coding convention conversion

Issac Trotts trotts at llnl.gov
Sat Dec 23 00:53:34 EST 2000


OK, that should do the trick for python.  Any ideas about how to 
do it for C++ (using python, so that this isn't off-topic ;).

Issac


On Sat, Dec 23, 2000 at 04:29:08AM +0000, Bruce Dodson wrote:
> Better yet, import the file as a module, and scan through its public symbols
> (via dir()) to find out which names need to be changed, and then use that
> information to build a sed script which can be applied globally.  You can
> easily take advantage of other meta-information such as the type, e.g. limit
> it to just functions if you want.  This approach is good because the parser
> will recognize more variations than a regexp.
> 
> 
> Something like this is what I had in mind:
> 
> from types import ModuleType, ClassType
> 
> def print_symbols(symbols, prefix=''):
>     for sym in dir(symbols):
>         if sym[:2] == '__': continue
> 
>         v = getattr(symbols, sym)
>         if type(v) is ModuleType: continue
> 
>         print prefix + sym
> 
>         if type(v) is ClassType:
>             print_symbols(v, prefix + sym + '.')
> 
> 
> See also the pyclbr module for a way to do something similar without
> executing the module.
> 
> Bruce
> 
> 
> 
> "D-Man" <dsh8290 at rit.edu> wrote in message
> news:mailman.977522226.5104.python-list at python.org...
> >
> > This shouldn't be too hard with a python script and some regexes with
> > some more string processing in between (or maybe multiple pass).
> >
> > Everything you want to change is bounded by "def" on one side and "("
> > on the other.  Then replace the capitals with _ followed by the lower
> > case version.
> >
> > A quick (partial) solution:
> >
> > re = re.compile( "def ([a-z]+)([A-Z])([a-z]*)\(" )
> >
> > for line in source.readlines() :
> > match = re.match( line )
> > if ( match ) :
> > res = "def " + re.group( 0 ) + "_" + \
> > string.lower( re.group( 1 ) + re.group( 2 ) + "("
> >
> >
> > This isn't complete and won't have the arguments in the result (nor
> > preserve indentation before the "def").
> >
> > I think the re.sub() function will do more of what you want it to.
> >
> >
> > HTH,
> > -D
> >
> >
> > On Fri, Dec 22, 2000 at 12:20:15PM -0800, Issac Trotts wrote:
> > > Does anyone know of a utility to change between the coding conventions
> > > of
> > >
> > > def fooBarBaz(): pass
> > >
> > > and
> > >
> > > def foo_bar_baz(): pass
> > >
> > > It is a pain to do this by hand.
> > >
> > > Thanks,
> > > Issac
> >
> 
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