On 06/20/2010 11:05 AM, Claus Reinke wrote:
I think Luke means that if you use qualified names then hothasktags
can give you better location information than current ghci ctags.
GHCi :ctags doesn't output tags for qualified names (though it
probably should), but that isn't enough for proper handling of
qualified imports. I believe hothasktags is meant to output
multiple tags per target, one for each module referencing the
target.
I understand it that way too.
But that would rely on scoped tags.
By scoped tags, I understand tags valid only in the given scope (which
is a file for the sake of qualified imports) which is the same as static
tags which are supposed to be valid inside a file too ... but they are
not as I found out from your example later :-(
I discussed this with Luke before and I sumarrized what would need to
be done to imporove ghci ctags to support qualified names better.
Here is the post which explains it with an example:
http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.comp.lang.haskell.cafe/73116
The problem with that example is that all occurrences of B.x point
to b.hs and C.x always points to c.hs, so it doesn't test the scoping
aspect of static tags. For instance, if you are in b.hs, and try ':tag
C.x',
you'll still be sent to c.hs, even though that isn't in scope (see also
':help tag-priority').
Yes, but this is the way vim works. Vim jumps even when given tag is not
in scope. C.x is not in scope in b.hs (not as a static nor as a global
symbol) so vim gives as static tag in a different file which matches
exactly. Which looks like a reasonable feature for non-hierarchical
symbols (maybe one is missing an include/import). Well, maybe not so
much for jumps to tags but definitely usefull in :tselect. If we would
use hierarchical names for tags then this is not so good and it works
poorly (if I can say it works at all) for tag completions (^X^]).
If I add a file d.hs that is the same as a.hs but with the qualifiers
exchanged:
module D () where
import qualified B as C
import qualified C as B
localAct = do
print B.x
print C.x
and try to add corresponding scoped tags by hand, then I don't
see the scoping being taken into account (though my Vim is old
7.2 from August 2008). Depending on sort order of the tags file,
either all B.x point to b.hs or all B.x point to c.hs. So, one either
gets the wrong pointers in a.hs or in d.hs.
You are correct. I thought this works well. Thanks for pointing it out.
It does not work for me in my vim too, version 7.2 too.
This looks to me like a vim bug. Though vim developers may not think so
since it is not documented anyway.
So it is really questionable how much do the qualified tags make sense
in vim. I'm much less of a supporter of scoped tags now :-/ Looks like
it is not worth the effort.
Peter.
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