tags.
"""
yield 0, ""
for tup in inner:
yield tup
yield 0, "
"
def wrap(self, source, outfile):
"""Return the source with a code, pre, and div."""
return self._wrap_div(self._wrap_pre(self._wrap_code(source)))
formatter = HtmlCodeFormatter(cssclass="codehilite", **formatter_opts)
return pygments.highlight(codeblock, lexer, formatter)
def _code_block_sub(self, match):
codeblock = match.group(1)
codeblock = self._outdent(codeblock)
codeblock = self._detab(codeblock)
codeblock = codeblock.lstrip('\n') # trim leading newlines
codeblock = codeblock.rstrip() # trim trailing whitespace
if "code-color" in self.extras and codeblock.startswith(":::"):
lexer_name, rest = codeblock.split('\n', 1)
lexer_name = lexer_name[3:].strip()
lexer = self._get_pygments_lexer(lexer_name)
codeblock = rest.lstrip("\n") # Remove lexer declaration line.
if lexer:
formatter_opts = self.extras['code-color'] or {}
colored = self._color_with_pygments(codeblock, lexer,
**formatter_opts)
return "\n\n%s\n\n" % colored
codeblock = self._encode_code(codeblock)
return "\n\n%s\n
\n\n" % codeblock
def _do_code_blocks(self, text):
"""Process Markdown `` blocks."""
code_block_re = re.compile(r'''
(?:\n\n|\A)
( # $1 = the code block -- one or more lines, starting with a space/tab
(?:
(?:[ ]{%d} | \t) # Lines must start with a tab or a tab-width of spaces
.*\n+
)+
)
((?=^[ ]{0,%d}\S)|\Z) # Lookahead for non-space at line-start, or end of doc
''' % (self.tab_width, self.tab_width),
re.M | re.X)
return code_block_re.sub(self._code_block_sub, text)
# Rules for a code span:
# - backslash escapes are not interpreted in a code span
# - to include one or or a run of more backticks the delimiters must
# be a longer run of backticks
# - cannot start or end a code span with a backtick; pad with a
# space and that space will be removed in the emitted HTML
# See `test/tm-cases/escapes.text` for a number of edge-case
# examples.
_code_span_re = re.compile(r'''
(?%s
" % c
def _do_code_spans(self, text):
# * Backtick quotes are used for
spans.
#
# * You can use multiple backticks as the delimiters if you want to
# include literal backticks in the code span. So, this input:
#
# Just type ``foo `bar` baz`` at the prompt.
#
# Will translate to:
#
# Just type foo `bar` baz
at the prompt.
#
# There's no arbitrary limit to the number of backticks you
# can use as delimters. If you need three consecutive backticks
# in your code, use four for delimiters, etc.
#
# * You can use spaces to get literal backticks at the edges:
#
# ... type `` `bar` `` ...
#
# Turns to:
#
# ... type `bar`
...
return self._code_span_re.sub(self._code_span_sub, text)
def _encode_code(self, text):
"""Encode/escape certain characters inside Markdown code runs.
The point is that in code, these characters are literals,
and lose their special Markdown meanings.
"""
replacements = [
# Encode all ampersands; HTML entities are not
# entities within a Markdown code span.
('&', '&'),
# Do the angle bracket song and dance:
('<', '<'),
('>', '>'),
# Now, escape characters that are magic in Markdown:
('*', g_escape_table['*']),
('_', g_escape_table['_']),
('{', g_escape_table['{']),
('}', g_escape_table['}']),
('[', g_escape_table['[']),
(']', g_escape_table[']']),
('\\', g_escape_table['\\']),
]
for before, after in replacements:
text = text.replace(before, after)
return text
_strong_re = re.compile(r"(\*\*|__)(?=\S)(.+?[*_]*)(?<=\S)\1", re.S)
_em_re = re.compile(r"(\*|_)(?=\S)(.+?)(?<=\S)\1", re.S)
_code_friendly_strong_re = re.compile(r"\*\*(?=\S)(.+?[*_]*)(?<=\S)\*\*", re.S)
_code_friendly_em_re = re.compile(r"\*(?=\S)(.+?)(?<=\S)\*", re.S)
def _do_italics_and_bold(self, text):
# must go first:
if "code-friendly" in self.extras:
text = self._code_friendly_strong_re.sub(r"\1", text)
text = self._code_friendly_em_re.sub(r"\1", text)
else:
text = self._strong_re.sub(r"\2", text)
text = self._em_re.sub(r"\2", text)
return text
_block_quote_re = re.compile(r'''
( # Wrap whole match in \1
(
^[ \t]*>[ \t]? # '>' at the start of a line
.+\n # rest of the first line
(.+\n)* # subsequent consecutive lines
\n* # blanks
)+
)
''', re.M | re.X)
_bq_one_level_re = re.compile('^[ \t]*>[ \t]?', re.M);
_html_pre_block_re = re.compile(r'(\s*.+?
)', re.S)
def _dedent_two_spaces_sub(self, match):
return re.sub(r'(?m)^ ', '', match.group(1))
def _block_quote_sub(self, match):
bq = match.group(1)
bq = self._bq_one_level_re.sub('', bq) # trim one level of quoting
bq = self._ws_only_line_re.sub('', bq) # trim whitespace-only lines
bq = self._run_block_gamut(bq) # recurse
bq = re.sub('(?m)^', ' ', bq)
# These leading spaces screw with content, so we need to fix that:
bq = self._html_pre_block_re.sub(self._dedent_two_spaces_sub, bq)
return "\n%s\n
\n\n" % bq
def _do_block_quotes(self, text):
if '>' not in text:
return text
return self._block_quote_re.sub(self._block_quote_sub, text)
def _form_paragraphs(self, text):
# Strip leading and trailing lines:
text = text.strip('\n')
# Wrap tags.
grafs = re.split(r"\n{2,}", text)
for i, graf in enumerate(grafs):
if graf in self.html_blocks:
# Unhashify HTML blocks
grafs[i] = self.html_blocks[graf]
else:
# Wrap
tags.
graf = self._run_span_gamut(graf)
grafs[i] = "
" + graf.lstrip(" \t") + "
"
return "\n\n".join(grafs)
def _add_footnotes(self, text):
if self.footnotes:
footer = [
'')
return text + '\n\n' + '\n'.join(footer)
else:
return text
# Ampersand-encoding based entirely on Nat Irons's Amputator MT plugin:
# http://bumppo.net/projects/amputator/
_ampersand_re = re.compile(r'&(?!#?[xX]?(?:[0-9a-fA-F]+|\w+);)')
_naked_lt_re = re.compile(r'<(?![a-z/?\$!])', re.I)
_naked_gt_re = re.compile(r'''(?''', re.I)
def _encode_amps_and_angles(self, text):
# Smart processing for ampersands and angle brackets that need
# to be encoded.
text = self._ampersand_re.sub('&', text)
# Encode naked <'s
text = self._naked_lt_re.sub('<', text)
# Encode naked >'s
# Note: Other markdown implementations (e.g. Markdown.pl, PHP
# Markdown) don't do this.
text = self._naked_gt_re.sub('>', text)
return text
def _encode_backslash_escapes(self, text):
for ch, escape in g_escape_table.items():
text = text.replace("\\"+ch, escape)
return text
_auto_link_re = re.compile(r'<((https?|ftp):[^\'">\s]+)>', re.I)
def _auto_link_sub(self, match):
g1 = match.group(1)
return '%s' % (g1, g1)
_auto_email_link_re = re.compile(r"""
<
(?:mailto:)?
(
[-.\w]+
\@
[-\w]+(\.[-\w]+)*\.[a-z]+
)
>
""", re.I | re.X | re.U)
def _auto_email_link_sub(self, match):
return self._encode_email_address(
self._unescape_special_chars(match.group(1)))
def _do_auto_links(self, text):
text = self._auto_link_re.sub(self._auto_link_sub, text)
text = self._auto_email_link_re.sub(self._auto_email_link_sub, text)
return text
def _encode_email_address(self, addr):
# Input: an email address, e.g. "foo@example.com"
#
# Output: the email address as a mailto link, with each character
# of the address encoded as either a decimal or hex entity, in
# the hopes of foiling most address harvesting spam bots. E.g.:
#
# foo
# @example.com
#
# Based on a filter by Matthew Wickline, posted to the BBEdit-Talk
# mailing list:
chars = [_xml_encode_email_char_at_random(ch)
for ch in "mailto:" + addr]
# Strip the mailto: from the visible part.
addr = '%s' \
% (''.join(chars), ''.join(chars[7:]))
return addr
def _do_link_patterns(self, text):
"""Caveat emptor: there isn't much guarding against link
patterns being formed inside other standard Markdown links, e.g.
inside a [link def][like this].
Dev Notes: *Could* consider prefixing regexes with a negative
lookbehind assertion to attempt to guard against this.
"""
link_from_hash = {}
for regex, repl in self.link_patterns:
replacements = []
for match in regex.finditer(text):
if hasattr(repl, "__call__"):
href = repl(match)
else:
href = match.expand(repl)
replacements.append((match.span(), href))
for (start, end), href in reversed(replacements):
escaped_href = (
href.replace('"', '"') # b/c of attr quote
# To avoid markdown and :
.replace('*', g_escape_table['*'])
.replace('_', g_escape_table['_']))
link = '%s' % (escaped_href, text[start:end])
hash = md5(link).hexdigest()
link_from_hash[hash] = link
text = text[:start] + hash + text[end:]
for hash, link in link_from_hash.items():
text = text.replace(hash, link)
return text
def _unescape_special_chars(self, text):
# Swap back in all the special characters we've hidden.
for ch, hash in g_escape_table.items():
text = text.replace(hash, ch)
return text
def _outdent(self, text):
# Remove one level of line-leading tabs or spaces
return self._outdent_re.sub('', text)
class MarkdownWithExtras(Markdown):
"""A markdowner class that enables most extras:
- footnotes
- code-color (only has effect if 'pygments' Python module on path)
These are not included:
- pyshell (specific to Python-related documenting)
- code-friendly (because it *disables* part of the syntax)
- link-patterns (because you need to specify some actual
link-patterns anyway)
"""
extras = ["footnotes", "code-color"]
#---- internal support functions
# From http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/52549
def _curry(*args, **kwargs):
function, args = args[0], args[1:]
def result(*rest, **kwrest):
combined = kwargs.copy()
combined.update(kwrest)
return function(*args + rest, **combined)
return result
# Recipe: regex_from_encoded_pattern (1.0)
def _regex_from_encoded_pattern(s):
"""'foo' -> re.compile(re.escape('foo'))
'/foo/' -> re.compile('foo')
'/foo/i' -> re.compile('foo', re.I)
"""
if s.startswith('/') and s.rfind('/') != 0:
# Parse it: /PATTERN/FLAGS
idx = s.rfind('/')
pattern, flags_str = s[1:idx], s[idx+1:]
flag_from_char = {
"i": re.IGNORECASE,
"l": re.LOCALE,
"s": re.DOTALL,
"m": re.MULTILINE,
"u": re.UNICODE,
}
flags = 0
for char in flags_str:
try:
flags |= flag_from_char[char]
except KeyError:
raise ValueError("unsupported regex flag: '%s' in '%s' "
"(must be one of '%s')"
% (char, s, ''.join(flag_from_char.keys())))
return re.compile(s[1:idx], flags)
else: # not an encoded regex
return re.compile(re.escape(s))
# Recipe: dedent (0.1.2)
def _dedentlines(lines, tabsize=8, skip_first_line=False):
"""_dedentlines(lines, tabsize=8, skip_first_line=False) -> dedented lines
"lines" is a list of lines to dedent.
"tabsize" is the tab width to use for indent width calculations.
"skip_first_line" is a boolean indicating if the first line should
be skipped for calculating the indent width and for dedenting.
This is sometimes useful for docstrings and similar.
Same as dedent() except operates on a sequence of lines. Note: the
lines list is modified **in-place**.
"""
DEBUG = False
if DEBUG:
print "dedent: dedent(..., tabsize=%d, skip_first_line=%r)"\
% (tabsize, skip_first_line)
indents = []
margin = None
for i, line in enumerate(lines):
if i == 0 and skip_first_line: continue
indent = 0
for ch in line:
if ch == ' ':
indent += 1
elif ch == '\t':
indent += tabsize - (indent % tabsize)
elif ch in '\r\n':
continue # skip all-whitespace lines
else:
break
else:
continue # skip all-whitespace lines
if DEBUG: print "dedent: indent=%d: %r" % (indent, line)
if margin is None:
margin = indent
else:
margin = min(margin, indent)
if DEBUG: print "dedent: margin=%r" % margin
if margin is not None and margin > 0:
for i, line in enumerate(lines):
if i == 0 and skip_first_line: continue
removed = 0
for j, ch in enumerate(line):
if ch == ' ':
removed += 1
elif ch == '\t':
removed += tabsize - (removed % tabsize)
elif ch in '\r\n':
if DEBUG: print "dedent: %r: EOL -> strip up to EOL" % line
lines[i] = lines[i][j:]
break
else:
raise ValueError("unexpected non-whitespace char %r in "
"line %r while removing %d-space margin"
% (ch, line, margin))
if DEBUG:
print "dedent: %r: %r -> removed %d/%d"\
% (line, ch, removed, margin)
if removed == margin:
lines[i] = lines[i][j+1:]
break
elif removed > margin:
lines[i] = ' '*(removed-margin) + lines[i][j+1:]
break
else:
if removed:
lines[i] = lines[i][removed:]
return lines
def _dedent(text, tabsize=8, skip_first_line=False):
"""_dedent(text, tabsize=8, skip_first_line=False) -> dedented text
"text" is the text to dedent.
"tabsize" is the tab width to use for indent width calculations.
"skip_first_line" is a boolean indicating if the first line should
be skipped for calculating the indent width and for dedenting.
This is sometimes useful for docstrings and similar.
textwrap.dedent(s), but don't expand tabs to spaces
"""
lines = text.splitlines(1)
_dedentlines(lines, tabsize=tabsize, skip_first_line=skip_first_line)
return ''.join(lines)
class _memoized(object):
"""Decorator that caches a function's return value each time it is called.
If called later with the same arguments, the cached value is returned, and
not re-evaluated.
http://wiki.python.org/moin/PythonDecoratorLibrary
"""
def __init__(self, func):
self.func = func
self.cache = {}
def __call__(self, *args):
try:
return self.cache[args]
except KeyError:
self.cache[args] = value = self.func(*args)
return value
except TypeError:
# uncachable -- for instance, passing a list as an argument.
# Better to not cache than to blow up entirely.
return self.func(*args)
def __repr__(self):
"""Return the function's docstring."""
return self.func.__doc__
def _xml_oneliner_re_from_tab_width(tab_width):
"""Standalone XML processing instruction regex."""
return re.compile(r"""
(?:
(?<=\n\n) # Starting after a blank line
| # or
\A\n? # the beginning of the doc
)
( # save in $1
[ ]{0,%d}
(?:
<\?\w+\b\s+.*?\?> # XML processing instruction
|
<\w+:\w+\b\s+.*?/> # namespaced single tag
)
[ \t]*
(?=\n{2,}|\Z) # followed by a blank line or end of document
)
""" % (tab_width - 1), re.X)
_xml_oneliner_re_from_tab_width = _memoized(_xml_oneliner_re_from_tab_width)
def _hr_tag_re_from_tab_width(tab_width):
return re.compile(r"""
(?:
(?<=\n\n) # Starting after a blank line
| # or
\A\n? # the beginning of the doc
)
( # save in \1
[ ]{0,%d}
<(hr) # start tag = \2
\b # word break
([^<>])*? #
/?> # the matching end tag
[ \t]*
(?=\n{2,}|\Z) # followed by a blank line or end of document
)
""" % (tab_width - 1), re.X)
_hr_tag_re_from_tab_width = _memoized(_hr_tag_re_from_tab_width)
def _xml_encode_email_char_at_random(ch):
r = random()
# Roughly 10% raw, 45% hex, 45% dec.
# '@' *must* be encoded. I [John Gruber] insist.
# Issue 26: '_' must be encoded.
if r > 0.9 and ch not in "@_":
return ch
elif r < 0.45:
# The [1:] is to drop leading '0': 0x63 -> x63
return '%s;' % hex(ord(ch))[1:]
else:
return '%s;' % ord(ch)
def _hash_text(text):
return 'md5:'+md5(text.encode("utf-8")).hexdigest()
#---- mainline
class _NoReflowFormatter(optparse.IndentedHelpFormatter):
"""An optparse formatter that does NOT reflow the description."""
def format_description(self, description):
return description or ""
def _test():
import doctest
doctest.testmod()
def main(argv=None):
if argv is None:
argv = sys.argv
if not logging.root.handlers:
logging.basicConfig()
usage = "usage: %prog [PATHS...]"
version = "%prog "+__version__
parser = optparse.OptionParser(prog="markdown2", usage=usage,
version=version, description=cmdln_desc,
formatter=_NoReflowFormatter())
parser.add_option("-v", "--verbose", dest="log_level",
action="store_const", const=logging.DEBUG,
help="more verbose output")
parser.add_option("--encoding",
help="specify encoding of text content")
parser.add_option("--html4tags", action="store_true", default=False,
help="use HTML 4 style for empty element tags")
parser.add_option("-s", "--safe", metavar="MODE", dest="safe_mode",
help="sanitize literal HTML: 'escape' escapes "
"HTML meta chars, 'replace' replaces with an "
"[HTML_REMOVED] note")
parser.add_option("-x", "--extras", action="append",
help="Turn on specific extra features (not part of "
"the core Markdown spec). Supported values: "
"'code-friendly' disables _/__ for emphasis; "
"'code-color' adds code-block syntax coloring; "
"'link-patterns' adds auto-linking based on patterns; "
"'footnotes' adds the footnotes syntax;"
"'xml' passes one-liner processing instructions and namespaced XML tags;"
"'pyshell' to put unindented Python interactive shell sessions in a block.")
parser.add_option("--use-file-vars",
help="Look for and use Emacs-style 'markdown-extras' "
"file var to turn on extras. See "
".")
parser.add_option("--link-patterns-file",
help="path to a link pattern file")
parser.add_option("--self-test", action="store_true",
help="run internal self-tests (some doctests)")
parser.add_option("--compare", action="store_true",
help="run against Markdown.pl as well (for testing)")
parser.set_defaults(log_level=logging.INFO, compare=False,
encoding="utf-8", safe_mode=None, use_file_vars=False)
opts, paths = parser.parse_args()
log.setLevel(opts.log_level)
if opts.self_test:
return _test()
if opts.extras:
extras = {}
for s in opts.extras:
splitter = re.compile("[,;: ]+")
for e in splitter.split(s):
if '=' in e:
ename, earg = e.split('=', 1)
try:
earg = int(earg)
except ValueError:
pass
else:
ename, earg = e, None
extras[ename] = earg
else:
extras = None
if opts.link_patterns_file:
link_patterns = []
f = open(opts.link_patterns_file)
try:
for i, line in enumerate(f.readlines()):
if not line.strip(): continue
if line.lstrip().startswith("#"): continue
try:
pat, href = line.rstrip().rsplit(None, 1)
except ValueError:
raise MarkdownError("%s:%d: invalid link pattern line: %r"
% (opts.link_patterns_file, i+1, line))
link_patterns.append(
(_regex_from_encoded_pattern(pat), href))
finally:
f.close()
else:
link_patterns = None
from os.path import join, dirname, abspath, exists
markdown_pl = join(dirname(dirname(abspath(__file__))), "test",
"Markdown.pl")
for path in paths:
if opts.compare:
print "==== Markdown.pl ===="
perl_cmd = 'perl %s "%s"' % (markdown_pl, path)
o = os.popen(perl_cmd)
perl_html = o.read()
o.close()
sys.stdout.write(perl_html)
print "==== markdown2.py ===="
html = markdown_path(path, encoding=opts.encoding,
html4tags=opts.html4tags,
safe_mode=opts.safe_mode,
extras=extras, link_patterns=link_patterns,
use_file_vars=opts.use_file_vars)
sys.stdout.write(
html.encode(sys.stdout.encoding or "utf-8", 'xmlcharrefreplace'))
if opts.compare:
test_dir = join(dirname(dirname(abspath(__file__))), "test")
if exists(join(test_dir, "test_markdown2.py")):
sys.path.insert(0, test_dir)
from test_markdown2 import norm_html_from_html
norm_html = norm_html_from_html(html)
norm_perl_html = norm_html_from_html(perl_html)
else:
norm_html = html
norm_perl_html = perl_html
print "==== match? %r ====" % (norm_perl_html == norm_html)
if __name__ == "__main__":
sys.exit( main(sys.argv) )