import 'package:code_buffer/code_buffer.dart'; import 'package:test/test.dart'; /// Use a `CodeBuffer` just like any regular `StringBuffer`: String someFunc() { var buf = new CodeBuffer(); buf ..write('hello ') ..writeln('world!'); return buf.toString(); } /// However, a `CodeBuffer` supports indentation. void someOtherFunc() { var buf = new CodeBuffer(); // Custom options... // ignore: unused_local_variable var customBuf = new CodeBuffer(newline: '\r\n', space: '\t', trailingNewline: true); // Without whitespace.. // ignore: unused_local_variable var minifyingBuf = new CodeBuffer.noWhitespace(); // Any following lines will have an incremented indentation level... buf.indent(); // And vice-versa: buf.outdent(); } /// `CodeBuffer` instances keep track of every `SourceSpan` they create. //This makes them useful for codegen tools, or to-JS compilers. void yetAnotherOtherFunc(CodeBuffer buf) { buf.write('hello'); expect(buf.lastLine!.text, 'hello'); buf.writeln('world'); expect(buf.lastLine!.lastSpan!.start.column, 5); } /// You can copy a `CodeBuffer` into another, heeding indentation rules: void yetEvenAnotherFunc(CodeBuffer a, CodeBuffer b) { b.copyInto(a); }