This small utility package provides functions to be used inside Python expressions that provide functionality like that available in stack-based languages (such as forth and postscript).
It registers a hidden variable in the current running frame, which is a plain Python list - calls to plain "push, pop, dup, retr", etc... will just push/recover elements from that list.
The intent is that whenever in an expression a value is complicated to retrieve - (or computationally extensive) - instead of having to retrieve it in a previous line and storing said value in a variable, one gets the ability to "push" the value in this implicit stack - and retrieve it in another part of the same expression:
`result = pop().upper() if not push(get_my+expensive_value()).isdigit() else pop()`
For convenience, most functions return the valued passed to them in the first place (like the push above).
As of version 0.20, and introduction of the window function, stackfull is no longer Python 2.x compatible.
Clears the stack
Clears the stack up to the special sentinel value MARK - this allows for clean-up of the stack after a block of code, preserving the older values. If the stack is not empty, returns the last value on the stack non destructively, else, MARK itself is returned.
Removes the last value in the stack if the expression is false. Made to be used in comprehensions, in the if part:
Ex.: [pop().name for image in values if pop_if_false(push(image) is not None)]
Dplicates the last value on the stack It also returns the value duplicated in a non-destructive way
Pops the last value from the stack
Pops the last value from the stack, and clears the stack. This allows stackfull to be used inside generator expressions and comprehensions, using a 'push' in the filtering expression, and 'popclear' on the result expression.
Pushes a value into the stack, and returns the value itself Along with 'pop' and 'popclear' this is the heart of stackfull - as it allows an expensive function to be used in a 'if' or 'while' test, and still have its value available to use inside the defined block - without the need of an explicit auxiliar variable
Returns the value itself, and Pushes a value into the stack, if it is truthy. Otherwise does not touch the stack. Nice to use inside comprehensions in the "if" part: if the expession is not True, it is never pushed, and extraneous values don't pile up on the stack.
Ex.: [pop().name for image in values if push_if_true(image)]
Peeks the last value on the stack without consuming it
Rolls the last 'items' values on the stack by 'amount' positions, changing their order. Returns the value on the top of the stack after the changes in a non destructive way.
Retrieves the stack as an ordinary Python list (which it actually is), allowing one to perform extra desired operations, such as 'len' or 'insert'
Pre-populates a frame stack with the seed values, and then iterates over the iterable -
This allows one to use the stack with initial values in a simple way in a generator-expression context - like
fib = [push(stack()[-2] + stack()[-1]) for i in window(range(2, 10), 1,1)]