/usr/share/pyshared/pyke/contexts.py is in python-pyke 1.1.1-3.
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# coding=utf-8
#
# Copyright © 2007-2008 Bruce Frederiksen
#
# Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
# of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
# in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
# to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
# copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
# furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
#
# The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
# all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
#
# THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
# IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
# FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
# AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
# LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
# OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
# THE SOFTWARE.
"""
A context is used to store all of a rule's pattern variable bindings for a
specific rule invocation during inferencing (both forward-chaining and
backward-chaining rules).
>>> from pyke import pattern
>>> c = simple_context()
>>> var = variable('foo')
>>> var
$foo
>>> var.name
'foo'
>>> c.bind(var.name, c, 123)
True
>>> c.lookup(var)
(123, None)
>>> c.lookup_data(var.name)
123
This is a shallow binding scheme which must "unbind" variables when a
rule is done. Each time a rule is invoked, a new context object is
created to store the bindings for the variables in that rule. When the
rule is done, this context is abandoned; so the variables bound there
do not need to be individually unbound. But bindings done to
variables in other contexts _do_ need to be individually unbound.
These bindings happen when a variable in the calling rule, which must
be bound in that rule's context, is matched to a non-variable pattern (i.e.,
pattern_literal or pattern_tuple) in the called rule's context.
For example, a caller, rule A, has its own context:
>>> A_context = simple_context()
and a pattern of $foo within a subgoal in its 'when' clause:
>>> A_pattern = variable('foo')
In proving this subgoal, rule B is being tried. A new context is
created for rule B:
>>> B_context = simple_context()
Rule B has a literal 123 in its 'proven' clause:
>>> B_pattern = pattern.pattern_literal(123)
Now B's 'proven' clause is pattern matched to A's subgoal, which
results in:
>>> B_pattern.match_pattern(B_context, B_context, A_pattern, A_context)
True
The pattern matches! But the $foo variable belongs to A, so it must be
bound in A's context, not B's.
>>> A_context.lookup(A_pattern)
(123, None)
>>> B_context.lookup(A_pattern)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
KeyError: '$foo not bound'
This is done by using the current rule's context as a controlling context
for all the bindings that occur within that rule. If the binding is for
a variable in another context, the controlling context remembers the
binding in its undo_list. When the rule is finished, it executes a 'done'
method on its context which undoes all of the bindings in its undo_list.
>>> B_context.done()
>>> A_context.lookup(A_pattern)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
KeyError: '$foo not bound'
Thus, in binding a variable to a value, there are three contexts
involved:
controlling_context.bind(variable, variable_context,
value [, value_context])
The value_context must be omitted if value is any python data, and
must be included if value is a pattern (including another variable).
Variables are bound to as just strings so that they can be accessed
easily from python code without needing the variable objects.
>>> A_context.bind('foo', A_context, 123)
True
>>> A_context.lookup_data('foo')
123
But to differentiate variables from string literals in the patterns,
variables are special objects. When a variable is bound as data (to
another variable), it is bound as a variable object (again, to
differentiate it from plain python strings).
>>> a_var = variable('a_var')
>>> a_var
$a_var
>>> b_var = variable('b_var')
>>> b_var
$b_var
>>> B_context.bind(b_var.name, B_context, a_var, A_context)
True
>>> B_context.lookup(b_var)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
KeyError: '$a_var not bound'
>>> ans = B_context.lookup(b_var, True)
>>> ans # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
($a_var, <pyke.contexts.simple_context object at ...>)
>>> ans[1] is A_context
True
But to differentiate variables from string literals in the patterns,
variables are special objects. When a variable is bound as data (to
another variable), it is bound as a variable object (again, to
differentiate it from plain python strings).
>>> type(ans[0])
<class 'pyke.contexts.variable'>
The anonymous variables have names starting with '_'. Binding
requests on anonymous variables are silently ignored.
>>> anonymous('_ignored')
$_ignored
>>> A_context.bind('_bogus', A_context, 567)
False
>>> A_context.lookup_data('_bogus')
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
KeyError: '$_bogus not bound'
>>> A_context.lookup_data('_bogus', True)
'$_bogus'
"""
import sys
from pyke import pattern, unique
_Not_found = unique.unique('Not_found')
# Set to a sequence (or frozenset) of variable names to trace their bindings:
debug = ()
class simple_context(object):
def __init__(self):
self.bindings = {}
self.undo_list = []
self.save_all_undo_count = 0
def dump(self):
for var_name in sorted(self.bindings.iterkeys()):
print "%s: %s" % (var_name, repr(self.lookup_data(var_name, True)))
def bind(self, var_name, var_context, val, val_context = None):
""" val_context must be None iff val is not a pattern.
Returns True if a new binding was created.
"""
assert not isinstance(val, pattern.pattern) \
if val_context is None \
else isinstance(val, pattern.pattern)
if var_name[0] == '_': return False
if var_context is self:
assert var_name not in self.bindings
if val_context is not None:
val, val_context = val_context.lookup(val, True)
if val_context == var_context and isinstance(val, variable) and \
val.name == var_name:
# binding $x to $x; no binding necessary!
return False
if var_name in debug:
if val_context:
sys.stderr.write("binding %s in %s to %s in %s\n" %
(var_name, var_context, val, val_context))
else:
sys.stderr.write("binding %s in %s to %s\n" %
(var_name, var_context, val))
self.bindings[var_name] = (val, val_context)
if self.save_all_undo_count:
self.undo_list.append((var_name, self))
return True
ans = var_context.bind(var_name, var_context, val, val_context)
if ans: self.undo_list.append((var_name, var_context))
return ans
def is_bound(self, var):
val, where = var, self
while where is not None and isinstance(val, variable):
ans = where.bindings.get(val.name)
if ans is None: return False
val, where = ans
# where is None or not isinstance(val, variable)
return where is None or val.is_data(where)
def lookup_data(self, var_name, allow_vars = False, final = None):
""" Converts the answer into data only (without any patterns in it).
If there are unbound variables anywhere in the data, a KeyError is
generated.
"""
if final is not None:
val = final.get((var_name, self), _Not_found)
if val is not _Not_found: return val
binding = self.bindings.get(var_name)
if binding is None:
if allow_vars: return "$" + var_name
raise KeyError("$%s not bound" % var_name)
val, context = binding
if context is not None:
val = val.as_data(context, allow_vars, final)
if isinstance(val, bc_context): val = val.create_plan(final)
if final is not None: final[var_name, self] = val
return val
def lookup(self, var, allow_variable_in_ans = False):
""" Returns value, val_context.
Returns (var, self) if not bound and allow_variable_in_ans, else
raises KeyError.
"""
val, where = var, self
while where is not None and isinstance(val, variable):
ans = where.bindings.get(val.name)
if ans is None: break
val, where = ans
else:
# where is None or not isinstance(val, variable)
return val, where
# where is not None and isinstance(val, variable)
if allow_variable_in_ans: return val, where
raise KeyError("%s not bound" % str(val))
def mark(self, save_all_undo = False):
if save_all_undo: self.save_all_undo_count += 1
return len(self.undo_list)
def end_save_all_undo(self):
assert self.save_all_undo_count > 0
self.save_all_undo_count -= 1
def undo_to_mark(self, mark, *var_names_to_undo):
for var_name, var_context in self.undo_list[mark:]:
var_context._unbind(var_name)
del self.undo_list[mark:]
for var_name in var_names_to_undo:
self._unbind(var_name)
def done(self):
""" Unbinds all variables bound through 'self's 'bind' method.
The assumption here is that 'self' is being abandoned, so we don't
need to worry about self.bindings.
"""
for var_name, var_context in self.undo_list:
var_context._unbind(var_name)
def _unbind(self, var_name):
del self.bindings[var_name]
class bc_context(simple_context):
def __init__(self, rule):
super(bc_context, self).__init__()
self.rule = rule
def name(self): return self.rule.name
def __repr__(self):
return "<bc_context for %s at 0x%x>" % (self.name(), id(self))
def create_plan(self, final = None):
if final is None: final = {}
return self.rule.make_plan(self, final)
class variable(pattern.pattern):
""" The code to force variables of the same name to be the same object is
probably not needed anymore...
"""
Variables = {}
def __new__(cls, name):
var = cls.Variables.get(name)
if var is None:
var = super(variable, cls).__new__(cls)
cls.Variables[name] = var
return var
def __init__(self, name):
self.name = name
def __repr__(self): return '$' + self.name
def lookup(self, my_context, allow_variable_in_ans = False):
return my_context.lookup(self, allow_variable_in_ans)
def match_data(self, bindings, my_context, data):
if self.name in debug:
sys.stderr.write("%s.match_data(%s, %s, %s)\n" %
(self, bindings, my_context, data))
var, var_context = my_context.lookup(self, True)
if isinstance(var, variable):
bindings.bind(var.name, var_context, data)
return True
if self.name in debug:
sys.stderr.write("%s.match_data: lookup got %s in %s\n" %
(self, var, var_context))
if var_context is None: return var == data
return var.match_data(bindings, var_context, data)
def simple_match_pattern(self, bindings, my_context, pattern_b, b_context):
var, var_context = my_context.lookup(self, True)
if isinstance(var, variable):
bindings.bind(var.name, var_context, pattern_b, b_context)
return True
if var_context is None:
return pattern_b.match_data(bindings, b_context, var)
return var.simple_match_pattern(bindings, var_context,
pattern_b, b_context)
def match_pattern(self, bindings, my_context, pattern_b, b_context):
var, var_context = my_context.lookup(self, True)
if isinstance(var, variable):
bindings.bind(var.name, var_context, pattern_b, b_context)
return True
if var_context is None:
return pattern_b.match_data(bindings, b_context, var)
return var.match_pattern(bindings, var_context, pattern_b, b_context)
def as_data(self, my_context, allow_vars = False, final = None):
return my_context.lookup_data(self.name, allow_vars, final)
def is_data(self, my_context):
return my_context.is_bound(self)
class anonymous(variable):
def __init__(self, name):
assert name[0] == '_', \
"anonymous variables must start with '_', not %s" % name
super(anonymous, self).__init__(name)
def lookup(self, my_context, allow_variable_in_ans = False):
if allow_variable_in_ans: return self, my_context
raise KeyError("$%s not bound" % self.name)
def match_data(self, bindings, my_context, data):
return True
def match_pattern(self, bindings, my_context, pattern_b, b_context):
return True
def as_data(self, my_context, allow_vars = False, final = None):
if allow_vars: return "$%s" % self.name
raise KeyError("$%s not bound" % self.name)
def is_data(self, my_context):
return False
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