tree-sitter/cli
Max Brunsfeld fda35894d4 Stop matching new patterns past the end of QueryCursor's range
This restores the original signatures of the `set_byte_range` and
`set_point_range` functions. Now, the QueryCursor will properly report
matches that intersect, but are not fully contained by its range.

Co-Authored-By: Nathan Sobo <nathan@zed.dev>
2021-05-25 18:02:35 -07:00
..
benches Add query construction to benchmark 2020-06-26 15:05:27 -07:00
npm 0.19.5 2021-05-20 15:02:46 -07:00
src Stop matching new patterns past the end of QueryCursor's range 2021-05-25 18:02:35 -07:00
vendor Add a highlight subcommand 2019-02-19 12:32:03 -08:00
build.rs fix warning and use implicit return here 2020-09-15 13:22:22 -04:00
Cargo.toml 0.19.5 2021-05-20 15:02:46 -07:00
README.md Update docs after Rust conversion 2019-02-05 11:34:01 -08:00

Tree-sitter CLI

Build Status Build status Crates.io

The Tree-sitter CLI allows you to develop, test, and use Tree-sitter grammars from the command line. It works on MacOS, Linux, and Windows.

Installation

You can install the tree-sitter-cli with cargo:

cargo install tree-sitter-cli

or with npm:

npm install tree-sitter-cli

You can also download a pre-built binary for your platform from the releases page.

Dependencies

The tree-sitter binary itself has no dependencies, but specific commands have dependencies that must be present at runtime:

  • To generate a parser from a grammar, you must have node on your PATH.
  • To run and test parsers, you must have a C and C++ compiler on your system.

Commands

  • generate - The tree-sitter generate command will generate a Tree-sitter parser based on the grammar in the current working directory. See the documentation for more information.

  • test - The tree-sitter test command will run the unit tests for the Tree-sitter parser in the current working directory. See the documentation for more information.

  • parse - The tree-sitter parse command will parse a file (or list of file) using Tree-sitter parsers.