view roundup/cgi/accept_language.py @ 5414:3fa026621f69

Python 3 preparation: comparisons. Python 3 no longer has the cmp function, or cmp= arguments to sorting functions / methods (key= must be used instead), and requires rich comparison methods such as __lt__ to be defined instead of using __cmp__. All of the comparison mechanisms supported in Python 3 are also supported in Python 2. This patch makes the corresponding changes in Roundup to use key functions and rich comparison methods. In the case of the JournalPassword and Permission classes, only __eq__ and __ne__ are defined as I don't see ordered comparisons as useful there (and for Permission, the old __cmp__ function didn't try to provide a valid ordering). In the case of the Date class, I kept the __cmp__ method and implemented the others in terms of it, to avoid excess repetitiveness in duplicating implementation code for all six rich comparison methods. In roundup/admin.py, help_commands_html used operator.attrgetter to produce the second argument of sorted() - which would be reasonable for a key function, but the second argument is the cmp function in Python 2, not a key function (and the key function must be a named argument not a positional argument in Python 3). That function appears to be completely unused, so I expect that code never worked. This patch adds the missing key= to that sorted() call, but it would also be reasonable to remove the unused function completely instead.
author Joseph Myers <jsm@polyomino.org.uk>
date Wed, 25 Jul 2018 00:39:37 +0000
parents 74476eaac38a
children b00cd44fea16
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"""Parse the Accept-Language header as defined in RFC2616.

See http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html#sec14.4
for details.  This module should follow the spec.
Author: Hernan M. Foffani (hfoffani@gmail.com)
Some use samples:

>>> parse("da, en-gb;q=0.8, en;q=0.7")
['da', 'en_gb', 'en']
>>> parse("en;q=0.2, fr;q=1")
['fr', 'en']
>>> parse("zn; q = 0.2 ,pt-br;q =1")
['pt_br', 'zn']
>>> parse("es-AR")
['es_AR']
>>> parse("es-es-cat")
['es_es_cat']
>>> parse("")
[]
>>> parse(None)
[]
>>> parse("   ")
[]
>>> parse("en,")
['en']
"""

import re
import heapq

# regexp for languange-range search
nqlre = "([A-Za-z]+[-[A-Za-z]+]*)$"
# regexp for languange-range search with quality value
qlre  = "([A-Za-z]+[-[A-Za-z]+]*);q=([\d\.]+)"
# both
lre   = re.compile(nqlre + "|" + qlre)

ascii = ''.join([chr(x) for x in range(256)])
whitespace = ' \t\n\r\v\f'

def parse(language_header):
    """parse(string_with_accept_header_content) -> languages list"""

    if language_header is None: return []

    # strip whitespaces.
    lh = language_header.translate(ascii, whitespace)

    # if nothing, return
    if lh == "": return []

    # split by commas and parse the quality values.
    pls = [lre.findall(x) for x in lh.split(',')]

    # drop uncomformant
    qls = [x[0] for x in pls if len(x) > 0]

    # use a heap queue to sort by quality values.
    # the value of each item is 1.0 complement.
    pq = []
    for l in qls:
        if l[0] != '':
            heapq.heappush(pq, (0.0, l[0]))
        else:
            heapq.heappush(pq, (1.0-float(l[2]), l[1]))

    # get the languages ordered by quality
    # and replace - by _
    return [x[1].replace('-','_') for x in pq]

if __name__ == "__main__":
    import doctest
    doctest.testmod()

# vim: set et sts=4 sw=4 :

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