class Ripper
Ripper
is a Ruby script parser.
You can get information from the parser with event-based style. Information such as abstract syntax trees or simple lexical analysis of the Ruby program.
Usage¶ ↑
Ripper
provides an easy interface for parsing your program into a symbolic expression tree (or S-expression).
Understanding the output of the parser may come as a challenge, it’s recommended you use PP
to format the output for legibility.
require 'ripper' require 'pp' pp Ripper.sexp('def hello(world) "Hello, #{world}!"; end') #=> [:program, [[:def, [:@ident, "hello", [1, 4]], [:paren, [:params, [[:@ident, "world", [1, 10]]], nil, nil, nil, nil, nil, nil]], [:bodystmt, [[:string_literal, [:string_content, [:@tstring_content, "Hello, ", [1, 18]], [:string_embexpr, [[:var_ref, [:@ident, "world", [1, 27]]]]], [:@tstring_content, "!", [1, 33]]]]], nil, nil, nil]]]]
You can see in the example above, the expression starts with :program
.
From here, a method definition at :def
, followed by the method’s identifier :@ident
. After the method’s identifier comes the parentheses :paren
and the method parameters under :params
.
Next is the method body, starting at :bodystmt
(stmt
meaning statement), which contains the full definition of the method.
In our case, we’re simply returning a String
, so next we have the :string_literal
expression.
Within our :string_literal
you’ll notice two @tstring_content
, this is the literal part for Hello,
and !
. Between the two @tstring_content
statements is a :string_embexpr
, where embexpr is an embedded expression. Our expression consists of a local variable, or var_ref
, with the identifier (@ident
) of world
.
Resources¶ ↑
Requirements¶ ↑
-
ruby 1.9 (support CVS HEAD only)
-
bison 1.28 or later (Other yaccs do not work)
License¶ ↑
Ruby License.
-
Minero Aoki
-
aamine@loveruby.net
Constants
- EVENTS
-
This array contains name of all ripper events.
- PARSER_EVENTS
-
This array contains name of parser events.
- SCANNER_EVENTS
-
This array contains name of scanner events.
Public Class Methods
Source
# File ext/ripper/lib/ripper/lexer.rb, line 51 def Ripper.lex(src, filename = '-', lineno = 1, **kw) Lexer.new(src, filename, lineno).lex(**kw) end
Tokenizes the Ruby program and returns an array of an array, which is formatted like [[lineno, column], type, token, state]
. The filename
argument is mostly ignored. By default, this method does not handle syntax errors in src
, use the raise_errors
keyword to raise a SyntaxError
for an error in src
.
require 'ripper' require 'pp' pp Ripper.lex("def m(a) nil end") #=> [[[1, 0], :on_kw, "def", FNAME ], [[1, 3], :on_sp, " ", FNAME ], [[1, 4], :on_ident, "m", ENDFN ], [[1, 5], :on_lparen, "(", BEG|LABEL], [[1, 6], :on_ident, "a", ARG ], [[1, 7], :on_rparen, ")", ENDFN ], [[1, 8], :on_sp, " ", BEG ], [[1, 9], :on_kw, "nil", END ], [[1, 12], :on_sp, " ", END ], [[1, 13], :on_kw, "end", END ]]
Source
Source
# File ext/ripper/lib/ripper/sexp.rb, line 35 def Ripper.sexp(src, filename = '-', lineno = 1, raise_errors: false) builder = SexpBuilderPP.new(src, filename, lineno) sexp = builder.parse if builder.error? if raise_errors raise SyntaxError, builder.error end else sexp end end
- EXPERIMENTAL
-
Parses
src
and create S-exp tree. Returns more readable tree rather thanRipper.sexp_raw
. This method is mainly for developer use. Thefilename
argument is mostly ignored. By default, this method does not handle syntax errors insrc
, returningnil
in such cases. Use theraise_errors
keyword to raise aSyntaxError
for an error insrc
.require 'ripper' require 'pp' pp Ripper.sexp("def m(a) nil end") #=> [:program, [[:def, [:@ident, "m", [1, 4]], [:paren, [:params, [[:@ident, "a", [1, 6]]], nil, nil, nil, nil, nil, nil]], [:bodystmt, [[:var_ref, [:@kw, "nil", [1, 9]]]], nil, nil, nil]]]]
Source
# File ext/ripper/lib/ripper/sexp.rb, line 71 def Ripper.sexp_raw(src, filename = '-', lineno = 1, raise_errors: false) builder = SexpBuilder.new(src, filename, lineno) sexp = builder.parse if builder.error? if raise_errors raise SyntaxError, builder.error end else sexp end end
- EXPERIMENTAL
-
Parses
src
and create S-exp tree. This method is mainly for developer use. Thefilename
argument is mostly ignored. By default, this method does not handle syntax errors insrc
, returningnil
in such cases. Use theraise_errors
keyword to raise aSyntaxError
for an error insrc
.require 'ripper' require 'pp' pp Ripper.sexp_raw("def m(a) nil end") #=> [:program, [:stmts_add, [:stmts_new], [:def, [:@ident, "m", [1, 4]], [:paren, [:params, [[:@ident, "a", [1, 6]]], nil, nil, nil]], [:bodystmt, [:stmts_add, [:stmts_new], [:var_ref, [:@kw, "nil", [1, 9]]]], nil, nil, nil]]]]
Source
# File ext/ripper/lib/ripper/lexer.rb, line 275 def Ripper.slice(src, pattern, n = 0) if m = token_match(src, pattern) then m.string(n) else nil end end
- EXPERIMENTAL
-
Parses
src
and return a string which was matched topattern
.pattern
should be described asRegexp
.require 'ripper' p Ripper.slice('def m(a) nil end', 'ident') #=> "m" p Ripper.slice('def m(a) nil end', '[ident lparen rparen]+') #=> "m(a)" p Ripper.slice("<<EOS\nstring\nEOS", 'heredoc_beg nl $(tstring_content*) heredoc_end', 1) #=> "string\n"
Source
# File ext/ripper/lib/ripper/lexer.rb, line 25 def Ripper.tokenize(src, filename = '-', lineno = 1, **kw) Lexer.new(src, filename, lineno).tokenize(**kw) end
Tokenizes the Ruby program and returns an array of strings. The filename
and lineno
arguments are mostly ignored, since the return value is just the tokenized input. By default, this method does not handle syntax errors in src
, use the raise_errors
keyword to raise a SyntaxError
for an error in src
.
p Ripper.tokenize("def m(a) nil end") # => ["def", " ", "m", "(", "a", ")", " ", "nil", " ", "end"]
Private Instance Methods
Source
# File ext/ripper/lib/ripper/core.rb, line 63 def compile_error(msg) end
This method is called when the parser found syntax error.
Source
# File ext/ripper/lib/ripper/core.rb, line 54 def warn(fmt, *args) end
This method is called when weak warning is produced by the parser. fmt
and args
is printf style.
Source
# File ext/ripper/lib/ripper/core.rb, line 59 def warning(fmt, *args) end
This method is called when strong warning is produced by the parser. fmt
and args
is printf style.