Thanks. I am interested in Python version as the regex template parsing is really incomplete and causes troubles in text replacements. I think I will be able to build a function into my copy of textlib.


2014-06-12 8:28 GMT+02:00 Alex Brollo <alex.brollo@gmail.com>:
Javascript version of parseTemplate() is presently "published" into it.wikisource pages, since it's part of our running tools library. Python version is presently for personal use, I can publish the code into a it.wikisource page. Keep into consideration that both are not tools, but only functions, to be used into simple tools. Thanks for interest, it incourages me to share them. :-) As soon as I'll publish them decently, I'll send you the reference off-list, then feeel free to do anything with them (to laugh, to use, to share). 

Alex




2014-06-12 6:12 GMT+02:00 Bináris <wikiposta@gmail.com>:

I am very much interested in tools that solve more problems than they cause. :-)
Have you published it anywhere?


2014-06-09 10:49 GMT+02:00 Alex Brollo <alex.brollo@gmail.com>:

While parsing wiki code without specific python tools, I found a major problem into templates code, since regex can't manage so well nested structures. I solved such issue by a layman approach with a parseTemplate  routine, both in python and in javascript, which converts templates into a simple object (a dictionary + a list), coupled with another simple routine which rebuilds the template code from the original, or edited, object. The whole thing is - as I told - very rough and it has written for personal use only; but if anyone is interested about, please ask. 

Alex brollo


2014-06-08 23:47 GMT+02:00 Merlijn van Deen <valhallasw@arctus.nl>:
On 1 June 2014 01:57, Ricordisamoa <ricordisamoa@openmailbox.org> wrote:
Since gerrit:131263 , it seems to me that the excellent mwpfh is going to be used more and more extensively within our framework.
Am I right? For example, the DuplicateReferences detection and fix in reflinks.py could be brightly refactored without regular expressions.
Or are we supposed to do the opposite conversion, where possible?

My preference is to depend on mwpfh where possible - their parser support is much better than ours, and it makes much more sense to concentrate efforts in one place. However, there's one blocker for this: the Windows support of wmpfh. It uses a C extension, and it's hard to build C extensions under Windows -- so we'd need to help Windows users along installing it in some way. I've updated the issue at https://github.com/earwig/mwparserfromhell/issues/68 with some notes for that.

Merlijn


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