mirror of
https://github.com/typst/typst
synced 2025-05-15 17:45:27 +08:00
146 lines
5.4 KiB
Rust
146 lines
5.4 KiB
Rust
use crate::prelude::*;
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/// Find elements in the document.
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///
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/// The `query` functions lets you search your document for elements of a
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/// particular type or with a particular label.
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///
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/// To use it, you first need to retrieve the current document location with the
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/// [`locate`]($func/locate) function. You can then decide whether you want to
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/// find all elements, just the ones before that location, or just the ones
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/// after it.
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///
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/// ## Finding elements { #finding-elements }
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/// In the example below, we create a custom page header that displays the text
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/// "Typst Academy" in small capitals and the current section title. On the
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/// first page, the section title is omitted because the header is before the
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/// first section heading.
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///
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/// To realize this layout, we call `locate` and then query for all headings
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/// after the current location. The function we pass to locate is called twice
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/// in this case: Once per page.
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///
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/// - On the first page the query for all headings before the current location
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/// yields an empty array: There are no previous headings. We check for this
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/// case and and just display "Typst Academy".
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///
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/// - For the second page, we retrieve the last element from the query's result.
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/// This is the latest heading before the current position and as such, it is
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/// the heading of the section we are currently in. We access its content
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/// through the `body` field and display it alongside "Typst Academy".
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///
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/// ```example
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/// >>> #set page(
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/// >>> width: 240pt,
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/// >>> height: 180pt,
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/// >>> margin: (top: 35pt, rest: 15pt),
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/// >>> header-ascent: 12pt,
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/// >>> )
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/// #set page(header: locate(loc => {
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/// let elems = query(
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/// selector(heading).before(loc),
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/// loc,
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/// )
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/// let academy = smallcaps[
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/// Typst Academy
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/// ]
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/// if elems == () {
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/// align(right, academy)
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/// } else {
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/// let body = elems.last().body
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/// academy + h(1fr) + emph(body)
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/// }
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/// }))
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///
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/// = Introduction
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/// #lorem(23)
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///
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/// = Background
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/// #lorem(30)
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///
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/// = Analysis
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/// #lorem(15)
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/// ```
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///
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/// ## A word of caution { #caution }
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/// To resolve all your queries, Typst evaluates and layouts parts of the
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/// document multiple times. However, there is no guarantee that your queries
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/// can actually be completely resolved. If you aren't careful a query can
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/// affect itself—leading to a result that never stabilizes.
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///
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/// In the example below, we query for all headings in the document. We then
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/// generate as many headings. In the beginning, there's just one heading,
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/// titled `Real`. Thus, `count` is `1` and one `Fake` heading is generated.
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/// Typst sees that the query's result has changed and processes it again. This
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/// time, `count` is `2` and two `Fake` headings are generated. This goes on and
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/// on. As we can see, the output has five headings. This is because Typst
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/// simply gives up after five attempts.
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///
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/// In general, you should try not to write queries that affect themselves.
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/// The same words of caution also apply to other introspection features like
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/// [counters]($func/counter) and [state]($func/state).
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///
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/// ```example
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/// = Real
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/// #locate(loc => {
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/// let elems = query(heading, loc)
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/// let count = elems.len()
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/// count * [= Fake]
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/// })
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/// ```
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///
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/// ## Migration Hints { #migration-hints }
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/// The `before` and `after` arguments have been removed in version 0.3.0. You
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/// can now use flexible selector combinator methods instead. For example,
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/// `query(heading, before: loc)` becomes `query(heading.before(loc), loc)`.
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/// Please refer to the [selector documentation]($type/selector) for more
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/// details.
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///
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/// Display: Query
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/// Category: meta
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#[func]
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pub fn query(
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/// Can be an element function like a `heading` or `figure`, a `{<label>}`
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/// or a more complex selector like `{heading.where(level: 1)}`.
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///
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/// Currently, only a subset of element functions is supported. Aside from
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/// headings and figures, this includes equations, references and all
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/// elements with an explicit label. As a result, you _can_ query for e.g.
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/// [`strong`]($func/strong) elements, but you will find only those that
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/// have an explicit label attached to them. This limitation will be
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/// resolved in the future.
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target: LocatableSelector,
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/// Can be any location. Why is it required then? As noted before, Typst has
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/// to evaluate parts of your code multiple times to determine the values of
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/// all state. By only allowing this function within
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/// [`locate`]($func/locate) calls, the amount of code that can depend on
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/// the query's result is reduced. If you could call it directly at the top
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/// level of a module, the evaluation of the whole module and its exports
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/// could depend on the query's result.
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location: Location,
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/// The virtual machine.
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vm: &mut Vm,
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) -> Array {
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let _ = location;
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let vec = vm.vt.introspector.query(&target.0);
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vec.into_iter()
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.map(|elem| Value::Content(elem.into_inner()))
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.collect()
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}
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/// Turns a value into a selector. The following values are accepted:
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/// - An element function like a `heading` or `figure`.
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/// - A `{<label>}`.
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/// - A more complex selector like `{heading.where(level: 1)}`.
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///
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/// Display: Selector
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/// Category: meta
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#[func]
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pub fn selector(
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/// Can be an element function like a `heading` or `figure`, a `{<label>}`
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/// or a more complex selector like `{heading.where(level: 1)}`.
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target: Selector,
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) -> Selector {
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target
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}
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