gram_grep
diffsitter
gram_grep | diffsitter | |
---|---|---|
4 | 15 | |
11 | 1,524 | |
- | - | |
7.1 | 8.6 | |
13 days ago | 3 days ago | |
C++ | Rust | |
Boost Software License 1.0 | MIT License |
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.
gram_grep
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AST-grep(sg) is a CLI tool for code structural search, lint, and rewriting
There is also gram_grep[0]"Search text using a grammar, lexer, or straight regex. Chain searches for greater refinement."
See also parsertl-playground[1] for online edit/test grammars.
[0]https://github.com/BenHanson/gram_grep
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Show HN: Yacc/Lex editor/tester online
I'm building an online yacc/lex (LALR(1)) grammar editor/tester to help develop/debug/document grammars, the main repository is here https://github.com/mingodad/parsertl-playground and the online playground with several non trivial examples is here https://mingodad.github.io/parsertl-playground/playground/ .
Select a grammar/example from "Examples" select box and then click "Parse" to see a parser tree for the source in "Input source" editor.
It's based on https://github.com/BenHanson/gram_grep and https://github.com/BenHanson/lexertl14 .
Any feedback is welcome !
The grammars available so far (with varying state of correctness):
- Ada parser
- Question about lexer and parser generators in Rust
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MSVC Backend Updates in Visual Studio 2019 version 16.10 Preview 2 | C++ Team Blog
Thanks for the tip, but I fear storing the result on the stack will be too much to ask for for big lexers (see https://github.com/BenHanson/gram_grep/blob/c64f8829661f11b38a55b42b37f5051c5eabfaa6/main.cpp#L2301 for example).
diffsitter
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AST-grep(sg) is a CLI tool for code structural search, lint, and rewriting
Or https://github.com/afnanenayet/diffsitter. I've tried both and I like them. No preference or notable opinions on them yet!
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Enable new diff option linematch (#14537) · neovim/neovim@04fbb1d
For git diff's I've been using https://github.com/afnanenayet/diffsitter
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Difftastic, the Fantastic Diff: How it works
One more tree-sitter based diffing tool - diffsitter
https://github.com/afnanenayet/diffsitter
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What Comes After Git
Several threads here point to difftastic: https://github.com/Wilfred/difftastic
I know a lot of people who have a lot of hope for diffsitter (or something like it): https://github.com/afnanenayet/diffsitter
Personally, I think the reason most "good" semantic diff tools are proprietary is that they are huge amounts of effort that are mostly "hacks" and "heuristics" bandaged together in ways that people don't want to let out how the sausage was made.
But I also "general, language agnostic AST-based semantic diff" is a mountain peak we cannot reach (probably ever), and I believe my experiments found an interesting local maxima that people are maybe sleeping on (lexer-based diffs rather than parser-based diffs): https://github.com/WorldMaker/tokdiff
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Fast Kernel Headers: Tree -v1: Eliminate the Linux kernel's "Dependency Hell"
https://github.com/afnanenayet/diffsitter there are quiet a few projects such as this one, attempting to solve the issue. :)
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Thinking about programming systems and not just languages and environments
There’s an interesting project in the semantic diff/merge space that I have been keeping an eye out for https://github.com/afnanenayet/diffsitter
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What if Git worked with Programming Languages?
I have never used any of them, but it look like tree-sitter based diff tools are exactly what you are searching for (like difftastic, gumtree or diffsitter).
I believe Unison is the only attempt to do this at a programming language/environment level.
For Git diffs, there is Diffsitter, which uses Tree Sitter to generate semantic diffs of code files: https://github.com/afnanenayet/diffsitter
I have not used it, but it is high on my todo list.
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Difftastic: A syntactic diff tool
Looks great, I'll try it! FYI, there is a very similar project called diffsitter https://github.com/afnanenayet/diffsitter
- diffsitter - a tree-sitter based AST difftool to get meaningful semantic diffs
What are some alternatives?
frozen - a header-only, constexpr alternative to gperf for C++14 users
difftastic - a structural diff that understands syntax 🟥🟩
tracy - Frame profiler
semantic-source - Parsing, analyzing, and comparing source code across many languages
gramatika - A minimal toolkit for writing parsers with Rust
nvim-treesitter-context - Show code context
parsertl14 - C++14 version of parsertl
tree-sitter-json - JSON grammar for tree-sitter
chumsky - Write expressive, high-performance parsers with ease.
dark - Darklang main repo, including language, backend, and infra
semgrep - Lightweight static analysis for many languages. Find bug variants with patterns that look like source code.
git-merge-driver - Example of how to configure a custom git merge driver