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view lisp/cedet/semantic/ia.el @ 108912:c7e85ff4bca6
* lisp/emacs-lisp/smie.el (smie-indent-keyword): Remove special case that
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author | Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> |
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date | Tue, 08 Jun 2010 22:58:26 -0400 |
parents | 56d11bda8235 |
children | b799d38f522a |
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;;; semantic/ia.el --- Interactive Analysis functions ;;; Copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, ;;; 2008, 2009, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. ;; Author: Eric M. Ludlam <zappo@gnu.org> ;; Keywords: syntax ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs. ;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by ;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or ;; (at your option) any later version. ;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the ;; GNU General Public License for more details. ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License ;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. ;;; Commentary: ;; ;; Interactive access to `semantic-analyze'. ;; ;; These routines are fairly simple, and show how to use the Semantic ;; analyzer to provide things such as completion lists, summaries, ;; locations, or documentation. ;; ;;; TODO ;; ;; fast-jump. For a virtual method, offer some of the possible ;; implementations in various sub-classes. (require 'semantic/analyze) (require 'semantic/format) (require 'pulse) (eval-when-compile (require 'semantic/analyze) (require 'semantic/analyze/refs)) (declare-function imenu--mouse-menu "imenu") ;;; Code: ;;; COMPLETION ;; ;; This set of routines provides some simplisting completion ;; functions. (defcustom semantic-ia-completion-format-tag-function 'semantic-format-tag-prototype "Function used to convert a tag to a string during completion." :group 'semantic :type semantic-format-tag-custom-list) (defvar semantic-ia-cache nil "Cache of the last completion request. Of the form ( POINT . COMPLETIONS ) where POINT is a location in the buffer where the completion was requested. COMPLETONS is the list of semantic tag names that provide logical completions from that location.") (make-variable-buffer-local 'semantic-ia-cache) ;;; COMPLETION HELPER ;; ;; This overload function handles inserting a tag ;; into a buffer for these local completion routines. ;; ;; By creating the functions as overloadable, it can be ;; customized. For example, the default will put a paren "(" ;; character after function names. For Lisp, it might check ;; to put a "(" in front of a function name. (define-overloadable-function semantic-ia-insert-tag (tag) "Insert TAG into the current buffer based on completion.") (defun semantic-ia-insert-tag-default (tag) "Insert TAG into the current buffer based on completion." (insert (semantic-tag-name tag)) (let ((tt (semantic-tag-class tag))) (cond ((eq tt 'function) (insert "(")) (t nil)))) (declare-function semantic-analyze-possible-completions "semantic/analyze/complete") (defun semantic-ia-get-completions (context point) "Fetch the completion of CONTEXT at POINT. Supports caching." ;; Cache the current set of symbols so that we can get at ;; them quickly the second time someone presses the ;; complete button. (let ((symbols (if (and semantic-ia-cache (= point (car semantic-ia-cache))) (cdr semantic-ia-cache) (semantic-analyze-possible-completions context)))) ;; Set the cache (setq semantic-ia-cache (cons point symbols)) symbols)) ;;;###autoload (defun semantic-ia-complete-symbol (&optional pos) "Complete the current symbol at POS. If POS is nil, default to point. Completion options are calculated with `semantic-analyze-possible-completions'." (interactive "d") (when (semantic-active-p) (or pos (setq pos (point))) ;; Calculating completions is a two step process. ;; ;; The first analyzer the current context, which finds tags for ;; all the stuff that may be references by the code around POS. ;; ;; The second step derives completions from that context. (let* ((a (semantic-analyze-current-context pos)) (syms (semantic-ia-get-completions a pos)) (pre (car (reverse (oref a prefix))))) ;; If PRE was actually an already completed symbol, it doesn't ;; come in as a string, but as a tag instead. (if (semantic-tag-p pre) ;; We will try completions on it anyway. (setq pre (semantic-tag-name pre))) ;; Complete this symbol. (if (null syms) (if (semantic-analyze-context-p a) ;; This is a clever hack. If we were unable to find any ;; smart completions, lets divert to how senator derives ;; completions. ;; ;; This is a way of making this fcn more useful since ;; the smart completion engine sometimes failes. (semantic-complete-symbol)) ;; Use try completion to seek a common substring. (let ((tc (try-completion (or pre "") syms))) (if (and (stringp tc) (not (string= tc (or pre "")))) (let ((tok (semantic-find-first-tag-by-name tc syms))) ;; Delete what came before... (when (and (car (oref a bounds)) (cdr (oref a bounds))) (delete-region (car (oref a bounds)) (cdr (oref a bounds))) (goto-char (car (oref a bounds)))) ;; We have some new text. Stick it in. (if tok (semantic-ia-insert-tag tok) (insert tc))) ;; We don't have new text. Show all completions. (when (cdr (oref a bounds)) (goto-char (cdr (oref a bounds)))) (with-output-to-temp-buffer "*Completions*" (display-completion-list (mapcar semantic-ia-completion-format-tag-function syms))))))))) (defcustom semantic-ia-completion-menu-format-tag-function 'semantic-uml-concise-prototype-nonterminal "*Function used to convert a tag to a string during completion." :group 'semantic :type semantic-format-tag-custom-list) ;;; Completions Tip ;; ;; This functions shows how to get the list of completions, ;; to place in a tooltip. It doesn't actually do any completion. ;;;###autoload (defun semantic-ia-complete-tip (point) "Pop up a tooltip for completion at POINT." (interactive "d") (let* ((a (semantic-analyze-current-context point)) (syms (semantic-ia-get-completions a point)) (x (mod (- (current-column) (window-hscroll)) (window-width))) (y (save-excursion (save-restriction (widen) (narrow-to-region (window-start) (point)) (goto-char (point-min)) (1+ (vertical-motion (buffer-size)))))) (str (mapconcat #'semantic-tag-name syms "\n")) ) (cond ((fboundp 'x-show-tip) (x-show-tip str (selected-frame) nil nil x y) ) (t (message str)) ))) ;;; Summary ;; ;; Like idle-summary-mode, this shows how to get something to ;; show a summary on. ;;;###autoload (defun semantic-ia-show-summary (point) "Display a summary for the symbol under POINT." (interactive "P") (let* ((ctxt (semantic-analyze-current-context point)) (pf (when ctxt ;; The CTXT is an EIEIO object. The below ;; method will attempt to pick the most interesting ;; tag associated with the current context. (semantic-analyze-interesting-tag ctxt))) ) (when pf (message "%s" (semantic-format-tag-summarize pf nil t))))) ;;; FAST Jump ;; ;; Jump to a destination based on the local context. ;; ;; This shows how to use the analyzer context, and the ;; analyer references objects to choose a good destination. (defun semantic-ia--fast-jump-helper (dest) "Jump to DEST, a Semantic tag. This helper manages the mark, buffer switching, and pulsing." ;; We have a tag, but in C++, we usually get a prototype instead ;; because of header files. Lets try to find the actual ;; implementaion instead. (when (semantic-tag-prototype-p dest) (let* ((refs (semantic-analyze-tag-references dest)) (impl (semantic-analyze-refs-impl refs t)) ) (when impl (setq dest (car impl))))) ;; Make sure we have a place to go... (if (not (and (or (semantic-tag-with-position-p dest) (semantic-tag-get-attribute dest :line)) (semantic-tag-file-name dest))) (error "Tag %s has no buffer information" (semantic-format-tag-name dest))) ;; Once we have the tag, we can jump to it. Here ;; are the key bits to the jump: ;; 1) Push the mark, so you can pop global mark back, or ;; use semantic-mru-bookmark mode to do so. (push-mark) (when (fboundp 'push-tag-mark) (push-tag-mark)) ;; 2) Visits the tag. (semantic-go-to-tag dest) ;; 3) go-to-tag doesn't switch the buffer in the current window, ;; so it is like find-file-noselect. Bring it forward. (switch-to-buffer (current-buffer)) ;; 4) Fancy pulsing. (pulse-momentary-highlight-one-line (point)) ) (declare-function semantic-decoration-include-visit "semantic/decorate/include") ;;;###autoload (defun semantic-ia-fast-jump (point) "Jump to the tag referred to by the code at POINT. Uses `semantic-analyze-current-context' output to identify an accurate origin of the code at point." (interactive "d") (let* ((ctxt (semantic-analyze-current-context point)) (pf (and ctxt (reverse (oref ctxt prefix)))) ;; In the analyzer context, the PREFIX is the list of items ;; that makes up the code context at point. Thus the c++ code ;; this.that().theothe ;; would make a list: ;; ( ("this" variable ..) ("that" function ...) "theothe") ;; Where the first two elements are the semantic tags of the prefix. ;; ;; PF is the reverse of this list. If the first item is a string, ;; then it is an incomplete symbol, thus we pick the second. ;; The second cannot be a string, as that would have been an error. (first (car pf)) (second (nth 1 pf)) ) (cond ((semantic-tag-p first) ;; We have a match. Just go there. (semantic-ia--fast-jump-helper first)) ((semantic-tag-p second) ;; Because FIRST failed, we should visit our second tag. ;; HOWEVER, the tag we actually want that was only an unfound ;; string may be related to some take in the datatype that belongs ;; to SECOND. Thus, instead of visiting second directly, we ;; can offer to find the type of SECOND, and go there. (let ((secondclass (car (reverse (oref ctxt prefixtypes))))) (cond ((and (semantic-tag-with-position-p secondclass) (y-or-n-p (format "Could not find `%s'. Jump to %s? " first (semantic-tag-name secondclass)))) (semantic-ia--fast-jump-helper secondclass) ) ;; If we missed out on the class of the second item, then ;; just visit SECOND. ((and (semantic-tag-p second) (y-or-n-p (format "Could not find `%s'. Jump to %s? " first (semantic-tag-name second)))) (semantic-ia--fast-jump-helper second) )))) ((semantic-tag-of-class-p (semantic-current-tag) 'include) ;; Just borrow this cool fcn. (require 'semantic/decorate/include) (semantic-decoration-include-visit) ) (t (error "Could not find suitable jump point for %s" first)) ))) ;;;###autoload (defun semantic-ia-fast-mouse-jump (evt) "Jump to the tag referred to by the point clicked on. See `semantic-ia-fast-jump' for details on how it works. This command is meant to be bound to a mouse event." (interactive "e") (semantic-ia-fast-jump (save-excursion (posn-set-point (event-end evt)) (point)))) ;;; DOC/DESCRIBE ;; ;; These routines show how to get additional information about a tag ;; for purposes of describing or showing documentation about them. ;;;###autoload (defun semantic-ia-show-doc (point) "Display the code-level documentation for the symbol at POINT." (interactive "d") (let* ((ctxt (semantic-analyze-current-context point)) (pf (reverse (oref ctxt prefix))) ) ;; If PF, the prefix is non-nil, then the last element is either ;; a string (incomplete type), or a semantic TAG. If it is a TAG ;; then we should be able to find DOC for it. (cond ((stringp (car pf)) (message "Incomplete symbol name.")) ((semantic-tag-p (car pf)) ;; The `semantic-documentation-for-tag' fcn is language ;; specific. If it doesn't return what you expect, you may ;; need to implement something for your language. ;; ;; The default tries to find a comment in front of the tag ;; and then strings off comment prefixes. (let ((doc (semantic-documentation-for-tag (car pf)))) (with-output-to-temp-buffer "*TAG DOCUMENTATION*" (princ "Tag: ") (princ (semantic-format-tag-prototype (car pf))) (princ "\n") (princ "\n") (princ "Snarfed Documentation: ") (princ "\n") (princ "\n") (if doc (princ doc) (princ " Documentation unavailable.")) ))) (t (message "Unknown tag."))) )) ;;;###autoload (defun semantic-ia-describe-class (typename) "Display all known parts for the datatype TYPENAME. If the type in question is a class, all methods and other accessible parts of the parent classes are displayed." ;; @todo - use a fancy completing reader. (interactive "sType Name: ") ;; When looking for a tag of any name there are a couple ways to do ;; it. The simple `semanticdb-find-tag-by-...' are simple, and ;; you need to pass it the exact name you want. ;; ;; The analyzer function `semantic-analyze-tag-name' will take ;; more complex names, such as the cpp symbol foo::bar::baz, ;; and break it up, and dive through the namespaces. (let ((class (semantic-analyze-find-tag typename))) (when (not (semantic-tag-p class)) (error "Cannot find class %s" class)) (with-output-to-temp-buffer "*TAG DOCUMENTATION*" ;; There are many semantic-format-tag-* fcns. ;; The summarize routine is a fairly generic one. (princ (semantic-format-tag-summarize class)) (princ "\n") (princ " Type Members:\n") ;; The type tag contains all the parts of the type. ;; In complex languages with inheritance, not all the ;; parts are in the tag. This analyzer fcn will traverse ;; the inheritance tree, and find all the pieces that ;; are inherited. (let ((parts (semantic-analyze-scoped-type-parts class))) (while parts (princ " ") (princ (semantic-format-tag-summarize (car parts))) (princ "\n") (setq parts (cdr parts))) ) ))) (provide 'semantic/ia) ;; Local variables: ;; generated-autoload-file: "loaddefs.el" ;; generated-autoload-load-name: "semantic/ia" ;; End: ;; arch-tag: ceeed1f2-e5b6-4f7c-a85a-a2f8ee0193ca ;;; semantic/ia.el ends here