7C47CF2F99F0C455089DAEC
     9ˆÉÌ„oÏ¿Ê =¾    9r"""plistlib.py -- a tool to generate and parse MacOSX .plist files.

The PropertyList (.plist) file format is a simple XML pickle supporting
basic object types, like dictionaries, lists, numbers and strings.
Usually the top level object is a dictionary.

To write out a plist file, use the writePlist(rootObject, pathOrFile)
function. 'rootObject' is the top level object, 'pathOrFile' is a
filename or a (writable) file object.

To parse a plist from a file, use the readPlist(pathOrFile) function,
with a file name or a (readable) file object as the only argument. It
returns the top level object (again, usually a dictionary).

To work with plist data in strings, you can use readPlistFromString()
and writePlistToString().

Values can be strings, integers, floats, booleans, tuples, lists,
dictionaries, Data or datetime.datetime objects. String values (including
dictionary keys) may be unicode strings -- they will be written out as
UTF-8.

The <data> plist type is supported through the Data class. This is a
thin wrapper around a Python string.

Generate Plist example:

    pl = dict(
        aString="Doodah",
        aList=["A", "B", 12, 32.1, [1, 2, 3]],
        aFloat=0.1,
        anInt=728,
        aDict=dict(
            anotherString="<hello & hi there!>",
            aUnicodeValue=u'M\xe4ssig, Ma\xdf',
            aTrueValue=True,
            aFalseValue=False,
        ),
        someData=Data("<binary gunk>"),
        someMoreData=Data("<lots of binary gunk>" * 10),
        aDate=datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(time.mktime(time.gmtime())),
    )
    # unicode keys are possible, but a little awkward to use:
    pl[u'\xc5benraa'] = "That was a unicode key."
    writePlist(pl, fileName)

Parse Plist example:

    pl = readPlist(pathOrFile)
    print pl["aKey"]
"""


__all__ = [
    "readPlist", "writePlist", "readPlistFromString", "writePlistToString",
    "readPlistFromResource", "writePlistToResource",
    "Plist", "Data", "Dict"
]
# Note: the Plist and Dict classes have been deprecated.

import binascii
import datetime
from cStringIO import StringIO
import re
import warnings


def readPlist(pathOrFile):
    """Read a .plist file. 'pathOrFile' may either be a file name or a
    (readable) file object. Return the unpacked root object (which
    usually is a dictionary).
    """
    didOpen = 0
    if isinstance(pathOrFile, (str, unicode)):
        pathOrFile = open(pathOrFile)
        didOpen = 1
    p = PlistParser()
    rootObject = p.parse(pathOrFile)
    if didOpen:
        pathOrFile.close()
    return rootObject


def writePlist(rootObject, pathOrFile):
    """Write 'rootObject' to a .plist file. 'pathOrFile' may either be a
    file name or a (writable) file object.
    """
    didOpen = 0
    if isinstance(pathOrFile, (str, unicode)):
        pathOrFile = open(pathOrFile, "w")
        didOpen = 1
    writer = PlistWriter(pathOrFile)
    writer.writeln("<plist version=\"1.0\">")
    writer.writeValue(rootObject)
    writer.writeln("</plist>")
    if didOpen:
        pathOrFile.close()


def readPlistFromString(data):
    """Read a plist data from a string. Return the root object.
    """
    return readPlist(StringIO(data))


def writePlistToString(rootObject):
    """Return 'rootObject' as a plist-formatted string.
    """
    f = StringIO()
    writePlist(rootObject, f)
    return f.getvalue()


def readPlistFromResource(path, restype='plst', resid=0):
    """Read plst resource from the resource fork of path.
    """
    warnings.warnpy3k("In 3.x, readPlistFromResource is removed.",
                      stacklevel=2)
    from Carbon.File import FSRef, FSGetResourceForkName
    from Carbon.Files import fsRdPerm
    from Carbon import Res
    fsRef = FSRef(path)
    resNum = Res.FSOpenResourceFile(fsRef, FSGetResourceForkName(), fsRdPerm)
    Res.UseResFile(resNum)
    plistData = Res.Get1Resource(restype, resid).data
    Res.CloseResFile(resNum)
    return readPlistFromString(plistData)


def writePlistToResource(rootObject, path, restype='plst', resid=0):
   