Add support for basic auto-indenting of sh code.
This attempts to support a simple formatting and intentation style for plain sh syntax (and other sh-compatible code which doesn't stray too far from portable sh). The complexity of sh syntax means that we have to be opinionated - attempting to be more flexible would require extensive context awareness, and would require something more akin to a proper autoformatting tool or a language server. The formatting style used here makes use of vertical whitespace as the primary delimiter, so that code ends up looking like this: if [ $foo = "bar" ]; then thing1 else thing2 fi for i in foo bar baz; do thing1 thing2 done case "$foo" in bar) thing1;; baz) thing1 thing2 ;; esac Since the formatting style used is very opinionated the 'sh_auto_indent' option can be used to disable auto-indentation, with the default set to 'no'.
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@ -5,6 +5,10 @@ hook global BufCreate .*\.(z|ba|c|k|mk)?sh(rc|_profile)? %{
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hook global WinSetOption filetype=sh %{
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require-module sh
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set-option window static_words %opt{sh_static_words}
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hook window ModeChange insert:.* -group sh-trim-indent sh-trim-indent
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hook window InsertChar \n -group sh-indent maybe-sh-indent-on-new-line
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hook -once -always window WinSetOption filetype=.* %{ remove-hooks window sh-.+ }
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}
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hook -group sh-highlight global WinSetOption filetype=sh %{
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@ -14,6 +18,9 @@ hook -group sh-highlight global WinSetOption filetype=sh %{
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provide-module sh %[
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declare-option -docstring "attempt to automatically indent shell code. Defaults to no." \
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bool sh_auto_indent no
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add-highlighter shared/sh regions
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add-highlighter shared/sh/code default-region group
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add-highlighter shared/sh/double_string region %{(?<!\\)(?:\\\\)*\K"} %{(?<!\\)(?:\\\\)*"} group
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@ -48,4 +55,137 @@ add-highlighter shared/sh/code/function regex ^\h*(\w+)\h*\(\) 1:function
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add-highlighter shared/sh/code/unscoped_expansion regex \$(\w+|#|@|\?|\$|!|-|\*) 0:value
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add-highlighter shared/sh/double_string/expansion regex \$(\w+|\{.+?\}) 0:value
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# Commands
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# ‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾
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# Check sh_auto_indent option before attempting to auto-indent anything
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define-command -hidden maybe-sh-indent-on-new-line %{
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evaluate-commands %sh{
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if [ "${kak_opt_sh_auto_indent}" = true ]; then
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echo "sh-indent-on-new-line"
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fi
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}
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}
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define-command -hidden sh-trim-indent %{
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# remove trailing white spaces
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try %{ execute-keys -draft -itersel <a-x> s \h+$ <ret> d }
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}
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# This is at best an approximation, since shell syntax is very complex.
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# Also note that this targets plain sh syntax, not bash - bash adds a whole
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# other level of complexity. If your bash code is fairly portable this will
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# probably work.
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#
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# Of necessity, this is also fairly opinionated about indentation styles.
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# Doing it "properly" would require far more context awareness than we can
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# bring to this kind of thing.
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define-command -hidden sh-indent-on-new-line %[
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evaluate-commands -draft -itersel %[
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# copy '#' comment prefix and following white spaces
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try %{ execute-keys -draft k <a-x> s ^\h*\K#\h* <ret> y gh j P }
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# preserve previous line indent
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try %{ execute-keys -draft \; K <a-&> }
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# filter previous line
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try %{ execute-keys -draft k : sh-trim-indent <ret> }
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# Indent loop syntax, e.g.:
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# for foo in bar; do
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# things
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# done
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#
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# or:
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#
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# while foo; do
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# things
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# done
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#
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# or equivalently:
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#
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# while foo
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# do
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# things
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# done
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#
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# indent after do
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try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> do$ <ret> j <a-gt> }
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# deindent after done
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try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> done$ <ret> <a-lt> j K <a-&> }
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# Indent if/then/else syntax, e.g.:
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# if [ $foo = $bar ]; then
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# things
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# else
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# other_things
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# fi
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#
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# or equivalently:
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# if [ $foo = $bar ]
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# then
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# things
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# else
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# other_things
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# fi
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#
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# indent after then
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try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> then$ <ret> j <a-gt> }
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# deindent after fi
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try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> fi$ <ret> <a-lt> j K <a-&> }
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# deindent and reindent after else - deindent the else, then back
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# down and return to the previous indent level.
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try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> else$ <ret> <a-lt> j }
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# Indent case syntax, e.g.:
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# case "$foo" in
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# bar) thing1;;
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# baz)
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# things
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# ;;
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# *)
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# default_things
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# ;;
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# esac
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#
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# or equivalently:
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# case "$foo"
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# in
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# bar) thing1;;
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# esac
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#
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# indent after in
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try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> in$ <ret> j <a-gt> }
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# deindent after esac
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try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> esac$ <ret> <a-lt> j K <a-&> }
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# indent after )
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try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> ^\s*\(?[^(]+[^)]\)$ <ret> j <a-gt> }
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# deindent after ;;
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try %{ execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> ^\s*\;\;$ <ret> j <a-lt> }
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# Indent compound commands as logical blocks, e.g.:
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# {
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# thing1
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# thing2
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# }
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#
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# or in a function definition:
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# foo () {
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# thing1
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# thing2
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# }
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#
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# We don't handle () delimited compond commands - these are technically very
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# similar, but the use cases are quite different and much less common.
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#
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# Note that in this context the '{' and '}' characters are reserved
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# words, and hence must be surrounded by a token separator - typically
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# white space (including a newline), though technically it can also be
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# ';'. Only vertical white space makes sense in this context, though,
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# since the syntax denotes a logical block, not a simple compound command.
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try %= execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> (\s|^)\{$ <ret> j <a-gt> =
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# deindent closing }
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try %= execute-keys -draft <space> k <a-x> <a-k> ^\s*\}$ <ret> <a-lt> j K <a-&> =
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]
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]
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]
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