// Copyright 2012 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. use core::prelude::*; use core::cmp; use core::dvec::DVec; use core::io::WriterUtil; use core::io; use core::str; use core::vec; /* * This pretty-printer is a direct reimplementation of Philip Karlton's * Mesa pretty-printer, as described in appendix A of * * STAN-CS-79-770: "Pretty Printing", by Derek C. Oppen. * Stanford Department of Computer Science, 1979. * * The algorithm's aim is to break a stream into as few lines as possible * while respecting the indentation-consistency requirements of the enclosing * block, and avoiding breaking at silly places on block boundaries, for * example, between "x" and ")" in "x)". * * I am implementing this algorithm because it comes with 20 pages of * documentation explaining its theory, and because it addresses the set of * concerns I've seen other pretty-printers fall down on. Weirdly. Even though * it's 32 years old. What can I say? * * Despite some redundancies and quirks in the way it's implemented in that * paper, I've opted to keep the implementation here as similar as I can, * changing only what was blatantly wrong, a typo, or sufficiently * non-idiomatic rust that it really stuck out. * * In particular you'll see a certain amount of churn related to INTEGER vs. * CARDINAL in the Mesa implementation. Mesa apparently interconverts the two * somewhat readily? In any case, I've used uint for indices-in-buffers and * ints for character-sizes-and-indentation-offsets. This respects the need * for ints to "go negative" while carrying a pending-calculation balance, and * helps differentiate all the numbers flying around internally (slightly). * * I also inverted the indentation arithmetic used in the print stack, since * the Mesa implementation (somewhat randomly) stores the offset on the print * stack in terms of margin-col rather than col itself. I store col. * * I also implemented a small change in the STRING token, in that I store an * explicit length for the string. For most tokens this is just the length of * the accompanying string. But it's necessary to permit it to differ, for * encoding things that are supposed to "go on their own line" -- certain * classes of comment and blank-line -- where relying on adjacent * hardbreak-like BREAK tokens with long blankness indication doesn't actually * work. To see why, consider when there is a "thing that should be on its own * line" between two long blocks, say functions. If you put a hardbreak after * each function (or before each) and the breaking algorithm decides to break * there anyways (because the functions themselves are long) you wind up with * extra blank lines. If you don't put hardbreaks you can wind up with the * "thing which should be on its own line" not getting its own line in the * rare case of "really small functions" or such. This re-occurs with comments * and explicit blank lines. So in those cases we use a string with a payload * we want isolated to a line and an explicit length that's huge, surrounded * by two zero-length breaks. The algorithm will try its best to fit it on a * line (which it can't) and so naturally place the content on its own line to * avoid combining it with other lines and making matters even worse. */ #[deriving_eq] pub enum breaks { consistent, inconsistent, } pub struct break_t { offset: int, blank_space: int } pub struct begin_t { offset: int, breaks: breaks } pub enum token { STRING(@~str, int), BREAK(break_t), BEGIN(begin_t), END, EOF, } pub impl token { fn is_eof(&self) -> bool { match *self { EOF => true, _ => false } } fn is_hardbreak_tok(&self) -> bool { match *self { BREAK(break_t { offset: 0, blank_space: bs }) if bs == size_infinity => true, _ => false } } } pub fn tok_str(++t: token) -> ~str { match t { STRING(s, len) => return fmt!("STR(%s,%d)", *s, len), BREAK(_) => return ~"BREAK", BEGIN(_) => return ~"BEGIN", END => return ~"END", EOF => return ~"EOF" } } pub fn buf_str(toks: ~[token], szs: ~[int], left: uint, right: uint, lim: uint) -> ~str { let n = vec::len(toks); assert (n == vec::len(szs)); let mut i = left; let mut L = lim; let mut s = ~"["; while i != right && L != 0u { L -= 1u; if i != left { s += ~", "; } s += fmt!("%d=%s", szs[i], tok_str(toks[i])); i += 1u; i %= n; } s += ~"]"; return s; } pub enum print_stack_break { fits, broken(breaks), } pub struct print_stack_elt { offset: int, pbreak: print_stack_break } pub const size_infinity: int = 0xffff; pub fn mk_printer(out: @io::Writer, linewidth: uint) -> @mut Printer { // Yes 3, it makes the ring buffers big enough to never // fall behind. let n: uint = 3 * linewidth; debug!("mk_printer %u", linewidth); let mut token: ~[token] = vec::from_elem(n, EOF); let mut size: ~[int] = vec::from_elem(n, 0); let mut scan_stack: ~[uint] = vec::from_elem(n, 0u); @mut Printer { out: @out, buf_len: n, margin: linewidth as int, space: linewidth as int, left: 0, right: 0, token: token, size: size, left_total: 0, right_total: 0, scan_stack: scan_stack, scan_stack_empty: true, top: 0, bottom: 0, print_stack: @mut ~[], pending_indentation: 0 } } /* * In case you do not have the paper, here is an explanation of what's going * on. * * There is a stream of input tokens flowing through this printer. * * The printer buffers up to 3N tokens inside itself, where N is linewidth. * Yes, linewidth is chars and tokens are multi-char, but in the worst * case every token worth buffering is 1 char long, so it's ok. * * Tokens are STRING, BREAK, and BEGIN/END to delimit blocks. * * BEGIN tokens can carry an offset, saying "how far to indent when you break * inside here", as well as a flag indicating "consistent" or "inconsistent" * breaking. Consistent breaking means that after the first break, no attempt * will be made to flow subsequent breaks together onto lines. Inconsistent * is the opposite. Inconsistent breaking example would be, say: * * foo(hello, there, good, friends) * * breaking inconsistently to become * * foo(hello, there * good, friends); * * whereas a consistent breaking would yield: * * foo(hello, * there * good, * friends); * * That is, in the consistent-break blocks we value vertical alignment * more than the ability to cram stuff onto a line. But in all cases if it * can make a block a one-liner, it'll do so. * * Carrying on with high-level logic: * * The buffered tokens go through a ring-buffer, 'tokens'. The 'left' and * 'right' indices denote the active portion of the ring buffer as well as * describing hypothetical points-in-the-infinite-stream at most 3N tokens * apart (i.e. "not wrapped to ring-buffer boundaries"). The paper will switch * between using 'left' and 'right' terms to denote the wrapepd-to-ring-buffer * and point-in-infinite-stream senses freely. * * There is a parallel ring buffer, 'size', that holds the calculated size of * each token. Why calculated? Because for BEGIN/END pairs, the "size" * includes everything betwen the pair. That is, the "size" of BEGIN is * actually the sum of the sizes of everything between BEGIN and the paired * END that follows. Since that is arbitrarily far in the future, 'size' is * being rewritten regularly while the printer runs; in fact most of the * machinery is here to work out 'size' entries on the fly (and give up when * they're so obviously over-long that "infinity" is a good enough * approximation for purposes of line breaking). * * The "input side" of the printer is managed as an abstract process called * SCAN, which uses 'scan_stack', 'scan_stack_empty', 'top' and 'bottom', to * manage calculating 'size'. SCAN is, in other words, the process of * calculating 'size' entries. * * The "output side" of the printer is managed by an abstract process called * PRINT, which uses 'print_stack', 'margin' and 'space' to figure out what to * do with each token/size pair it consumes as it goes. It's trying to consume * the entire buffered window, but can't output anything until the size is >= * 0 (sizes are set to negative while they're pending calculation). * * So SCAN takeks input and buffers tokens and pending calculations, while * PRINT gobbles up completed calculations and tokens from the buffer. The * theory is that the two can never get more than 3N tokens apart, because * once there's "obviously" too much data to fit on a line, in a size * calculation, SCAN will write "infinity" to the size and let PRINT consume * it. * * In this implementation (following the paper, again) the SCAN process is * the method called 'pretty_print', and the 'PRINT' process is the method * called 'print'. */ pub struct Printer { out: @@io::Writer, buf_len: uint, margin: int, // width of lines we're constrained to space: int, // number of spaces left on line left: uint, // index of left side of input stream right: uint, // index of right side of input stream token: ~[token], // ring-buffr stream goes through size: ~[int], // ring-buffer of calculated sizes left_total: int, // running size of stream "...left" right_total: int, // running size of stream "...right" // pseudo-stack, really a ring too. Holds the // primary-ring-buffers index of the BEGIN that started the // current block, possibly with the most recent BREAK after that // BEGIN (if there is any) on top of it. Stuff is flushed off the // bottom as it becomes irrelevant due to the primary ring-buffer // advancing. scan_stack: ~[uint], scan_stack_empty: bool, // top==bottom disambiguator top: uint, // index of top of scan_stack bottom: uint, // index of bottom of scan_stack // stack of blocks-in-progress being flushed by print print_stack: @mut ~[print_stack_elt], // buffered indentation to avoid writing trailing whitespace pending_indentation: int, } pub impl Printer { fn last_token(&mut self) -> token { self.token[self.right] } // be very careful with this! fn replace_last_token(&mut self, t: token) { self.token[self.right] = t; } fn pretty_print(&mut self, t: token) { debug!("pp ~[%u,%u]", self.left, self.right); match t { EOF => { if !self.scan_stack_empty { self.check_stack(0); self.advance_left(self.token[self.left], self.size[self.left]); } self.indent(0); } BEGIN(b) => { if self.scan_stack_empty { self.left_total = 1; self.right_total = 1; self.left = 0u; self.right = 0u; } else { self.advance_right(); } debug!("pp BEGIN(%d)/buffer ~[%u,%u]", b.offset, self.left, self.right); self.token[self.right] = t; self.size[self.right] = -self.right_total; self.scan_push(self.right); } END => { if self.scan_stack_empty { debug!("pp END/print ~[%u,%u]", self.left, self.right); self.print(t, 0); } else { debug!("pp END/buffer ~[%u,%u]", self.left, self.right); self.advance_right(); self.token[self.right] = t; self.size[self.right] = -1; self.scan_push(self.right); } } BREAK(b) => { if self.scan_stack_empty { self.left_total = 1; self.right_total = 1; self.left = 0u; self.right = 0u; } else { self.advance_right(); } debug!("pp BREAK(%d)/buffer ~[%u,%u]", b.offset, self.left, self.right); self.check_stack(0); self.scan_push(self.right); self.token[self.right] = t; self.size[self.right] = -self.right_total; self.right_total += b.blank_space; } STRING(s, len) => { if self.scan_stack_empty { debug!("pp STRING('%s')/print ~[%u,%u]", *s, self.left, self.right); self.print(t, len); } else { debug!("pp STRING('%s')/buffer ~[%u,%u]", *s, self.left, self.right); self.advance_right(); self.token[self.right] = t; self.size[self.right] = len; self.right_total += len; self.check_stream(); } } } } fn check_stream(&mut self) { debug!("check_stream ~[%u, %u] with left_total=%d, right_total=%d", self.left, self.right, self.left_total, self.right_total); if self.right_total - self.left_total > self.space { debug!("scan window is %d, longer than space on line (%d)", self.right_total - self.left_total, self.space); if !self.scan_stack_empty { if self.left == self.scan_stack[self.bottom] { debug!("setting %u to infinity and popping", self.left); self.size[self.scan_pop_bottom()] = size_infinity; } } self.advance_left(self.token[self.left], self.size[self.left]); if self.left != self.right { self.check_stream(); } } } fn scan_push(&mut self, x: uint) { debug!("scan_push %u", x); if self.scan_stack_empty { self.scan_stack_empty = false; } else { self.top += 1u; self.top %= self.buf_len; assert (self.top != self.bottom); } self.scan_stack[self.top] = x; } fn scan_pop(&mut self) -> uint { assert (!self.scan_stack_empty); let x = self.scan_stack[self.top]; if self.top == self.bottom { self.scan_stack_empty = true; } else { self.top += self.buf_len - 1u; self.top %= self.buf_len; } return x; } fn scan_top(&mut self) -> uint { assert (!self.scan_stack_empty); return self.scan_stack[self.top]; } fn scan_pop_bottom(&mut self) -> uint { assert (!self.scan_stack_empty); let x = self.scan_stack[self.bottom]; if self.top == self.bottom { self.scan_stack_empty = true; } else { self.bottom += 1u; self.bottom %= self.buf_len; } return x; } fn advance_right(&mut self) { self.right += 1u; self.right %= self.buf_len; assert (self.right != self.left); } fn advance_left(&mut self, ++x: token, L: int) { debug!("advnce_left ~[%u,%u], sizeof(%u)=%d", self.left, self.right, self.left, L); if L >= 0 { self.print(x, L); match x { BREAK(b) => self.left_total += b.blank_space, STRING(_, len) => { assert (len == L); self.left_total += len; } _ => () } if self.left != self.right { self.left += 1u; self.left %= self.buf_len; self.advance_left(self.token[self.left], self.size[self.left]); } } } fn check_stack(&mut self, k: int) { if !self.scan_stack_empty { let x = self.scan_top(); match copy self.token[x] { BEGIN(_) => { if k > 0 { self.size[self.scan_pop()] = self.size[x] + self.right_total; self.check_stack(k - 1); } } END => { // paper says + not =, but that makes no sense. self.size[self.scan_pop()] = 1; self.check_stack(k + 1); } _ => { self.size[self.scan_pop()] = self.size[x] + self.right_total; if k > 0 { self.check_stack(k); } } } } } fn print_newline(&mut self, amount: int) { debug!("NEWLINE %d", amount); (*self.out).write_str(~"\n"); self.pending_indentation = 0; self.indent(amount); } fn indent(&mut self, amount: int) { debug!("INDENT %d", amount); self.pending_indentation += amount; } fn get_top(&mut self) -> print_stack_elt { let n = self.print_stack.len(); if n != 0u { self.print_stack[n - 1u] } else { print_stack_elt { offset: 0, pbreak: broken(inconsistent) } } } fn print_str(&mut self, s: ~str) { while self.pending_indentation > 0 { (*self.out).write_str(~" "); self.pending_indentation -= 1; } (*self.out).write_str(s); } fn print(&mut self, x: token, L: int) { debug!("print %s %d (remaining line space=%d)", tok_str(x), L, self.space); log(debug, buf_str(copy self.token, copy self.size, self.left, self.right, 6u)); match x { BEGIN(b) => { if L > self.space { let col = self.margin - self.space + b.offset; debug!("print BEGIN -> push broken block at col %d", col); self.print_stack.push(print_stack_elt { offset: col, pbreak: broken(b.breaks) }); } else { debug!("print BEGIN -> push fitting block"); self.print_stack.push(print_stack_elt { offset: 0, pbreak: fits }); } } END => { debug!("print END -> pop END"); assert (self.print_stack.len() != 0u); self.print_stack.pop(); } BREAK(b) => { let top = self.get_top(); match top.pbreak { fits => { debug!("print BREAK(%d) in fitting block", b.blank_space); self.space -= b.blank_space; self.indent(b.blank_space); } broken(consistent) => { debug!("print BREAK(%d+%d) in consistent block", top.offset, b.offset); self.print_newline(top.offset + b.offset); self.space = self.margin - (top.offset + b.offset); } broken(inconsistent) => { if L > self.space { debug!("print BREAK(%d+%d) w/ newline in inconsistent", top.offset, b.offset); self.print_newline(top.offset + b.offset); self.space = self.margin - (top.offset + b.offset); } else { debug!("print BREAK(%d) w/o newline in inconsistent", b.blank_space); self.indent(b.blank_space); self.space -= b.blank_space; } } } } STRING(s, len) => { debug!("print STRING(%s)", *s); assert (L == len); // assert L <= space; self.space -= len; self.print_str(*s); } EOF => { // EOF should never get here. fail!(); } } } } // Convenience functions to talk to the printer. pub fn box(p: @mut Printer, indent: uint, b: breaks) { p.pretty_print(BEGIN(begin_t { offset: indent as int, breaks: b })); } pub fn ibox(p: @mut Printer, indent: uint) { box(p, indent, inconsistent); } pub fn cbox(p: @mut Printer, indent: uint) { box(p, indent, consistent); } pub fn break_offset(p: @mut Printer, n: uint, off: int) { p.pretty_print(BREAK(break_t { offset: off, blank_space: n as int })); } pub fn end(p: @mut Printer) { p.pretty_print(END); } pub fn eof(p: @mut Printer) { p.pretty_print(EOF); } pub fn word(p: @mut Printer, wrd: ~str) { p.pretty_print(STRING(@wrd, str::len(wrd) as int)); } pub fn huge_word(p: @mut Printer, wrd: ~str) { p.pretty_print(STRING(@wrd, size_infinity)); } pub fn zero_word(p: @mut Printer, wrd: ~str) { p.pretty_print(STRING(@wrd, 0)); } pub fn spaces(p: @mut Printer, n: uint) { break_offset(p, n, 0); } pub fn zerobreak(p: @mut Printer) { spaces(p, 0u); } pub fn space(p: @mut Printer) { spaces(p, 1u); } pub fn hardbreak(p: @mut Printer) { spaces(p, size_infinity as uint); } pub fn hardbreak_tok_offset(off: int) -> token { BREAK(break_t {offset: off, blank_space: size_infinity}) } pub fn hardbreak_tok() -> token { return hardbreak_tok_offset(0); } // // Local Variables: // mode: rust // fill-column: 78; // indent-tabs-mode: nil // c-basic-offset: 4 // buffer-file-coding-system: utf-8-unix // End: //