lima
Sync your README
with your Haskell
codebase.
Convert files between:
Haskell
(.hs
)
Literate Haskell
(.lhs
)
GitHub Flavored Markdown
(.md
)
TeX
(.tex
)
-
LiterateMarkdown - lima
is a fork of this abandoned project.
-
pandoc - supports Literate Haskell
and a ton of other formats.
-
IHaskell - create Jupyter
notebooks with Haskell
code cells and GitHub Flavored Markdown
text cells.
-
lhs2tex - convert Literate Haskell
to TeX
.
-
agda2lagda - Generate a literate Agda/Haskell script from an Agda/Haskell script. Produces LaTeX or Markdown literate scripts.
-
markdown-unlit - markdown-unlit
is a custom unlit program. It can be used to extract Haskell code from Markdown files.
-
unlit - Tool to convert literate code between styles or to code.
-
design-tools - a Pandoc filter for building a book from Markdown.
Scope
lima
focuses on converting documents between formats and allows to concatenate documents.
Other scenarios, e.g., inlining a document into a document, may require specialized tools.
Demo
Markdown
.hs and .md
TeX
.hs and .lhs and .tex
Ideas
- A document is a text in a supported format.
- I introduced tags into supported formats.
- E.g., in
.hs
documents, tags are multiline comments written on a single line like '{- LIMA_ENABLE -}
'.
- Tag names are configurable.
- A user may set '
on
' instead of 'LIMA_ENABLE
'.
- A document can be parsed into a list of tokens.
- Tags affect document parsing.
- The tokens can be printed back to that document.
- Formatting a document is printing a parsed document back to itself.
- Formatting is idempotent. In other words, formatting the document again won't change its content.
- The
lima
library provides a parser and a printer for each supported format.
- A composition of a printer after a parser produces a converter.
- Such a converter is usually invertible for a formatted document.
- Converting a document
A
to a document B
, then converting B
to A
doesn't change the content of A
.
Suggested setup
-
Create a test suite. README.hs
may be its main file.
-
Add lima
and text
to its dependencies.
-
Create a test module. It may have the following content.
import Lima.Converter (Format (..), convertTo, def)
import Data.Text.IO qualified as T
main :: IO ()
main = T.readFile "README.hs" >>= T.writeFile "README.md" . (Hs `convertTo` Md) def
This package has three such test suites:
Suggested workflow
Here's a suggested workflow for Haskell
and Markdown
:
- Edit the code in a
README.hs
using Haskell Language Server.
- Convert
README.hs
to a README.md
. Comments from README.hs
become text in README.md
.
- Edit the text in
README.md
using markdownlint.
- Convert
README.md
back to the README.hs
to keep files in sync. Text from README.md
becomes comments in README.hs
.
- Repeat.
Contribute
Clone this repo and enter lima
.
git clone https://github.com/deemp/lima
cd lima
cabal
Build
cabal update
cabal build
nix
-
Install Nix
.
-
Run a devshell and build lima
using the project's cabal
:
nix develop nix-dev/
cabal build
-
Optionally, start VSCodium
:
nix run nix-dev/#writeSettings
nix run nix-dev/#codium .
-
Open a Haskell
file there, hover over a term and wait until HLS
shows hints.
-
Troubleshoot if necessary.