| Conditions | 18 |
| Total Lines | 73 |
| Code Lines | 54 |
| Lines | 0 |
| Ratio | 0 % |
| Changes | 0 | ||
Small methods make your code easier to understand, in particular if combined with a good name. Besides, if your method is small, finding a good name is usually much easier.
For example, if you find yourself adding comments to a method's body, this is usually a good sign to extract the commented part to a new method, and use the comment as a starting point when coming up with a good name for this new method.
Commonly applied refactorings include:
If many parameters/temporary variables are present:
Complex classes like msgfmt.make() often do a lot of different things. To break such a class down, we need to identify a cohesive component within that class. A common approach to find such a component is to look for fields/methods that share the same prefixes, or suffixes.
Once you have determined the fields that belong together, you can apply the Extract Class refactoring. If the component makes sense as a sub-class, Extract Subclass is also a candidate, and is often faster.
| 1 | #! /usr/bin/env python2 |
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| 104 | # Compute .mo name from .po name and arguments |
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| 105 | if filename.endswith('.po'): |
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| 106 | infile = filename |
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| 107 | else: |
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| 108 | infile = filename + '.po' |
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| 109 | if outfile is None: |
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| 110 | outfile = os.path.splitext(infile)[0] + '.mo' |
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| 111 | |||
| 112 | try: |
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| 113 | lines = open(infile).readlines() |
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| 114 | except IOError, msg: |
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| 115 | print >> sys.stderr, msg |
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| 116 | sys.exit(1) |
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| 117 | |||
| 118 | section = None |
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| 119 | fuzzy = 0 |
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| 120 | |||
| 121 | # Parse the catalog |
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| 122 | lno = 0 |
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| 123 | for l in lines: |
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| 124 | lno += 1 |
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| 125 | # If we get a comment line after a msgstr, this is a new entry |
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| 126 | if l[0] == '#' and section == STR: |
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| 127 | add(msgid, msgstr, fuzzy) |
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| 128 | section = None |
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| 129 | fuzzy = 0 |
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| 130 | # Record a fuzzy mark |
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| 131 | if l[:2] == '#,' and l.find('fuzzy'): |
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| 132 | fuzzy = 1 |
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| 133 | # Skip comments |
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| 134 | if l[0] == '#': |
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| 135 | continue |
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| 136 | # Now we are in a msgid section, output previous section |
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| 137 | if l.startswith('msgid'): |
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| 138 | if section == STR: |
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| 139 | add(msgid, msgstr, fuzzy) |
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| 140 | section = ID |
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| 141 | l = l[5:] |
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| 142 | msgid = msgstr = '' |
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| 143 | # Now we are in a msgstr section |
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| 144 | elif l.startswith('msgstr'): |
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| 145 | section = STR |
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| 146 | l = l[6:] |
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| 147 | # Skip empty lines |
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| 148 | l = l.strip() |
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| 149 | if not l: |
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| 150 | continue |
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| 151 | # XXX: Does this always follow Python escape semantics? |
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| 152 | l = eval(l) |
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| 153 | if section == ID: |
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| 154 | msgid += l |
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| 155 | elif section == STR: |
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| 156 | msgstr += l |
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| 157 | else: |
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| 158 | print >> sys.stderr, 'Syntax error on %s:%d' % (infile, lno), \ |
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| 159 | 'before:' |
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| 160 | print >> sys.stderr, l |
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| 161 | sys.exit(1) |
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| 162 | # Add last entry |
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| 163 | if section == STR: |
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| 164 | add(msgid, msgstr, fuzzy) |
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| 165 | |||
| 166 | # Compute output |
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| 167 | output = generate() |
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| 168 | |||
| 169 | try: |
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| 170 | open(outfile,"wb").write(output) |
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| 171 | except IOError,msg: |
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| 172 | print >> sys.stderr, msg |
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| 173 | |||
| 174 | |||
| 175 | |||
| 176 | def main(): |
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| 177 | try: |
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| 205 |