""" To understand Python on a deeper level, |jedi| needs to understand some of the dynamic features of Python, however this probably the most complicated part: - Array modifications (e.g. ``list.append``) - Parameter completion in functions - Flow checks (e.g. ``if isinstance(a, str)`` -> a is a str) Array modifications ******************* If the content of an array (``set``/``list``) is wanted somewhere, the current module will be checked for appearances of ``arr.append``, ``arr.insert``, etc. If the ``arr`` name points to an actual array, the content will be added This can be really cpu intensive, as you can imagine. Because |jedi| has to follow **every** ``append``. However this works pretty good, because in *slow* cases, the recursion detector and other settings will stop this process. It is important to note that: 1. Array modfications work only in the current module 2. Only Array additions are being checked, ``list.pop``, etc. is being ignored. Parameter completion ******************** One of the really important features of |jedi| is to have an option to understand code like this:: def foo(bar): bar. # completion here foo(1) There's no doubt wheter bar is an ``int`` or not, but if there's also a call like ``foo('str')``, what would happen? Well, we'll just show both. Because that's what a human would expect. It works as follows: - A param is being encountered - search for function calls named ``foo`` - execute these calls and check the injected params. This work with a ``ParamListener``. Flow checks *********** Flow checks are not really mature. There's only a check for ``isinstance``. It would check whether a flow has the form of ``if isinstance(a, type_or_tuple)``. Unfortunately every other thing is being ignored (e.g. a == '' would be easy to check for -> a is a string). There's big potential in these checks. """ import os from jedi import cache from jedi.parser import representation as pr from jedi import modules from jedi import settings from jedi import debug from jedi.parser import fast as fast_parser from jedi.evaluate.cache import memoize_default # This is something like the sys.path, but only for searching params. It means # that this is the order in which Jedi searches params. search_param_modules = ['.'] def get_directory_modules_for_name(mods, name): """ Search a name in the directories of modules. """ def check_python_file(path): try: return cache.parser_cache[path].parser.module except KeyError: try: return check_fs(path) except IOError: return None def check_fs(path): with open(path) as f: source = modules.source_to_unicode(f.read()) if name in source: return modules.Module(path, source).parser.module # skip non python modules mods = set(m for m in mods if m.path is None or m.path.endswith('.py')) mod_paths = set() for m in mods: mod_paths.add(m.path) yield m if settings.dynamic_params_for_other_modules: paths = set(settings.additional_dynamic_modules) for p in mod_paths: if p is not None: d = os.path.dirname(p) for entry in os.listdir(d): if entry not in mod_paths: if entry.endswith('.py'): paths.add(d + os.path.sep + entry) for p in sorted(paths): # make testing easier, sort it - same results on every interpreter c = check_python_file(p) if c is not None and c not in mods: yield c class ParamListener(object): """ This listener is used to get the params for a function. """ def __init__(self): self.param_possibilities = [] def execute(self, params): self.param_possibilities.append(params) @memoize_default([], evaluator_is_first_arg=True) def search_params(evaluator, param): """ This is a dynamic search for params. If you try to complete a type: >>> def func(foo): ... foo >>> func(1) >>> func("") It is not known what the type is, because it cannot be guessed with recursive madness. Therefore one has to analyse the statements that are calling the function, as well as analyzing the incoming params. """ if not settings.dynamic_params: return [] def get_params_for_module(module): """ Returns the values of a param, or an empty array. """ @memoize_default([], evaluator_is_first_arg=True) def get_posibilities(evaluator, module, func_name): try: possible_stmts = module.used_names[func_name] except KeyError: return [] for stmt in possible_stmts: if isinstance(stmt, pr.Import): continue calls = _scan_statement(stmt, func_name) for c in calls: # no execution means that params cannot be set call_path = list(c.generate_call_path()) pos = c.start_pos scope = stmt.parent # this whole stuff is just to not execute certain parts # (speed improvement), basically we could just call # ``follow_call_path`` on the call_path and it would # also work. def listRightIndex(lst, value): return len(lst) - lst[-1::-1].index(value) - 1 # Need to take right index, because there could be a # func usage before. i = listRightIndex(call_path, func_name) first, last = call_path[:i], call_path[i + 1:] if not last and not call_path.index(func_name) != i: continue scopes = [scope] if first: scopes = evaluator.follow_call_path(iter(first), scope, pos) pos = None from jedi.evaluate import representation as er for scope in scopes: s = evaluator.find_name(scope, func_name, position=pos, search_global=not first, resolve_decorator=False) c = [getattr(escope, 'base_func', None) or escope.base for escope in s if escope.isinstance(er.Function, er.Class)] if compare in c: # only if we have the correct function we execute # it, otherwise just ignore it. evaluator.follow_paths(iter(last), s, scope) return listener.param_possibilities result = [] for params in get_posibilities(evaluator, module, func_name): for p in params: if str(p) == param_name: result += evaluator.eval_statement(p.parent) return result func = param.get_parent_until(pr.Function) current_module = param.get_parent_until() func_name = str(func.name) compare = func if func_name == '__init__' and isinstance(func.parent, pr.Class): func_name = str(func.parent.name) compare = func.parent # get the param name if param.assignment_details: # first assignment details, others would be a syntax error commands, op = param.assignment_details[0] else: commands = param.get_commands() offset = 1 if commands[0] in ['*', '**'] else 0 param_name = str(commands[offset].name) # add the listener listener = ParamListener() func.listeners.add(listener) result = [] # This is like backtracking: Get the first possible result. for mod in get_directory_modules_for_name([current_module], func_name): result = get_params_for_module(mod) if result: break # cleanup: remove the listener; important: should not stick. func.listeners.remove(listener) return result def check_array_additions(evaluator, array): """ Just a mapper function for the internal _check_array_additions """ if not pr.Array.is_type(array._array, pr.Array.LIST, pr.Array.SET): # TODO also check for dict updates return [] is_list = array._array.type == 'list' current_module = array._array.get_parent_until() res = _check_array_additions(evaluator, array, current_module, is_list) return res def _scan_statement(stmt, search_name, assignment_details=False): """ Returns the function Call that match search_name in an Array. """ def scan_array(arr, search_name): result = [] if arr.type == pr.Array.DICT: for key_stmt, value_stmt in arr.items(): result += _scan_statement(key_stmt, search_name) result += _scan_statement(value_stmt, search_name) else: for stmt in arr: result += _scan_statement(stmt, search_name) return result check = list(stmt.get_commands()) if assignment_details: for commands, op in stmt.assignment_details: check += commands result = [] for c in check: if isinstance(c, pr.Array): result += scan_array(c, search_name) elif isinstance(c, pr.Call): s_new = c while s_new is not None: n = s_new.name if isinstance(n, pr.Name) and search_name in n.names: result.append(c) if s_new.execution is not None: result += scan_array(s_new.execution, search_name) s_new = s_new.next return result @memoize_default([], evaluator_is_first_arg=True) def _check_array_additions(evaluator, compare_array, module, is_list): """ Checks if a `pr.Array` has "add" statements: >>> a = [""] >>> a.append(1) """ if not settings.dynamic_array_additions or module.is_builtin(): return [] def check_calls(calls, add_name): """ Calls are processed here. The part before the call is searched and compared with the original Array. """ result = [] for c in calls: call_path = list(c.generate_call_path()) separate_index = call_path.index(add_name) if add_name == call_path[-1] or separate_index == 0: # this means that there is no execution -> [].append # or the keyword is at the start -> append() continue backtrack_path = iter(call_path[:separate_index]) position = c.start_pos scope = c.get_parent_until(pr.IsScope) found = evaluator.follow_call_path(backtrack_path, scope, position) if not compare_array in found: continue params = call_path[separate_index + 1] if not params.values: continue # no params: just ignore it if add_name in ['append', 'add']: for param in params: result += evaluator.eval_statement(param) elif add_name in ['insert']: try: second_param = params[1] except IndexError: continue else: result += evaluator.eval_statement(second_param) elif add_name in ['extend', 'update']: for param in params: iterators = evaluator.eval_statement(param) result += evaluate.get_iterator_types(iterators) return result from jedi.evaluate import representation as er from jedi import evaluate def get_execution_parent(element, *stop_classes): """ Used to get an Instance/Execution parent """ if isinstance(element, er.Array): stmt = element._array.parent else: # is an Instance with an ArrayInstance inside stmt = element.var_args[0].var_args.parent if isinstance(stmt, er.InstanceElement): stop_classes = list(stop_classes) + [er.Function] return stmt.get_parent_until(stop_classes) temp_param_add = settings.dynamic_params_for_other_modules settings.dynamic_params_for_other_modules = False search_names = ['append', 'extend', 'insert'] if is_list else \ ['add', 'update'] comp_arr_parent = get_execution_parent(compare_array, er.Execution) possible_stmts = [] res = [] for n in search_names: try: possible_stmts += module.used_names[n] except KeyError: continue for stmt in possible_stmts: # Check if the original scope is an execution. If it is, one # can search for the same statement, that is in the module # dict. Executions are somewhat special in jedi, since they # literally copy the contents of a function. if isinstance(comp_arr_parent, er.Execution): stmt = comp_arr_parent. \ get_statement_for_position(stmt.start_pos) if stmt is None: continue # InstanceElements are special, because they don't get copied, # but have this wrapper around them. if isinstance(comp_arr_parent, er.InstanceElement): stmt = er.InstanceElement(comp_arr_parent.instance, stmt) if evaluator.recursion_detector.push_stmt(stmt): # check recursion continue res += check_calls(_scan_statement(stmt, n), n) evaluator.recursion_detector.pop_stmt() # reset settings settings.dynamic_params_for_other_modules = temp_param_add return res def check_array_instances(evaluator, instance): """Used for set() and list() instances.""" if not settings.dynamic_arrays_instances: return instance.var_args ai = ArrayInstance(evaluator, instance) return [ai] class ArrayInstance(pr.Base): """ Used for the usage of set() and list(). This is definitely a hack, but a good one :-) It makes it possible to use set/list conversions. """ def __init__(self, evaluator, instance): self._evaluator = evaluator self.instance = instance self.var_args = instance.var_args def iter_content(self): """ The index is here just ignored, because of all the appends, etc. lists/sets are too complicated too handle that. """ items = [] from jedi import evaluate for stmt in self.var_args: for typ in self._evaluator.eval_statement(stmt): if isinstance(typ, evaluate.er.Instance) and len(typ.var_args): array = typ.var_args[0] if isinstance(array, ArrayInstance): # prevent recursions # TODO compare Modules if self.var_args.start_pos != array.var_args.start_pos: items += array.iter_content() else: debug.warning( 'ArrayInstance recursion', self.var_args) continue items += evaluate.get_iterator_types([typ]) # TODO check if exclusion of tuple is a problem here. if isinstance(self.var_args, tuple) or self.var_args.parent is None: return [] # generated var_args should not be checked for arrays module = self.var_args.get_parent_until() is_list = str(self.instance.name) == 'list' items += _check_array_additions(self._evaluator, self.instance, module, is_list) return items def check_flow_information(evaluator, flow, search_name, pos): """ Try to find out the type of a variable just with the information that is given by the flows: e.g. It is also responsible for assert checks.:: if isinstance(k, str): k. # <- completion here ensures that `k` is a string. """ if not settings.dynamic_flow_information: return None result = [] if isinstance(flow, (pr.Scope, fast_parser.Module)) and not result: for ass in reversed(flow.asserts): if pos is None or ass.start_pos > pos: continue result = _check_isinstance_type(evaluator, ass, search_name) if result: break if isinstance(flow, pr.Flow) and not result: if flow.command in ['if', 'while'] and len(flow.inputs) == 1: result = _check_isinstance_type(evaluator, flow.inputs[0], search_name) return result def _check_isinstance_type(evaluator, stmt, search_name): from jedi.evaluate import representation as er try: commands = stmt.get_commands() # this might be removed if we analyze and, etc assert len(commands) == 1 call = commands[0] assert isinstance(call, pr.Call) and str(call.name) == 'isinstance' assert bool(call.execution) # isinstance check isinst = call.execution.values assert len(isinst) == 2 # has two params obj, classes = [statement.get_commands() for statement in isinst] assert len(obj) == 1 assert len(classes) == 1 assert isinstance(obj[0], pr.Call) # names fit? assert str(obj[0].name) == search_name assert isinstance(classes[0], pr.StatementElement) # can be type or tuple except AssertionError: return [] result = [] for c in evaluator.follow_call(classes[0]): if isinstance(c, er.Array): result += c.get_index_types() else: result.append(c) for i, c in enumerate(result): result[i] = er.Instance(evaluator, c) return result