minipy 0.2
Minify Python 2 source code
a Python 2 minifier by Gareth Rees <http://garethrees.org/>
Introduction
minipy is a minifier for Python 2. It rewrites Python 2 source code in a way that preserves the meaning of the code while reducing it in size. For example:
$ cat fib.py
cache = {0: 0, 1: 1, 2: 1, 3: 2}
def fibonacci(n):
"""Return the nth Fibonacci number."""
if n not in cache:
a = n // 2
r = n % 2
m = (r * 2) - 1
cache[n] = fibonacci(a + 1) ** 2 + m * fibonacci(a + r - 1) ** 2
return cache[n]
$ minipy --rename --docstrings fib.py
b={0:0,1:1,2:1,3:2}
def c(a):
if a not in b:d=a//2;e=a%2;f=e*2-1;b[a]=c(d+1)**2+f*c(d+e-1)**2
return b[a]
Command line
Usage: minipy [options] [-o OUTPUT] FILE
Options:
--version show program's version number and exit
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-o OUTPUT, --output=OUTPUT
output file (default: stdout)
-D, --docstrings remove docstrings and other statements with no side
effects (implies --noselftest)
-R, --rename aggressively rename non-preserved variables
-i INDENT, --indent=INDENT
number of spaces per indentation level
-p PRESERVE, --preserve=PRESERVE
preserve words from renaming (separate by commas)
--nojoinlines put each statement on its own line
--noselftest skip the self-test
--debug dump the parse tree
The self-test
Generating minified source code without accidentally changing the meaning is tricky: see the list of issues for many awkward cases that had to be fixed. Therefore, in its default operating mode, minipy performs a “self-test”: it takes the minified code, re-parses it, and asserts that the parse tree for the minified code is identical to the parse tree for the original code. If the self-test passes, then you can be highly confident that minipy has not changed the meaning of your code.
In order to pass the self-test, minipy must eschew a few changes to the code that result in harmless changes to the parse tree. These changes are:
- Replacing pass with 0.
- Replacing -(1) with -1.
You can use the --noselftest option to enable these changes, but by disabling the self-test you accept a small risk of a bug in minipy changing the meaning of your code.
The optional transformations --rename and --docstrings can’t be combined with the self-test, so these options imply --noselftest.
Please report all self-test failures, attaching the code that causes the failure.
Renaming
Python’s use of introspection and duck typing means that it is not possible to change names in a program without risk of changing the meaning. The --rename option to minipy therefore makes a “best attempt” to discover names that need to be preserved, but does not guarantee anything. Use at your own risk!
The following names are preserved when renaming:
- Names specified on the command-line via the --preserve option (write --preserve=name1,name2,name3 to preserve more than one name).
- Built-in names (abs, all, any, apply, ...).
- Any name used as an attribute (.join, .index, .copy, .sort, ...).
- Any name starting and ending with two underscores.
- The names of all imported modules.
- Any name exported by a module in a from module import * statement.
- Any name in the list assigned to the __all__ global variable.
License
minipy is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
- Author: Gareth Rees
- Home Page: https://github.com/gareth-rees/minipy
- License: GNU General Public License (GPL) Version 3
- Categories
- Package Index Owner: garethrees
- DOAP record: minipy-0.2.xml
