mercurial/thirdparty/zope/interface/ro.py
author Joerg Sonnenberger <joerg@bec.de>
Fri, 30 Apr 2021 02:11:58 +0200
changeset 47043 12450fbea288
parent 37178 68ee61822182
permissions -rw-r--r--
manifests: push down expected node length into the parser This strictly enforces the node length in the manifest lines according to what the repository expects. One test case moves large hash testing into the non-treemanifest part as treemanifests don't provide an interface for overriding just the node length for now. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D10533

##############################################################################
#
# Copyright (c) 2003 Zope Foundation and Contributors.
# All Rights Reserved.
#
# This software is subject to the provisions of the Zope Public License,
# Version 2.1 (ZPL).  A copy of the ZPL should accompany this distribution.
# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND ANY AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
# WARRANTIES ARE DISCLAIMED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
# WARRANTIES OF TITLE, MERCHANTABILITY, AGAINST INFRINGEMENT, AND FITNESS
# FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
#
##############################################################################
"""Compute a resolution order for an object and its bases
"""

from __future__ import absolute_import

__docformat__ = 'restructuredtext'

def _mergeOrderings(orderings):
    """Merge multiple orderings so that within-ordering order is preserved

    Orderings are constrained in such a way that if an object appears
    in two or more orderings, then the suffix that begins with the
    object must be in both orderings.

    For example:

    >>> _mergeOrderings([
    ... ['x', 'y', 'z'],
    ... ['q', 'z'],
    ... [1, 3, 5],
    ... ['z']
    ... ])
    ['x', 'y', 'q', 1, 3, 5, 'z']

    """

    seen = {}
    result = []
    for ordering in reversed(orderings):
        for o in reversed(ordering):
            if o not in seen:
                seen[o] = 1
                result.insert(0, o)

    return result

def _flatten(ob):
    result = [ob]
    i = 0
    for ob in iter(result):
        i += 1
        # The recursive calls can be avoided by inserting the base classes
        # into the dynamically growing list directly after the currently
        # considered object;  the iterator makes sure this will keep working
        # in the future, since it cannot rely on the length of the list
        # by definition.
        result[i:i] = ob.__bases__
    return result


def ro(object):
    """Compute a "resolution order" for an object
    """
    return _mergeOrderings([_flatten(object)])