Use brackets instead of indentation.
Project description
========
brackets
========
Use c-style brackets instead of indentation. This is an encoding, you can also import this module in sites.py, it will register the encoding on import.
to use this, add the magic encoding comment to your source file::
# coding: brackets
Then you can import it directly (obvsly brackets should be imported first), or if you added the encoding to your sites.py, you can use idle to view the decoded file.
Currently just works for "if|elif|else|for|while|def|with" statements. It's also possible to mix indentation and brackets. You can do that, but it is not recommended.
This started as a code, a hobby project in 2014, but now I started working on it again.
You can also decode brackets literals::
import brackets
a = b'brackets code'
a.decode('brackets')
To know how to code with brackets examine the examples provided here. There's no warranty. There might be parsing errors, report if there are any, feel free to make a pull request.
What this can do?
=================
This will convert::
if(1 in {1,2,3}){
print(5)
for(x in c){
print(c)
}
}
To this::
if(1 in {1,2,3}):
print(5)
for x in c:
print(c)
It works for messy code too. see how this can work on this one-line code::
def fib(n){if(n in 0){return n}else{return fib(n-1)+fib(n-2)}}
The result from the previous is::
def fib(n):
if(n in 0):
return n
else:
return fib(n-1)+fib(n-2)
using ; is supported::
import io; def fib(n){/* code */} ; print("hello");
You can also write anonymous functions like this:
print([def(x, y) {return x + y}(x, y) for x in range(0, 5) for y in range(-5, 0)])
print([def(x) { if(x in [0, 1]) {return x}; while (x < 100) { x = x ** 2} return x}(x) for x in range(0, 10)])
Not necessarily in one line:
print([def(x) {
if(x in [0, 1]) {
return x
};
while (x < 100) {
x = x ** 2
};
return x
}(x) for x in range(0, 10)])
Note that this anonymous function isn't Python lambda, they're real functions, without limitations of lambda.
Project Info
============
Github project page: https://github.com/pooya-eghbali/brackets
Mail me at: persian.writer [at] Gmail.com
brackets
========
Use c-style brackets instead of indentation. This is an encoding, you can also import this module in sites.py, it will register the encoding on import.
to use this, add the magic encoding comment to your source file::
# coding: brackets
Then you can import it directly (obvsly brackets should be imported first), or if you added the encoding to your sites.py, you can use idle to view the decoded file.
Currently just works for "if|elif|else|for|while|def|with" statements. It's also possible to mix indentation and brackets. You can do that, but it is not recommended.
This started as a code, a hobby project in 2014, but now I started working on it again.
You can also decode brackets literals::
import brackets
a = b'brackets code'
a.decode('brackets')
To know how to code with brackets examine the examples provided here. There's no warranty. There might be parsing errors, report if there are any, feel free to make a pull request.
What this can do?
=================
This will convert::
if(1 in {1,2,3}){
print(5)
for(x in c){
print(c)
}
}
To this::
if(1 in {1,2,3}):
print(5)
for x in c:
print(c)
It works for messy code too. see how this can work on this one-line code::
def fib(n){if(n in 0){return n}else{return fib(n-1)+fib(n-2)}}
The result from the previous is::
def fib(n):
if(n in 0):
return n
else:
return fib(n-1)+fib(n-2)
using ; is supported::
import io; def fib(n){/* code */} ; print("hello");
You can also write anonymous functions like this:
print([def(x, y) {return x + y}(x, y) for x in range(0, 5) for y in range(-5, 0)])
print([def(x) { if(x in [0, 1]) {return x}; while (x < 100) { x = x ** 2} return x}(x) for x in range(0, 10)])
Not necessarily in one line:
print([def(x) {
if(x in [0, 1]) {
return x
};
while (x < 100) {
x = x ** 2
};
return x
}(x) for x in range(0, 10)])
Note that this anonymous function isn't Python lambda, they're real functions, without limitations of lambda.
Project Info
============
Github project page: https://github.com/pooya-eghbali/brackets
Mail me at: persian.writer [at] Gmail.com
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.
Source Distribution
brackets-0.1.1.tar.gz
(4.1 kB
view hashes)