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util/format.lua @ 11962:9a70a543c727
util.async: Add next-tick configuration
Running woken runners in the next iteration of the event loop prevents
unexpected recursion, unexpected tracebacks, and is generally more
predictable.
The pattern is borrowed from util.promise, where we're now doing the same.
author | Matthew Wild <mwild1@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 29 Nov 2021 14:14:30 +0000 |
parent | 11648:96d3cbeb9275 |
child | 12031:87bc26f23d9b |
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-- -- A string.format wrapper that gracefully handles invalid arguments -- local tostring = tostring; local unpack = table.unpack or unpack; -- luacheck: ignore 113/unpack local pack = require "util.table".pack; -- TODO table.pack in 5.2+ local type = type; local dump = require "util.serialization".new("debug"); local num_type = math.type or function (n) return n % 1 == 0 and n <= 9007199254740992 and n >= -9007199254740992 and "integer" or "float"; end -- In Lua 5.3+ these formats throw an error if given a float local expects_integer = { c = true, d = true, i = true, o = true, u = true, X = true, x = true, }; -- Printable Unicode replacements for control characters local control_symbols = { -- 0x00 .. 0x1F --> U+2400 .. U+241F, 0x7F --> U+2421 ["\000"] = "\226\144\128", ["\001"] = "\226\144\129", ["\002"] = "\226\144\130", ["\003"] = "\226\144\131", ["\004"] = "\226\144\132", ["\005"] = "\226\144\133", ["\006"] = "\226\144\134", ["\007"] = "\226\144\135", ["\008"] = "\226\144\136", ["\009"] = "\226\144\137", ["\010"] = "\226\144\138", ["\011"] = "\226\144\139", ["\012"] = "\226\144\140", ["\013"] = "\226\144\141", ["\014"] = "\226\144\142", ["\015"] = "\226\144\143", ["\016"] = "\226\144\144", ["\017"] = "\226\144\145", ["\018"] = "\226\144\146", ["\019"] = "\226\144\147", ["\020"] = "\226\144\148", ["\021"] = "\226\144\149", ["\022"] = "\226\144\150", ["\023"] = "\226\144\151", ["\024"] = "\226\144\152", ["\025"] = "\226\144\153", ["\026"] = "\226\144\154", ["\027"] = "\226\144\155", ["\028"] = "\226\144\156", ["\029"] = "\226\144\157", ["\030"] = "\226\144\158", ["\031"] = "\226\144\159", ["\127"] = "\226\144\161", }; local function format(formatstring, ...) local args = pack(...); local args_length = args.n; -- format specifier spec: -- 1. Start: '%%' -- 2. Flags: '[%-%+ #0]' -- 3. Width: '%d?%d?' -- 4. Precision: '%.?%d?%d?' -- 5. Option: '[cdiouxXaAeEfgGqs%%]' -- -- The options c, d, E, e, f, g, G, i, o, u, X, and x all expect a number as argument, whereas q and s expect a string. -- This function does not accept string values containing embedded zeros, except as arguments to the q option. -- a and A are only in Lua 5.2+ -- process each format specifier local i = 0; formatstring = formatstring:gsub("%%[^cdiouxXaAeEfgGqs%%]*[cdiouxXaAeEfgGqs%%]", function(spec) if spec ~= "%%" then i = i + 1; local arg = args[i]; local option = spec:sub(-1); if arg == nil then args[i] = "nil"; spec = "(%s)"; elseif option == "q" then args[i] = dump(arg); spec = "%s"; elseif option == "s" then args[i] = tostring(arg):gsub("[%z\1-\8\11-\31\127]", control_symbols):gsub("\n\t?", "\n\t"); elseif type(arg) ~= "number" then -- arg isn't number as expected? args[i] = tostring(arg); spec = "[%s]"; elseif expects_integer[option] and num_type(arg) ~= "integer" then args[i] = tostring(arg); spec = "[%s]"; end end return spec; end); -- process extra args while i < args_length do i = i + 1; local arg = args[i]; if arg == nil then args[i] = "(nil)"; else args[i] = tostring(arg):gsub("[%z\1-\8\11-\31\127]", control_symbols):gsub("\n\t?", "\n\t"); end formatstring = formatstring .. " [%s]" end return formatstring:format(unpack(args)); end return { format = format; };