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code_line.rb
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# frozen_string_literal: true module SyntaxSuggest # Represents a single line of code of a given source file # # This object contains metadata about the line such as # amount of indentation, if it is empty or not, and # lexical data, such as if it has an `end` or a keyword # in it. # # Visibility of lines can be toggled off. Marking a line as invisible # indicates that it should not be used for syntax checks. # It's functionally the same as commenting it out. # # Example: # # line = CodeLine.from_source("def foo\n").first # line.number => 1 # line.empty? # => false # line.visible? # => true # line.mark_invisible # line.visible? # => false # class CodeLine TRAILING_SLASH = ("\\" + $/).freeze # Returns an array of CodeLine objects # from the source string def self.from_source(source, lines: nil) lines ||= source.lines lex_array_for_line = LexAll.new(source: source, source_lines: lines).each_with_object(Hash.new { |h, k| h[k] = [] }) { |lex, hash| hash[lex.line] << lex } lines.map.with_index do |line, index| CodeLine.new( line: line, index: index, lex: lex_array_for_line[index + 1] ) end end attr_reader :line, :index, :lex, :line_number, :indent def initialize(line:, index:, lex:) @lex = lex @line = line @index = index @original = line @line_number = @index + 1 strip_line = line.dup strip_line.lstrip! @indent = if (@empty = strip_line.empty?) line.length - 1 # Newline removed from strip_line is not "whitespace" else line.length - strip_line.length end set_kw_end end # Used for stable sort via indentation level # # Ruby's sort is not "stable" meaning that when # multiple elements have the same value, they are # not guaranteed to return in the same order they # were put in. # # So when multiple code lines have the same indentation # level, they're sorted by their index value which is unique # and consistent. # # This is mostly needed for consistency of the test suite def indent_index @indent_index ||= [indent, index] end alias_method :number, :line_number # Returns true if the code line is determined # to contain a keyword that matches with an `end` # # For example: `def`, `do`, `begin`, `ensure`, etc. def is_kw? @is_kw end # Returns true if the code line is determined # to contain an `end` keyword def is_end? @is_end end # Used to hide lines # # The search alorithm will group lines into blocks # then if those blocks are determined to represent # valid code they will be hidden def mark_invisible @line = "" end # Means the line was marked as "invisible" # Confusingly, "empty" lines are visible...they # just don't contain any source code other than a newline ("\n"). def visible? !line.empty? end # Opposite or `visible?` (note: different than `empty?`) def hidden? !visible? end # An `empty?` line is one that was originally left # empty in the source code, while a "hidden" line # is one that we've since marked as "invisible" def empty? @empty end # Opposite of `empty?` (note: different than `visible?`) def not_empty? !empty? end # Renders the given line # # Also allows us to represent source code as # an array of code lines. # # When we have an array of code line elements # calling `join` on the array will call `to_s` # on each element, which essentially converts # it back into it's original source string. def to_s line end # When the code line is marked invisible # we retain the original value of it's line # this is useful for debugging and for # showing extra context # # DisplayCodeWithLineNumbers will render # all lines given to it, not just visible # lines, it uses the original method to # obtain them. attr_reader :original # Comparison operator, needed for equality # and sorting def <=>(other) index <=> other.index end # [Not stable API] # # Lines that have a `on_ignored_nl` type token and NOT # a `BEG` type seem to be a good proxy for the ability # to join multiple lines into one. # # This predicate method is used to determine when those # two criteria have been met. # # The one known case this doesn't handle is: # # Ripper.lex <<~EOM # a && # b || # c # EOM # # For some reason this introduces `on_ignore_newline` but with BEG type def ignore_newline_not_beg? @ignore_newline_not_beg end # Determines if the given line has a trailing slash # # lines = CodeLine.from_source(<<~EOM) # it "foo" \ # EOM # expect(lines.first.trailing_slash?).to eq(true) # if SyntaxSuggest.use_prism_parser? def trailing_slash? last = @lex.last last&.type == :on_tstring_end end else def trailing_slash? last = @lex.last return false unless last return false unless last.type == :on_sp last.token == TRAILING_SLASH end end # Endless method detection # # From https://github.com/ruby/irb/commit/826ae909c9c93a2ddca6f9cfcd9c94dbf53d44ab # Detecting a "oneliner" seems to need a state machine. # This can be done by looking mostly at the "state" (last value): # # ENDFN -> BEG (token = '=' ) -> END # private def set_kw_end oneliner_count = 0 in_oneliner_def = nil kw_count = 0 end_count = 0 @ignore_newline_not_beg = false @lex.each do |lex| kw_count += 1 if lex.is_kw? end_count += 1 if lex.is_end? if lex.type == :on_ignored_nl @ignore_newline_not_beg = !lex.expr_beg? end if in_oneliner_def.nil? in_oneliner_def = :ENDFN if lex.state.allbits?(Ripper::EXPR_ENDFN) elsif lex.state.allbits?(Ripper::EXPR_ENDFN) # Continue elsif lex.state.allbits?(Ripper::EXPR_BEG) in_oneliner_def = :BODY if lex.token == "=" elsif lex.state.allbits?(Ripper::EXPR_END) # We found an endless method, count it oneliner_count += 1 if in_oneliner_def == :BODY in_oneliner_def = nil else in_oneliner_def = nil end end kw_count -= oneliner_count @is_kw = (kw_count - end_count) > 0 @is_end = (end_count - kw_count) > 0 end end end