From 2fc85c6c68ff25df35cf4a9979a97a902ec34313 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: omentic Date: Wed, 1 Nov 2023 04:44:42 +0000 Subject: deploy: 9663740245e2c18e160f6563d2f114f59d27b7c9 --- 23.10.1/guides/rainbow_bracket_queries.html | 323 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 323 insertions(+) create mode 100644 23.10.1/guides/rainbow_bracket_queries.html (limited to '23.10.1/guides/rainbow_bracket_queries.html') diff --git a/23.10.1/guides/rainbow_bracket_queries.html b/23.10.1/guides/rainbow_bracket_queries.html new file mode 100644 index 00000000..98f11d99 --- /dev/null +++ b/23.10.1/guides/rainbow_bracket_queries.html @@ -0,0 +1,323 @@ + + + + + + Adding rainbow bracket queries + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
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Adding Rainbow Bracket Queries

+

Helix uses rainbows.scm tree-sitter query files to provide rainbow bracket +functionality.

+

Tree-sitter queries are documented in the tree-sitter online documentation. +If you're writing queries for the first time, be sure to check out the section +on syntax highlighting queries and on query syntax.

+

Rainbow queries have two captures: @rainbow.scope and @rainbow.bracket. +@rainbow.scope should capture any node that increases the nesting level +while @rainbow.bracket should capture any bracket nodes. Put another way: +@rainbow.scope switches to the next rainbow color for all nodes in the tree +under it while @rainbow.bracket paints captured nodes with the current +rainbow color.

+

For an example, let's add rainbow queries for the tree-sitter query (TSQ) +language itself. These queries will go into a +runtime/queries/tsq/rainbows.scm file in the repository root.

+

First we'll add the @rainbow.bracket captures. TSQ only has parentheses and +square brackets:

+
["(" ")" "[" "]"] @rainbow.bracket
+
+

The ordering of the nodes within the alternation (square brackets) is not +taken into consideration.

+
+

Note: Why are these nodes quoted? Most syntax highlights capture text +surrounded by parentheses. These are named nodes and correspond to the +names of rules in the grammar. Brackets are usually written in tree-sitter +grammars as literal strings, for example:

+
{
+  // ...
+  arguments: seq("(", repeat($.argument), ")"),
+  // ...
+}
+
+

Nodes written as literal strings in tree-sitter grammars may be captured +in queries with those same literal strings.

+
+

Then we'll add @rainbow.scope captures. The easiest way to do this is to +view the grammar.js file in the tree-sitter grammar's repository. For TSQ, +that file is here. As we scroll down the grammar.js, we +see that the (alternation), (L36) (group) (L57), (named_node) (L59), +(predicate) (L87) and (wildcard_node) (L97) nodes all contain literal +parentheses or square brackets in their definitions. These nodes are all +direct parents of brackets and happen to also be the nodes we want to change +to the next rainbow color, so we capture them as @rainbow.scope.

+
[
+  (group)
+  (named_node)
+  (wildcard_node)
+  (predicate)
+  (alternation)
+] @rainbow.scope
+
+

This strategy works as a rule of thumb for most programming and configuration +languages. Markup languages can be trickier and may take additional +experimentation to find the correct nodes to use for scopes and brackets.

+

The :tree-sitter-subtree command shows the syntax tree under the primary +selection in S-expression format and can be a useful tool for determining how +to write a query.

+

Properties

+

The rainbow.include-children property may be applied to @rainbow.scope +captures. By default, all @rainbow.bracket captures must be direct descendant +of a node captured with @rainbow.scope in a syntax tree in order to be +highlighted. The rainbow.include-children property disables that check and +allows @rainbow.bracket captures to be highlighted if they are direct or +indirect descendants of some node captured with @rainbow.scope.

+

For example, this property is used in the HTML rainbow queries.

+

For a document like <a>link</a>, the syntax tree is:

+
(element                   ; <a>link</a>
+  (start_tag               ; <a>
+    (tag_name))            ; a
+  (text)                   ; link
+  (end_tag                 ; </a>
+    (tag_name)))           ; a
+
+

If we want to highlight the <, > and </ nodes with rainbow colors, we +capture them as @rainbow.bracket:

+
["<" ">" "</"] @rainbow.bracket
+
+

And we capture (element) as @rainbow.scope because (element) nodes nest +within each other: they increment the nesting level and switch to the next +color in the rainbow.

+
(element) @rainbow.scope
+
+

But this combination of @rainbow.scope and @rainbow.bracket will not +highlight any nodes. <, > and </ are children of the (start_tag) and +(end_tag) nodes. We can't capture (start_tag) and (end_tag) as +@rainbow.scope because they don't nest other elements. We can fix this case +by removing the requirement that <, > and </ are direct descendants of +(element) using the rainbow.include-children property.

+
((element) @rainbow.scope
+ (#set! rainbow.include-children))
+
+

With this property set, <, >, and </ will highlight with rainbow colors +even though they aren't direct descendents of the (element) node.

+

rainbow.include-children is not necessary for the vast majority of programming +languages. It is only necessary when the node that increments the nesting level +(changes rainbow color) is not the direct parent of the bracket node.

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