lima: Convert between Haskell, Markdown, Literate Haskell, TeX

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Versions [RSS] 0.1.0.0, 0.1.0.1, 0.1.0.2, 0.1.0.3, 0.1.0.4, 0.1.0.5, 0.1.0.6, 0.2.0.0, 0.2.1.0, 0.2.1.1, 0.2.1.2, 0.2.1.3, 0.3.0.0
Change log CHANGELOG.md
Dependencies base (>=4 && <5), data-default, lima, microlens, microlens-th, text [details]
License MIT
Author Fabian Schneider
Maintainer Danila Danko
Category Productivity
Bug tracker https://github.com/deemp/lima/issues
Source repo head: git clone https://github.com/deemp/lima
Uploaded by deemp at 2023-04-17T14:48:57Z
Distributions NixOS:0.3.0.0
Executables readme
Downloads 414 total (32 in the last 30 days)
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Status Docs available [build log]
Last success reported on 2023-04-17 [all 1 reports]

Readme for lima-0.2.1.2

[back to package description]

lima

Convert between files in different formats.

  • LiterateMarkdown - lima is a fork of this (abandoned?) project.

  • pandoc - supports Literate Haskell and a ton of other formats.

  • IHaskell - create Jupyter notebooks with Haskell code cells and GitHub Flavored Markdown text cells.

  • lhs2tex - convert Literate Haskell to TeX.

  • agda2lagda - Generate a literate Agda/Haskell script from an Agda/Haskell script. Produces LaTeX or Markdown literate scripts.

  • markdown-unlit - markdown-unlit is a custom unlit program. It can be used to extract Haskell code from Markdown files..

Supported formats

  • Haskell (.hs)
  • Literate Haskell (.lhs)
  • GitHub Flavored Markdown (.md)
  • TeX (.tex)

Demo

Markdown

.hs and .md

demo

TeX

.hs and .lhs and .tex

demo

Ideas

  • I introduced tags into supported formats.
    • E.g., in .hs files, tags are multiline comments written on a single line like {- LIMA_ENABLE -}.
  • Tag names are configurable.
    • A user may set on instead of LIMA_ENABLE.
  • A document can be parsed into a list of tokens.
    • Tags affect how a document is parsed.
  • The tokens can be printed back to that document.
  • Formatting a document is printing a parsed document back to itself.
    • Formatting is idempotent. In other words, formatting the document again won't change its content.
  • The lima library provides a parser and a printer for each supported format.
  • A composition of a printer after a parser produces a converter.
  • Such a converter is usually invertible for a formatted document.
    • Converting a document A to a document B, then converting B to A doesn't change the content of A.

Setup

  1. Create a test suite.

  2. Add lima and text to its dependencies.

  3. Create a test module. It can have the following content.

    import Converter (Format (..), convertTo, def)
    import Data.Text.IO qualified as T
    
    main :: IO ()
    main = T.readFile "README.hs" >>= T.writeFile "README.md" . (Hs `convertTo` Md) def
    

Example

This package has two such test suites:

Workflow

Here's a possible workflow for Haskell and Markdown:

  1. Edit the code in a README.hs using Haskell Language Server.
  2. Convert README.hs to a README.md. Comments from README.hs become text in README.md.
  3. Edit the text in README.md using markdownlint.
  4. Convert README.md back to the README.hs to keep files in sync. Text in README.md becomes comments in README.hs.
  5. Repeat.

Contribute

Clone this repo and enter lima

git clone https://github.com/deemp/lima
cd lima

cabal

Build

cabal update
cabal build

nix

  1. Install Nix.

  2. Run a devshell and build lima using the project's cabal:

    nix develop nix-dev/
    cabal build
    
  3. Optionally, start VSCodium:

    nix run nix-dev/#writeSettings
    nix run nix-dev/#codium .
    
  4. Open a Haskell file there, hover over a term and wait until HLS shows hints.

  5. Troubleshoot if necessary.