# HG changeset patch # User saskia-hiltemann # Date 1447687414 18000 # Node ID 092570578470ac25530bbf38a2b7ff12ed62d31f # Parent 2c912ff178b848d3759d4921498e45ad3e127460 Uploaded diff -r 2c912ff178b8 -r 092570578470 DataTables-1.9.4.tar Binary file DataTables-1.9.4.tar has changed diff -r 2c912ff178b8 -r 092570578470 Markdown/markdown2.py --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/Markdown/markdown2.py Mon Nov 16 10:23:34 2015 -0500 @@ -0,0 +1,2440 @@ +#!/usr/bin/env python +# Copyright (c) 2012 Trent Mick. +# Copyright (c) 2007-2008 ActiveState Corp. +# License: MIT (http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php) + +from __future__ import generators + +r"""A fast and complete Python implementation of Markdown. + +[from http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/] +> Markdown is a text-to-HTML filter; it translates an easy-to-read / +> easy-to-write structured text format into HTML. Markdown's text +> format is most similar to that of plain text email, and supports +> features such as headers, *emphasis*, code blocks, blockquotes, and +> links. +> +> Markdown's syntax is designed not as a generic markup language, but +> specifically to serve as a front-end to (X)HTML. You can use span-level +> HTML tags anywhere in a Markdown document, and you can use block level +> HTML tags (like
tags.
+ """
+ yield 0, ""
+ for tup in inner:
+ yield tup
+ yield 0, "
"
+
+ def wrap(self, source, outfile):
+ """Return the source with a code, pre, and div."""
+ return self._wrap_div(self._wrap_pre(self._wrap_code(source)))
+
+ formatter_opts.setdefault("cssclass", "codehilite")
+ formatter = HtmlCodeFormatter(**formatter_opts)
+ return pygments.highlight(codeblock, lexer, formatter)
+
+ def _code_block_sub(self, match, is_fenced_code_block=False):
+ lexer_name = None
+ if is_fenced_code_block:
+ lexer_name = match.group(1)
+ if lexer_name:
+ formatter_opts = self.extras['fenced-code-blocks'] or {}
+ codeblock = match.group(2)
+ codeblock = codeblock[:-1] # drop one trailing newline
+ else:
+ codeblock = match.group(1)
+ codeblock = self._outdent(codeblock)
+ codeblock = self._detab(codeblock)
+ codeblock = codeblock.lstrip('\n') # trim leading newlines
+ codeblock = codeblock.rstrip() # trim trailing whitespace
+
+ # Note: "code-color" extra is DEPRECATED.
+ if "code-color" in self.extras and codeblock.startswith(":::"):
+ lexer_name, rest = codeblock.split('\n', 1)
+ lexer_name = lexer_name[3:].strip()
+ codeblock = rest.lstrip("\n") # Remove lexer declaration line.
+ formatter_opts = self.extras['code-color'] or {}
+
+ if lexer_name:
+ def unhash_code( codeblock ):
+ for key, sanitized in list(self.html_spans.items()):
+ codeblock = codeblock.replace(key, sanitized)
+ replacements = [
+ ("&", "&"),
+ ("<", "<"),
+ (">", ">")
+ ]
+ for old, new in replacements:
+ codeblock = codeblock.replace(old, new)
+ return codeblock
+ lexer = self._get_pygments_lexer(lexer_name)
+ if lexer:
+ codeblock = unhash_code( codeblock )
+ colored = self._color_with_pygments(codeblock, lexer,
+ **formatter_opts)
+ return "\n\n%s\n\n" % colored
+
+ codeblock = self._encode_code(codeblock)
+ pre_class_str = self._html_class_str_from_tag("pre")
+ code_class_str = self._html_class_str_from_tag("code")
+ return "\n\n%s\n
\n\n" % (
+ pre_class_str, code_class_str, codeblock)
+
+ def _html_class_str_from_tag(self, tag):
+ """Get the appropriate ' class="..."' string (note the leading
+ space), if any, for the given tag.
+ """
+ if "html-classes" not in self.extras:
+ return ""
+ try:
+ html_classes_from_tag = self.extras["html-classes"]
+ except TypeError:
+ return ""
+ else:
+ if tag in html_classes_from_tag:
+ return ' class="%s"' % html_classes_from_tag[tag]
+ return ""
+
+ def _do_code_blocks(self, text):
+ """Process Markdown `` blocks."""
+ code_block_re = re.compile(r'''
+ (?:\n\n|\A\n?)
+ ( # $1 = the code block -- one or more lines, starting with a space/tab
+ (?:
+ (?:[ ]{%d} | \t) # Lines must start with a tab or a tab-width of spaces
+ .*\n+
+ )+
+ )
+ ((?=^[ ]{0,%d}\S)|\Z) # Lookahead for non-space at line-start, or end of doc
+ # Lookahead to make sure this block isn't already in a code block.
+ # Needed when syntax highlighting is being used.
+ (?![^<]*\
)
+ ''' % (self.tab_width, self.tab_width),
+ re.M | re.X)
+ return code_block_re.sub(self._code_block_sub, text)
+
+ _fenced_code_block_re = re.compile(r'''
+ (?:\n\n|\A\n?)
+ ^```([\w+-]+)?[ \t]*\n # opening fence, $1 = optional lang
+ (.*?) # $2 = code block content
+ ^```[ \t]*\n # closing fence
+ ''', re.M | re.X | re.S)
+
+ def _fenced_code_block_sub(self, match):
+ return self._code_block_sub(match, is_fenced_code_block=True);
+
+ def _do_fenced_code_blocks(self, text):
+ """Process ```-fenced unindented code blocks ('fenced-code-blocks' extra)."""
+ return self._fenced_code_block_re.sub(self._fenced_code_block_sub, text)
+
+ # Rules for a code span:
+ # - backslash escapes are not interpreted in a code span
+ # - to include one or or a run of more backticks the delimiters must
+ # be a longer run of backticks
+ # - cannot start or end a code span with a backtick; pad with a
+ # space and that space will be removed in the emitted HTML
+ # See `test/tm-cases/escapes.text` for a number of edge-case
+ # examples.
+ _code_span_re = re.compile(r'''
+ (?%s
" % c
+
+ def _do_code_spans(self, text):
+ # * Backtick quotes are used for
spans.
+ #
+ # * You can use multiple backticks as the delimiters if you want to
+ # include literal backticks in the code span. So, this input:
+ #
+ # Just type ``foo `bar` baz`` at the prompt.
+ #
+ # Will translate to:
+ #
+ # Just type foo `bar` baz
at the prompt.
`bar`
...
+ return self._code_span_re.sub(self._code_span_sub, text)
+
+ def _encode_code(self, text):
+ """Encode/escape certain characters inside Markdown code runs.
+ The point is that in code, these characters are literals,
+ and lose their special Markdown meanings.
+ """
+ replacements = [
+ # Encode all ampersands; HTML entities are not
+ # entities within a Markdown code span.
+ ('&', '&'),
+ # Do the angle bracket song and dance:
+ ('<', '<'),
+ ('>', '>'),
+ ]
+ for before, after in replacements:
+ text = text.replace(before, after)
+ hashed = _hash_text(text)
+ self._escape_table[text] = hashed
+ return hashed
+
+ _strong_re = re.compile(r"(\*\*|__)(?=\S)(.+?[*_]*)(?<=\S)\1", re.S)
+ _em_re = re.compile(r"(\*|_)(?=\S)(.+?)(?<=\S)\1", re.S)
+ _code_friendly_strong_re = re.compile(r"\*\*(?=\S)(.+?[*_]*)(?<=\S)\*\*", re.S)
+ _code_friendly_em_re = re.compile(r"\*(?=\S)(.+?)(?<=\S)\*", re.S)
+ def _do_italics_and_bold(self, text):
+ # must go first:
+ if "code-friendly" in self.extras:
+ text = self._code_friendly_strong_re.sub(r"\1", text)
+ text = self._code_friendly_em_re.sub(r"\1", text)
+ else:
+ text = self._strong_re.sub(r"\2", text)
+ text = self._em_re.sub(r"\2", text)
+ return text
+
+ # "smarty-pants" extra: Very liberal in interpreting a single prime as an
+ # apostrophe; e.g. ignores the fact that "round", "bout", "twer", and
+ # "twixt" can be written without an initial apostrophe. This is fine because
+ # using scare quotes (single quotation marks) is rare.
+ _apostrophe_year_re = re.compile(r"'(\d\d)(?=(\s|,|;|\.|\?|!|$))")
+ _contractions = ["tis", "twas", "twer", "neath", "o", "n",
+ "round", "bout", "twixt", "nuff", "fraid", "sup"]
+ def _do_smart_contractions(self, text):
+ text = self._apostrophe_year_re.sub(r"’\1", text)
+ for c in self._contractions:
+ text = text.replace("'%s" % c, "’%s" % c)
+ text = text.replace("'%s" % c.capitalize(),
+ "’%s" % c.capitalize())
+ return text
+
+ # Substitute double-quotes before single-quotes.
+ _opening_single_quote_re = re.compile(r"(?
+ See "test/tm-cases/smarty_pants.text" for a full discussion of the
+ support here and
+ .+?)', re.S) + def _dedent_two_spaces_sub(self, match): + return re.sub(r'(?m)^ ', '', match.group(1)) + + def _block_quote_sub(self, match): + bq = match.group(1) + bq = self._bq_one_level_re.sub('', bq) # trim one level of quoting + bq = self._ws_only_line_re.sub('', bq) # trim whitespace-only lines + bq = self._run_block_gamut(bq) # recurse + + bq = re.sub('(?m)^', ' ', bq) + # These leading spaces screw with
content, so we need to fix that: + bq = self._html_pre_block_re.sub(self._dedent_two_spaces_sub, bq) + + return "\n%s\n\n\n" % bq + + def _do_block_quotes(self, text): + if '>' not in text: + return text + return self._block_quote_re.sub(self._block_quote_sub, text) + + def _form_paragraphs(self, text): + # Strip leading and trailing lines: + text = text.strip('\n') + + # Wraptags. + grafs = [] + for i, graf in enumerate(re.split(r"\n{2,}", text)): + if graf in self.html_blocks: + # Unhashify HTML blocks + grafs.append(self.html_blocks[graf]) + else: + cuddled_list = None + if "cuddled-lists" in self.extras: + # Need to put back trailing '\n' for `_list_item_re` + # match at the end of the paragraph. + li = self._list_item_re.search(graf + '\n') + # Two of the same list marker in this paragraph: a likely + # candidate for a list cuddled to preceding paragraph + # text (issue 33). Note the `[-1]` is a quick way to + # consider numeric bullets (e.g. "1." and "2.") to be + # equal. + if (li and len(li.group(2)) <= 3 and li.group("next_marker") + and li.group("marker")[-1] == li.group("next_marker")[-1]): + start = li.start() + cuddled_list = self._do_lists(graf[start:]).rstrip("\n") + assert cuddled_list.startswith("
tags. + graf = self._run_span_gamut(graf) + grafs.append("
" + graf.lstrip(" \t") + "
") + + if cuddled_list: + grafs.append(cuddled_list) + + return "\n\n".join(grafs) + + def _add_footnotes(self, text): + if self.footnotes: + footer = [ + '%s
" % backlink) + footer.append('+ iFrame + Back to page 1 +
++ This page has an absolute position elemnt that take it out side the normal document body, which is marked with a red border on this page. This prevents the normal height calculation, which is based on the body tag from returning the correct height. To work around this you can set the heightCalculationMethod option to use one of the other page height propeties. +
++ Use the dropdown to change the sizing method of the page, select the different sizing options to see how the effect the page. Note that they can have different effects in different browsers, so you are normally best off selecting max if you need to change away from the default bodyOffset option. +
++ Height Calculation Method + +
++ This option should be used sparingly, as the alternate methods can be less acurate at working out the correct page size, can cause screen flicker and can sometimes fail to reduce in size when the frame content changes in browsers that do not support mutationObservers (See caniuse.com for details). +
+ +