#!/usr/bin/env python ## ## Copyright (c) 2016, Alliance for Open Media. All rights reserved ## ## This source code is subject to the terms of the BSD 2 Clause License and ## the Alliance for Open Media Patent License 1.0. If the BSD 2 Clause License ## was not distributed with this source code in the LICENSE file, you can ## obtain it at www.aomedia.org/license/software. If the Alliance for Open ## Media Patent License 1.0 was not distributed with this source code in the ## PATENTS file, you can obtain it at www.aomedia.org/license/patent. ## """Wraps paragraphs of text, preserving manual formatting This is like fold(1), but has the special convention of not modifying lines that start with whitespace. This allows you to intersperse blocks with special formatting, like code blocks, with written prose. The prose will be wordwrapped, and the manual formatting will be preserved. * This won't handle the case of a bulleted (or ordered) list specially, so manual wrapping must be done. Occasionally it's useful to put something with explicit formatting that doesn't look at all like a block of text inline. indicator = has_leading_whitespace(line); if (indicator) preserve_formatting(line); The intent is that this docstring would make it through the transform and still be legible and presented as it is in the source. If additional cases are handled, update this doc to describe the effect. """ __author__ = "jkoleszar@google.com" import textwrap import sys def wrap(text): if text: return textwrap.fill(text, break_long_words=False) + '\n' return "" def main(fileobj): text = "" output = "" while True: line = fileobj.readline() if not line: break if line.lstrip() == line: text += line else: output += wrap(text) text="" output += line output += wrap(text) # Replace the file or write to stdout. if fileobj == sys.stdin: fileobj = sys.stdout else: fileobj.seek(0) fileobj.truncate(0) fileobj.write(output) if __name__ == "__main__": if len(sys.argv) > 1: main(open(sys.argv[1], "r+")) else: main(sys.stdin)