Modifying the PSI
The PSI is a read/write representation of the source code as a tree of elements corresponding to a source file's structure. You can modify the PSI by adding, replacing, and deleting PSI elements.
To perform these operations, you use methods such as PsiElement.add()
, PsiElement.delete()
, and PsiElement.replace()
, as well as other methods defined in the PsiElement
interface that let you process multiple elements in a single operation, or to specify the exact location in the tree where an element needs to be added.
Like document operations, PSI modifications need to be wrapped in a write action and in command (and can only be performed in the event dispatch thread). See the Documents article for more information on commands and write actions.
Creating the New PSI
The PSI elements to add to the tree or replace existing PSI elements are usually created from text. In the most general case, you use the createFileFromText()
method of PsiFileFactory
to create a new file that contains the code construct which you need to add to the tree or to use as a replacement for an existing element, traverse the resulting tree to locate the specific part that you need, and then pass that element to add()
or replace()
. See also How do I create a PSI file?.
Most languages provide factory methods that let you create specific code constructs more easily. For example, the PsiJavaParserFacade
class contains methods such as createMethodFromText()
, which creates a Java method from the given text.
When you're implementing refactorings, intentions, or inspection quickfixes that work with existing code, the text that you pass to the various createFromText()
methods will combine hard-coded fragments and fragments of code taken from the existing file. For small code fragments (individual identifiers), you can simply append the text from the existing code to the text of the code fragment you are building. In that case, you need to make sure that the resulting text is syntactically correct. Otherwise, the createFromText()
method will throw an exception.
For larger code fragments, it's best to perform the modification in several steps:
create a replacement tree fragment from the text, leaving placeholders for the user code fragments;
replace the placeholders with the user code fragments;
replace the element in the original source file with the replacement tree.
This ensures that the user code's formatting is preserved and that the modification does not introduce any unwanted whitespace changes. Just as everywhere else in the IntelliJ Platform API, the text passed to createFileFromText()
and other createFromText()
methods must use only \n
as line separators.
As an example of this approach, see the quickfix in the ComparingReferencesInspection
example:
Maintaining Tree Structure Consistency
The PSI modification methods do not restrict you in the way you can build the resulting tree structure. For example, when working with a Java class, you can add a for
statement as a direct child of a PsiMethod
element, even though the Java parser will never produce such a structure (the for
statement will always be a child of the PsiCodeBlock
) representing the method body. Modifications that produce incorrect tree structures may appear to work, but they will lead to problems and exceptions later. Therefore, you always need to ensure that the structure you built with PSI modification operations is the same as what the parser would produce when parsing the code that you've created.
To make sure you're not introducing inconsistencies, you can call PsiTestUtil.checkFileStructure()
in the tests for your action that modifies the PSI. This method ensures that the structure you've built is the same as what the parser produces.
Whitespaces and Imports
When working with PSI modification functions, you should never create individual whitespace nodes (spaces or line breaks) from the text. Instead, all whitespace modifications are performed by the formatter, which follows the code style settings selected by the user. Formatting is automatically performed at the end of every command, and if you need, you can also perform it manually using the reformat(PsiElement)
method in the CodeStyleManager
class.
Also, when working with Java code (or with code in other languages with a similar import mechanism such as Groovy or Python), you should never create imports manually. Instead, you should insert fully-qualified names into the code you're generating, and then call the shortenClassReferences()
method in the JavaCodeStyleManager
(or the equivalent API for the language you're working with). This ensures that the imports are created according to the user's code style settings and inserted into the file's correct place.
Combining PSI and Document Modifications
In some cases, you need to perform a PSI modification and then to perform an operation on the document you've just modified through the PSI (for example, start a live template). To complete the PSI-based post-processing (such as formatting) and commit the changes to the document, call doPostponedOperationsAndUnblockDocument()
on PsiDocumentManager
instance.