frozen_string_literal: true
This class implements a pretty printing algorithm. It finds line breaks and nice indentations for grouped structure.
By default, the class assumes that primitive elements are strings and each byte in the strings have single column in width. But it can be used for other situations by giving suitable arguments for some methods:
There are several candidate uses:
-
text formatting using proportional fonts
-
multibyte characters which has columns different to number of bytes
-
non-string formatting
Bugs
-
Box based formatting?
-
Other (better) model/algorithm?
Report any bugs at bugs.ruby-lang.org
References
Christian Lindig, Strictly Pretty, March 2000, www.st.cs.uni-sb.de/~lindig/papers/#pretty
Philip Wadler, A prettier printer, March 1998, homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/wadler/topics/language-design.html#prettier
Author
Tanaka Akira <akr@fsij.org>
- CLASS PrettyPrint::SingleLine
- B
- C
- F
- G
- N
- S
- T
| [R] | genspace | A lambda or Proc, that takes one argument, of a Fixnum, and returns the corresponding number of spaces. By default this is: |
| [R] | group_queue | The PrettyPrint::GroupQueue of groups in stack to be pretty printed |
| [R] | indent | The number of spaces to be indented |
| [R] | maxwidth | The maximum width of a line, before it is separated in to a newline This defaults to 79, and should be a Fixnum |
| [R] | newline | The value that is appended to This defaults to “n”, and should be String |
| [R] | output | The output object. This defaults to '', and should accept the << method |
This is a convenience method which is same as follows:
begin
q = PrettyPrint.new(output, maxwidth, newline, &genspace)
...
q.flush
output
end
Creates a buffer for pretty printing.
output is an output target. If it is not specified, ''
is assumed. It should have a << method which accepts the first
argument obj of #text, the first argument
sep of #breakable, the first
argument newline of ::new, and the result of a given
block for ::new.
maxwidth specifies maximum line length. If it is not
specified, 79 is assumed. However actual outputs may overflow
maxwidth if long non-breakable texts are provided.
newline is used for line breaks. “n” is used if it is not
specified.
The block is used to generate spaces. {|width| ' ' * width} is used if it is not given.
# File lib/prettyprint.rb, line 82 def initialize(output=''.dup, maxwidth=79, newline="\n", &genspace) @output = output @maxwidth = maxwidth @newline = newline @genspace = genspace || lambda {|n| ' ' * n} @output_width = 0 @buffer_width = 0 @buffer = [] root_group = Group.new(0) @group_stack = [root_group] @group_queue = GroupQueue.new(root_group) @indent = 0 end
This is similar to ::format but the result has no breaks.
maxwidth, newline and genspace are
ignored.
The invocation of breakable in the block doesn't break a
line and is treated as just an invocation of text.
Breaks the buffer into lines that are shorter than maxwidth
# File lib/prettyprint.rb, line 160 def break_outmost_groups while @maxwidth < @output_width + @buffer_width return unless group = @group_queue.deq until group.breakables.empty? data = @buffer.shift @output_width = data.output(@output, @output_width) @buffer_width -= data.width end while !@buffer.empty? && Text === @buffer.first text = @buffer.shift @output_width = text.output(@output, @output_width) @buffer_width -= text.width end end end
This says “you can break a line here if necessary”, and a
width-column text sep is inserted if a line is
not broken at the point.
If sep is not specified, “ ” is used.
If width is not specified, sep.length is used.
You will have to specify this when sep is a multibyte
character, for example.
# File lib/prettyprint.rb, line 224 def breakable(sep=' ', width=sep.length) group = @group_stack.last if group.break? flush @output << @newline @output << @genspace.call(@indent) @output_width = @indent @buffer_width = 0 else @buffer << Breakable.new(sep, width, self) @buffer_width += width break_outmost_groups end end
Returns the group most recently added to the stack.
Contrived example:
out = ""
=> ""
q = PrettyPrint.new(out)
=> #<PrettyPrint:0x82f85c0 @output="", @maxwidth=79, @newline="\n", @genspace=#<Proc:0x82f8368@/home/vbatts/.rvm/rubies/ruby-head/lib/ruby/2.0.0/prettyprint.rb:82 (lambda)>, @output_width=0, @buffer_width=0, @buffer=[], @group_stack=[#<PrettyPrint::Group:0x82f8138 @depth=0, @breakables=[], @break=false>], @group_queue=#<PrettyPrint::GroupQueue:0x82fb7c0 @queue=[[#<PrettyPrint::Group:0x82f8138 @depth=0, @breakables=[], @break=false>]]>, @indent=0>
q.group {
q.text q.current_group.inspect
q.text q.newline
q.group(q.current_group.depth + 1) {
q.text q.current_group.inspect
q.text q.newline
q.group(q.current_group.depth + 1) {
q.text q.current_group.inspect
q.text q.newline
q.group(q.current_group.depth + 1) {
q.text q.current_group.inspect
q.text q.newline
}
}
}
}
=> 284
puts out
#<PrettyPrint::Group:0x8354758 @depth=1, @breakables=[], @break=false>
#<PrettyPrint::Group:0x8354550 @depth=2, @breakables=[], @break=false>
#<PrettyPrint::Group:0x83541cc @depth=3, @breakables=[], @break=false>
#<PrettyPrint::Group:0x8347e54 @depth=4, @breakables=[], @break=false>
This is similar to breakable except the decision to break or not is determined individually.
Two fill_breakable under a group may cause 4 results: (break,break), (break,non-break), (non-break,break), (non-break,non-break). This is different to breakable because two breakable under a group may cause 2 results: (break,break), (non-break,non-break).
The text sep is inserted if a line is not broken at this
point.
If sep is not specified, “ ” is used.
If width is not specified, sep.length is used.
You will have to specify this when sep is a multibyte
character, for example.
outputs buffered data.
Groups line break hints added in the block. The line break hints are all to be used or not.
If indent is specified, the method call is regarded as nested
by nest(indent) { … }.
If open_obj is specified, text open_obj,
open_width is called before grouping. If close_obj is
specified, text close_obj, close_width is called after
grouping.
Takes a block and queues a new group that is indented 1 level further.
Increases left margin after newline with indent for line
breaks added in the block.
This adds obj as a text of width columns in
width.
If width is not specified, obj.length is used.
# File lib/prettyprint.rb, line 180 def text(obj, width=obj.length) if @buffer.empty? @output << obj @output_width += width else text = @buffer.last unless Text === text text = Text.new @buffer << text end text.add(obj, width) @buffer_width += width break_outmost_groups end end