module Haddock.Backends.Hyperlinker.Parser (parse) where import Data.Char import Data.List import Data.Maybe import Haddock.Backends.Hyperlinker.Types -- | Turn source code string into a stream of more descriptive tokens. -- -- Result should retain original file layout (including comments, whitespace, -- etc.), i.e. the following "law" should hold: -- -- @concat . map 'tkValue' . 'parse' = id@ parse :: String -> [Token] parse = tokenize . tag . chunk -- | Split raw source string to more meaningful chunks. -- -- This is the initial stage of tokenization process. Each chunk is either -- a comment (including comment delimiters), a whitespace string, preprocessor -- macro (and all its content until the end of a line) or valid Haskell lexeme. chunk :: String -> [String] chunk [] = [] chunk str@(c:_) | isSpace c = let (space, mcpp, rest) = spanSpaceOrCpp str in [space] ++ maybeToList mcpp ++ chunk rest chunk str | "--" `isPrefixOf` str = chunk' $ spanToNewline str | "{-" `isPrefixOf` str = chunk' $ chunkComment 0 str | otherwise = case lex' str of (tok:_) -> chunk' tok [] -> [str] where chunk' (c, rest) = c:(chunk rest) -- | A bit better lexer then the default, i.e. handles DataKinds quotes lex' :: ReadS String lex' ('\'' : '\'' : rest) = [("''", rest)] lex' str@('\'' : '\\' : _ : '\'' : _) = lex str lex' str@('\'' : _ : '\'' : _) = lex str lex' ('\'' : rest) = [("'", rest)] lex' str = lex str -- | Split input to "first line" string and the rest of it. -- -- Ideally, this should be done simply with @'break' (== '\n')@. However, -- Haskell also allows line-unbreaking (or whatever it is called) so things -- are not as simple and this function deals with that. spanToNewline :: String -> (String, String) spanToNewline [] = ([], []) spanToNewline ('\\':'\n':str) = let (str', rest) = spanToNewline str in ('\\':'\n':str', rest) spanToNewline str@('\n':_) = ("", str) spanToNewline (c:str) = let (str', rest) = spanToNewline str in (c:str', rest) -- | Split input to whitespace string, (optional) preprocessor directive and -- the rest of it. -- -- Again, using something like @'span' 'isSpace'@ would be nice to chunk input -- to whitespace. The problem is with /#/ symbol - if it is placed at the very -- beginning of a line, it should be recognized as preprocessor macro. In any -- other case, it is ordinary Haskell symbol and can be used to declare -- operators. Hence, while dealing with whitespace we also check whether there -- happens to be /#/ symbol just after a newline character - if that is the -- case, we begin treating the whole line as preprocessor macro. spanSpaceOrCpp :: String -> (String, Maybe String, String) spanSpaceOrCpp ('\n':'#':str) = let (str', rest) = spanToNewline str in ("\n", Just $ '#':str', rest) spanSpaceOrCpp (c:str') | isSpace c = let (space, mcpp, rest) = spanSpaceOrCpp str' in (c:space, mcpp, rest) spanSpaceOrCpp str = ("", Nothing, str) -- | Split input to comment content (including delimiters) and the rest. -- -- Again, some more logic than simple 'span' is required because of Haskell -- comment nesting policy. chunkComment :: Int -> String -> (String, String) chunkComment _ [] = ("", "") chunkComment depth ('{':'-':str) = let (c, rest) = chunkComment (depth + 1) str in ("{-" ++ c, rest) chunkComment depth ('-':'}':str) | depth == 1 = ("-}", str) | otherwise = let (c, rest) = chunkComment (depth - 1) str in ("-}" ++ c, rest) chunkComment depth (e:str) = let (c, rest) = chunkComment depth str in (e:c, rest) -- | Assign source location for each chunk in given stream. tag :: [String] -> [(Span, String)] tag = reverse . snd . foldl aux (Position 1 1, []) where aux (pos, cs) str = let pos' = foldl move pos str in (pos', (Span pos pos', str):cs) move pos '\n' = pos { posRow = posRow pos + 1, posCol = 1 } move pos _ = pos { posCol = posCol pos + 1 } -- | Turn unrecognised chunk stream to more descriptive token stream. tokenize :: [(Span, String)] -> [Token] tokenize = map aux where aux (sp, str) = Token { tkType = classify str , tkValue = str , tkSpan = sp } -- | Classify given string as appropriate Haskell token. -- -- This method is based on Haskell 98 Report lexical structure description: -- https://www.haskell.org/onlinereport/lexemes.html -- -- However, this is probably far from being perfect and most probably does not -- handle correctly all corner cases. classify :: String -> TokenType classify str | "--" `isPrefixOf` str = TkComment | "{-#" `isPrefixOf` str = TkPragma | "{-" `isPrefixOf` str = TkComment classify "''" = TkSpecial classify "'" = TkSpecial classify str@(c:_) | isSpace c = TkSpace | isDigit c = TkNumber | c `elem` special = TkSpecial | str `elem` glyphs = TkGlyph | all (`elem` symbols) str = TkOperator | c == '#' = TkCpp | c == '"' = TkString | c == '\'' = TkChar classify str | str `elem` keywords = TkKeyword | isIdentifier str = TkIdentifier | otherwise = TkUnknown keywords :: [String] keywords = [ "as" , "case" , "class" , "data" , "default" , "deriving" , "do" , "else" , "hiding" , "if" , "import" , "in" , "infix" , "infixl" , "infixr" , "instance" , "let" , "module" , "newtype" , "of" , "qualified" , "then" , "type" , "where" , "forall" , "family" , "mdo" ] glyphs :: [String] glyphs = [ ".." , ":" , "::" , "=" , "\\" , "|" , "<-" , "->" , "@" , "~" , "~#" , "=>" , "-" , "!" ] special :: [Char] special = "()[]{},;`" -- TODO: Add support for any Unicode symbol or punctuation. -- source: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10548170/what-characters-are-permitted-for-haskell-operators symbols :: [Char] symbols = "!#$%&*+./<=>?@\\^|-~:" isIdentifier :: String -> Bool isIdentifier (s:str) | (isLower' s || isUpper s) && all isAlphaNum' str = True where isLower' c = isLower c || c == '_' isAlphaNum' c = isAlphaNum c || c == '_' || c == '\'' isIdentifier _ = False