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Rollup merge of rust-lang#39557 - bjorn3:pp-docs, r=jseyfried
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A few documentation improvements for `syntax::print::pp`

* Moved algorithm explanation to module docs
* Added ``` before and after the examples
* Explanation of the `rbox`, `ibox` and `cbox` names
* Added docs about the breaking types to `Breaks`
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frewsxcv committed Feb 7, 2017
2 parents 76f8873 + 1ee88e5 commit cf7fbb7
Showing 1 changed file with 89 additions and 78 deletions.
167 changes: 89 additions & 78 deletions src/libsyntax/print/pp.rs
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -60,11 +60,95 @@
//! by two zero-length breaks. The algorithm will try its best to fit it on a
//! line (which it can't) and so naturally place the content on its own line to
//! avoid combining it with other lines and making matters even worse.
//!
//! # Explanation
//!
//! In case you do not have the paper, here is an explanation of what's going
//! on.
//!
//! There is a stream of input tokens flowing through this printer.
//!
//! The printer buffers up to 3N tokens inside itself, where N is linewidth.
//! Yes, linewidth is chars and tokens are multi-char, but in the worst
//! case every token worth buffering is 1 char long, so it's ok.
//!
//! Tokens are String, Break, and Begin/End to delimit blocks.
//!
//! Begin tokens can carry an offset, saying "how far to indent when you break
//! inside here", as well as a flag indicating "consistent" or "inconsistent"
//! breaking. Consistent breaking means that after the first break, no attempt
//! will be made to flow subsequent breaks together onto lines. Inconsistent
//! is the opposite. Inconsistent breaking example would be, say:
//!
//! ```
//! foo(hello, there, good, friends)
//! ```
//!
//! breaking inconsistently to become
//!
//! ```
//! foo(hello, there
//! good, friends);
//! ```
//!
//! whereas a consistent breaking would yield:
//!
//! ```
//! foo(hello,
//! there
//! good,
//! friends);
//! ```
//!
//! That is, in the consistent-break blocks we value vertical alignment
//! more than the ability to cram stuff onto a line. But in all cases if it
//! can make a block a one-liner, it'll do so.
//!
//! Carrying on with high-level logic:
//!
//! The buffered tokens go through a ring-buffer, 'tokens'. The 'left' and
//! 'right' indices denote the active portion of the ring buffer as well as
//! describing hypothetical points-in-the-infinite-stream at most 3N tokens
//! apart (i.e. "not wrapped to ring-buffer boundaries"). The paper will switch
//! between using 'left' and 'right' terms to denote the wrapped-to-ring-buffer
//! and point-in-infinite-stream senses freely.
//!
//! There is a parallel ring buffer, 'size', that holds the calculated size of
//! each token. Why calculated? Because for Begin/End pairs, the "size"
//! includes everything between the pair. That is, the "size" of Begin is
//! actually the sum of the sizes of everything between Begin and the paired
//! End that follows. Since that is arbitrarily far in the future, 'size' is
//! being rewritten regularly while the printer runs; in fact most of the
//! machinery is here to work out 'size' entries on the fly (and give up when
//! they're so obviously over-long that "infinity" is a good enough
//! approximation for purposes of line breaking).
//!
//! The "input side" of the printer is managed as an abstract process called
//! SCAN, which uses 'scan_stack', to manage calculating 'size'. SCAN is, in
//! other words, the process of calculating 'size' entries.
//!
//! The "output side" of the printer is managed by an abstract process called
//! PRINT, which uses 'print_stack', 'margin' and 'space' to figure out what to
//! do with each token/size pair it consumes as it goes. It's trying to consume
//! the entire buffered window, but can't output anything until the size is >=
//! 0 (sizes are set to negative while they're pending calculation).
//!
//! So SCAN takes input and buffers tokens and pending calculations, while
//! PRINT gobbles up completed calculations and tokens from the buffer. The
//! theory is that the two can never get more than 3N tokens apart, because
//! once there's "obviously" too much data to fit on a line, in a size
//! calculation, SCAN will write "infinity" to the size and let PRINT consume
//! it.
//!
//! In this implementation (following the paper, again) the SCAN process is
//! the method called `Printer::pretty_print`, and the 'PRINT' process is the method
//! called `Printer::print`.

use std::collections::VecDeque;
use std::fmt;
use std::io;

/// How to break. Described in more detail in the module docs.
#[derive(Clone, Copy, PartialEq)]
pub enum Breaks {
Consistent,
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -177,81 +261,6 @@ pub fn mk_printer<'a>(out: Box<io::Write+'a>, linewidth: usize) -> Printer<'a> {
}
}


/// In case you do not have the paper, here is an explanation of what's going
/// on.
///
/// There is a stream of input tokens flowing through this printer.
///
/// The printer buffers up to 3N tokens inside itself, where N is linewidth.
/// Yes, linewidth is chars and tokens are multi-char, but in the worst
/// case every token worth buffering is 1 char long, so it's ok.
///
/// Tokens are String, Break, and Begin/End to delimit blocks.
///
/// Begin tokens can carry an offset, saying "how far to indent when you break
/// inside here", as well as a flag indicating "consistent" or "inconsistent"
/// breaking. Consistent breaking means that after the first break, no attempt
/// will be made to flow subsequent breaks together onto lines. Inconsistent
/// is the opposite. Inconsistent breaking example would be, say:
///
/// foo(hello, there, good, friends)
///
/// breaking inconsistently to become
///
/// foo(hello, there
/// good, friends);
///
/// whereas a consistent breaking would yield:
///
/// foo(hello,
/// there
/// good,
/// friends);
///
/// That is, in the consistent-break blocks we value vertical alignment
/// more than the ability to cram stuff onto a line. But in all cases if it
/// can make a block a one-liner, it'll do so.
///
/// Carrying on with high-level logic:
///
/// The buffered tokens go through a ring-buffer, 'tokens'. The 'left' and
/// 'right' indices denote the active portion of the ring buffer as well as
/// describing hypothetical points-in-the-infinite-stream at most 3N tokens
/// apart (i.e. "not wrapped to ring-buffer boundaries"). The paper will switch
/// between using 'left' and 'right' terms to denote the wrapped-to-ring-buffer
/// and point-in-infinite-stream senses freely.
///
/// There is a parallel ring buffer, 'size', that holds the calculated size of
/// each token. Why calculated? Because for Begin/End pairs, the "size"
/// includes everything between the pair. That is, the "size" of Begin is
/// actually the sum of the sizes of everything between Begin and the paired
/// End that follows. Since that is arbitrarily far in the future, 'size' is
/// being rewritten regularly while the printer runs; in fact most of the
/// machinery is here to work out 'size' entries on the fly (and give up when
/// they're so obviously over-long that "infinity" is a good enough
/// approximation for purposes of line breaking).
///
/// The "input side" of the printer is managed as an abstract process called
/// SCAN, which uses 'scan_stack', to manage calculating 'size'. SCAN is, in
/// other words, the process of calculating 'size' entries.
///
/// The "output side" of the printer is managed by an abstract process called
/// PRINT, which uses 'print_stack', 'margin' and 'space' to figure out what to
/// do with each token/size pair it consumes as it goes. It's trying to consume
/// the entire buffered window, but can't output anything until the size is >=
/// 0 (sizes are set to negative while they're pending calculation).
///
/// So SCAN takes input and buffers tokens and pending calculations, while
/// PRINT gobbles up completed calculations and tokens from the buffer. The
/// theory is that the two can never get more than 3N tokens apart, because
/// once there's "obviously" too much data to fit on a line, in a size
/// calculation, SCAN will write "infinity" to the size and let PRINT consume
/// it.
///
/// In this implementation (following the paper, again) the SCAN process is
/// the method called 'pretty_print', and the 'PRINT' process is the method
/// called 'print'.
pub struct Printer<'a> {
pub out: Box<io::Write+'a>,
buf_len: usize,
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -292,7 +301,7 @@ impl<'a> Printer<'a> {
pub fn last_token(&mut self) -> Token {
self.buf[self.right].token.clone()
}
// be very careful with this!
/// be very careful with this!
pub fn replace_last_token(&mut self, t: Token) {
self.buf[self.right].token = t;
}
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -571,19 +580,21 @@ impl<'a> Printer<'a> {
}

// Convenience functions to talk to the printer.
//
// "raw box"

/// "raw box"
pub fn rbox(p: &mut Printer, indent: usize, b: Breaks) -> io::Result<()> {
p.pretty_print(Token::Begin(BeginToken {
offset: indent as isize,
breaks: b
}))
}

/// Inconsistent breaking box
pub fn ibox(p: &mut Printer, indent: usize) -> io::Result<()> {
rbox(p, indent, Breaks::Inconsistent)
}

/// Consistent breaking box
pub fn cbox(p: &mut Printer, indent: usize) -> io::Result<()> {
rbox(p, indent, Breaks::Consistent)
}
Expand Down

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