emacs/lisp/progmodes/c-ts-common.el
Yuan Fu f856468e45
Only fill the current paragraph in c-ts-common--fill-block-comment
* lisp/progmodes/c-ts-common.el:
(c-ts-common--fill-block-comment): Shrink the filled region to the
paragraph at point.
2023-03-21 22:50:03 -07:00

397 lines
15 KiB
EmacsLisp

;;; c-ts-common.el --- Utilities for C like Languages -*- lexical-binding: t; -*-
;; Copyright (C) 2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
;; Maintainer : 付禹安 (Yuan Fu) <casouri@gmail.com>
;; Keywords : c c++ java javascript rust languages tree-sitter
;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
;; (at your option) any later version.
;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
;; GNU General Public License for more details.
;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
;;; Commentary:
;;
;; This file contains functions that can be shared by C-like language
;; major modes, like indenting and filling "/* */" block comments.
;;
;; For indenting and filling comments:
;;
;; - Use `c-ts-common-comment-setup' to setup comment variables and
;; filling.
;;
;; - Use simple-indent matcher `c-ts-common-looking-at-star' and
;; anchor `c-ts-common-comment-start-after-first-star' for indenting
;; block comments. See `c-ts-mode--indent-styles' for example.
;;
;; For indenting statements:
;;
;; - Set `c-ts-common-indent-offset',
;; `c-ts-common-indent-block-type-regexp', and
;; `c-ts-common-indent-bracketless-type-regexp', then use simple-indent
;; offset `c-ts-common-statement-offset' in
;; `treesit-simple-indent-rules'.
;;; Code:
(require 'treesit)
(eval-when-compile (require 'rx))
(declare-function treesit-node-start "treesit.c")
(declare-function treesit-node-end "treesit.c")
(declare-function treesit-node-type "treesit.c")
(declare-function treesit-node-parent "treesit.c")
(declare-function treesit-node-prev-sibling "treesit.c")
;;; Comment indentation and filling
(defun c-ts-common-looking-at-star (_n _p bol &rest _)
"A tree-sitter simple indent matcher.
Matches if there is a \"*\" after BOL."
(eq (char-after bol) ?*))
(defun c-ts-common-comment-start-after-first-star (_n parent &rest _)
"A tree-sitter simple indent anchor.
Finds the \"/*\" and returns the point after the \"*\".
Assumes PARENT is a comment node."
(save-excursion
(goto-char (treesit-node-start parent))
(if (looking-at (rx "/*"))
(match-end 0)
(point))))
(defun c-ts-common-comment-2nd-line-matcher (_n parent &rest _)
"Matches if point is at the second line of a block comment.
PARENT should be a comment node."
(and (equal (treesit-node-type parent) "comment")
(save-excursion
(forward-line -1)
(back-to-indentation)
(eq (point) (treesit-node-start parent)))))
(defun c-ts-common-comment-2nd-line-anchor (_n _p bol &rest _)
"Return appropriate anchor for the second line of a comment.
If the first line is /* alone, return the position right after
the star; if the first line is /* followed by some text, return
the position right before the text minus 1.
Use an offset of 1 with this anchor. BOL is the beginning of
non-whitespace characters of the current line."
(save-excursion
(forward-line -1)
(back-to-indentation)
(when (looking-at comment-start-skip)
(goto-char (match-end 0))
(if (looking-at (rx (* (or " " "\t")) eol))
;; Only /* at the first line.
(progn (skip-chars-backward " \t")
(if (save-excursion
(goto-char bol)
(looking-at (rx "*")))
;; The common case. Checked by "Multiline Block
;; Comments 4".
(point)
;; The "Multiline Block Comments 2" test in
;; c-ts-common-resources/indent.erts checks this.
(1- (point))))
;; There is something after /* at the first line. The
;; "Multiline Block Comments 3" test checks this.
(1- (point))))))
(defvar c-ts-common--comment-regexp
;; These covers C/C++, Java, JavaScript, TypeScript, Rust, C#.
(rx (or "comment" "line_comment" "block_comment"))
"Regexp pattern that matches a comment in C-like languages.")
(defun c-ts-common--fill-paragraph (&optional arg)
"Fillling function for `c-ts-common'.
ARG is passed to `fill-paragraph'."
(interactive "*P")
(save-restriction
(widen)
(let ((node (treesit-node-at (point))))
(when (string-match-p c-ts-common--comment-regexp
(treesit-node-type node))
(if (save-excursion
(goto-char (treesit-node-start node))
(looking-at "//"))
(fill-comment-paragraph arg)
(c-ts-common--fill-block-comment arg)))
;; Return t so `fill-paragraph' doesn't attempt to fill by
;; itself.
t)))
(defun c-ts-common--fill-block-comment (&optional arg)
"Fillling function for block comments.
ARG is passed to `fill-paragraph'. Assume point is in a block
comment."
(let* ((node (treesit-node-at (point)))
(start (treesit-node-start node))
(end (treesit-node-end node))
;; Bind to nil to avoid infinite recursion.
(fill-paragraph-function nil)
(orig-point (point-marker))
(start-marker (point-marker))
(end-marker nil)
(end-len 0))
(move-marker start-marker start)
;; We mask "/*" and the space before "*/" like
;; `c-fill-paragraph' does.
(atomic-change-group
;; Mask "/*".
(goto-char start)
(when (looking-at (rx (* (syntax whitespace))
(group "/") "*"))
(goto-char (match-beginning 1))
(move-marker start-marker (point))
(replace-match " " nil nil nil 1))
;; Include whitespaces before /*.
(goto-char start)
(beginning-of-line)
(setq start (point))
;; Mask spaces before "*/" if it is attached at the end
;; of a sentence rather than on its own line.
(goto-char end)
(when (looking-back (rx (not (syntax whitespace))
(group (+ (syntax whitespace)))
"*/")
(line-beginning-position))
(goto-char (match-beginning 1))
(setq end-marker (point-marker))
(setq end-len (- (match-end 1) (match-beginning 1)))
(replace-match (make-string end-len ?x)
nil nil nil 1))
;; If "*/" is on its own line, don't included it in the
;; filling region.
(when (not end-marker)
(goto-char end)
(when (looking-back (rx "*/") 2)
(backward-char 2)
(skip-syntax-backward "-")
(setq end (point))))
;; Let `fill-paragraph' do its thing.
(goto-char orig-point)
(narrow-to-region start end)
(let (para-start para-end)
(forward-paragraph 1)
(setq para-end (point))
(forward-paragraph -1)
(setq para-start (point))
;; We don't want to fill the region between START and
;; START-MARKER, otherwise the filling function might delete
;; some spaces there. Also, we only fill the current
;; paragraph.
(fill-region (max start-marker para-start) (min end para-end) arg))
;; Unmask.
(when start-marker
(goto-char start-marker)
(delete-char 1)
(insert "/"))
(when end-marker
(goto-char end-marker)
(delete-region (point) (+ end-len (point)))
(insert (make-string end-len ?\s)))
(goto-char orig-point))))
(defun c-ts-common-comment-setup ()
"Set up local variables for C-like comment.
Set up:
- `comment-start'
- `comment-end'
- `comment-start-skip'
- `comment-end-skip'
- `adaptive-fill-mode'
- `adaptive-fill-first-line-regexp'
- `paragraph-start'
- `paragraph-separate'
- `fill-paragraph-function'"
(setq-local comment-start "// ")
(setq-local comment-end "")
(setq-local comment-start-skip (rx (or (seq "/" (+ "/"))
(seq "/" (+ "*")))
(* (syntax whitespace))))
(setq-local comment-end-skip
(rx (* (syntax whitespace))
(group (or (syntax comment-end)
(seq (+ "*") "/")))))
(setq-local adaptive-fill-mode t)
;; This matches (1) empty spaces (the default), (2) "//", (3) "*",
;; but do not match "/*", because we don't want to use "/*" as
;; prefix when filling. (Actually, it doesn't matter, because
;; `comment-start-skip' matches "/*" which will cause
;; `fill-context-prefix' to use "/*" as a prefix for filling, that's
;; why we mask the "/*" in `c-ts-common--fill-paragraph'.)
(setq-local adaptive-fill-regexp
(concat (rx (* (syntax whitespace))
(group (or (seq "/" (+ "/")) (* "*"))))
adaptive-fill-regexp))
;; Note the missing * comparing to `adaptive-fill-regexp'. The
;; reason for its absence is a bit convoluted to explain. Suffice
;; to say that without it, filling a single line paragraph that
;; starts with /* doesn't insert * at the beginning of each
;; following line, and filling a multi-line paragraph whose first
;; two lines start with * does insert * at the beginning of each
;; following line. If you know how does adaptive filling works, you
;; know what I mean.
(setq-local adaptive-fill-first-line-regexp
(rx bos
(seq (* (syntax whitespace))
(group (seq "/" (+ "/")))
(* (syntax whitespace)))
eos))
;; Same as `adaptive-fill-regexp'.
(setq-local paragraph-start
(rx (or (seq (* (syntax whitespace))
(group (or (seq "/" (+ "/")) (* "*")))
(* (syntax whitespace))
;; Add this eol so that in
;; `fill-context-prefix', `paragraph-start'
;; doesn't match the prefix.
eol)
"\f")))
(setq-local paragraph-separate paragraph-start)
(setq-local fill-paragraph-function #'c-ts-common--fill-paragraph))
;;; Statement indent
(defvar c-ts-common-indent-offset nil
"Indent offset used by `c-ts-common' indent functions.
This should be the symbol of the indent offset variable for the
particular major mode. This cannot be nil for `c-ts-common'
statement indent functions to work.")
(defvar c-ts-common-indent-type-regexp-alist nil
"An alist of node type regexps.
Each key in the alist is one of `if', `else', `do', `while',
`for', `block', `close-bracket'. Each value in the alist
is the regexp matching the type of that kind of node. Most of
these types are self-explanatory, e.g., `if' corresponds to
\"if_statement\" in C. `block' corresponds to the {} block.
Some types, specifically `else', is usually not identified by a
standalone node, but a child under the \"if_statement\", under a
field name like \"alternative\", etc. In that case, use a
cons (TYPE . FIELD-NAME) as the value, where TYPE is the node's
parent's type, and FIELD-NAME is the field name of the node.
If the language doesn't have a particular type, it is fine to
omit it.")
(defun c-ts-common--node-is (node &rest types)
"Return non-nil if NODE is any one of the TYPES.
TYPES can be any of `if', `else', `while', `do', `for', and
`block'.
If NODE is nil, return nil."
(declare (indent 2))
(catch 'ret
(when (null node)
(throw 'ret nil))
(dolist (type types)
(let ((regexp (alist-get
type c-ts-common-indent-type-regexp-alist))
(parent (treesit-node-parent node)))
(when (and regexp
(if (consp regexp)
(and parent
(string-match-p (car regexp)
(treesit-node-type parent))
(treesit-node-field-name node)
(string-match-p (cdr regexp)
(treesit-node-field-name
node)))
(string-match-p regexp (treesit-node-type node))))
(throw 'ret t))))
nil))
(defun c-ts-common-statement-offset (node parent &rest _)
"Return an indent offset for a statement inside a block.
Assumes the anchor is (point-min), i.e., the 0th column.
This function basically counts the number of block nodes (i.e.,
brackets) (defined by `c-ts-common-indent-block-type-regexp')
between NODE and the root node (not counting NODE itself), and
multiply that by `c-ts-common-indent-offset'.
To support GNU style, on each block level, this function also
checks whether the opening bracket { is on its own line, if so,
it adds an extra level, except for the top-level.
It also has special handling for bracketless statements and
else-if statements, which see.
PARENT is NODE's parent, BOL is the beginning of non-whitespace
characters on the current line."
(let ((level 0))
;; If NODE is a opening/closing bracket on its own line, take off
;; one level because the code below assumes NODE is a statement
;; _inside_ a {} block.
(when (c-ts-common--node-is node 'block 'close-bracket)
(cl-decf level))
;; If point is on an empty line, NODE would be nil, but we pretend
;; there is a statement node.
(when (null node)
(setq node t))
;; Go up the tree and compute indent level.
(while (if (eq node t)
(setq node parent)
node)
(let ((parent (treesit-node-parent node)))
;; Increment level for every bracket (with exception).
(when (c-ts-common--node-is node 'block)
(cl-incf level)
(save-excursion
(goto-char (treesit-node-start node))
;; Add an extra level if the opening bracket is on its own
;; line, except (1) it's at top-level, or (2) it's immediate
;; parent is another block.
(cond ((bolp) nil) ; Case (1).
((c-ts-common--node-is parent 'block) ; Case (2).
nil)
;; Add a level.
((looking-back (rx bol (* whitespace))
(line-beginning-position))
(cl-incf level)))))
;; Fix bracketless statements.
(when (and (c-ts-common--node-is parent
'if 'do 'while 'for)
(not (c-ts-common--node-is node 'block)))
(cl-incf level))
;; Flatten "else if" statements.
(when (and (c-ts-common--node-is node 'else)
(c-ts-common--node-is node 'if)
;; But if the "if" is on it's own line, still
;; indent a level.
(not (save-excursion
(goto-char (treesit-node-start node))
(looking-back (rx bol (* whitespace))
(line-beginning-position)))))
(cl-decf level)))
;; Go up the tree.
(setq node (treesit-node-parent node)))
(* level (symbol-value c-ts-common-indent-offset))))
(provide 'c-ts-common)
;;; c-ts-common.el ends here