Reputation: 765
I am trying to parse a file using the amazing python library pyparsing
but I am having a lot of problems...
The file I am trying to parse is something like:
sectionOne:
list:
- XXitem
- XXanotherItem
key1: value1
product: milk
release: now
subSection:
skey : sval
slist:
- XXitem
mods:
- XXone
- XXtwo
version: last
sectionTwo:
base: base-0.1
config: config-7.0-7
As you can see is an indented configuration file, and this is more or less how I have tried to define the grammar
I have tried to create this grammar using pyparsing but with no success.
import pprint
import pyparsing
NEWLINE = pyparsing.LineEnd().suppress()
VALID_CHARACTERS = pyparsing.srange("[a-zA-Z0-9_\-\.]")
COLON = pyparsing.Suppress(pyparsing.Literal(":"))
HYPHEN = pyparsing.Suppress(pyparsing.Literal("-"))
XX = pyparsing.Literal("XX")
list_item = HYPHEN + pyparsing.Combine(XX + pyparsing.Word(VALID_CHARACTERS))
list_of_items = pyparsing.Group(pyparsing.OneOrMore(list_item))
key = pyparsing.Word(VALID_CHARACTERS) + COLON
pair_value = pyparsing.Word(VALID_CHARACTERS) + NEWLINE
value = (pair_value | list_of_items)
pair = pyparsing.Group(key + value)
indentStack = [1]
section = pyparsing.Forward()
section_name = pyparsing.Word(VALID_CHARACTERS) + COLON
section_value = pyparsing.OneOrMore(pair | section)
section_content = pyparsing.indentedBlock(section_value, indentStack, True)
section << pyparsing.Group(section_name + section_content)
parser = pyparsing.OneOrMore(section)
def main():
try:
with open('simple.info', 'r') as content_file:
content = content_file.read()
print "content:\n", content
print "\n"
result = parser.parseString(content)
print "result1:\n", result
print "len", len(result)
pprint.pprint(result.asList())
except pyparsing.ParseException, err:
print err.line
print " " * (err.column - 1) + "^"
print err
except pyparsing.ParseFatalException, err:
print err.line
print " " * (err.column - 1) + "^"
print err
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()
This is the result :
result1:
[['sectionOne', [[['list', ['XXitem', 'XXanotherItem']], ['key1', 'value1'], ['product', 'milk'], ['release', 'now'], ['subSection', [[['skey', 'sval'], ['slist', ['XXitem']], ['mods', ['XXone', 'XXtwo']], ['version', 'last']]]]]]], ['sectionTwo', [[['base', 'base-0.1'], ['config', 'config-7.0-7']]]]]
len 2
[
['sectionOne',
[[
['list', ['XXitem', 'XXanotherItem']],
['key1', 'value1'],
['product', 'milk'],
['release', 'now'],
['subSection',
[[
['skey', 'sval'],
['slist', ['XXitem']],
['mods', ['XXone', 'XXtwo']],
['version', 'last']
]]
]
]]
],
['sectionTwo',
[[
['base', 'base-0.1'],
['config', 'config-7.0-7']
]]
]
]
As you can see I have two main problems:
1.- Each section content is nested twice into a list
2.- the key "version" is parsed inside the "subSection" when it belongs to the "sectionOne"
My real target is to be able to get a structure of python nested dictionaries with the keys and values to easily extract the info for each field, but the pyparsing.Dict
is something obscure to me.
Could anyone please help me ?
Thanks in advance
( sorry for the long post )
Upvotes: 2
Views: 1404
Reputation: 63709
You really are pretty close - congrats, indented parsers are not the easiest to write with pyparsing.
Look at the commented changes. Those marked with 'A' are changes to fix your two stated problems. Those marked with 'B' add Dict constructs so that you can access the parsed data as a nested structure using the names in the config.
The biggest culprit is that indentedBlock
does some extra Group'ing for you, which gets in the way of Dict's name-value associations. Using ungroup
to peel that away lets Dict see the underlying pairs.
Best of luck with pyparsing!
import pprint
import pyparsing
NEWLINE = pyparsing.LineEnd().suppress()
VALID_CHARACTERS = pyparsing.srange("[a-zA-Z0-9_\-\.]")
COLON = pyparsing.Suppress(pyparsing.Literal(":"))
HYPHEN = pyparsing.Suppress(pyparsing.Literal("-"))
XX = pyparsing.Literal("XX")
list_item = HYPHEN + pyparsing.Combine(XX + pyparsing.Word(VALID_CHARACTERS))
list_of_items = pyparsing.Group(pyparsing.OneOrMore(list_item))
key = pyparsing.Word(VALID_CHARACTERS) + COLON
pair_value = pyparsing.Word(VALID_CHARACTERS) + NEWLINE
value = (pair_value | list_of_items)
#~ A: pair = pyparsing.Group(key + value)
pair = (key + value)
indentStack = [1]
section = pyparsing.Forward()
section_name = pyparsing.Word(VALID_CHARACTERS) + COLON
#~ A: section_value = pyparsing.OneOrMore(pair | section)
section_value = (pair | section)
#~ B: section_content = pyparsing.indentedBlock(section_value, indentStack, True)
section_content = pyparsing.Dict(pyparsing.ungroup(pyparsing.indentedBlock(section_value, indentStack, True)))
#~ A: section << Group(section_name + section_content)
section << (section_name + section_content)
#~ B: parser = pyparsing.OneOrMore(section)
parser = pyparsing.Dict(pyparsing.OneOrMore(pyparsing.Group(section)))
Now instead of pprint(result.asList())
you can write:
print (result.dump())
to show the Dict hierarchy:
[['sectionOne', ['list', ['XXitem', 'XXanotherItem']], ... etc. ...
- sectionOne: [['list', ['XXitem', 'XXanotherItem']], ... etc. ...
- key1: value1
- list: ['XXitem', 'XXanotherItem']
- mods: ['XXone', 'XXtwo']
- product: milk
- release: now
- subSection: [['skey', 'sval'], ['slist', ['XXitem']]]
- skey: sval
- slist: ['XXitem']
- version: last
- sectionTwo: [['base', 'base-0.1'], ['config', 'config-7.0-7']]
- base: base-0.1
- config: config-7.0-7
allowing you to write statements like:
print (result.sectionTwo.base)
Upvotes: 1