Skip to content

nvim-treesitter/nvim-tree-docs

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

67 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

nvim-tree-docs

Highly configurable documentation generator using treesitter.

This plugin is experimental!

Setup

nvim-tree-docs is a module for the nvim-treesitter plugin. You can install both by doing (vim-plug):

Plug 'nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter'
Plug 'nvim-treesitter/nvim-tree-docs'

You can configure nvim-tree-docs as part of your nvim-treesitter configuration.

require "nvim-treesitter.configs".setup {
  tree_docs = {enable = true}
}

Usage

There are two key bindings provided by default:

  • doc_node_at_cursor: gdd
  • doc_all_in_range: gdd (Visual)

These can be configured through the keymap option in the config.

Advanced configuration

This plugin is extremely configurable. Most documentation is standardized, but our projects and personal preferences for documentation vary. This plugin aims to add total customization to the user.

Core concepts

There three key components to how this plugin operates.

  • processors -> Processors generate lines of content within a template.
  • slots -> Slots are positions where a processor can output it's content.
  • templates -> Templates are a list of slots, basically the ordering of processors. These are by kind (Ex: function).
  • specs -> Specs are a collection of templates and processors (Ex: jsdoc).

Basic example

Here is a basic example of how this works (psuedo code).

local processors = {
  my_processor = function() -- The processor
    return "Output!!!"
  end
}

local template = { -- template
  "my_processor", -- slot
  "my_processor"  -- slot
}

This example would generate the lines

Output!!!
Output!!!

You get the idea... The above code doesn't actually do anything, but is just to illustrate the point.

Configuring slots

The key advantage is they can be toggled on and off. For example, lets say you like to include an @author tag on all your jsdoc classes. You can enable the author slot to generate an author tag. This is done in the configuration for the spec.

require "nvim-treesitter.configs".setup {
  tree_docs = {
    enable = true,
    spec_config = {
      jsdoc = {
        slots = {
          class = {author = true}
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

This will generate the following output.

/**
 * The person class
 * @author
 */
class Person {}

Pretty cool... but this is using the default processor for the spec, which in the case of jsdoc, just generates a tag. What if we could modify the behavior of that processor? We can configure author processor in the same config.

require "nvim-treesitter.configs".setup {
  tree_docs = {
    enable = true,
    spec_config = {
      jsdoc = {
        slots = {
          class = {author = true}
        },
        processors = {
          author = function()
            return " * @author Steven Sojka"
          end
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

This will generate.

/**
 * The person class
 * @author Steven Sojka
 */
class Person {}

Processors can return a single line or multiple lines. Here's an advanced sample that will prompt the user for an issue ticket number. If the user doesn't enter anything the tag won't get generated.

require "nvim-treesitter.configs".setup {
  tree_docs = {
    enable = true,
    spec_config = {
      jsdoc = {
        slots = {
          class = {see = true, author = true}
        },
        processors = {
          author = function() return " * @author Steven Sojka" end
          see = function()
            local ticket = vim.fn.input("Ticket: ")
            return ticket ~= "" and (" * @see " .. ticket) or []
          end
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

This will result in the following (assuming PROJ-X-123456 was inputted).

/**
 * The person class
 * @author Steven Sojka
 * @see PROJ-X-123456
 */
class Person {}

Configuring templates

Templates aren't traditional templates. It's basically just a set of slots in a specific order. You can configure the template in the config.

require "nvim-treesitter.configs".setup {
  tree_docs = {
    enable = true,
    spec_config = {
      jsdoc = {
        slots = {
          class = {custom = true, author = true}
        },
        templates = {
          class = {
            "doc-start" -- Note, these are implicit slots and can't be turned off and vary between specs.
            "custom"
            "author"
            "doc-end"
            "%content%"
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

This will generate.

/**
 * The person class
 * @custom
 * @author
 */
class Person {}

Note, in the above example, if we would have left out the custom slot in the template, it would not have output anything.

Builtin processors

There are some builtin processors that work across all specs (unless overridden, which is possible).

  • %content% -> This will output the content line, in our case above it would be the class declaration line. This makes it possible to wrap or put the documentation below the content line.
  • %rest% -> This will output all slots that are enabled, but do not have an explicit slot in the template.

Template context

This still needs to be documented...

Writing language queries

Queries contain a couple conventions that are shared amongst all languages.

Query tag syntax is @<kind>.<property>

The <kind> tag corresponds with a template in the language specific template file. Properties can be accessed within a processor as the first argument.

For example, a simple processor that gets the name of a nod

function(ctx) return ctx.get_text(ctx.name.node) end

This would correspond to a tag @<kind>.name.

Properties are not predefined and can differ from language to language, but there a couple that have special behavior.

@<kind>.definition

This is the most important one and is required for each <kind>. This defines the node that defines the <kind>. If multiple queries match the same definition node, those entries will be merged together. This is very important for function parameters where multiple matches need to be grouped under the same function definition.

For example, that this javascript query.

(function_declaration
  name: (identifier) @function.name
  body: (statement_block
    (return_statement)? @function.return)) @function.definition

(export_statement
  (function_declaration) @function.definition) @function.export

This will match both these functions.

function test() {}

export function test() {}

The key difference is one will have an export node associated with it. Both queries match the function that is exported but they get merged into a single data model because both @function.definition tags match the same node at the same position.

@<kind>.<kind>.definition

Kind queries can be nested to define multiple different node merge points. This can be done by providing multiple, nested definition tags. For example in function parameters. A nested <kind> can be thought of as a list of similiar items.

@<kind>.start_point

When docs are inserted into the document, it will insert the docs at the indentation and position of the definition node (@<kind>.definition). This can be changed, if you need to keep the same definition node, but need a different start point to insert.

For example, that this javascript query.

(function_declaration
  name: (identifier) @function.name
  body: (statement_block
    (return_statement)? @function.return_statement)) @function.definition

(export_statement
  (function_declaration) @function.definition) @function.start_point @function.export

If we doc'ed the following functions WITHOUT the root tag, we would get this:

/**
 * test
 */
function test() {}

       /**
        * test
        */
export function test() {}

Including the start_point tag flags the export_statement node as the root node INSTEAD of the definition node.

@<kind>.end_point

This flags the end node that document can be triggered from. For example, the end of a function signature. This is important, because it allows us to trigger docs on a multiline signature.

For example, that this javascript query.

(
  (comment)+? @function.doc
  (function_declaration
    name: (identifier) @function.name
    parameters: (formal_parameters) @function.end_point
    body: (statement_block
      (return_statement)? @function.return)) @function.definition
)

This flags the parameters node as the end node for the signature. This allows us to doc signatures that look like this.

function test(
  someVeryLongNameThatRequiresUsToWrap,
  blorg, // <- We can trigger here to generate docs with no problem
  boom
) {
  return;
}

The furtherest end node will be used if there are overlapping end_points. You should always have an end_point defined in order to avoid unwanted document triggers.

@<kind>.doc

The doc references the current doc that is preceding the definition node. This gives access to existing documentation to either parse, update, or remove with updated information.

Roadmap

  • Filetype aliases
  • Template marks
  • More doc specs
  • Doc commands that don't require a treesitter node (jsdoc modules)
  • Predifined processors that can be swapped in... (think promptable descriptions?)

About

Code documentation built with treesitter

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published