{-# LANGUAGE PackageImports #-} {-# LANGUAGE Trustworthy #-} ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- | -- Module : Text.PrettyPrint.ANSI.Leijen -- Copyright : Daan Leijen (c) 2000, http://www.cs.uu.nl/~daan -- Max Bolingbroke (c) 2008, http://blog.omega-prime.co.uk -- License : BSD-style (see the file LICENSE) -- -- Maintainer : Edward Kmett <ekmett@gmail.com> -- Stability : provisional -- Portability : portable -- -- -- This module is an extended implementation of the functional pretty printer -- given by Philip Wadler (1997): -- -- @ -- \"A prettier printer\" -- Draft paper, April 1997, revised March 1998. -- <https://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/wadler/papers/prettier/prettier.pdf> -- @ -- -- In their bare essence, the combinators given by Wadler are -- not expressive enough to describe some commonly occurring layouts. -- This library adds new primitives to describe these layouts and -- works well in practice. -- -- The library is based on a single way to concatenate documents, -- which is associative and has both a left and right unit. This -- simple design leads to an efficient and short implementation. The -- simplicity is reflected in the predictable behaviour of the -- combinators which make them easy to use in practice. -- -- A thorough description of the primitive combinators and their -- implementation can be found in Philip Wadler's paper. -- The main differences with his original paper are: -- -- * The nil document is called 'empty'. -- -- * The above combinator is called '<$>'. The operator '</>' is used -- for soft line breaks. -- -- * There are three new primitives: 'align', 'fill' and -- 'fillBreak'. These are very useful in practice. -- -- * There are many additional useful combinators, like 'fillSep' and 'list'. -- -- * There are two renderers: 'renderPretty' for pretty printing, and -- 'renderCompact' for quickly rendered, compact output more suitable -- for generating input to other programs. -- -- * The pretty printing algorithm used by 'renderPretty' extends the algorithm -- given by Wadler to take into account a \"ribbon width\", i.e., a desired -- maximum number of non-indentation characters to output on any one line. -- -- * There are two displayers, 'displayS' for strings and 'displayIO' for -- file-based output. -- -- * There is a 'Pretty' class. -- -- * The implementation uses optimised representations and strictness -- annotations. -- -- * The library has been extended to allow formatting text for output -- to ANSI style consoles. New combinators allow control of foreground and -- background color and the ability to make parts of the text bold or -- underlined. ----------------------------------------------------------- module Text.PrettyPrint.ANSI.Leijen {-# DEPRECATED "Compatibility module for users of ansi-wl-pprint - use \"Prettyprinter\" instead" #-} ( -- * The algebra of pretty-printing -- $DocumentAlgebra -- * Documents Doc, -- * Basic combinators empty, char, text, string, int, integer, float, double, rational, bool, (<>), nest, line, linebreak, group, softline, softbreak, hardline, flatAlt, -- * Alignment combinators -- -- | The combinators in this section cannot be described by Wadler's -- original combinators. They align their output relative to the -- current output position — in contrast to @nest@ which always -- aligns to the current nesting level. This deprives these -- combinators from being \`optimal\'. In practice however they -- prove to be very useful. The combinators in this section should -- be used with care, since they are more expensive than the other -- combinators. For example, @align@ shouldn't be used to pretty -- print all top-level declarations of a language, but using @hang@ -- for let expressions is fine. align, hang, indent, encloseSep, list, tupled, semiBraces, -- * Operators (<+>), (<$>), (</>), (<$$>), (<//>), -- * List combinators hsep, vsep, fillSep, sep, hcat, vcat, fillCat, cat, punctuate, -- * Filler combinators fill, fillBreak, -- * Bracketing combinators enclose, squotes, dquotes, parens, angles, braces, brackets, -- * Named character combinators lparen, rparen, langle, rangle, lbrace, rbrace, lbracket, rbracket, squote, dquote, semi, colon, comma, space, dot, backslash, equals, -- * ANSI formatting combinators -- -- | This terminal formatting functionality is, as far as possible, -- portable across platforms with their varying terminals. However, -- note that to display ANSI colors and formatting will only be displayed -- on Windows consoles if the 'Doc' value is output using the 'putDoc' -- function or one of its friends. Rendering the 'Doc' to a 'String' -- and then outputing /that/ will only work on Unix-style operating systems. -- ** Forecolor combinators black, red, green, yellow, blue, magenta, cyan, white, dullblack, dullred, dullgreen, dullyellow, dullblue, dullmagenta, dullcyan, dullwhite, -- ** Backcolor combinators onblack, onred, ongreen, onyellow, onblue, onmagenta, oncyan, onwhite, ondullblack, ondullred, ondullgreen, ondullyellow, ondullblue, ondullmagenta, ondullcyan, ondullwhite, -- ** Emboldening combinators bold, debold, -- ** Underlining combinators underline, deunderline, -- ** Formatting elimination combinators plain, -- * Pretty class Pretty(..), -- * Rendering and displaying documents -- ** Simple (i.e., rendered) documents SimpleDoc(..), renderPretty, renderCompact, renderSmart, displayS, displayIO, -- ** Simultaneous rendering and displaying of documents putDoc, hPutDoc, -- * Undocumented column, columns, nesting, width ) where import Prelude () import "prettyprinter-compat-ansi-wl-pprint" Text.PrettyPrint.ANSI.Leijen -- $DocumentAlgebra -- The combinators in this library satisfy many algebraic laws. -- -- The concatenation operator '<>' is associative and has 'empty' as a left -- and right unit: -- -- > x <> (y <> z) = (x <> y) <> z -- > x <> empty = x -- > empty <> x = x -- -- The 'text' combinator is a homomorphism from string concatenation to -- document concatenation: -- -- > text (s ++ t) = text s <> text t -- > text "" = empty -- -- The 'char' combinator behaves like one-element text: -- -- > char c = text [c] -- -- The 'nest' combinator is a homomorphism from addition to document -- composition. 'nest' also distributes through document concatenation and is -- absorbed by 'text' and 'align': -- -- > nest (i + j) x = nest i (nest j x) -- > nest 0 x = x -- > nest i (x <> y) = nest i x <> nest i y -- > nest i empty = empty -- > nest i (text s) = text s -- > nest i (align x) = align x -- -- The 'group' combinator is absorbed by 'empty'. 'group' is commutative with -- 'nest' and 'align': -- -- > group empty = empty -- > group (text s <> x) = text s <> group x -- > group (nest i x) = nest i (group x) -- > group (align x) = align (group x) -- -- The 'align' combinator is absorbed by 'empty' and 'text'. -- 'align' is idempotent: -- -- > align empty = empty -- > align (text s) = text s -- > align (align x) = align x -- -- From the laws of the primitive combinators, we can derive many other laws -- for the derived combinators. For example, the /above/ operator '<$>' is -- defined as: -- -- > x <$> y = x <> line <> y -- -- It follows that '<$>' is associative and that '<$>' and '<>' associate -- with each other: -- -- > x <$> (y <$> z) = (x <$> y) <$> z -- > x <> (y <$> z) = (x <> y) <$> z -- > x <$> (y <> z) = (x <$> y) <> z -- -- Similar laws also hold for the other line break operators '</>', '<$$>', -- and '<//>'.