Commit graph

10 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
konsti
3ccd1d580d
Use crates.io unicode_names2 0.6.0 (#6478)
Update `unicode_names2` to the crates.io release 0.6.0, removing a git
dependency.
2023-10-02 18:17:38 -04:00
Dhruv Manilawala
e62e245c61
Add support for PEP 701 (#7376)
## Summary

This PR adds support for PEP 701 in Ruff. This is a rollup PR of all the
other individual PRs. The separate PRs were created for logic separation
and code reviews. Refer to each pull request for a detail description on
the change.

Refer to the PR description for the list of pull requests within this PR.

## Test Plan

### Formatter ecosystem checks

Explanation for the change in ecosystem check:
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/7597#issue-1908878183

#### `main`

```
| project      | similarity index  | total files       | changed files     |
|--------------|------------------:|------------------:|------------------:|
| cpython      |           0.76083 |              1789 |              1631 |
| django       |           0.99983 |              2760 |                36 |
| transformers |           0.99963 |              2587 |               319 |
| twine        |           1.00000 |                33 |                 0 |
| typeshed     |           0.99983 |              3496 |                18 |
| warehouse    |           0.99967 |               648 |                15 |
| zulip        |           0.99972 |              1437 |                21 |
```

#### `dhruv/pep-701`

```
| project      | similarity index  | total files       | changed files     |
|--------------|------------------:|------------------:|------------------:|
| cpython      |           0.76051 |              1789 |              1632 |
| django       |           0.99983 |              2760 |                36 |
| transformers |           0.99963 |              2587 |               319 |
| twine        |           1.00000 |                33 |                 0 |
| typeshed     |           0.99983 |              3496 |                18 |
| warehouse    |           0.99967 |               648 |                15 |
| zulip        |           0.99972 |              1437 |                21 |
```
2023-09-29 02:55:39 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
93b5d8a0fb
Implement our own small-integer optimization (#7584)
## Summary

This is a follow-up to #7469 that attempts to achieve similar gains, but
without introducing malachite. Instead, this PR removes the `BigInt`
type altogether, instead opting for a simple enum that allows us to
store small integers directly and only allocate for values greater than
`i64`:

```rust
/// A Python integer literal. Represents both small (fits in an `i64`) and large integers.
#[derive(Clone, PartialEq, Eq, Hash)]
pub struct Int(Number);

#[derive(Debug, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, Hash)]
pub enum Number {
    /// A "small" number that can be represented as an `i64`.
    Small(i64),
    /// A "large" number that cannot be represented as an `i64`.
    Big(Box<str>),
}

impl std::fmt::Display for Number {
    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut std::fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> std::fmt::Result {
        match self {
            Number::Small(value) => write!(f, "{value}"),
            Number::Big(value) => write!(f, "{value}"),
        }
    }
}
```

We typically don't care about numbers greater than `isize` -- our only
uses are comparisons against small constants (like `1`, `2`, `3`, etc.),
so there's no real loss of information, except in one or two rules where
we're now a little more conservative (with the worst-case being that we
don't flag, e.g., an `itertools.pairwise` that uses an extremely large
value for the slice start constant). For simplicity, a few diagnostics
now show a dedicated message when they see integers that are out of the
supported range (e.g., `outdated-version-block`).

An additional benefit here is that we get to remove a few dependencies,
especially `num-bigint`.

## Test Plan

`cargo test`
2023-09-25 15:13:21 +00:00
Dhruv Manilawala
f5701fcc63
Use snapshots for remaining lexer tests (#7264)
## Summary

This PR updates the remaining lexer test cases to use the snapshots.
This is mainly a mechanical refactor.

## Motivation

The main motivation is so that when we add the token range values to the
test case output, it's easier to update the test cases.

The reason they were not using the snapshots before was because of the usage of
`test_case` macro. The macros is mainly used for different EOL test cases. If we
just generate the snapshots directly, then the snapshot name would be suffixed
with `-1`, `-2`, etc. as the test function is still the same. So, we'll create
the snapshot ourselves with the platform name for the respective EOL
test cases.

## Test Plan

`cargo test`
2023-09-12 00:16:38 +05:30
Micha Reiser
f1a4eb9c28
Use the unicode-ident crate (#7212) 2023-09-07 08:19:25 +00:00
Victor Hugo Gomes
041cdb95e0
Update identifier Unicode character validation to match Python spec (#7209)
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
2023-09-07 07:08:42 +00:00
Dhruv Manilawala
fb7caf43c8
Update lexer tests to use snapshots (#6658)
## Summary

This PR updates the lexer tests to use the snapshot testing framework.
It also
makes the following changes:
* Remove the use of macros in the lexer tests
* Use `test_case` for EOL tests

## Test Plan

```
cargo test --package ruff_python_parser --lib --all-features -- lexer::tests --no-capture
```
2023-08-22 18:23:19 +00:00
Dhruv Manilawala
e4a4660925
Support help end escape command with priority (#6272)
## Summary

This PR adds support for help end escape command in the lexer.

### What are "help end escape commands"?

First, the escape commands are special IPython syntax which enhances the
functionality for the IPython REPL. There are 9 types of escape kinds
which are recognized by the tokens which are present at the start of the
command (`?`, `??`, `!`, `!!`, etc.).

Here, the help command is using either the `?` or `??` token at the
start (`?str.replace` for example). Those 2 tokens are also supported
when they're at the end of the command (`str.replace?`), but the other
tokens aren't supported in that position.

There are mainly two types of help end escape commands:
1. Ending with either `?` or `??`, but it also starts with one of the
escape tokens (`%matplotlib?`)
2. On the other hand, there's a stricter version for (1) which doesn't
start with any escape tokens (`str.replace?`)

This PR adds support for (1) while (2) will be supported in the parser.

### Priority

Now, if the command starts and ends with an escape token, how do we
decide the kind of this command? This is where priority comes into
picture. This is simple as there's only one priority where `?`/`??` at
the end takes priority over any other escape token and all of the other
tokens are at the same priority. Remember that only `?`/`??` at the end
is considered valid.

This is mainly useful in the case where someone would want to invoke the
help command on the magic command itself. For example, in `%matplotlib?`
the help command takes priority which means that we want help for the
`matplotlib` magic function instead of calling the magic function
itself.

### Specification

Here's where things get a bit tricky. What if there are question mark
tokens at both ends. How do we decide if it's `Help` (`?`) kind or
`Help2` (`??`) kind?

|     | Magic       | Value     | Kind    |
| --- | ---         | ---       | ---     |
| 1   | `?foo?`     | `foo`     | `Help`  |
| 2   | `??foo?`    | `foo`     | `Help`  |
| 3   | `?foo??`    | `foo`     | `Help2` |
| 4   | `??foo??`   | `foo`     | `Help2` |
| 5   | `???foo??`  | `foo`     | `Help2` |
| 6   | `??foo???`  | `foo???`  | `Help2` |
| 7   | `???foo???` | `?foo???` | `Help2` |

Looking at the above table:

- The question mark tokens on the right takes priority over the ones on
the left but only if the number of question mark on the right is 1 or 2.
- If there are more than 2 question mark tokens on the right side, then
the left side is used to determine the same.
- If the right side is used to determine the kind, then all of the
question marks and whitespaces on the left side are ignored in the
`value`, but if it’s the other way around, then all of the extra
question marks are part of the `value`.

### References

- IPython implementation using the regex:
292e3a2345/IPython/core/inputtransformer2.py (L454-L462)
- Priorities:
292e3a2345/IPython/core/inputtransformer2.py (L466-L469)

## Test Plan

Add a bunch of test cases for the lexer and verify that it matches the
behavior of
IPython transformer.

resolves: #6357
2023-08-07 21:01:02 +05:30
Micha Reiser
40f54375cb
Pull in RustPython parser (#6099) 2023-07-27 09:29:11 +00:00
Micha Reiser
2cf00fee96
Remove parser dependency from ruff-python-ast (#6096) 2023-07-26 17:47:22 +02:00
Renamed from crates/ruff_rustpython/Cargo.toml (Browse further)