This is a demonstration of ANTLRv4 library for IntelliJ plugins, which makes it easy to create plugins for IntelliJ-based IDEs based on an ANTLRv4 grammar.
Make sure the Gradle plugin is installed in your IDE, go to File -> Open
, select the build.gradle
file
and choose Open as Project
.
If you already imported the project when it was not based on Gradle, then choose the option to delete the existing project and reimport it.
Once the IDE is done downloading dependencies and refreshing the project, you can use the Gradle
tool window
and use the following Tasks
:
build > assemble
to build the projectintellij > runIde
to run the plugin in a sandboxed instance
The build is based on Gradle, and uses the gradle-intellij-plugin, which makes it easy to:
- pull dependencies, especially the IntelliJ SDK and
antlr4-intellij-adaptor
- build and run tests in a CI environment on different versions of the SDK
- generate lexers & parsers from your grammars, thanks to the ANTLR plugin for Gradle
- publish plugins to the JetBrains Plugins Repository
- configure the project for occasional contributors 🙂
PSI nodes defined in the plugin extend ANTLRPsiNode
and IdentifierDefSubtree
, which automatically
makes them PsiNameIdentifierOwner
s.
Errors are shown by SampleExternalAnnotator
, which makes use of org.antlr.intellij.adaptor.xpath.XPath
to
detect references to unknown functions.
SampleParserDefinition
uses several handy classes from the adaptor library:
PSIElementTypeFactory
to generateIElementType
s from tokens and rules defined in your ANTLRv4 grammarANTLRLexerAdaptor
to bind generated lexers to acom.intellij.lexer.Lexer
ANTLRParserAdaptor
to bind generated parsers to acom.intellij.lang.PsiParser
WARNING. Turn on Dragon speech recognition for Mac and do a rename. GUI deadlocks. Every time. Turn off dragon. No problem ever. See JetBrains forum.