A Python parser for MediaWiki wikicode https://mwparserfromhell.readthedocs.io/
Nevar pievienot vairāk kā 25 tēmas Tēmai ir jāsākas ar burtu vai ciparu, tā var saturēt domu zīmes ('-') un var būt līdz 35 simboliem gara.
 
 
 
 
Ben Kurtovic b2b49ebd80 More specific docs for contexts and tokenizer. pirms 11 gadiem
mwparserfromhell More specific docs for contexts and tokenizer. pirms 11 gadiem
tests Support changing a template's name, plus a couple of typos and docs. pirms 11 gadiem
.gitignore Adding Python 3 support pirms 11 gadiem
LICENSE Update copyright notice; some additions. pirms 12 gadiem
README.rst Update py3k compatibility in some modules. pirms 11 gadiem
setup.py Copyedit, fixes, clarify Python 2 + 3 support. pirms 11 gadiem

README.rst

mwparserfromhell
========================

**mwparserfromhell** (the *MediaWiki Parser from Hell*) is a Python package
that provides an easy-to-use and outrageously powerful parser for MediaWiki_
wikicode. It supports Python 2 and Python 3.

Developed by Earwig_ with help from `Σ`_.

Installation
------------

The easiest way to install the parser is through the `Python Package Index`_,
so you can install the latest release with ``pip install mwparserfromhell``
(`get pip`_). Alternatively, get the latest development version::

git clone git://github.com/earwig/mwparserfromhell.git mwparserfromhell
cd mwparserfromhell
python setup.py install

You can run the comprehensive unit testing suite with ``python setup.py test``.

Usage
-----

Normal usage is rather straightforward (where ``text`` is page text)::

>>> import mwparserfromhell
>>> wikicode = mwparserfromhell.parse(text)

``wikicode`` is a ``mwparserfromhell.wikicode.Wikicode`` object, which acts
like an ordinary ``unicode`` object (or ``str`` in Python 3) with some extra
methods. For example::

>>> text = "I has a template! {{foo|bar|baz|eggs=spam}} See it?"
>>> wikicode = mwparserfromhell.parse(text)
>>> print wikicode
I has a template! {{foo|bar|baz|eggs=spam}} See it?
>>> templates = wikicode.filter_templates()
>>> print templates
['{{foo|bar|baz|eggs=spam}}']
>>> template = templates[0]
>>> print template.name
foo
>>> print template.params
['bar', 'baz', 'eggs=spam']
>>> print template.get(1).value
bar
>>> print template.get("eggs").value
spam

Since every node you reach is also a ``Wikicode`` object, it's trivial to get
nested templates::

>>> code = mwparserfromhell.parse("{{foo|this {{includes a|template}}}}")
>>> print code.filter_templates()
['{{foo|this {{includes a|template}}}}']
>>> foo = code.filter_templates()[0]
>>> print foo.get(1).value
this {{includes a|template}}
>>> print foo.get(1).value.filter_templates()[0]
{{includes a|template}}
>>> print foo.get(1).value.filter_templates()[0].get(1).value
template

Additionally, you can get include nested templates in ``filter_templates()`` by
passing ``recursive=True``::

>>> text = "{{foo|{{bar}}={{baz|{{spam}}}}}}"
>>> mwparserfromhell.parse(text).filter_templates(recursive=True)
['{{foo|{{bar}}={{baz|{{spam}}}}}}', '{{bar}}', '{{baz|{{spam}}}}', '{{spam}}']

Templates can be easily modified to add, remove, alter or params. ``Wikicode``
can also be treated like a list with ``append()``, ``insert()``, ``remove()``,
``replace()``, and more::

>>> text = "{{cleanup}} '''Foo''' is a [[bar]]. {{uncategorized}}"
>>> code = mwparserfromhell.parse(text)
>>> for template in code.filter_templates():
... if template.name == "cleanup" and not template.has_param("date"):
... template.add("date", "July 2012")
...
>>> print code
{{cleanup|date=July 2012}} '''Foo''' is a [[bar]]. {{uncategorized}}
>>> code.replace("{{uncategorized}}", "{{bar-stub}}")
>>> print code
{{cleanup|date=July 2012}} '''Foo''' is a [[bar]]. {{bar-stub}}
>>> print code.filter_templates()
['{{cleanup|date=July 2012}}', '{{bar-stub}}']

You can then convert ``code`` back into a regular ``unicode`` object (for
saving the page!) by calling ``unicode()`` on it::

>>> text = unicode(code)
>>> print text
{{cleanup|date=July 2012}} '''Foo''' is a [[bar]]. {{bar-stub}}
>>> text == code
True

Likewise, use ``str(code)`` in Python 3.

Integration
-----------

``mwparserfromhell`` is used by and originally developed for EarwigBot_;
``Page`` objects have a ``parse`` method that essentially calls
``mwparserfromhell.parse()`` on ``page.get()``.

If you're using PyWikipedia_, your code might look like this::

import mwparserfromhell
import wikipedia as pywikibot
def parse(title):
site = pywikibot.get_site()
page = pywikibot.Page(site, title)
text = page.get()
return mwparserfromhell.parse(text)

If you're not using a library, you can parse templates in any page using the
following code (via the API_)::

import json
import urllib
import mwparserfromhell
API_URL = "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/api.php"
def parse(title):
raw = urllib.urlopen(API_URL, data).read()
res = json.loads(raw)
text = res["query"]["pages"].values()[0]["revisions"][0]["*"]
return mwparserfromhell.parse(text)

.. _MediaWiki: http://mediawiki.org
.. _Earwig: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:The_Earwig
.. _Σ: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Σ
.. _Python Package Index: http://pypi.python.org
.. _get pip: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/pip
.. _EarwigBot: https://github.com/earwig/earwigbot
.. _PyWikipedia: http://pywikipediabot.sourceforge.net/
.. _API: http://mediawiki.org/wiki/API