Index: third_party/Python-Markdown/markdown/blockparser.py |
diff --git a/third_party/Python-Markdown/markdown/blockparser.py b/third_party/Python-Markdown/markdown/blockparser.py |
new file mode 100644 |
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..32d3254cdf832b869a83c0fd1cb6a0607090511e |
--- /dev/null |
+++ b/third_party/Python-Markdown/markdown/blockparser.py |
@@ -0,0 +1,100 @@ |
+from __future__ import unicode_literals |
+from __future__ import absolute_import |
+from . import util |
+from . import odict |
+ |
+ |
+class State(list): |
+ """ Track the current and nested state of the parser. |
+ |
+ This utility class is used to track the state of the BlockParser and |
+ support multiple levels if nesting. It's just a simple API wrapped around |
+ a list. Each time a state is set, that state is appended to the end of the |
+ list. Each time a state is reset, that state is removed from the end of |
+ the list. |
+ |
+ Therefore, each time a state is set for a nested block, that state must be |
+ reset when we back out of that level of nesting or the state could be |
+ corrupted. |
+ |
+ While all the methods of a list object are available, only the three |
+ defined below need be used. |
+ |
+ """ |
+ |
+ def set(self, state): |
+ """ Set a new state. """ |
+ self.append(state) |
+ |
+ def reset(self): |
+ """ Step back one step in nested state. """ |
+ self.pop() |
+ |
+ def isstate(self, state): |
+ """ Test that top (current) level is of given state. """ |
+ if len(self): |
+ return self[-1] == state |
+ else: |
+ return False |
+ |
+ |
+class BlockParser: |
+ """ Parse Markdown blocks into an ElementTree object. |
+ |
+ A wrapper class that stitches the various BlockProcessors together, |
+ looping through them and creating an ElementTree object. |
+ """ |
+ |
+ def __init__(self, markdown): |
+ self.blockprocessors = odict.OrderedDict() |
+ self.state = State() |
+ self.markdown = markdown |
+ |
+ def parseDocument(self, lines): |
+ """ Parse a markdown document into an ElementTree. |
+ |
+ Given a list of lines, an ElementTree object (not just a parent |
+ Element) is created and the root element is passed to the parser |
+ as the parent. The ElementTree object is returned. |
+ |
+ This should only be called on an entire document, not pieces. |
+ |
+ """ |
+ # Create a ElementTree from the lines |
+ self.root = util.etree.Element(self.markdown.doc_tag) |
+ self.parseChunk(self.root, '\n'.join(lines)) |
+ return util.etree.ElementTree(self.root) |
+ |
+ def parseChunk(self, parent, text): |
+ """ Parse a chunk of markdown text and attach to given etree node. |
+ |
+ While the ``text`` argument is generally assumed to contain multiple |
+ blocks which will be split on blank lines, it could contain only one |
+ block. Generally, this method would be called by extensions when |
+ block parsing is required. |
+ |
+ The ``parent`` etree Element passed in is altered in place. |
+ Nothing is returned. |
+ |
+ """ |
+ self.parseBlocks(parent, text.split('\n\n')) |
+ |
+ def parseBlocks(self, parent, blocks): |
+ """ Process blocks of markdown text and attach to given etree node. |
+ |
+ Given a list of ``blocks``, each blockprocessor is stepped through |
+ until there are no blocks left. While an extension could potentially |
+ call this method directly, it's generally expected to be used |
+ internally. |
+ |
+ This is a public method as an extension may need to add/alter |
+ additional BlockProcessors which call this method to recursively |
+ parse a nested block. |
+ |
+ """ |
+ while blocks: |
+ for processor in self.blockprocessors.values(): |
+ if processor.test(parent, blocks[0]): |
+ if processor.run(parent, blocks) is not False: |
+ # run returns True or None |
+ break |