{-# LANGUAGE GeneralizedNewtypeDeriving #-}
{-# LANGUAGE FlexibleContexts #-}
{-# LANGUAGE FlexibleInstances #-}
{-# LANGUAGE TypeFamilies #-}
{-# LANGUAGE BangPatterns #-}
{-# LANGUAGE TypeSynonymInstances #-}
-- |
-- Module      :  Documentation.Haddock.Parser.Monad
-- Copyright   :  (c) Alec Theriault 2018-2019,
-- License     :  BSD-like
--
-- Maintainer  :  haddock@projects.haskell.org
-- Stability   :  experimental
-- Portability :  portable
--
-- Defines the Parsec monad over which all parsing is done and also provides
-- more efficient versions of the usual parsec combinator functions (but
-- specialized to 'Text').

module Documentation.Haddock.Parser.Monad where

import qualified Text.Parsec.Char as Parsec
import qualified Text.Parsec as Parsec
import           Text.Parsec.Pos             ( updatePosChar )
import           Text.Parsec                 ( State(..)
                                             , getParserState, setParserState )

import qualified Data.Text as T
import           Data.Text                   ( Text )

import           Control.Monad               ( mfilter )
import           Data.Functor                ( ($>) )
import           Data.String                 ( IsString(..) )
import           Data.Bits                   ( Bits(..) )
import           Data.Char                   ( ord )
import           Data.List                   ( foldl' )
import           Control.Applicative as App

import           Documentation.Haddock.Types ( Version )
import           Prelude hiding (takeWhile)

-- | The only bit of information we really care about truding along with us
-- through parsing is the version attached to a @\@since@ annotation - if
-- the doc even contained one.
newtype ParserState = ParserState {
  parserStateSince :: Maybe Version
} deriving (Eq, Show)

initialParserState :: ParserState
initialParserState = ParserState Nothing

setSince :: Version -> Parser ()
setSince since = Parsec.modifyState (\st -> st{ parserStateSince = Just since })

type Parser = Parsec.Parsec Text ParserState

instance (a ~ Text) => IsString (Parser a) where
  fromString = fmap T.pack . Parsec.string

parseOnly :: Parser a -> Text -> Either String (ParserState, a)
parseOnly p t = case Parsec.runParser p' initialParserState "<haddock>" t of
                  Left e -> Left (show e)
                  Right (x,s) -> Right (s,x)
  where p' = (,) <$> p <*> Parsec.getState

-- | Always succeeds, but returns 'Nothing' if at the end of input. Does not
-- consume input.
--
-- Equivalent to @Parsec.optionMaybe . Parsec.lookAhead $ Parsec.anyChar@, but
-- more efficient.
peekChar :: Parser (Maybe Char)
peekChar = headOpt . stateInput <$> getParserState
  where headOpt t | T.null t = Nothing
                  | otherwise = Just (T.head t)
{-# INLINE peekChar #-}

-- | Fails if at the end of input. Does not consume input.
--
-- Equivalent to @Parsec.lookAhead Parsec.anyChar@, but more efficient.
peekChar' :: Parser Char
peekChar' = headFail . stateInput =<< getParserState
  where headFail t | T.null t = Parsec.parserFail "peekChar': reached EOF"
                   | otherwise = App.pure (T.head t)
{-# INLINE peekChar' #-}

-- | Parses the given string. Returns the parsed string.
--
-- Equivalent to @Parsec.string (T.unpack t) $> t@, but more efficient.
string :: Text -> Parser Text
string t = do
  s@State{ stateInput = inp, statePos = pos } <- getParserState
  case T.stripPrefix t inp of
    Nothing -> Parsec.parserFail "string: Failed to match the input string"
    Just inp' ->
      let pos' = T.foldl updatePosChar pos t
          s' = s{ stateInput = inp', statePos = pos' }
      in setParserState s' $> t

-- | Keep matching characters as long as the predicate function holds (and
-- return them).
--
-- Equivalent to @fmap T.pack . Parsec.many@, but more efficient.
takeWhile :: (Char -> Bool) -> Parser Text
takeWhile f = do
  s@State{ stateInput = inp, statePos = pos } <- getParserState
  let (t, inp') = T.span f inp
      pos' = T.foldl updatePosChar pos t
      s' = s{ stateInput = inp', statePos = pos' }
  setParserState s' $> t

-- | Like 'takeWhile', but fails if no characters matched.
--
-- Equivalent to @fmap T.pack . Parsec.many1@, but more efficient.
takeWhile1 :: (Char -> Bool) -> Parser Text
takeWhile1 = mfilter (not . T.null) . takeWhile

-- | Scan the input text, accumulating characters as long as the scanning
-- function returns true.
scan :: (s -> Char -> Maybe s) -- ^ scan function
     -> s                      -- ^ initial state
     -> Parser Text
scan f st = do
  s@State{ stateInput = inp, statePos = pos } <- getParserState
  go inp st pos 0 $ \inp' pos' n ->
    let s' = s{ Parsec.stateInput = inp', Parsec.statePos = pos' }
    in setParserState s' $> T.take n inp
  where
    go inp s !pos !n cont
      = case T.uncons inp of
          Nothing -> cont inp pos n        -- ran out of input
          Just (c, inp') ->
             case f s c of
               Nothing -> cont inp pos n   -- scan function failed
               Just s' -> go inp' s' (updatePosChar pos c) (n+1) cont


-- | Parse a decimal number.
decimal :: Integral a => Parser a
decimal = foldl' step 0 `fmap` Parsec.many1 Parsec.digit
  where step a c = a * 10 + fromIntegral (ord c - 48)

-- | Parse a hexadecimal number.
hexadecimal :: (Integral a, Bits a) => Parser a
hexadecimal = foldl' step 0 `fmap` Parsec.many1 Parsec.hexDigit
  where
  step a c | w >= 48 && w <= 57  = (a `shiftL` 4) .|. fromIntegral (w - 48)
           | w >= 97             = (a `shiftL` 4) .|. fromIntegral (w - 87)
           | otherwise           = (a `shiftL` 4) .|. fromIntegral (w - 55)
    where w = ord c