literatex
transform literate source code to Markdown
https://github.com/ExtremaIS/literatex-haskell#readme
LTS Haskell 23.1: | 0.3.0.0@rev:8 |
Stackage Nightly 2024-12-26: | 0.3.0.0@rev:8 |
Latest on Hackage: | 0.3.0.0@rev:8 |
literatex-0.3.0.0@sha256:0cd9c7c2a6a29df5094bf73b94691ab3e1936232d443768b714803eba19ee971,3946
LiterateX
Overview
LiterateX transforms literate source code to Markdown. Write documentation in Markdown format in the comments of source code, and LiterateX can transform the file to Markdown, optionally including the source code with syntax highlighting and line numbers. Many source formats are supported, and the following target formats are supported:
- Pandoc Markdown
- GitHub Flavored Markdown
- mdBook Markdown, which does not support per-block line numbering
LiterateX can be used to document code that is particularly important or
difficult to understand. For example, documentation can be written in the SQL
file that defines the schema for a complex database. LiterateX can translate
the .sql
file to a Markdown file, which can then be converted to HTML, PDF,
or even EPUB with Pandoc.
LiterateX can also be used in the publishing of blog entries, magazine articles, or books. Use the command-line utility or integrate the Haskell library into your own software.
LiterateX has support for source code rules, comment lines that are used to visually separate sections of source code. Since source code rules are only used to make the source code easier to scan quickly, they are ignored (treated as a blank line) when translating to Markdown.
LiterateX also has support for shebang lines at the start of the file. They can be ignored so that they do not precede the documentation.
Source Formats
LiterateX supports a number of source formats. With the exception of literate Haskell, documentation is written in line comments in the source language. Note that multi-line comments are treated as code, not documentation.
Double-Dash Comments
Documentation is parsed from lines that begin with two dashes immediately
followed by a space (--
). Lines that only contain two dashes are treated
as blank lines in the documentation. Lines that contain three or more dashes
are treated as source code rules and are ignored.
-- # Haskell Example
--
-- Executables are implemented using a `Main` module that exposes a function
-- named `main`.
module Main (main) where
-- The `main` function is run when the program is executed.
main :: IO ()
main = putStrLn "Hello!"
-- This simple example just prints "Hello!" to the screen.
Languages that use double-dash comments include the following:
Double-Slash Comments
Documentation is parsed from lines that begin with two slashes immediately
followed by a space (//
). Lines that only contain two slashes are treated
as blank lines in the documentation. Lines that contain three or more slashes
are treated as source code rules and are ignored.
// # Rust Example
//
// The `main` function is run when the program is executed.
fn main() {
println!("Hello!");
}
// This simple example just prints "Hello!" to the screen.
Languages that use double-slash comments include the following:
Hash Comments
Documentation is parsed from lines that begin with a hash character
immediately followed by a space (#
). Lines that only contain a hash
character are treated as blank lines in the documentation. Lines that contain
two or more hash characters are treated as source code rules and are ignored.
# # Python Example
#
# A quick-and-dirty Python script can include commands at the top level!
print("Hello!")
# This simple example just prints "Hello!" to the screen.
Languages that use hash comments include the following:
Lisp Semicolon Comments
Lisp languages use a semicolon (;
) for line comments, but there is a
special convention to use a different number of semicolons according to the
context. Documentation is parsed from lines that begin with one to four
semicolons immediately followed by a space (;
, ;;
, ;;;
, or ;;;;
).
Lines that only contain one to four semicolons are treated as blank lines in
the documentation. Lines that contain more than four semicolons are treated
as source code rules and are ignored.
; # Racket Example
;
; Racket programs must declare the language to use.
#lang racket/base
; Racket can also include commands at the top level!
(println "Hello!")
; This simple example just prints "Hello!" to the screen.
Languages that use Lisp semicolon comments include the following:
Literate Haskell
GHC has special support for
literate programming.
Haskell source code is usually written with documentation in comments, in
files with a .hs
extension. Literate Haskell source code gives
documentation the leading role and prefixes code with a greater-than sign and
space (>
), in files with a .lhs
extension. The documentation can be in
any format, and Markdown is a popular choice.
Unfortunately, there is a bug that causes problems when using
ATX-style headings (#
characters before the heading text). Any easy
workaround is to use setext-style headings (underlines) instead, but this
limits the number of heading levels. See the
Literate Haskell Markdown Headings blog post for more information and an
example workaround.
This source format does not support source code rules.
Literate Haskell Example
========================
Executables are implemented using a `Main` module that exposes a function
named `main`.
> module Main (main) where
The `main` function is run when the program is executed.
> main :: IO ()
> main = putStrLn "Hello!"
This simple example just prints "Hello!" to the screen.
Percent Comments
Documentation is parsed from lines that begin with a percent character
immediately followed by a space (%
). Lines that only contain a percent
character are treated as blank lines in the documentation. Lines that contain
two or more percent characters are treated as source code rules and are
ignored.
% # Erlang Example
%
% Programs are implemented using a `main` module that exports a `start/0`
% function.
-module(main).
-export([start/0]).
% The `start` function is run when the program is executed.
start() -> io.fwrite("Hello!\n").
% This simple example just prints "Hello!" to the screen.
Languages that use percent comments include the following:
CLI
LiterateX may be used via a command-line utility named literatex
.
Requirements
literatex
has only been tested on Linux. It might work on Windows and
macOS.
Installation
.deb
Package Installation
Check the Releases page for .deb
packages.
.rpm
Package Installation
Check the Releases page for .rpm
packages.
Installation From Hackage
Install literatex
from Hackage using Cabal as follows:
$ cabal v2-install literatex
Installation From Stackage
Install literatex
from Stackage using Stack as follows:
$ stack install literatex
Usage
See the literatex
man page for usage information.
Library
The LiterateX Haskell library provides an API for integrating LiterateX functionality in your own software.
Related Work
Literate programming is a style of programming introduced by Donald Knuth in which the main idea is “to regard a program as a communication to human beings rather than as a set of instructions to a computer.” LiterateX is faithful to this idea in that it is used for communication to human beings. Note, however, that LiterateX does not support another core aspect of Knuth’s literate programming: the ability to write source code in the order best for human understanding. Since LiterateX transforms actual source code files, the source code has to be written in whatever order is required by the language. Those interested in writing code in different order are encouraged to check out noweb and CWEB.
The lhs2tex utility is used to work with literate Haskell and LaTeX.
The markdown-unlit utility is used to extract Haskell code from Markdown files. This is useful in cases where the Markdown file is displayed on GitHub.
The src2md utility, written in Common Lisp, also supports multiple source formats. It outputs Markdown that includes HTML, which limits the usefulness of the Markdown.
The extract-documentation-comments utility, written in JavaScript, extracts documentation from multi-line JavaScript comments.
mlp.clj, written in Clojure, is a babashka script that transforms literate Clojure source code to Markdown, including HTML. The author uses it to implement a live preview of literate Clojure documentation while using the Notepad++ (Windows editor).
Project
Links
- Hackage: https://hackage.haskell.org/package/literatex
- Stackage: https://www.stackage.org/package/literatex
- Flora: https://flora.pm/packages/@hackage/literatex
- GitHub: https://github.com/ExtremaIS/literatex-haskell
- GitHub Actions CI: https://github.com/ExtremaIS/literatex-haskell/actions
Branches
The main
branch is reserved for releases. It may be considered stable, and
HEAD
is always the latest release.
The develop
branch is the primary development branch. It contains changes
that have not yet been released, and it is not necessarily stable.
Hackage revisions are made for metadata changes, such as relaxation of
constraints when new versions of dependencies are released. The
literatex.cabal
metadata in the main
branch may therefore not match that
of Hackage. The literatex.cabal
metadata in the develop
branch may match,
unless work is being done on a new release that contains other changes.
Tags
All releases are tagged in the main
branch. Release tags are signed using
the [email protected]
GPG key.
Contribution
Issues and feature requests are tracked on GitHub: https://github.com/ExtremaIS/literatex-haskell/issues
Issues may also be submitted via email to [email protected].
License
This project is released under the MIT License as specified in the
LICENSE
file.
Changes
literatex-haskell
Changelog
This project follows the Haskell package versioning policy, with
versions in A.B.C.D
format. A
may be incremented arbitrarily for
non-technical reasons, but semantic versioning is otherwise
followed, where A.B
is the major version, C
is the minor version, and D
is the patch version. Initial development uses versions 0.0.0.D
, for which
every version is considered breaking.
The format of this changelog is based on Keep a Changelog, with the following conventions:
- Level-two heading
Unreleased
is used to track changes that have not been released. - Other level-two headings specify the release in
A.B.C.D (YYYY-MM-DD)
format, with newer versions above older versions. - Level-three headings are used to categorize changes as follows:
- Breaking
- Non-Breaking
- Changes are listed in arbitrary order and present tense.
0.3.0.0 (2023-05-28)
Breaking
- Add support for
optparse-applicative
0.18
Non-Breaking
- Bump
ansi-wl-pprint
dependency version upper bound
0.2.1.0 (2023-03-21)
Breaking
- Add
MdBook
target format
Non-Breaking
- Bump TTC dependency version upper bound
- Adjust dependency constraints to match tested versions
0.2.0.2 (2022-02-05)
Non-Breaking
- Bump
optparse-applicative
dependency version upper bound
0.2.0.1 (2021-12-25)
Non-Breaking
- Bump
text
dependency version upper bound
0.2.0.0 (2021-06-25)
Breaking
- Fix
--help
when usingoptparse-applicative
0.16
Non-Breaking
- Refactor Nix configuration
- Use TTC 1.1.0.1
0.1.0.2 (2021-06-10)
Non-Breaking
- Bump TTC dependency version upper bound
0.1.0.1 (2021-06-03)
Non-Breaking
- Use
docker-pkg
scripts to build packages - Bump TTC dependency version upper bound
0.1.0.0 (2021-05-26)
Breaking
- Initial public release