PHP Parser
nvim-treesitter
PHP Parser | nvim-treesitter | |
---|---|---|
11 | 300 | |
16,835 | 9,487 | |
- | 2.8% | |
8.3 | 9.9 | |
12 days ago | 7 days ago | |
PHP | Scheme | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
PHP Parser
- PHP-Parser: A PHP parser written in PHP
-
Diff Speeding - Rector and sebastian/diff speed improvements through profiling
Interesting. One of the reasons I stopped considering Rector is because of how memory, CPU, and time intensive it is for a non-trivial project. Instead I've been using Nikita's PHP Parser directly and getting much better results even though it isn't multi-threaded out of the box.
-
PHP Skeleton for Bison
nikic/PHP-Parser uses a Bison equivalent for PHP parsing. See the grammar file https://github.com/nikic/PHP-Parser/blob/4.x/grammar/php7.y.
-
Alternative for nette/tokenizer?
Maybe nikic/PHP-Parser is an alternative. If you only need to tokenizer part, PHP has an extension too.
-
How PHP engine builds AST
nikic/PHP-Parser
-
Parsing with PHP, Bison and re2c
Code parsing. Many linters and code builders use php-parser. It uses YACC (analog Bison) to build AST.
-
Readonly classes RFC accepted
The PR in PHP-Parser is already on the way ↓ https://github.com/nikic/PHP-Parser/pull/834
-
[Question] Trying to understand, how does the PHP Parser work when it sees HTML?
I see there is the https://github.com/nikic/PHP-Parser
-
I was annoyed by some of PHP's syntax, so I decided to make a PHP transpiler (still in beta!)
It's good idea. But something strange. Php was made as language which embedded to HTML. And how will it work without open and close tags? Instead of parsing and replacing source code as string you might use parser e.g https://github.com/nikic/PHP-Parser
-
Tree-sitter: an incremental parsing system for programming tools
I wish there was a more universal format for parsers, but I just don't think there enough people who know their stuff.
Take PHP, a language that a lot of people use: the tree-sitter-php extension doesn't support features added in 2019, let alone features added towards the end of 2020.
If you want an up-to-date PHP parser, there's really only one open-source parser[0] that's accurate enough to be used on PHP codebases old and new, and it's written in PHP. Then if you want to parse in a robust fashion you have to adopt a number of hacks to get everything working.
I hadn't encountered LSIF before – can GitHub be configured to use those maps?
[0] https://github.com/nikic/PHP-Parser
nvim-treesitter
-
JetBrains' unremovable AI assistant meets irresistible outcry
I suggest looking for blog posts about this, you're gunnuh wanna pick out a plugin manager and stuff. It's kind of like a package manager for neovim. You can install everything manually but usually you manually install a plugin manager and it gives you commands to manage the rest of your plugins.
These two plugins are the bare minimum in my view.
https://github.com/nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter
Treesitter gives you much better syntax highlighting based on a parser for a given language.
https://github.com/neovim/nvim-lspconfig
This plugin helps you connect to a given language LSP quickly with sensible defaults. You more or less pick your language from here and copy paste a snippet, and then install the relevant LSP:
https://github.com/neovim/nvim-lspconfig/blob/master/doc/ser...
For Python you'll want pylsp. For JavaScript it will depend on what frontend framework you're using, I probably can't help you there.
pylsp itself takes some plugins and you'll probably want them. https://github.com/python-lsp/python-lsp-server
Best of luck! Happy hacking.
-
Help needed with Treesitter sql injection
It was changed in https://github.com/nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter/commit/78b54eb
-
Do I need NeoVIM?
https://github.com/hrsh7th/nvim-cmp This is an autocompletion engine https://github.com/nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter This allows NeoVim to install parsing scripts so NeoVim can do things like code highlighting. https://github.com/williamboman/mason.nvim Not strictly necessary, but allows you to access a repo of LSP, install them, and configure them for without you actively messing about in config files. https://github.com/neovim/nvim-lspconfig Also not strictly necessary, but vastly simplifies LSP setup. https://github.com/williamboman/mason-lspconfig.nvim This lets the above two plugins talk to each other more easily.
- Problem with highlighting when attempting to create own treesitter parser
-
neorg problem, all other plugins deactivate when added to init.lua
vim.opt.rtp:prepend(lazypath) require('lazy').setup({ { "nvim-neorg/neorg", build = ":Neorg sync-parsers", opts = { load = { ["core.defaults"] = {}, -- Loads default behaviour ["core.concealer"] = {}, -- Adds pretty icons to your documents ["core.dirman"] = { -- Manages Neorg workspaces config = { workspaces = { notes = "~/notes", }, defaultworkspace = "notes", }, }, }, }, dependencies = { { "nvim-lua/plenary.nvim", }, { -- YOU ALMOST CERTAINLY WANT A MORE ROBUST nvim-treesitter SETUP -- see https://github.com/nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter "nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter", opts = { auto_install = true, highlight = { enable = true, additional_vim_regex_highlighting = false, }, }, config = function(,opts) require('nvim-treesitter.configs').setup(opts) end }, { "folke/tokyonight.nvim", config=function(,) vim.cmd.colorscheme "tokyonight-storm" end,}, }, }, }) require 'plugins' ```
-
Getting Treesitter to work for Windows 10
Change the compiler to use 'llvm' and install visual studio build tools command line stuff - at least that is what worked for me without problems. If you are using c++ then I would assume you have visual studio installed already. If you need more info follow the treesitter windows support
-
Just come back up out of the rabbit hole - TS unsets syntax variable by design!
After a lot of time spent yesterday I took a fresh look today and then thought to myself - what if this is what TS does by design? A few clicks later and I found this https://github.com/nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter/issues/1327
- What is this color scheme
-
nvim-treesitter erroring on Windows 11 Pro
I've followed the official guide for nvim-treesitter support on Windows, but I'm having problems making it work. I keep getting a compilation error for any parser I try to install using TSInstall. If instead I use TSInstallSync I don't get errors but the parser is not correctly installed. My setup uses lazyvim and I installed LLVM using winget to have a C compiler.
-
Neovim can't find C compiler
I have read that gcc in windows doesn't always provide the necessary support for treesitter. I have seen ppl prefer clang over gcc in Windows. Please see also Windows support in treesitter's repo. Unfortunately I cannot help further as I don't use Windows for coding, but hope you can deduce something to solve your problem from the above link (if you haven't already read through it).
What are some alternatives?
PHPStan - PHP Static Analysis Tool - discover bugs in your code without running it!
coc.nvim - Nodejs extension host for vim & neovim, load extensions like VSCode and host language servers.
PHP Code Sniffer - PHP_CodeSniffer tokenizes PHP files and detects violations of a defined set of coding standards.
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP
PHP CS Fixer - A tool to automatically fix PHP Coding Standards issues
vim-polyglot - A solid language pack for Vim.
PHPCPD - Copy/Paste Detector (CPD) for PHP code.
vim-python-pep8-indent - A nicer Python indentation style for vim.
Better Reflection - :crystal_ball: Better Reflection is a reflection API that aims to improve and provide more features than PHP's built-in reflection API.
packer.nvim - A use-package inspired plugin manager for Neovim. Uses native packages, supports Luarocks dependencies, written in Lua, allows for expressive config
PHP Mess Detector - PHPMD is a spin-off project of PHP Depend and aims to be a PHP equivalent of the well known Java tool PMD. PHPMD can be seen as an user friendly frontend application for the raw metrics stream measured by PHP Depend.
tree-sitter - An incremental parsing system for programming tools