| Safe Haskell | Safe |
|---|---|
| Language | Haskell2010 |
Data.Text.Prettyprint.Doc.Render.Tutorials.TreeRenderingTutorial
Contents
Description
This module shows how to write a custom prettyprinter backend, based on a
tree representation of a SimpleDocStream. For a stack machine approach, which
may be more suitable for certain output formats, see
Data.Text.Prettyprint.Doc.Render.Tutorials.StackMachineTutorial.
Rendering to HTML, particularly using libraries such as blaze-html or lucid, is one important use case of tree-based rendering.
The module is written to be readable top-to-bottom in both Haddock and raw source form.
Synopsis
- data SimpleHtml
- data Color
- bold :: Doc SimpleHtml -> Doc SimpleHtml
- italics :: Doc SimpleHtml -> Doc SimpleHtml
- paragraph :: Doc SimpleHtml -> Doc SimpleHtml
- headline :: Doc SimpleHtml -> Doc SimpleHtml
- color :: Color -> Doc SimpleHtml -> Doc SimpleHtml
- render :: SimpleDocStream SimpleHtml -> Text
- renderTree :: SimpleDocTree SimpleHtml -> Builder
- encloseInTagFor :: SimpleHtml -> Builder -> Builder
The type of available markup
First, we define a set of valid annotations must be defined, with the goal of
defining a . We will later define how to convert this to
the output format (Doc SimpleHtmlText).
Convenience definitions
bold :: Doc SimpleHtml -> Doc SimpleHtml Source #
italics :: Doc SimpleHtml -> Doc SimpleHtml Source #
paragraph :: Doc SimpleHtml -> Doc SimpleHtml Source #
headline :: Doc SimpleHtml -> Doc SimpleHtml Source #
color :: Color -> Doc SimpleHtml -> Doc SimpleHtml Source #
The rendering algorithm
With the annotation definitions out of the way, we can now define a
conversion function from SimpleDocStream (annotated with our SimpleHtml)
to the tree-shaped SimpleDocTree, which is easily convertible to a
HTML/Text representation.
There are two ways to render this; the simpler one is just using
renderSimplyDecorated. However, some output formats require more
complicated functionality, so we explore this explicitly with a simple
example below. An example for something more complicated is e.g. an XHTML
renderer, where a newline may not simply be a newline character followed by a
certain number of spaces, but e.g. involve adding a br/ tag.
render :: SimpleDocStream SimpleHtml -> Text Source #
To render the HTML, we first convert the SimpleDocStream to the
SimpleDocTree format, which makes enveloping sub-documents in markup
easier.
This function is the entry main API function of the renderer; as such, it is
only glue for the internal functions. This is similar to
render from
the stack machine tutorial in its purpose.
renderTree :: SimpleDocTree SimpleHtml -> Builder Source #
Render a SimpleDocTree to a Builder; this is the workhorse of the
tree-based rendering approach, and equivalent to
renderStackMachine
in the stack machine rendering tutorial.
encloseInTagFor :: SimpleHtml -> Builder -> Builder Source #
Convert a SimpleHtml to a function that encloses a Builder in HTML
tags. This is where the translation of style to raw output happens.
Example invocation
We can now render an example document using our definitions:
>>>:set -XOverloadedStrings>>>import qualified Data.Text.Lazy.IO as TL>>>:{>>>let go = TL.putStrLn . render . layoutPretty defaultLayoutOptions>>>in go (vsep>>>[ headline "Example document">>>, paragraph ("This is a" <+> color Red "paragraph" <> comma)>>>, paragraph ("and" <+> bold "this text is bold.")>>>])>>>:}<h1>Example document</h1> <p>This is a <span style="color: #f00">paragraph</span>,</p> <p>and <strong>this text is bold.</strong></p>