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cmt_annot

cmt_annot is a small command-line program that reimplements the functionality provided by .annot files using .cmt files instead. Concretely, given a .cmt file and a (line, column) location, it queries the file for type and scope information.

Installation

Using opam:

opam pin add cmt_annot git://github.com/LexiFi/cmt_annot

Or simply build it by doing

make

and then copy the resulting cmt_annot (or cmt_annot.exe if on Windows) to somewhere suitable.

Usage

Usage: cmt_annot [-type | -ident] <filename> <startline> <startcol> [<endline> <endcol>]
  -v      Print timings
  -type   Query type
  -ident  Query ident
  -help   Display this list of options
  --help  Display this list of options

At the moment, results are returned in s-expression syntax.

When invoked with -type the result can either be

  • nil if no expression was found at the given location, or

  • (l1 c1 l2 c2 s) where (l1, c1) and (l2, c2) are the (line, column) starting and ending positions of the term at the given location and s is a string (in the OCaml %S format) describing the type of the term.

When invoked with -ident the result can either be:

  • nil if no identifier was found at the given location, or

  • (l1 c1 l2 c2 s k) where (l1, c1) and (l2, c2) have the same meaning as before, s is the fully qualified form of the identifier in question as a string, and k is one of:

    • external: the identifier is defined outside of the current module.

    • internal l1 c1 l2 c2: the identifier is a variable reference, and (l1, c1), (l2, c2) determine its place of definition in the current module.

    • local-variable l1 c1 l2 c2: the identifier is a local let-binding (this includes identifiers bound in patterns) and (l1, c1), (l2, c2) determine its scope.

    • global-variable l1 c1 l2 c2: the identifier is a global let-binding and (l1, c1), (l2, c2) determine its scope.

Emacs bindings

The file cmt_annot.el adds support for this tool to the standard caml-mode included in the standard OCaml distribution. To use it, make sure that this file and the caml-mode package is in your load-path and add

(require 'cmt_annot)

somewhere in your .emacs or init.el files. The tool cmt_annot should be in your $PATH as well (this is automatically the case when using opam).

Contributions to improve this code are highly welcome.

Vim bindings

None for the moment. Contributions highly welcomed.

Remarks

Since cmt_annot depends on the precise data structures used by the OCaml type checker, it may not work when dealing with more than one OCaml versions at the same time. This should not be much of an issue when using opam.

About

This package is licensed by LexiFi under the terms of the MIT license.

Contact: [email protected]

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