29.2. codeop — Compile Python code¶
The codeop module provides utilities upon which the Python
read-eval-print loop can be emulated, as is done in the code module.  As
a result, you probably don’t want to use the module directly; if you want to
include such a loop in your program you probably want to use the code
module instead.
There are two parts to this job:
- Being able to tell if a line of input completes a Python statement: in short, telling whether to print ‘ - >>>’ or ‘- ...’ next.
- Remembering which future statements the user has entered, so subsequent input can be compiled with these in effect. 
The codeop module provides a way of doing each of these things, and a way
of doing them both.
To do just the former:
- codeop.compile_command(source[, filename[, symbol]])¶
- Tries to compile source, which should be a string of Python code and return a code object if source is valid Python code. In that case, the filename attribute of the code object will be filename, which defaults to - '<input>'. Returns- Noneif source is not valid Python code, but is a prefix of valid Python code.- If there is a problem with source, an exception will be raised. - SyntaxErroris raised if there is invalid Python syntax, and- OverflowErroror- ValueErrorif there is an invalid literal.- The symbol argument determines whether source is compiled as a statement ( - 'single', the default) or as an expression (- 'eval'). Any other value will cause- ValueErrorto be raised.- Note - It is possible (but not likely) that the parser stops parsing with a successful outcome before reaching the end of the source; in this case, trailing symbols may be ignored instead of causing an error. For example, a backslash followed by two newlines may be followed by arbitrary garbage. This will be fixed once the API for the parser is better. 
- class codeop.Compile¶
- Instances of this class have - __call__()methods identical in signature to the built-in function- compile(), but with the difference that if the instance compiles program text containing a- __future__statement, the instance ‘remembers’ and compiles all subsequent program texts with the statement in force.
- class codeop.CommandCompiler¶
- Instances of this class have - __call__()methods identical in signature to- compile_command(); the difference is that if the instance compiles program text containing a- __future__statement, the instance ‘remembers’ and compiles all subsequent program texts with the statement in force.
A note on version compatibility: the Compile and
CommandCompiler are new in Python 2.2.  If you want to enable the
future-tracking features of 2.2 but also retain compatibility with 2.1 and
earlier versions of Python you can either write
try:
    from codeop import CommandCompiler
    compile_command = CommandCompiler()
    del CommandCompiler
except ImportError:
    from codeop import compile_command
which is a low-impact change, but introduces possibly unwanted global state into your program, or you can write:
try:
    from codeop import CommandCompiler
except ImportError:
    def CommandCompiler():
        from codeop import compile_command
        return compile_command
and then call CommandCompiler every time you need a fresh compiler object.
