home/rc/filetype/sh.kak
Simon Fowler b2459f5ecb Remove the sh_auto_indent option.
We now auto indent by default, with the option to disable it handled by
the `diabled_hooks` mechanism.
2019-06-29 12:34:14 +10:00

180 lines
6.4 KiB
Plaintext

hook global BufCreate .*\.(z|ba|c|k|mk)?sh(rc|_profile)? %{
set-option buffer filetype sh
}
hook global WinSetOption filetype=sh %{
require-module sh
set-option window static_words %opt{sh_static_words}
hook window ModeChange insert:.* -group sh-trim-indent sh-trim-indent
hook window InsertChar \n -group sh-indent sh-indent-on-new-line
hook -once -always window WinSetOption filetype=.* %{ remove-hooks window sh-.+ }
}
hook -group sh-highlight global WinSetOption filetype=sh %{
add-highlighter window/sh ref sh
hook -once -always window WinSetOption filetype=.* %{ remove-highlighter window/sh }
}
provide-module sh %[
add-highlighter shared/sh regions
add-highlighter shared/sh/code default-region group
add-highlighter shared/sh/double_string region %{(?<!\\)(?:\\\\)*\K"} %{(?<!\\)(?:\\\\)*"} group
add-highlighter shared/sh/single_string region %{(?<!\\)(?:\\\\)*\K'} %{'} fill string
add-highlighter shared/sh/expansion region '\$\{' '\}|\n' fill value
add-highlighter shared/sh/comment region '(?<!\$)(?<!\$\{)#' '$' fill comment
add-highlighter shared/sh/heredoc region -match-capture '<<-?''?(\w+)''?' '^\t*(\w+)$' fill string
add-highlighter shared/sh/double_string/fill fill string
evaluate-commands %sh{
# Grammar
keywords="alias bind builtin caller case cd command coproc declare do done
echo elif else enable esac exit fi for function help
if in let local logout mapfile printf read readarray
readonly return select set shift source test then
time type typeset ulimit unalias until while break continue"
join() { sep=$2; eval set -- $1; IFS="$sep"; echo "$*"; }
# Add the language's grammar to the static completion list
printf %s\\n "declare-option str-list sh_static_words $(join "${keywords}" ' ')"
# Highlight keywords
printf %s "add-highlighter shared/sh/code/ regex \b($(join "${keywords}" '|'))\b 0:keyword"
}
add-highlighter shared/sh/code/operators regex [\[\]\(\)&|]{1,2} 0:operator
add-highlighter shared/sh/code/variable regex (\w+)= 1:variable
add-highlighter shared/sh/code/function regex ^\h*(\w+)\h*\(\) 1:function
add-highlighter shared/sh/code/unscoped_expansion regex \$(\w+|#|@|\?|\$|!|-|\*) 0:value
add-highlighter shared/sh/double_string/expansion regex \$(\w+|\{.+?\}) 0:value
# Commands
# ‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾
define-command -hidden sh-trim-indent %{
# remove trailing white spaces
try %{ execute-keys -draft -itersel <a-x> s \h+$ <ret> d }
}
# This is at best an approximation, since shell syntax is very complex.
# Also note that this targets plain sh syntax, not bash - bash adds a whole
# other level of complexity. If your bash code is fairly portable this will
# probably work.
#
# Of necessity, this is also fairly opinionated about indentation styles.
# Doing it "properly" would require far more context awareness than we can
# bring to this kind of thing.
define-command -hidden sh-indent-on-new-line %[
evaluate-commands -draft -itersel %[
# copy '#' comment prefix and following white spaces
try %{ execute-keys -draft k <a-x> s ^\h*\K#\h* <ret> y gh j P }
# preserve previous line indent
try %{ execute-keys -draft \; K <a-&> }
# filter previous line
try %{ execute-keys -draft k : sh-trim-indent <ret> }
# Indent loop syntax, e.g.:
# for foo in bar; do
# things
# done
#
# or:
#
# while foo; do
# things
# done
#
# or equivalently:
#
# while foo
# do
# things
# done
#
# indent after do
try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> do$ <ret> j <a-gt> }
# deindent after done
try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> done$ <ret> <a-lt> j K <a-&> }
# Indent if/then/else syntax, e.g.:
# if [ $foo = $bar ]; then
# things
# else
# other_things
# fi
#
# or equivalently:
# if [ $foo = $bar ]
# then
# things
# else
# other_things
# fi
#
# indent after then
try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> then$ <ret> j <a-gt> }
# deindent after fi
try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> fi$ <ret> <a-lt> j K <a-&> }
# deindent and reindent after else - deindent the else, then back
# down and return to the previous indent level.
try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> else$ <ret> <a-lt> j }
# Indent case syntax, e.g.:
# case "$foo" in
# bar) thing1;;
# baz)
# things
# ;;
# *)
# default_things
# ;;
# esac
#
# or equivalently:
# case "$foo"
# in
# bar) thing1;;
# esac
#
# indent after in
try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> in$ <ret> j <a-gt> }
# deindent after esac
try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> esac$ <ret> <a-lt> j K <a-&> }
# indent after )
try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> ^\s*\(?[^(]+[^)]\)$ <ret> j <a-gt> }
# deindent after ;;
try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> ^\s*\;\;$ <ret> j <a-lt> }
# Indent compound commands as logical blocks, e.g.:
# {
# thing1
# thing2
# }
#
# or in a function definition:
# foo () {
# thing1
# thing2
# }
#
# We don't handle () delimited compond commands - these are technically very
# similar, but the use cases are quite different and much less common.
#
# Note that in this context the '{' and '}' characters are reserved
# words, and hence must be surrounded by a token separator - typically
# white space (including a newline), though technically it can also be
# ';'. Only vertical white space makes sense in this context, though,
# since the syntax denotes a logical block, not a simple compound command.
try %= execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> (\s|^)\{$ <ret> j <a-gt> =
# deindent closing }
try %= execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> ^\s*\}$ <ret> <a-lt> j K <a-&> =
]
]
]