I'm producing a function for imenu-create-index-function
, to index a source code module, for csharp-mode.el
It works, but delivers completely unacceptable performance. Any tips for fixing this?
The Background
I looked at js.el, which is the rebadged "espresso" now included, since v23.2, into emacs. It indexes Javascript files very nicely, does a good job with anonymous functions and various coding styles and patterns in common use. For example, in javascript one can do:
(function() {
var x = ... ;
function foo() {
if (x == 1) ...
}
})();
...to define a scope where x
is "private" or inaccessible from other code. This gets indexed nicely by js.el, using regexps, and it indexes the inner functions (anonymous or not) within that scope also. It works quickly. A big module can be indexed in less than a second.
I tried following a similar approach in csharp-mode, but it's quite a bit more complicated. In Js, everything that gets indexed is a function. So the starting regex is "function" with some elaboration on either end. Once an occurrence of the function
keyword is found, then there are 4 - 8 other regexps that get tried via looking-at
- the number depends on settings. One nice thing about js mode is that you can turn on or off regexps for various coding styles, to speed things along I suppose. The default "styles" work for most of the code I tried.
This doesn't work in csharp-mode. It works, but it performs poorly enough to make it not very usable. I think the reason for this is that
there is no single marker keyword in C#, as
function
behaves in javascript. In C# I need to look for namespace, class, struct, interface, enum, and so on.there's a great deal of flexibility with which csharp constructs can be defined. As one example, a class can define base classes as well as implemented interfaces. Another example: The return type for a method isn't a simple word-like string, but can be something messy like
Dictionary<String, List<String>>
. The index routine needs to handle all those cases, and capture the matches. This makes it run sloooooowly.I use a lot of
looking-back
. The marker I use in the current approach is the open curly brace. Once I find one of those, I uselooking-back
to determine if the curly is a class, interface, enum, method, etc. I read thatlooking-back
can be slow; I'm not clear on how much slower it is than, say,looking-at
.once I find an open-close pair of curlies, I call
narrow-to-region
in order to index what's inside. not sure if this is will kill performance or not. I suspect that it is not the main culprit, because the perf problems I see happen in modules with one namespace and 2 or 3 classes, which means narrow gets called 3 or 4 times total.
What's the Question?
My question is: do you have any tips for speeding up imenu-like indexing in a C# buffer?
I'm considering:
avoiding
looking-back
. I don't know exactly how to do this because whenre-search-forward
finds, say, the keywordclass
, the cursor is already in the middle of a class declaration.looking-back
seems essential.instead of using open-curly as the marker, use the keywords like enum, interface, namespace, class
avoid
narrow-to-region
any hard advice? Further suggestions?
Something I've tried and I'm not really enthused about re-visiting: building a wisent-based parser for C#, and relying on semantic to do the indexing. I found semantic to be very very very (etc) difficult to use, hard to discover, and problematic. I had semantic working for a while, but then upgraded to v23.2, and it broke, and I never could get it working again. Simple things - like indexing the namespace keyword - took a very long time to solve. I'm very dissatisfied with it and don't want to try again.