shithub: rgbds

ref: 8553b61a946527d12f2af7b75b1a7c66b8044ca1
dir: /contrib/bash_compl/_rgbasm.bash/

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#!/usr/bin/env bash

# Known bugs:
# - Newlines in file/directory names break this script
#   This is because we rely on `compgen -A`, which is broken like this.
#   A fix would require implementing it ourselves, and no thanks!
# - `rgbasm --binary-digits=a` is treated the same as `rgbasm --binary-digits=` (for example)
#   This is not our fault, Bash passes both of these identically.
#   Maybe it could be worked around, but such a fix would likely be involved.
#   The user can work around it by typing `--binary-digits ''` instead, for example.
# - Directories are not completed as such in "coalesced" short-opt arguments. For example,
#   `rgbasm -M d<tab>` can autocomplete to `rgbasm -M dir/` (no space), but
#   `rgbasm -Md<tab>` would autocomplete to `rgbasm -Mdir ` (trailing space) instead.
#   This is because directory handling is performed by Readline, whom we can't tell about the short
#   opt kerfuffle. The user can work around by separating the argument, as shown above.
#   (Also, there might be more possible bugs if `-Mdir` is actually a directory. Ugh.)

# Something to note:
# `rgbasm --binary-digits=a` gets passed to us as ('rgbasm' '--binary-digits' '=' 'a')
# Thus, we don't need to do much to handle that form of argument passing: skip '=' after long opts.

_rgbasm_completions() {
	# Format: "long_opt:state_after"
	# Empty long opt = it doesn't exit
	# See the `state` variable below for info about `state_after`
	declare -A opts=(
		[V]="version:normal"
		[E]="export-all:normal"
		[H]="nop-after-halt:normal"
		[h]="halt-without-nop:normal"
		[L]="preserve-ld:normal"
		[l]="auto-ldh:normal"
		[v]="verbose:normal"
		[w]=":normal"
		[b]="binary-digits:unk"
		[D]="define:unk"
		[g]="gfx-chars:unk"
		[I]="include:dir"
		[M]="dependfile:glob-*.mk *.d"
		[o]="output:glob-*.o"
		[P]="preinclude:glob-*.asm *.inc"
		[p]="pad-value:unk"
		[Q]="q-precision:unk"
		[r]="recursion-depth:unk"
		[W]="warning:warning"
	)
	# Parse command-line up to current word
	local opt_ena=true
	# Possible states:
	# - normal  = Well, normal. Options are parsed normally.
	# - unk     = An argument that can't be completed, and should just be skipped.
	# - warning = A warning flag.
	# - dir     = A directory path
	# - glob-*  = A glob, after the dash is a whitespace-separated list of file globs to use
	local state=normal
	# The length of the option, used as a return value by the function below
	local optlen=0
	# $1: a short option word
	# `state` will be set to the parsing state after the last option character in the word. If
	# "normal" is not returned, `optlen` will be set to the length (dash included) of the "option"
	# part of the argument.
	parse_short_opt() {
		# These options act like a long option (= takes up the entire word), but only use a single dash
		# So, they need some special handling
		if [[ "$1" = "-M"[GP] ]]; then
			state=normal
			optlen=${#1}
			return;
		elif [[ "$1" = "-M"[QT] ]]; then
			state='glob-*.d *.mk *.o'
			optlen=${#1}
			return;
		fi

		for (( i = 1; i < "${#1}"; i++ )); do
			# If the option is not known, assume it doesn't take an argument
			local opt="${opts["${1:$i:1}"]:-":normal"}"
			state="${opt#*:}"
			# If the option takes an argument, record the length and exit
			if [[ "$state" != 'normal' ]]; then
				let optlen="$i + 1"
				return
			fi
		done
		optlen=0
	}

	for (( i = 1; i < COMP_CWORD; i++ )); do
		local word="${COMP_WORDS[$i]}"

		# If currently processing an argument, skip this word
		if [[ "$state" != 'normal' ]]; then
			state=normal
			continue
		fi

		if [[ "$word" = '--' ]]; then
			# Options stop being parsed after this
			opt_ena=false
			break
		fi

		# Check if it's a long option
		if [[ "$word" = '--'* ]]; then
			# If the option is unknown, assume it takes no arguments: keep the state at "normal"
			for long_opt in "${opts[@]}"; do
				if [[ "$word" = "--${long_opt%%:*}" ]]; then
					state="${long_opt#*:}"
					# Check if the next word is just '='; if so, skip it, the argument must follow
					# (See "known bugs" at the top of this script)
					let i++
					if [[ "${COMP_WORDS[$i]}" != '=' ]]; then
						let i--
					fi
					optlen=0
					break
				fi
			done
		# Check if it's a short option
		elif [[ "$word" = '-'* ]]; then
			parse_short_opt "$word"
			# The last option takes an argument...
			if [[ "$state" != 'normal' ]]; then
				if [[ "$optlen" -ne "${#word}" ]]; then
					# If it's contained within the word, we won't complete it, revert to "normal"
					state=normal
				else
					# Otherwise, complete it, but start at the beginning of *that* word
					optlen=0
				fi
			fi
		fi
	done

	# Parse current word
	# Careful that it might look like an option, so use `--` aggressively!
	local cur_word="${COMP_WORDS[$i]}"

	# Process options, as short ones may change the state
	if $opt_ena && [[ "$state" = 'normal' && "$cur_word" = '-'* ]]; then
		# We might want to complete to an option or an arg to that option
		# Parse the option word to check
		# There's no whitespace in the option names, so we can ride a little dirty...

		# Is this a long option?
		if [[ "$cur_word" = '--'* ]]; then
			# It is, try to complete one
			mapfile -t COMPREPLY < <(compgen -W "${opts[*]%%:*}" -P '--' -- "${cur_word#--}")
			return 0
		elif [[ "$cur_word" = '-M'[GPQT] ]]; then
			# These options act like long opts with no arguments, so return them and exactly them
			COMPREPLY=( "$cur_word" )
			return 0
		else
			# Short options may be grouped, parse them to determine what to complete
			parse_short_opt "$cur_word"

			if [[ "$state" = 'normal' ]]; then
				mapfile -t COMPREPLY < <(compgen -W "${!opts[*]}" -P "$cur_word" ''; compgen -W '-MG -MP -MQ -MT' "$cur_word")
				return 0
			elif [[ "$optlen" = "${#cur_word}" && "$state" != "warning" ]]; then
				# This short option group only awaits its argument!
				# Post the option group as-is as a reply so that Readline inserts a space,
				# so that the next completion request switches to the argument
				# An exception is made for warnings, since it's idiomatic to stick them to the
				# `-W`, and it doesn't break anything.
				COMPREPLY=( "$cur_word" )
				return 0
			fi
		fi
	fi

	COMPREPLY=()
	case "$state" in
		unk) # Return with no replies: no idea what to complete!
			;;
		warning)
			mapfile -t COMPREPLY < <(compgen -W "
				assert
				backwards-for
				builtin-args
				charmap-redef
				div
				empty-data-directive
				empty-macro-arg
				empty-strrpl
				large-constant
				long-string
				macro-shift
				nested-comment
				numeric-string
				obsolete
				shift
				shift-amount
				truncation
				unmapped-char
				user
				all
				extra
				everything
				error" -P "${cur_word:0:$optlen}" -- "${cur_word:$optlen}")
			;;
		normal) # Acts like a glob...
			state="glob-*.asm *.inc *.sm83"
			;&
		glob-*)
			while read -r word; do
				COMPREPLY+=("${cur_word:0:$optlen}$word")
			done < <(for glob in ${state#glob-}; do compgen -A file -X \!"$glob" -- "${cur_word:$optlen}"; done)
			# Also complete directories
			;&
		dir)
			while read -r word; do
				COMPREPLY+=("${cur_word:0:$optlen}$word")
			done < <(compgen -A directory -- "${cur_word:$optlen}")
			compopt -o filenames
			;;
		*)
			echo >&2 "Internal completion error: invalid state \"$state\", please report this bug"
			return 1
			;;
	esac
}

complete -F _rgbasm_completions rgbasm