From: "Dan0042 (Daniel DeLorme) via ruby-core" Date: 2025-01-08T14:15:54+00:00 Subject: [ruby-core:120557] [Ruby master Feature#21005] Update the source location method to include line start/stop and column start/stop details Issue #21005 has been updated by Dan0042 (Daniel DeLorme). Eregon (Benoit Daloze) wrote in #note-3: > If it's a new method, I think we should return a "code location" object (could be `Ruby::CodeLocation` or `Ruby::Location` or `Ruby::SourceLocation` or so) and have the following methods (inspired from https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/6012#note-19): > * start_line > * end_line I really like the idea of a `#source` method that returns a `Ruby::SourceLocation` object. However, when there's a start and end, I believe Ruby should ideally align with its own core conventions and return a `Range`. For example, `method.source.lines => start...end`. While I understand concerns about the allocation of `Range` objects and performance, I feel that: 1) this might be an example of premature micro-optimization, and 2) from an API design perspective, a `Range` object feels like the natural default. Separate `start`/`end` accessors could remain a low-level, performance-focused API if truly necessary. As an alternative to `start`/`end` accessors, it would be even better if the `Range`-returning method could be optimized via opcode. Referring back to the idea of `Range#bounds` in #20080, we could have something like `start_line, end_line = method.source.lines.bounds`, which could be optimized via opcode to avoid allocating a `Range` object entirely. It would be great to see Ruby continue to embrace its own language idioms and explore such optimizations for a more elegant API. ---------------------------------------- Feature #21005: Update the source location method to include line start/stop and column start/stop details https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/21005#change-111367 * Author: bkuhlmann (Brooke Kuhlmann) * Status: Open ---------------------------------------- ## Why ���� Hello. After discussing with Kevin Newton and Benoit Daloze in [Feature 20999](https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/20999), I'd like to propose adding line start/stop and column start/stop information to the `#source_location` method for the following objects: - [Binding](https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/Binding.html) - [Proc](https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/Proc.html) - [Method](https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/Method.html) - [UnboundMethod](https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/UnboundMethod.html) At the moment, when using `#source_location`, you only get the following information: ``` ruby def demo = "A demonstration." # From disk. method(:demo).source_location # ["/Users/bkuhlmann/Engineering/Misc/demo", 15] # From memory. method(:demo).source_location # ["(irb)", 3] ``` Notice, when asking for the source location, we only get the path/location as the first element and the line number as the second element but I'd like to obtain a much richer set of data which includes line start/stop and column start/stop so I can avoid leaning on the `RubyVM` for this information. Example: ``` ruby def demo = "A demonstration." # From disk. instructions = RubyVM::InstructionSequence.of method(:demo) puts [instructions.absolute_path, *instructions.to_a.dig(4, :code_location)] [ "/Users/bkuhlmann/Engineering/Misc/demo", # Source path. 15, # Line start. 0, # Column start. 15, # Line stop. 29 # Column stop. ] # From memory. instructions = RubyVM::InstructionSequence.of method(:demo) puts instructions.script_lines [ "def demo = \"A demonstration.\"\n", "" ] ``` By having access to the path (or lack thereof in case of IRB), line start/stop, and column start/stop, this means we could avoid using the RubyVM to obtain raw source code for any of these objects. This would not only enhance debugging situations but also improve Domain Specific Languages that wish to leverage this information for introducing new features and/or new debugging capabilities to the language. ## How Building upon the examples provided above, I'd like to see `Binding`, `Proc`, `Method`, and `UnboundMethod` respond to `#source_location` as follows: ``` ruby [ "/Users/bkuhlmann/Engineering/Misc/demo", # Source path. 15, # Line start. 15, # Line stop. 0, # Column start. 29 # Column stop. ] ``` Notice, for data grouping purposes, I changed the array structure to always start with the path as the first element, followed by line information, and ending with column information. Alternatively, it could might be nice to improve upon the above by answering a hash each time, instead, for a more self-describing data structure. Example: ``` ruby { path: "/Users/bkuhlmann/Engineering/Misc/demo", line_start: 15, line_stop: 15, column_start: 0, column_stop: 29 } ``` For in-memory, situations like IRB, it would be nice to answer the equivalent of `RubyVM::InstructionSequence#script_lines` which would always be an `Array` with no line or column information since only the source code is necessary. Example: ``` ruby [ "def demo = \"A demonstration.\"\n", "" ] ``` From a pattern matching perspective, this could provide the best of both worlds especially if information is answered as either a `Hash` or and `Array`. Example: ``` def demo = "A demonstration." case method(:demo).source_location in Hash then puts "Source information obtained from disk." in Array then puts "Source obtained from memory." else fail TypeError, "Unrecognized source location type." end ``` This above is only a simple example but there's a lot we could do with this information if the above pattern match was enhanced to deal with the extraction and formatting of the actual source code! ## Notes This feature request is related to the following discussions in case more context is of help: - [Feature 6012](https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/6012) - [Feature 20999](https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/20999) -- https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/ ______________________________________________ ruby-core mailing list -- ruby-core@ml.ruby-lang.org To unsubscribe send an email to ruby-core-leave@ml.ruby-lang.org ruby-core info -- https://ml.ruby-lang.org/mailman3/lists/ruby-core.ml.ruby-lang.org/