1 //! This pretty-printer is a direct reimplementation of Philip Karlton's 2 //! Mesa pretty-printer, as described in the appendix to 3 //! Derek C. Oppen, "Pretty Printing" (1979), 4 //! Stanford Computer Science Department STAN-CS-79-770, 5 //! <http://i.stanford.edu/pub/cstr/reports/cs/tr/79/770/CS-TR-79-770.pdf>. 6 //! 7 //! The algorithm's aim is to break a stream into as few lines as possible 8 //! while respecting the indentation-consistency requirements of the enclosing 9 //! block, and avoiding breaking at silly places on block boundaries, for 10 //! example, between "x" and ")" in "x)". 11 //! 12 //! I am implementing this algorithm because it comes with 20 pages of 13 //! documentation explaining its theory, and because it addresses the set of 14 //! concerns I've seen other pretty-printers fall down on. Weirdly. Even though 15 //! it's 32 years old. What can I say? 16 //! 17 //! Despite some redundancies and quirks in the way it's implemented in that 18 //! paper, I've opted to keep the implementation here as similar as I can, 19 //! changing only what was blatantly wrong, a typo, or sufficiently 20 //! non-idiomatic rust that it really stuck out. 21 //! 22 //! In particular you'll see a certain amount of churn related to INTEGER vs. 23 //! CARDINAL in the Mesa implementation. Mesa apparently interconverts the two 24 //! somewhat readily? In any case, I've used usize for indices-in-buffers and 25 //! ints for character-sizes-and-indentation-offsets. This respects the need 26 //! for ints to "go negative" while carrying a pending-calculation balance, and 27 //! helps differentiate all the numbers flying around internally (slightly). 28 //! 29 //! I also inverted the indentation arithmetic used in the print stack, since 30 //! the Mesa implementation (somewhat randomly) stores the offset on the print 31 //! stack in terms of margin-col rather than col itself. I store col. 32 //! 33 //! I also implemented a small change in the String token, in that I store an 34 //! explicit length for the string. For most tokens this is just the length of 35 //! the accompanying string. But it's necessary to permit it to differ, for 36 //! encoding things that are supposed to "go on their own line" -- certain 37 //! classes of comment and blank-line -- where relying on adjacent 38 //! hardbreak-like Break tokens with long blankness indication doesn't actually 39 //! work. To see why, consider when there is a "thing that should be on its own 40 //! line" between two long blocks, say functions. If you put a hardbreak after 41 //! each function (or before each) and the breaking algorithm decides to break 42 //! there anyways (because the functions themselves are long) you wind up with 43 //! extra blank lines. If you don't put hardbreaks you can wind up with the 44 //! "thing which should be on its own line" not getting its own line in the 45 //! rare case of "really small functions" or such. This re-occurs with comments 46 //! and explicit blank lines. So in those cases we use a string with a payload 47 //! we want isolated to a line and an explicit length that's huge, surrounded 48 //! by two zero-length breaks. The algorithm will try its best to fit it on a 49 //! line (which it can't) and so naturally place the content on its own line to 50 //! avoid combining it with other lines and making matters even worse. 51 //! 52 //! # Explanation 53 //! 54 //! In case you do not have the paper, here is an explanation of what's going 55 //! on. 56 //! 57 //! There is a stream of input tokens flowing through this printer. 58 //! 59 //! The printer buffers up to 3N tokens inside itself, where N is linewidth. 60 //! Yes, linewidth is chars and tokens are multi-char, but in the worst 61 //! case every token worth buffering is 1 char long, so it's ok. 62 //! 63 //! Tokens are String, Break, and Begin/End to delimit blocks. 64 //! 65 //! Begin tokens can carry an offset, saying "how far to indent when you break 66 //! inside here", as well as a flag indicating "consistent" or "inconsistent" 67 //! breaking. Consistent breaking means that after the first break, no attempt 68 //! will be made to flow subsequent breaks together onto lines. Inconsistent 69 //! is the opposite. Inconsistent breaking example would be, say: 70 //! 71 //! ```ignore (illustrative) 72 //! foo(hello, there, good, friends) 73 //! ``` 74 //! 75 //! breaking inconsistently to become 76 //! 77 //! ```ignore (illustrative) 78 //! foo(hello, there, 79 //! good, friends); 80 //! ``` 81 //! 82 //! whereas a consistent breaking would yield: 83 //! 84 //! ```ignore (illustrative) 85 //! foo(hello, 86 //! there, 87 //! good, 88 //! friends); 89 //! ``` 90 //! 91 //! That is, in the consistent-break blocks we value vertical alignment 92 //! more than the ability to cram stuff onto a line. But in all cases if it 93 //! can make a block a one-liner, it'll do so. 94 //! 95 //! Carrying on with high-level logic: 96 //! 97 //! The buffered tokens go through a ring-buffer, 'tokens'. The 'left' and 98 //! 'right' indices denote the active portion of the ring buffer as well as 99 //! describing hypothetical points-in-the-infinite-stream at most 3N tokens 100 //! apart (i.e., "not wrapped to ring-buffer boundaries"). The paper will switch 101 //! between using 'left' and 'right' terms to denote the wrapped-to-ring-buffer 102 //! and point-in-infinite-stream senses freely. 103 //! 104 //! There is a parallel ring buffer, `size`, that holds the calculated size of 105 //! each token. Why calculated? Because for Begin/End pairs, the "size" 106 //! includes everything between the pair. That is, the "size" of Begin is 107 //! actually the sum of the sizes of everything between Begin and the paired 108 //! End that follows. Since that is arbitrarily far in the future, `size` is 109 //! being rewritten regularly while the printer runs; in fact most of the 110 //! machinery is here to work out `size` entries on the fly (and give up when 111 //! they're so obviously over-long that "infinity" is a good enough 112 //! approximation for purposes of line breaking). 113 //! 114 //! The "input side" of the printer is managed as an abstract process called 115 //! SCAN, which uses `scan_stack`, to manage calculating `size`. SCAN is, in 116 //! other words, the process of calculating 'size' entries. 117 //! 118 //! The "output side" of the printer is managed by an abstract process called 119 //! PRINT, which uses `print_stack`, `margin` and `space` to figure out what to 120 //! do with each token/size pair it consumes as it goes. It's trying to consume 121 //! the entire buffered window, but can't output anything until the size is >= 122 //! 0 (sizes are set to negative while they're pending calculation). 123 //! 124 //! So SCAN takes input and buffers tokens and pending calculations, while 125 //! PRINT gobbles up completed calculations and tokens from the buffer. The 126 //! theory is that the two can never get more than 3N tokens apart, because 127 //! once there's "obviously" too much data to fit on a line, in a size 128 //! calculation, SCAN will write "infinity" to the size and let PRINT consume 129 //! it. 130 //! 131 //! In this implementation (following the paper, again) the SCAN process is the 132 //! methods called `Printer::scan_*`, and the 'PRINT' process is the 133 //! method called `Printer::print`. 134 135 mod convenience; 136 mod ring; 137 138 use ring::RingBuffer; 139 use std::borrow::Cow; 140 use std::cmp; 141 use std::collections::VecDeque; 142 use std::iter; 143 144 /// How to break. Described in more detail in the module docs. 145 #[derive(Clone, Copy, PartialEq)] 146 pub enum Breaks { 147 Consistent, 148 Inconsistent, 149 } 150 151 #[derive(Clone, Copy, PartialEq)] 152 enum IndentStyle { 153 /// Vertically aligned under whatever column this block begins at. 154 /// 155 /// fn demo(arg1: usize, 156 /// arg2: usize) {} 157 Visual, 158 /// Indented relative to the indentation level of the previous line. 159 /// 160 /// fn demo( 161 /// arg1: usize, 162 /// arg2: usize, 163 /// ) {} 164 Block { offset: isize }, 165 } 166 167 #[derive(Clone, Copy, Default, PartialEq)] 168 pub struct BreakToken { 169 offset: isize, 170 blank_space: isize, 171 pre_break: Option<char>, 172 } 173 174 #[derive(Clone, Copy, PartialEq)] 175 pub struct BeginToken { 176 indent: IndentStyle, 177 breaks: Breaks, 178 } 179 180 #[derive(Clone, PartialEq)] 181 pub enum Token { 182 // In practice a string token contains either a `&'static str` or a 183 // `String`. `Cow` is overkill for this because we never modify the data, 184 // but it's more convenient than rolling our own more specialized type. 185 String(Cow<'static, str>), 186 Break(BreakToken), 187 Begin(BeginToken), 188 End, 189 } 190 191 #[derive(Copy, Clone)] 192 enum PrintFrame { 193 Fits, 194 Broken { indent: usize, breaks: Breaks }, 195 } 196 197 const SIZE_INFINITY: isize = 0xffff; 198 199 /// Target line width. 200 const MARGIN: isize = 78; 201 /// Every line is allowed at least this much space, even if highly indented. 202 const MIN_SPACE: isize = 60; 203 204 pub struct Printer { 205 out: String, 206 /// Number of spaces left on line 207 space: isize, 208 /// Ring-buffer of tokens and calculated sizes 209 buf: RingBuffer<BufEntry>, 210 /// Running size of stream "...left" 211 left_total: isize, 212 /// Running size of stream "...right" 213 right_total: isize, 214 /// Pseudo-stack, really a ring too. Holds the 215 /// primary-ring-buffers index of the Begin that started the 216 /// current block, possibly with the most recent Break after that 217 /// Begin (if there is any) on top of it. Stuff is flushed off the 218 /// bottom as it becomes irrelevant due to the primary ring-buffer 219 /// advancing. 220 scan_stack: VecDeque<usize>, 221 /// Stack of blocks-in-progress being flushed by print 222 print_stack: Vec<PrintFrame>, 223 /// Level of indentation of current line 224 indent: usize, 225 /// Buffered indentation to avoid writing trailing whitespace 226 pending_indentation: isize, 227 /// The token most recently popped from the left boundary of the 228 /// ring-buffer for printing 229 last_printed: Option<Token>, 230 } 231 232 #[derive(Clone)] 233 struct BufEntry { 234 token: Token, 235 size: isize, 236 } 237 238 impl Printer { new() -> Self239 pub fn new() -> Self { 240 Printer { 241 out: String::new(), 242 space: MARGIN, 243 buf: RingBuffer::new(), 244 left_total: 0, 245 right_total: 0, 246 scan_stack: VecDeque::new(), 247 print_stack: Vec::new(), 248 indent: 0, 249 pending_indentation: 0, 250 last_printed: None, 251 } 252 } 253 last_token(&self) -> Option<&Token>254 pub fn last_token(&self) -> Option<&Token> { 255 self.last_token_still_buffered().or_else(|| self.last_printed.as_ref()) 256 } 257 last_token_still_buffered(&self) -> Option<&Token>258 pub fn last_token_still_buffered(&self) -> Option<&Token> { 259 self.buf.last().map(|last| &last.token) 260 } 261 262 /// Be very careful with this! replace_last_token_still_buffered(&mut self, token: Token)263 pub fn replace_last_token_still_buffered(&mut self, token: Token) { 264 self.buf.last_mut().unwrap().token = token; 265 } 266 scan_eof(&mut self)267 fn scan_eof(&mut self) { 268 if !self.scan_stack.is_empty() { 269 self.check_stack(0); 270 self.advance_left(); 271 } 272 } 273 scan_begin(&mut self, token: BeginToken)274 fn scan_begin(&mut self, token: BeginToken) { 275 if self.scan_stack.is_empty() { 276 self.left_total = 1; 277 self.right_total = 1; 278 self.buf.clear(); 279 } 280 let right = self.buf.push(BufEntry { token: Token::Begin(token), size: -self.right_total }); 281 self.scan_stack.push_back(right); 282 } 283 scan_end(&mut self)284 fn scan_end(&mut self) { 285 if self.scan_stack.is_empty() { 286 self.print_end(); 287 } else { 288 let right = self.buf.push(BufEntry { token: Token::End, size: -1 }); 289 self.scan_stack.push_back(right); 290 } 291 } 292 scan_break(&mut self, token: BreakToken)293 fn scan_break(&mut self, token: BreakToken) { 294 if self.scan_stack.is_empty() { 295 self.left_total = 1; 296 self.right_total = 1; 297 self.buf.clear(); 298 } else { 299 self.check_stack(0); 300 } 301 let right = self.buf.push(BufEntry { token: Token::Break(token), size: -self.right_total }); 302 self.scan_stack.push_back(right); 303 self.right_total += token.blank_space; 304 } 305 scan_string(&mut self, string: Cow<'static, str>)306 fn scan_string(&mut self, string: Cow<'static, str>) { 307 if self.scan_stack.is_empty() { 308 self.print_string(&string); 309 } else { 310 let len = string.len() as isize; 311 self.buf.push(BufEntry { token: Token::String(string), size: len }); 312 self.right_total += len; 313 self.check_stream(); 314 } 315 } 316 offset(&mut self, offset: isize)317 pub fn offset(&mut self, offset: isize) { 318 if let Some(BufEntry { token: Token::Break(token), .. }) = &mut self.buf.last_mut() { 319 token.offset += offset; 320 } 321 } 322 check_stream(&mut self)323 fn check_stream(&mut self) { 324 while self.right_total - self.left_total > self.space { 325 if *self.scan_stack.front().unwrap() == self.buf.index_of_first() { 326 self.scan_stack.pop_front().unwrap(); 327 self.buf.first_mut().unwrap().size = SIZE_INFINITY; 328 } 329 self.advance_left(); 330 if self.buf.is_empty() { 331 break; 332 } 333 } 334 } 335 advance_left(&mut self)336 fn advance_left(&mut self) { 337 while self.buf.first().unwrap().size >= 0 { 338 let left = self.buf.pop_first().unwrap(); 339 340 match &left.token { 341 Token::String(string) => { 342 self.left_total += string.len() as isize; 343 self.print_string(string); 344 } 345 Token::Break(token) => { 346 self.left_total += token.blank_space; 347 self.print_break(*token, left.size); 348 } 349 Token::Begin(token) => self.print_begin(*token, left.size), 350 Token::End => self.print_end(), 351 } 352 353 self.last_printed = Some(left.token); 354 355 if self.buf.is_empty() { 356 break; 357 } 358 } 359 } 360 check_stack(&mut self, mut depth: usize)361 fn check_stack(&mut self, mut depth: usize) { 362 while let Some(&index) = self.scan_stack.back() { 363 let entry = &mut self.buf[index]; 364 match entry.token { 365 Token::Begin(_) => { 366 if depth == 0 { 367 break; 368 } 369 self.scan_stack.pop_back().unwrap(); 370 entry.size += self.right_total; 371 depth -= 1; 372 } 373 Token::End => { 374 // paper says + not =, but that makes no sense. 375 self.scan_stack.pop_back().unwrap(); 376 entry.size = 1; 377 depth += 1; 378 } 379 _ => { 380 self.scan_stack.pop_back().unwrap(); 381 entry.size += self.right_total; 382 if depth == 0 { 383 break; 384 } 385 } 386 } 387 } 388 } 389 get_top(&self) -> PrintFrame390 fn get_top(&self) -> PrintFrame { 391 *self 392 .print_stack 393 .last() 394 .unwrap_or(&PrintFrame::Broken { indent: 0, breaks: Breaks::Inconsistent }) 395 } 396 print_begin(&mut self, token: BeginToken, size: isize)397 fn print_begin(&mut self, token: BeginToken, size: isize) { 398 if size > self.space { 399 self.print_stack.push(PrintFrame::Broken { indent: self.indent, breaks: token.breaks }); 400 self.indent = match token.indent { 401 IndentStyle::Block { offset } => { 402 usize::try_from(self.indent as isize + offset).unwrap() 403 } 404 IndentStyle::Visual => (MARGIN - self.space) as usize, 405 }; 406 } else { 407 self.print_stack.push(PrintFrame::Fits); 408 } 409 } 410 print_end(&mut self)411 fn print_end(&mut self) { 412 if let PrintFrame::Broken { indent, .. } = self.print_stack.pop().unwrap() { 413 self.indent = indent; 414 } 415 } 416 print_break(&mut self, token: BreakToken, size: isize)417 fn print_break(&mut self, token: BreakToken, size: isize) { 418 let fits = match self.get_top() { 419 PrintFrame::Fits => true, 420 PrintFrame::Broken { breaks: Breaks::Consistent, .. } => false, 421 PrintFrame::Broken { breaks: Breaks::Inconsistent, .. } => size <= self.space, 422 }; 423 if fits { 424 self.pending_indentation += token.blank_space; 425 self.space -= token.blank_space; 426 } else { 427 if let Some(pre_break) = token.pre_break { 428 self.out.push(pre_break); 429 } 430 self.out.push('\n'); 431 let indent = self.indent as isize + token.offset; 432 self.pending_indentation = indent; 433 self.space = cmp::max(MARGIN - indent, MIN_SPACE); 434 } 435 } 436 print_string(&mut self, string: &str)437 fn print_string(&mut self, string: &str) { 438 // Write the pending indent. A more concise way of doing this would be: 439 // 440 // write!(self.out, "{: >n$}", "", n = self.pending_indentation as usize)?; 441 // 442 // But that is significantly slower. This code is sufficiently hot, and indents can get 443 // sufficiently large, that the difference is significant on some workloads. 444 self.out.reserve(self.pending_indentation as usize); 445 self.out.extend(iter::repeat(' ').take(self.pending_indentation as usize)); 446 self.pending_indentation = 0; 447 448 self.out.push_str(string); 449 self.space -= string.len() as isize; 450 } 451 } 452