The Dhall language integration consists of the following parts:
- The VSCode/ium plugin "Dhall Language Support" (vscode-language-dhall) adds syntax highlighting for Dhall files.
- The VSCode/ium plugin "Dhall LSP Server" (vscode-dhall-lsp-server) implements the LSP client – yes, there is a naming issue here – that communicates with the backend via the LSP protocol to provide advanced language features like error diagnostics or type information, etc.
- dhall-lsp-server, which is part of the dhall-haskell project, implements the actual LSP server (i.e. the backend) that implements those language features in an editor agnostic way, though at the moment only a VSCode/ium frontend exists.
The "official" releases can be installed as follows:
- vscode-language-dhall should be installed directly from VSCode/ium via the extensions marketplace.
- vscode-dhall-lsp-server can also be installed directly from the marketplace.
- dhall-lsp-server can be installed from hackage with
cabal install dhall-lsp-server
. See thedhall-haskell
README
for pre-built binaries, as well as comprehensive installation and development instructions using cabal, stack or nix.
Note The versions of vscode-dhall-lsp-server and dhall-lsp-server need not necessarily match: an older client version will simply not expose all commands available in the backend, while an older server might not implement all commands exposed in the UI.
vscode-dhall-lsp-server
- You need to have npm installed (e.g. using your favourite package manager).
- Install the typescript compiler with
npm install -g typescript
. I recommend runningnpm config set prefix '~/.local'
first to have npm install the executable in~/.local/bin
; this avoids having to use sudo and polluting the rest of the system. - Check out a copy of the vscode-dhall-lsp-server repository into the VSCode/ium extensions folder
(replace
git clone [email protected]:PanAeon/vscode-dhall-lsp-server.git ~/.vscode-oss/extensions/vscode-dhall-lsp-server
~/.vscode-oss/
with~/.vscode/
if you use VSCode instead of VSCodium). - Run the remaining commands in the checked-out directory
cd ~/.vscode-oss/extensions/vscode-dhall-lsp-server
- Run
npm install
to fetch all library dependencies. - Run
npm run compile
to compile the typescript code to javascript. - Start (restart) VSCode/ium.
dhall-lsp-server
For detailed instructions as well as instructions using cabal or nix, see dhall-haskell
- README
. To install dhall-lsp-server using stack:
- Clone
[email protected]:dhall-lang/dhall-haskell.git
. - Inside the checked out repository run
stack install dhall-lsp-server
.
-
Diagnostics Every time you save a Dhall file it is parsed and typechecked, and any errors are marked. You can hover over the offending code to see the error message; to see a detailed explanation in the case of type errors, click the Explain link in the hover box.
-
Clickable imports As long as the file parses successfully, all (local file and remote) imports will be underlined and clickable.
-
Type on hover You can hover over any part of the code and it will tell you the type of the subexpression at that point – if you highlight an identifier you see its type; if you highlight the
->
in a function you will see the type of the entire function. This feature only works if the code passes the typechecker! -
Code completion As you type you will be offered completions for:
- environment variables
- local imports
- identifiers in scope (as well as built-ins)
- record projections from 'easy-to-parse' records (of the form
ident1.ident2
[.ident3...
]) - union constructors from 'easy-to-parse' unions
This is the only feature that works even when the file does not parse (or typecheck).
-
Formatting and Linting Right click and select "Format Document" to run the file through the Dhall formatter. The command "Lint and Format" can be selected via the Command Palette (Ctrl+Shift+P); this will run the linter over the file, removing unused let bindings and formatting the result.
-
Annotate lets Right-click the bound identifier in a
let
binding and select "Annotate Let binding with its type" to do exactly that. -
Freeze imports Right-click an import statement and select "Freeze (refreeze) import" to add (or update) a semantic hash annotation to the import. You can also select "Freeze (refreeze) all imports" from the Command Palette to freeze all imports at once.
Note that this feature behaves slightly differently from the
dhall freeze
command in that the hash annotations are inserted without re-formatting the rest of the code!
dhall-lsp-server
See dhall-haskell
- README
for general development instructions.
- You can also build using
stack build dhall-lsp-server
and pointvscode-dhall-lsp-server.executable
in the VSCode/ium settings to the stack build directory to avoid overriding the already installed version of the LSP server. - You can use standard
Debug.Trace
/putStrLn
debugging; the output will show up in the "Output" panel in VSCode/ium. - To log all LSP communication set
vscode-dhall-lsp-server.trace.server
toverbose
in VSCode/ium.
vscode-dhall-lsp-server
- Instead of working in
~/vscode-oss/extensions/...
directly, you can open a clone of the git repository in VSCode/ium and use the built-in debugging capabilities for extensions: press F5 (or click the green play button in the debugging tab) to launch a new VSCode/ium window with the modified extension (potentially shadowing the installed version). - To package a release:
- Make sure you have npm and tsc installed.
- Use
npm install -g vsce
to install the vsce executable. - Run
vsce package
inside the git repo to package the extension, resulting in a filevscode-dhall-lsp-server-x.x.x.vsix
. - You can install the packaged extension directly by opening the
.vsix
file from within VSCod/ium.
Integration tests
The dhall-lsp-server:tests
testsuite depends on the dhall-lsp-server
executable. Since stack
isn't aware of this dependency, stack test dhall-lsp-server:tests
may use an old executable version. Run these tests with
stack test dhall-lsp-server:tests dhall-lsp-server:dhall-lsp-server
to ensure that the executable is up-to-date.