From: Dominik Honnef <dominik@honnef.co>
To: Yuan Fu <casouri@gmail.com>, Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
Cc: 66674@debbugs.gnu.org
Subject: bug#66674: 30.0.50; Upstream tree-sitter and treesit disagree about fields
Date: Sun, 10 Dec 2023 15:28:38 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <87r0jujfmx.fsf@honnef.co> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <5ad5f956-7533-451b-9815-1710713ee334@gmail.com>
Yuan Fu <casouri@gmail.com> writes:
> On 11/25/23 2:03 AM, Eli Zaretskii wrote:
>> Ping! Ping! Yuan, please chime in.
>>
>>> Cc: 66674@debbugs.gnu.org, dominik@honnef.co
>>> Date: Sun, 19 Nov 2023 12:08:08 +0200
>>> From: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
>>>
>>> Ping! Yuan, any comments?
>>>
>>>> Cc: 66674@debbugs.gnu.org
>>>> Date: Wed, 25 Oct 2023 16:03:10 +0300
>>>> From: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
>>>>
>>>>> From: Dominik Honnef <dominik@honnef.co>
>>>>> Date: Sat, 21 Oct 2023 22:36:30 +0200
>>>>>
>>>>> Using tree-sitter's CLI as well as the publicly hosted playground
>>>>> produce different parse trees than treesit in Emacs. Specifically, the
>>>>> assignment of nodes to named fields differs.
>>>>>
>>>>> Given the following C source:
>>>>>
>>>>> void main() {
>>>>> int x = // foo
>>>>> 1+
>>>>> // comment
>>>>> 2;
>>>>> }
>>>>>
>>>>> treesit-explore-mode displays the following tree:
>>>>>
>>>>> (translation_unit
>>>>> (function_definition type: (primitive_type)
>>>>> declarator:
>>>>> (function_declarator declarator: (identifier)
>>>>> parameters: (parameter_list ( )))
>>>>> body:
>>>>> (compound_statement {
>>>>> (declaration type: (primitive_type)
>>>>> declarator:
>>>>> (init_declarator declarator: (identifier) = value: (comment)
>>>>> (binary_expression left: (number_literal) operator: + right: (comment) (number_literal)))
>>>>> ;)
>>>>> })))
>>>>>
>>>>> Note how in the init_declarator node, the 'value' field is a comment
>>>>> node, and similarly for the 'right' field in the binary_expression node.
>>>>>
>>>>> Running 'tree-sitter parse file.c', on the other hand, produces the
>>>>> following tree:
>>>>>
>>>>> (translation_unit [0, 0] - [6, 0]
>>>>> (function_definition [0, 0] - [5, 1]
>>>>> type: (primitive_type [0, 0] - [0, 4])
>>>>> declarator: (function_declarator [0, 5] - [0, 11]
>>>>> declarator: (identifier [0, 5] - [0, 9])
>>>>> parameters: (parameter_list [0, 9] - [0, 11]))
>>>>> body: (compound_statement [0, 12] - [5, 1]
>>>>> (declaration [1, 2] - [4, 6]
>>>>> type: (primitive_type [1, 2] - [1, 5])
>>>>> declarator: (init_declarator [1, 6] - [4, 5]
>>>>> declarator: (identifier [1, 6] - [1, 7])
>>>>> (comment [1, 10] - [1, 16])
>>>>> value: (binary_expression [2, 4] - [4, 5]
>>>>> left: (number_literal [2, 4] - [2, 5])
>>>>> (comment [3, 4] - [3, 14])
>>>>> right: (number_literal [4, 4] - [4, 5])))))))
>>>>>
>>>>> Here, the two comment nodes appear as unnamed nodes. IMHO the second
>>>>> tree is a more useful one, as the named fields contain the semantically
>>>>> important subtrees (e.g. a binary expression is made up of a left and
>>>>> right subtree, not a left subtree, a right comment, and then some
>>>>> unnamed subtree.)
>>>>>
>>>>> Emacs's tree makes writing queries less convenient, as instead of being
>>>>> able to refer to well-defined names, one has to rely on child indices to
>>>>> account for comments.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Further mismatch arises from repeated fields and separators.
>>>>>
>>>>> Consider the following Go source:
>>>>>
>>>>> package pkg
>>>>>
>>>>> var a, b, c = 1, 2, 3
>>>>>
>>>>> treesit-explore-mode displays the following tree:
>>>>>
>>>>> (source_file
>>>>> (package_clause package (package_identifier))
>>>>> \n
>>>>> (var_declaration var
>>>>> (var_spec name: (identifier) name: , (identifier) value: , (identifier) =
>>>>> (expression_list (int_literal) , (int_literal) , (int_literal))))
>>>>> \n)
>>>>>
>>>>> Here, the var_spec node has two fields named 'name' even though the
>>>>> source specifies three names. Furthermore, The second 'name', as well as
>>>>> 'value' are set to the ',' separator between identifiers. Two of the three
>>>>> identifiers aren't named.
>>>>>
>>>>> 'tree-sitter parse file.go', on the other hand, produces this more
>>>>> accurate tree:
>>>>>
>>>>> (source_file [0, 0] - [2, 21]
>>>>> (package_clause [0, 0] - [0, 11]
>>>>> (package_identifier [0, 8] - [0, 11]))
>>>>> (var_declaration [2, 0] - [2, 21]
>>>>> (var_spec [2, 4] - [2, 21]
>>>>> name: (identifier [2, 4] - [2, 5])
>>>>> name: (identifier [2, 7] - [2, 8])
>>>>> name: (identifier [2, 10] - [2, 11])
>>>>> value: (expression_list [2, 14] - [2, 21]
>>>>> (int_literal [2, 14] - [2, 15])
>>>>> (int_literal [2, 17] - [2, 18])
>>>>> (int_literal [2, 20] - [2, 21])))))
>>>>>
>>>>> This reproduces with 29.1 as well as 30.0.50.
>>>> Yuan, any comments or suggestions?
>
> Sorry sorry sorry, another missed report. I think this is a bug in
> treesit-explore-mode, I'll work on fixing it!
>
> Yuan
I don't think that's the case, at least not exclusively. I used
treesit-explore-mode to debug patterns that matched in the playground
but not in Emacs. The matching behavior seemed pretty in line with what
treesit-explore-mode reported.
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2023-12-10 14:28 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 7+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2023-10-21 20:36 bug#66674: 30.0.50; Upstream tree-sitter and treesit disagree about fields Dominik Honnef
2023-10-25 13:03 ` Eli Zaretskii
2023-11-19 10:08 ` Eli Zaretskii
2023-11-25 10:03 ` Eli Zaretskii
2023-12-10 10:07 ` Yuan Fu
2023-12-10 14:28 ` Dominik Honnef [this message]
2023-12-11 1:02 ` Yuan Fu
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