| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Before:
```
scala> {" ".char<TAB>}
charAt chars
scala> {" ".char<CURSOR>}}
```
I noticed that pressing <SPACE>-<BACKSPACE> re-rendered the line
correctly, so I've added this workaround to our customization of
the JLine console reader.
After:
```
scala> {" ".char<TAB>}
charAt chars
scala> {" ".char<CURSOR>}
```
We can delete this workaround when JLine 2.13.1 is released, but
I haven't heard back about when this might happen.
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The old implementation is still avaiable under a flag, but we'll
remove it in due course.
Design goal:
- Push as much code in src/interactive as possible to enable reuse
outside of the REPL
- Don't entangle the REPL completion with JLine. The enclosed test
case drives the REPL and autocompletion programatically.
- Don't hard code UI choices, like how to render symbols or
how to filter candidates.
When completion is requested, we wrap the entered code into the
same "interpreter wrapper" synthetic code as is done for regular
execution. We then start a throwaway instance of the presentation
compiler, which takes this as its one and only source file, and
has a classpath formed from the REPL's classpath and the REPL's
output directory (by default, this is in memory).
We can then typecheck the tree, and find the position in the synthetic
source corresponding to the cursor location. This is enough to use
the new completion APIs in the presentation compiler to prepare
a list of candidates.
We go to extra lengths to allow completion of partially typed
identifiers that appear to be keywords, e.g `global.def` should offer
`definitions`.
Two secret handshakes are included; move the the end of the line,
type `// print<TAB>` and you'll see the post-typer tree.
`// typeAt 4 6<TAB>` shows the type of the range position within
the buffer.
The enclosed unit test exercises most of the new functionality.
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Specify it with -Dscala.shell.histfile=/path/to/file.
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As usual, the repl will use whatever jline 2 jar on the classpath,
if there is one. Failing that, there's a fallback and an override.
If instantiating the standard `jline.InteractiveReader` fails,
we fall back to an embedded, shaded, version of jline,
provided by `jline_embedded.InteractiveReader`.
(Assume `import scala.tools.nsc.interpreter._` for this message.)
The instantiation of `InteractiveReader` eagerly exercises jline,
so that a linkage error will result if jline is missing or if the
provided one is not binary compatible.
The property `scala.repl.reader` overrides this behavior, if set to
the FQN of a class that looks like `YourInteractiveReader` below.
```
class YourInteractiveReader(completer: () => Completion) extends InteractiveReader
```
The repl logs which classes it tried to instantiate under `-Ydebug`.
# Changes to source & build
The core of the repl (`src/repl`) no longer depends on jline.
The jline interface is now in `src/repl-jline`.
The embedded jline + our interface to it are generated by the `quick.repl` target.
The build now also enforces that only `src/repl-jline` depends on jline.
The sources in `src/repl` are now sure to be independent of it,
though they do use reflection to instantiate a suitable subclass
of `InteractiveReader`, as explained above.
The `quick.repl` target builds the sources in `src/repl` and `src/repl-jline`,
producing a jar for the `repl-jline` classes, which is then transformed using
jarjar to obtain a shaded copy of the `scala.tools.nsc.interpreter.jline` package.
Jarjar is used to combine the `jline` jar and the `repl-jline` into a new jar,
rewriting package names as follows:
- `org.fusesource` -> `scala.tools.fusesource_embedded`
- `jline` -> `scala.tools.jline_embedded`
- `scala.tools.nsc.interpreter.jline` -> `scala.tools.nsc.interpreter.jline_embedded`
Classes not reachable from `scala.tools.**` are pruned, as well as empty dirs.
The classes in the `repl-jline` jar as well as those in the rewritten one
are copied to the repl's output directory.
PS: The sbt build is not updated, sorry.
PPS: A more recent fork of jarjar: https://github.com/shevek/jarjar.
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