o
    Ee;                     @   sz   d Z ddlZddlmZ z
ddlmZmZ W n ey'   ddlmZmZ Y nw e	dZ
dZdd ZG dd	 d	eeZdS )
z
An OrderedSet is a custom MutableSet that remembers its order, so that every
entry has an index that can be looked up.

Based on a recipe originally posted to ActiveState Recipes by Raymond Hettiger,
and released under the MIT license.
    N)deque)
MutableSetSequencez3.1c                 C   s"   t | dot| t ot| t S )a
  
    Are we being asked to look up a list of things, instead of a single thing?
    We check for the `__iter__` attribute so that this can cover types that
    don't have to be known by this module, such as NumPy arrays.

    Strings, however, should be considered as atomic values to look up, not
    iterables. The same goes for tuples, since they are immutable and therefore
    valid entries.

    We don't need to check for the Python 2 `unicode` type, because it doesn't
    have an `__iter__` attribute anyway.
    __iter__)hasattr
isinstancestrtuple)obj r   _/var/www/bmteknikk.ddns.net/venv/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/ordered_set.pyis_iterable   s
   


r   c                   @   s   e Zd ZdZd;ddZdd Zdd Zd	d
 Zdd Zdd Z	dd Z
dd ZeZdd Zdd ZeZeZdd Zdd Zdd Zdd Zdd  Zd!d" Zd#d$ Zd%d& Zd'd( Zd)d* Zd+d, Zd-d. Zd/d0 Zd1d2 Zd3d4 Zd5d6 Z d7d8 Z!d9d: Z"dS )<
OrderedSetz
    An OrderedSet is a custom MutableSet that remembers its order, so that
    every entry has an index that can be looked up.

    Example:
        >>> OrderedSet([1, 1, 2, 3, 2])
        OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
    Nc                 C   s$   g | _ i | _|d ur| |O } d S d S N)itemsmap)selfiterabler   r   r   __init__4   s
   zOrderedSet.__init__c                 C   
   t | jS )z
        Returns the number of unique elements in the ordered set

        Example:
            >>> len(OrderedSet([]))
            0
            >>> len(OrderedSet([1, 2]))
            2
        )lenr   r   r   r   r   __len__:      

zOrderedSet.__len__c                    sv   t |tr|tkr  S t|r fdd|D S t|ds$t |tr5 j| }t |tr3 |S |S t	d| )aQ  
        Get the item at a given index.

        If `index` is a slice, you will get back that slice of items, as a
        new OrderedSet.

        If `index` is a list or a similar iterable, you'll get a list of
        items corresponding to those indices. This is similar to NumPy's
        "fancy indexing". The result is not an OrderedSet because you may ask
        for duplicate indices, and the number of elements returned should be
        the number of elements asked for.

        Example:
            >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
            >>> oset[1]
            2
        c                    s   g | ]} j | qS r   )r   ).0ir   r   r   
<listcomp>[       z*OrderedSet.__getitem__.<locals>.<listcomp>	__index__z+Don't know how to index an OrderedSet by %r)
r   slice	SLICE_ALLcopyr   r   r   list	__class__	TypeError)r   indexresultr   r   r   __getitem__F   s   


zOrderedSet.__getitem__c                 C   s
   |  | S )z
        Return a shallow copy of this object.

        Example:
            >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
            >>> other = this.copy()
            >>> this == other
            True
            >>> this is other
            False
        )r#   r   r   r   r   r!   e   s   
zOrderedSet.copyc                 C   s   t | dkrdS t| S )Nr   r   )r   r"   r   r   r   r   __getstate__s   s   zOrderedSet.__getstate__c                 C   s$   |dkr|  g  d S |  | d S )Nr   )r   )r   stater   r   r   __setstate__   s   zOrderedSet.__setstate__c                 C   s
   || j v S )z
        Test if the item is in this ordered set

        Example:
            >>> 1 in OrderedSet([1, 3, 2])
            True
            >>> 5 in OrderedSet([1, 3, 2])
            False
        )r   r   keyr   r   r   __contains__   r   zOrderedSet.__contains__c                 C   s0   || j vrt| j| j |< | j| | j | S )aE  
        Add `key` as an item to this OrderedSet, then return its index.

        If `key` is already in the OrderedSet, return the index it already
        had.

        Example:
            >>> oset = OrderedSet()
            >>> oset.append(3)
            0
            >>> print(oset)
            OrderedSet([3])
        )r   r   r   appendr+   r   r   r   add   s   

zOrderedSet.addc                 C   s>   d}z|D ]}|  |}qW |S  ty   tdt| w )a<  
        Update the set with the given iterable sequence, then return the index
        of the last element inserted.

        Example:
            >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
            >>> oset.update([3, 1, 5, 1, 4])
            4
            >>> print(oset)
            OrderedSet([1, 2, 3, 5, 4])
        Nz(Argument needs to be an iterable, got %s)r/   r$   
ValueErrortype)r   sequence
item_indexitemr   r   r   update   s   
zOrderedSet.updatec                    s$   t |r fdd|D S  j| S )aH  
        Get the index of a given entry, raising an IndexError if it's not
        present.

        `key` can be an iterable of entries that is not a string, in which case
        this returns a list of indices.

        Example:
            >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
            >>> oset.index(2)
            1
        c                    s   g | ]}  |qS r   )r%   )r   subkeyr   r   r   r      r   z$OrderedSet.index.<locals>.<listcomp>)r   r   r+   r   r   r   r%      s   
zOrderedSet.indexc                 C   s,   | j std| j d }| j d= | j|= |S )z
        Remove and return the last element from the set.

        Raises KeyError if the set is empty.

        Example:
            >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
            >>> oset.pop()
            3
        zSet is empty)r   KeyErrorr   )r   elemr   r   r   pop   s   
zOrderedSet.popc                 C   sT   || v r&| j | }| j|= | j |= | j  D ]\}}||kr%|d | j |< qdS dS )a  
        Remove an element.  Do not raise an exception if absent.

        The MutableSet mixin uses this to implement the .remove() method, which
        *does* raise an error when asked to remove a non-existent item.

        Example:
            >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
            >>> oset.discard(2)
            >>> print(oset)
            OrderedSet([1, 3])
            >>> oset.discard(2)
            >>> print(oset)
            OrderedSet([1, 3])
           N)r   r   )r   r,   r   kvr   r   r   discard   s   
zOrderedSet.discardc                 C   s   | j dd= | j  dS )z8
        Remove all items from this OrderedSet.
        N)r   r   clearr   r   r   r   r?      s   zOrderedSet.clearc                 C   r   )zb
        Example:
            >>> list(iter(OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])))
            [1, 2, 3]
        )iterr   r   r   r   r   r        
zOrderedSet.__iter__c                 C   r   )zf
        Example:
            >>> list(reversed(OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])))
            [3, 2, 1]
        )reversedr   r   r   r   r   __reversed__  rA   zOrderedSet.__reversed__c                 C   s&   | s	d| j jf S d| j jt| f S )Nz%s()z%s(%r))r#   __name__r"   r   r   r   r   __repr__  s   zOrderedSet.__repr__c                 C   sL   t |ttfrt| t|kS zt|}W n
 ty   Y dS w t| |kS )a  
        Returns true if the containers have the same items. If `other` is a
        Sequence, then order is checked, otherwise it is ignored.

        Example:
            >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 3, 2])
            >>> oset == [1, 3, 2]
            True
            >>> oset == [1, 2, 3]
            False
            >>> oset == [2, 3]
            False
            >>> oset == OrderedSet([3, 2, 1])
            False
        F)r   r   r   r"   setr$   )r   otherother_as_setr   r   r   __eq__  s   zOrderedSet.__eq__c                 G   s<   t | tr| jnt}ttt| g|}tj|}||S )a  
        Combines all unique items.
        Each items order is defined by its first appearance.

        Example:
            >>> oset = OrderedSet.union(OrderedSet([3, 1, 4, 1, 5]), [1, 3], [2, 0])
            >>> print(oset)
            OrderedSet([3, 1, 4, 5, 2, 0])
            >>> oset.union([8, 9])
            OrderedSet([3, 1, 4, 5, 2, 0, 8, 9])
            >>> oset | {10}
            OrderedSet([3, 1, 4, 5, 2, 0, 10])
        )r   r   r#   r   r"   itchainfrom_iterable)r   setscls
containersr   r   r   r   union6  s   zOrderedSet.unionc                 C   s
   |  |S r   )intersectionr   rG   r   r   r   __and__I  s   
zOrderedSet.__and__c                    sN   t | tr| jnt}|r!tjtt|   fdd| D }||S | }||S )a  
        Returns elements in common between all sets. Order is defined only
        by the first set.

        Example:
            >>> oset = OrderedSet.intersection(OrderedSet([0, 1, 2, 3]), [1, 2, 3])
            >>> print(oset)
            OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
            >>> oset.intersection([2, 4, 5], [1, 2, 3, 4])
            OrderedSet([2])
            >>> oset.intersection()
            OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
        c                 3   s    | ]	}| v r|V  qd S r   r   r   r4   commonr   r   	<genexpr>^      z*OrderedSet.intersection.<locals>.<genexpr>)r   r   r#   rF   rQ   r   r   rM   rN   r   r   rU   r   rQ   M  s   zOrderedSet.intersectionc                    s@   | j }|rtjtt|   fdd| D }||S | }||S )a  
        Returns all elements that are in this set but not the others.

        Example:
            >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).difference(OrderedSet([2]))
            OrderedSet([1, 3])
            >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).difference(OrderedSet([2]), OrderedSet([3]))
            OrderedSet([1])
            >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) - OrderedSet([2])
            OrderedSet([1, 3])
            >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).difference()
            OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
        c                 3   s    | ]	}| vr|V  qd S r   r   rT   rG   r   r   rW   t  rX   z(OrderedSet.difference.<locals>.<genexpr>)r#   rF   rP   r   rY   r   rZ   r   
differencec  s   zOrderedSet.differencec                    s*   t | t  kr
dS t fdd| D S )a7  
        Report whether another set contains this set.

        Example:
            >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).issubset({1, 2})
            False
            >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).issubset({1, 2, 3, 4})
            True
            >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).issubset({1, 4, 3, 5})
            False
        Fc                 3       | ]}| v V  qd S r   r   rT   rZ   r   r   rW         z&OrderedSet.issubset.<locals>.<genexpr>r   allrR   r   rZ   r   issubsety     zOrderedSet.issubsetc                    s*   t  t |k r
dS t fdd|D S )a=  
        Report whether this set contains another set.

        Example:
            >>> OrderedSet([1, 2]).issuperset([1, 2, 3])
            False
            >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3, 4]).issuperset({1, 2, 3})
            True
            >>> OrderedSet([1, 4, 3, 5]).issuperset({1, 2, 3})
            False
        Fc                 3   r\   r   r   rT   r   r   r   rW     r]   z(OrderedSet.issuperset.<locals>.<genexpr>r^   rR   r   r   r   
issuperset  ra   zOrderedSet.issupersetc                 C   s:   t | tr| jnt}|| |}||| }||S )a  
        Return the symmetric difference of two OrderedSets as a new set.
        That is, the new set will contain all elements that are in exactly
        one of the sets.

        Their order will be preserved, with elements from `self` preceding
        elements from `other`.

        Example:
            >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 4, 3, 5, 7])
            >>> other = OrderedSet([9, 7, 1, 3, 2])
            >>> this.symmetric_difference(other)
            OrderedSet([4, 5, 9, 2])
        )r   r   r#   r[   rP   )r   rG   rN   diff1diff2r   r   r   symmetric_difference  s   
zOrderedSet.symmetric_differencec                 C   s   || _ dd t|D | _dS )zt
        Replace the 'items' list of this OrderedSet with a new one, updating
        self.map accordingly.
        c                 S   s   i | ]\}}||qS r   r   )r   idxr4   r   r   r   
<dictcomp>  r   z,OrderedSet._update_items.<locals>.<dictcomp>N)r   	enumerater   )r   r   r   r   r   _update_items  s   zOrderedSet._update_itemsc                    s:   t   |D ]} t |O  q|  fdd| jD  dS )a  
        Update this OrderedSet to remove items from one or more other sets.

        Example:
            >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
            >>> this.difference_update(OrderedSet([2, 4]))
            >>> print(this)
            OrderedSet([1, 3])

            >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
            >>> this.difference_update(OrderedSet([2, 4]), OrderedSet([1, 4, 6]))
            >>> print(this)
            OrderedSet([3, 5])
        c                       g | ]}| vr|qS r   r   rT   items_to_remover   r   r         z0OrderedSet.difference_update.<locals>.<listcomp>NrF   ri   r   )r   rM   rG   r   rk   r   difference_update  s   zOrderedSet.difference_updatec                    s&   t   |  fdd| jD  dS )a^  
        Update this OrderedSet to keep only items in another set, preserving
        their order in this set.

        Example:
            >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 4, 3, 5, 7])
            >>> other = OrderedSet([9, 7, 1, 3, 2])
            >>> this.intersection_update(other)
            >>> print(this)
            OrderedSet([1, 3, 7])
        c                    s   g | ]}| v r|qS r   r   rT   rZ   r   r   r     rm   z2OrderedSet.intersection_update.<locals>.<listcomp>Nrn   rR   r   rZ   r   intersection_update  s   zOrderedSet.intersection_updatec                    s<   fdd|D }t |  fddjD |  dS )a  
        Update this OrderedSet to remove items from another set, then
        add items from the other set that were not present in this set.

        Example:
            >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 4, 3, 5, 7])
            >>> other = OrderedSet([9, 7, 1, 3, 2])
            >>> this.symmetric_difference_update(other)
            >>> print(this)
            OrderedSet([4, 5, 9, 2])
        c                    rj   r   r   rT   r   r   r   r     rm   z:OrderedSet.symmetric_difference_update.<locals>.<listcomp>c                    rj   r   r   rT   rk   r   r   r     rm   Nrn   )r   rG   items_to_addr   )rl   r   r   symmetric_difference_update  s
   z&OrderedSet.symmetric_difference_updater   )#rD   
__module____qualname____doc__r   r   r'   r!   r(   r*   r-   r/   r.   r5   r%   get_locget_indexerr:   r>   r?   r   rC   rE   rI   rP   rS   rQ   r[   r`   rb   re   ri   ro   rp   rr   r   r   r   r   r   *   sB    
	r   )ru   	itertoolsrJ   collectionsr   collections.abcr   r   ImportErrorr   r    __version__r   r   r   r   r   r   <module>   s    