NAME¶
Parse::ExuberantCTags - Efficiently parse exuberant ctags files
SYNOPSIS¶
use Parse::ExuberantCTags;
my $parser = Parse::ExuberantCTags->new( 'tags_filename' );
# find a given tag that starts with 'foo' and do not ignore case
my $tag = $parser->findTag("foo", ignore_case => 0, partial => 1);
if (defined $tag) {
print $tag->{name}, "\n";
}
$tag = $parser->findNextTag();
# ...
# iterator interface (use findTag instead, it does a binary search)
$tag = $parser->firstTag;
while (defined($tag = $parser->nextTag)) {
# use the tag structure
}
DESCRIPTION¶
This Perl module parses
ctags files and handles both traditional ctags as
well as extended ctags files such as produced with
Exuberant
ctags. To the best of my knowledge, it does not handle emacs-style
"
etags" files.
The module is implemented as a wrapper around the
readtags library that
normally ships with
Exuberant ctags. If you do not know what that is,
you are encouraged to have a look at <
http://ctags.sourceforge.net/>. In
order to use this module, you do not need
Exuberant ctags on your
system. The module ships a copy of
readtags. Quoting the
readtags documentation:
The functions defined in this interface are intended to provide tag file
support to a software tool. The tag lookups provided are sufficiently fast
enough to permit opening a sorted tag file, searching for a matching tag,
then closing the tag file each time a tag is looked up (search times are
on the order of hundreths of a second, even for huge tag files). This is
the recommended use of this library for most tool applications. Adhering
to this approach permits a user to regenerate a tag file at will without
the tool needing to detect and resynchronize with changes to the tag file.
Even for an unsorted 24MB tag file, tag searches take about one second.
Take away from this that tag files should be sorted by the generating program.
The methods that return a tag entry all return tags in the same format. Examples
count for a billion words:
{
name => 'IO::File',
file => '/usr/lib/perl/5.10/IO/File.pm',
fileScope => 0,
kind => 'p',
addressPattern => '/package IO::File;/',
addressLineNumber => 3,
extension => {
class => 'IO::File',
},
}
The structure has the name of the tag ("name"), the file it was found
in ("file"), a flag indicating whether the tag is scoped to the file
only, the type of the tag entry ("kind"), the "ex" search
pattern for locating the definition ("addressPattern"), the line
number ("addressLineNumber"), and then key/value pairs from the
extension section of the tag.
Not all of the fields are guaranteed to be available. Particularly the
"extension" section will be empty if the tags file doesn't make use
of the extended format. Refer to the ctags reference for details.
METHODS¶
new¶
Given the name of a file to read the tags from, opens that file and returns a
"Parse::ExuberantCTags" object on success, false otherwise.
findTag¶
Takes the name of the tag to be sought as first argument.
Following the tag name, two optional arguments (key/value pairs) are supported:
Setting "<partial =" 1>> makes the tag name match if it's the
start of a tag. Setting "<ignore_case =" 1>> makes the
search ignore the case of the tag. Note that setting
"<ignore_case"> to true results in a slower linear instead of
a binary search!
Returns a tag structure or undef if none matched.
findNextTag¶
Returns the next tag that matches the previous search (see "findTag").
Returns undef if no more tags match.
firstTag¶
Returns the first tag in the file. Returns undef if the file is emtpy.
nextTag¶
Returns the next tag or undef if the end of the file is reached.
CAVEATS¶
The SetSortType call is currently not supported. Let me know if you need it and
I'll add a wrapper.
SEE ALSO¶
Exuberant ctags homepage: <
http://ctags.sourceforge.net/>
Wikipedia on ctags: <
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ctags>
Module that can produce ctags files from Perl code: Perl::Tags
File::PackageIndexer
AUTHOR¶
Steffen Mueller, <smueller@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE¶
This Perl module is a wrapper around the
readtags library that is shipped
as part of the exuberant ctags program. A copy of
readtags is included
with this module.
readtags was put in the public domain by its author.
The full copyright/license information from the code is:
Copyright (c) 1996-2003, Darren Hiebert
This source code is released into the public domain.
The XS wrapper and this document are:
Copyright (C) 2009-2010 by Steffen Mueller
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.6 or, at your option, any
later version of Perl 5 you may have available.