ansi-wl-pprint-0.6.6: The Wadler/Leijen Pretty Printer for colored ANSI terminal output

Portabilityportable
Stabilityprovisional
Maintainerbatterseapower@hotmail.com
Safe HaskellSafe-Inferred

Text.PrettyPrint.ANSI.Leijen

Contents

Description

Pretty print module based on Philip Wadler's "prettier printer"

      "A prettier printer"
      Draft paper, April 1997, revised March 1998.
      http://cm.bell-labs.com/cm/cs/who/wadler/papers/prettier/prettier.ps

PPrint is an implementation of the pretty printing combinators described by Philip Wadler (1997). In their bare essence, the combinators of Wadler are not expressive enough to describe some commonly occurring layouts. The PPrint library adds new primitives to describe these layouts and works well in practice.

The library is based on a single way to concatenate documents, which is associative and has both a left and right unit. This simple design leads to an efficient and short implementation. The simplicity is reflected in the predictable behaviour of the combinators which make them easy to use in practice.

A thorough description of the primitive combinators and their implementation can be found in Philip Wadler's paper (1997). Additions and the main differences with his original paper are:

  • The nil document is called empty.
  • The above combinator is called <$>. The operator </> is used for soft line breaks.
  • There are three new primitives: align, fill and fillBreak. These are very useful in practice.
  • Lots of other useful combinators, like fillSep and list.
  • There are two renderers, renderPretty for pretty printing and renderCompact for compact output. The pretty printing algorithm also uses a ribbon-width now for even prettier output.
  • There are two displayers, displayS for strings and displayIO for file based output.
  • There is a Pretty class.
  • The implementation uses optimised representations and strictness annotations.

Full documentation for the original wl-pprint library available at http://www.cs.uu.nl/~daan/download/pprint/pprint.html.

The library has been extended to allow formatting text for output to ANSI style consoles. New combinators allow:

  • Control of foreground and background color of text
  • The abliity to make parts of the text bold or underlined

This functionality is, as far as possible, portable across platforms with their varying terminals. However, one thing to be particularly wary of is that console colors will not be displayed on Windows unless the Doc value is output using the putDoc function or one of it's friends. Rendering the Doc to a String and then outputing that will only work on Unix-style operating systems.

Synopsis

Documents

data Doc Source

The abstract data type Doc represents pretty documents.

Doc is an instance of the Show class. (show doc) pretty prints document doc with a page width of 100 characters and a ribbon width of 40 characters.

 show (text "hello" <$> text "world")

Which would return the string "hello\nworld", i.e.

 hello
 world

putDoc :: Doc -> IO ()Source

The action (putDoc doc) pretty prints document doc to the standard output, with a page width of 100 characters and a ribbon width of 40 characters.

 main :: IO ()
 main = do{ putDoc (text "hello" <+> text "world") }

Which would output

 hello world

Any ANSI colorisation in doc will be output.

hPutDoc :: Handle -> Doc -> IO ()Source

(hPutDoc handle doc) pretty prints document doc to the file handle handle with a page width of 100 characters and a ribbon width of 40 characters.

 main = do{ handle <- openFile "MyFile" WriteMode
          ; hPutDoc handle (vcat (map text
                            ["vertical","text"]))
          ; hClose handle
          }

Any ANSI colorisation in doc will be output.

Basic combinators

empty :: DocSource

The empty document is, indeed, empty. Although empty has no content, it does have a 'height' of 1 and behaves exactly like (text "") (and is therefore not a unit of <$>).

char :: Char -> DocSource

The document (char c) contains the literal character c. The character shouldn't be a newline ('\n'), the function line should be used for line breaks.

text :: String -> DocSource

The document (text s) contains the literal string s. The string shouldn't contain any newline ('\n') characters. If the string contains newline characters, the function string should be used.

(<>) :: Doc -> Doc -> DocSource

The document (x <> y) concatenates document x and document y. It is an associative operation having empty as a left and right unit. (infixr 6)

nest :: Int -> Doc -> DocSource

The document (nest i x) renders document x with the current indentation level increased by i (See also hang, align and indent).

 nest 2 (text "hello" <$> text "world") <$> text "!"

outputs as:

 hello
   world
 !

line :: DocSource

The line document advances to the next line and indents to the current nesting level. Document line behaves like (text " ") if the line break is undone by group.

linebreak :: DocSource

The linebreak document advances to the next line and indents to the current nesting level. Document linebreak behaves like empty if the line break is undone by group.

group :: Doc -> DocSource

The group combinator is used to specify alternative layouts. The document (group x) undoes all line breaks in document x. The resulting line is added to the current line if that fits the page. Otherwise, the document x is rendered without any changes.

softline :: DocSource

The document softline behaves like space if the resulting output fits the page, otherwise it behaves like line.

 softline = group line

softbreak :: DocSource

The document softbreak behaves like empty if the resulting output fits the page, otherwise it behaves like line.

 softbreak  = group linebreak

Alignment

align :: Doc -> DocSource

The document (align x) renders document x with the nesting level set to the current column. It is used for example to implement hang.

As an example, we will put a document right above another one, regardless of the current nesting level:

 x $$ y  = align (x <$> y)
 test    = text "hi" <+> (text "nice" $$ text "world")

which will be layed out as:

 hi nice
    world

hang :: Int -> Doc -> DocSource

The hang combinator implements hanging indentation. The document (hang i x) renders document x with a nesting level set to the current column plus i. The following example uses hanging indentation for some text:

 test  = hang 4 (fillSep (map text
         (words "the hang combinator indents these words !")))

Which lays out on a page with a width of 20 characters as:

 the hang combinator
     indents these
     words !

The hang combinator is implemented as:

 hang i x  = align (nest i x)

indent :: Int -> Doc -> DocSource

The document (indent i x) indents document x with i spaces.

 test  = indent 4 (fillSep (map text
         (words "the indent combinator indents these words !")))

Which lays out with a page width of 20 as:

     the indent
     combinator
     indents these
     words !

encloseSep :: Doc -> Doc -> Doc -> [Doc] -> DocSource

The document (encloseSep l r sep xs) concatenates the documents xs separated by sep and encloses the resulting document by l and r. The documents are rendered horizontally if that fits the page. Otherwise they are aligned vertically. All separators are put in front of the elements. For example, the combinator list can be defined with encloseSep:

 list xs = encloseSep lbracket rbracket comma xs
 test    = text "list" <+> (list (map int [10,200,3000]))

Which is layed out with a page width of 20 as:

 list [10,200,3000]

But when the page width is 15, it is layed out as:

 list [10
      ,200
      ,3000]

list :: [Doc] -> DocSource

The document (list xs) comma separates the documents xs and encloses them in square brackets. The documents are rendered horizontally if that fits the page. Otherwise they are aligned vertically. All comma separators are put in front of the elements.

tupled :: [Doc] -> DocSource

The document (tupled xs) comma separates the documents xs and encloses them in parenthesis. The documents are rendered horizontally if that fits the page. Otherwise they are aligned vertically. All comma separators are put in front of the elements.

semiBraces :: [Doc] -> DocSource

The document (semiBraces xs) separates the documents xs with semi colons and encloses them in braces. The documents are rendered horizontally if that fits the page. Otherwise they are aligned vertically. All semi colons are put in front of the elements.

Operators

(<+>) :: Doc -> Doc -> DocSource

The document (x <+> y) concatenates document x and y with a space in between. (infixr 6)

(<$>) :: Doc -> Doc -> DocSource

The document (x <$> y) concatenates document x and y with a line in between. (infixr 5)

(</>) :: Doc -> Doc -> DocSource

The document (x </> y) concatenates document x and y with a softline in between. This effectively puts x and y either next to each other (with a space in between) or underneath each other. (infixr 5)

(<$$>) :: Doc -> Doc -> DocSource

The document (x <$$> y) concatenates document x and y with a linebreak in between. (infixr 5)

(<//>) :: Doc -> Doc -> DocSource

The document (x <//> y) concatenates document x and y with a softbreak in between. This effectively puts x and y either right next to each other or underneath each other. (infixr 5)

List combinators

hsep :: [Doc] -> DocSource

The document (hsep xs) concatenates all documents xs horizontally with (<+>).

vsep :: [Doc] -> DocSource

The document (vsep xs) concatenates all documents xs vertically with (<$>). If a group undoes the line breaks inserted by vsep, all documents are separated with a space.

 someText = map text (words ("text to lay out"))

 test     = text "some" <+> vsep someText

This is layed out as:

 some text
 to
 lay
 out

The align combinator can be used to align the documents under their first element

 test     = text "some" <+> align (vsep someText)

Which is printed as:

 some text
      to
      lay
      out

fillSep :: [Doc] -> DocSource

The document (fillSep xs) concatenates documents xs horizontally with (<+>) as long as its fits the page, than inserts a line and continues doing that for all documents in xs.

 fillSep xs  = foldr (\<\/\>) empty xs

sep :: [Doc] -> DocSource

The document (sep xs) concatenates all documents xs either horizontally with (<+>), if it fits the page, or vertically with (<$>).

 sep xs  = group (vsep xs)

hcat :: [Doc] -> DocSource

The document (hcat xs) concatenates all documents xs horizontally with (<>).

vcat :: [Doc] -> DocSource

The document (vcat xs) concatenates all documents xs vertically with (<$$>). If a group undoes the line breaks inserted by vcat, all documents are directly concatenated.

fillCat :: [Doc] -> DocSource

The document (fillCat xs) concatenates documents xs horizontally with (<>) as long as its fits the page, than inserts a linebreak and continues doing that for all documents in xs.

 fillCat xs  = foldr (\<\/\/\>) empty xs

cat :: [Doc] -> DocSource

The document (cat xs) concatenates all documents xs either horizontally with (<>), if it fits the page, or vertically with (<$$>).

 cat xs  = group (vcat xs)

punctuate :: Doc -> [Doc] -> [Doc]Source

(punctuate p xs) concatenates all documents in xs with document p except for the last document.

 someText = map text ["words","in","a","tuple"]
 test     = parens (align (cat (punctuate comma someText)))

This is layed out on a page width of 20 as:

 (words,in,a,tuple)

But when the page width is 15, it is layed out as:

 (words,
  in,
  a,
  tuple)

(If you want put the commas in front of their elements instead of at the end, you should use tupled or, in general, encloseSep.)

Fillers

fill :: Int -> Doc -> DocSource

The document (fill i x) renders document x. It than appends spaces until the width is equal to i. If the width of x is already larger, nothing is appended. This combinator is quite useful in practice to output a list of bindings. The following example demonstrates this.

 types  = [("empty","Doc")
          ,("nest","Int -> Doc -> Doc")
          ,("linebreak","Doc")]

 ptype (name,tp)
        = fill 6 (text name) <+> text "::" <+> text tp

 test   = text "let" <+> align (vcat (map ptype types))

Which is layed out as:

 let empty  :: Doc
     nest   :: Int -> Doc -> Doc
     linebreak :: Doc

fillBreak :: Int -> Doc -> DocSource

The document (fillBreak i x) first renders document x. It than appends spaces until the width is equal to i. If the width of x is already larger than i, the nesting level is increased by i and a line is appended. When we redefine ptype in the previous example to use fillBreak, we get a useful variation of the previous output:

 ptype (name,tp)
        = fillBreak 6 (text name) <+> text "::" <+> text tp

The output will now be:

 let empty  :: Doc
     nest   :: Int -> Doc -> Doc
     linebreak
            :: Doc

Bracketing combinators

enclose :: Doc -> Doc -> Doc -> DocSource

The document (enclose l r x) encloses document x between documents l and r using (<>).

 enclose l r x   = l <> x <> r

squotes :: Doc -> DocSource

Document (squotes x) encloses document x with single quotes "'".

dquotes :: Doc -> DocSource

Document (dquotes x) encloses document x with double quotes '"'.

parens :: Doc -> DocSource

Document (parens x) encloses document x in parenthesis, "(" and ")".

angles :: Doc -> DocSource

Document (angles x) encloses document x in angles, "<" and ">".

braces :: Doc -> DocSource

Document (braces x) encloses document x in braces, "{" and "}".

brackets :: Doc -> DocSource

Document (brackets x) encloses document x in square brackets, "[" and "]".

Character documents

lparen :: DocSource

The document lparen contains a left parenthesis, "(".

rparen :: DocSource

The document rparen contains a right parenthesis, ")".

langle :: DocSource

The document langle contains a left angle, "<".

rangle :: DocSource

The document rangle contains a right angle, ">".

lbrace :: DocSource

The document lbrace contains a left brace, "{".

rbrace :: DocSource

The document rbrace contains a right brace, "}".

lbracket :: DocSource

The document lbracket contains a left square bracket, "[".

rbracket :: DocSource

The document rbracket contains a right square bracket, "]".

squote :: DocSource

The document squote contains a single quote, "'".

dquote :: DocSource

The document dquote contains a double quote, '"'.

semi :: DocSource

The document semi contains a semi colon, ";".

colon :: DocSource

The document colon contains a colon, ":".

comma :: DocSource

The document comma contains a comma, ",".

space :: DocSource

The document space contains a single space, " ".

 x <+> y   = x <> space <> y

dot :: DocSource

The document dot contains a single dot, ".".

backslash :: DocSource

The document backslash contains a back slash, "\".

equals :: DocSource

The document equals contains an equal sign, "=".

Colorisation combinators

black :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the black forecolor

red :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the red forecolor

green :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the green forecolor

yellow :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the yellow forecolor

blue :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the blue forecolor

magenta :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the magenta forecolor

cyan :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the cyan forecolor

white :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the white forecolor

dullblack :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the dull black forecolor

dullred :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the dull red forecolor

dullgreen :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the dull green forecolor

dullyellow :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the dull yellow forecolor

dullblue :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the dull blue forecolor

dullmagenta :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the dull magenta forecolor

dullcyan :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the dull cyan forecolor

dullwhite :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the dull white forecolor

onblack :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the black backcolor

onred :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the red backcolor

ongreen :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the green backcolor

onyellow :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the yellow backcolor

onblue :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the blue backcolor

onmagenta :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the magenta backcolor

oncyan :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the cyan backcolor

onwhite :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the white backcolor

ondullblack :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the dull block backcolor

ondullred :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the dull red backcolor

ondullgreen :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the dull green backcolor

ondullyellow :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the dull yellow backcolor

ondullblue :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the dull blue backcolor

ondullmagenta :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the dull magenta backcolor

ondullcyan :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the dull cyan backcolor

ondullwhite :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with the dull white backcolor

Emboldening combinators

bold :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document in a heavier font weight

debold :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document in the normal font weight

Underlining combinators

underline :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with underlining

deunderline :: Doc -> DocSource

Displays a document with no underlining

Removing formatting

plain :: Doc -> DocSource

Removes all colorisation, emboldening and underlining from a document

Primitive type documents

string :: String -> DocSource

The document (string s) concatenates all characters in s using line for newline characters and char for all other characters. It is used instead of text whenever the text contains newline characters.

int :: Int -> DocSource

The document (int i) shows the literal integer i using text.

integer :: Integer -> DocSource

The document (integer i) shows the literal integer i using text.

float :: Float -> DocSource

The document (float f) shows the literal float f using text.

double :: Double -> DocSource

The document (double d) shows the literal double d using text.

rational :: Rational -> DocSource

The document (rational r) shows the literal rational r using text.

Pretty class

class Pretty a whereSource

The member prettyList is only used to define the instance Pretty a => Pretty [a]. In normal circumstances only the pretty function is used.

Methods

pretty :: a -> DocSource

prettyList :: [a] -> DocSource

Instances

Rendering

data SimpleDoc Source

The data type SimpleDoc represents rendered documents and is used by the display functions.

The Int in SText contains the length of the string. The Int in SLine contains the indentation for that line. The library provides two default display functions displayS and displayIO. You can provide your own display function by writing a function from a SimpleDoc to your own output format.

renderPretty :: Float -> Int -> Doc -> SimpleDocSource

This is the default pretty printer which is used by show, putDoc and hPutDoc. (renderPretty ribbonfrac width x) renders document x with a page width of width and a ribbon width of (ribbonfrac * width) characters. The ribbon width is the maximal amount of non-indentation characters on a line. The parameter ribbonfrac should be between 0.0 and 1.0. If it is lower or higher, the ribbon width will be 0 or width respectively.

renderCompact :: Doc -> SimpleDocSource

(renderCompact x) renders document x without adding any indentation. Since no 'pretty' printing is involved, this renderer is very fast. The resulting output contains fewer characters than a pretty printed version and can be used for output that is read by other programs.

This rendering function does not add any colorisation information.

displayS :: SimpleDoc -> ShowSSource

(displayS simpleDoc) takes the output simpleDoc from a rendering function and transforms it to a ShowS type (for use in the Show class).

 showWidth :: Int -> Doc -> String
 showWidth w x   = displayS (renderPretty 0.4 w x) ""

ANSI color information will be discarded by this function unless you are running on a Unix-like operating system. This is due to a technical limitation in Windows ANSI support.

displayIO :: Handle -> SimpleDoc -> IO ()Source

(displayIO handle simpleDoc) writes simpleDoc to the file handle handle. This function is used for example by hPutDoc:

 hPutDoc handle doc  = displayIO handle (renderPretty 0.4 100 doc)

Any ANSI colorisation in simpleDoc will be output.

Undocumented

column :: (Int -> Doc) -> DocSource

width :: Doc -> (Int -> Doc) -> DocSource