// Copyright 2013 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT // file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at // http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT. // // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 or the MIT license // , at your // option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed // except according to those terms. //! Macro support for format strings //! //! These structures are used when parsing format strings for the compiler. //! Parsing does not happen at runtime: structures of `std::fmt::rt` are //! generated instead. #![crate_name = "fmt_macros"] #![experimental] #![crate_type = "rlib"] #![crate_type = "dylib"] #![doc(html_logo_url = "http://www.rust-lang.org/logos/rust-logo-128x128-blk-v2.png", html_favicon_url = "http://www.rust-lang.org/favicon.ico", html_root_url = "http://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/", html_playground_url = "http://play.rust-lang.org/")] #![feature(macro_rules, globs, import_shadowing)] pub use self::Piece::*; pub use self::Position::*; pub use self::Alignment::*; pub use self::Flag::*; pub use self::Count::*; use std::str; use std::string; /// A piece is a portion of the format string which represents the next part /// to emit. These are emitted as a stream by the `Parser` class. #[deriving(PartialEq)] pub enum Piece<'a> { /// A literal string which should directly be emitted String(&'a str), /// This describes that formatting should process the next argument (as /// specified inside) for emission. NextArgument(Argument<'a>), } /// Representation of an argument specification. #[deriving(PartialEq)] pub struct Argument<'a> { /// Where to find this argument pub position: Position<'a>, /// How to format the argument pub format: FormatSpec<'a>, } /// Specification for the formatting of an argument in the format string. #[deriving(PartialEq)] pub struct FormatSpec<'a> { /// Optionally specified character to fill alignment with pub fill: Option, /// Optionally specified alignment pub align: Alignment, /// Packed version of various flags provided pub flags: uint, /// The integer precision to use pub precision: Count<'a>, /// The string width requested for the resulting format pub width: Count<'a>, /// The descriptor string representing the name of the format desired for /// this argument, this can be empty or any number of characters, although /// it is required to be one word. pub ty: &'a str } /// Enum describing where an argument for a format can be located. #[deriving(PartialEq)] pub enum Position<'a> { /// The argument will be in the next position. This is the default. ArgumentNext, /// The argument is located at a specific index. ArgumentIs(uint), /// The argument has a name. ArgumentNamed(&'a str), } /// Enum of alignments which are supported. #[deriving(PartialEq)] pub enum Alignment { /// The value will be aligned to the left. AlignLeft, /// The value will be aligned to the right. AlignRight, /// The value will be aligned in the center. AlignCenter, /// The value will take on a default alignment. AlignUnknown, } /// Various flags which can be applied to format strings. The meaning of these /// flags is defined by the formatters themselves. #[deriving(PartialEq)] pub enum Flag { /// A `+` will be used to denote positive numbers. FlagSignPlus, /// A `-` will be used to denote negative numbers. This is the default. FlagSignMinus, /// An alternate form will be used for the value. In the case of numbers, /// this means that the number will be prefixed with the supplied string. FlagAlternate, /// For numbers, this means that the number will be padded with zeroes, /// and the sign (`+` or `-`) will precede them. FlagSignAwareZeroPad, } /// A count is used for the precision and width parameters of an integer, and /// can reference either an argument or a literal integer. #[deriving(PartialEq)] pub enum Count<'a> { /// The count is specified explicitly. CountIs(uint), /// The count is specified by the argument with the given name. CountIsName(&'a str), /// The count is specified by the argument at the given index. CountIsParam(uint), /// The count is specified by the next parameter. CountIsNextParam, /// The count is implied and cannot be explicitly specified. CountImplied, } /// The parser structure for interpreting the input format string. This is /// modelled as an iterator over `Piece` structures to form a stream of tokens /// being output. /// /// This is a recursive-descent parser for the sake of simplicity, and if /// necessary there's probably lots of room for improvement performance-wise. pub struct Parser<'a> { input: &'a str, cur: str::CharOffsets<'a>, /// Error messages accumulated during parsing pub errors: Vec, } impl<'a> Iterator> for Parser<'a> { fn next(&mut self) -> Option> { match self.cur.clone().next() { Some((pos, '{')) => { self.cur.next(); if self.consume('{') { Some(String(self.string(pos + 1))) } else { let ret = Some(NextArgument(self.argument())); self.must_consume('}'); ret } } Some((pos, '}')) => { self.cur.next(); if self.consume('}') { Some(String(self.string(pos + 1))) } else { self.err("unmatched `}` found"); None } } Some((pos, _)) => { Some(String(self.string(pos))) } None => None } } } impl<'a> Parser<'a> { /// Creates a new parser for the given format string pub fn new<'a>(s: &'a str) -> Parser<'a> { Parser { input: s, cur: s.char_indices(), errors: vec!(), } } /// Notifies of an error. The message doesn't actually need to be of type /// String, but I think it does when this eventually uses conditions so it /// might as well start using it now. fn err(&mut self, msg: &str) { self.errors.push(msg.to_string()); } /// Optionally consumes the specified character. If the character is not at /// the current position, then the current iterator isn't moved and false is /// returned, otherwise the character is consumed and true is returned. fn consume(&mut self, c: char) -> bool { match self.cur.clone().next() { Some((_, maybe)) if c == maybe => { self.cur.next(); true } Some(..) | None => false, } } /// Forces consumption of the specified character. If the character is not /// found, an error is emitted. fn must_consume(&mut self, c: char) { self.ws(); match self.cur.clone().next() { Some((_, maybe)) if c == maybe => { self.cur.next(); } Some((_, other)) => { self.err(format!("expected `{}`, found `{}`", c, other).as_slice()); } None => { self.err(format!("expected `{}` but string was terminated", c).as_slice()); } } } /// Consumes all whitespace characters until the first non-whitespace /// character fn ws(&mut self) { loop { match self.cur.clone().next() { Some((_, c)) if c.is_whitespace() => { self.cur.next(); } Some(..) | None => { return } } } } /// Parses all of a string which is to be considered a "raw literal" in a /// format string. This is everything outside of the braces. fn string(&mut self, start: uint) -> &'a str { loop { // we may not consume the character, so clone the iterator match self.cur.clone().next() { Some((pos, '}')) | Some((pos, '{')) => { return self.input.slice(start, pos); } Some(..) => { self.cur.next(); } None => { self.cur.next(); return self.input.slice(start, self.input.len()); } } } } /// Parses an Argument structure, or what's contained within braces inside /// the format string fn argument(&mut self) -> Argument<'a> { Argument { position: self.position(), format: self.format(), } } /// Parses a positional argument for a format. This could either be an /// integer index of an argument, a named argument, or a blank string. fn position(&mut self) -> Position<'a> { match self.integer() { Some(i) => { ArgumentIs(i) } None => { match self.cur.clone().next() { Some((_, c)) if c.is_alphabetic() => { ArgumentNamed(self.word()) } _ => ArgumentNext } } } } /// Parses a format specifier at the current position, returning all of the /// relevant information in the FormatSpec struct. fn format(&mut self) -> FormatSpec<'a> { let mut spec = FormatSpec { fill: None, align: AlignUnknown, flags: 0, precision: CountImplied, width: CountImplied, ty: self.input.slice(0, 0), }; if !self.consume(':') { return spec } // fill character match self.cur.clone().next() { Some((_, c)) => { match self.cur.clone().skip(1).next() { Some((_, '>')) | Some((_, '<')) | Some((_, '^')) => { spec.fill = Some(c); self.cur.next(); } Some(..) | None => {} } } None => {} } // Alignment if self.consume('<') { spec.align = AlignLeft; } else if self.consume('>') { spec.align = AlignRight; } else if self.consume('^') { spec.align = AlignCenter; } // Sign flags if self.consume('+') { spec.flags |= 1 << (FlagSignPlus as uint); } else if self.consume('-') { spec.flags |= 1 << (FlagSignMinus as uint); } // Alternate marker if self.consume('#') { spec.flags |= 1 << (FlagAlternate as uint); } // Width and precision let mut havewidth = false; if self.consume('0') { // small ambiguity with '0$' as a format string. In theory this is a // '0' flag and then an ill-formatted format string with just a '$' // and no count, but this is better if we instead interpret this as // no '0' flag and '0$' as the width instead. if self.consume('$') { spec.width = CountIsParam(0); havewidth = true; } else { spec.flags |= 1 << (FlagSignAwareZeroPad as uint); } } if !havewidth { spec.width = self.count(); } if self.consume('.') { if self.consume('*') { spec.precision = CountIsNextParam; } else { spec.precision = self.count(); } } // Finally the actual format specifier if self.consume('?') { spec.ty = "?"; } else { spec.ty = self.word(); } return spec; } /// Parses a Count parameter at the current position. This does not check /// for 'CountIsNextParam' because that is only used in precision, not /// width. fn count(&mut self) -> Count<'a> { match self.integer() { Some(i) => { if self.consume('$') { CountIsParam(i) } else { CountIs(i) } } None => { let tmp = self.cur.clone(); match self.word() { word if word.len() > 0 => { if self.consume('$') { CountIsName(word) } else { self.cur = tmp; CountImplied } } _ => { self.cur = tmp; CountImplied } } } } } /// Parses a word starting at the current position. A word is considered to /// be an alphabetic character followed by any number of alphanumeric /// characters. fn word(&mut self) -> &'a str { let start = match self.cur.clone().next() { Some((pos, c)) if c.is_xid_start() => { self.cur.next(); pos } Some(..) | None => { return self.input.slice(0, 0); } }; let mut end; loop { match self.cur.clone().next() { Some((_, c)) if c.is_xid_continue() => { self.cur.next(); } Some((pos, _)) => { end = pos; break } None => { end = self.input.len(); break } } } self.input.slice(start, end) } /// Optionally parses an integer at the current position. This doesn't deal /// with overflow at all, it's just accumulating digits. fn integer(&mut self) -> Option { let mut cur = 0; let mut found = false; loop { match self.cur.clone().next() { Some((_, c)) => { match c.to_digit(10) { Some(i) => { cur = cur * 10 + i; found = true; self.cur.next(); } None => { break } } } None => { break } } } if found { return Some(cur); } else { return None; } } } #[cfg(test)] mod tests { use super::*; fn same(fmt: &'static str, p: &[Piece<'static>]) { let mut parser = Parser::new(fmt); assert!(p == parser.collect::>>().as_slice()); } fn fmtdflt() -> FormatSpec<'static> { return FormatSpec { fill: None, align: AlignUnknown, flags: 0, precision: CountImplied, width: CountImplied, ty: "", } } fn musterr(s: &str) { let mut p = Parser::new(s); p.next(); assert!(p.errors.len() != 0); } #[test] fn simple() { same("asdf", &[String("asdf")]); same("a{{b", &[String("a"), String("{b")]); same("a}}b", &[String("a"), String("}b")]); same("a}}", &[String("a"), String("}")]); same("}}", &[String("}")]); same("\\}}", &[String("\\"), String("}")]); } #[test] fn invalid01() { musterr("{") } #[test] fn invalid02() { musterr("}") } #[test] fn invalid04() { musterr("{3a}") } #[test] fn invalid05() { musterr("{:|}") } #[test] fn invalid06() { musterr("{:>>>}") } #[test] fn format_nothing() { same("{}", &[NextArgument(Argument { position: ArgumentNext, format: fmtdflt(), })]); } #[test] fn format_position() { same("{3}", &[NextArgument(Argument { position: ArgumentIs(3), format: fmtdflt(), })]); } #[test] fn format_position_nothing_else() { same("{3:}", &[NextArgument(Argument { position: ArgumentIs(3), format: fmtdflt(), })]); } #[test] fn format_type() { same("{3:a}", &[NextArgument(Argument { position: ArgumentIs(3), format: FormatSpec { fill: None, align: AlignUnknown, flags: 0, precision: CountImplied, width: CountImplied, ty: "a", }, })]); } #[test] fn format_align_fill() { same("{3:>}", &[NextArgument(Argument { position: ArgumentIs(3), format: FormatSpec { fill: None, align: AlignRight, flags: 0, precision: CountImplied, width: CountImplied, ty: "", }, })]); same("{3:0<}", &[NextArgument(Argument { position: ArgumentIs(3), format: FormatSpec { fill: Some('0'), align: AlignLeft, flags: 0, precision: CountImplied, width: CountImplied, ty: "", }, })]); same("{3:*