Parsexp.PositionsCompact set of positions
A t value represent a sequence of positions. The focus is on small memory footprint.
Given a s-expression and a sequence of positions, one can reconstruct the location of every sub s-expression. This is used to report location informations without having to annotate every node in the s-expression during parsing.
The s-expression parser saves the positions of each opening and closing parentheses as well as the positions of the first and last character of each atom.
Note that a t can hold the same given positions no more than twice. The parser stores the same position twice for non-quoted single character atoms.
val sexp_of_t : t -> Sexplib0.Sexp.ttype pos = {}Represent a position in the input
val sexp_of_pos : pos -> Sexplib0.Sexp.tval beginning_of_file : posRange of positions, as reported in error messages. We follow the lexing conventions of OCaml, i.e. start_pos points to the first character and end_pos points to the position just after the last character.
This allow for instance to represent empty ranges with start_pos = end_pos.
val sexp_of_range : range -> Sexplib0.Sexp.tMake a range from two positions where both positions are inclusive, i.e. start_pos points to the first character and end_pos points to the last one. The character at last_pos is assumed to not be a newline character.
module Builder : sig ... endfind t start stop returns the range of positions starting at position with index start in t and ending at position with index stop.
find t i j is the same as:
let a = to_array t in
make_range_incl ~start_pos:a.(i) ~last_pos:a.(j)but more efficient.
val find_sub_sexp_phys : t -> Sexplib0.Sexp.t -> sub:Sexplib0.Sexp.t -> range optionfind_sub_sexp_phys t sexp ~sub looks for sub in sexp and return its location, assuming t is the sequence of positions associated with sexp.
Comparison is done using physical equality.
val find_sub_sexp_in_list_phys : t -> Sexplib0.Sexp.t list -> sub:Sexplib0.Sexp.t -> range optionval memory_footprint_in_bytes : t -> intReturns how much memory is used by t
module Iterator : sig ... endAPI for iterating over positions in an efficient way