All Downloads are FREE. Search and download functionalities are using the official Maven repository.

src.org.python.modules._io.OpenMode Maven / Gradle / Ivy

Go to download

Jython is an implementation of the high-level, dynamic, object-oriented language Python written in 100% Pure Java, and seamlessly integrated with the Java platform. It thus allows you to run Python on any Java platform.

There is a newer version: 2.7.4
Show newest version
package org.python.modules._io;

import org.python.core.Py;
import org.python.core.PyException;

/**
 * An object able to check a file access mode provided as a String and represent it as boolean
 * attributes and in a normalised form. Such a string is the the mode argument of the several open()
 * functions available in Python and certain constructors for streams-like objects.
 */
public class OpenMode {

    /** Original string supplied as the mode */
    public final String originalModeString;

    /** Whether this file is opened for reading ('r') */
    public boolean reading;

    /** Whether this file is opened for writing ('w') */
    public boolean writing;

    /** Whether this file is opened in appending mode ('a') */
    public boolean appending;

    /** Whether this file is opened for updating ('+') */
    public boolean updating;

    /** Whether this file is opened in binary mode ('b') */
    public boolean binary;

    /** Whether this file is opened in text mode ('t') */
    public boolean text;

    /** Whether this file is opened in universal newlines mode ('U') */
    public boolean universal;

    /** Whether the mode contained some other symbol from the allowed ones */
    public boolean other;

    /** Set true when any invalid symbol or combination is discovered */
    public boolean invalid;

    /**
     * Error message describing the way in which the mode is invalid, or null if no problem has been
     * found. This field may be set by the constructor (in the case of duplicate or unrecognised
     * mode letters), by the {@link #validate()} method, or by client code.
     */
    public String message;

    /**
     * Decode the given string to an OpenMode object, checking for duplicate or unrecognised mode
     * letters. Valid letters are those in "rwa+btU". Errors in the mode string do not raise an
     * exception, they simply generate an appropriate error message in {@link #message}. After
     * construction, a client should always call {@link #validate()} to complete validity checks.
     *
     * @param mode
     */
    public OpenMode(String mode) {

        originalModeString = mode;
        int n = mode.length();
        boolean duplicate = false;

        for (int i = 0; i < n; i++) {
            char c = mode.charAt(i);

            switch (c) {
                case 'r':
                    duplicate = reading;
                    reading = true;
                    break;
                case 'w':
                    duplicate = writing;
                    writing = true;
                    break;
                case 'a':
                    duplicate = appending;
                    appending = true;
                    break;
                case '+':
                    duplicate = updating;
                    updating = true;
                    break;
                case 't':
                    duplicate = text;
                    text = true;
                    break;
                case 'b':
                    duplicate = binary;
                    binary = true;
                    break;
                case 'U':
                    duplicate = universal;
                    universal = true;
                    break;
                default:
                    other = true;
            }

            // duplicate is set iff c was encountered previously */
            if (duplicate) {
                invalid = true;
                break;
            }
        }

    }

    /**
     * Adjust and validate the flags decoded from the mode string. The method affects the flags
     * where the presence of one flag implies another, then if the {@link #invalid} flag is not
     * already true, it checks the validity of the flags against combinations allowed
     * by the Python io.open() function. In the case of a violation, it sets the
     * invalid flag, and sets {@link #message} to a descriptive message. The point of
     * the qualification "if the invalid flag is not already true" is that
     * the message should always describe the first problem discovered. If left blank, as in fact
     * the constructor does, it will be filled by the generic message when {@link #checkValid()} is
     * finally called. Clients may override this method (by sub-classing) to express the validation
     * correct in their context.
     * 

* The invalid combinations enforced here are those for the "raw" (ie non-text) file types: *

    *
  • universal & (writing | appending)),
  • *
  • text & binary
  • , *
  • reading & writing,
  • *
  • appending & (reading | writing)
  • *
* See also {@link #validate(String, String, String)} for additional checks relevant to text * files. */ public void validate() { // Implications reading |= universal; // Standard tests if (!invalid) { if (universal && (writing || appending)) { message = "can't use U and writing mode at once"; } else if (text && binary) { message = "can't have text and binary mode at once"; } else { // How many of r/U, w and a were given? int rwa = 0; if (reading) { rwa += 1; } if (writing) { rwa += 1; } if (appending) { rwa += 1; } if (rwa != 1) { message = "must have exactly one of read/write/append mode"; } } invalid |= (message != null); } } /** * Perform additional validation of the flags relevant to text files. If {@link #invalid} is not * already true, and the mode includes {@link #binary}, then all the arguments to * this call must be null. If the criterion is not met, then on return from the * method, invalid==true and {@link #message} is set to a standard error message. * This is the standard additional validation applicable to text files. (By "standard" we mean * the test and messages that CPython io.open uses.) * * @param encoding argument to open() * @param errors argument to open() * @param newline argument to open() */ public void validate(String encoding, String errors, String newline) { // If the basic tests passed and binary mode is set one check text arguments null if (!invalid && binary) { if (encoding != null) { message = "binary mode doesn't take an encoding argument"; } else if (errors != null) { message = "binary mode doesn't take an errors argument"; } else if (newline != null) { message = "binary mode doesn't take a newline argument"; } invalid = (message != null); } } /** * Call {@link #validate()} and raise an exception if the mode string is not valid, as signalled * by either {@link #invalid} or {@link #other} being true after that call. If no * more specific message has been assigned in {@link #message}, report the original mode string. * * @throws PyException (ValueError) if the mode string was invalid. */ public void checkValid() throws PyException { // Actually perform the check validate(); // The 'other' flag reports alien symbols in the original mode string invalid |= other; // Finally, if invalid, report this as an error if (invalid) { if (message == null) { // Duplicates discovered in the constructor or invalid symbols message = String.format("invalid mode: '%.20s'", originalModeString); } throw Py.ValueError(message); } } /** * The mode string we need when constructing a FileIO initialised with the present * mode. Note that this is not the same as the full open mode because it omits the text-based * attributes. * * @return "r", "w", or "a" with optional "+". */ public String forFileIO() { StringBuilder m = new StringBuilder(2); if (appending) { m.append('a'); } else if (writing) { m.append('w'); } else { m.append('r'); } if (updating) { m.append('+'); } return m.toString(); } /** * The mode string that a text file should claim to have, when initialised with the present * mode. Note that this only contains text-based attributes. Since mode 't' has no effect, * except to produce an error if specified with 'b', we don't reproduce it. * * @return "", or "U". */ public String text() { return universal ? "U" : ""; } @Override public String toString() { StringBuilder m = new StringBuilder(4); if (appending) { m.append('a'); } else if (writing) { m.append('w'); } else { m.append('r'); } if (updating) { m.append('+'); } if (text) { m.append('t'); } else if (binary) { m.append('b'); } if (universal) { m.append('U'); } return m.toString(); } }




© 2015 - 2024 Weber Informatics LLC | Privacy Policy