Feature #13686
closedAdd states of scanner to tokens from Ripper.lex and Ripper::Filter#on_*
Description
I'm writing syntax analysis software by pure Ruby, for processing Ruby's source code and meta information what are classes, methods, constants, comments and others. I'm using Ripper for it. But the results of Ripper.sexp doesn't have comments, and the results of Ripper.lex doesn't have token states of scanner.
I think that the behavior of Ripper.sexp is correct because the position of comments in Ruby's syntax tree is blurred and unhandled.
On the other hand, Ripper.lex has comments token but Ripper.lex clearly drops the states of scanner for each tokens under "finite-state scanner". The states are very important for many Ripper use cases. EXPR_END is especially required to know the end of statement. If the states aren't provided, we must re-implement finite-state analyzer for tokens from Ripper. For example, borderlines of conditions, args, constants and others. It's just not realistic.
In Ripper.lex's behavior as of now:
require 'ripper'
require 'pp'
pp Ripper.lex(<<EOM)
def str?(v)
String === v # check
end
EOM
#=> [[[1, 0], :on_kw, "def" ],
# [[1, 3], :on_sp, " " ],
# [[1, 4], :on_ident, "str?" ],
# [[1, 8], :on_lparen, "(" ],
# [[1, 9], :on_ident, "v" ],
# [[1, 10], :on_rparen, ")" ],
# [[1, 11], :on_ignored_nl, "\n" ],
# [[2, 0], :on_sp, " " ],
# [[2, 2], :on_const, "String" ],
# [[2, 8], :on_sp, " " ],
# [[2, 9], :on_op, "===" ],
# [[2, 12], :on_sp, " " ],
# [[2, 13], :on_ident, "v" ],
# [[2, 14], :on_sp, " " ],
# [[2, 15], :on_comment, "# check\n"],
# [[3, 0], :on_kw, "end" ],
# [[3, 3], :on_nl, "\n" ]]
In Ripper.lex's behavior with attached patch:
require 'ripper'
require 'pp'
pp Ripper.lex(<<EOM)
def str?(v)
String === v # check
end
EOM
#=> [[[1, 0], :on_kw, "def", Ripper::EXPR_FNAME ],
# [[1, 3], :on_sp, " ", Ripper::EXPR_FNAME ],
# [[1, 4], :on_ident, "str?", Ripper::EXPR_ENDFN ],
# [[1, 8], :on_lparen, "(", Ripper::EXPR_BEG | Ripper::EXPR_LABEL],
# [[1, 9], :on_ident, "v", Ripper::EXPR_ARG ],
# [[1, 10], :on_rparen, ")", Ripper::EXPR_ENDFN ],
# [[1, 11], :on_ignored_nl, "\n", Ripper::EXPR_BEG ],
# [[2, 0], :on_sp, " ", Ripper::EXPR_BEG ],
# [[2, 2], :on_const, "String", Ripper::EXPR_CMDARG ],
# [[2, 8], :on_sp, " ", Ripper::EXPR_CMDARG ],
# [[2, 9], :on_op, "===", Ripper::EXPR_BEG ],
# [[2, 12], :on_sp, " ", Ripper::EXPR_BEG ],
# [[2, 13], :on_ident, "v", Ripper::EXPR_END | Ripper::EXPR_LABEL],
# [[2, 14], :on_sp, " ", Ripper::EXPR_END | Ripper::EXPR_LABEL],
# [[2, 15], :on_comment, "# check\n", Ripper::EXPR_END | Ripper::EXPR_LABEL],
# [[3, 0], :on_kw, "end", Ripper::EXPR_END ],
# [[3, 3], :on_nl, "\n", Ripper::EXPR_BEG ]]
In Ripper::Filter#on_* with attached patch, you can use #state metohd:
require 'ripper'
require 'pp'
class MyFilter < Ripper::Filter
def on_default(event, tok, data)
data.push([event, tok, state])
end
end
# Ripper::Filter#parse works like Enumerable#inject
pp MyFilter.new(<<EOM).parse([])
def str?(v)
String === v # check
end
EOM
#=> [[:on_kw, "def", Ripper::EXPR_FNAME ],
# [:on_sp, " ", Ripper::EXPR_FNAME ],
# [:on_ident, "str?", Ripper::EXPR_ENDFN ],
# [:on_lparen, "(", Ripper::EXPR_BEG | Ripper::EXPR_LABEL],
# [:on_ident, "v", Ripper::EXPR_ARG ],
# [:on_rparen, ")", Ripper::EXPR_ENDFN ],
# [:on_ignored_nl, "\n", Ripper::EXPR_BEG ],
# [:on_sp, " ", Ripper::EXPR_BEG ],
# [:on_const, "String", Ripper::EXPR_CMDARG ],
# [:on_sp, " ", Ripper::EXPR_CMDARG ],
# [:on_op, "===", Ripper::EXPR_BEG ],
# [:on_sp, " ", Ripper::EXPR_BEG ],
# [:on_ident, "v", Ripper::EXPR_END | Ripper::EXPR_LABEL],
# [:on_sp, " ", Ripper::EXPR_END | Ripper::EXPR_LABEL],
# [:on_comment, "# check\n", Ripper::EXPR_END | Ripper::EXPR_LABEL],
# [:on_kw, "end", Ripper::EXPR_END ],
# [:on_nl, "\n", Ripper::EXPR_BEG ]]
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