module Text.PrettyPrint.Annotated.Leijen ( -- * Documents, parametrized by their annotations Doc, putDoc, hPutDoc, -- * Basic combinators empty, char, text, (<>), nest, line, linebreak, group, softline, softbreak, -- * Alignment -- -- The combinators in this section can not be described by Wadler's -- original combinators. They align their output relative to the -- current output position - in contrast to @nest@ which always -- aligns to the current nesting level. This deprives these -- combinators from being \`optimal\'. In practice however they -- prove to be very useful. The combinators in this section should -- be used with care, since they are more expensive than the other -- combinators. For example, @align@ shouldn't be used to pretty -- print all top-level declarations of a language, but using @hang@ -- for let expressions is fine. align, hang, indent, encloseSep, list, tupled, semiBraces, -- * Operators (<+>), (<$>), (</>), (<$$>), (<//>), -- * List combinators hsep, vsep, fillSep, sep, hcat, vcat, fillCat, cat, punctuate, -- * Fillers fill, fillBreak, -- * Bracketing combinators enclose, squotes, dquotes, parens, angles, braces, brackets, -- * Character documents lparen, rparen, langle, rangle, lbrace, rbrace, lbracket, rbracket, squote, dquote, semi, colon, comma, space, dot, backslash, equals, pipe, -- * Primitive type documents string, int, integer, float, double, rational, bool, -- * Pretty class --Pretty(..), -- * Semantic annotations annotate, noAnnotate, -- * Rendering SimpleDoc(..), renderPretty, renderCompact, displayDecorated, displayS, displayIO, SpanList(..), displaySpans -- * Undocumented , column, nesting, width ) where import System.IO (Handle,hPutStr,hPutChar,stdout) infixr 5 </>,<//>,<$>,<$$> infixr 6 <>,<+> ----------------------------------------------------------- -- list, tupled and semiBraces pretty print a list of -- documents either horizontally or vertically aligned. ----------------------------------------------------------- -- | The document @(list xs)@ comma separates the documents @xs@ and -- encloses them in square brackets. The documents are rendered -- horizontally if that fits the page. Otherwise they are aligned -- vertically. All comma separators are put in front of the elements. list :: [Doc a] -> Doc a list = encloseSep lbracket rbracket comma -- | The document @(tupled xs)@ comma separates the documents @xs@ and -- encloses them in parenthesis. The documents are rendered -- horizontally if that fits the page. Otherwise they are aligned -- vertically. All comma separators are put in front of the elements. tupled :: [Doc a] -> Doc a tupled = encloseSep lparen rparen comma -- | The document @(semiBraces xs)@ separates the documents @xs@ with -- semi colons and encloses them in braces. The documents are rendered -- horizontally if that fits the page. Otherwise they are aligned -- vertically. All semi colons are put in front of the elements. semiBraces :: [Doc a] -> Doc a semiBraces = encloseSep lbrace rbrace semi -- | The document @(encloseSep l r sep xs)@ concatenates the documents -- @xs@ separated by @sep@ and encloses the resulting document by @l@ -- and @r@. The documents are rendered horizontally if that fits the -- page. Otherwise they are aligned vertically. All separators are put -- in front of the elements. For example, the combinator 'list' can be -- defined with @encloseSep@: -- -- > list xs = encloseSep lbracket rbracket comma xs -- > test = text "list" <+> (list (map int [10,200,3000])) -- -- Which is layed out with a page width of 20 as: -- -- @ -- list [10,200,3000] -- @ -- -- But when the page width is 15, it is layed out as: -- -- @ -- list [10 -- ,200 -- ,3000] -- @ encloseSep :: Doc a -> Doc a -> Doc a -> [Doc a] -> Doc a encloseSep left right sep ds = case ds of [] -> left <> right [d] -> left <> d <> right _ -> align (cat (zipWith (<>) (left : repeat sep) ds) <> right) ----------------------------------------------------------- -- punctuate p [d1,d2,...,dn] => [d1 <> p,d2 <> p, ... ,dn] ----------------------------------------------------------- -- | @(punctuate p xs)@ concatenates all documents in @xs@ with -- document @p@ except for the last document. -- -- > someText = map text ["words","in","a","tuple"] -- > test = parens (align (cat (punctuate comma someText))) -- -- This is layed out on a page width of 20 as: -- -- @ -- (words,in,a,tuple) -- @ -- -- But when the page width is 15, it is layed out as: -- -- @ -- (words, -- in, -- a, -- tuple) -- @ -- -- (If you want put the commas in front of their elements instead of -- at the end, you should use 'tupled' or, in general, 'encloseSep'.) punctuate :: Doc a -> [Doc a] -> [Doc a] punctuate p [] = [] punctuate p [d] = [d] punctuate p (d:ds) = (d <> p) : punctuate p ds ----------------------------------------------------------- -- high-level combinators ----------------------------------------------------------- -- | The document @(sep xs)@ concatenates all documents @xs@ either -- horizontally with @(\<+\>)@, if it fits the page, or vertically with -- @(\<$\>)@. -- -- > sep xs = group (vsep xs) sep :: [Doc a] -> Doc a sep = group . vsep -- | The document @(fillSep xs)@ concatenates documents @xs@ -- horizontally with @(\<+\>)@ as long as its fits the page, than -- inserts a @line@ and continues doing that for all documents in -- @xs@. -- -- > fillSep xs = foldr (\<\/\>) empty xs fillSep :: [Doc a] -> Doc a fillSep = fold (</>) -- | The document @(hsep xs)@ concatenates all documents @xs@ -- horizontally with @(\<+\>)@. hsep :: [Doc a] -> Doc a hsep = fold (<+>) -- | The document @(vsep xs)@ concatenates all documents @xs@ -- vertically with @(\<$\>)@. If a 'group' undoes the line breaks -- inserted by @vsep@, all documents are separated with a space. -- -- > someText = map text (words ("text to lay out")) -- > -- > test = text "some" <+> vsep someText -- -- This is layed out as: -- -- @ -- some text -- to -- lay -- out -- @ -- -- The 'align' combinator can be used to align the documents under -- their first element -- -- > test = text "some" <+> align (vsep someText) -- -- Which is printed as: -- -- @ -- some text -- to -- lay -- out -- @ vsep :: [Doc a] -> Doc a vsep = fold (<$>) -- | The document @(cat xs)@ concatenates all documents @xs@ either -- horizontally with @(\<\>)@, if it fits the page, or vertically with -- @(\<$$\>)@. -- -- > cat xs = group (vcat xs) cat :: [Doc a] -> Doc a cat = group . vcat -- | The document @(fillCat xs)@ concatenates documents @xs@ -- horizontally with @(\<\>)@ as long as its fits the page, than inserts -- a @linebreak@ and continues doing that for all documents in @xs@. -- -- > fillCat xs = foldr (\<\/\/\>) empty xs fillCat :: [Doc a] -> Doc a fillCat = fold (<//>) -- | The document @(hcat xs)@ concatenates all documents @xs@ -- horizontally with @(\<\>)@. hcat :: [Doc a] -> Doc a hcat = fold (<>) -- | The document @(vcat xs)@ concatenates all documents @xs@ -- vertically with @(\<$$\>)@. If a 'group' undoes the line breaks -- inserted by @vcat@, all documents are directly concatenated. vcat :: [Doc a] -> Doc a vcat = fold (<$$>) fold f [] = empty fold f ds = foldr1 f ds -- | The document @(x \<\> y)@ concatenates document @x@ and document -- @y@. It is an associative operation having 'empty' as a left and -- right unit. (infixr 6) (<>) :: Doc a -> Doc a -> Doc a x <> y = x `beside` y -- | The document @(x \<+\> y)@ concatenates document @x@ and @y@ with a -- @space@ in between. (infixr 6) (<+>) :: Doc a -> Doc a -> Doc a x <+> y = x <> space <> y -- | The document @(x \<\/\> y)@ concatenates document @x@ and @y@ with a -- 'softline' in between. This effectively puts @x@ and @y@ either -- next to each other (with a @space@ in between) or underneath each -- other. (infixr 5) (</>) :: Doc a -> Doc a -> Doc a x </> y = x <> softline <> y -- | The document @(x \<\/\/\> y)@ concatenates document @x@ and @y@ with -- a 'softbreak' in between. This effectively puts @x@ and @y@ either -- right next to each other or underneath each other. (infixr 5) (<//>) :: Doc a -> Doc a -> Doc a x <//> y = x <> softbreak <> y -- | The document @(x \<$\> y)@ concatenates document @x@ and @y@ with a -- 'line' in between. (infixr 5) (<$>) :: Doc a -> Doc a -> Doc a x <$> y = x <> line <> y -- | The document @(x \<$$\> y)@ concatenates document @x@ and @y@ with -- a @linebreak@ in between. (infixr 5) (<$$>) :: Doc a -> Doc a -> Doc a x <$$> y = x <> linebreak <> y -- | The document @softline@ behaves like 'space' if the resulting -- output fits the page, otherwise it behaves like 'line'. -- -- > softline = group line softline :: Doc a softline = group line -- | The document @softbreak@ behaves like 'empty' if the resulting -- output fits the page, otherwise it behaves like 'line'. -- -- > softbreak = group linebreak softbreak :: Doc a softbreak = group linebreak -- | Document @(squotes x)@ encloses document @x@ with single quotes -- \"'\". squotes :: Doc a -> Doc a squotes = enclose squote squote -- | Document @(dquotes x)@ encloses document @x@ with double quotes -- '\"'. dquotes :: Doc a -> Doc a dquotes = enclose dquote dquote -- | Document @(braces x)@ encloses document @x@ in braces, \"{\" and -- \"}\". braces :: Doc a -> Doc a braces = enclose lbrace rbrace -- | Document @(parens x)@ encloses document @x@ in parenthesis, \"(\" -- and \")\". parens :: Doc a -> Doc a parens = enclose lparen rparen -- | Document @(angles x)@ encloses document @x@ in angles, \"\<\" and -- \"\>\". angles :: Doc a -> Doc a angles = enclose langle rangle -- | Document @(brackets x)@ encloses document @x@ in square brackets, -- \"[\" and \"]\". brackets :: Doc a -> Doc a brackets = enclose lbracket rbracket -- | The document @(enclose l r x)@ encloses document @x@ between -- documents @l@ and @r@ using @(\<\>)@. -- -- > enclose l r x = l <> x <> r enclose :: Doc a -> Doc a -> Doc a -> Doc a enclose l r x = l <> x <> r -- | The document @lparen@ contains a left parenthesis, \"(\". lparen :: Doc a lparen = char '(' -- | The document @rparen@ contains a right parenthesis, \")\". rparen :: Doc a rparen = char ')' -- | The document @langle@ contains a left angle, \"\<\". langle :: Doc a langle = char '<' -- | The document @rangle@ contains a right angle, \">\". rangle :: Doc a rangle = char '>' -- | The document @lbrace@ contains a left brace, \"{\". lbrace :: Doc a lbrace = char '{' -- | The document @rbrace@ contains a right brace, \"}\". rbrace :: Doc a rbrace = char '}' -- | The document @lbracket@ contains a left square bracket, \"[\". lbracket :: Doc a lbracket = char '[' -- | The document @rbracket@ contains a right square bracket, \"]\". rbracket :: Doc a rbracket = char ']' -- | The document @squote@ contains a single quote, \"'\". squote :: Doc a squote = char '\'' -- | The document @dquote@ contains a double quote, '\"'. dquote :: Doc a dquote = char '"' -- | The document @semi@ contains a semi colon, \";\". semi :: Doc a semi = char ';' -- | The document @colon@ contains a colon, \":\". colon :: Doc a colon = char ':' -- | The document @comma@ contains a comma, \",\". comma :: Doc a comma = char ',' -- | The document @space@ contains a single space, \" \". -- -- > x <+> y = x <> space <> y space :: Doc a space = char ' ' -- | The document @dot@ contains a single dot, \".\". dot :: Doc a dot = char '.' -- | The document @backslash@ contains a back slash, \"\\\". backslash :: Doc a backslash = char '\\' -- | The document @equals@ contains an equal sign, \"=\". equals :: Doc a equals = char '=' -- | The document @pipe@ contains a pipe character, \"\|\". pipe :: Doc a pipe = char '|' ----------------------------------------------------------- -- Combinators for prelude types ----------------------------------------------------------- -- string is like "text" but replaces '\n' by "line" -- | The document @(string s)@ concatenates all characters in @s@ -- using @line@ for newline characters and @char@ for all other -- characters. It is used instead of 'text' whenever the text contains -- newline characters. string :: String -> Doc a string "" = empty string ('\n':s) = line <> string s string s = case (span (/='\n') s) of (xs,ys) -> text xs <> string ys -- | The document @(bool b)@ is @text "True"@ when @b@ is true, and @text -- "False"@ otherwise. bool :: Bool -> Doc a bool b = text (show b) -- | The document @(int i)@ shows the literal integer @i@ using -- 'text'. int :: Int -> Doc a int i = text (show i) -- | The document @(integer i)@ shows the literal integer @i@ using -- 'text'. integer :: Integer -> Doc a integer i = text (show i) -- | The document @(float f)@ shows the literal float @f@ using -- 'text'. float :: Float -> Doc a float f = text (show f) -- | The document @(double d)@ shows the literal double @d@ using -- 'text'. double :: Double -> Doc a double d = text (show d) -- | The document @(rational r)@ shows the literal rational @r@ using -- 'text'. rational :: Rational -> Doc a rational r = text (show r) ----------------------------------------------------------- -- semi primitive: fill and fillBreak ----------------------------------------------------------- -- | The document @(fillBreak i x)@ first renders document @x@. It -- than appends @space@s until the width is equal to @i@. If the -- width of @x@ is already larger than @i@, the nesting level is -- increased by @i@ and a @line@ is appended. When we redefine @ptype@ -- in the previous example to use @fillBreak@, we get a useful -- variation of the previous output: -- -- > ptype (name,tp) -- > = fillBreak 6 (text name) <+> text "::" <+> text tp -- -- The output will now be: -- -- @ -- let empty :: Doc a -- nest :: Int -> Doc a -> Doc a -- linebreak -- :: Doc a -- @ fillBreak :: Int -> Doc a -> Doc a fillBreak f x = width x (\w -> if (w > f) then nest f linebreak else text (spaces (f - w))) -- | The document @(fill i x)@ renders document @x@. It than appends -- @space@s until the width is equal to @i@. If the width of @x@ is -- already larger, nothing is appended. This combinator is quite -- useful in practice to output a list of bindings. The following -- example demonstrates this. -- -- > types = [("empty","Doc a") -- > ,("nest","Int -> Doc a -> Doc a") -- > ,("linebreak","Doc a")] -- > -- > ptype (name,tp) -- > = fill 6 (text name) <+> text "::" <+> text tp -- > -- > test = text "let" <+> align (vcat (map ptype types)) -- -- Which is layed out as: -- -- @ -- let empty :: Doc a -- nest :: Int -> Doc a -> Doc a -- linebreak :: Doc a -- @ fill :: Int -> Doc a -> Doc a fill f d = width d (\w -> if (w >= f) then empty else text (spaces (f - w))) width :: Doc a -> (Int -> Doc a) -> Doc a width d f = column (\k1 -> d <> column (\k2 -> f (k2 - k1))) ----------------------------------------------------------- -- semi primitive: Alignment and indentation ----------------------------------------------------------- -- | The document @(indent i x)@ indents document @x@ with @i@ spaces. -- -- > test = indent 4 (fillSep (map text -- > (words "the indent combinator indents these words !"))) -- -- Which lays out with a page width of 20 as: -- -- @ -- the indent -- combinator -- indents these -- words ! -- @ indent :: Int -> Doc a -> Doc a indent i d = hang i (text (spaces i) <> d) -- | The hang combinator implements hanging indentation. The document -- @(hang i x)@ renders document @x@ with a nesting level set to the -- current column plus @i@. The following example uses hanging -- indentation for some text: -- -- > test = hang 4 (fillSep (map text -- > (words "the hang combinator indents these words !"))) -- -- Which lays out on a page with a width of 20 characters as: -- -- @ -- the hang combinator -- indents these -- words ! -- @ -- -- The @hang@ combinator is implemented as: -- -- > hang i x = align (nest i x) hang :: Int -> Doc a -> Doc a hang i d = align (nest i d) -- | The document @(align x)@ renders document @x@ with the nesting -- level set to the current column. It is used for example to -- implement 'hang'. -- -- As an example, we will put a document right above another one, -- regardless of the current nesting level: -- -- > x $$ y = align (x <$> y) -- -- > test = text "hi" <+> (text "nice" $$ text "world") -- -- which will be layed out as: -- -- @ -- hi nice -- world -- @ align :: Doc a -> Doc a align d = column (\k -> nesting (\i -> nest (k - i) d)) --nesting might be negative :-) ----------------------------------------------------------- -- Primitives ----------------------------------------------------------- -- | The abstract data type @Doc a@ represents pretty documents. -- -- @Doc a@ is an instance of the 'Show' class. @(show doc)@ pretty -- prints document @doc@ with a page width of 100 characters and a -- ribbon width of 40 characters. -- -- > show (text "hello" <$> text "world") -- -- Which would return the string \"hello\\nworld\", i.e. -- -- @ -- hello -- world -- @ data Doc a = Empty | Char Char -- invariant: char is not '\n' | Text !Int String -- invariant: text doesn't contain '\n' | Line !Bool -- True <=> when undone by group, do not insert a space | Cat (Doc a) (Doc a) | Nest !Int (Doc a) | Union (Doc a) (Doc a) -- invariant: first lines of first doc longer than the first lines of the second doc | Column (Int -> Doc a) | Nesting (Int -> Doc a) | Annotate a (Doc a) -- The contained document, annotated by the info | AnnotEnd -- Only used during rendering - indicates the end of an annotation deriving Functor type SpanList a = [(Int, Int, a)] -- | The data type @SimpleDoc a@ represents rendered documents and is -- used by the display functions. -- -- The @Int@ in @SText@ contains the length of the string. The @Int@ -- in @SLine@ contains the indentation for that line. The library -- provides two default display functions 'displayS' and -- 'displayIO'. You can provide your own display function by writing a -- function from a @SimpleDoc a@ to your own output format. data SimpleDoc a = SEmpty | SChar Char (SimpleDoc a) | SText !Int String (SimpleDoc a) | SLine !Int (SimpleDoc a) | SAnnotStart a (SimpleDoc a) | SAnnotStop (SimpleDoc a) deriving Functor -- | The empty document is, indeed, empty. Although @empty@ has no -- content, it does have a \'height\' of 1 and behaves exactly like -- @(text \"\")@ (and is therefore not a unit of @\<$\>@). empty :: Doc a empty = Empty -- | The document @(char c)@ contains the literal character @c@. The -- character shouldn't be a newline (@'\n'@), the function 'line' -- should be used for line breaks. char :: Char -> Doc a char '\n' = line char c = Char c -- | The document @(text s)@ contains the literal string @s@. The -- string shouldn't contain any newline (@'\n'@) characters. If the -- string contains newline characters, the function 'string' should be -- used. text :: String -> Doc a text "" = Empty text s = Text (length s) s -- | The @line@ document advances to the next line and indents to the -- current nesting level. Doc aument @line@ behaves like @(text \" \")@ -- if the line break is undone by 'group'. line :: Doc a line = Line False -- | The @linebreak@ document advances to the next line and indents to -- the current nesting level. Document @linebreak@ behaves like -- 'empty' if the line break is undone by 'group'. linebreak :: Doc a linebreak = Line True beside x y = Cat x y -- | The document @(nest i x)@ renders document @x@ with the current -- indentation level increased by i (See also 'hang', 'align' and -- 'indent'). -- -- > nest 2 (text "hello" <$> text "world") <$> text "!" -- -- outputs as: -- -- @ -- hello -- world -- ! -- @ nest :: Int -> Doc a -> Doc a nest i x = Nest i x column, nesting :: (Int -> Doc a) -> Doc a column f = Column f nesting f = Nesting f -- | The @group@ combinator is used to specify alternative -- layouts. The document @(group x)@ undoes all line breaks in -- document @x@. The resulting line is added to the current line if -- that fits the page. Otherwise, the document @x@ is rendered without -- any changes. group :: Doc a -> Doc a group x = Union (flatten x) x flatten :: Doc a -> Doc a flatten (Cat x y) = Cat (flatten x) (flatten y) flatten (Nest i x) = Nest i (flatten x) flatten (Line break) = if break then Empty else Text 1 " " flatten (Union x y) = flatten x flatten (Column f) = Column (flatten . f) flatten (Nesting f) = Nesting (flatten . f) flatten other = other --Empty,Char,Text ----------------------------------------------------------- -- Semantic annotations ----------------------------------------------------------- annotate :: a -> Doc a -> Doc a annotate = Annotate -- | Strip annotations from a document. This is useful for re-using the -- textual formatting of some sub-document, but applying a different -- high-level annotation. noAnnotate :: Doc a -> Doc a noAnnotate (Cat x y) = Cat (noAnnotate x) (noAnnotate y) noAnnotate (Nest i x) = Nest i (noAnnotate x) noAnnotate (Union x y) = Union (noAnnotate x) (noAnnotate y) noAnnotate (Column f) = Column (noAnnotate . f) noAnnotate (Nesting f) = Nesting (noAnnotate . f) noAnnotate (Annotate _ x) = noAnnotate x noAnnotate other = other ----------------------------------------------------------- -- Renderers ----------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------- -- renderPretty: the default pretty printing algorithm ----------------------------------------------------------- -- list of indentation/document pairs; saves an indirection over [(Int,Doc a)] data Docs a = Nil | Cons !Int (Doc a) (Docs a) -- | This is the default pretty printer which is used by 'show', -- 'putDoc' and 'hPutDoc'. @(renderPretty ribbonfrac width x)@ renders -- document @x@ with a page width of @width@ and a ribbon width of -- @(ribbonfrac * width)@ characters. The ribbon width is the maximal -- amount of non-indentation characters on a line. The parameter -- @ribbonfrac@ should be between @0.0@ and @1.0@. If it is lower or -- higher, the ribbon width will be 0 or @width@ respectively. renderPretty :: Float -> Int -> Doc a -> SimpleDoc a renderPretty rfrac w x = best 0 0 (Cons 0 x Nil) where -- r :: the ribbon width in characters r = max 0 (min w (round (fromIntegral w * rfrac))) -- best :: n = indentation of current line -- k = current column -- (ie. (k >= n) && (k - n == count of inserted characters) best n k Nil = SEmpty best n k (Cons i d ds) = case d of Empty -> best n k ds Char c -> let k' = k+1 in seq k' (SChar c (best n k' ds)) Text l s -> let k' = k+l in seq k' (SText l s (best n k' ds)) Line _ -> SLine i (best i i ds) Cat x y -> best n k (Cons i x (Cons i y ds)) Nest j x -> let i' = i+j in seq i' (best n k (Cons i' x ds)) Union x y -> nicest n k (best n k (Cons i x ds)) (best n k (Cons i y ds)) Column f -> best n k (Cons i (f k) ds) Nesting f -> best n k (Cons i (f i) ds) Annotate a d' -> SAnnotStart a (best n k (Cons i d' (Cons i AnnotEnd ds))) AnnotEnd -> SAnnotStop (best n k ds) --nicest :: r = ribbon width, w = page width, -- n = indentation of current line, k = current column -- x and y, the (simple) documents to chose from. -- precondition: first lines of x are longer than the first lines of y. nicest n k x y | fits width x = x | otherwise = y where width = min (w - k) (r - k + n) fits w x | w < 0 = False fits w SEmpty = True fits w (SChar c x) = fits (w - 1) x fits w (SText l s x) = fits (w - l) x fits w (SLine i x) = True fits w (SAnnotStart _ x) = fits w x fits w (SAnnotStop x) = fits w x ----------------------------------------------------------- -- renderCompact: renders documents without indentation -- fast and fewer characters output, good for machines ----------------------------------------------------------- -- | @(renderCompact x)@ renders document @x@ without adding any -- indentation. Since no \'pretty\' printing is involved, this -- renderer is very fast. The resulting output contains fewer -- characters than a pretty printed version and can be used for output -- that is read by other programs. renderCompact :: Doc a -> SimpleDoc a renderCompact x = scan 0 [x] where scan k [] = SEmpty scan k (d:ds) = case d of Empty -> scan k ds Char c -> let k' = k+1 in seq k' (SChar c (scan k' ds)) Text l s -> let k' = k+l in seq k' (SText l s (scan k' ds)) Line _ -> SLine 0 (scan 0 ds) Cat x y -> scan k (x:y:ds) Nest j x -> scan k (x:ds) Union x y -> scan k (y:ds) Column f -> scan k (f k:ds) Nesting f -> scan k (f 0:ds) Annotate a d' -> SAnnotStart a (scan k (d':AnnotEnd:ds)) AnnotEnd -> SAnnotStop $ scan k ds ----------------------------------------------------------- -- Displayers: displayS and displayIO ----------------------------------------------------------- -- | @(displayS simpleDoc a)@ takes the output @simpleDoc a@ from a -- rendering function and transforms it to a 'ShowS' type (for use in -- the 'Show' class). -- -- > showWidth :: Int -> Doc a -> String -- > showWidth w x = displayS (renderPretty 0.4 w x) "" displayS :: SimpleDoc a -> ShowS displayS SEmpty = id displayS (SChar c x) = showChar c . displayS x displayS (SText l s x) = showString s . displayS x displayS (SLine i x) = showString ('\n':indentation i) . displayS x displayS (SAnnotStart _ x) = displayS x displayS (SAnnotStop x) = displayS x -- | @(displayIO handle simpleDoc a)@ writes @simpleDoc a@ to the file -- handle @handle@. This function is used for example by 'hPutDoc a': -- -- > hPutDoc a handle doc = displayIO handle (renderPretty 0.4 100 doc) displayIO :: Handle -> SimpleDoc a -> IO () displayIO handle simpleDoc = display simpleDoc where display SEmpty = return () display (SChar c x) = do{ hPutChar handle c; display x} display (SText l s x) = do{ hPutStr handle s; display x} display (SLine i x) = do{ hPutStr handle ('\n':indentation i); display x} display (SAnnotStart _ x) = display x display (SAnnotStop x) = display x -- | Generate a pair of a string and a list of source span/annotation pairs displaySpans :: SimpleDoc a -> (String, SpanList a) displaySpans sd = display 0 [] sd where display :: Int -> [(Int, a)] -> SimpleDoc a -> (String, SpanList a) display i [] SEmpty = ("", []) display i stk (SChar c x) = let (str, spans) = display (i+1) stk x in (c:str, spans) display i stk (SText l s x) = mapFst (s++) (display (i + l) stk x) display i stk (SLine ind x) = mapFst (('\n':indentation ind)++) (display (1+i+ind) stk x) display i stk (SAnnotStart ann x) = display i ((i, ann):stk) x display i ((start, ann):stk) (SAnnotStop x) = mapSnd ((start, i-start, ann):) (display i stk x) -- malformed documents display _ [] (SAnnotStop _) = error "stack underflow" display _ stk SEmpty = error "Stack not consumed by rendering" mapFst :: (a -> b) -> (a, c) -> (b, c) mapFst f (x, y) = (f x, y) mapSnd :: (a -> b) -> (c, a) -> (c, b) mapSnd f (x, y) = (x, f y) -- | Render a string, where annotated regions are decorated by a user-provided function. displayDecorated :: (a -> String -> String) -> SimpleDoc a -> String displayDecorated decor sd = display id id [] sd "" where display s d [] SEmpty = d . s display s d stk (SChar c x) = display (s . showChar c) d stk x display s d stk (SText l str x) = display (s . showString str) d stk x display s d stk (SLine ind x) = display (s . showString ('\n':indentation ind)) d stk x display s d stk (SAnnotStart ann x) = display id (decor ann) ((s, d):stk) x display s d ((sf', d'):stk) (SAnnotStop x) = let formatted = d (s "") in display (sf' . showString formatted) d' stk x -- malformed documents display _ _ [] (SAnnotStop _) = error "stack underflow" display _ _ stk SEmpty = error "stack not consumed by rendering" ----------------------------------------------------------- -- default pretty printers: show, putDoc and hPutDoc ----------------------------------------------------------- instance Show (Doc a) where showsPrec d doc = displayS (renderPretty 0.4 80 doc) -- | The action @(putDoc doc)@ pretty prints document @doc@ to the -- standard output, with a page width of 100 characters and a ribbon -- width of 40 characters. -- -- > main :: IO () -- > main = do{ putDoc (text "hello" <+> text "world") } -- -- Which would output -- -- @ -- hello world -- @ putDoc :: Doc a -> IO () putDoc doc = hPutDoc stdout doc -- | @(hPutDoc handle doc)@ pretty prints document @doc@ to the file -- handle @handle@ with a page width of 100 characters and a ribbon -- width of 40 characters. -- -- > main = do{ handle <- openFile "MyFile" WriteMode -- > ; hPutDoc handle (vcat (map text -- > ["vertical","text"])) -- > ; hClose handle -- > } hPutDoc :: Handle -> Doc a -> IO () hPutDoc handle doc = displayIO handle (renderPretty 0.4 80 doc) ----------------------------------------------------------- -- insert spaces -- "indentation" used to insert tabs but tabs seem to cause -- more trouble than they solve :-) ----------------------------------------------------------- spaces n | n <= 0 = "" | otherwise = replicate n ' ' indentation n = spaces n --indentation n | n >= 8 = '\t' : indentation (n-8) -- | otherwise = spaces n