tree-sitter grammar for F# (still WIP) Based on the 4.1 F# language specification (Mostly, Appendix A) and the F# compiler parser
First, run npm install
to install the tree-sitter cli
.
Next, the grammar can be build using npm run build
, or used to parse a file with npm run parse $file
This project defined two parser:
- ./fsharp/grammar.js
fsharp
grammar. - ./fsharp_signature/grammar.js defines the grammar for signature files
In addition to the grammar.js
files each parser depends on a common external scanner found at ./common/scanner.h.
The external scanner is responsible for parsing newlines and comments and keeps track of indentation to open and close scopes.
each grammar starts with the file
node at the beginning of the rules.
tree-sitter-fsharp is supported through the usual installation methods of nvim-treesitter.
Installing the lastest grammar from this repo involves the following three steps:
- Update your Neovim config for nvim-treesitter to refer to tree-sitter-fsharp.
- Run
:TSInstall fsharp
inside Neovim. - Copy the files from ./queries/ to the neovim config directory at
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/nvim/queries/fsharp/
- see the Adding queries section of the nvim-treesitter README.
The config you need is this (you can use a local path for url
if you prefer):
local parser_config = require('nvim-treesitter.parsers').get_parser_configs()
parser_config.fsharp = {
install_info = {
url = 'https://github.com/ionide/tree-sitter-fsharp',
branch = 'main',
files = { 'src/scanner.c', 'src/parser.c' },
location = "fsharp"
},
requires_generate_from_grammar = false,
filetype = 'fsharp',
}
The package.json
defines some helpful targets for developing the grammar:
npm run generate
rebuilds all parser.npx tree-sitter test
runs all tests for both parsers.npx tree-sitter parse $file
run thefsharp
parser on$file
and outputs the parse tree.npx tree-sitter parse -d $file
run thefsharp
parser on$file
and prints debug information.
Clone the project and start playing around with it.
If you find a code example which fails to parse, please reduce it to a minimal example and added to the corpus (fsharp/test/corpus/*.txt
) as a test case.
For an introduction to developing tree-sitter parsers the official documentation is a good reference point.
PRs fleshing out the grammar or fixing bugs are welcome!