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Find the Python code for specified symbols

Project description

symbex

PyPI Changelog Tests License

Find the Python code for specified symbols

Read symbex: search Python code for functions and classes, then pipe them into a LLM for background on this project.

Installation

Install this tool using pip:

pip install symbex

Usage

symbex can search for names of functions and classes that occur at the top level of a Python file.

To search every .py file in your current directory and all subdirectories, run like this:

symbex my_function

You can search for more than one symbol at a time:

symbex my_function MyClass

Wildcards are supported - to search for every test_ function run this (note the single quotes to avoid the shell interpreting the * as a wildcard):

symbex 'test_*'

To search for methods within classes, use class.method notation:

symbex Entry.get_absolute_url

Wildcards are supported here as well:

symbex 'Entry.*'
symbex '*.get_absolute_url'
symbex '*.get_*'

Or to view every method of every class:

symbex '*.*'

To search within a specific file, pass that file using the -f option. You can pass this more than once to search multiple files.

symbex MyClass -f my_file.py

To search within a specific directory and all of its subdirectories, use the -d option:

symbex Database -d ~/projects/datasette

If symbex encounters any Python code that it cannot parse, it will print a warning message and continue searching:

# Syntax error in path/badcode.py: expected ':' (<unknown>, line 1)

Pass --silent to suppress these warnings:

symbex MyClass --silent

Filters

In addition to searching for symbols, you can apply filters to the results.

The following filters are available:

  • --function - only functions
  • --class - only classes
  • --async - only async def functions
  • --documented - functions/classes that have a docstring
  • --undocumented - functions/classes that do not have a docstring
  • --typed - functions that have at least one type annotation
  • --untyped - functions that have no type annotations
  • --partially-typed - functions that have some type annotations but not all
  • --fully-typed - functions that have type annotations for every argument and the return value

For example, to see the signatures of every async def function in your project that doesn't have any type annotations:

symbex -s --async --untyped

For class methods instead of functions, you can combine filters with a symbol search argument of *.*.

This example shows the full source code of every class method in your project with type annotations on all of the arguments and the return value:

symbex --fully-typed '*.*'

Example output

In a fresh checkout of Datasette I ran this command:

symbex MessagesDebugView get_long_description

Here's the output of the command:

# File: setup.py Line: 5
def get_long_description():
    with open(
        os.path.join(os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__)), "README.md"),
        encoding="utf8",
    ) as fp:
        return fp.read()

# File: datasette/views/special.py Line: 60
class PatternPortfolioView(View):
    async def get(self, request, datasette):
        await datasette.ensure_permissions(request.actor, ["view-instance"])
        return Response.html(
            await datasette.render_template(
                "patterns.html",
                request=request,
                view_name="patterns",
            )
        )

Just the signatures

The -s/--signatures option will list just the signatures of the functions and classes, for example:

symbex -s -d symbex
# File: symbex/cli.py Line: 95
def cli(symbols, files, directories, signatures, docstrings, count, silent, async_, function, class_, documented, undocumented, typed, untyped, partially_typed, fully_typed)

# File: symbex/lib.py Line: 105
def function_definition(function_node: AST)

# File: symbex/lib.py Line: 12
def find_symbol_nodes(code: str, filename: str, symbols: Iterable[str]) -> List[Tuple[(AST, Optional[str])]]

# File: symbex/lib.py Line: 173
def class_definition(class_def)

# File: symbex/lib.py Line: 207
def annotation_definition(annotation: AST) -> str

# File: symbex/lib.py Line: 225
def read_file(path)

# File: symbex/lib.py Line: 251
class TypeSummary

# File: symbex/lib.py Line: 256
def type_summary(node: AST) -> Optional[TypeSummary]

# File: symbex/lib.py Line: 302
def quoted_string(s)

# File: symbex/lib.py Line: 36
def code_for_node(code: str, node: AST, class_name: str, signatures: bool, docstrings: bool) -> Tuple[(str, int)]

# File: symbex/lib.py Line: 70
def add_docstring(definition: str, node: AST, docstrings: bool, is_method: bool) -> str

# File: symbex/lib.py Line: 80
def match(name: str, symbols: Iterable[str]) -> bool

This can be combined with other options, or you can run symbex -s to see every symbol in the current directory and its subdirectories.

To include docstrings in those signatures, use --docstrings:

symbex --docstrings --documented -f symbex/lib.py
# File: symbex/lib.py Line: 12
def find_symbol_nodes(code: str, filename: str, symbols: Iterable[str]) -> List[Tuple[(AST, Optional[str])]]
    "Returns ast Nodes matching symbols"

# File: symbex/lib.py Line: 36
def code_for_node(code: str, node: AST, class_name: str, signatures: bool, docstrings: bool) -> Tuple[(str, int)]
    "Returns the code for a given node"

# File: symbex/lib.py Line: 80
def match(name: str, symbols: Iterable[str]) -> bool
    "Returns True if name matches any of the symbols, resolving wildcards"

Counting symbols

If you just want to count the number of functions and classes that match your filters, use the --count option. Here's how to count your classes:

symbex --class --count

Or to count every async test function:

symbex --async 'test_*' --count

Using with LLM

This tool is primarily designed to be used with LLM, a CLI tool for working with Large Language Models.

symbex makes it easy to grab a specific class or function and pass it to the llm command.

For example, I ran this in the Datasette repository root:

symbex Response | llm --system 'Explain this code, succinctly'

And got back this:

This code defines a custom Response class with methods for returning HTTP responses. It includes methods for setting cookies, returning HTML, text, and JSON responses, and redirecting to a different URL. The asgi_send method sends the response to the client using the ASGI (Asynchronous Server Gateway Interface) protocol.

Similar tools

  • pyastgrep by Luke Plant offers advanced capabilities for viewing and searching through Python ASTs using XPath.
  • cq is a tool thet lets you "extract code snippets using CSS-like selectors", built using Tree-sitter and primarily targetting JavaScript and TypeScript.

symbex --help

Usage: symbex [OPTIONS] [SYMBOLS]...

  Find symbols in Python code and print the code for them.

  Example usage:

      # Search current directory and subdirectories
      symbex my_function MyClass

      # Search using a wildcard
      symbex 'test_*'

      # Find a specific class method
      symbex 'MyClass.my_method'

      # Find class methods using wildcards
      symbex '*View.handle_*'

      # Search a specific file
      symbex MyClass -f my_file.py

      # Search within a specific directory and its subdirectories
      symbex Database -d ~/projects/datasette

      # View signatures for all symbols in current directory and subdirectories
      symbex -s

      # View signatures for all test functions
      symbex 'test_*' -s

      # View signatures for all async functions with type definitions
      symbex --async --typed -s

      # Count the number of --async functions in the project
      symbex --async --count

Options:
  --version                  Show the version and exit.
  -f, --file FILE            Files to search
  -d, --directory DIRECTORY  Directories to search
  -s, --signatures           Show just function and class signatures
  --docstrings               Show function and class signatures plus docstrings
  --count                    Show count of matching symbols
  --silent                   Silently ignore Python files with parse errors
  --async                    Filter async functions
  --function                 Filter functions
  --class                    Filter classes
  --documented               Filter functions with docstrings
  --undocumented             Filter functions without docstrings
  --typed                    Filter functions with type annotations
  --untyped                  Filter functions without type annotations
  --partially-typed          Filter functions with partial type annotations
  --fully-typed              Filter functions with full type annotations
  --help                     Show this message and exit.

Development

To contribute to this tool, first checkout the code. Then create a new virtual environment:

cd symbex
python -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate

Now install the dependencies and test dependencies:

pip install -e '.[test]'

To run the tests:

pytest

just

You can also install just and use it to run the tests and linters like this:

just

Or to list commands:

just -l
Available recipes:
    black         # Apply Black
    cog           # Rebuild docs with cog
    default       # Run tests and linters
    lint          # Run linters
    test *options # Run pytest with supplied options

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