class SyntaxSuggest::CodeLine
Represents a single line of code of a given source file
This object contains metadata about the line such as amount of indentation, if it is empty or not, and lexical data, such as if it has an ‘end` or a keyword in it.
Visibility of lines can be toggled off. Marking a line as invisible indicates that it should not be used for syntax checks. It’s functionally the same as commenting it out.
Example:
line = CodeLine.from_source("def foo\n").first line.number => 1 line.empty? # => false line.visible? # => true line.mark_invisible line.visible? # => false
Constants
- TRAILING_SLASH
Attributes
When the code line is marked invisible we retain the original value of it’s line this is useful for debugging and for showing extra context
DisplayCodeWithLineNumbers
will render all lines given to it, not just visible lines, it uses the original method to obtain them.
Public Class Methods
Returns an array of CodeLine
objects from the source string
# File syntax_suggest/code_line.rb, line 29 def self.from_source(source, lines: nil) lines ||= source.lines lex_array_for_line = LexAll.new(source: source, source_lines: lines).each_with_object(Hash.new { |h, k| h[k] = [] }) { |lex, hash| hash[lex.line] << lex } lines.map.with_index do |line, index| CodeLine.new( line: line, index: index, lex: lex_array_for_line[index + 1] ) end end
# File syntax_suggest/code_line.rb, line 42 def initialize(line:, index:, lex:) @lex = lex @line = line @index = index @original = line @line_number = @index + 1 strip_line = line.dup strip_line.lstrip! if strip_line.empty? @empty = true @indent = 0 else @empty = false @indent = line.length - strip_line.length end set_kw_end end
Public Instance Methods
Comparison operator, needed for equality and sorting
# File syntax_suggest/code_line.rb, line 152 def <=>(other) index <=> other.index end
An ‘empty?` line is one that was originally left empty in the source code, while a “hidden” line is one that we’ve since marked as “invisible”
# File syntax_suggest/code_line.rb, line 117 def empty? @empty end
- Not stable API
-
Lines that have a ‘on_ignored_nl` type token and NOT a `BEG` type seem to be a good proxy for the ability to join multiple lines into one.
This predicate method is used to determine when those two criteria have been met.
The one known case this doesn’t handle is:
Ripper.lex <<~EOM a && b || c EOM
For some reason this introduces ‘on_ignore_newline` but with BEG type
# File syntax_suggest/code_line.rb, line 174 def ignore_newline_not_beg? @ignore_newline_not_beg end
Used for stable sort via indentation level
Ruby’s sort is not “stable” meaning that when multiple elements have the same value, they are not guaranteed to return in the same order they were put in.
So when multiple code lines have the same indentation level, they’re sorted by their index value which is unique and consistent.
This is mostly needed for consistency of the test suite
# File syntax_suggest/code_line.rb, line 74 def indent_index @indent_index ||= [indent, index] end
Returns true if the code line is determined to contain an ‘end` keyword
# File syntax_suggest/code_line.rb, line 89 def is_end? @is_end end
Returns true if the code line is determined to contain a keyword that matches with an ‘end`
For example: ‘def`, `do`, `begin`, `ensure`, etc.
# File syntax_suggest/code_line.rb, line 83 def is_kw? @is_kw end
Used to hide lines
The search alorithm will group lines into blocks then if those blocks are determined to represent valid code they will be hidden
# File syntax_suggest/code_line.rb, line 98 def mark_invisible @line = "" end
Opposite of ‘empty?` (note: different than `visible?`)
# File syntax_suggest/code_line.rb, line 122 def not_empty? !empty? end
Renders the given line
Also allows us to represent source code as an array of code lines.
When we have an array of code line elements calling ‘join` on the array will call `to_s` on each element, which essentially converts it back into it’s original source string.
# File syntax_suggest/code_line.rb, line 135 def to_s line end
Determines if the given line has a trailing slash
lines = CodeLine.from_source(<<~EOM) it "foo" \ EOM expect(lines.first.trailing_slash?).to eq(true)
# File syntax_suggest/code_line.rb, line 185 def trailing_slash? last = @lex.last return false unless last return false unless last.type == :on_sp last.token == TRAILING_SLASH end
Means the line was marked as “invisible” Confusingly, “empty” lines are visible…they just don’t contain any source code other than a newline (“n”).
# File syntax_suggest/code_line.rb, line 105 def visible? !line.empty? end
Private Instance Methods
Endless method detection
From github.com/ruby/irb/commit/826ae909c9c93a2ddca6f9cfcd9c94dbf53d44ab Detecting a “oneliner” seems to need a state machine. This can be done by looking mostly at the “state” (last value):
ENDFN -> BEG (token = '=' ) -> END
# File syntax_suggest/code_line.rb, line 201 def set_kw_end oneliner_count = 0 in_oneliner_def = nil kw_count = 0 end_count = 0 @ignore_newline_not_beg = false @lex.each do |lex| kw_count += 1 if lex.is_kw? end_count += 1 if lex.is_end? if lex.type == :on_ignored_nl @ignore_newline_not_beg = !lex.expr_beg? end if in_oneliner_def.nil? in_oneliner_def = :ENDFN if lex.state.allbits?(Ripper::EXPR_ENDFN) elsif lex.state.allbits?(Ripper::EXPR_ENDFN) # Continue elsif lex.state.allbits?(Ripper::EXPR_BEG) in_oneliner_def = :BODY if lex.token == "=" elsif lex.state.allbits?(Ripper::EXPR_END) # We found an endless method, count it oneliner_count += 1 if in_oneliner_def == :BODY in_oneliner_def = nil else in_oneliner_def = nil end end kw_count -= oneliner_count @is_kw = (kw_count - end_count) > 0 @is_end = (end_count - kw_count) > 0 end