""" Python Markdown A Python implementation of John Gruber's Markdown. Documentation: https://python-markdown.github.io/ GitHub: https://github.com/Python-Markdown/markdown/ PyPI: https://pypi.org/project/Markdown/ Started by Manfred Stienstra (http://www.dwerg.net/). Maintained for a few years by Yuri Takhteyev (http://www.freewisdom.org). Currently maintained by Waylan Limberg (https://github.com/waylan), Dmitry Shachnev (https://github.com/mitya57) and Isaac Muse (https://github.com/facelessuser). Copyright 2007-2018 The Python Markdown Project (v. 1.7 and later) Copyright 2004, 2005, 2006 Yuri Takhteyev (v. 0.2-1.6b) Copyright 2004 Manfred Stienstra (the original version) License: BSD (see LICENSE.md for details). """ import xml.etree.ElementTree as etree from . import util 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, md): self.blockprocessors = util.Registry() self.state = State() self.md = md 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 an `ElementTree` from the lines self.root = etree.Element(self.md.doc_tag) self.parseChunk(self.root, '\n'.join(lines)) return 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: if processor.test(parent, blocks[0]): if processor.run(parent, blocks) is not False: # run returns True or None break