jammy (3) Format_tutorial.3o.gz

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NAME

       Format_tutorial -  Principles

Module

       Module   Format_tutorial

Documentation

       Module Format_tutorial
        : sig end

   Principles
       Line breaking is based on three concepts:

       -boxes : a box is a logical pretty-printing unit, which defines a behaviour of the pretty-printing engine
       to display the material inside the box.

       -break hints: a break hint is a directive to the pretty-printing engine that proposes to break  the  line
       here,  if  it  is  necessary  to properly print the rest of the material.  Otherwise, the pretty-printing
       engine never break lines (except "in case of emergency" to avoid very bad output).   In  short,  a  break
       hint tells the pretty printer that a line break here may be appropriate.

       -indentation  rules:  When  a  line  break  occurs, the pretty-printing engines fixes the indentation (or
       amount of leading spaces) of the new line using indentation rules, as follows:

       -A box can state the extra indentation of every new line opened in its scope. This extra  indentation  is
       named box breaking indentation.

       -A break hint can also set the additional indentation of the new line it may fire. This extra indentation
       is named hint breaking indentation.

       - If break hint bh fires a new line within box b , then the indentation of the new line is simply the sum
       of: the current indentation of box b + the additional box breaking indentation, as defined by box b + the
       additional hint breaking indentation, as defined by break hint bh .

   Boxes
       There are 4 types of boxes. (The most often used is the "hov"  box  type,  so  skip  the  rest  at  first
       reading).

       -horizontal box (h box, as obtained by the open_hbox procedure): within this box, break hints do not lead
       to line breaks.

       -vertical box (v box, as obtained by the open_vbox procedure): within this box, every break hint lead  to
       a new line.

       -vertical/horizontal box (hv box, as obtained by the open_hvbox procedure): if it is possible, the entire
       box is written on a single line; otherwise, every break hint within the box leads to a new line.

       -vertical or horizontal box (hov box, as obtained by the open_box or open_hovbox procedures): within this
       box, break hints are used to cut the line when there is no more room on the line.  There are two kinds of
       "hov" boxes, you can find the details below. In first approximation, let me consider these two  kinds  of
       "hov" boxes as equivalent and obtained by calling the open_box procedure.

       Let  me  give  an  example. Suppose we can write 10 chars before the right margin (that indicates no more
       room). We represent any char as a - sign; characters [ and ] indicates the opening and closing of  a  box
       and b stands for a break hint given to the pretty-printing engine.

       The  output  "--b--b--"  is  displayed  like this (the b symbol stands for the value of the break that is
       explained below):

       Within a "h" box:


       --b--b--
       Within a "v" box:

       --b
       --b
       --

       Within a "hv" box:

       If there is enough room to print the box on the line:


       --b--b--
       But "---b---b---" that cannot fit on the line is written

       ---b
       ---b
       ---

       Within a "hov" box:

       If there is enough room to print the box on the line:


       --b--b--
       But if "---b---b---" cannot fit on the line, it is written as

       ---b---b
       ---

       The first break hint does not lead to a new line, since there is enough room on the line. The second  one
       leads  to  a new line since there is no more room to print the material following it. If the room left on
       the line were even shorter, the first break hint may lead to a new line and "---b---b---" is written as:

       ---b
       ---b
       ---

   Printing spaces
       Break hints are also used to output spaces (if the line is not  split  when  the  break  is  encountered,
       otherwise the new line indicates properly the separation between printing items). You output a break hint
       using print_break sp indent , and this sp integer is used to print "sp" spaces. Thus print_break  sp  ...
       may be thought as: print sp spaces or output a new line.

       For instance, if b is break 1 0 in the output "--b--b--", we get

       within a "h" box:

       -- -- --

       within a "v" box:

       --
       --
       --

       within a "hv" box:
       -- -- --

       or, according to the remaining room on the line:

       --
       --
       --

       and similarly for "hov" boxes.

       Generally  speaking,  a  printing  routine  using  "format", should not directly output white spaces: the
       routine should use break hints instead. (For instance print_space () that is  a  convenient  abbreviation
       for print_break 1 0 and outputs a single space or break the line.)

   Indentation of new lines
       The user gets 2 ways to fix the indentation of new lines:

       When  defining  the  box:  when you open a box, you can fix the indentation added to each new line opened
       within that box.

       For instance: open_hovbox 1 opens a "hov" box with new lines indented 1 more than the initial indentation
       of the box. With output "---[--b--b--b--", we get:

       ---[--b--b

            --b--
       with open_hovbox 2, we get

       ---[--b--b

             --b--
       Note:  the  [  sign  in  the  display  is  not visible on the screen, it is just there to materialise the
       aperture of the pretty-printing box. Last "screen" stands for:

       -----b--b

            --b--
       When defining the break that makes the new line. As said above, you output a break hint using print_break
       sp  indent  . The indent integer is used to fix the additional indentation of the new line. Namely, it is
       added to the default indentation offset of the box where the break occurs.

       For instance, if [ stands for the opening of a "hov" box with 1 as  extra  indentation  (as  obtained  by
       open_hovbox 1 ), and b is print_break 1 2 , then from output "---[--b--b--b--", we get:

          ---[-- --
                --
                --

   Refinement on hov boxes
       The "hov" box type is refined into two categories.

       -the  vertical or horizontal packing box (as obtained by the open_hovbox procedure): break hints are used
       to cut the line when there is no more room on the line; no new line occurs if there is enough room on the
       line.

       -vertical  or  horizontal  structural  box  (as obtained by the open_box procedure): similar to the "hov"
       packing box, the break hints are used to cut the line when  there  is  no  more  room  on  the  line;  in
       addition,  break  hints that can show the box structure lead to new lines even if there is enough room on
       the current line.

       The difference between a packing and a structural "hov" box is shown by a routine that closes  boxes  and
       parentheses  at the end of printing: with packing boxes, the closure of boxes and parentheses do not lead
       to new lines if there is enough room on the line, whereas with structural boxes each break hint will lead
       to a new line. For instance, when printing "[(---[(----[(---b)]b)]b)]", where "b" is a break hint without
       extra indentation ( print_cut () ). If "[" means  opening  of  a  packing  "hov"  box  (  open_hovbox  ),
       "[(---[(----[(---b)]b)]b)]" is printed as follows:

       (---
        (----
         (---)))

       If we replace the packing boxes by structural boxes ( open_box ), each break hint that precedes a closing
       parenthesis can show the boxes structure, if it leads to a new line; hence "[(---[(----[(---b)]b)]b)]" is
       printed like this:

       (---
        (----
         (---
         )
        )
       )

   Practical advice
       When writing a pretty-printing routine, follow these simple rules:

       -Boxes must be opened and closed consistently ( open_* and close_box must be nested like parentheses).

       -Never hesitate to open a box.

       -Output  many  break  hints,  otherwise the pretty-printer is in a bad situation where it tries to do its
       best, which is always "worse than your bad".

       -Do not try to force spacing using explicit spaces in the character strings.  For each space you want  in
       the  output  emit a break hint ( print_space () ), unless you explicitly don't want the line to be broken
       here. For instance, imagine you want to pretty print an OCaml definition, more precisely a let rec
       ident = expression value definition. You will probably treat  the  first  three  spaces  as  "unbreakable
       spaces"  and  write  them  directly  in the string constants for keywords, and print "let rec" before the
       identifier, and similarly write = to get an unbreakable space after  the  identifier;  in  contrast,  the
       space  after  the  =  sign  is  certainly  a  break hint, since breaking the line after = is a usual (and
       elegant) way to indent the expression part of a definition.  In short, it is  often  necessary  to  print
       unbreakable spaces; however, most of the time a space should be considered a break hint.

       -Do  not  try  to  force  new  lines,  let  the  pretty-printer  do  it for you: that's its only job.  In
       particular, do not use force_newline : this procedure effectively leads to a newline, but it also as  the
       unfortunate  side  effect  to  partially reinitialise the pretty-printing engine, so that the rest of the
       printing material is noticeably messed up.

       -Never put newline characters directly in the strings to be printed: pretty printing engine will consider
       this  newline  character as any other character written on the current line and this will completely mess
       up the output.  Instead of new line characters use line break hints: if those  break  hints  must  always
       result in new lines, it just means that the surrounding box must be a vertical box!

       -End  your  main  program  by  a print_newline () call, that flushes the pretty-printer tables (hence the
       output).  (Note that the top-level loop of the interactive system does it as  well,  just  before  a  new
       input.)

   Printing to stdout: using printf
       The format module provides a general printing facility "a la" printf. In addition to the usual conversion
       facility provided by printf, you can write pretty-printing indications directly inside the format  string
       (opening and closing boxes, indicating breaking hints, etc).

       Pretty-printing  annotations  are introduced by the @ symbol, directly into the string format. Almost any
       function of the Format module can be called from within a printf format string. For instance

       -" @[ " open a box (open_box 0).  You may precise the type as an extra argument. For instance  @[<hov  n>
       is equivalent to open_hovbox n .

       -" @] " close a box ( close_box () ).

       -" @ " output a breakable space ( print_space () ).

       -" @, " output a break hint ( print_cut () ).

       -" @;<n m> " emit a "full" break hint ( print_break n m ).

       -" @.  " end the pretty-printing, closing all the boxes still opened ( print_newline () ).

       For instance

       printf "@[<1>%s@ =@ %d@ %s@]@." "Prix TTC" 100 "Euros";; Prix TTC = 100 Euros - : unit = ()

   A concrete example
       Let  me  give  a  full  example:  the  shortest non trivial example you could imagine, that is the lambda
       calculus :)

       Thus the problem is to pretty-print the values of  a  concrete  data  type  that  models  a  language  of
       expressions that defines functions and their applications to arguments.

       First, I give the abstract syntax of lambda-terms:

       type lambda = | Lambda of string * lambda | Var of string | Apply of lambda * lambda ;;

       I use the format library to print the lambda-terms:

       open  Format;; let ident = print_string;; let kwd = print_string;; val ident : string -> unit = <fun> val
       kwd : string -> unit = <fun> let rec print_exp0 = function | Var s ->  ident s | lam  ->  open_hovbox  1;
       kwd  "(";  print_lambda  lam;  kwd  ")";  close_box  ()  and  print_app  = function | e -> open_hovbox 2;
       print_other_applications e; close_box () and print_other_applications f = match f with | Apply  (f,  arg)
       ->  print_app  f; print_space (); print_exp0 arg | f -> print_exp0 f and print_lambda = function | Lambda
       (s, lam) -> open_hovbox 1; kwd "\\"; ident s; kwd "."; print_space(); print_lambda lam; close_box()  |  e
       ->  print_app  e;; val print_app : lambda -> unit = <fun> val print_other_applications : lambda -> unit =
       <fun> val print_lambda : lambda -> unit = <fun>

   Most general pretty-printing: using fprintf
       We use the fprintf function to write the most versatile version  of  the  pretty-printing  functions  for
       lambda-terms.   Now,  the  functions  get  an extra argument, namely a pretty-printing formatter (the ppf
       argument) where printing will occur. This way the printing routines are  more  general,  since  they  can
       print  on  any formatter defined in the program (either printing to a file, or to stdout , to stderr , or
       even to a string).  Furthermore, the pretty-printing functions are now compositional, since they  may  be
       used in conjunction with the special %a conversion, that prints a fprintf argument with a user's supplied
       function (these user's supplied functions also have a formatter as first argument).

       Using fprintf , the lambda-terms printing routines can be written as follows:

       open Format;; let ident ppf s = fprintf ppf "%s" s;; let kwd ppf s = fprintf ppf "%s"  s;;  val  ident  :
       Format.formatter  ->  string  ->  unit val kwd : Format.formatter -> string -> unit let rec pr_exp0 ppf =
       function | Var s -> fprintf ppf "%a" ident s | lam -> fprintf ppf "@[<1>(%a)@]" pr_lambda lam and  pr_app
       ppf  =  function | e -> fprintf ppf "@[<2>%a@]" pr_other_applications e and pr_other_applications ppf f =
       match f with | Apply (f, arg) -> fprintf ppf "%a@ %a" pr_app f pr_exp0 arg |  f  ->  pr_exp0  ppf  f  and
       pr_lambda  ppf  =  function | Lambda (s, lam) -> fprintf ppf "@[<1>%a%a%a@ %a@]" kwd "\\" ident s kwd "."
       pr_lambda  lam  |  e  ->  pr_app  ppf  e  ;;  val  pr_app  :  Format.formatter  ->  lambda  ->  unit  val
       pr_other_applications  : Format.formatter -> lambda -> unit val pr_lambda : Format.formatter -> lambda ->
       unit

       Given those general printing routines, procedures to print to stdout  or  stderr  is  just  a  matter  of
       partial application:

       let   print_lambda  =  pr_lambda  std_formatter;;  let  eprint_lambda  =  pr_lambda  err_formatter;;  val
       print_lambda : lambda -> unit val eprint_lambda : lambda -> unit