I just used this to update 600 lines, across 33 files! It worked great!

    • paequ2@lemmy.todayOP
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      20 days ago

      Some very quick, superficial differences:

      • ast-grep uses tree-sitter for understanding languages

      • ast-grep is written in Rust

      • ast-grep uses YAML for config

      • ast-grep more normal --flags

      • comby doesn’t use tree-sitter and does it’s own thing… not sure what to think of this approach

      • comby is written in OCaml

      • comby uses TOML for config

      • comby uses -single-dash-flags

      • both have online playgrounds for testing

      I personally hate YAML, so it’s comby for me! (For now.)

      Also, here’s what Comby says about its approach to matching: https://comby.dev/docs/faq

      Underneath the hood, Comby uses no tree definition, but turns patterns into an executable routine (a language-aware parser) where the tree structure is implicit in this executable routine. In theory, the syntax matched by this routine could dump a serialized parse tree, but this isn’t implemented :-). With this design, Comby sacrifices this ability to recognize many predefined language constructs in order to support a more freeform pattern writing and matching process. This loses precision for deeply recognizing all of a program’s structures, and may fall short of your needs depending on your use case.

      • backlever@programming.dev
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        20 days ago

        Fair enough. I hate YAML too, but I’m stuck with Python for now and Comby doesn’t handle indentation too well (it’s in their FAQ).