Skip to main content

simple python module for KoiLang parsing

Project description

Kola

Simple python module for KoiLang parsing.

License PyPI PyPI - Downloads Python Version

Installation

From pip:

pip install KoiLang

From source code:

python setup.py build_ext --inplace
python setup.py install

What is KoiLang

KoiLang is a markup language while is easy to read for people. There is an simple example.

#background Street
    #camera on(Orga)
    #character Orga
        Huh... I'm a pretty good shot, huh?
    #camera on(Ride, Ched)
    #character Ride
        B- boss...
    #character Orga
        #action bleed
    #camera on(object: blood, source: Orga)

    #camera on(Ched, Orga, Ride)
    #character Orga
        How come you're stammering like that... Ride!

    #playsound freesia

    #character Orga
        #action stand_up speed(slowly)

    #character Ride
        But... but!
    #character Orga
        I'm the Boss of Tekkadan, Orga Itsuka, this is nothing to me.
    #character Ride
        #action shed_tear
        No... not for me...

    #camera on(Orga)
    #character Orga
        Protecting my members is my job!
    #character Ched
        #action shed_tear

    #character Ride
        But...!
    #character Orga
        Shut up and let's go!

        #camera on(Orga)
        #action walk direction(front) speed(slowly)
        Everyone's waiting, besides...

        I finally understand now, Mika, we don't need any destinations, we just need to keep moving forward.
        As long as we don't stop, the road will continue!

Grammar

In KoiLang, the code contains 'command' section and 'text' section. The format of the command section is similar to a C prepared statement, using '#' as the prefix. And other lines that do not start with '#' are the text section.

#command "This is a command"
This is the text.

The format of a single command like:

#command_name [param 1] [param 2] ...

There are several parameters behind the command whose name should be a valid variable name.

An unsigned decimal integer like is also a legal command name, like #114.

Each command can have several parameters behind the command name. Valid argument type include integer, float, literal and string.

#arg_int    1 0b101 0x6CF
#arg_float  1. 2e-2 .114514
#arg_literal string __name__
#arg_string "A string"

Here literal argument is a valid python variety name containing letter, digit, underline and not starting with digit. Usually it is the same as a string.

The above parameter types are often referred to base parameters. Combination parameter which is composed of multiple basic parameters is another argument type. It is a key-to-value mode which is starting with a literal as key and followed by several basic parameters. The format is as follows:

#kwargs key(value)

And another format:
#keyargs_list key(item0, item1)

And the third:
#kwargs_dict key(x: 11, y: 45, z: 14)

All the parameters above can be put together:

#draw Line 2 pos0(x: 0, y: 0) pos1(x: 16, y: 16) \
    thickness(2) color(255, 255, 255)

What can Kola module do

Kola module provides a fast way to translate KoiLang command into a python function call.

Above command #draw will convert to function call below:

draw(
    "Line", 2,
    pos0={"x": 0, "y": 0},
    pos1={"x": 16, "y": 16},
    thickness=2,
    color=[255, 255, 255]
)

Kola mudule just create a bridge from kola file to Python script. The bridge, the main class of Kola module, is KoiLang class. There is a simple example.

Example

Let's image a simple situation, where you want to create some small files. Manual creating is complex and time-consuming. Here is a way to solve that. We can use a single kola file to write all my text. Then use commands to devide these text in to different files.

Let us start with a kola file:

## This is the file `makefiles.kola`

#file "hello.txt" encoding("utf-8")
Hello world!
And there are all my friends.

#space hello

    #file "Bob.txt"
    Hello Bob.

    #file "Alice.txt"
    Hello Alice.

#endspace

Just name it as makefiles.kola. Then, we make a script to explain how to do with these commands:

import os
from kola import KoiLang, kola_command, kola_text


class FastFile(KoiLang):
    @kola_command
    def file(self, path: str, encoding: str = "utf-8") -> None:
        if self._file:
            self._file.close()
        path_dir = os.path.dirname(path)
        if path_dir:
            os.makedirs(path_dir, exist_ok=True)
        self._file = open(path, "w", encoding=encoding)
    
    @kola_command
    def space(self, name: str) -> None:
        path = name.replace('.', '/')
        if not os.path.isdir(path):
            os.makedirs(path)
        os.chdir(path)
    
    @kola_command
    def endspace(self) -> None:
        os.chdir("..")
        self.end()

    @kola_command
    def end(self) -> None:
        if self._file:
            self._file.close()
            self._file = None
    
    @kola_text
    def text(self, text: str) -> None:
        if not self._file:
            raise OSError("write texts before the file open")
        self._file.write(text)
    
    def at_start(self) -> None:
        self._file = None
    
    def at_end(self) -> None:
        self.end()

You can save the script in file script.py. After that, let us try to mix them together by entering the following in terminal:

python -m kola makefiles.kola -s script.py

Or add these directly at the end of the script:

if __name__ = "__main__":
    FastFile().parse_file("makefiles.kola")

You will see new files in your work dir.

<workdir>
│      
│  hello.txt
│      
└─hello
    Alice.txt
    Bob.txt

What happened

It seems amusing? Well, if you make a python script as this:

vmobj = FastFile()

with vmobj.exec_block():
    vmobj.file("hello.txt", encoding="utf-8")
    vmobj.text("Hello world!")
    vmobj.text("And there are all my friends.")

    vmobj.space("hello")

    vmobj.file("Bob.txt")
    vmobj.text("Hello Bob.")

    vmobj.file("Alice.txt")
    vmobj.text("Hello Alice.")

    vmobj.endspace()

the same result will be get. This is the python script corresponding to the previous kola file. What we have done is to make KoiLang interpreter know the correspondence between kola commands and python functions.

So let's go back to the script. Here the first we need is a kola command set that is the top interface for parsing. All commands we want to use will be included in the set. The best way is create a subclass of KoiLang with all commands as methods. That is:

class FastFile(KoiLang):
    ...

The next step is making the kola command we need. So a function is defined here:

def file(self, path: str, encoding: str = "utf-8") -> None:
    if self._file:
        self._file.close()
    path_dir = os.path.dirname(path)
    if path_dir:
        os.makedirs(path_dir, exist_ok=True)
    self._file = open(path, "w", encoding=encoding)

But it is not enough. Use the decorator @kola_command to annotate the function can be used in the kola text. In default case, the name of kola command will be the same to that of the function's. If another name is expected to use in kola files instead of the raw function name, you can use @kola_command("new_name") as the decorator. It wiil look like:

@kola_command("open")
def file(self, path: str, encoding: str = "utf-8") -> None:
    if self._file:
        self._file.close()
    path_dir = os.path.dirname(path)
    if path_dir:
        os.makedirs(path_dir, exist_ok=True)
    self._file = open(path, "w", encoding=encoding)

Than #open "hello.txt" will be a valid command, while using #space hello would get a KoiLangCommandError.

You may have notice that there is a special decorator @kola_text. As we know, the text section in kola files is a command, too. This decorator is to annotate the function to use to handle texts. Using @kola_command("@text") has the same effect. And another special decorator which is not shown here is @kola_number. It can handle commands like #114 or #1919. The first argument wiil be the number in the command.

File parse

KoiLang class provides several method. Use parse method to parse a string and parse_file to parse a file. It is suggested to use the second way so that KoiLang interpreter can give a traceback to the file when an error occure.

Advanced techniques

In above example, we define two commands to create and leave the space. While, if users use #endspace before creating space, this can cause some problems. To correct user behavior, we can use the environment to restrict the use of some commands. Environment class should be used here to define a sub class that is the new environment:

class FastFile(KoiLang):
    ...

    class space(Environment):
        @kola_env_enter("space")
        def enter(self, name: str) -> None:
            self.pwd = os.getcwd()
            path = name.replace('.', '/')
            if not os.path.isdir(path):
                os.makedirs(path)
            os.chdir(path)
        
        @kola_env_exit("endspace")
        def exit(self) -> None:
            os.chdir(self.pwd)

There is a parameter named envs in @kola_command, which is also used to limit the environment where commands use. It means the top stack of environment must have the same name, while commands defined in the environment class mean the they can be used until the environment is pop from the environment stack, even though the stack top is other environment.

What is more

The most difference between KoiLang and other markup language like YAML which is data-centric is that KoiLang more pay attention to the command. Yeah, text in Kola file is a special command named @text too. In fact, the core idea of Kola is to separate data and instructions. The kola file is the data to execute commands, and the python script is the instructions. Then Kola module just mix they together. It can be considered as a simple virtual machine engine. if you want, you can even build a Python virtual machine (of course, I guess no one like to do that).

On the other hand, text is also an important feature of Kola, which is a separate part, independent of context during parsing. The text is the soul of a Kola file. Any commands just are used to tell the computer what to do with the text. Though you can make a Kola file with only commands, it is not recommended. Instead, you ought to consider switching to another language.

Bugs/Requests

Please send bug reports and feature requests through github issue tracker. Kola is open to any constructive suggestions.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

KoiLang-1.1.1.tar.gz (332.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

KoiLang-1.1.1-cp38-cp38-win_amd64.whl (189.4 kB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.8 Windows x86-64

File details

Details for the file KoiLang-1.1.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: KoiLang-1.1.1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 332.1 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/4.0.1 CPython/3.8.12

File hashes

Hashes for KoiLang-1.1.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 76f58e5c15d125d5518c73a12759846e373a859c522da9f9d80851835b935129
MD5 a256b36d06ee8e4ac4b92908ade6abdd
BLAKE2b-256 701807746e6ae99b7c155cc0339c3b7b2c0ccb4f0749878fde8b9fec406ebeac

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file KoiLang-1.1.1-cp38-cp38-win_amd64.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: KoiLang-1.1.1-cp38-cp38-win_amd64.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 189.4 kB
  • Tags: CPython 3.8, Windows x86-64
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/4.0.1 CPython/3.8.12

File hashes

Hashes for KoiLang-1.1.1-cp38-cp38-win_amd64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 f616e3bf7bba628bfa0afdcdf970d8629792f54bdd1548c17f854de102806fee
MD5 bc4d3412ff55d1e117d445f73c4f5b84
BLAKE2b-256 975bb8b6cc3de4cb3b0c06c7b6d9697fb0539964f7966c87d13e8e9d56443ff1

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page