Commit graph

7 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Zsolt Dollenstein
d9a1dc8473
Fix all type errors (#579)
* bump pyre version
* make sure CI-pyre uses working copy
* remove unused pyre suppressions
* suppress invalid decorations
* fix undefined attributes
* fix missing return annotations
* fix tuple concatenation issues
* add native stubs
* fix invalid typing of **kwargs in test_apply_type_annotations
* only install pyre on non-windows
* update test fixture to reflect changes in recent pyre versions
* suppress errors related to mismatched positions
2022-01-05 18:13:01 +00:00
Zsolt Dollenstein
c44ff0500b
Fix license headers (#560)
* Facebook -> Meta

* remove year from doc copyright
2021-12-28 11:55:18 +00:00
Zsolt Dollenstein
c02de9b718
Implement a Python PEG parser in Rust (#566)
This massive PR implements an alternative Python parser that will allow LibCST to parse Python 3.10's new grammar features. The parser is implemented in Rust, but it's turned off by default through the `LIBCST_PARSER_TYPE` environment variable. Set it to `native` to enable. The PR also enables new CI steps that test just the Rust parser, as well as steps that produce binary wheels for a variety of CPython versions and platforms.

Note: this PR aims to be roughly feature-equivalent to the main branch, so it doesn't include new 3.10 syntax features. That will be addressed as a follow-up PR.

The new parser is implemented in the `native/` directory, and is organized into two rust crates: `libcst_derive` contains some macros to facilitate various features of CST nodes, and `libcst` contains the `parser` itself (including the Python grammar), a `tokenizer` implementation by @bgw, and a very basic representation of CST `nodes`. Parsing is done by
1. **tokenizing** the input utf-8 string (bytes are not supported at the Rust layer, they are converted to utf-8 strings by the python wrapper)
2. running the **PEG parser** on the tokenized input, which also captures certain anchor tokens in the resulting syntax tree
3. using the anchor tokens to **inflate** the syntax tree into a proper CST

Co-authored-by: Benjamin Woodruff <github@benjam.info>
2021-12-21 18:14:39 +00:00
Steven Troxler
5e1e3fe970
The ufmt tool combines usort and black with a consistent wrapper, (#515)
which ensures we won't have inconsistent black-vs-isort errors
going forward. We can always format by running `ufmt format .`
at the root, and check with `ufmt check .` in our CI actions.
2021-08-25 20:39:29 -04:00
jimmylai
c023fa7c4c
[typing] enable Pyre strict mode by default (#313)
Co-authored-by: Jimmy Lai <jimmylai@fb.com>
2020-06-12 18:24:18 -07:00
Jennifer Taylor
fb4785cfa1 Bump pyre version to 0.0.30.
This introduces a few new gotchas (namely attribute access and a bug with
Union[Callable]), but it also removes a whole host of pyre-fixmes and gets us
updated to a release of pyre that came out after May.
2019-09-25 12:04:33 -07:00
Jennifer Taylor
fc430343b5 Fix internal underscore convention.
Standardize on the convention that private modules (those we don't expect people to directly import) are prefixed with an underscore. Everything under a directory/module that has an underscore is considered private, unless it is re-exported from a non-underscored module. Most things are exported from libcst directly, but there are a few things in libcst.tool, libcst.codegen and libcst.metadata that are namedspaced as such.
2019-09-17 13:52:42 -07:00
Renamed from libcst/_parser/_whitespace_parser.py (Browse further)