GNU bug report logs - #75154
31.0.50; java-ts-mode. Issues with Indentation

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Package: emacs;

Reported by: Artem <snake05865 <at> gmail.com>

Date: Sat, 28 Dec 2024 04:38:02 UTC

Severity: minor

Found in version 31.0.50

Full log


Message #40 received at 75154 <at> debbugs.gnu.org (full text, mbox):

From: Eli Zaretskii <eliz <at> gnu.org>
To: casouri <at> gmail.com
Cc: 75154 <at> debbugs.gnu.org, theo <at> thornhill.no, stefankangas <at> gmail.com,
 snake05865 <at> gmail.com
Subject: Re: bug#75154: 31.0.50; java-ts-mode. Issues with Indentation
Date: Sun, 13 Apr 2025 10:20:07 +0300
Ping! Ping!  Do we need to do anything else here?

> Cc: 75154 <at> debbugs.gnu.org, theo <at> thornhill.no, stefankangas <at> gmail.com,
>  snake05865 <at> gmail.com
> Date: Sat, 29 Mar 2025 14:26:11 +0300
> From: Eli Zaretskii <eliz <at> gnu.org>
> 
> Ping! What else needs to be done here?
> 
> > From: Yuan Fu <casouri <at> gmail.com>
> > Date: Sun, 16 Mar 2025 22:47:48 -0700
> > Cc: Artem Bliznetsov <snake05865 <at> gmail.com>,
> >  Theodor Thornhill <theo <at> thornhill.no>,
> >  75154 <at> debbugs.gnu.org,
> >  stefankangas <at> gmail.com
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > > On Mar 9, 2025, at 1:54 AM, Eli Zaretskii <eliz <at> gnu.org> wrote:
> > > 
> > > Ping! Yuan, could you please respond, so we could make progress with
> > > these issues?
> > 
> > Yeah, to move this forward, I applied the patch I submitted and made some more changes suggested by Artem. Now everything in this report should be handled. And honestly I don’t want to put more work in java-ts-mode anymore. I don’t know java very well and there’s a million other tree-sitter things I need to do.
> > 
> > >> From: Artem Bliznetsov <snake05865 <at> gmail.com>
> > >> Cc: Theodor Thornhill <theo <at> thornhill.no>, 75154 <at> debbugs.gnu.org, Eli
> > >> Zaretskii <eliz <at> gnu.org>, Stefan Kangas <stefankangas <at> gmail.com>
> > >> Date: Sun, 02 Mar 2025 01:34:05 +0300
> > >> 
> > >>> Ok, I attached a patch-set, if you apply this patch-set on top of _latest master_, most of the fixable problems in this report should be fixed/improved. Now, let me reply each item:
> > >> 
> > >> Thank you for your patch. I have tested your changes.
> > >> During compilation, I encountered the following warning:
> > >> 
> > >> In java-ts-mode--first-line-on-multi-line-string:
> > >> java-ts-mode.el:105:68: Warning: Unused lexical argument ‘bol’
> > >> 
> > >> However, everything seems to be working fine. 
> > >> 
> > >>> 1. In the patch I added java-ts-mode-method-chaining-indent-offset,
> > >>>   defaults to 8
> > >> 
> > >> Thank you! That’s great. Most users accustomed to 8-space indentation
> > >> will find the default setting comfortable. Those who prefer
> > >> 4 spaces are also taken into account.
> > >> 
> > >>> 2. Set electric-indent-chars to nil so it doesn’t indent the current
> > >>>   line when you press RET.
> > >> 
> > >> Actually, setting electric-indent-chars to nil disables all automatic
> > >> indentation. Now, I’m reconsidering whether the initial example I
> > >> provided was perhaps misguided and beyond what should be expected.
> > >> 
> > >> 2) Inner Classes
> > >> Example 1:
> > >> public class Outer {
> > >> class Inner {| <-- cursor here moves Inner class unexpectedly
> > >> 
> > >>    }
> > >> }
> > >> Example 2:
> > >> public class Outer {
> > >>    class Inner { // ???
> > >>        | <-- cursor here.           
> > >>    }
> > >> }
> > >> 
> > >> Again, I compared this behavior with IntelliJ IDEA and
> > >> wondered why it shouldn't work the same way here. Essentially,
> > >> what are we violating if we write
> > >> 
> > >> public class Outer {
> > >> class Inner {}
> > >> }
> > >> 
> > >> There are no syntax errors, but class Inner is not indented.
> > >> Yes, the indentation appears when pressing RET after {, but if we
> > >> then remove the spaces before class Inner and press RET again
> > >> after {, electric-indent corrects the indentation.
> > 
> > On my machine this code snippet is indented correctly:
> > 
> > public class Outer {
> >     class Inner {}
> > }
> > 
> > Might have to do with different tree-sitter grammar versions. But let’s focus on the bigger issues and move forward at the moment.
> > 
> > >> On one hand, this seems reasonable. On the other hand, shouldn’t this
> > >> be handled by an external formatter? This is a minor issue and may
> > >> not require any changes.
> > 
> > You can definitely use an external formatter. If you really just want indent behavior of other editors, try stupid-indent-mode (you can install it from MELPA I think).
> > 
> > >> 
> > >>> 3. The indentation is fixed once you type a valid statement, this is
> > >>>   because tree-sitter needs something to generate a parse-tree. We
> > >>>   can add some heuristics that gives a more intuitive indentation
> > >>>   when the line is empty, eg, "if prev line is while and current line
> > >>>   is empty, indent one level", etc. But that’s a more complicated
> > >>>   feature and I’ll defer to Theo.
> > >> 
> > >>> 
> > >>> 4.
> > >>> - Triple quote support in electric-pair-mode -> let’s open a separate
> > >>>  bug report for it and have electric-pair-mode maintainer take a
> > >>>  look.
> > >> 
> > >> Should I classify this as a bug report? I didn’t notice any feature
> > >> request category in the bug tracker. This is a small improvement that
> > >> would add some convenience. Triple-quoted text blocks are not
> > >> exclusive to Java; many other languages use them as well.
> > 
> > Sure, I don’t think the category matter too much.
> > 
> > >> 
> > >>> - In general, TAB in Emacs prog modes indent to a fixed point, rather
> > >>>  than just inserting a tab.
> > >> 
> > >> I wasn’t aware of how this works. I briefly tested python-ts-mode and
> > >> noticed that TAB behaves more freely there.
> > 
> > Because python’s semantics depends on indentation, so it’s impossible to know what’s the correct indentation. Anyway, as I said, try stupid-indent-mode.
> > 
> > >> 
> > >>> I added a indent rule such that aligns a
> > >>>  line in a string block to the previous line, for the first line, it indents one level.
> > >>> 
> > >> 
> > >>> 6. For the parameter indentation, I recently added
> > >>>   c-ts-common-baseline-indent-rules that can handle it correctly. So
> > >>>   if we remove the existing indent rule for the parameters and add
> > >>>   c-ts-common-baseline-indent-rules at the end so the indentation
> > >>>   falls back to it, the indentation would look like this:
> > >>> 
> > >>> public class TextBlocks {
> > >>>    public record StudentRecord(String firstName,
> > >>>                                String lastName,
> > >>>                                Long studentId,
> > >>>                                String email) {
> > >>> 
> > >>>    }
> > >>> 
> > >>> 
> > >>>    public String filterData(@RequestParam(required = false) String name,
> > >>>                             @RequestParam(required = false) String name,
> > >>>                             @RequestParam(required = false) Integer age
> > >>>    )
> > >>> }
> > >>> 
> > >>> Seems fair? Theo, WDYT?
> > >> 
> > >> I tested it, and it works. But do you see how it behaves?
> > >> I’m not sure how to describe it correctly, but it feels a bit odd.
> > >> If issue #3 gets resolved, everything should look much better.
> > 
> > Stupid-indent-mode should solve your problem. So I’ll leave it as-is for now.
> > 
> > >> 
> > >>>> - Annotations (@Annotations)
> > >>> It seems to work fine? What’s the problem that you see?
> > >> 
> > >> That was my mistake. I didn’t check which face was being used—or
> > >> whether there was one at all. By default, java-mode uses
> > >> c-annotation-face,while java-ts-mode uses font-lock-constant-face.
> > >> One inherits from the other. I use the Modus theme, so something may
> > >> have changed there.I only noticed it because, without any additional
> > >> configuration, java-mode highlighted annotations by default.
> > >> 
> > >> Anyway, it’s not that important now.
> > >> 
> > >>>> - Diamond Brackets (<>)
> > >>> Same as above, what’s the desired behavior?
> > >> 
> > >> I just tested it with emacs -q and didn’t see any specific face for <>
> > >> in java-mode. I use the popular package rainbow-delimiters.el,
> > >> which does highlight <> in java-mode, but it hasn’t been updated in
> > >> a while and doesn’t work with java-ts-mode.Currently, java-ts-mode
> > >> applies font-lock-operator-face to <>, =, ->, &&, and possibly other
> > >> symbols.That doesn’t seem quite right—should all operators really be
> > >> highlighted this way? Some users might prefer extensive syntax
> > >> highlighting, but it feels excessive to me.
> > 
> > What’s your treesit-font-lock-level? It’s 3 by default, and you shouldn’t get highlighting on operators unless the level is set to 4.
> > 
> > >> For reference, IntelliJ IDEA also doesn’t highlight <> by default.
> > >> It requires a third-party plugin for that. So I’m not sure whether
> > >> this should be added or not. If it is, that would be a nice improvement.
> > 
> > 
> > >> 
> > >>>> - Constants, Static Variables, Enum Variables should be highlighted with
> > >>>> distinct colors and optionally italic font
> > >>> 
> > >>> For constants, they aren’t highlighted in constant face because rules
> > >>> for ‘definition’ and ‘expression’ feature overrides them with
> > >>> variable-name face. We can fix this by either moving the ‘constant’
> > >>> face after ‘definition’ and ‘expression’ feature, or remove the
> > >>> :override flag for ‘definition’ and ‘expression’ feature. Theo, any
> > >>> suggestions here?
> > >> 
> > >> That would be great to implement! I’m not sure how to show you exactly
> > >> how it "should" look. Is it possible to attach images here?
> > 
> > Yes, just attach it to the email. And I moved the font-lock rule for constant below definition and expression. Now constants should be fontified correctly.
> > 
> > >> Although, Theo might have IntelliJ IDEA CE installed, so he likely
> > >> already knows how it can look visually appealing.
> > >> 
> > >>>> - Unused Variables or Classes (Grayed Out)
> > >>>> - Unused variables, unused classes, etc., highlighted in gray. Not
> > >>>    sure if this can be achieved
> > >>> 
> > >>> Tree-sitter can’t do this. So the only option is to use eglot for it.
> > >> 
> > >> Thanks for the clarification! I’ll try to look into this.
> > >> 
> > >> ----
> > >> By the way, I discovered something else today. In
> > >> java-ts-mode--keywords, the following keywords are missing:
> > >> boolean, byte, char, const, double, float,
> > >> goto, int, long, short, super, this, void, permits, var, when, yield, _.
> > >> According to the Java Language Specification
> > >> https://docs.oracle.com/javase/specs/jls/se23/html/jls-3.html#jls-3.9,
> > >> the keyword @interface should be removed since annotations are already
> > >> handled separately, and interface is already in the list.
> > 
> > I added the non-type keywords in. Types like boolean and byte are fontified as type, so they don’t need to be in the list. And this and super are handled differently. I removed @interface.
> > 
> > >>> Finally, some suggestions on communication. As you said on reddit,
> > >>> you’re not a native English speaker, so I can’t blame you, but some
> > >>> minor changes to wording can make your message sound a lot kinder :)
> > >>> For example, short and imperative sentences like "you understand?"
> > >>> sounds harsh and condescending; OTOH something like "I hope you can
> > >>> understand/get that..." is a lot better. As a rule of thumb, the less
> > >>> certain and the longer your expression is, the softer it sounds ;-)
> > >>> 
> > >>> Yuan
> > >> 
> > >> Yes, it is true that English is not my native language. However, upon
> > >> reviewing my messages,I understand that in certain instances, I was not
> > >> sufficiently polite. I will make an effort to improve this.
> > >> I regret that this occurred.
> > 
> > Thanks for you consideration :-)
> > 
> > 
> 
> 
> 
> 




This bug report was last modified 60 days ago.

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