Tim Chase wrote: > After a little searching, I've not been able to come up with what > I'd consider canonical examples of consider calling an external > editor/pager on a file and reading the results back in. (most of > my results are swamped by people asking about editors written in > Python, or what the best editors for Python code are) > > The pseudocode would be something like > > def edit_text(data): > temp_fname = generate_temp_name() > try: > f = file(temp_fname, 'w') > f.write(data) > f.close() > before = info(temp_fname) # maybe stat+checksum? > editor = find_sensible_editor() > subprocess.call([editor, temp_fname]) > if before == info(temp_fname): > return None > else: > return file(temp_fname).read() > finally: > delete_if_exists(temp_fname) > > However there are things to watch out for in this lousy code: > > -race conditions, unique naming, and permissions on the temp file > > -proper & efficient detection of file-change, to know whether the > user actually did anything
Just read the whole thing back into memory and compare the string to the original data. The file has to be quite long for the checksum calculation to be worthwhile. > -cross-platform determination of a sensible editor (that blocks > rather than spawns), using platform conventions like > os.environ['EDITOR'] > > -cleanup deletion of the temp-file > > I presume the code for spawning $PAGER on some content would look > pretty similar. > > Any good example code (or blog posts, or other links) that has > been battle-tested? You could look into mercurial to see what it does to let you edit its commit messages. A quick look into mercurial/ui.py (http://selenic.com/hg/file/9cf1620e1e75/mercurial/ui.py, start with the ui.edit() method) suggests that it uses the same approach as your pseudocode. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list