Plugin shows complexity information
This plugin implements live calculation of the Cognitive Complexity metric, which was proposed by G. Ann Campbell in Cognitive Complexity - A new way of measuring understandability (c) SonarSource S.A. 2016-2021, Switzerland.
Abstract: Cyclomatic Complexity was initially formulated as a measurement of the "testability and maintainability" of the control flow of a module. While it excels at measuring the former, its underlying mathematical model is unsatisfactory at producing a value that measures the latter. This white paper describes a new metric that breaks from the use of mathematical models to evaluate code in order to remedy Cyclomatic Complexityβs shortcomings and produce a measurement that more accurately reflects the relative difficulty of understanding, and therefore of maintaining methods, classes, and applications.
Table of Contents
- Code Metrics
(use-package codemetrics
:straight (codemetrics :type git :host github :repo "jcs-elpa/codemetrics"))
git clone https://github.com/jcs-elpa/codemetrics /path/to/lib
then in Emacs:
(add-to-list 'load-path "/path/to/lib")
(require 'codemetrics)
or
(use-package codemetrics
:load-path "/path/to/lib")
The simplest way to start using this package:
(codemetrics-mode 1)
These are functions you can use to analyze:
Functions | Description |
---|---|
codemetrics-analyze |
Analyze a string with major-mode |
codemetrics-region |
Analyze region |
codemetrics-buffer |
Analyze the whole buffer |
All these functions return the score data indicating the complexity.
β οΈ Please sort these two lists alphabetically!
These languages are fairly complete:
- Bash
- C / C++ / C#
- Elisp
- Go
- Java / JavaScript / JSX / Julia
- Kotlin
- Lua
- PHP / Python
- Ruby / Rust
- Swift
- TypeScript / TSX
These languages are in development:
- Agda
- Elm
- Elixir
- OCaml
- Scala (upstream, kinda buggy)
Although codemetrics aims to have good analysis rules out of the box for all supported definitions, people will indubitably have their own preferences or desired functionality. The following section outlines how to add your own analysis definitions and analysis functions to make codemetrics work for you. If there are any improvements you find for existing or new languages, please do raise a PR so that others may benefit from better analysis in the future!
Code-Metrics defines all its analysis definitions in the variable
codemetrics-rules
which is an alist with the key of the alist being the
mode and the value being another alist of analysis definitions.
;; Example of codemetrics-rules' structure
'((c-mode . c-analysis-definitions) ; <language>-analysis-definitions is structured as shown below
(csharp-mode . csharp-analysis-definitions)
(go-mode . go-analysis-definitions)
(scala-mode . scala-analysis-definitions)
...)
;; Examle of a analysis definition alist
(setq csharp-analysis-definitions
(if_statement . (1 t))
("&&" . codemetrics-rules--logical-operators))
So you can select whatever node that you want to analyze on it.
To find what node you'll want to analyze, refer to the
tree-sitter documentation
about viewing nodes. tree-sitter-debug
and tree-sitter-query-builder
are both very useful for this.
Let's look at a quick example of adding a new analysis definition. Let's say you
want to add analysis to go-mode
's if_statement
. The analysis definition that
is needed will be '(if_statement . (1 t))
. To add this to the
codemetrics-rules
, you can do something like the following.
(push '(if_statement . (1 t)) (alist-get 'go-mode codemetrics-rules))
Now the new analysis definition should be usable by codemetrics!
For more complex analysis, you can write your own analysis rules!
node
- (optional) the targeted tree-sitter node, in this example,if_statement
will be the targeting node.depth
- (optional) current depth of from the root tree.nested
- (optional) current nested level apply from current complexity algorithm.
Then the function needs to return an integer represent the score and a
boolean represent increment of the nested level in the form
(score-to-add . nested?)
. This can be useful if you want to add extra
conditional logic onto your analysis.
As an example of an analysis function, take a look at the definition of the
basic codemetrics-rules--class-declaration
.
(defun codemetrics-rules--class-declaration (_node depth _nested)
"..."
(codemetrics-with-complexity
(if (< 1 depth) ; if class inside class,
'(1 nil) ; we score 1, but don't increase nested level
'(0 nil))
'(1 nil)))
If you would like to contribute to this project, you may either clone and make pull requests to this repository. Or you can clone the project and establish your own branch of this tool. Any methods are welcome!
To run the test locally, you will need the following tools:
Install all dependencies and development dependencies:
$ eask install-deps --dev
To test the package's installation:
$ eask package
$ eask install
To test compilation:
$ eask compile
πͺ§ The following steps are optional, but we recommend you follow these lint results!
The built-in checkdoc
linter:
$ eask lint checkdoc
The standard package
linter:
$ eask lint package
π P.S. For more information, find the Eask manual at https://emacs-eask.github.io/.
When adding a new analysis rules, add the analysis definition function to
codemetrics.el
itself near where the other rules functions live and then add
the parser to codemetrics-rules.el
file. Finally, if you are adding support
for a new language, remember to add it to the codemetrics-rules
variable.
When creating a new parser, name it codemetrics-rules-<language>
.
When creating a new analysis function, name it
codemetrics-rules-<language>-<feature>
or something similar.
Here are some techniques for finding your desired nodes in tree-sitter.
To look for the correct node you have three options:
- look at the
tree-sitter-[lang]/grammar.js
implementation. In the above example,if_statement
node is defined in the tree-sitter-c-sharp'sgrammar.js
file - open a file of your language choice in emacs and
M-x tree-sitter-debug-mode
. This will display the whole s-expr representing your file (message "%S" (tsc-node-to-sexp))
in your function to display what your function is seeing
β οΈ WarningMake sure you look into the correct repository. Repositories are managed under tree-sitter-langs's using git submodule. Some tree-sitter module aren't using the latest version!
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see https://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
See LICENSE
for details.