Nim IDE Integration Guide

Author: Unknown
Version: 1.2.0

Nim differs from many other compilers in that it is really fast, and being so fast makes it suited to provide external queries for text editors about the source code being written. Through the nimsuggest tool, any IDE can query a .nim source file and obtain useful information like definition of symbols or suggestions for completion.

This document will guide you through the available options. If you want to look at practical examples of nimsuggest support you can look at the various editor integrations already available.

Installation

Nimsuggest is part of Nim's core. Build it via:

koch nimsuggest

Nimsuggest invocation

Run it via nimsuggest --stdin --debug myproject.nim. Nimsuggest is a server that takes queries that are related to myproject. There is some support so that you can throw random .nim files which are not part of myproject at Nimsuggest too, but usually the query refer to modules/files that are part of myproject.

--stdin means that Nimsuggest reads the query from stdin. This is great for testing things out and playing with it but for an editor communication via sockets is more reasonable so that is the default. It listens to port 6000 by default.

Specifying the location of the query

Nimsuggest then waits for queries to process. A query consists of a cryptic 3 letter "command" def or con or sug or use followed by a location. A query location consists of:

file.nim
This is the name of the module or include file the query refers to.
dirtyfile.nim

This is optional.

The file parameter is enough for static analysis, but IDEs tend to have unsaved buffers where the user may still be in the middle of typing a line. In such situations the IDE can save the current contents to a temporary file and then use the dirtyfile.nim option to tell Nimsuggest that foobar.nim should be taken from temporary/foobar.nim.

line
An integer with the line you are going to query. For the compiler lines start at 1.
col
An integer with the column you are going to query. For the compiler columns start at 0.

Definitions

The def Nimsuggest command performs a query about the definition of a specific symbol. If available, Nimsuggest will answer with the type, source file, line/column information and other accessory data if available like a docstring. With this information an IDE can provide the typical Jump to definition where a user puts the cursor on a symbol or uses the mouse to select it and is redirected to the place where the symbol is located.

Since Nim is implemented in Nim, one of the nice things of this feature is that any user with an IDE supporting it can quickly jump around the standard library implementation and see exactly what a proc does, learning about the language and seeing real life examples of how to write/implement specific features.

Nimsuggest will always answer with a single definition or none if it can't find any valid symbol matching the position of the query.

Suggestions

The sug Nimsuggest command performs a query about possible completion symbols at some point in the file.

The typical usage scenario for this option is to call it after the user has typed the dot character for the object oriented call syntax. Nimsuggest will try to return the suggestions sorted first by scope (from innermost to outermost) and then by item name.

Invocation context

The con Nimsuggest command is very similar to the suggestions command, but instead of being used after the user has typed a dot character, this one is meant to be used after the user has typed an opening brace to start typing parameters.

Symbol usages

The use Nimsuggest command lists all usages of the symbol at a position. IDEs can use this to find all the places in the file where the symbol is used and offer the user to rename it in all places at the same time.

For this kind of query the IDE will most likely ignore all the type/signature info provided by Nimsuggest and concentrate on the filename, line and column position of the multiple returned answers.

Parsing nimsuggest output

Nimsuggest output is always returned on single lines separated by tab characters (\t). The values of each column are:

  1. Three characters indicating the type of returned answer (e.g. def for definition, sug for suggestion, etc).
  2. Type of the symbol. This can be skProc, skLet, and just about any of the enums defined in the module compiler/ast.nim.
  3. Fully qualified path of the symbol. If you are querying a symbol defined in the proj.nim file, this would have the form proj.symbolName.
  4. Type/signature. For variables and enums this will contain the type of the symbol, for procs, methods and templates this will contain the full unique signature (e.g. proc (File)).
  5. Full path to the file containing the symbol.
  6. Line where the symbol is located in the file. Lines start to count at 1.
  7. Column where the symbol is located in the file. Columns start to count at 0.
  8. Docstring for the symbol if available or the empty string. To differentiate the docstring from end of answer, the docstring is always provided enclosed in double quotes, and if the docstring spans multiple lines, all following lines of the docstring will start with a blank space to align visually with the starting quote.

    Also, you won't find raw \n characters breaking the one answer per line format. Instead you will need to parse sequences in the form \xHH, where HH is a hexadecimal value (e.g. newlines generate the sequence \x0A).