view scripts/docs-headings.py @ 5725:05a85a6cecba

graph: detect git branches and colourise them properly without rainbow effect (Issue #188) This is based on research and patches by Andrew Shadura. When using Git, only commits pointed to by branch references have their branches set. In general, there's no way in Git to find out which branch a commit belongs to, so we can try to deduce that from the merge topology. In other words, if we know the branch name, we know it's a different colour than any different branch. If we don't (it is None), we guesstimate the first parent is probably on the same branch. The relevant part of the code before 2da0dc09 used a similar, yet simpler, algorithm.
author Mads Kiilerich <madski@unity3d.com>
date Mon, 22 Feb 2016 21:07:47 +0100
parents ed2fb6e84a02
children 665dfa112f2c
line wrap: on
line source

#!/usr/bin/env python2

"""
Consistent formatting of rst section titles
"""

import re
import subprocess

spaces = [
    (0, 1), # we assume this is a over-and-underlined header
    (2, 1),
    (1, 1),
    (1, 0),
    (1, 0),
    ]

# http://sphinx-doc.org/rest.html :
#   for the Python documentation, this convention is used which you may follow:
#   # with overline, for parts
#   * with overline, for chapters
#   =, for sections
#   -, for subsections
#   ^, for subsubsections
#   ", for paragraphs
pystyles = ['#', '*', '=', '-', '^', '"']

# match on a header line underlined with one of the valid characters
headermatch = re.compile(r'''\n*(.+)\n([][!"#$%&'()*+,./:;<=>?@\\^_`{|}~-])\2{2,}\n+''', flags=re.MULTILINE)


def main():
    for fn in subprocess.check_output(['hg', 'loc', 'set:**.rst+kallithea/i18n/how_to']).splitlines():
        print 'processing %s:' % fn
        s = file(fn).read()

        # find levels and their styles
        lastpos = 0
        styles = []
        for markup in headermatch.findall(s):
            style = markup[1]
            if style in styles:
                stylepos = styles.index(style)
                if stylepos > lastpos + 1:
                    print 'bad style %r with level %s - was at %s' % (style, stylepos, lastpos)
            else:
                stylepos = len(styles)
                if stylepos > lastpos + 1:
                    print 'bad new style %r - expected %r' % (style, styles[lastpos + 1])
                else:
                    styles.append(style)
            lastpos = stylepos

        # remove superfluous spacing (may however be restored by header spacing)
        s = re.sub(r'''(\n\n)\n*''', r'\1', s, flags=re.MULTILINE)

        if styles:
            newstyles = pystyles[pystyles.index(styles[0]):]

            def subf(m):
                title, style = m.groups()
                level = styles.index(style)
                before, after = spaces[level]
                newstyle = newstyles[level]
                return '\n' * (before + 1) + title + '\n' + newstyle * len(title) + '\n' * (after + 1)
            s = headermatch.sub(subf, s)

        # remove superfluous spacing when headers are adjacent
        s = re.sub(r'''(\n.+\n([][!"#$%&'()*+,./:;<=>?@\\^_`{|}~-])\2{2,}\n\n\n)\n*''', r'\1', s, flags=re.MULTILINE)
        # fix trailing space and spacing before link sections
        s = s.strip() + '\n'
        s = re.sub(r'''\n+((?:\.\. _[^\n]*\n)+)$''', r'\n\n\n\1', s)

        file(fn, 'w').write(s)
        print subprocess.check_output(['hg', 'diff', fn])
        print

if __name__ == '__main__':
    main()