Hmm. I have it mostly working, but I seem to have completely broken
attribute matching. Don't know why, and can't seem to be able to debug
anything. If you want, I can send you a patch as it is now, maybe you
will understand better than me. Don't want to waste your time though.

What I have right now is that I split out all of the language specific
stuff completely, and everything but the attribute matching works (Oh,
and I haven't tested rewind, but that shouldn't be a problem).

On May 13, 9:46 am, Bob Farrell <[email protected]>
wrote:
> Hi Pavel,
>
>
>
> On Tue, May 12, 2009 at 05:58:13PM -0700, Pavel Panchekha wrote:
>
> > Having a bit of trouble here with the color formatting. The
> > BPythonFormatter works (mostly, had to fix it up a bit) but there's
> > another issue.
>
> > When Oranj prints error messages, it'd be nice if they were colored.
> > They already are when using the console, but I need to use the curses
> > color codes for printing in the bpython.
>
> > What I'm doing is this:
>
> > msg = "\x01r\x03%s\x01d\x03%s" % (type(e).__name__, ("" if not e.args
> > else (": " + " ".join(map(str, e.args)))))
>
> > Ideally, this should make the first bit (type(e).__name__) red and the
> > other bit normal gray colored (Its the error message). This isn't
> > working, however - the entire line is red.
>
> I thought this was already possible, but turns out it wasn't - I've changed 
> the
> code so that you can achieve what you were aiming for now by doing this:
>     msg = "\x01r\x03what\x04\x01d\x03hello"
> and then passing that to Repl.write, which will now split on \x04 - you'll 
> have
> to pull from the hg repo to get the latest changes, or just use this:
>
>     def write(self, s):
>         """For overriding stdout defaults"""
>         if '\x04' in s:
>             for block in s.split('\x04'):
>                 self.write(block)
>             return
>         if s.rstrip() and '\x03' in s:
>             t = s.split('\x03')[1]
>         else:
>             t = s
>
>         if isinstance(t, unicode):
>             t = t.encode(getattr(sys.__stdout__, 'encoding') or 
> sys.getdefaultencoding())
>
>         if not self.stdout_hist:
>             self.stdout_hist = t
>         else:
>             self.stdout_hist += t
>
>         self.echo(s)
>         self.s_hist.append(s.rstrip())
>
> The more I look at the way the colours work in bpython, the more I hate it. Oh
> well. :)
>
>
>
> > Anything I'm doing wrong? I could send complete, (sorta) working code
> > if you want, but in any case, is there anything obviously wrong?
>
> > On May 12, 5:06 pm, Pavel Panchekha <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > Thanks for the rundown. It shouldn't be too hard - most of the stuff
> > > you mentioned is already there in a half-done way, just need to clean
> > > it up. With luck, I'll extract the python-specific bits as I go, so it
> > > can be merged upstream. I'll try to keep the mailing list posted if I
> > > finish up.
>
> > > On May 12, 4:53 pm, Bob Farrell <[email protected]>
> > > wrote:
>
> > > > Hi Pavel,
>
> > > > On Tue, May 12, 2009 at 11:01:05AM -0700, Pavel Panchekha wrote:
>
> > > > > I'd like to write a shell for oranj similar to bpython. I've already
> > > > > written a pygments parser for it, and writing completion shouldn't be
> > > > > too hard. What else needs to be changed before I can get a full
> > > > > bpython-esque shell for oranj? Is there anything in curses to fiddle
> > > > > with, for example? (I tried just replacing PythonLexer with
> > > > > OranjLexer, but it doesn't seem to work)
>
> > > > > Oranj:http://github.com/pavpanchekha/oranj/tree/master
> > > > > OranjLexer:http://dev.pocoo.org/projects/pygments/ticket/409
>
> > > > I tried downloading it and running it (seems it depends on 2.6) but, 
> > > > since I
> > > > didn't have readline built against my 2.6 build, it errored - you try 
> > > > to import
> > > > readline, pass on an ImportError and then refer to it anyway.
>
> > > > Anyway, so I've rebuilt my python2.6 and got it working.
>
> > > > It looks to me like you'd be best off using bpython pretty much as-is 
> > > > and
> > > > providing something similar to the "code" module for oranj, i.e. a way 
> > > > of
> > > > executing oranj code from any Python program. Here's how bpython uses 
> > > > it:
>
> > > >     def push(self, s):
> > > >         """Push a line of code onto the buffer so it can process it all
> > > >         at once when a code block ends"""
> > > >         s = s.rstrip('\n')
> > > >         self.buffer.append(s)
>
> > > >         try:
> > > >             more = self.interp.runsource("\n".join(self.buffer))
> > > >         except SystemExit:
> > > >             # Avoid a traceback on e.g. quit()
> > > >             self.do_exit = True
> > > >             return False
>
> > > >         if not more:
> > > >             self.buffer = []
>
> > > >         return more
>
> > > > "self.interp" in this case is one of these:
>
> > > >     class Interpreter(code.InteractiveInterpreter):
>
> > > > So, if you can make a Python module that mimics the code module (at 
> > > > least the
> > > > part of it that bpython uses) then you should be able to swap out the 
> > > > Python
> > > > code module with your one, change the lexer it being used, do your own
> > > > autocompletion routines and everything should hopefully Just Work.
>
> > > > You might also want to try to mimic the behaviour of 
> > > > inspect.getargspec, since
> > > > bpython uses that to show what arguments a function is expecting.
>
> > > > I can't think of anything else right now, but if you have any more 
> > > > questions
> > > > feel free to ask. Also if you think you can make the necessary changes 
> > > > to
> > > > bpython and still keep it 100% compatible with its current 
> > > > functionality (i.e.
> > > > if you can make it so anyone could come along and plug in their own 
> > > > module to
> > > > make it work with some other language) then I'd be happy to bring that
> > > > upstream. Otherwise, you are of course encouraged to fork it. :)
>
> > > > Good luck !
>
> --
> Bob Farrell
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