Hazel is a live functional-programming environment rooted in the principles of type theory. You can find the relevant papers and more motivation at the Hazel website.
You can try Hazel online: the dev branch is the main branch at the moment. Every other branch that has been pushed to GitHub and successfully builds can also be accessed at:
https://hazel.org/build/<branch_name>
If you already have ocaml
version 5.2.0 and at least version 2.0 of opam
installed, you can build Hazel by running the following commands.
git clone [email protected]:hazelgrove/hazel.git
cd hazel
make deps
make dev
To view Hazel, you have to serve it, on localhost for development (you can't
run it from a file:///
URL due to browser restrictions on e.g. web workers.)
If you have python3
on your path, you can use the Python server via
make serve
, then navigate to http://0.0.0.0:8000/
in your browser.
Otherwise, run make echo-html-dir
which will echo the directory that needs
to be served using some other server of your choice.
If you are unfamiliar with ocaml
or opam
, do not have them installed, or
just get stuck, we recommend you follow the step-by-step installation
instructions contained in INSTALL.md.
Hazel is written in ReasonML, which is a syntactic sugar atop OCaml. This link lets you type OCaml and see what the corresponding ReasonML syntax is: https://reasonml.github.io/en/try.
This is useful if you are trying to figure out the ReasonML syntax for something that you know the OCaml syntax for.
You can also convert between OCaml and ReasonML syntax at the terminal using
refmt
at the terminal. See refmt --help
for the details.
Most of our team uses Visual Studio Code (VS Code) to write code. If you use VS Code, here are a few extensions that might be helpful.
-
This extension provides full support for editing ReasonML source code and relevant tools:
-
Due to Reason's poor parse errors, unbalanced parentheses can be difficult to find. The following extensions help with that.
In addition to these extensions, enabling the breadcrumbs bar can make navigating a large code base easier. There are multiple ways to make the breadcrumbs bar visible:
- Click View / Show Breadcrumbs from the menu bar.
- Press
Ctrl Shift P
(macOS:Cmd Shift P
), start typingbreadcrumbs
, and selectView: Toggle Breadcrumbs
from the dropdown menu to toggle breadcrumbs on and off. - Press
Ctrl Shift .
to start breadcrumbs navigation.
If you enjoy your Vim binding and Vim setup, the following may help you set up your Reason IDE in NeoVim.
If you use vim, I recommend you to switch to NeoVim since it has a better support for multi-thread, and thus less likely to block you when you are programming.
To set up the LSP (Language Server Protocol), you need to set up your Language Client for Neovim and Language Server for ocaml.
After installing the previous two, you may want to copy the following to your neovim config file.
(assuming npm
have ocaml-language-server installed under /usr/bin
)
let g:LanguageClient_serverCommands = {
\ 'ocaml': ['/usr/bin/ocaml-language-server', '--stdio'],
\ 'reason': ['/usr/bin/ocaml-language-server', '--stdio']
\ }
" LanguageClient-neovim
nnoremap <F5> :call LanguageClient_contextMenu()<CR>
" Or map each action separately
nnoremap <silent> K :call LanguageClient#textDocument_hover()<CR>
nnoremap <silent> gd :call LanguageClient#textDocument_definition()<CR>
nnoremap <silent> gr :call LanguageClient#textDocument_references()<CR>
nnoremap <silent> gf :call LanguageClient#textDocument_formatting()<cr>
nnoremap <silent> <F2> :call LanguageClient#textDocument_rename()<CR>
Hazel is compiled to Javascript for the web browser via the js_of_ocaml
compiler.
Though make
targets are provided as a convenience, they mostly translate to
dune
commands.
Invoking make
by itself is equivalent to invoking make dev
. With these
commands we pass additional flags to js_of_ocaml
that cause the insertion of
comments that map locations in the generated JS to locations in the source
files. This is useful for debugging purposes.
make dev
also auto-formats Reason source files using refmt
(this is what the
@src/fmt
alias is for). This ensures code from all contributors follows the
same style.
The make dev
and make release
commands do three things:
- Generate some internal parsers using
menhir
. - Compile the Reason code to OCaml bytecode using the OCaml compiler.
- Compile the OCaml bytecode to JavaScript
(
_build/default/src/hazelweb/www/hazel.js
) usingjs_of_ocaml
.
For a smoother dev experience, use make watch
to automatically watch
for file changes. This may require installing fswatch
(see INSTALL.md).
You can also run make watch-release
to continuously build the release
build (takes longer per build).
To obtain an clean build, you may need to:
-
Clone the repository (if you have not), and enter the project root of your cloned Hazel project.
git clone [email protected]:hazelgrove/hazel.git cd hazel
-
Setup a local OCaml environment specific to the project, and compile. If you have setup a local OCaml environment (there is a directory called
_opam
), you may want to first remove it.# opam switch remove ./ opam switch create ./ 5.2.0 eval $(opam env) make deps make
This sets up a standalone OCaml environment in the cloned project, independent of the one you sent in your home directory. This allow you to alternate dependencies, or test dependencies changes, without affect existing OCaml projects.
NOTE: You may see the following warning when building:
Warning 58 [no-cmx-file]: no cmx file was found in path for module Ezjs_idb, and its interface was not compiled with -opaque
This is due to an upstream library issue and does not cause problems with Hazel:
You can print to the browser console using the standard print_endline
function. This is probably the easiest method right now.
Most datatypes in the codebase have something like [@deriving (show({with_path: false}), sexp, yojson)]
on them. This generates
helper functions for printing and serializing this data. For a type named t
, the show
function will be named show
. Otherwise,
for a type named something else like q
, it will be show_q
.
Source maps for js_of_ocaml
should be configured when making locally with the dev profile (make
). This is configured using the env stanzas present in the dune
files for each top-level directory.
Since source maps are generated browser developer tools should show reason code in the debugger and source tree. Stack traces should also include reason line numbers.
If Hazel is hanging on load or when you perform certain actions, you can load into Debug Mode by appending #debug
to the URL and reloading. From there, you have some buttons that will change settings or reset local storage. Refresh without the #debug
flag and hopefully you can resolve the situation from there.
You can run all of the unit tests located in test
by running make test
.
Unit tests are written using the Alcotest framework.
Code coverage is provided by bisect_ppx. To collect coverage statistics from tests run make coverage
. After coverage statistics are generated, running make generate-coverage-html
will generate a local webpage at _coverage/index.html
that can be viewed to see line coverage per module.
When you push your branch to the main hazelgrove/hazel
repository, we
have a GitHub Action setup (see .github/workflows/deploy_branches.yml
)
that will build that branch (in release
mode) and deploy it to the URL
https://hazel.org/build/<branch name>
, assuming the build succeeds.
It usually takes about 2 minutes if the build environment cache hits, or 20 minutes if not. You can view the status of the build in the Actions tab on Github.
Builds prior to July 2024 are archived at https://hazel.org/build/<branch name>
.
Note: If another archive needs to be performed, make sure to redeploy the following branches manually since we refer to them in various public material (websites and published papers):
dev livelits