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# = Introduction # # SimpleMarkup parses plain text documents and attempts to decompose # them into their constituent parts. Some of these parts are high-level: # paragraphs, chunks of verbatim text, list entries and the like. Other # parts happen at the character level: a piece of bold text, a word in # code font. This markup is similar in spirit to that used on WikiWiki # webs, where folks create web pages using a simple set of formatting # rules. # # SimpleMarkup itself does no output formatting: this is left to a # different set of classes. # # SimpleMarkup is extendable at runtime: you can add new markup # elements to be recognised in the documents that SimpleMarkup parses. # # SimpleMarkup is intended to be the basis for a family of tools which # share the common requirement that simple, plain-text should be # rendered in a variety of different output formats and media. It is # envisaged that SimpleMarkup could be the basis for formating RDoc # style comment blocks, Wiki entries, and online FAQs. # # = Basic Formatting # # * SimpleMarkup looks for a document's natural left margin. This is # used as the initial margin for the document. # # * Consecutive lines starting at this margin are considered to be a # paragraph. # # * If a paragraph starts with a "*", "-", or with "<digit>.", then it is # taken to be the start of a list. The margin in increased to be the # first non-space following the list start flag. Subsequent lines # should be indented to this new margin until the list ends. For # example: # # * this is a list with three paragraphs in # the first item. This is the first paragraph. # # And this is the second paragraph. # # 1. This is an indented, numbered list. # 2. This is the second item in that list # # This is the third conventional paragraph in the # first list item. # # * This is the second item in the original list # # * You can also construct labeled lists, sometimes called description # or definition lists. Do this by putting the label in square brackets # and indenting the list body: # # [cat] a small furry mammal # that seems to sleep a lot # # [ant] a little insect that is known # to enjoy picnics # # A minor variation on labeled lists uses two colons to separate the # label from the list body: # # cat:: a small furry mammal # that seems to sleep a lot # # ant:: a little insect that is known # to enjoy picnics # # This latter style guarantees that the list bodies' left margins are # aligned: think of them as a two column table. # # * Any line that starts to the right of the current margin is treated # as verbatim text. This is useful for code listings. The example of a # list above is also verbatim text. # # * A line starting with an equals sign (=) is treated as a # heading. Level one headings have one equals sign, level two headings # have two,and so on. # # * A line starting with three or more hyphens (at the current indent) # generates a horizontal rule. THe more hyphens, the thicker the rule # (within reason, and if supported by the output device) # # * You can use markup within text (except verbatim) to change the # appearance of parts of that text. Out of the box, SimpleMarkup # supports word-based and general markup. # # Word-based markup uses flag characters around individual words: # # [\*word*] displays word in a *bold* font # [\_word_] displays word in an _emphasized_ font # [\+word+] displays word in a +code+ font # # General markup affects text between a start delimiter and and end # delimiter. Not surprisingly, these delimiters look like HTML markup. # # [\<b>text...</b>] displays word in a *bold* font # [\<em>text...</em>] displays word in an _emphasized_ font # [\<i>text...</i>] displays word in an _emphasized_ font # [\<tt>text...</tt>] displays word in a +code+ font # # Unlike conventional Wiki markup, general markup can cross line # boundaries. You can turn off the interpretation of markup by # preceding the first character with a backslash, so \\\<b>bold # text</b> and \\\*bold* produce \<b>bold text</b> and \*bold # respectively. # # = Using SimpleMarkup # # For information on using SimpleMarkup programatically, # see SM::SimpleMarkup. # # Author:: Dave Thomas, dave@pragmaticprogrammer.com # Version:: 0.0 # License:: Ruby license require 'rdoc/markup/simple_markup/fragments' require 'rdoc/markup/simple_markup/lines.rb' module SM #:nodoc: # == Synopsis # # This code converts <tt>input_string</tt>, which is in the format # described in markup/simple_markup.rb, to HTML. The conversion # takes place in the +convert+ method, so you can use the same # SimpleMarkup object to convert multiple input strings. # # require 'rdoc/markup/simple_markup' # require 'rdoc/markup/simple_markup/to_html' # # p = SM::SimpleMarkup.new # h = SM::ToHtml.new # # puts p.convert(input_string, h) # # You can extend the SimpleMarkup parser to recognise new markup # sequences, and to add special processing for text that matches a # regular epxression. Here we make WikiWords significant to the parser, # and also make the sequences {word} and \<no>text...</no> signify # strike-through text. When then subclass the HTML output class to deal # with these: # # require 'rdoc/markup/simple_markup' # require 'rdoc/markup/simple_markup/to_html' # # class WikiHtml < SM::ToHtml # def handle_special_WIKIWORD(special) # "<font color=red>" + special.text + "</font>" # end # end # # p = SM::SimpleMarkup.new # p.add_word_pair("{", "}", :STRIKE) # p.add_html("no", :STRIKE) # # p.add_special(/\b([A-Z][a-z]+[A-Z]\w+)/, :WIKIWORD) # # h = WikiHtml.new # h.add_tag(:STRIKE, "<strike>", "</strike>") # # puts "<body>" + p.convert(ARGF.read, h) + "</body>" # # == Output Formatters # # _missing_ # # class SimpleMarkup SPACE = ?\s # List entries look like: # * text # 1. text # [label] text # label:: text # # Flag it as a list entry, and # work out the indent for subsequent lines SIMPLE_LIST_RE = /^( ( \* (?# bullet) |- (?# bullet) |\d+\. (?# numbered ) |[A-Za-z]\. (?# alphabetically numbered ) ) \s+ )\S/x LABEL_LIST_RE = /^( ( \[.*?\] (?# labeled ) |\S.*:: (?# note ) )(?:\s+|$) )/x ## # take a block of text and use various heuristics to determine # it's structure (paragraphs, lists, and so on). Invoke an # event handler as we identify significant chunks. # def initialize @am = AttributeManager.new @output = nil end ## # Add to the sequences used to add formatting to an individual word # (such as *bold*). Matching entries will generate attibutes # that the output formatters can recognize by their +name+ def add_word_pair(start, stop, name) @am.add_word_pair(start, stop, name) end ## # Add to the sequences recognized as general markup # def add_html(tag, name) @am.add_html(tag, name) end ## # Add to other inline sequences. For example, we could add # WikiWords using something like: # # parser.add_special(/\b([A-Z][a-z]+[A-Z]\w+)/, :WIKIWORD) # # Each wiki word will be presented to the output formatter # via the accept_special method # def add_special(pattern, name) @am.add_special(pattern, name) end # We take a string, split it into lines, work out the type of # each line, and from there deduce groups of lines (for example # all lines in a paragraph). We then invoke the output formatter # using a Visitor to display the result def convert(str, op) @lines = Lines.new(str.split(/\r?\n/).collect { |aLine| Line.new(aLine) }) return "" if @lines.empty? @lines.normalize assign_types_to_lines group = group_lines # call the output formatter to handle the result # group.to_a.each {|i| p i} group.accept(@am, op) end ####### private ####### ## # Look through the text at line indentation. We flag each line as being # Blank, a paragraph, a list element, or verbatim text # def assign_types_to_lines(margin = 0, level = 0) while line = @lines.next if line.isBlank? line.stamp(Line::BLANK, level) next end # if a line contains non-blanks before the margin, then it must belong # to an outer level text = line.text for i in 0...margin if text[i] != SPACE @lines.unget return end end active_line = text[margin..-1] # Rules (horizontal lines) look like # # --- (three or more hyphens) # # The more hyphens, the thicker the rule # if /^(---+)\s*$/ =~ active_line line.stamp(Line::RULE, level, $1.length-2) next end # Then look for list entries. First the ones that have to have # text following them (* xxx, - xxx, and dd. xxx) if SIMPLE_LIST_RE =~ active_line offset = margin + $1.length prefix = $2 prefix_length = prefix.length flag = case prefix when "*","-" then ListBase::BULLET when /^\d/ then ListBase::NUMBER when /^[A-Z]/ then ListBase::UPPERALPHA when /^[a-z]/ then ListBase::LOWERALPHA else raise "Invalid List Type: #{self.inspect}" end line.stamp(Line::LIST, level+1, prefix, flag) text[margin, prefix_length] = " " * prefix_length assign_types_to_lines(offset, level + 1) next end if LABEL_LIST_RE =~ active_line offset = margin + $1.length prefix = $2 prefix_length = prefix.length next if handled_labeled_list(line, level, margin, offset, prefix) end # Headings look like # = Main heading # == Second level # === Third # # Headings reset the level to 0 if active_line[0] == ?= and active_line =~ /^(=+)\s*(.*)/ prefix_length = $1.length prefix_length = 6 if prefix_length > 6 line.stamp(Line::HEADING, 0, prefix_length) line.strip_leading(margin + prefix_length) next end # If the character's a space, then we have verbatim text, # otherwise if active_line[0] == SPACE line.strip_leading(margin) if margin > 0 line.stamp(Line::VERBATIM, level) else line.stamp(Line::PARAGRAPH, level) end end end # Handle labeled list entries, We have a special case # to deal with. Because the labels can be long, they force # the remaining block of text over the to right: # # this is a long label that I wrote:: and here is the # block of text with # a silly margin # # So we allow the special case. If the label is followed # by nothing, and if the following line is indented, then # we take the indent of that line as the new margin # # this is a long label that I wrote:: # here is a more reasonably indented block which # will ab attached to the label. # def handled_labeled_list(line, level, margin, offset, prefix) prefix_length = prefix.length text = line.text flag = nil case prefix when /^\[/ flag = ListBase::LABELED prefix = prefix[1, prefix.length-2] when /:$/ flag = ListBase::NOTE prefix.chop! else raise "Invalid List Type: #{self.inspect}" end # body is on the next line if text.length <= offset original_line = line line = @lines.next return(false) unless line text = line.text for i in 0..margin if text[i] != SPACE @lines.unget return false end end i = margin i += 1 while text[i] == SPACE if i >= text.length @lines.unget return false else offset = i prefix_length = 0 @lines.delete(original_line) end end line.stamp(Line::LIST, level+1, prefix, flag) text[margin, prefix_length] = " " * prefix_length assign_types_to_lines(offset, level + 1) return true end # Return a block consisting of fragments which are # paragraphs, list entries or verbatim text. We merge consecutive # lines of the same type and level together. We are also slightly # tricky with lists: the lines following a list introduction # look like paragraph lines at the next level, and we remap them # into list entries instead def group_lines @lines.rewind inList = false wantedType = wantedLevel = nil block = LineCollection.new group = nil while line = @lines.next if line.level == wantedLevel and line.type == wantedType group.add_text(line.text) else group = block.fragment_for(line) block.add(group) if line.type == Line::LIST wantedType = Line::PARAGRAPH else wantedType = line.type end wantedLevel = line.type == Line::HEADING ? line.param : line.level end end block.normalize block end ## for debugging, we allow access to our line contents as text def content @lines.as_text end public :content ## for debugging, return the list of line types def get_line_types @lines.line_types end public :get_line_types end end