# Contributing to Tokei - [Language Addition](#language-addition) - [Bug Reports](#bug-reports) # Language Addition Currently, Tokei generates languages from the [`languages.json`](languages.json) file. JSON was chosen to make it easy to add new languages and change code structure without changing large data structures. Here, we will go over the properties of a language in `languages.json` through examples. ```json "JavaScript": { "line_comment": ["//"], "multi_line_comments": [["/*", "*/"]], "quotes": [["\\\"", "\\\""], ["'", "'"], ["`", "`"]], "extensions": ["js", "mjs"] }, ``` Above is the JavaScript's definition. The first thing that needs to be defined is the key. The key's format should be same as [Rust's enum style]. As this key will be used in an enum for identifying the language. For a lot of languages, this also works for showing the language when we print to the screen. However, there are some languages whose names don't work with the enum style. For example, `JSON` is usually shown in all caps, but that doesn't fit in Rust's enum style. So we have an additional optional field called `name` which defines how the language should look when displayed to the user. ```json "Json": { "name": "JSON", //... }, ``` For defining comments, there are a few properties. The most commonly used property is `line_comment` which defines single line comments. These are comments which don't continue onto the next line. Here is an example in Rust: ```rust let x = 5; // default x position let y = 0; // default y position ``` The `line_comment` property expects an array of strings, as some languages have multiple syntaxes for defining a single line comment. For example, `PHP` allows both `#` and `//` for single line comments. ```json "Php": { "line_comment": [ "#", "//" ], //... }, ``` For defining comments that also have an ending syntax, there is the `multi_line` property. An example for such comments in Rust: ```rust let x = /* There is a reason for this comment, I swear! */ 10; ``` The `verbatim_quotes` property expects an array of strings, as some languages have multiple syntaxes for defining verbatim strings. A verbatim string in the context of Tokei is a string literal that can have unescaped `"`s. For example [`CSharp`](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/programming-guide/strings/#regular-and-verbatim-string-literals) ```json "CSharp": { "verbatim_quotes": [ [ "@\\\"", "\\\"" ] ], //... }, ``` ```csharp const string BasePath = @"C:\"; ``` Some languages have a single, standard filename with no extension like `Makefile` or `Dockerfile`. These can be defined with the `filenames` property: ```json "Makefile": { "filenames": [ "makefile" ], "extensions": [ "makefile", "mak", "mk" ] }, ``` Filenames should be all-lowercase, whether or not the filename typically has capital letters included. Note that filenames will **override** extensions. With the following definition, a file named `CMakeLists.txt` will be detected as a `CMake` file, not a `Text` file. ```json "Text": { "extensions": [ "txt" ] }, "CMake": { "filenames": [ "cmakelists.txt" ] }, ``` # Tests A test file is required for language additions. The file should contain every variant comments and quotes, as well as a comment at the top of the file containing the manually verified lines, code, comments, blanks in the following format: ``` NUM lines NUM code NUM comments NUM blanks ``` ### Example In Rust for example, the first line should look like the following: ```rust //! 39 lines 32 code 2 comments 5 blanks ``` The comment should use the syntax of the language you're testing. A good example of a test file is [`tests/data/rust.rs`](tests/data/rust.rs). ```rust //! 48 lines 36 code 6 comments 6 blanks //! ```rust //! fn main () { //! // Comment //! //! println!("Hello World!"); //! } //! ``` /* /**/ */ fn main() { let start = r##"/*##\" \"##; // comment loop { if x.len() >= 2 && x[0] == '*' && x[1] == '/' { // found the */ break; } } } fn foo<'a, 'b>(name: &'b str) { let this_ends = "a \"test/*."; call1(); call2(); let this_does_not = /* a /* nested */ comment " */ "*/another /*test call3(); */"; } fn foobar() { let does_not_start = // " "until here, test/* test"; // a quote: " let also_doesnt_start = /* " */ "until here, test,*/ test"; // another quote: " } fn foo() { let a = 4; // /* let b = 5; let c = 6; // */ } ``` # Bug Reports Please include the error message and a minimum working example including the file or file structure. ```` This file crashes the program: ``` ``` ```` [Rust's enum style]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0430-finalizing-naming-conventions.md#general-naming-conventions