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TODO.orig
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TODO.orig
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TODO List:
As with all open source projects... if you want something strongly
enough, then please (1) code it and submit it, or (2) pay me to add it.
You have the source, you have the power - use it. Or has been said for years:
Use the Source, Luke.
I _do_ listen to user requests, but I cannot do everything myself.
I've released this program under the GPL _specifically_ so that others
will help debug and extend it.
Obviously, a general "TODO" is adding support for other computer languages;
here are languages I'd like to add support for specifically:
+ Eiffel.
+ Sather (much like Eiffel).
+ CORBA IDL.
+ Forth. Comments can start with "\" (backslash) and continue to end-of-line,
or be surrounded by parens. In both cases, they must be on word
bounds-- .( is not a comment! Variable names often begin with "\"!
For example:
: 2dup ( n1 n2 -- n1 n2 n1 n2 ) \ Duplicate two numbers.
\ Pronounced: two-dupe.
over over ;
Strings begin with " (doublequote) or p" (p doublequote, for
packed strings), and these must be separate words
(e.g., followed by a whitespace). They end with a matching ".
Also, the ." word begins a string that ends in " (this word immediately
prints it the given string).
Note that "copy is a perfectly legitimate Forth word, and does NOT
start a string.
Forth sources can be stored as blocks, or as more conventional text.
Any way to detect them?
See http://www.forth.org/dpans/dpans.html for syntax definition.
See also http://www.taygeta.com/forth_style.html
and http://www.forth.org/fig.html
+ Create a "javascript" category. ".js" extention, "js" type.
(see below for a discussion of the issues with embedded scripts)
+ .pco -> Oracle preprocessed Cobol Code
+ .pfo -> Oracle preprocessed Fortran Code
+ Fortran beyond Fortran 77 (.f90).
+ PL/1.
+ BASIC, including Visual Basic, Future Basic, GW-Basic, QBASIC, etc.
+ Improve ML/CAML. It uses Pascal-style comments (*..*),
double-quoted C-like strings "\n...", and .ml or .mli file extensions
(.mli is an interface file for CAML).
For more language examples, see the ACM "Hello World" project, which tries
to collect "Hello World" in every computer language. It's at:
http://www2.latech.edu/~acm/HelloWorld.shtml
Here are other TODOs:
* A big one is to add support for logical SLOC, at least for C/C++.
Then add support for COCOMO II. Even partial support would be great
(e.g., not all languages)... other languages could be displayed as
"UNK" (unknown) and be considered 0.
Add options to allow display of only one,
or of both. See Park's paper, COCOMO II, and Humphrey's 1995 book.
* In general, modify the program so that it ports more easily. Currently,
it assumes a Unix-like system (esp. in the shell programs), and it requires
md5sum as a separate executable.
There are probably some other nonportable constructs, in particular
for non-Unix systems (e.g., symlink handling and file/dirnames).
* Rewrite Bourne shell code to either Perl or Python (prob. Python), and
make the call to md5sum optional. That way, the program
could run on Windows without Cygwin.
* Improve the heuristics for detecting language type.
They're actually pretty good already.
* Clean up the program. This was originally written as a one-off program
that wouldn't be used again (or distributed!), and it shows.
The heuristics used to detect language type should
be made more modular, so it could be reused in other programs, and
so you don't HAVE to write out a list of filenames first if you
don't want to.
* Consider rewriting everything not in C into Python. Perl is
a write-only language, and it's absurdly hard to read Perl code later.
I find Python code much cleaner. And shell isn't as portable.
One reason I didn't rewrite it in Python is that I had concerns about
Python's licensing issues; Python versions 1.6 and up have questionable
compatibility with the GPL. Thankfully, the Free Software Foundation (FSF)
and the Python developers have worked together, and the Python
developers have fixed the license for version 2.0.1 and up.
Joy!! I'm VERY happy about this!
* Improve the speed, primarily to support analysis of massive amounts
of data. There's a generic routine in Perl; switching that
to C would probably help. Perhaps rewriting many of the counters
using flex would speed things up, simplify maintenance, and make
supporting logical SLOC easier.
* Handle scripts embedded in data.
Perhaps create a category, "only the code embedded in HTML"
(e.g., Javascript scripts, PHP statements, etc.).
This is currently complicated - the whole program assumes that a file
can be assigned a specific type, and HTML (etc.) might have multiple
languages embedded in it.
* Are any CGI files (.cgi) unhandled? Are files unidentified?
* Improve makefile identification and counting.
Currently the program does not identify as makefiles "Imakefile"
(generated by xmkmf and processed by imake, used by MIT X server)
nor automake/autoconf files (Makefile.am/Makefile.in).
Need to handle ".rules" too.
I didn't just add these files to the "makefile" list, because
I have concerns about processing them correctly using the
makefile counter. Since most people won't count makefiles anyway,
this isn't an issue for most. I welcome patches to change this,
_IF_ you ensure that the resulting counts are correct.
The current version is sufficient for handling programs who have
ordinary makefiles that are to be included in the SLOC count when
they enable the option to count makefiles.
Currently the makefiles count "all non-blank lines"; conceivably
someone might want to count only the actual directives, not the
conditions under which they fire.
* Improve the flexibility in symlink handling; see "make_filelists".
It should be rewritten. Some systems don't allow
"test"ing for symlinks, which was a portability problem - that problem
at least has been removed.
* I've added a few utilities that I use for counting whole Linux systems
to the tar file, but they're not installed by the RPM and they're not
documented.
* More testing! COBOL in particular is undertested.
* Modify the code, esp. sloccount, to handle systems so large that
the data directory list can't be expanded using "*".
This would involve using "xargs" in sloccount, maybe getting rid
of the separate filelist creation, and having break_filelist
call compute_all directly (break_filelist needs to run all the time,
or its reloading of hashes during initialization would become the
bottleneck). Some of this work has already been done.