: int(toks[0]))
+        na = oneOf("N/A NA").setParseAction(replaceWith(math.nan))
+        term = na | num
+        
+        OneOrMore(term).parseString("324 234 N/A 234") # -> [324, 234, nan, 234]
+    """
+    return lambda s,l,t: [replStr]
+
+def removeQuotes(s,l,t):
+    """
+    Helper parse action for removing quotation marks from parsed quoted strings.
+
+    Example::
+        # by default, quotation marks are included in parsed results
+        quotedString.parseString("'Now is the Winter of our Discontent'") # -> ["'Now is the Winter of our Discontent'"]
+
+        # use removeQuotes to strip quotation marks from parsed results
+        quotedString.setParseAction(removeQuotes)
+        quotedString.parseString("'Now is the Winter of our Discontent'") # -> ["Now is the Winter of our Discontent"]
+    """
+    return t[0][1:-1]
+
+def tokenMap(func, *args):
+    """
+    Helper to define a parse action by mapping a function to all elements of a ParseResults list.If any additional 
+    args are passed, they are forwarded to the given function as additional arguments after
+    the token, as in C{hex_integer = Word(hexnums).setParseAction(tokenMap(int, 16))}, which will convert the
+    parsed data to an integer using base 16.
+
+    Example (compare the last to example in L{ParserElement.transformString}::
+        hex_ints = OneOrMore(Word(hexnums)).setParseAction(tokenMap(int, 16))
+        hex_ints.runTests('''
+            00 11 22 aa FF 0a 0d 1a
+            ''')
+        
+        upperword = Word(alphas).setParseAction(tokenMap(str.upper))
+        OneOrMore(upperword).runTests('''
+            my kingdom for a horse
+            ''')
+
+        wd = Word(alphas).setParseAction(tokenMap(str.title))
+        OneOrMore(wd).setParseAction(' '.join).runTests('''
+            now is the winter of our discontent made glorious summer by this sun of york
+            ''')
+    prints::
+        00 11 22 aa FF 0a 0d 1a
+        [0, 17, 34, 170, 255, 10, 13, 26]
+
+        my kingdom for a horse
+        ['MY', 'KINGDOM', 'FOR', 'A', 'HORSE']
+
+        now is the winter of our discontent made glorious summer by this sun of york
+        ['Now Is The Winter Of Our Discontent Made Glorious Summer By This Sun Of York']
+    """
+    def pa(s,l,t):
+        return [func(tokn, *args) for tokn in t]
+
+    try:
+        func_name = getattr(func, '__name__', 
+                            getattr(func, '__class__').__name__)
+    except Exception:
+        func_name = str(func)
+    pa.__name__ = func_name
+
+    return pa
+
+upcaseTokens = tokenMap(lambda t: _ustr(t).upper())
+"""(Deprecated) Helper parse action to convert tokens to upper case. Deprecated in favor of L{pyparsing_common.upcaseTokens}"""
+
+downcaseTokens = tokenMap(lambda t: _ustr(t).lower())
+"""(Deprecated) Helper parse action to convert tokens to lower case. Deprecated in favor of L{pyparsing_common.downcaseTokens}"""
+    
+def _makeTags(tagStr, xml):
+    """Internal helper to construct opening and closing tag expressions, given a tag name"""
+    if isinstance(tagStr,basestring):
+        resname = tagStr
+        tagStr = Keyword(tagStr, caseless=not xml)
+    else:
+        resname = tagStr.name
+
+    tagAttrName = Word(alphas,alphanums+"_-:")
+    if (xml):
+        tagAttrValue = dblQuotedString.copy().setParseAction( removeQuotes )
+        openTag = Suppress("<") + tagStr("tag") + \
+                Dict(ZeroOrMore(Group( tagAttrName + Suppress("=") + tagAttrValue ))) + \
+                Optional("/",default=[False]).setResultsName("empty").setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:t[0]=='/') + Suppress(">")
+    else:
+        printablesLessRAbrack = "".join(c for c in printables if c not in ">")
+        tagAttrValue = quotedString.copy().setParseAction( removeQuotes ) | Word(printablesLessRAbrack)
+        openTag = Suppress("<") + tagStr("tag") + \
+                Dict(ZeroOrMore(Group( tagAttrName.setParseAction(downcaseTokens) + \
+                Optional( Suppress("=") + tagAttrValue ) ))) + \
+                Optional("/",default=[False]).setResultsName("empty").setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:t[0]=='/') + Suppress(">")
+    closeTag = Combine(_L("")
+
+    openTag = openTag.setResultsName("start"+"".join(resname.replace(":"," ").title().split())).setName("<%s>" % resname)
+    closeTag = closeTag.setResultsName("end"+"".join(resname.replace(":"," ").title().split())).setName("" % resname)
+    openTag.tag = resname
+    closeTag.tag = resname
+    return openTag, closeTag
+
+def makeHTMLTags(tagStr):
+    """
+    Helper to construct opening and closing tag expressions for HTML, given a tag name. Matches
+    tags in either upper or lower case, attributes with namespaces and with quoted or unquoted values.
+
+    Example::
+        text = 'More info at the pyparsing wiki page'
+        # makeHTMLTags returns pyparsing expressions for the opening and closing tags as a 2-tuple
+        a,a_end = makeHTMLTags("A")
+        link_expr = a + SkipTo(a_end)("link_text") + a_end
+        
+        for link in link_expr.searchString(text):
+            # attributes in the  tag (like "href" shown here) are also accessible as named results
+            print(link.link_text, '->', link.href)
+    prints::
+        pyparsing -> http://pyparsing.wikispaces.com
+    """
+    return _makeTags( tagStr, False )
+
+def makeXMLTags(tagStr):
+    """
+    Helper to construct opening and closing tag expressions for XML, given a tag name. Matches
+    tags only in the given upper/lower case.
+
+    Example: similar to L{makeHTMLTags}
+    """
+    return _makeTags( tagStr, True )
+
+def withAttribute(*args,**attrDict):
+    """
+    Helper to create a validating parse action to be used with start tags created
+    with C{L{makeXMLTags}} or C{L{makeHTMLTags}}. Use C{withAttribute} to qualify a starting tag
+    with a required attribute value, to avoid false matches on common tags such as
+    C{} or C{
}. + + Call C{withAttribute} with a series of attribute names and values. Specify the list + of filter attributes names and values as: + - keyword arguments, as in C{(align="right")}, or + - as an explicit dict with C{**} operator, when an attribute name is also a Python + reserved word, as in C{**{"class":"Customer", "align":"right"}} + - a list of name-value tuples, as in ( ("ns1:class", "Customer"), ("ns2:align","right") ) + For attribute names with a namespace prefix, you must use the second form. Attribute + names are matched insensitive to upper/lower case. + + If just testing for C{class} (with or without a namespace), use C{L{withClass}}. + + To verify that the attribute exists, but without specifying a value, pass + C{withAttribute.ANY_VALUE} as the value. + + Example:: + html = ''' +
+ Some text +
1 4 0 1 0
+
1,3 2,3 1,1
+
this has no type
+
+ + ''' + div,div_end = makeHTMLTags("div") + + # only match div tag having a type attribute with value "grid" + div_grid = div().setParseAction(withAttribute(type="grid")) + grid_expr = div_grid + SkipTo(div | div_end)("body") + for grid_header in grid_expr.searchString(html): + print(grid_header.body) + + # construct a match with any div tag having a type attribute, regardless of the value + div_any_type = div().setParseAction(withAttribute(type=withAttribute.ANY_VALUE)) + div_expr = div_any_type + SkipTo(div | div_end)("body") + for div_header in div_expr.searchString(html): + print(div_header.body) + prints:: + 1 4 0 1 0 + + 1 4 0 1 0 + 1,3 2,3 1,1 + """ + if args: + attrs = args[:] + else: + attrs = attrDict.items() + attrs = [(k,v) for k,v in attrs] + def pa(s,l,tokens): + for attrName,attrValue in attrs: + if attrName not in tokens: + raise ParseException(s,l,"no matching attribute " + attrName) + if attrValue != withAttribute.ANY_VALUE and tokens[attrName] != attrValue: + raise ParseException(s,l,"attribute '%s' has value '%s', must be '%s'" % + (attrName, tokens[attrName], attrValue)) + return pa +withAttribute.ANY_VALUE = object() + +def withClass(classname, namespace=''): + """ + Simplified version of C{L{withAttribute}} when matching on a div class - made + difficult because C{class} is a reserved word in Python. + + Example:: + html = ''' +
+ Some text +
1 4 0 1 0
+
1,3 2,3 1,1
+
this <div> has no class
+
+ + ''' + div,div_end = makeHTMLTags("div") + div_grid = div().setParseAction(withClass("grid")) + + grid_expr = div_grid + SkipTo(div | div_end)("body") + for grid_header in grid_expr.searchString(html): + print(grid_header.body) + + div_any_type = div().setParseAction(withClass(withAttribute.ANY_VALUE)) + div_expr = div_any_type + SkipTo(div | div_end)("body") + for div_header in div_expr.searchString(html): + print(div_header.body) + prints:: + 1 4 0 1 0 + + 1 4 0 1 0 + 1,3 2,3 1,1 + """ + classattr = "%s:class" % namespace if namespace else "class" + return withAttribute(**{classattr : classname}) + +opAssoc = _Constants() +opAssoc.LEFT = object() +opAssoc.RIGHT = object() + +def infixNotation( baseExpr, opList, lpar=Suppress('('), rpar=Suppress(')') ): + """ + Helper method for constructing grammars of expressions made up of + operators working in a precedence hierarchy. Operators may be unary or + binary, left- or right-associative. Parse actions can also be attached + to operator expressions. The generated parser will also recognize the use + of parentheses to override operator precedences (see example below). + + Note: if you define a deep operator list, you may see performance issues + when using infixNotation. See L{ParserElement.enablePackrat} for a + mechanism to potentially improve your parser performance. + + Parameters: + - baseExpr - expression representing the most basic element for the nested + - opList - list of tuples, one for each operator precedence level in the + expression grammar; each tuple is of the form + (opExpr, numTerms, rightLeftAssoc, parseAction), where: + - opExpr is the pyparsing expression for the operator; + may also be a string, which will be converted to a Literal; + if numTerms is 3, opExpr is a tuple of two expressions, for the + two operators separating the 3 terms + - numTerms is the number of terms for this operator (must + be 1, 2, or 3) + - rightLeftAssoc is the indicator whether the operator is + right or left associative, using the pyparsing-defined + constants C{opAssoc.RIGHT} and C{opAssoc.LEFT}. + - parseAction is the parse action to be associated with + expressions matching this operator expression (the + parse action tuple member may be omitted); if the parse action + is passed a tuple or list of functions, this is equivalent to + calling C{setParseAction(*fn)} (L{ParserElement.setParseAction}) + - lpar - expression for matching left-parentheses (default=C{Suppress('(')}) + - rpar - expression for matching right-parentheses (default=C{Suppress(')')}) + + Example:: + # simple example of four-function arithmetic with ints and variable names + integer = pyparsing_common.signed_integer + varname = pyparsing_common.identifier + + arith_expr = infixNotation(integer | varname, + [ + ('-', 1, opAssoc.RIGHT), + (oneOf('* /'), 2, opAssoc.LEFT), + (oneOf('+ -'), 2, opAssoc.LEFT), + ]) + + arith_expr.runTests(''' + 5+3*6 + (5+3)*6 + -2--11 + ''', fullDump=False) + prints:: + 5+3*6 + [[5, '+', [3, '*', 6]]] + + (5+3)*6 + [[[5, '+', 3], '*', 6]] + + -2--11 + [[['-', 2], '-', ['-', 11]]] + """ + ret = Forward() + lastExpr = baseExpr | ( lpar + ret + rpar ) + for i,operDef in enumerate(opList): + opExpr,arity,rightLeftAssoc,pa = (operDef + (None,))[:4] + termName = "%s term" % opExpr if arity < 3 else "%s%s term" % opExpr + if arity == 3: + if opExpr is None or len(opExpr) != 2: + raise ValueError("if numterms=3, opExpr must be a tuple or list of two expressions") + opExpr1, opExpr2 = opExpr + thisExpr = Forward().setName(termName) + if rightLeftAssoc == opAssoc.LEFT: + if arity == 1: + matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore( opExpr ) ) + elif arity == 2: + if opExpr is not None: + matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr + lastExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore( opExpr + lastExpr ) ) + else: + matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr+lastExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore(lastExpr) ) + elif arity == 3: + matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr1 + lastExpr + opExpr2 + lastExpr) + \ + Group( lastExpr + opExpr1 + lastExpr + opExpr2 + lastExpr ) + else: + raise ValueError("operator must be unary (1), binary (2), or ternary (3)") + elif rightLeftAssoc == opAssoc.RIGHT: + if arity == 1: + # try to avoid LR with this extra test + if not isinstance(opExpr, Optional): + opExpr = Optional(opExpr) + matchExpr = FollowedBy(opExpr.expr + thisExpr) + Group( opExpr + thisExpr ) + elif arity == 2: + if opExpr is not None: + matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr + thisExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore( opExpr + thisExpr ) ) + else: + matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + thisExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore( thisExpr ) ) + elif arity == 3: + matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr1 + thisExpr + opExpr2 + thisExpr) + \ + Group( lastExpr + opExpr1 + thisExpr + opExpr2 + thisExpr ) + else: + raise ValueError("operator must be unary (1), binary (2), or ternary (3)") + else: + raise ValueError("operator must indicate right or left associativity") + if pa: + if isinstance(pa, (tuple, list)): + matchExpr.setParseAction(*pa) + else: + matchExpr.setParseAction(pa) + thisExpr <<= ( matchExpr.setName(termName) | lastExpr ) + lastExpr = thisExpr + ret <<= lastExpr + return ret + +operatorPrecedence = infixNotation +"""(Deprecated) Former name of C{L{infixNotation}}, will be dropped in a future release.""" + +dblQuotedString = Combine(Regex(r'"(?:[^"\n\r\\]|(?:"")|(?:\\(?:[^x]|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)))*')+'"').setName("string enclosed in double quotes") +sglQuotedString = Combine(Regex(r"'(?:[^'\n\r\\]|(?:'')|(?:\\(?:[^x]|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)))*")+"'").setName("string enclosed in single quotes") +quotedString = Combine(Regex(r'"(?:[^"\n\r\\]|(?:"")|(?:\\(?:[^x]|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)))*')+'"'| + Regex(r"'(?:[^'\n\r\\]|(?:'')|(?:\\(?:[^x]|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)))*")+"'").setName("quotedString using single or double quotes") +unicodeString = Combine(_L('u') + quotedString.copy()).setName("unicode string literal") + +def nestedExpr(opener="(", closer=")", content=None, ignoreExpr=quotedString.copy()): + """ + Helper method for defining nested lists enclosed in opening and closing + delimiters ("(" and ")" are the default). + + Parameters: + - opener - opening character for a nested list (default=C{"("}); can also be a pyparsing expression + - closer - closing character for a nested list (default=C{")"}); can also be a pyparsing expression + - content - expression for items within the nested lists (default=C{None}) + - ignoreExpr - expression for ignoring opening and closing delimiters (default=C{quotedString}) + + If an expression is not provided for the content argument, the nested + expression will capture all whitespace-delimited content between delimiters + as a list of separate values. + + Use the C{ignoreExpr} argument to define expressions that may contain + opening or closing characters that should not be treated as opening + or closing characters for nesting, such as quotedString or a comment + expression. Specify multiple expressions using an C{L{Or}} or C{L{MatchFirst}}. + The default is L{quotedString}, but if no expressions are to be ignored, + then pass C{None} for this argument. + + Example:: + data_type = oneOf("void int short long char float double") + decl_data_type = Combine(data_type + Optional(Word('*'))) + ident = Word(alphas+'_', alphanums+'_') + number = pyparsing_common.number + arg = Group(decl_data_type + ident) + LPAR,RPAR = map(Suppress, "()") + + code_body = nestedExpr('{', '}', ignoreExpr=(quotedString | cStyleComment)) + + c_function = (decl_data_type("type") + + ident("name") + + LPAR + Optional(delimitedList(arg), [])("args") + RPAR + + code_body("body")) + c_function.ignore(cStyleComment) + + source_code = ''' + int is_odd(int x) { + return (x%2); + } + + int dec_to_hex(char hchar) { + if (hchar >= '0' && hchar <= '9') { + return (ord(hchar)-ord('0')); + } else { + return (10+ord(hchar)-ord('A')); + } + } + ''' + for func in c_function.searchString(source_code): + print("%(name)s (%(type)s) args: %(args)s" % func) + + prints:: + is_odd (int) args: [['int', 'x']] + dec_to_hex (int) args: [['char', 'hchar']] + """ + if opener == closer: + raise ValueError("opening and closing strings cannot be the same") + if content is None: + if isinstance(opener,basestring) and isinstance(closer,basestring): + if len(opener) == 1 and len(closer)==1: + if ignoreExpr is not None: + content = (Combine(OneOrMore(~ignoreExpr + + CharsNotIn(opener+closer+ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS,exact=1)) + ).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0].strip())) + else: + content = (empty.copy()+CharsNotIn(opener+closer+ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS + ).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0].strip())) + else: + if ignoreExpr is not None: + content = (Combine(OneOrMore(~ignoreExpr + + ~Literal(opener) + ~Literal(closer) + + CharsNotIn(ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS,exact=1)) + ).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0].strip())) + else: + content = (Combine(OneOrMore(~Literal(opener) + ~Literal(closer) + + CharsNotIn(ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS,exact=1)) + ).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0].strip())) + else: + raise ValueError("opening and closing arguments must be strings if no content expression is given") + ret = Forward() + if ignoreExpr is not None: + ret <<= Group( Suppress(opener) + ZeroOrMore( ignoreExpr | ret | content ) + Suppress(closer) ) + else: + ret <<= Group( Suppress(opener) + ZeroOrMore( ret | content ) + Suppress(closer) ) + ret.setName('nested %s%s expression' % (opener,closer)) + return ret + +def indentedBlock(blockStatementExpr, indentStack, indent=True): + """ + Helper method for defining space-delimited indentation blocks, such as + those used to define block statements in Python source code. + + Parameters: + - blockStatementExpr - expression defining syntax of statement that + is repeated within the indented block + - indentStack - list created by caller to manage indentation stack + (multiple statementWithIndentedBlock expressions within a single grammar + should share a common indentStack) + - indent - boolean indicating whether block must be indented beyond the + the current level; set to False for block of left-most statements + (default=C{True}) + + A valid block must contain at least one C{blockStatement}. + + Example:: + data = ''' + def A(z): + A1 + B = 100 + G = A2 + A2 + A3 + B + def BB(a,b,c): + BB1 + def BBA(): + bba1 + bba2 + bba3 + C + D + def spam(x,y): + def eggs(z): + pass + ''' + + + indentStack = [1] + stmt = Forward() + + identifier = Word(alphas, alphanums) + funcDecl = ("def" + identifier + Group( "(" + Optional( delimitedList(identifier) ) + ")" ) + ":") + func_body = indentedBlock(stmt, indentStack) + funcDef = Group( funcDecl + func_body ) + + rvalue = Forward() + funcCall = Group(identifier + "(" + Optional(delimitedList(rvalue)) + ")") + rvalue << (funcCall | identifier | Word(nums)) + assignment = Group(identifier + "=" + rvalue) + stmt << ( funcDef | assignment | identifier ) + + module_body = OneOrMore(stmt) + + parseTree = module_body.parseString(data) + parseTree.pprint() + prints:: + [['def', + 'A', + ['(', 'z', ')'], + ':', + [['A1'], [['B', '=', '100']], [['G', '=', 'A2']], ['A2'], ['A3']]], + 'B', + ['def', + 'BB', + ['(', 'a', 'b', 'c', ')'], + ':', + [['BB1'], [['def', 'BBA', ['(', ')'], ':', [['bba1'], ['bba2'], ['bba3']]]]]], + 'C', + 'D', + ['def', + 'spam', + ['(', 'x', 'y', ')'], + ':', + [[['def', 'eggs', ['(', 'z', ')'], ':', [['pass']]]]]]] + """ + def checkPeerIndent(s,l,t): + if l >= len(s): return + curCol = col(l,s) + if curCol != indentStack[-1]: + if curCol > indentStack[-1]: + raise ParseFatalException(s,l,"illegal nesting") + raise ParseException(s,l,"not a peer entry") + + def checkSubIndent(s,l,t): + curCol = col(l,s) + if curCol > indentStack[-1]: + indentStack.append( curCol ) + else: + raise ParseException(s,l,"not a subentry") + + def checkUnindent(s,l,t): + if l >= len(s): return + curCol = col(l,s) + if not(indentStack and curCol < indentStack[-1] and curCol <= indentStack[-2]): + raise ParseException(s,l,"not an unindent") + indentStack.pop() + + NL = OneOrMore(LineEnd().setWhitespaceChars("\t ").suppress()) + INDENT = (Empty() + Empty().setParseAction(checkSubIndent)).setName('INDENT') + PEER = Empty().setParseAction(checkPeerIndent).setName('') + UNDENT = Empty().setParseAction(checkUnindent).setName('UNINDENT') + if indent: + smExpr = Group( Optional(NL) + + #~ FollowedBy(blockStatementExpr) + + INDENT + (OneOrMore( PEER + Group(blockStatementExpr) + Optional(NL) )) + UNDENT) + else: + smExpr = Group( Optional(NL) + + (OneOrMore( PEER + Group(blockStatementExpr) + Optional(NL) )) ) + blockStatementExpr.ignore(_bslash + LineEnd()) + return smExpr.setName('indented block') + +alphas8bit = srange(r"[\0xc0-\0xd6\0xd8-\0xf6\0xf8-\0xff]") +punc8bit = srange(r"[\0xa1-\0xbf\0xd7\0xf7]") + +anyOpenTag,anyCloseTag = makeHTMLTags(Word(alphas,alphanums+"_:").setName('any tag')) +_htmlEntityMap = dict(zip("gt lt amp nbsp quot apos".split(),'><& "\'')) +commonHTMLEntity = Regex('&(?P' + '|'.join(_htmlEntityMap.keys()) +");").setName("common HTML entity") +def replaceHTMLEntity(t): + """Helper parser action to replace common HTML entities with their special characters""" + return _htmlEntityMap.get(t.entity) + +# it's easy to get these comment structures wrong - they're very common, so may as well make them available +cStyleComment = Combine(Regex(r"/\*(?:[^*]|\*(?!/))*") + '*/').setName("C style comment") +"Comment of the form C{/* ... */}" + +htmlComment = Regex(r"").setName("HTML comment") +"Comment of the form C{}" + +restOfLine = Regex(r".*").leaveWhitespace().setName("rest of line") +dblSlashComment = Regex(r"//(?:\\\n|[^\n])*").setName("// comment") +"Comment of the form C{// ... (to end of line)}" + +cppStyleComment = Combine(Regex(r"/\*(?:[^*]|\*(?!/))*") + '*/'| dblSlashComment).setName("C++ style comment") +"Comment of either form C{L{cStyleComment}} or C{L{dblSlashComment}}" + +javaStyleComment = cppStyleComment +"Same as C{L{cppStyleComment}}" + +pythonStyleComment = Regex(r"#.*").setName("Python style comment") +"Comment of the form C{# ... (to end of line)}" + +_commasepitem = Combine(OneOrMore(Word(printables, excludeChars=',') + + Optional( Word(" \t") + + ~Literal(",") + ~LineEnd() ) ) ).streamline().setName("commaItem") +commaSeparatedList = delimitedList( Optional( quotedString.copy() | _commasepitem, default="") ).setName("commaSeparatedList") +"""(Deprecated) Predefined expression of 1 or more printable words or quoted strings, separated by commas. + This expression is deprecated in favor of L{pyparsing_common.comma_separated_list}.""" + +# some other useful expressions - using lower-case class name since we are really using this as a namespace +class pyparsing_common: + """ + Here are some common low-level expressions that may be useful in jump-starting parser development: + - numeric forms (L{integers}, L{reals}, L{scientific notation}) + - common L{programming identifiers} + - network addresses (L{MAC}, L{IPv4}, L{IPv6}) + - ISO8601 L{dates} and L{datetime} + - L{UUID} + - L{comma-separated list} + Parse actions: + - C{L{convertToInteger}} + - C{L{convertToFloat}} + - C{L{convertToDate}} + - C{L{convertToDatetime}} + - C{L{stripHTMLTags}} + - C{L{upcaseTokens}} + - C{L{downcaseTokens}} + + Example:: + pyparsing_common.number.runTests(''' + # any int or real number, returned as the appropriate type + 100 + -100 + +100 + 3.14159 + 6.02e23 + 1e-12 + ''') + + pyparsing_common.fnumber.runTests(''' + # any int or real number, returned as float + 100 + -100 + +100 + 3.14159 + 6.02e23 + 1e-12 + ''') + + pyparsing_common.hex_integer.runTests(''' + # hex numbers + 100 + FF + ''') + + pyparsing_common.fraction.runTests(''' + # fractions + 1/2 + -3/4 + ''') + + pyparsing_common.mixed_integer.runTests(''' + # mixed fractions + 1 + 1/2 + -3/4 + 1-3/4 + ''') + + import uuid + pyparsing_common.uuid.setParseAction(tokenMap(uuid.UUID)) + pyparsing_common.uuid.runTests(''' + # uuid + 12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678 + ''') + prints:: + # any int or real number, returned as the appropriate type + 100 + [100] + + -100 + [-100] + + +100 + [100] + + 3.14159 + [3.14159] + + 6.02e23 + [6.02e+23] + + 1e-12 + [1e-12] + + # any int or real number, returned as float + 100 + [100.0] + + -100 + [-100.0] + + +100 + [100.0] + + 3.14159 + [3.14159] + + 6.02e23 + [6.02e+23] + + 1e-12 + [1e-12] + + # hex numbers + 100 + [256] + + FF + [255] + + # fractions + 1/2 + [0.5] + + -3/4 + [-0.75] + + # mixed fractions + 1 + [1] + + 1/2 + [0.5] + + -3/4 + [-0.75] + + 1-3/4 + [1.75] + + # uuid + 12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678 + [UUID('12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678')] + """ + + convertToInteger = tokenMap(int) + """ + Parse action for converting parsed integers to Python int + """ + + convertToFloat = tokenMap(float) + """ + Parse action for converting parsed numbers to Python float + """ + + integer = Word(nums).setName("integer").setParseAction(convertToInteger) + """expression that parses an unsigned integer, returns an int""" + + hex_integer = Word(hexnums).setName("hex integer").setParseAction(tokenMap(int,16)) + """expression that parses a hexadecimal integer, returns an int""" + + signed_integer = Regex(r'[+-]?\d+').setName("signed integer").setParseAction(convertToInteger) + """expression that parses an integer with optional leading sign, returns an int""" + + fraction = (signed_integer().setParseAction(convertToFloat) + '/' + signed_integer().setParseAction(convertToFloat)).setName("fraction") + """fractional expression of an integer divided by an integer, returns a float""" + fraction.addParseAction(lambda t: t[0]/t[-1]) + + mixed_integer = (fraction | signed_integer + Optional(Optional('-').suppress() + fraction)).setName("fraction or mixed integer-fraction") + """mixed integer of the form 'integer - fraction', with optional leading integer, returns float""" + mixed_integer.addParseAction(sum) + + real = Regex(r'[+-]?\d+\.\d*').setName("real number").setParseAction(convertToFloat) + """expression that parses a floating point number and returns a float""" + + sci_real = Regex(r'[+-]?\d+([eE][+-]?\d+|\.\d*([eE][+-]?\d+)?)').setName("real number with scientific notation").setParseAction(convertToFloat) + """expression that parses a floating point number with optional scientific notation and returns a float""" + + # streamlining this expression makes the docs nicer-looking + number = (sci_real | real | signed_integer).streamline() + """any numeric expression, returns the corresponding Python type""" + + fnumber = Regex(r'[+-]?\d+\.?\d*([eE][+-]?\d+)?').setName("fnumber").setParseAction(convertToFloat) + """any int or real number, returned as float""" + + identifier = Word(alphas+'_', alphanums+'_').setName("identifier") + """typical code identifier (leading alpha or '_', followed by 0 or more alphas, nums, or '_')""" + + ipv4_address = Regex(r'(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|1?[0-9]{1,2})(\.(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|1?[0-9]{1,2})){3}').setName("IPv4 address") + "IPv4 address (C{0.0.0.0 - 255.255.255.255})" + + _ipv6_part = Regex(r'[0-9a-fA-F]{1,4}').setName("hex_integer") + _full_ipv6_address = (_ipv6_part + (':' + _ipv6_part)*7).setName("full IPv6 address") + _short_ipv6_address = (Optional(_ipv6_part + (':' + _ipv6_part)*(0,6)) + "::" + Optional(_ipv6_part + (':' + _ipv6_part)*(0,6))).setName("short IPv6 address") + _short_ipv6_address.addCondition(lambda t: sum(1 for tt in t if pyparsing_common._ipv6_part.matches(tt)) < 8) + _mixed_ipv6_address = ("::ffff:" + ipv4_address).setName("mixed IPv6 address") + ipv6_address = Combine((_full_ipv6_address | _mixed_ipv6_address | _short_ipv6_address).setName("IPv6 address")).setName("IPv6 address") + "IPv6 address (long, short, or mixed form)" + + mac_address = Regex(r'[0-9a-fA-F]{2}([:.-])[0-9a-fA-F]{2}(?:\1[0-9a-fA-F]{2}){4}').setName("MAC address") + "MAC address xx:xx:xx:xx:xx (may also have '-' or '.' delimiters)" + + @staticmethod + def convertToDate(fmt="%Y-%m-%d"): + """ + Helper to create a parse action for converting parsed date string to Python datetime.date + + Params - + - fmt - format to be passed to datetime.strptime (default=C{"%Y-%m-%d"}) + + Example:: + date_expr = pyparsing_common.iso8601_date.copy() + date_expr.setParseAction(pyparsing_common.convertToDate()) + print(date_expr.parseString("1999-12-31")) + prints:: + [datetime.date(1999, 12, 31)] + """ + def cvt_fn(s,l,t): + try: + return datetime.strptime(t[0], fmt).date() + except ValueError as ve: + raise ParseException(s, l, str(ve)) + return cvt_fn + + @staticmethod + def convertToDatetime(fmt="%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%f"): + """ + Helper to create a parse action for converting parsed datetime string to Python datetime.datetime + + Params - + - fmt - format to be passed to datetime.strptime (default=C{"%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%f"}) + + Example:: + dt_expr = pyparsing_common.iso8601_datetime.copy() + dt_expr.setParseAction(pyparsing_common.convertToDatetime()) + print(dt_expr.parseString("1999-12-31T23:59:59.999")) + prints:: + [datetime.datetime(1999, 12, 31, 23, 59, 59, 999000)] + """ + def cvt_fn(s,l,t): + try: + return datetime.strptime(t[0], fmt) + except ValueError as ve: + raise ParseException(s, l, str(ve)) + return cvt_fn + + iso8601_date = Regex(r'(?P\d{4})(?:-(?P\d\d)(?:-(?P\d\d))?)?').setName("ISO8601 date") + "ISO8601 date (C{yyyy-mm-dd})" + + iso8601_datetime = Regex(r'(?P\d{4})-(?P\d\d)-(?P\d\d)[T ](?P\d\d):(?P\d\d)(:(?P\d\d(\.\d*)?)?)?(?PZ|[+-]\d\d:?\d\d)?').setName("ISO8601 datetime") + "ISO8601 datetime (C{yyyy-mm-ddThh:mm:ss.s(Z|+-00:00)}) - trailing seconds, milliseconds, and timezone optional; accepts separating C{'T'} or C{' '}" + + uuid = Regex(r'[0-9a-fA-F]{8}(-[0-9a-fA-F]{4}){3}-[0-9a-fA-F]{12}').setName("UUID") + "UUID (C{xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx})" + + _html_stripper = anyOpenTag.suppress() | anyCloseTag.suppress() + @staticmethod + def stripHTMLTags(s, l, tokens): + """ + Parse action to remove HTML tags from web page HTML source + + Example:: + # strip HTML links from normal text + text = 'More info at the
pyparsing wiki page' + td,td_end = makeHTMLTags("TD") + table_text = td + SkipTo(td_end).setParseAction(pyparsing_common.stripHTMLTags)("body") + td_end + + print(table_text.parseString(text).body) # -> 'More info at the pyparsing wiki page' + """ + return pyparsing_common._html_stripper.transformString(tokens[0]) + + _commasepitem = Combine(OneOrMore(~Literal(",") + ~LineEnd() + Word(printables, excludeChars=',') + + Optional( White(" \t") ) ) ).streamline().setName("commaItem") + comma_separated_list = delimitedList( Optional( quotedString.copy() | _commasepitem, default="") ).setName("comma separated list") + """Predefined expression of 1 or more printable words or quoted strings, separated by commas.""" + + upcaseTokens = staticmethod(tokenMap(lambda t: _ustr(t).upper())) + """Parse action to convert tokens to upper case.""" + + downcaseTokens = staticmethod(tokenMap(lambda t: _ustr(t).lower())) + """Parse action to convert tokens to lower case.""" + + +if __name__ == "__main__": + + selectToken = CaselessLiteral("select") + fromToken = CaselessLiteral("from") + + ident = Word(alphas, alphanums + "_$") + + columnName = delimitedList(ident, ".", combine=True).setParseAction(upcaseTokens) + columnNameList = Group(delimitedList(columnName)).setName("columns") + columnSpec = ('*' | columnNameList) + + tableName = delimitedList(ident, ".", combine=True).setParseAction(upcaseTokens) + tableNameList = Group(delimitedList(tableName)).setName("tables") + + simpleSQL = selectToken("command") + columnSpec("columns") + fromToken + tableNameList("tables") + + # demo runTests method, including embedded comments in test string + simpleSQL.runTests(""" + # '*' as column list and dotted table name + select * from SYS.XYZZY + + # caseless match on "SELECT", and casts back to "select" + SELECT * from XYZZY, ABC + + # list of column names, and mixed case SELECT keyword + Select AA,BB,CC from Sys.dual + + # multiple tables + Select A, B, C from Sys.dual, Table2 + + # invalid SELECT keyword - should fail + Xelect A, B, C from Sys.dual + + # incomplete command - should fail + Select + + # invalid column name - should fail + Select ^^^ frox Sys.dual + + """) + + pyparsing_common.number.runTests(""" + 100 + -100 + +100 + 3.14159 + 6.02e23 + 1e-12 + """) + + # any int or real number, returned as float + pyparsing_common.fnumber.runTests(""" + 100 + -100 + +100 + 3.14159 + 6.02e23 + 1e-12 + """) + + pyparsing_common.hex_integer.runTests(""" + 100 + FF + """) + + import uuid + pyparsing_common.uuid.setParseAction(tokenMap(uuid.UUID)) + pyparsing_common.uuid.runTests(""" + 12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678 + """) diff --git a/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/command/__pycache__/__init__.cpython-310.pyc b/env-llmeval/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/command/__pycache__/__init__.cpython-310.pyc new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..3617739f5ff0886806e83661d10c611ce24cc325 Binary files /dev/null and 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