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Allows a user to efficiently specify multiple values in one larger text block.

Project description

Quick Entry

The quick entry processor allows a user to efficiently specify multiple values in one larger text block. The processor uses plugins to dynamically define the commands to handle.

This type of input is not aimed at the average user, but at power users and users that can be trained. The syntax is purposefully minimized to maximize the input speed. This method of entry has been verified in a real life setting.

Processor Plugins

Let’s start by looking at the processor plugins, which can handle one piece of the quick entry text. The first plugin type can handle strings of the form:

<shortName>=<value>

A base implementation of this plugin is provided by the package. Let’s create a plugin that can process a name:

>>> from z3c.quickentry import plugin
>>> class NamePlugin(plugin.ShortNamePlugin):
...     shortName = 'nm'
...     varName = 'name'

Any plugin is instantiated using an initial text and optionally a position that is used during error reporting:

>>> name = NamePlugin('nm=Stephan')
>>> name
<NamePlugin shortName='nm', varName='name'>
>>> NamePlugin('nm=Stephan', 35)
<NamePlugin shortName='nm', varName='name'>

You can now ask the plugin, whether it can process this text:

>>> name.canProcess()
True
>>> NamePlugin('n=Stephan').canProcess()
False
>>> NamePlugin('Stephan').canProcess()
False

Sometimes the processor adds more text later:

>>> name.text += ' Richter'

Once all pieces have been processed by the quick entry processor, each instantiated plugin gets processed. The result of this action is a dictionary:

>>> name.process(None)
{'name': u'Stephan Richter'}

The second type of plugin matches a regular expression to determine whether a piece of text can be processed. Let’s create a phone number plugin:

>>> import re
>>> class PhonePlugin(plugin.RegexPlugin):
...     regex = re.compile('^[0-9]{3}-[0-9]{3}-[0-9]{4}$')
...     varName = 'phone'

This plugin is also instantiated using an initial text:

>>> phone = PhonePlugin('978-555-5300')
>>> phone
<PhonePlugin varName='phone'>

You can now ask the plugin, whether it can process this text:

>>> name.canProcess()
True
>>> PhonePlugin('(978) 555-5300').canProcess()
False
>>> PhonePlugin('+1-978-555-5300').canProcess()
False

Let’s now process the plugin:

>>> phone.process(None)
{'phone': u'978-555-5300'}

If the text changes, so that the plugin cannot parse the text anymore, a process error is raised:

>>> phone.text += ' (ext. 2134)'
>>> phone.process(None)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ProcessError: The regex did match anymore. Probably some text was added
              later that disrupted the pattern. (Position 0)

Finally let’s have a look at a more advanced example. We would like to be able to handle the string “<age><gender>” and parse it into 2 variables:

>>> from z3c.quickentry import interfaces
>>> class AgeGenderPlugin(plugin.BasePlugin):
...     regex = re.compile('([0-9]{1,3})([FM])')
...
...     def canProcess(self):
...         return self.regex.match(self.text) is not None
...
...     def process(self, context):
...         match = self.regex.match(self.text)
...         if match is None:
...            raise interfaces.ProcessError(self.position, u'Error here.')
...         return {'age': int(match.groups()[0]),
...                 'gender': unicode(match.groups()[1])}

Let’s now make sure that the plugin can handle several strings:

>>> AgeGenderPlugin('27M').canProcess()
True
>>> AgeGenderPlugin('8F').canProcess()
True
>>> AgeGenderPlugin('101F').canProcess()
True
>>> AgeGenderPlugin('27N').canProcess()
False
>>> AgeGenderPlugin('M').canProcess()
False
>>> AgeGenderPlugin('18').canProcess()
False

Let’s also make sure it is processed correctly:

>>> from pprint import pprint
>>> pprint(AgeGenderPlugin('27M').process(None))
{'age': 27, 'gender': u'M'}
>>> pprint(AgeGenderPlugin('8F').process(None))
{'age': 8, 'gender': u'F'}
>>> pprint(AgeGenderPlugin('101F').process(None))
{'age': 101, 'gender': u'F'}

When an error occurs at any point during the processing, a process error must be raised:

>>> pprint(AgeGenderPlugin('27N').process(None))
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ProcessError: Error here. (Position 0)

The plugin above used the BasePlugin class to minimize the boilerplate. The base plugin requires you to implement the canProcess() and process():

>>> base = plugin.BasePlugin('some text')
>>> base.canProcess()
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
NotImplementedError
>>> base.process(None)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
NotImplementedError

Executing Plugins

An optional feature of the package is the ability for the plugin to apply the parsed data directly to a specified context. The simplest such case is to simply set the attribute on the context. For this use case we have a mix-in class:

>>> class ExecutingAgeGenderPlugin(AgeGenderPlugin, plugin.SetAttributeMixin):
...     pass

Let’s now create a person on which the attributes can be stored:

>>> class Person(object):
...     name = None
...     phone = None
...     age = None
...     gender = None
>>> stephan = Person()

Let’s now apply the executing age/gender plugin onto the person:

>>> stephan.age
>>> stephan.gender
>>> ExecutingAgeGenderPlugin('27M').apply(stephan)
>>> stephan.age
27
>>> stephan.gender
u'M'

Processors

The processor collects several plugins and handles one large chunk of quick entry text. Let’s create a processor for the plugins above, using the default whitespace character as field separator:

>>> from z3c.quickentry import processor
>>> info = processor.BaseProcessor()
>>> info.plugins = (NamePlugin, PhonePlugin, AgeGenderPlugin)

The lowest level step of the processor is the parsing of the text; the result is a sequence of plugin instances:

>>> info.parse('nm=Stephan 27M')
[<NamePlugin shortName='nm', varName='name'>, <AgeGenderPlugin '27M'>]

Let’s now parse and process a simple texts that uses some or all plugins:

>>> pprint(info.process('nm=Stephan 27M'))
{'age': 27, 'gender': u'M', 'name': u'Stephan'}
>>> pprint(info.process('978-555-5300 27M'))
{'age': 27, 'gender': u'M', 'phone': u'978-555-5300'}
>>> pprint(info.process('nm=Stephan 978-555-5300 27M'))
{'age': 27, 'gender': u'M', 'name': u'Stephan', 'phone': u'978-555-5300'}

Note that you can also have names that contain spaces, because the last name cannot be matched to another plugin:

>>> pprint(info.process('nm=Stephan Richter 27M'))
{'age': 27, 'gender': u'M', 'name': u'Stephan Richter'}

Optionally, you can also provide a processing context that can be used to look up values (for example vocabularies):

>>> pprint(info.process('nm=Stephan Richter 27M', context=object()))
{'age': 27, 'gender': u'M', 'name': u'Stephan Richter'}

Let’s now change the separation character to a comma:

>>> info.separationCharacter = ','
>>> pprint(info.process('nm=Stephan Richter,27M', context=object()))
{'age': 27, 'gender': u'M', 'name': u'Stephan Richter'}

But what happens, if no plugin can be found. Then a process error is raised:

>>> info.process('err=Value', context=object())
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ProcessError: No matching plugin found. (Position 0)

Executing Processors

These processors can apply all of the plugins on a context. Let’s convert the remaining plugins to be executable:

>>> class ExecutingNamePlugin(NamePlugin, plugin.SetAttributeMixin):
...     pass
>>> class ExecutingPhonePlugin(PhonePlugin, plugin.SetAttributeMixin):
...     pass

Let’s now create a new user and create an executing processor:

>>> stephan = Person()
>>> proc = processor.ExecutingBaseProcessor()
>>> proc.plugins = (
...     ExecutingNamePlugin, ExecutingPhonePlugin, ExecutingAgeGenderPlugin)
>>> proc.apply('nm=Stephan 978-555-5300 27M', stephan)
>>> stephan.name
u'Stephan'
>>> stephan.phone
u'978-555-5300'
>>> stephan.age
27
>>> stephan.gender
u'M'

Changes

0.1 (2010-08-23)

  • Initial public release.

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