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berkus/kdl-rs: Rust parser for KDL

kdl is a "document-oriented" parser and API for the KDL Document Language, a node-based, human-friendly configuration and serialization format. Unlike serde-based implementations, this crate preserves formatting when editing, as well as when inserting or changing values with custom formatting. This is most useful when working with human-maintained KDL files.

You can think of this crate as toml_edit, but for KDL.

If you don't care about formatting or programmatic manipulation, you might check out knuffel or kaydle instead for serde (or serde-like) parsing.

use kdl::KdlDocument;

let doc_str = r#"
hello 1 2 3

world prop="value" {
    child 1
    child 2
}
"#;

let doc: KdlDocument = doc_str.parse().expect("failed to parse KDL");

assert_eq!(
    doc.get_args("hello"),
    vec![&1.into(), &2.into(), &3.into()]
);

assert_eq!(
    doc.get("world").map(|node| &node["prop"]),
    Some(&"value".into())
);

// Documents fully roundtrip:
assert_eq!(doc.to_string(), doc_str);

By default, everything is created with default formatting. You can parse items manually to provide custom representations, comments, etc:

let node_str = r#"
  // indented comment
  "formatted" 1 /* comment */ \
    2;
"#;

let mut doc = kdl::KdlDocument::new();
doc.nodes_mut().push(node_str.parse().unwrap());

assert_eq!(&doc.to_string(), node_str);

KdlDocument, KdlNode, KdlEntry, and KdlIdentifier can all be parsed and managed this way.

kdl includes a query engine for KQL, which lets you pick out nodes from a document using a CSS Selectors-style syntax.

Queries can be done from either a KdlDocument or a KdlNode, with mostly the same semantics.

use kdl::KdlDocument;

let doc = r#"
a {
    b 1
    c 2
    d 3 {
        e prop="hello"
    }
}
"#.parse::<KdlDocument>().expect("failed to parse KDL");

let results = doc.query("a > b").expect("failed to parse query");
assert_eq!(results, Some(&doc.nodes()[0].children().unwrap().nodes()[0]));

let results = doc.query_get("e", "prop").expect("failed to parse query");
assert_eq!(results, Some(&"hello".into()));

let results = doc.query_get_all("a > []", 0).expect("failed to parse query").collect::<Vec<_>>();
assert_eq!(results, vec![&1.into(), &2.into(), &3.into()]);

KdlError implements miette::Diagnostic and can be used to display detailed, pretty-printed diagnostic messages when using miette::Result and the "fancy" feature flag for miette:

# Cargo.toml
[dependencies]
miette = { version = "x.y.z", features = ["fancy"] }
fn main() -> miette::Result<()> {
    "foo 1.".parse::<kdl::KdlDocument>()?;
    Ok(())
}

This will display a message like:

Error:
  × Expected valid value.
   ╭────
 1 │ foo 1.
   ·     ─┬
   ·      ╰── invalid float
   ╰────
  help: Floating point numbers must be base 10, and have numbers after the decimal point.

Multiple properties with the same name are allowed, and all duplicated will be preserved, meaning those documents will correctly round-trip. When using node.get()/node["key"] & company, the last property with that name's value will be returned.

KDL itself does not specify a particular representation for numbers and accepts just about anything valid, no matter how large and how small. This means a few things:

The code in this repository is covered by the Apache-2.0 License.


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