//! Macro support for format strings //! //! These structures are used when parsing format strings for the compiler. //! Parsing does not happen at runtime: structures of `std::fmt::rt` are //! generated instead. #![doc(html_root_url = "https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/", html_playground_url = "https://play.rust-lang.org/", test(attr(deny(warnings))))] #![feature(nll)] #![feature(rustc_private)] #![feature(unicode_internals)] #![feature(bool_to_option)] pub use Piece::*; pub use Position::*; pub use Alignment::*; pub use Flag::*; pub use Count::*; use std::str; use std::string; use std::iter; use syntax_pos::{InnerSpan, Symbol}; #[derive(Copy, Clone)] struct InnerOffset(usize); impl InnerOffset { fn to(self, end: InnerOffset) -> InnerSpan { InnerSpan::new(self.0, end.0) } } /// A piece is a portion of the format string which represents the next part /// to emit. These are emitted as a stream by the `Parser` class. #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq)] pub enum Piece<'a> { /// A literal string which should directly be emitted String(&'a str), /// This describes that formatting should process the next argument (as /// specified inside) for emission. NextArgument(Argument<'a>), } /// Representation of an argument specification. #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq)] pub struct Argument<'a> { /// Where to find this argument pub position: Position, /// How to format the argument pub format: FormatSpec<'a>, } /// Specification for the formatting of an argument in the format string. #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq)] pub struct FormatSpec<'a> { /// Optionally specified character to fill alignment with. pub fill: Option, /// Optionally specified alignment. pub align: Alignment, /// Packed version of various flags provided. pub flags: u32, /// The integer precision to use. pub precision: Count, /// The span of the precision formatting flag (for diagnostics). pub precision_span: Option, /// The string width requested for the resulting format. pub width: Count, /// The span of the width formatting flag (for diagnostics). pub width_span: Option, /// The descriptor string representing the name of the format desired for /// this argument, this can be empty or any number of characters, although /// it is required to be one word. pub ty: &'a str, /// The span of the descriptor string (for diagnostics). pub ty_span: Option, } /// Enum describing where an argument for a format can be located. #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq)] pub enum Position { /// The argument is implied to be located at an index ArgumentImplicitlyIs(usize), /// The argument is located at a specific index given in the format ArgumentIs(usize), /// The argument has a name. ArgumentNamed(Symbol), } impl Position { pub fn index(&self) -> Option { match self { ArgumentIs(i) | ArgumentImplicitlyIs(i) => Some(*i), _ => None, } } } /// Enum of alignments which are supported. #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq)] pub enum Alignment { /// The value will be aligned to the left. AlignLeft, /// The value will be aligned to the right. AlignRight, /// The value will be aligned in the center. AlignCenter, /// The value will take on a default alignment. AlignUnknown, } /// Various flags which can be applied to format strings. The meaning of these /// flags is defined by the formatters themselves. #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq)] pub enum Flag { /// A `+` will be used to denote positive numbers. FlagSignPlus, /// A `-` will be used to denote negative numbers. This is the default. FlagSignMinus, /// An alternate form will be used for the value. In the case of numbers, /// this means that the number will be prefixed with the supplied string. FlagAlternate, /// For numbers, this means that the number will be padded with zeroes, /// and the sign (`+` or `-`) will precede them. FlagSignAwareZeroPad, /// For Debug / `?`, format integers in lower-case hexadecimal. FlagDebugLowerHex, /// For Debug / `?`, format integers in upper-case hexadecimal. FlagDebugUpperHex, } /// A count is used for the precision and width parameters of an integer, and /// can reference either an argument or a literal integer. #[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq)] pub enum Count { /// The count is specified explicitly. CountIs(usize), /// The count is specified by the argument with the given name. CountIsName(Symbol), /// The count is specified by the argument at the given index. CountIsParam(usize), /// The count is implied and cannot be explicitly specified. CountImplied, } pub struct ParseError { pub description: string::String, pub note: Option, pub label: string::String, pub span: InnerSpan, pub secondary_label: Option<(string::String, InnerSpan)>, } /// The parser structure for interpreting the input format string. This is /// modeled as an iterator over `Piece` structures to form a stream of tokens /// being output. /// /// This is a recursive-descent parser for the sake of simplicity, and if /// necessary there's probably lots of room for improvement performance-wise. pub struct Parser<'a> { input: &'a str, cur: iter::Peekable>, /// Error messages accumulated during parsing pub errors: Vec, /// Current position of implicit positional argument pointer curarg: usize, /// `Some(raw count)` when the string is "raw", used to position spans correctly style: Option, /// Start and end byte offset of every successfully parsed argument pub arg_places: Vec, /// Characters that need to be shifted skips: Vec, /// Span of the last opening brace seen, used for error reporting last_opening_brace: Option, /// Wether the source string is comes from `println!` as opposed to `format!` or `print!` append_newline: bool, } impl<'a> Iterator for Parser<'a> { type Item = Piece<'a>; fn next(&mut self) -> Option> { if let Some(&(pos, c)) = self.cur.peek() { match c { '{' => { let curr_last_brace = self.last_opening_brace; let byte_pos = self.to_span_index(pos); self.last_opening_brace = Some(byte_pos.to(InnerOffset(byte_pos.0 + 1))); self.cur.next(); if self.consume('{') { self.last_opening_brace = curr_last_brace; Some(String(self.string(pos + 1))) } else { let arg = self.argument(); if let Some(end) = self.must_consume('}') { let start = self.to_span_index(pos); let end = self.to_span_index(end + 1); self.arg_places.push(start.to(end)); } Some(NextArgument(arg)) } } '}' => { self.cur.next(); if self.consume('}') { Some(String(self.string(pos + 1))) } else { let err_pos = self.to_span_index(pos); self.err_with_note( "unmatched `}` found", "unmatched `}`", "if you intended to print `}`, you can escape it using `}}`", err_pos.to(err_pos), ); None } } '\n' => { Some(String(self.string(pos))) } _ => Some(String(self.string(pos))), } } else { None } } } impl<'a> Parser<'a> { /// Creates a new parser for the given format string pub fn new( s: &'a str, style: Option, skips: Vec, append_newline: bool, ) -> Parser<'a> { Parser { input: s, cur: s.char_indices().peekable(), errors: vec![], curarg: 0, style, arg_places: vec![], skips, last_opening_brace: None, append_newline, } } /// Notifies of an error. The message doesn't actually need to be of type /// String, but I think it does when this eventually uses conditions so it /// might as well start using it now. fn err, S2: Into>( &mut self, description: S1, label: S2, span: InnerSpan, ) { self.errors.push(ParseError { description: description.into(), note: None, label: label.into(), span, secondary_label: None, }); } /// Notifies of an error. The message doesn't actually need to be of type /// String, but I think it does when this eventually uses conditions so it /// might as well start using it now. fn err_with_note, S2: Into, S3: Into>( &mut self, description: S1, label: S2, note: S3, span: InnerSpan, ) { self.errors.push(ParseError { description: description.into(), note: Some(note.into()), label: label.into(), span, secondary_label: None, }); } /// Optionally consumes the specified character. If the character is not at /// the current position, then the current iterator isn't moved and `false` is /// returned, otherwise the character is consumed and `true` is returned. fn consume(&mut self, c: char) -> bool { self.consume_pos(c).is_some() } /// Optionally consumes the specified character. If the character is not at /// the current position, then the current iterator isn't moved and `None` is /// returned, otherwise the character is consumed and the current position is /// returned. fn consume_pos(&mut self, c: char) -> Option { if let Some(&(pos, maybe)) = self.cur.peek() { if c == maybe { self.cur.next(); return Some(pos); } } None } fn to_span_index(&self, pos: usize) -> InnerOffset { let mut pos = pos; // This handles the raw string case, the raw argument is the number of # // in r###"..."### (we need to add one because of the `r`). let raw = self.style.map(|raw| raw + 1).unwrap_or(0); for skip in &self.skips { if pos > *skip { pos += 1; } else if pos == *skip && raw == 0 { pos += 1; } else { break; } } InnerOffset(raw + pos + 1) } /// Forces consumption of the specified character. If the character is not /// found, an error is emitted. fn must_consume(&mut self, c: char) -> Option { self.ws(); if let Some(&(pos, maybe)) = self.cur.peek() { if c == maybe { self.cur.next(); Some(pos) } else { let pos = self.to_span_index(pos); let description = format!("expected `'}}'`, found `{:?}`", maybe); let label = "expected `}`".to_owned(); let (note, secondary_label) = if c == '}' { (Some("if you intended to print `{`, you can escape it using `{{`".to_owned()), self.last_opening_brace.map(|sp| { ("because of this opening brace".to_owned(), sp) })) } else { (None, None) }; self.errors.push(ParseError { description, note, label, span: pos.to(pos), secondary_label, }); None } } else { let description = format!("expected `{:?}` but string was terminated", c); // point at closing `"` let pos = self.input.len() - if self.append_newline { 1 } else { 0 }; let pos = self.to_span_index(pos); if c == '}' { let label = format!("expected `{:?}`", c); let (note, secondary_label) = if c == '}' { (Some("if you intended to print `{`, you can escape it using `{{`".to_owned()), self.last_opening_brace.map(|sp| { ("because of this opening brace".to_owned(), sp) })) } else { (None, None) }; self.errors.push(ParseError { description, note, label, span: pos.to(pos), secondary_label, }); } else { self.err(description, format!("expected `{:?}`", c), pos.to(pos)); } None } } /// Consumes all whitespace characters until the first non-whitespace character fn ws(&mut self) { while let Some(&(_, c)) = self.cur.peek() { if c.is_whitespace() { self.cur.next(); } else { break; } } } /// Parses all of a string which is to be considered a "raw literal" in a /// format string. This is everything outside of the braces. fn string(&mut self, start: usize) -> &'a str { // we may not consume the character, peek the iterator while let Some(&(pos, c)) = self.cur.peek() { match c { '{' | '}' => { return &self.input[start..pos]; } _ => { self.cur.next(); } } } &self.input[start..self.input.len()] } /// Parses an `Argument` structure, or what's contained within braces inside the format string. fn argument(&mut self) -> Argument<'a> { let pos = self.position(); let format = self.format(); // Resolve position after parsing format spec. let pos = match pos { Some(position) => position, None => { let i = self.curarg; self.curarg += 1; ArgumentImplicitlyIs(i) } }; Argument { position: pos, format, } } /// Parses a positional argument for a format. This could either be an /// integer index of an argument, a named argument, or a blank string. /// Returns `Some(parsed_position)` if the position is not implicitly /// consuming a macro argument, `None` if it's the case. fn position(&mut self) -> Option { if let Some(i) = self.integer() { Some(ArgumentIs(i)) } else { match self.cur.peek() { Some(&(_, c)) if rustc_lexer::is_id_start(c) => { Some(ArgumentNamed(Symbol::intern(self.word()))) } // This is an `ArgumentNext`. // Record the fact and do the resolution after parsing the // format spec, to make things like `{:.*}` work. _ => None, } } } /// Parses a format specifier at the current position, returning all of the /// relevant information in the `FormatSpec` struct. fn format(&mut self) -> FormatSpec<'a> { let mut spec = FormatSpec { fill: None, align: AlignUnknown, flags: 0, precision: CountImplied, precision_span: None, width: CountImplied, width_span: None, ty: &self.input[..0], ty_span: None, }; if !self.consume(':') { return spec; } // fill character if let Some(&(_, c)) = self.cur.peek() { match self.cur.clone().nth(1) { Some((_, '>')) | Some((_, '<')) | Some((_, '^')) => { spec.fill = Some(c); self.cur.next(); } _ => {} } } // Alignment if self.consume('<') { spec.align = AlignLeft; } else if self.consume('>') { spec.align = AlignRight; } else if self.consume('^') { spec.align = AlignCenter; } // Sign flags if self.consume('+') { spec.flags |= 1 << (FlagSignPlus as u32); } else if self.consume('-') { spec.flags |= 1 << (FlagSignMinus as u32); } // Alternate marker if self.consume('#') { spec.flags |= 1 << (FlagAlternate as u32); } // Width and precision let mut havewidth = false; if self.consume('0') { // small ambiguity with '0$' as a format string. In theory this is a // '0' flag and then an ill-formatted format string with just a '$' // and no count, but this is better if we instead interpret this as // no '0' flag and '0$' as the width instead. if self.consume('$') { spec.width = CountIsParam(0); havewidth = true; } else { spec.flags |= 1 << (FlagSignAwareZeroPad as u32); } } if !havewidth { let width_span_start = if let Some((pos, _)) = self.cur.peek() { *pos } else { 0 }; let (w, sp) = self.count(width_span_start); spec.width = w; spec.width_span = sp; } if let Some(start) = self.consume_pos('.') { if let Some(end) = self.consume_pos('*') { // Resolve `CountIsNextParam`. // We can do this immediately as `position` is resolved later. let i = self.curarg; self.curarg += 1; spec.precision = CountIsParam(i); spec.precision_span = Some(self.to_span_index(start).to(self.to_span_index(end + 1))); } else { let (p, sp) = self.count(start); spec.precision = p; spec.precision_span = sp; } } let ty_span_start = self.cur.peek().map(|(pos, _)| *pos); // Optional radix followed by the actual format specifier if self.consume('x') { if self.consume('?') { spec.flags |= 1 << (FlagDebugLowerHex as u32); spec.ty = "?"; } else { spec.ty = "x"; } } else if self.consume('X') { if self.consume('?') { spec.flags |= 1 << (FlagDebugUpperHex as u32); spec.ty = "?"; } else { spec.ty = "X"; } } else if self.consume('?') { spec.ty = "?"; } else { spec.ty = self.word(); let ty_span_end = self.cur.peek().map(|(pos, _)| *pos); if !spec.ty.is_empty() { spec.ty_span = ty_span_start .and_then(|s| ty_span_end.map(|e| (s, e))) .map(|(start, end)| self.to_span_index(start).to(self.to_span_index(end))); } } spec } /// Parses a `Count` parameter at the current position. This does not check /// for 'CountIsNextParam' because that is only used in precision, not /// width. fn count(&mut self, start: usize) -> (Count, Option) { if let Some(i) = self.integer() { if let Some(end) = self.consume_pos('$') { let span = self.to_span_index(start).to(self.to_span_index(end + 1)); (CountIsParam(i), Some(span)) } else { (CountIs(i), None) } } else { let tmp = self.cur.clone(); let word = self.word(); if word.is_empty() { self.cur = tmp; (CountImplied, None) } else if self.consume('$') { (CountIsName(Symbol::intern(word)), None) } else { self.cur = tmp; (CountImplied, None) } } } /// Parses a word starting at the current position. A word is the same as /// Rust identifier, except that it can't start with `_` character. fn word(&mut self) -> &'a str { let start = match self.cur.peek() { Some(&(pos, c)) if rustc_lexer::is_id_start(c) => { self.cur.next(); pos } _ => { return ""; } }; let mut end = None; while let Some(&(pos, c)) = self.cur.peek() { if rustc_lexer::is_id_continue(c) { self.cur.next(); } else { end = Some(pos); break; } } let end = end.unwrap_or(self.input.len()); let word = &self.input[start..end]; if word == "_" { self.err_with_note( "invalid argument name `_`", "invalid argument name", "argument name cannot be a single underscore", self.to_span_index(start).to(self.to_span_index(end)), ); } word } /// Optionally parses an integer at the current position. This doesn't deal /// with overflow at all, it's just accumulating digits. fn integer(&mut self) -> Option { let mut cur = 0; let mut found = false; while let Some(&(_, c)) = self.cur.peek() { if let Some(i) = c.to_digit(10) { cur = cur * 10 + i as usize; found = true; self.cur.next(); } else { break; } } found.then_some(cur) } } #[cfg(test)] mod tests;