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- module Data.SCargot
- ( -- * SCargot Basics
- -- $intro
- -- * Parsing and Printing
- decode
- , decodeOne
- , encode
- , encodeOne
- -- * Parser Construction
- -- ** Specifying a Parser
- , SExprParser
- , Reader
- , Comment
- , mkParser
- , setCarrier
- , addReader
- , setComment
- , asRich
- , asWellFormed
- , withQuote
- -- * Printer Construction
- -- * Specifying a Pretty-Printer
- , SExprPrinter
- , Indent(..)
- , basicPrint
- , flatPrint
- , unconstrainedPrint
- , setFromCarrier
- , setMaxWidth
- , removeMaxWidth
- , setIndentAmount
- , setIndentStrategy
- ) where
- import Data.SCargot.Parse
- import Data.SCargot.Print
- {- $intro
- The S-Cargot library is a library for parsing and emitting
- <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S-expression s-expressions>, designed
- to be as flexible as possible. Despite some efforts at
- <http://people.csail.mit.edu/rivest/Sexp.txt standardization>,
- s-expressions are a general approach to describing a data format
- that can very often differ in subtle, incompatible ways: the
- s-expressions understood by Common Lisp are different from the
- s-expressions understood by Scheme, and even the different
- revisions of the Scheme language understand s-expressions in a
- slightly different way. To accomodate this, the S-Cargot library
- provides a toolbox for defining variations on s-expressions,
- complete with the ability to select various comment syntaxes, reader
- macros, and atom types.
- If all you want is to read some s-expressions and don't care about
- the edge cases of the format, or all you want is a new configuration
- format, try the "Data.SCargot.Language.Basic" or "Data.SCargot.Language.HaskLike"
- modules, which define an s-expression language whose atoms are
- plain strings and Haskell literals, respectively.
- The S-Cargot library works by specifying values which contain all
- the information needed to either parse or print an s-expression.
- The actual s-expression structure is parsed as a structure of
- <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cons cons cells> as represented
- by the 'SExpr' type, but can alternately be exposed as the
- isomorphic 'RichSExpr' type or the less expressive but
- easier-to-work-with 'WellFormedSExpr' type. Modules devoted
- to each representation type (in "Data.SCargot.Repr.Basic",
- "Data.SCargot.Repr.Rich", and "Data.SCargot.Repr.WellFormed")
- provide helper functions, lenses, and pattern synonyms to make
- creating and processing these values easier.
- The details of how to parse a given structure are represented
- by building up a 'SExprParser' value, which is defined in
- "Data.SCargot.Parse" and re-exported here. A minimal
- 'SExprParser' defines only how to parse the atoms of the
- language; helper functions can define comment syntaxes,
- reader macros, and transformations over the parsed structure.
- The details of how to print a given structure are represented
- by building up a 'SExprPrinter' value, which is defined in
- "Data.SCargot.Print" and re-exported here. A minimal
- 'SExprPrinter' defines only how to print the atoms of the
- language; helper functions help with the layout of the
- pretty-printed s-expression in terms of how to indent the
- surrounding expression.
- Other helper modules define useful primitives for building up
- s-expression languages: the "Data.SCargot.Common" module provides
- parsers for common literals, while the "Data.SCargot.Comments"
- module provides parsers for comment syntaxes borrowed from
- various other languages.
- -}
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