package comby-kernel

  1. Overview
  2. Docs
A match engine for structural code search and replace that supports ~every language

Install

Dune Dependency

Authors

Maintainers

Sources

comby-kernel.1.7.0.tar.gz
md5=ee6556d8bd9b25ed0445ebe23862e48a
sha512=e6386c8ce5ef14bbcab2b0ead5b1edc39375438f56330d5f02e81e467afe6623a7e299f97f26008d77bbc62850c6dc63a7cbe5b81671b5183ff3adeee5946bb3

Description

Comby-kernel is the library that exposes the core matching engine for the comby application tool.

Published: 17 Jun 2021

README

comby

See the usage documentation.

A short example below shows how comby simplifies matching and rewriting compared to regex approaches like sed.

Comby supports interactive review mode (click here to see it in action).

Need help writing patterns or have other problems? Post them in Gitter.

Install (pre-built binaries)

Mac OS X

  • brew install comby

Ubuntu Linux

  • bash <(curl -sL get.comby.dev)

  • Other Linux distributions: The PCRE library is dynamically linked in the Ubuntu binary. For other distributions like Arch Linux, a fixup is needed: sudo ln -s /usr/lib/libpcre.so /usr/lib/libpcre.so.3. On Fedora, use sudo ln -s /usr/lib64/libpcre.so /usr/lib64/libpcre.so.3. Alternatively, consider building from source.

Windows

Docker

  • docker pull comby/comby

click to expand an example invocation for the docker image

Running with docker on stdin:

docker run -a stdin -a stdout -a stderr -i comby/comby '(:[emoji] hi)' 'bye :[emoji]' lisp -stdin <<< '(👋 hi)'

Or try it live.

Isn't a regex approach like sed good enough?

Sometimes, yes. But often, small changes and refactorings are complicated by nested expressions, comments, or strings. Consider the following C-like snippet. Say the challenge is to rewrite the two if conditions to the value 1. Can you write a regular expression that matches the contents of the two if condition expressions, and only those two? Feel free to share your pattern with @rvtond on Twitter.

if (fgets(line, 128, file_pointer) == Null) // 1) if (...) returns 0
      return 0;
...
if (scanf("%d) %d", &x, &y) == 2) // 2) if (scanf("%d) %d", &x, &y) == 2) returns 0
      return 0;

To match these with comby, all you need to write is if (:[condition]), and specify one flag that this language is C-like. The replacement is if (1). See the live example.

Build from source

  • Install opam. TL;DR do sh <(curl -sL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ocaml/opam/master/shell/install.sh)

  • Run this if you don't have OCaml installed (it bootstraps the OCaml compiler):

opam init
opam switch create 4.11.0 4.11.0
  • Run eval $(opam env)

  • Install OS dependencies:

    • Linux: sudo apt-get install autoconf libpcre3-dev pkg-config zlib1g-dev m4 libgmp-dev libev-dev libsqlite3-dev

    • Mac: brew install pkg-config gmp pcre libev

  • Then install the library dependencies:

git clone https://github.com/comby-tools/comby
cd comby 
opam install ./comby-kernel.opam --deps-only
opam install ./comby-semantic.opam --deps-only
opam install ./comby.opam --deps-only
  • Build and test

make
make test
  • Install comby on your PATH by running

make install

Dev Dependencies (1)

  1. bisect_ppx with-test & dev & >= "2.5.0"

Used by (1)

  1. comby >= "1.7.0"

Conflicts

None

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