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scope-capture-nrepl

Clojars Project

A companion library to scope-capture, providing an nREPL middleware that lets you put your REPL in the context of an Execution Point (via sc.api/letsc).

Project status: alpha quality. Tested empirically on Cursive. OTOH, this is typically only used in development, and for most purposes you can just falling back to using the raw API of scope-capture.

NOTE: this middleware is only suitable for programs where the REPL and the nREPL middleware run in the same process (typically JVM Clojure, typically not JVM-compiled ClojureScript.)

Installation

This library exposes an nREPL middleware in the Var sc.nrepl.middleware/wrap-letsc.

It works with both the nREPL library and the older tools.nrepl: you must provide these dependencies separately.

Via deps.edn

You need to declare dependencies both to this library and to nREPL itself. You'll typically want to put them in a custom profile, as recommended by the nREPL documentation:

;; in your deps.edn file:
{
 ;; [...]
 :aliases
 {
  ;; [...]
  :nREPL
  {:extra-deps
   {nrepl/nrepl {:mvn/version "0.5.3"}
    vvvvalvalval/scope-capture-nrepl {:mvn/version "0.3.1"}}}}}

Via Leiningen

Add the following to your project.clj file (potentially in a development profile):

  :dependencies 
  [... ;; you probably have other dependencies 
   [vvvvalvalval/scope-capture-nrepl "0.3.1"]]
  :repl-options
  {:nrepl-middleware
   [... ;; you may have other nREPL middleware 
    sc.nrepl.middleware/wrap-letsc]}

Usage

Assume you placed a sc.api/spy (or sc.api/brk) call in the following code:

(defn foo
  [x y]
  (let [z (* x y)]
    (sc.api/spy  
      (+ (* x x) (* 2 z) (* y y)))))
;SPY <-3> /home/me/myapp/src/myapp/myns.clj:4 
;  At Code Site -3, will save scope with locals [x y z]

You ran it and got an Execution Point with id 7:

(foo 2 23)
;SPY [7 -3] /home/me/myapp/src/myapp/myns.clj:4 
;  At Execution Point 7 of Code Site -3, saved scope with locals [x y z]
;SPY [7 -3] /home/me/myapp/src/myapp/myns.clj:4 
;(+ (* x x) (* 2 z) (* y y))
;=>
;625

You can now 'place yourself' in the context of that Execution Point by calling sc.nrepl.repl/in-ep

(sc.nrepl.repl/in-ep 7)

Once you've done that, you'll see that the locals bindings of the Execution Point are always in scope, although not via Global Vars:

x 
=> 2 

y 
=> 23

z
=> 26

(+ x z)
=> 28

This is achieved by wrapping each code expression to evaluate (via the 'eval' and 'load-file' nREPL ops) with (sc.api/letsc <<ep-id>> <<expr>>).

So the semantics are exactly those of sc.api/letsc, you just don't get the tedium of writing them manually.

Once you're done with that Execution Point, you put your REPL back in a normal state by using sc.nrepl.repl/exit:

(sc.nrepl.repl/exit)

License

Copyright © 2017 Valentin Waeselynck and contributors.

Distributed under the MIT License.

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