Syntax_Tools

Reference Manual

Version 2.3

Table of Contents

erl_recomment

Module

erl_recomment

Module Summary

Inserting comments into abstract Erlang syntax trees.

Description

Inserting comments into abstract Erlang syntax trees

This module contains functions for inserting comments, described by position, indentation and text, as attachments on an abstract syntax tree, at the correct places.

DATA TYPES

syntaxTree() = erl_syntax:syntaxTree()

An abstract syntax tree. See the erl_syntax module for details.

Exports

Types

Comment = {Line, Column, Indentation, Text}
Line = integer()
Column = integer()
Indentation = integer()
Text = [string()]

Like recomment_forms/2, but only inserts top-level comments. Comments within function definitions or declarations ("forms") are simply ignored.

Types

Comment = {Line, Column, Indentation, Text}
Line = integer()
Column = integer()
Indentation = integer()
Text = [string()]

Attaches comments to the syntax tree/trees representing a program. The given Forms should be a single syntax tree of type form_list, or a list of syntax trees representing "program forms". The syntax trees must contain valid position information (for details, see recomment_tree/2). The result is a corresponding syntax tree of type form_list in which all comments in the list Comments have been attached at the proper places.

Assuming Forms represents a program (or any sequence of "program forms"), any comments whose first lines are not directly associated with a specific program form will become standalone comments inserted between the neighbouring program forms. Furthermore, comments whose column position is less than or equal to one will not be attached to a program form that begins at a conflicting line number (this can happen with preprocessor-generated line-attributes).

If Forms is a syntax tree of some other type than form_list, the comments will be inserted directly using recomment_tree/2, and any comments left over from that process are added as postcomments on the result.

Entries in Comments represent multi-line comments. For each entry, Line is the line number and Column the left column of the comment (the column of the first comment-introducing "%" character). Indentation is the number of character positions between the last non-whitespace character before the comment (or the left margin) and the left column of the comment. Text is a list of strings representing the consecutive comment lines in top-down order, where each string contains all characters following (but not including) the comment-introducing "%" and up to (but not including) the terminating newline. (Cf. module erl_comment_scan.)

Evaluation exits with reason {bad_position, Pos} if the associated position information Pos of some subtree in the input does not have a recognizable format, or with reason {bad_tree, L, C} if insertion of a comment at line L, column C, fails because the tree structure is ill-formed.

See also: erl_comment_scan, quick_recomment_forms/2, recomment_tree/2.

Types

Comment = {Line, Column, Indentation, Text}
Line = integer()
Column = integer()
Indentation = integer()
Text = [string()]

Attaches comments to a syntax tree. The result is a pair {NewTree, Remainder} where NewTree is the given Tree where comments from the list Comments have been attached at the proper places. Remainder is the list of entries in Comments which have not been inserted, because their line numbers are greater than those of any node in the tree. The entries in Comments are inserted in order; if two comments become attached to the same node, they will appear in the same order in the program text.

The nodes of the syntax tree must contain valid position information. This can be single integers, assumed to represent a line number, or 2- or 3-tuples where the first or second element is an integer, in which case the leftmost integer element is assumed to represent the line number. Line numbers less than one are ignored (usually, the default line number for newly created nodes is zero).

For details on the Line, Column and Indentation fields, and the behaviour in case of errors, see recomment_forms/2.

See also: recomment_forms/2.

Richard Carlsson carlsson.richard@gmail.com