Mercurial > ~astiob > upreckon > hgweb
view compat.py @ 76:0e5ae28e0b2b
Points are now weighted on a test context basis
In particular, this has allowed for simple extensions to the format
of testconf to award points to whole test groups without at the same time
compromising the future ability of giving partial score for correct
but slow solutions. Specifically, the groupweight configuration variable
has been added and normally has the format {groupindex: points} where
groupindex is the group's index in the tests configuration variable.
The backwards incompatible change is that test contexts are no longer
guaranteed to learn the score awarded or the maximum possible score
for every test case and may instead be notified about them in batches.
In other news, the pointmap and groupweight configuration variables can
(now) be given as sequences in addition to mappings. (Technically,
the distinction currently made is dict versus everything else.) Items
of a sequence pointmap/groupweight correspond directly to the test cases/
groups defined in the tests configuration variable; in particular,
when groups are used, tests=[1],[2,3];pointmap={1:1,2:2,3:3} can now be
written as pointmap=tests=[1],[2,3]. Missing items are handled in the same
way in which they are handled when the variable is a mapping. Note
that the items of groupweight correspond to whole test groups rather
than individual test cases.
In other news again, the wording of problem total lines has been changed
from '<unweighted> points; weighted score: <weighted>' to '<weighted>
points (<unweighted> before weighting)', and group total lines now
properly report fractional numbers of points (this is a bug fix).
author | Oleg Oshmyan <chortos@inbox.lv> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 08 Jan 2011 16:03:35 +0200 |
parents | b9d5857f7b9a |
children | d46bd7ee3e69 |
line wrap: on
line source
#! /usr/bin/env python # Copyright (c) 2010 Chortos-2 <chortos@inbox.lv> # A compatibility layer for Python 2.5+. This is what lets test.py # run on all versions of Python starting with 2.5, including Python 3. # A few notes regarding some compatibility-driven peculiarities # in the use of the language that can be seen in all modules: # # * Except statements never specify target; instead, when needed, # the exception is taken from sys.exc_info(). Blame the incompatible # syntaxes of the except clause in Python 2.5 and Python 3 and the lack # of preprocessor macros in Python of any version ;P. # # * Keyword-only parameters are never used, even for parameters # that should never be given in as arguments. The reason is # the laziness of some Python developers who have failed to finish # implementing them in Python 2 even though they had several years # of time and multiple version releases to sneak them in. # # * Abstract classes are only implemented for Python 2.6 and 2.7. # ABC's require the abc module and the specification of metaclasses, # but in Python 2.5, the abc module does not exist, while in Python 3, # metaclasses are specified using a syntax totally incompatible # with Python 2 and not usable conditionally via exec() and such # because it is a detail of the syntax of the class statement itself. # Some code was adapted from Python 2.7.1 and its documentation. # This code is clearly marked as such in preceding comments and is # covered by copyright as follows: # # Copyright (c) 2001-2010 Python Software Foundation; all rights reserved. # # The code is used according to the PSF License Agreement # for Python 2.7.1, whose full text is available from your local # installation of Python (enter 'license()' in the interactive # interpreter) or from the Web at the following URL: # # http://docs.python.org/2.7.1/license.html#terms-and-conditions-for-accessing-or-otherwise-using-python try: import builtins except ImportError: import __builtin__ as builtins pseudobuiltins = ('say', 'basestring', 'range', 'map', 'zip', 'filter', 'next', 'items', 'keys', 'values', 'zip_longest', 'callable') __all__ = pseudobuiltins + ('ABCMeta', 'abstractmethod', 'CompatBuiltins') try: # Python 3 exec('say = print') except SyntaxError: try: # Python 2.6/2.7 # An alternative is exec('from __future__ import print_function; say = print'); # if problems arise with the current line, one should try replacing it # with this one with the future import before abandoning the idea altogether say = getattr(builtins, 'print') except Exception: # Python 2.5 import sys # This should fully emulate the print function of Python 2.6 in Python 2.3+ # The error messages are taken from Python 2.6 # The name bindings at the bottom of this file are in effect def saytypeerror(value, name): return TypeError(' '.join((name, 'must be None, str or unicode, not', type(value).__name__))) def say(*values, **kwargs): sep = kwargs.pop('sep' , None) end = kwargs.pop('end' , None) file = kwargs.pop('file', None) if kwargs: raise TypeError("'%s' is an invalid keyword argument for this function" % kwargs.popitem()[0]) if sep is None: sep = ' ' if end is None: end = '\n' if file is None: file = sys.stdout if not isinstance(sep, basestring): raise saytypeerror(sep, 'sep') if not isinstance(end, basestring): raise saytypeerror(end, 'end') file.write(sep.join(map(str, values)) + end) try: from os.path import relpath except ImportError: # Python 2.5 import os.path as _path # Adapted from Python 2.7.1 if hasattr(_path, 'splitunc'): def _abspath_split(path): abs = _path.abspath(_path.normpath(path)) prefix, rest = _path.splitunc(abs) is_unc = bool(prefix) if not is_unc: prefix, rest = _path.splitdrive(abs) return is_unc, prefix, [x for x in rest.split(_path.sep) if x] else: def _abspath_split(path): prefix, rest = _path.splitdrive(_path.abspath(_path.normpath(path))) return False, prefix, [x for x in rest.split(_path.sep) if x] def relpath(path, start=_path.curdir): """Return a relative version of a path""" if not path: raise ValueError("no path specified") start_is_unc, start_prefix, start_list = _abspath_split(start) path_is_unc, path_prefix, path_list = _abspath_split(path) if path_is_unc ^ start_is_unc: raise ValueError("Cannot mix UNC and non-UNC paths (%s and %s)" % (path, start)) if path_prefix.lower() != start_prefix.lower(): if path_is_unc: raise ValueError("path is on UNC root %s, start on UNC root %s" % (path_prefix, start_prefix)) else: raise ValueError("path is on drive %s, start on drive %s" % (path_prefix, start_prefix)) # Work out how much of the filepath is shared by start and path. i = 0 for e1, e2 in zip(start_list, path_list): if e1.lower() != e2.lower(): break i += 1 rel_list = [_path.pardir] * (len(start_list)-i) + path_list[i:] if not rel_list: return _path.curdir return _path.join(*rel_list) _path.relpath = relpath def import_urllib(): try: # Python 3 import urllib.request return urllib.request, lambda url: urllib.request.urlopen(url).read().decode('ascii') except ImportError: # Python 2 import urllib return urllib, lambda url: urllib.urlopen(url).read() try: from abc import ABCMeta, abstractmethod except ImportError: ABCMeta, abstractmethod = None, lambda x: x try: basestring = basestring except NameError: basestring = str # xrange is set to support simple testconf.py's written for test.py 1.x try: xrange = range = xrange except NameError: xrange = range = range try: callable = callable except NameError: from collections import Callable callable = lambda obj: isinstance(obj, Callable) try: next = next except NameError: next = lambda obj: obj.next() try: from itertools import imap as map except ImportError: map = map try: from itertools import izip as zip except ImportError: zip = zip try: from itertools import ifilter as filter except ImportError: filter = filter try: items = dict.iteritems except AttributeError: items = dict.items try: keys = dict.iterkeys except AttributeError: keys = dict.keys try: values = dict.itervalues except AttributeError: values = dict.values try: # Python 3 from itertools import zip_longest except ImportError: try: # Python 2.6/2.7 from itertools import izip_longest as zip_longest except ImportError: # Python 2.5 from itertools import chain, repeat # Adapted from the documentation of itertools.izip_longest def zip_longest(*args, **kwargs): fillvalue = kwargs.get('fillvalue') def sentinel(counter=([fillvalue]*(len(args)-1)).pop): yield counter() fillers = repeat(fillvalue) iters = [chain(it, sentinel(), fillers) for it in args] try: for tup in zip(*iters): yield tup except IndexError: pass # Automatically import * from this module into testconf.py's class CompatBuiltins(object): __slots__ = 'originals' globals = globals() def __enter__(self): self.originals = {} for name in pseudobuiltins: try: self.originals[name] = getattr(builtins, name) except AttributeError: pass setattr(builtins, name, self.globals[name]) return self def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb): for name in self.originals: setattr(builtins, name, self.originals[name])