[Rd] Source references from the parser
Duncan Murdoch
murdoch at stats.uwo.ca
Wed Dec 20 05:51:15 CET 2006
On 12/19/2006 11:44 PM, Duncan Murdoch wrote:
> A few days ago Brian Ripley pointed out a bug with the design of this,
> so I've changed it. See the notes below if you were trying to work with it.
>
> On 11/25/2006 1:51 PM, Duncan Murdoch wrote:
>> I have just committed some changes to R-devel (which will become R 2.5.0
>> next spring) to add source references to parsed R code. Here's a
>> description of the scheme:
>>
>> The design is done through 2 old-style classes.
>>
>> "srcfile" corresponds to a source file: it contains a filename, the
>> working directory in which that filename is to be interpreted, the last
>> modified timestamp of the file at the time the object is created, plus
>> some internal components. It is implemented as an environment so that
>> there can be multiple references to it.
>>
>> "srcref" is a reference to a particular range of characters (as the
>> parser sees them; I think that really means bytes, but I haven't tested
>> with MBCSs) in a source file. It is implemented as a vector of 4
>> integers (first line, first column, last line, last column), with the
>> srcfile as an attribute.
>>
>> The parser attaches a srcref attribute to each complete statement as it
>> gets parsed, if option("useSource") is TRUE. (I've left the old source
>> attribute in place as well for functions; I think it won't be needed in
>> the long run, but it is needed now.)
I didn't notice an error in the paragraph above until just now: the
option isn't "useSource", it's "keep.source". "useSource" is the name
of an argument used when deciding how to print something.
> This is the part that changed. The srcref attribute is no longer
> attached to each statement, because some statements are objects that
> can't have attributes. Now a list of srcref objects is attached to the
> container of the statements: the expression() list in the case of
> parse(), or the call to "{" which is how the parser stores a block of code.
>> When printing an object with a srcref attribute, print.default tries to
>> read the srcfile to obtain the text. If it fails, it falls back to an
>> ugly display of the reference. Using a new argument useSource=FALSE in
>> printing will stop this attempt: when printing language, it will
>> deparse; when printing a srcref, it will print the ugly fallback.
>>
>> source(echo=T) will echo all the lines of the file including comments
>> and formatting. demo() does the same, and I would guess Sweave will do
>> this too, but I haven't tested that yet. I think this will improve
>> Sweave output, but will need changes to the input file: people may have
>> comments there that they don't want shown. Some sort of
>> "useSource=FALSE" option will need to be added.
>
> As discussed, this facility was added to Sweave, but currently (and
> probably permanently) defaults to not being turned on.
>
>> The browser used with debug() etc. will display statements as they were
>> formatted in the original source. It will not display leading or
>> following comments, but will display embedded comments.
>
> I think the debugger will now only use deparsed output, since the srcref
> is no longer part of the statement.
>> Parsing errors display the name of the source file that was parsed, and
>> display verbose error messages describing what's wrong. This display
>> could still be improved, e.g. by displaying the whole source line with a
>> pointer to the error, instead of just the text up to the location of the
>> error.
>>
>> I plan to add some sort of equivalent of C "#line" directives, so that
>> preprocessed source files (e.g. the concatenated source that is
>> installed) can include references back to the original source files, for
>> syntax error reporting, and/or debugging. This will require
>> modification of the INSTALL process, but I haven't started on this yet.
>
> I haven't done this yet, and I'm not sure I'll have time to get to it
> before 2.5.0.
>
>> It would probably be a good idea to have some utility functions to play
>> with the srcref records for debugging and other purposes, but I haven't
>> written those yet. For example, the current source record on a function
>> could be replaced with a srcref, but only by expanding the srcref to
>> include some of the surrounding comments.
>
> This hasn't been done either.
>> Comments and problem reports are welcome.
>
> That's still true.
>
> Duncan Murdoch
>> Duncan Murdoch
>>
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>
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