Current File : //proc/thread-self/root/proc/self/root/opt/alt/ruby33/share/ruby/prism/parse_result.rb |
# frozen_string_literal: true
module Prism
# This represents a source of Ruby code that has been parsed. It is used in
# conjunction with locations to allow them to resolve line numbers and source
# ranges.
class Source
# The source code that this source object represents.
attr_reader :source
# The line number where this source starts.
attr_accessor :start_line
# The list of newline byte offsets in the source code.
attr_reader :offsets
# Create a new source object with the given source code and newline byte
# offsets. If no newline byte offsets are given, they will be computed from
# the source code.
def initialize(source, start_line = 1, offsets = compute_offsets(source))
@source = source
@start_line = start_line
@offsets = offsets
end
# Perform a byteslice on the source code using the given byte offset and
# byte length.
def slice(byte_offset, length)
source.byteslice(byte_offset, length)
end
# Binary search through the offsets to find the line number for the given
# byte offset.
def line(byte_offset)
start_line + find_line(byte_offset)
end
# Return the byte offset of the start of the line corresponding to the given
# byte offset.
def line_start(byte_offset)
offsets[find_line(byte_offset)]
end
# Return the column number for the given byte offset.
def column(byte_offset)
byte_offset - line_start(byte_offset)
end
# Return the character offset for the given byte offset.
def character_offset(byte_offset)
source.byteslice(0, byte_offset).length
end
# Return the column number in characters for the given byte offset.
def character_column(byte_offset)
character_offset(byte_offset) - character_offset(line_start(byte_offset))
end
private
# Binary search through the offsets to find the line number for the given
# byte offset.
def find_line(byte_offset)
left = 0
right = offsets.length - 1
while left <= right
mid = left + (right - left) / 2
return mid if offsets[mid] == byte_offset
if offsets[mid] < byte_offset
left = mid + 1
else
right = mid - 1
end
end
left - 1
end
# Find all of the newlines in the source code and return their byte offsets
# from the start of the string an array.
def compute_offsets(code)
offsets = [0]
code.b.scan("\n") { offsets << $~.end(0) }
offsets
end
end
# This represents a location in the source.
class Location
# A Source object that is used to determine more information from the given
# offset and length.
protected attr_reader :source
# The byte offset from the beginning of the source where this location
# starts.
attr_reader :start_offset
# The length of this location in bytes.
attr_reader :length
# The list of comments attached to this location
attr_reader :comments
# Create a new location object with the given source, start byte offset, and
# byte length.
def initialize(source, start_offset, length)
@source = source
@start_offset = start_offset
@length = length
@comments = []
end
# Create a new location object with the given options.
def copy(**options)
Location.new(
options.fetch(:source) { source },
options.fetch(:start_offset) { start_offset },
options.fetch(:length) { length }
)
end
# Returns a string representation of this location.
def inspect
"#<Prism::Location @start_offset=#{@start_offset} @length=#{@length} start_line=#{start_line}>"
end
# The source code that this location represents.
def slice
source.slice(start_offset, length)
end
# The character offset from the beginning of the source where this location
# starts.
def start_character_offset
source.character_offset(start_offset)
end
# The byte offset from the beginning of the source where this location ends.
def end_offset
start_offset + length
end
# The character offset from the beginning of the source where this location
# ends.
def end_character_offset
source.character_offset(end_offset)
end
# The line number where this location starts.
def start_line
source.line(start_offset)
end
# The content of the line where this location starts before this location.
def start_line_slice
offset = source.line_start(start_offset)
source.slice(offset, start_offset - offset)
end
# The line number where this location ends.
def end_line
source.line(end_offset)
end
# The column number in bytes where this location starts from the start of
# the line.
def start_column
source.column(start_offset)
end
# The column number in characters where this location ends from the start of
# the line.
def start_character_column
source.character_column(start_offset)
end
# The column number in bytes where this location ends from the start of the
# line.
def end_column
source.column(end_offset)
end
# The column number in characters where this location ends from the start of
# the line.
def end_character_column
source.character_column(end_offset)
end
# Implement the hash pattern matching interface for Location.
def deconstruct_keys(keys)
{ start_offset: start_offset, end_offset: end_offset }
end
# Implement the pretty print interface for Location.
def pretty_print(q)
q.text("(#{start_line},#{start_column})-(#{end_line},#{end_column})")
end
# Returns true if the given other location is equal to this location.
def ==(other)
other.is_a?(Location) &&
other.start_offset == start_offset &&
other.end_offset == end_offset
end
# Returns a new location that stretches from this location to the given
# other location. Raises an error if this location is not before the other
# location or if they don't share the same source.
def join(other)
raise "Incompatible sources" if source != other.source
raise "Incompatible locations" if start_offset > other.start_offset
Location.new(source, start_offset, other.end_offset - start_offset)
end
# Returns a null location that does not correspond to a source and points to
# the beginning of the file. Useful for when you want a location object but
# do not care where it points.
def self.null
new(nil, 0, 0)
end
end
# This represents a comment that was encountered during parsing. It is the
# base class for all comment types.
class Comment
# The location of this comment in the source.
attr_reader :location
# Create a new comment object with the given location.
def initialize(location)
@location = location
end
# Implement the hash pattern matching interface for Comment.
def deconstruct_keys(keys)
{ location: location }
end
end
# InlineComment objects are the most common. They correspond to comments in
# the source file like this one that start with #.
class InlineComment < Comment
# Returns true if this comment happens on the same line as other code and
# false if the comment is by itself.
def trailing?
!location.start_line_slice.strip.empty?
end
# Returns a string representation of this comment.
def inspect
"#<Prism::InlineComment @location=#{location.inspect}>"
end
end
# EmbDocComment objects correspond to comments that are surrounded by =begin
# and =end.
class EmbDocComment < Comment
# This can only be true for inline comments.
def trailing?
false
end
# Returns a string representation of this comment.
def inspect
"#<Prism::EmbDocComment @location=#{location.inspect}>"
end
end
# This represents a magic comment that was encountered during parsing.
class MagicComment
# A Location object representing the location of the key in the source.
attr_reader :key_loc
# A Location object representing the location of the value in the source.
attr_reader :value_loc
# Create a new magic comment object with the given key and value locations.
def initialize(key_loc, value_loc)
@key_loc = key_loc
@value_loc = value_loc
end
# Returns the key of the magic comment by slicing it from the source code.
def key
key_loc.slice
end
# Returns the value of the magic comment by slicing it from the source code.
def value
value_loc.slice
end
# Implement the hash pattern matching interface for MagicComment.
def deconstruct_keys(keys)
{ key_loc: key_loc, value_loc: value_loc }
end
# Returns a string representation of this magic comment.
def inspect
"#<Prism::MagicComment @key=#{key.inspect} @value=#{value.inspect}>"
end
end
# This represents an error that was encountered during parsing.
class ParseError
# The message associated with this error.
attr_reader :message
# A Location object representing the location of this error in the source.
attr_reader :location
# Create a new error object with the given message and location.
def initialize(message, location)
@message = message
@location = location
end
# Implement the hash pattern matching interface for ParseError.
def deconstruct_keys(keys)
{ message: message, location: location }
end
# Returns a string representation of this error.
def inspect
"#<Prism::ParseError @message=#{@message.inspect} @location=#{@location.inspect}>"
end
end
# This represents a warning that was encountered during parsing.
class ParseWarning
# The message associated with this warning.
attr_reader :message
# A Location object representing the location of this warning in the source.
attr_reader :location
# Create a new warning object with the given message and location.
def initialize(message, location)
@message = message
@location = location
end
# Implement the hash pattern matching interface for ParseWarning.
def deconstruct_keys(keys)
{ message: message, location: location }
end
# Returns a string representation of this warning.
def inspect
"#<Prism::ParseWarning @message=#{@message.inspect} @location=#{@location.inspect}>"
end
end
# This represents the result of a call to ::parse or ::parse_file. It contains
# the AST, any comments that were encounters, and any errors that were
# encountered.
class ParseResult
# The value that was generated by parsing. Normally this holds the AST, but
# it can sometimes how a list of tokens or other results passed back from
# the parser.
attr_reader :value
# The list of comments that were encountered during parsing.
attr_reader :comments
# The list of magic comments that were encountered during parsing.
attr_reader :magic_comments
# An optional location that represents the location of the content after the
# __END__ marker. This content is loaded into the DATA constant when the
# file being parsed is the main file being executed.
attr_reader :data_loc
# The list of errors that were generated during parsing.
attr_reader :errors
# The list of warnings that were generated during parsing.
attr_reader :warnings
# A Source instance that represents the source code that was parsed.
attr_reader :source
# Create a new parse result object with the given values.
def initialize(value, comments, magic_comments, data_loc, errors, warnings, source)
@value = value
@comments = comments
@magic_comments = magic_comments
@data_loc = data_loc
@errors = errors
@warnings = warnings
@source = source
end
# Implement the hash pattern matching interface for ParseResult.
def deconstruct_keys(keys)
{ value: value, comments: comments, magic_comments: magic_comments, data_loc: data_loc, errors: errors, warnings: warnings }
end
# Returns true if there were no errors during parsing and false if there
# were.
def success?
errors.empty?
end
# Returns true if there were errors during parsing and false if there were
# not.
def failure?
!success?
end
end
# This represents a token from the Ruby source.
class Token
# The type of token that this token is.
attr_reader :type
# A byteslice of the source that this token represents.
attr_reader :value
# A Location object representing the location of this token in the source.
attr_reader :location
# Create a new token object with the given type, value, and location.
def initialize(type, value, location)
@type = type
@value = value
@location = location
end
# Implement the hash pattern matching interface for Token.
def deconstruct_keys(keys)
{ type: type, value: value, location: location }
end
# Implement the pretty print interface for Token.
def pretty_print(q)
q.group do
q.text(type.to_s)
self.location.pretty_print(q)
q.text("(")
q.nest(2) do
q.breakable("")
q.pp(value)
end
q.breakable("")
q.text(")")
end
end
# Returns true if the given other token is equal to this token.
def ==(other)
other.is_a?(Token) &&
other.type == type &&
other.value == value
end
end
end