= Structural selections for Kakoune kak-tree is a plugin for Kakoune which enables selection of syntax tree nodes. Parsing is performed with https://github.com/tree-sitter/tree-sitter[tree-sitter]. Status: proof of concept, interface and overall development direction could change drastically based on feedback. == Installation Replace `"rust javascript"` with a list of languages you need. Or use `all` to build all supported languages. Note that `all` build takes a long time, and resulting binary is quite fat which could have a negative impact on responsiveness. ---- git clone --recurse-submodules cargo install --path . --force --features "rust javascript" cp rc/tree.kak ~/.config/kak/autoload/ ---- Look at `Cargo.toml` for a full list of supported languages. It is possible to check programmaticaly if kak-tree was built with support for a given filetype: ---- kak-tree --do-you-understand rust ---- If language is supported then exit code is 0 otherwise it's non-zero (1 at the moment, but it is not guaranteed in future). == Usage Tree-sitter parsers produce very detailed syntax tree, many elements of which are not interesting for day-to-day selection purposes. kak-tree introduces the concept of a _visible_ node. Node is _visible_ when: . Node is named in the tree-sitter grammar for the given language (as opposed to anonymous nodes, http://tree-sitter.github.io/tree-sitter/using-parsers#named-vs-anonymous-nodes[more]). . Either there is no white/blacklist for the given filetype or node kind is whitelisted or not blacklisted. See <> for details about white/blacklisting. Most of the kak-tree commands operate on _visible_ nodes and skip not _visible_ ones. [cols=2*] |=== | tree-select-parent-node [] | Select the closest visible ancestor or ancestor of KIND when provided. | tree-select-next-node [] | Select the closest visible next sibling or next sibling of KIND when provided. | tree-select-previous-node [] | Select the closest visible previous sibling or previous sibling of KIND when provided. | tree-select-children [] | Select all immediate visible children or all descendants matching KIND when provided. | tree-select-first-child [] | Select the first immediate visible children or the first descendant matching KIND when provided. | tree-node-sexp | Show info box with a syntax tree of the main selection parent. |=== == Configuration kak-tree supports configuration via a configuration file. As for now there is no default path to load the configuration file, and it must be given using CLI option `--config` or `-c` for short: ---- set global tree_cmd 'kak-tree -c /path/to/kak-tree.toml' ---- === Filetype configuration Configuration for specific filetypes should be provided like this: ---- [filetype.rust] blacklist = ["identifier", "scoped_identifier", "string_literal"] whitelist = ["function_item"] group.identifier = ["identifier", "scoped_identifier"] group.fn = ["function_item"] [filetype.javascript] group.fn = ["function", "arrow_function"] ---- Configuration under the `[filetype.default]` key will be used for all filetypes without configuration. Specific filetype configuration _doesn't_ extend default configuration but rather overwrites it. ==== White/blacklisting If `whitelist` array is provided then kak-tree selection will skip nodes which kinds are not whitelisted. If `blacklist` array is provided then kak-tree selection will skip nodes which kinds are blacklisted. NOTE: `whitelist` takes precedence over `blacklist`. In the Rust example above kak-tree would expand selection up to the function definition, ignoring other node kinds. NOTE: `tree-node-sexp` command is useful for exploring node kinds which appear in the specific code. Whitelisting or blacklisting node kinds could be tedious as tree-sitter parsers define many of them, but it also could be rewarding as you will be able to quickly modify selection in scopes which matter for you with fewer keystrokes. ==== Kind groups Groups of node kinds serve a two-fold purpose: . Groups allow matching functionally similar node kinds (i.e. `identifier` and `scoped_identifier` in Rust) by a single query. . Groups allow matching functionally similar nodes across filetypes (i.e. `function_item` in Rust and `function` in JavaScript) as tree-sitter parsers don't use uniform node kind names. NOTE: `whitelist` and `blacklist` options doesn't expand groups yet. == License For kak-tree see UNLICENSE file. For tree-sitter and its parsers look at their repositories.