#tree-sitter #parser

tree-sitter-elisp

elisp grammar for the tree-sitter parsing library

4 stable releases

1.5.0 Jun 18, 2024
1.4.0 Jun 18, 2024
1.3.0 Jun 3, 2023
1.2.0 Sep 27, 2021

#1052 in Parser implementations

27 downloads per month
Used in 3 crates (2 directly)

MIT license

235KB
7K SLoC

C 6.5K SLoC JavaScript 190 SLoC Scheme 62 SLoC // 0.1% comments Rust 33 SLoC // 0.4% comments

Tree-sitter Grammar for Emacs Lisp

crates.io npm

A tree-sitter grammar for elisp.

Syntax supported:

  • Atoms (integers, floats, strings, characters, symbols)
  • Lists (normal syntax (a b) and dotted (a . b))
  • Vectors
  • Quoting and unquoting (', #', `, ,, ,@)
  • Some special read syntax ($#, ##, #("foo" 1 2 x))
  • Bytecode literals (#[1 2 3 4])
  • Special forms (let etc)
  • Comments

Limitations:

  • Autoload cookies are treated as plain comments

Limitations

Elisp is a lisp-2 with user-defined macros. A simple parser cannot detect if e.g. (foo (let ...)) is a function call with a let expression argument, or a macro call where let means something else.

Currently tree-sitter-elisp treats everything as an s-expression. This is accurate, but makes this package less useful for generating a summary of file contents, or for syntax highlighting.

Emacs itself has more information that it can use. Emacs will highlight macro calls based on which macros are defined in the current instance. Some elisp packages also offer custom highlighting logic, such as dash-fontify-mode in dash.el.

Developing

Check out the repo, then use npm to install dependencies.

$ npm install

You can then parse your favourite elisp files.

$ npm run parse ~/.emacs.d/init.el

The grammar itself is in grammar.js. You'll need to regenerate the code after editing the grammar.

$ npm run generate

This project also contains a few tests.

$ npm test

You can also run this parser against your .emacs.d to confirm it can parse everything.

$ npm run parse -- '/home/wilfred/.emacs.d/**/*.el' --quiet --stat

Why?

The best place to read and write elisp is of course Emacs.

However, there is a growing ecosystem of tools built on top of tree-sitter, such as GitHub. This project should allow them to support emacs lisp too.

tree-sitter-clojure is another tree-sitter package for the lisp family. It's a useful project to compare with, and has notes discussing lisp-specific challenges.

language-emacs-lisp is a textmate grammar for elisp that's used for Atom and GitHub.

Dependencies

~2.7–4MB
~73K SLoC