ghc-source-gen
ghc-source-gen
is a Haskell library for generating Haskell source files and
code fragments. It uses GHC's library API for the latest up-to-date syntax, and
provides a simple, consistent interface across several major versions of GHC.
To get started, take a look at the example below, or check out the
GHC.SourceGen
module.
This package is not an officially supported Google product.
Example
The following example creates a module that defines the
const
function:
{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
{-# LANGUAGE NoMonomorphismRestriction #-}
import GHC.SourceGen
import GHC.Paths (libdir)
constModule :: HsModule'
constModule =
module' (Just "Const") (Just [var "const"]) []
[ typeSig "const" $ a --> b --> a
, funBind "const" $ matchRhs [wildP, x] x
]
where
a = var "a"
b = var "b"
x = var "x"
main = runGhc (Just libdir) $ putPpr constModule
The output of that program is:
module Const (
const
) where
const :: a -> b -> a
const _ x = x
Comparison with the GHC API
The raw GHC API has several complexities that ghc-source-gen
simplifies for the
purpose of source code generation.
Backwards-compatibility
ghc-source-gen
provides the same API across several versions of GHC. Code written
with ghc-source-gen
should compile unchanged on each of those versions.
Currently, this library supports GHC versions 8.2, 8.4, 8.6 and 8.8.
One caveat: in the future, ghc-source-gen
will support some forms of syntax
which are not implemented by all of those GHC versions. For example, the
DerivingVia
extension is only implemented in ghc >= 8.6
. When built on
older versions of GHC, ghc-source-gen
will omit functions for constructing
that syntax. We will also tag any such function with a note in its Haddock
documentation.
Less verbose types and construction functions
The datatypes that GHC uses to represent Haskell syntax change their
representation at different stages of the compilation: for example, parsing,
renaming, or type-checking. That data transformation provides type safety and
a uniform structure across the phases. However, it also adds unnecessary
complexity to the task of source code generation.
ghc-source-gen
aims to provide a simple interface by creating data types as
GHC would represent them immediately after its parsing step. For example,
ghc >= 8.4
uses a type parameter p
in its syntax types: HsExpr p
for
expressions, HsDecl p
for declarations, etc. ghc-source-gen
defines type
synonyms for them:
type HsExpr' = HsExpr GhcPs
type HsDecl' = HsDecl GhcPs
type HsType' = HsType GhcPs
-- etc.
Furthermore, most constructors take an extra "extension" field which can
contain different information in different stages, influenced by the parameter
p
. In almost all cases, after the parsing step that field is the
trivial type data NoExt = NoExt
. (For more details, see the Trees that
Grow paper. GHC versions earlier than 8.4 used a similar PlaceHolder
type.).
This extra data makes code generation more verbose.
ghc-source-gen
automatically sets the NoExt
value (or equivalent) for the
terms that it generates, hiding that detail from its external API. It also
sets and hides other fields that are irrelevant to parsing or pretty-printing,
such as simplifier ticks.
Source Locations
GHC carefully tracks the source location of (nearly) every node in the AST.
That information is very useful for error reporting. However, it would be too
verbose to set it explicitly for each individual node during code generation.
Furthermore, GHC doesn't use the source location when pretty-printing its
output, which is ghc-source-gen
's main use case.
Currently, ghc-source-gen
gives to each node it generates a trivial location
without an explicit line or column.
Parentheses
GHC represents parentheses explicitly in its syntax tree, so that it can print code
exactly as it was parsed. Unfortunately, this means that its pretty-printing code
expects those parentheses to be present, and outputs incorrect
source code if they are missing. ghc-source-gen
adds parentheses automatically in the code that it generates.
For example, consider a simplified expression syntax:
data Expr
= VarE String -- ^ Variables
| App Expr Expr -- ^ Function application
| Paren Expr Expr -- ^ Parentheses
Then GHC would pretty-print as "f (g x)"
the tree
App (VarE "f") $ Paren $ App (VarE "g") (VarE "h")
But without the explicit parenthesis, it would pretty-print as "f g x"
:
App (VarE "f") $ App (VarE "g") (VarE "h")
which misrepresents the precedence between the two function applications.
ghc-source-gen
resolves this issue by inserting parentheses automatically, and only when necessary. In the expression
var "f" @@ (var "g" @@ var "h")
it inserts a parenthesis automatically so that the result pretty-prints to "f (g x)"
as expected.
GHC uses a similar approach internally itself. For more discussion, see tickets 14289 and 15738.