Moose
elisp-tree-sitter
Moose | elisp-tree-sitter | |
---|---|---|
2 | 21 | |
133 | 803 | |
0.0% | 0.1% | |
7.7 | 7.2 | |
20 days ago | 10 days ago | |
Smalltalk | Emacs Lisp | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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Moose
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Architecture diagrams should be code
I use TLA+. Almost every system has some sort of safety property that needs to be guaranteed (bad things must never happen). A good many have liveness properties (something must eventually happen). Diagrams are well and good for documentation but tell you nothing about the specifications of the system.
I tried UML once but found it lacking.
When I’m writing documentation I like to use diagrams. Mermaid has served me well. It’s integrated into GitHub these days which is convenient. I’ve also used ditaa and graphviz to good effect. With org-mode and org-babel it’s quite easy to build executable documentation: take the query from a database to build a rough ER diagram with graphviz, a shell command on a jump box to get the data-plane hosts to build into a network diagram, etc.
Another interesting tool: https://github.com/moosetechnology/Moose I haven’t spent that much time with it but I learned enough to generate a dependency graph for a NodeJS project that was useful for planning refactoring work.
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Tree-sitter: an incremental parsing system for programming tools
Could you compare Sourcegraph to something like Moose, FAMIX, GToolkit?
https://github.com/moosetechnology/Moose
elisp-tree-sitter
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How to Get Started with Tree-Sitter
Look at the original integration project https://github.com/emacs-tree-sitter/elisp-tree-sitter, before it was done inside Emacs 29+.
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function to mark all within brackets, quotes, etc
When tree-sitter is available you may extend expand-region with this one one https://github.com/emacs-tree-sitter/elisp-tree-sitter/issues/20 Works very nice for me. But simple matching pairs should be handled well by expand-region alone
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How to use Emacs 29 Tree-sitter?
That said, if you want a more complete experience with tree-sitter right now, there’s a 3rd party implementation with support for a lot more languages, and also automatically downloads all supported grammars. It’s available here: https://github.com/emacs-tree-sitter/elisp-tree-sitter
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why is melpa still necessary for stuff that is built-in to emacs?
Just like there are multiple LSP implementations for emacs (lsp-mode, eglot, lsp-bridge), there are multiple tree-sitter implementations. The one recently included in emacs was never a standalone package, I believe (correct me if that’s wrong), but was created with the purpose of being included in emacs. You will need melpa to download the linked elisp-tree-sitter package (https://github.com/emacs-tree-sitter/elisp-tree-sitter), but not the built in one.
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tree-sitter has been merged into master
How am I going to even use the built-in one? I was using elisp-tree-sitter. I know I have to add grammar for different languages, but how? I have been searching for a while and still have no clue.
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Ask HN: S/W development text editor have feature colorizing every iteration?
from github README.rst "Emacs package that provides a standardized framework for manipulating and navigating your source code using tree sitter's concrete syntax tree " -> https://github.com/mickeynp/combobulate
https://www.spacemacs.org/ with https://github.com/emacs-tree-sitter/elisp-tree-sitter then write a iterator/loop query for language(s) editing per https://tree-sitter.github.io/tree-sitter/syntax-highlightin...
tad less installation heavy (sorta) but also makes use of tree-sitter syntax queries : https://www.lunarvim.org (neovim with treesitter syntax)
blockman usage examples: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5539gDeAdWqeXcczWuhnBA
Alternative examples / takes (per user interface):
### embedding a block of source code in a document:
** carrotsearch.gethub.io/apidocs/code-blocks
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regarding feature/tree-sitter branch
However, if you want to use tree-sitter today, there is the tree-sitter package which enables tree-sitter syntax highlighting in a number of popular major modes. I’ve been using it for about six months now in all major modes it supports.
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how to configure doom emacs (generic emacs too) with a C project
Tree Sitter and lsp-mode might be of help. Looks like both take a bit of work to get going. I have personally not used them, so try out which suits you and let us know how it went.
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Commercial-Emacs
You can use tree-sitter already if you have dynamic module support: https://github.com/emacs-tree-sitter/elisp-tree-sitter
- Are we living in the golden age of Emacs?
What are some alternatives?
gtoolkit - Glamorous Toolkit is the Moldable Development environment. It empowers you to make systems explainable through experiences tailored for each problem.
tree-sitter-go - Go grammar for tree-sitter
tree-sitter - An incremental parsing system for programming tools
tree-sitter-c - C grammar for tree-sitter
typescript.el - TypeScript-support for Emacs
csharp-mode - A major-mode for editing C# in emacs
lsp-treemacs - lsp-mode :heart: treemacs
PHP Parser - A PHP parser written in PHP
tree-sitter-ruby - Ruby grammar for tree-sitter
tree-sitter-kotlin - Kotlin grammar for Tree-sitter