Problem:
`TSNode:_rawquery()` is complicated, has known issues and the Lua and
C code is awkwardly coupled (see logic with `active`).
Solution:
- Add `TSQueryCursor` and `TSQueryMatch` bindings.
- Replace `TSNode:_rawquery()` with `TSQueryCursor:next_capture()` and `TSQueryCursor:next_match()`
- Do more stuff in Lua
- API for `Query:iter_captures()` and `Query:iter_matches()` remains the same.
- `treesitter.c` no longer contains any logic related to predicates.
- Add `match_limit` option to `iter_matches()`. Default is still 256.
- Added `@inlinedoc` so single use Lua types can be inlined into the
functions docs. E.g.
```lua
--- @class myopts
--- @inlinedoc
---
--- Documentation for some field
--- @field somefield integer
--- @param opts myOpts
function foo(opts)
end
```
Will be rendered as
```
foo(opts)
Parameters:
- {opts} (table) Object with the fields:
- somefield (integer) Documentation
for some field
```
- Marked many classes with with `@nodoc` or `(private)`.
We can eventually introduce these when we want to.
Problem:
The documentation flow (`gen_vimdoc.py`) has several issues:
- it's not very versatile
- depends on doxygen
- doesn't work well with Lua code as it requires an awkward filter script to convert it into pseudo-C.
- The intermediate XML files and filters makes it too much like a rube goldberg machine.
Solution:
Re-implement the flow using Lua, LPEG and treesitter.
- `gen_vimdoc.py` is now replaced with `gen_vimdoc.lua` and replicates a portion of the logic.
- `lua2dox.lua` is gone!
- No more XML files.
- Doxygen is now longer used and instead we now use:
- LPEG for comment parsing (see `scripts/luacats_grammar.lua` and `scripts/cdoc_grammar.lua`).
- LPEG for C parsing (see `scripts/cdoc_parser.lua`)
- Lua patterns for Lua parsing (see `scripts/luacats_parser.lua`).
- Treesitter for Markdown parsing (see `scripts/text_utils.lua`).
- The generated `runtime/doc/*.mpack` files have been removed.
- `scripts/gen_eval_files.lua` now instead uses `scripts/cdoc_parser.lua` directly.
- Text wrapping is implemented in `scripts/text_utils.lua` and appears to produce more consistent results (the main contributer to the diff of this change).
Query patterns can contain quantifiers (e.g. (foo)+ @bar), so a single
capture can map to multiple nodes. The iter_matches API can not handle
this situation because the match table incorrectly maps capture indices
to a single node instead of to an array of nodes.
The match table should be updated to map capture indices to an array of
nodes. However, this is a massively breaking change, so must be done
with a proper deprecation period.
`iter_matches`, `add_predicate` and `add_directive` must opt-in to the
correct behavior for backward compatibility. This is done with a new
"all" option. This option will become the default and removed after the
0.10 release.
Co-authored-by: Christian Clason <c.clason@uni-graz.at>
Co-authored-by: MDeiml <matthias@deiml.net>
Co-authored-by: Gregory Anders <greg@gpanders.com>
Memoizes a function, using a custom function to hash the arguments.
Private for now until:
- There are other places in the codebase that could benefit from this
(e.g. LSP), but might require other changes to accommodate.
- Invalidation of the cache needs to be controllable. Using weak tables
is an acceptable invalidation policy, but it shouldn't be the only
one.
- I don't think the story around `hash_fn` is completely thought out. We
may be able to have a good default hash_fn by hashing each argument,
so basically a better 'concat'.