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Parse::RecDescent
Parse::RecDescent
Parse::RecDescent - Generate Recursive-Descent Parsers
This document describes version 1.94 of Parse::RecDescent, released April 9, 2003.
use Parse::RecDescent;
# Generate a parser from the specification in $grammar:
$parser = new Parse::RecDescent ($grammar);
# Generate a parser from the specification in $othergrammar
$anotherparser = new Parse::RecDescent ($othergrammar);
# Parse $text using rule 'startrule' (which must be # defined in $grammar):
$parser->startrule($text);
# Parse $text using rule 'otherrule' (which must also # be defined in $grammar):
$parser->otherrule($text);
# Change the universal token prefix pattern # (the default is: '\s*'):
$Parse::RecDescent::skip = '[ \t]+';
# Replace productions of existing rules (or create new ones) # with the productions defined in $newgrammar:
$parser->Replace($newgrammar);
# Extend existing rules (or create new ones) # by adding extra productions defined in $moregrammar:
$parser->Extend($moregrammar);
# Global flags (useful as command line arguments under -s):
$::RD_ERRORS # unless undefined, report fatal errors $::RD_WARN # unless undefined, also report non-fatal problems $::RD_HINT # if defined, also suggestion remedies $::RD_TRACE # if defined, also trace parsers' behaviour $::RD_AUTOSTUB # if defined, generates "stubs" for undefined rules $::RD_AUTOACTION # if defined, appends specified action to productions
Parse::RecDescent incrementally generates top-down recursive-descent text parsers from simple yacc-like grammar specifications. It provides:
Regular expressions or literal strings as terminals (tokens),
Multiple (non-contiguous) productions for any rule,
Repeated and optional subrules within productions,
Full access to Perl within actions specified as part of the grammar,
Simple automated error reporting during parser generation and parsing,
The ability to commit to, uncommit to, or reject particular productions during a parse,
The ability to pass data up and down the parse tree (``down'' via subrule argument lists, ``up'' via subrule return values)
Incremental extension of the parsing grammar (even during a parse),
Precompilation of parser objects,
User-definable reduce-reduce conflict resolution via ``scoring'' of matching productions.
Parse::RecDescent
Parser objects are created by calling Parse::RecDescent::new
, passing in a
grammar specification (see the following subsections). If the grammar is
correct, new
returns a blessed reference which can then be used to initiate
parsing through any rule specified in the original grammar. A typical sequence
looks like this:
$grammar = q { # GRAMMAR SPECIFICATION HERE };
$parser = new Parse::RecDescent ($grammar) or die "Bad grammar!\n";
# acquire $text
defined $parser->startrule($text) or print "Bad text!\n";
The rule through which parsing is initiated must be explicitly defined in the grammar (i.e. for the above example, the grammar must include a rule of the form: ``startrule: <subrules>''.
If the starting rule succeeds, its value (see below)
is returned. Failure to generate the original parser or failure to match a text
is indicated by returning undef
. Note that it's easy to set up grammars
that can succeed, but which return a value of 0, ``0'', or ``''. So don't be
tempted to write:
$parser->startrule($text) or print "Bad text!\n";
Normally, the parser has no effect on the original text. So in the previous example the value of $text would be unchanged after having been parsed.
If, however, the text to be matched is passed by reference:
$parser->startrule(\$text)
then any text which was consumed during the match will be removed from the start of $text.
In the grammar from which the parser is built, rules are specified by giving an identifier (which must satisfy /[A-Za-z]\w*/), followed by a colon on the same line, followed by one or more productions, separated by single vertical bars. The layout of the productions is entirely free-format:
rule1: production1 | production2 | production3 | production4
At any point in the grammar previously defined rules may be extended with additional productions. This is achieved by redeclaring the rule with the new productions. Thus:
rule1: a | b | c rule2: d | e | f rule1: g | h
is exactly equivalent to:
rule1: a | b | c | g | h rule2: d | e | f
Each production in a rule consists of zero or more items, each of which may be either: the name of another rule to be matched (a ``subrule''), a pattern or string literal to be matched directly (a ``token''), a block of Perl code to be executed (an ``action''), a special instruction to the parser (a ``directive''), or a standard Perl comment (which is ignored).
A rule matches a text if one of its productions matches. A production matches if each of its items match consecutive substrings of the text. The productions of a rule being matched are tried in the same order that they appear in the original grammar, and the first matching production terminates the match attempt (successfully). If all productions are tried and none matches, the match attempt fails.
Note that this behaviour is quite different from the ``prefer the longer match'' behaviour of yacc. For example, if yacc were parsing the rule:
seq : 'A' 'B' | 'A' 'B' 'C'
upon matching ``AB'' it would look ahead to see if a 'C' is next and, if so, will match the second production in preference to the first. In other words, yacc effectively tries all the productions of a rule breadth-first in parallel, and selects the ``best'' match, where ``best'' means longest (note that this is a gross simplification of the true behaviour of yacc but it will do for our purposes).
In contrast, Parse::RecDescent
tries each production depth-first in
sequence, and selects the ``best'' match, where ``best'' means first. This is
the fundamental difference between ``bottom-up'' and ``recursive descent''
parsing.
Each successfully matched item in a production is assigned a value, which can be accessed in subsequent actions within the same production (or, in some cases, as the return value of a successful subrule call). Unsuccessful items don't have an associated value, since the failure of an item causes the entire surrounding production to immediately fail. The following sections describe the various types of items and their success values.
A subrule which appears in a production is an instruction to the parser to attempt to match the named rule at that point in the text being parsed. If the named subrule is not defined when requested the production containing it immediately fails (unless it was ``autostubbed'' - see Autostubbing).
A rule may (recursively) call itself as a subrule, but not as the left-most item in any of its productions (since such recursions are usually non-terminating).
The value associated with a subrule is the value associated with its
$return
variable (see Actions below), or with the last successfully
matched item in the subrule match.
Subrules may also be specified with a trailing repetition specifier, indicating that they are to be (greedily) matched the specified number of times. The available specifiers are:
subrule(?) # Match one-or-zero times subrule(s) # Match one-or-more times subrule(s?) # Match zero-or-more times subrule(N) # Match exactly N times for integer N > 0 subrule(N..M) # Match between N and M times subrule(..M) # Match between 1 and M times subrule(N..) # Match at least N times
Repeated subrules keep matching until either the subrule fails to match, or it has matched the minimal number of times but fails to consume any of the parsed text (this second condition prevents the subrule matching forever in some cases).
Since a repeated subrule may match many instances of the subrule itself, the value associated with it is not a simple scalar, but rather a reference to a list of scalars, each of which is the value associated with one of the individual subrule matches. In other words in the rule:
program: statement(s)
the value associated with the repeated subrule ``statement(s)'' is a reference to an array containing the values matched by each call to the individual subrule ``statement''.
Repetition modifieres may include a separator pattern:
program: statement(s /;/)
specifying some sequence of characters to be skipped between each repetition. This is really just a shorthand for the <leftop:...> directive (see below).
If a quote-delimited string or a Perl regex appears in a production, the parser attempts to match that string or pattern at that point in the text. For example:
typedef: "typedef" typename identifier ';'
identifier: /[A-Za-z_][A-Za-z0-9_]*/
As in regular Perl, a single quoted string is uninterpolated, whilst a double-quoted string or a pattern is interpolated (at the time of matching, not when the parser is constructed). Hence, it is possible to define rules in which tokens can be set at run-time:
typedef: "$::typedefkeyword" typename identifier ';'
identifier: /$::identpat/
Note that, since each rule is implemented inside a special namespace belonging to its parser, it is necessary to explicitly quantify variables from the main package.
Regex tokens can be specified using just slashes as delimiters
or with the explicit m<delimiter>......<delimiter>
syntax:
typedef: "typedef" typename identifier ';'
typename: /[A-Za-z_][A-Za-z0-9_]*/
identifier: m{[A-Za-z_][A-Za-z0-9_]*}
A regex of either type can also have any valid trailing parameter(s)
(that is, any of [cgimsox]):
typedef: "typedef" typename identifier ';'
identifier: / [a-z_] # LEADING ALPHA OR UNDERSCORE [a-z0-9_]* # THEN DIGITS ALSO ALLOWED /ix # CASE/SPACE/COMMENT INSENSITIVE
The value associated with any successfully matched token is a string containing the actual text which was matched by the token.
It is important to remember that, since each grammar is specified in a Perl string, all instances of the universal escape character '\' within a grammar must be ``doubled'', so that they interpolate to single '\'s when the string is compiled. For example, to use the grammar:
word: /\S+/ | backslash line: prefix word(s) "\n" backslash: '\\'
the following code is required:
$parser = new Parse::RecDescent (q{
word: /\\S+/ | backslash line: prefix word(s) "\\n" backslash: '\\\\'
});
For the purpose of matching, each terminal in a production is considered to be preceded by a ``prefix'' - a pattern which must be matched before a token match is attempted. By default, the prefix is optional whitespace (which always matches, at least trivially), but this default may be reset in any production.
The variable $Parse::RecDescent::skip
stores the universal
prefix, which is the default for all terminal matches in all parsers
built with Parse::RecDescent
.
The prefix for an individual production can be altered
by using the <skip:...>
directive (see below).
An action is a block of Perl code which is to be executed (as the
block of a do
statement) when the parser reaches that point in a
production. The action executes within a special namespace belonging to
the active parser, so care must be taken in correctly qualifying variable
names (see also Start-up Actions below).
The action is considered to succeed if the final value of the block
is defined (that is, if the implied do
statement evaluates to a
defined value - even one which would be treated as ``false''). Note
that the value associated with a successful action is also the final
value in the block.
An action will fail if its last evaluated value is undef
. This is
surprisingly easy to accomplish by accident. For instance, here's an
infuriating case of an action that makes its production fail, but only
when debugging isn't activated:
description: name rank serial_number { print "Got $item[2] $item[1] ($item[3])\n" if $::debugging }
If $debugging
is false, no statement in the block is executed, so
the final value is undef
, and the entire production fails. The solution is:
description: name rank serial_number { print "Got $item[2] $item[1] ($item[3])\n" if $::debugging; 1; }
Within an action, a number of useful parse-time variables are available in the special parser namespace (there are other variables also accessible, but meddling with them will probably just break your parser. As a general rule, if you avoid referring to unqualified variables - especially those starting with an underscore - inside an action, things should be okay):
@item
and %item
The array slice @item[1..$#item]
stores the value associated with each item
(that is, each subrule, token, or action) in the current production. The
analogy is to $1
, $2
, etc. in a yacc grammar.
Note that, for obvious reasons, @item
only contains the
values of items before the current point in the production.
The first element ($item[0]
) stores the name of the current rule
being matched.
@item
is a standard Perl array, so it can also be indexed with negative
numbers, representing the number of items back from the current position in
the parse:
stuff: /various/ bits 'and' pieces "then" data 'end' { print $item[-2] } # PRINTS data # (EASIER THAN: $item[6])
The %item
hash complements the <@item> array, providing named
access to the same item values:
stuff: /various/ bits 'and' pieces "then" data 'end' { print $item{data} # PRINTS data # (EVEN EASIER THAN USING @item)
The results of named subrules are stored in the hash under each subrule's name (including the repetition specifier, if any), whilst all other items are stored under a ``named positional'' key that indictates their ordinal position within their item type: __STRINGn__, __PATTERNn__, __DIRECTIVEn__, __ACTIONn__:
stuff: /various/ bits 'and' pieces "then" data 'end' { save } { print $item{__PATTERN1__}, # PRINTS 'various' $item{__STRING2__}, # PRINTS 'then' $item{__ACTION1__}, # PRINTS RETURN # VALUE OF save }
If you want proper named access to patterns or literals, you need to turn them into separate rules:
stuff: various bits 'and' pieces "then" data 'end' { print $item{various} # PRINTS various }
various: /various/
The special entry $item{__RULE__}
stores the name of the current
rule (i.e. the same value as $item[0]
.
The advantage of using %item
, instead of @items
is that it
removes the need to track items positions that may change as a grammar
evolves. For example, adding an interim <skip>
directive
of action can silently ruin a trailing action, by moving an @item
element ``down'' the array one place. In contrast, the named entry
of %item
is unaffected by such an insertion.
A limitation of the %item
hash is that it only records the last
value of a particular subrule. For example:
range: '(' number '..' number )' { $return = $item{number} }
will return only the value corresponding to the second match of the
number
subrule. In other words, successive calls to a subrule
overwrite the corresponding entry in %item
. Once again, the
solution is to rename each subrule in its own rule:
range: '(' from_num '..' to_num )' { $return = $item{from_num} }
from_num: number to_num: number
@arg
and %arg
The array @arg
and the hash %arg
store any arguments passed to
the rule from some other rule (see Subrule argument lists). Changes
to the elements of either variable do not propagate back to the calling
rule (data can be passed back from a subrule via the $return
variable - see next item).
$return
If a value is assigned to $return
within an action, that value is
returned if the production containing the action eventually matches
successfully. Note that setting $return
doesn't cause the current
production to succeed. It merely tells it what to return if it does succeed.
Hence $return
is analogous to $$
in a yacc grammar.
If $return
is not assigned within a production, the value of the
last component of the production (namely: $item[$#item]
) is
returned if the production succeeds.
$commit
The current state of commitment to the current production (see Directives below).
$skip
The current terminal prefix (see Directives below).
$text
The remaining (unparsed) text. Changes to $text
do not
propagate out of unsuccessful productions, but do survive
successful productions. Hence it is possible to dynamically alter the
text being parsed - for example, to provide a #include
-like facility:
hash_include: '#include' filename { $text = ::loadfile($item[2]) . $text }
filename: '<' /[a-z0-9._-]+/i '>' { $return = $item[2] } | '"' /[a-z0-9._-]+/i '"' { $return = $item[2] }
$thisline
and $prevline
$thisline
stores the current line number within the current parse
(starting from 1). $prevline
stores the line number for the last
character which was already successfully parsed (this will be different from
$thisline
at the end of each line).
For efficiency, $thisline
and $prevline
are actually tied
hashes, and only recompute the required line number when the variable's
value is used.
Assignment to $thisline
adjusts the line number calculator, so that
it believes that the current line number is the value being assigned. Note
that this adjustment will be reflected in all subsequent line numbers
calculations.
Modifying the value of the variable $text
(as in the previous
hash_include
example, for instance) will confuse the line
counting mechanism. To prevent this, you should call
Parse::RecDescent::LineCounter::resync($thisline)
immediately
after any assignment to the variable $text
(or, at least, before the
next attempt to use $thisline
).
Note that if a production fails after assigning to or
resync'ing $thisline
, the parser's line counter mechanism will
usually be corrupted.
Also see the entry for @itempos
.
The line number can be set to values other than 1, by calling the start rule with a second argument. For example:
$parser = new Parse::RecDescent ($grammar);
$parser->input($text, 10); # START LINE NUMBERS AT 10
$thiscolumn
and $prevcolumn
$thiscolumn
stores the current column number within the current line
being parsed (starting from 1). $prevcolumn
stores the column number
of the last character which was actually successfully parsed. Usually
$prevcolumn == $thiscolumn-1
, but not at the end of lines.
For efficiency, $thiscolumn
and $prevcolumn
are
actually tied hashes, and only recompute the required column number
when the variable's value is used.
Assignment to $thiscolumn
or $prevcolumn
is a fatal error.
Modifying the value of the variable $text
(as in the previous
hash_include
example, for instance) may confuse the column
counting mechanism.
Note that $thiscolumn
reports the column number before any
whitespace that might be skipped before reading a token. Hence
if you wish to know where a token started (and ended) use something like this:
rule: token1 token2 startcol token3 endcol token4 { print "token3: columns $item[3] to $item[5]"; }
startcol: '' { $thiscolumn } # NEED THE '' TO STEP PAST TOKEN SEP endcol: { $prevcolumn }
Also see the entry for @itempos
.
$thisoffset
and $prevoffset
$thisoffset
stores the offset of the current parsing position
within the complete text
being parsed (starting from 0). $prevoffset
stores the offset
of the last character which was actually successfully parsed. In all
cases $prevoffset == $thisoffset-1
.
For efficiency, $thisoffset
and $prevoffset
are
actually tied hashes, and only recompute the required offset
when the variable's value is used.
Assignment to $thisoffset
or <$prevoffset> is a fatal error.
Modifying the value of the variable $text
will not affect the
offset counting mechanism.
Also see the entry for @itempos
.
@itempos
The array @itempos
stores a hash reference corresponding to
each element of @item
. The elements of the hash provide the
following:
$itempos[$n]{offset}{from} # VALUE OF $thisoffset BEFORE $item[$n] $itempos[$n]{offset}{to} # VALUE OF $prevoffset AFTER $item[$n] $itempos[$n]{line}{from} # VALUE OF $thisline BEFORE $item[$n] $itempos[$n]{line}{to} # VALUE OF $prevline AFTER $item[$n] $itempos[$n]{column}{from} # VALUE OF $thiscolumn BEFORE $item[$n] $itempos[$n]{column}{to} # VALUE OF $prevcolumn AFTER $item[$n]
Note that the various $itempos[$n]...{from}
values record the
appropriate value after any token prefix has been skipped.
Hence, instead of the somewhat tedious and error-prone:
rule: startcol token1 endcol startcol token2 endcol startcol token3 endcol { print "token1: columns $item[1] to $item[3] token2: columns $item[4] to $item[6] token3: columns $item[7] to $item[9]" }
startcol: '' { $thiscolumn } # NEED THE '' TO STEP PAST TOKEN SEP endcol: { $prevcolumn }
it is possible to write:
rule: token1 token2 token3 { print "token1: columns $itempos[1]{column}{from} to $itempos[1]{column}{to} token2: columns $itempos[2]{column}{from} to $itempos[2]{column}{to} token3: columns $itempos[3]{column}{from} to $itempos[3]{column}{to}" }
Note however that (in the current implementation) the use of @itempos
anywhere in a grammar implies that item positioning information is
collected everywhere during the parse. Depending on the grammar
and the size of the text to be parsed, this may be prohibitively
expensive and the explicit use of $thisline
, $thiscolumn
, etc. may
be a better choice.
$thisparser
A reference to the Parse::RecDescent
object through which
parsing was initiated.
The value of $thisparser
propagates down the subrules of a parse
but not back up. Hence, you can invoke subrules from another parser
for the scope of the current rule as follows:
rule: subrule1 subrule2 | { $thisparser = $::otherparser } <reject> | subrule3 subrule4 | subrule5
The result is that the production calls ``subrule1'' and ``subrule2'' of
the current parser, and the remaining productions call the named subrules
from $::otherparser
. Note, however that ``Bad Things'' will happen if
::otherparser
isn't a blessed reference and/or doesn't have methods
with the same names as the required subrules!
$thisrule
A reference to the Parse::RecDescent::Rule
object corresponding to the
rule currently being matched.
$thisprod
A reference to the Parse::RecDescent::Production
object
corresponding to the production currently being matched.
$score
and $score_return
$score stores the best production score to date, as specified by
an earlier <score:...>
directive. $score_return stores
the corresponding return value for the successful production.
See Scored productions.
Warning: the parser relies on the information in the various this...
objects in some non-obvious ways. Tinkering with the other members of
these objects will probably cause Bad Things to happen, unless you
really know what you're doing. The only exception to this advice is
that the use of $this...->{local}
is always safe.
Any actions which appear before the first rule definition in a grammar are treated as ``start-up'' actions. Each such action is stripped of its outermost brackets and then evaluated (in the parser's special namespace) just before the rules of the grammar are first compiled.
The main use of start-up actions is to declare local variables within the parser's special namespace:
{ my $lastitem = '???'; }
list: item(s) { $return = $lastitem }
item: book { $lastitem = 'book'; } bell { $lastitem = 'bell'; } candle { $lastitem = 'candle'; }
but start-up actions can be used to execute any valid Perl code within a parser's special namespace.
Start-up actions can appear within a grammar extension or replacement
(that is, a partial grammar installed via Parse::RecDescent::Extend()
or
Parse::RecDescent::Replace()
- see Incremental Parsing), and will be
executed before the new grammar is installed. Note, however, that a
particular start-up action is only ever executed once.
It is sometimes desirable to be able to specify a default action to be
taken at the end of every production (for example, in order to easily
build a parse tree). If the variable $::RD_AUTOACTION
is defined
when Parse::RecDescent::new()
is called, the contents of that
variable are treated as a specification of an action which is to appended
to each production in the corresponding grammar. So, for example, to construct
a simple parse tree:
$::RD_AUTOACTION = q { [@item] };
parser = new Parse::RecDescent (q{ expression: and_expr '||' expression | and_expr and_expr: not_expr '&&' and_expr | not_expr not_expr: '!' brack_expr | brack_expr brack_expr: '(' expression ')' | identifier identifier: /[a-z]+/i });
which is equivalent to:
parser = new Parse::RecDescent (q{ expression: and_expr '||' expression { [@item] } | and_expr { [@item] }
and_expr: not_expr '&&' and_expr { [@item] } | not_expr { [@item] }
not_expr: '!' brack_expr { [@item] } | brack_expr { [@item] }
brack_expr: '(' expression ')' { [@item] } | identifier { [@item] }
identifier: /[a-z]+/i { [@item] } });
Alternatively, we could take an object-oriented approach, use different classes for each node (and also eliminating redundant intermediate nodes):
$::RD_AUTOACTION = q { $#item==1 ? $item[1] : new ${"$item[0]_node"} (@item[1..$#item]) };
parser = new Parse::RecDescent (q{ expression: and_expr '||' expression | and_expr and_expr: not_expr '&&' and_expr | not_expr not_expr: '!' brack_expr | brack_expr brack_expr: '(' expression ')' | identifier identifier: /[a-z]+/i });
which is equivalent to:
parser = new Parse::RecDescent (q{ expression: and_expr '||' expression { new expression_node (@item[1..3]) } | and_expr
and_expr: not_expr '&&' and_expr { new and_expr_node (@item[1..3]) } | not_expr
not_expr: '!' brack_expr { new not_expr_node (@item[1..2]) } | brack_expr
brack_expr: '(' expression ')' { new brack_expr_node (@item[1..3]) } | identifier
identifier: /[a-z]+/i { new identifer_node (@item[1]) } });
Note that, if a production already ends in an action, no autoaction is appended to it. For example, in this version:
$::RD_AUTOACTION = q { $#item==1 ? $item[1] : new ${"$item[0]_node"} (@item[1..$#item]) };
parser = new Parse::RecDescent (q{ expression: and_expr '&&' expression | and_expr and_expr: not_expr '&&' and_expr | not_expr not_expr: '!' brack_expr | brack_expr brack_expr: '(' expression ')' | identifier identifier: /[a-z]+/i { new terminal_node($item[1]) } });
each identifier
match produces a terminal_node
object, not an
identifier_node
object.
A level 1 warning is issued each time an ``autoaction'' is added to some production.
A commonly needed autoaction is one that builds a parse-tree. It is moderately
tricky to set up such an action (which must treat terminals differently from
non-terminals), so Parse::RecDescent simplifies the process by providing the
<autotree>
directive.
If this directive appears at the start of grammar, it causes Parse::RecDescent to insert autoactions at the end of any rule except those which already end in an action. The action inserted depends on whether the production is an intermediate rule (two or more items), or a terminal of the grammar (i.e. a single pattern or string item).
So, for example, the following grammar:
<autotree>
file : command(s) command : get | set | vet get : 'get' ident ';' set : 'set' ident 'to' value ';' vet : 'check' ident 'is' value ';' ident : /\w+/ value : /\d+/
is equivalent to:
file : command(s) { bless \%item, $item[0] } command : get { bless \%item, $item[0] } | set { bless \%item, $item[0] } | vet { bless \%item, $item[0] } get : 'get' ident ';' { bless \%item, $item[0] } set : 'set' ident 'to' value ';' { bless \%item, $item[0] } vet : 'check' ident 'is' value ';' { bless \%item, $item[0] }
ident : /\w+/ { bless {__VALUE__=>$item[1]}, $item[0] } value : /\d+/ { bless {__VALUE__=>$item[1]}, $item[0] }
Note that each node in the tree is blessed into a class of the same name as the rule itself. This makes it easy to build object-oriented processors for the parse-trees that the grammar produces. Note too that the last two rules produce special objects with the single attribute '__VALUE__'. This is because they consist solely of a single terminal.
This autoaction-ed grammar would then produce a parse tree in a data structure like this:
{ file => { command => { [ get => { identifier => { __VALUE__ => 'a' }, }, set => { identifier => { __VALUE__ => 'b' }, value => { __VALUE__ => '7' }, }, vet => { identifier => { __VALUE__ => 'b' }, value => { __VALUE__ => '7' }, }, ], }, } }
(except, of course, that each nested hash would also be blessed into the appropriate class).
Normally, if a subrule appears in some production, but no rule of that name is ever defined in the grammar, the production which refers to the non-existent subrule fails immediately. This typically occurs as a result of misspellings, and is a sufficiently common occurance that a warning is generated for such situations.
However, when prototyping a grammar it is sometimes useful to be able to use subrules before a proper specification of them is really possible. For example, a grammar might include a section like:
function_call: identifier '(' arg(s?) ')'
identifier: /[a-z]\w*/i
where the possible format of an argument is sufficiently complex that
it is not worth specifying in full until the general function call
syntax has been debugged. In this situation it is convenient to leave
the real rule arg
undefined and just slip in a placeholder (or
``stub''):
arg: 'arg'
so that the function call syntax can be tested with dummy input such as:
f0() f1(arg) f2(arg arg) f3(arg arg arg)
et cetera.
Early in prototyping, many such ``stubs'' may be required, so
Parse::RecDescent
provides a means of automating their definition.
If the variable $::RD_AUTOSTUB
is defined when a parser is built,
a subrule reference to any non-existent rule (say, sr
),
causes a ``stub'' rule of the form:
sr: 'sr'
to be automatically defined in the generated parser. A level 1 warning is issued for each such ``autostubbed'' rule.
Hence, with $::AUTOSTUB
defined, it is possible to only partially
specify a grammar, and then ``fake'' matches of the unspecified
(sub)rules by just typing in their name.
If a subrule, token, or action is prefixed by ``...'', then it is
treated as a ``look-ahead'' request. That means that the current production can
(as usual) only succeed if the specified item is matched, but that the matching
does not consume any of the text being parsed. This is very similar to the
/(?=...)/
look-ahead construct in Perl patterns. Thus, the rule:
inner_word: word ...word
will match whatever the subrule ``word'' matches, provided that match is followed by some more text which subrule ``word'' would also match (although this second substring is not actually consumed by ``inner_word'')
Likewise, a ``...!'' prefix, causes the following item to succeed (without consuming any text) if and only if it would normally fail. Hence, a rule such as:
identifier: ...!keyword ...!'_' /[A-Za-z_]\w*/
matches a string of characters which satisfies the pattern
/[A-Za-z_]\w*/
, but only if the same sequence of characters would
not match either subrule ``keyword'' or the literal token '_'.
Sequences of look-ahead prefixes accumulate, multiplying their positive and/or negative senses. Hence:
inner_word: word ...!......!word
is exactly equivalent the the original example above (a warning is issued in cases like these, since they often indicate something left out, or misunderstood).
Note that actions can also be treated as look-aheads. In such cases,
the state of the parser text (in the local variable $text
)
after the look-ahead action is guaranteed to be identical to its
state before the action, regardless of how it's changed within
the action (unless you actually undefine $text
, in which case you
get the disaster you deserve :-).
Directives are special pre-defined actions which may be used to alter
the behaviour of the parser. There are currently eighteen directives:
<commit>
,
<uncommit>
,
<reject>
,
<score>
,
<autoscore>
,
<skip>
,
<resync>
,
<error>
,
<rulevar>
,
<matchrule>
,
<leftop>
,
<rightop>
,
<defer>
,
<nocheck>
,
<perl_quotelike>
,
<perl_codeblock>
,
<perl_variable>
,
and <token>
.
The <commit>
and <uncommit>
directives permit the recursive
descent of the parse tree to be pruned (or ``cut'') for efficiency.
Within a rule, a <commit>
directive instructs the rule to ignore subsequent
productions if the current production fails. For example:
command: 'find' <commit> filename | 'open' <commit> filename | 'move' filename filename
Clearly, if the leading token 'find' is matched in the first production but that
production fails for some other reason, then the remaining
productions cannot possibly match. The presence of the
<commit>
causes the ``command'' rule to fail immediately if
an invalid ``find'' command is found, and likewise if an invalid ``open''
command is encountered.
It is also possible to revoke a previous commitment. For example:
if_statement: 'if' <commit> condition 'then' block <uncommit> 'else' block | 'if' <commit> condition 'then' block
In this case, a failure to find an ``else'' block in the first production shouldn't preclude trying the second production, but a failure to find a ``condition'' certainly should.
As a special case, any production in which the first item is an
<uncommit>
immediately revokes a preceding <commit>
(even though the production would not otherwise have been tried). For
example, in the rule:
request: 'explain' expression | 'explain' <commit> keyword | 'save' | 'quit' | <uncommit> term '?'
if the text being matched was ``explain?'', and the first two
productions failed, then the <commit>
in production two would cause
productions three and four to be skipped, but the leading
<uncommit>
in the production five would allow that production to
attempt a match.
Note in the preceding example, that the <commit>
was only placed
in production two. If production one had been:
request: 'explain' <commit> expression
then production two would be (inappropriately) skipped if a leading ``explain...'' was encountered.
Both <commit>
and <uncommit>
directives always succeed, and their value
is always 1.
The <reject>
directive immediately causes the current production
to fail (it is exactly equivalent to, but more obvious than, the
action {undef}
). A <reject>
is useful when it is desirable to get
the side effects of the actions in one production, without prejudicing a match
by some other production later in the rule. For example, to insert
tracing code into the parse:
complex_rule: { print "In complex rule...\n"; } <reject> complex_rule: simple_rule '+' 'i' '*' simple_rule | 'i' '*' simple_rule | simple_rule
It is also possible to specify a conditional rejection, using the
form <reject:condition>
, which only rejects if the
specified condition is true. This form of rejection is exactly
equivalent to the action {(condition)?undef:1}>
.
For example:
command: save_command | restore_command | <reject: defined $::tolerant> { exit } | <error: Unknown command. Ignored.>
A <reject>
directive never succeeds (and hence has no
associated value). A conditional rejection may succeed (if its
condition is not satisfied), in which case its value is 1.
As an extra optimization, Parse::RecDescent
ignores any production
which begins with an unconditional <reject>
directive,
since any such production can never successfully match or have any
useful side-effects. A level 1 warning is issued in all such cases.
Note that productions beginning with conditional
<reject:...>
directives are never ``optimized away'' in
this manner, even if they are always guaranteed to fail (for example:
<reject:1>
)
Due to the way grammars are parsed, there is a minor restriction on the
condition of a conditional <reject:...>
: it cannot
contain any raw '<' or '>' characters. For example:
line: cmd <reject: $thiscolumn > max> data
results in an error when a parser is built from this grammar (since the
grammar parser has no way of knowing whether the first > is a ``less than''
or the end of the <reject:...>
.
To overcome this problem, put the condition inside a do{} block:
line: cmd <reject: do{$thiscolumn > max}> data
Note that the same problem may occur in other directives that take arguments. The same solution will work in all cases.
The <skip>
directive enables the terminal prefix used in
a production to be changed. For example:
OneLiner: Command <skip:'[ \t]*'> Arg(s) /;/
causes only blanks and tabs to be skipped before terminals in the Arg
subrule (and any of its subrules>, and also before the final /;/
terminal.
Once the production is complete, the previous terminal prefix is
reinstated. Note that this implies that distinct productions of a rule
must reset their terminal prefixes individually.
The <skip>
directive evaluates to the previous terminal prefix,
so it's easy to reinstate a prefix later in a production:
Command: <skip:","> CSV(s) <skip:$item[1]> Modifier
The value specified after the colon is interpolated into a pattern, so all of the following are equivalent (though their efficiency increases down the list):
<skip: "$colon|$comma"> # ASSUMING THE VARS HOLD THE OBVIOUS VALUES
<skip: ':|,'>
<skip: q{[:,]}>
<skip: qr/[:,]/>
There is no way of directly setting the prefix for an entire rule, except as follows:
Rule: <skip: '[ \t]*'> Prod1 | <skip: '[ \t]*'> Prod2a Prod2b | <skip: '[ \t]*'> Prod3
or, better:
Rule: <skip: '[ \t]*'> ( Prod1 | Prod2a Prod2b | Prod3 )
Note: Up to release 1.51 of Parse::RecDescent, an entirely different mechanism was used for specifying terminal prefixes. The current method is not backwards-compatible with that early approach. The current approach is stable and will not to change again.
The <resync>
directive provides a visually distinctive
means of consuming some of the text being parsed, usually to skip an
erroneous input. In its simplest form <resync>
simply
consumes text up to and including the next newline ("\n"
)
character, succeeding only if the newline is found, in which case it
causes its surrounding rule to return zero on success.
In other words, a <resync>
is exactly equivalent to the token
/[^\n]*\n/
followed by the action { $return = 0 }
(except that
productions beginning with a <resync>
are ignored when generating
error messages). A typical use might be:
script : command(s)
command: save_command | restore_command | <resync> # TRY NEXT LINE, IF POSSIBLE
It is also possible to explicitly specify a resynchronization
pattern, using the <resync:pattern>
variant. This version
succeeds only if the specified pattern matches (and consumes) the
parsed text. In other words, <resync:pattern>
is exactly
equivalent to the token /pattern/
(followed by a { $return = 0 }
action). For example, if commands were terminated by newlines or semi-colons:
command: save_command | restore_command | <resync:[^;\n]*[;\n]>
The value of a successfully matched <resync>
directive (of either
type) is the text that it consumed. Note, however, that since the
directive also sets $return
, a production consisting of a lone
<resync>
succeeds but returns the value zero (which a calling rule
may find useful to distinguish between ``true'' matches and ``tolerant'' matches).
Remember that returning a zero value indicates that the rule succeeded (since
only an undef
denotes failure within Parse::RecDescent
parsers.
The <error>
directive provides automatic or user-defined
generation of error messages during a parse. In its simplest form
<error>
prepares an error message based on
the mismatch between the last item expected and the text which cause
it to fail. For example, given the rule:
McCoy: curse ',' name ', I'm a doctor, not a' a_profession '!' | pronoun 'dead,' name '!' | <error>
the following strings would produce the following messages:
ERROR (line 1): Invalid McCoy: Expected curse or pronoun not found
ERROR (line 1): Invalid McCoy: Expected ", I'm a doctor, not a" but found ", I'm a doctor!" instead
ERROR (line 2): Invalid McCoy: Expected name not found
ERROR (line 1): Invalid McCoy: Expected 'dead,' but found "alive!" instead
ERROR (line 1): Invalid McCoy: Expected a profession but found "pointy-eared Vulcan!" instead
Note that, when autogenerating error messages, all underscores in any rule name used in a message are replaced by single spaces (for example ``a_production'' becomes ``a production''). Judicious choice of rule names can therefore considerably improve the readability of automatic error messages (as well as the maintainability of the original grammar).
If the automatically generated error is not sufficient, it is possible to provide an explicit message as part of the error directive. For example:
Spock: "Fascinating ',' (name | 'Captain') '.' | "Highly illogical, doctor." | <error: He never said that!>
which would result in all failures to parse a ``Spock'' subrule printing the following message:
ERROR (line <N>): Invalid Spock: He never said that!
The error message is treated as a ``qq{...}'' string and interpolated when the error is generated (not when the directive is specified!). Hence:
<error: Mystical error near "$text">
would correctly insert the ambient text string which caused the error.
There are two other forms of error directive: <error?>
and
<error?: msg>
. These behave just like <error>
and <error: msg>
respectively, except that they are
only triggered if the rule is ``committed'' at the time they are
encountered. For example:
Scotty: "Ya kenna change the Laws of Phusics," <commit> name | name <commit> ',' 'she's goanta blaw!' | <error?>
will only generate an error for a string beginning with ``Ya kenna
change the Laws o' Phusics,'' or a valid name, but which still fails to match the
corresponding production. That is, $parser->Scotty("Aye, Cap'ain")
will
fail silently (since neither production will ``commit'' the rule on that
input), whereas $parser->Scotty("Mr Spock, ah jest kenna do'ut!")
will fail with the error message:
ERROR (line 1): Invalid Scotty: expected 'she's goanta blaw!' but found 'I jest kenna do'ut!' instead.
since in that case the second production would commit after matching the leading name.
Note that to allow this behaviour, all <error>
directives which are
the first item in a production automatically uncommit the rule just
long enough to allow their production to be attempted (that is, when
their production fails, the commitment is reinstated so that
subsequent productions are skipped).
In order to permanently uncommit the rule before an error message,
it is necessary to put an explicit <uncommit>
before the
<error>
. For example:
line: 'Kirk:' <commit> Kirk | 'Spock:' <commit> Spock | 'McCoy:' <commit> McCoy | <uncommit> <error?> <reject> | <resync>
Error messages generated by the various <error...>
directives
are not displayed immediately. Instead, they are ``queued'' in a buffer and
are only displayed once parsing ultimately fails. Moreover,
<error...>
directives that cause one production of a rule
to fail are automatically removed from the message queue
if another production subsequently causes the entire rule to succeed.
This means that you can put
<error...>
directives wherever useful diagnosis can be done,
and only those associated with actual parser failure will ever be
displayed. Also see Gotchas.
As a general rule, the most useful diagnostics are usually generated
either at the very lowest level within the grammar, or at the very
highest. A good rule of thumb is to identify those subrules which
consist mainly (or entirely) of terminals, and then put an
<error...>
directive at the end of any other rule which calls
one or more of those subrules.
There is one other situation in which the output of the various types of error directive is suppressed; namely, when the rule containing them is being parsed as part of a ``look-ahead'' (see Look-ahead). In this case, the error directive will still cause the rule to fail, but will do so silently.
An unconditional <error>
directive always fails (and hence has no
associated value). This means that encountering such a directive
always causes the production containing it to fail. Hence an
<error>
directive will inevitably be the last (useful) item of a
rule (a level 3 warning is issued if a production contains items after an unconditional
<error>
directive).
An <error?>
directive will succeed (that is: fail to fail :-), if
the current rule is uncommitted when the directive is encountered. In
that case the directive's associated value is zero. Hence, this type
of error directive can be used before the end of a
production. For example:
command: 'do' <commit> something | 'report' <commit> something | <error?: Syntax error> <error: Unknown command>
Warning: The <error?>
directive does not mean ``always fail (but
do so silently unless committed)''. It actually means ``only fail (and report) if
committed, otherwise succeed''. To achieve the ``fail silently if uncommitted''
semantics, it is necessary to use:
rule: item <commit> item(s) | <error?> <reject> # FAIL SILENTLY UNLESS COMMITTED
However, because people seem to expect a lone <error?>
directive
to work like this:
rule: item <commit> item(s) | <error?: Error message if committed> | <error: Error message if uncommitted>
Parse::RecDescent automatically appends a
<reject>
directive if the <error?>
directive
is the only item in a production. A level 2 warning (see below)
is issued when this happens.
The level of error reporting during both parser construction and
parsing is controlled by the presence or absence of four global
variables: $::RD_ERRORS
, $::RD_WARN
, $::RD_HINT
, and
<$::RD_TRACE>. If $::RD_ERRORS
is defined (and, by default, it is)
then fatal errors are reported.
Whenever $::RD_WARN
is defined, certain non-fatal problems are also reported.
Warnings have an associated ``level'': 1, 2, or 3. The higher the level,
the more serious the warning. The value of the corresponding global
variable ($::RD_WARN
) determines the lowest level of warning to
be displayed. Hence, to see all warnings, set $::RD_WARN
to 1.
To see only the most serious warnings set $::RD_WARN
to 3.
By default $::RD_WARN
is initialized to 3, ensuring that serious but
non-fatal errors are automatically reported.
See ``DIAGNOSTICS'' for a list of the varous error and warning messages that Parse::RecDescent generates when these two variables are defined.
Defining any of the remaining variables (which are not defined by
default) further increases the amount of information reported.
Defining $::RD_HINT
causes the parser generator to offer
more detailed analyses and hints on both errors and warnings.
Note that setting $::RD_HINT
at any point automagically
sets $::RD_WARN
to 1.
Defining $::RD_TRACE
causes the parser generator and the parser to
report their progress to STDERR in excruciating detail (although, without hints
unless $::RD_HINT is separately defined). This detail
can be moderated in only one respect: if $::RD_TRACE
has an
integer value (N) greater than 1, only the N characters of
the ``current parsing context'' (that is, where in the input string we
are at any point in the parse) is reported at any time.
>
$::RD_TRACE
is mainly useful for debugging a grammar that isn't
behaving as you expected it to. To this end, if $::RD_TRACE
is
defined when a parser is built, any actual parser code which is
generated is also written to a file named ``RD_TRACE'' in the local
directory.
Note that the four variables belong to the ``main'' package, which makes them easier to refer to in the code controlling the parser, and also makes it easy to turn them into command line flags (``-RD_ERRORS'', ``-RD_WARN'', ``-RD_HINT'', ``-RD_TRACE'') under perl -s.
It is occasionally convenient to specify variables which are local
to a single rule. This may be achieved by including a
<rulevar:...>
directive anywhere in the rule. For example:
markup: <rulevar: $tag>
markup: tag {($tag=$item[1]) =~ s/^<|>$//g} body[$tag]
The example <rulevar: $tag>
directive causes a ``my'' variable named
$tag
to be declared at the start of the subroutine implementing the
markup
rule (that is, before the first production, regardless of
where in the rule it is specified).
Specifically, any directive of the form:
<rulevar:text>
causes a line of the form my text;
to be added at the beginning of the rule subroutine, immediately after
the definitions of the following local variables:
$thisparser $commit $thisrule @item $thisline @arg $text %arg
This means that the following <rulevar>
directives work
as expected:
<rulevar: $count = 0 >
<rulevar: $firstarg = $arg[0] || '' >
<rulevar: $myItems = \@item >
<rulevar: @context = ( $thisline, $text, @arg ) >
<rulevar: ($name,$age) = $arg{"name","age"} >
If a variable that is also visible to subrules is required, it needs
to be local
'd, not my
'd. rulevar
defaults to my
, but if local
is explicitly specified:
<rulevar: local $count = 0 >
then a local
-ized variable is declared instead, and will be available
within subrules.
Note however that, because all such variables are ``my'' variables, their
values do not persist between match attempts on a given rule. To
preserve values between match attempts, values can be stored within the
``local'' member of the $thisrule
object:
countedrule: { $thisrule->{"local"}{"count"}++ } <reject> | subrule1 | subrule2 | <reject: $thisrule->{"local"}{"count"} == 1> subrule3
When matching a rule, each <rulevar>
directive is matched as
if it were an unconditional <reject>
directive (that is, it
causes any production in which it appears to immediately fail to match).
For this reason (and to improve readability) it is usual to specify any
<rulevar>
directive in a separate production at the start of
the rule (this has the added advantage that it enables
Parse::RecDescent
to optimize away such productions, just as it does
for the <reject>
directive).
Because regexes and double-quoted strings are interpolated, it is relatively easy to specify productions with ``context sensitive'' tokens. For example:
command: keyword body "end $item[1]"
which ensures that a command block is bounded by a ``<keyword>...end <same keyword>'' pair.
Building productions in which subrules are context sensitive is also possible,
via the <matchrule:...>
directive. This directive behaves
identically to a subrule item, except that the rule which is invoked to match
it is determined by the string specified after the colon. For example, we could
rewrite the command
rule like this:
command: keyword <matchrule:body> "end $item[1]"
Whatever appears after the colon in the directive is treated as an interpolated
string (that is, as if it appeared in qq{...}
operator) and the value of
that interpolated string is the name of the subrule to be matched.
Of course, just putting a constant string like body
in a
<matchrule:...>
directive is of little interest or benefit.
The power of directive is seen when we use a string that interpolates
to something interesting. For example:
command: keyword <matchrule:$item[1]_body> "end $item[1]"
keyword: 'while' | 'if' | 'function'
while_body: condition block
if_body: condition block ('else' block)(?)
function_body: arglist block
Now the command
rule selects how to proceed on the basis of the keyword
that is found. It is as if command
were declared:
command: 'while' while_body "end while" | 'if' if_body "end if" | 'function' function_body "end function"
When a <matchrule:...>
directive is used as a repeated
subrule, the rule name expression is ``late-bound''. That is, the name of
the rule to be called is re-evaluated each time a match attempt is
made. Hence, the following grammar:
{ $::species = 'dogs' }
pair: 'two' <matchrule:$::species>(s)
dogs: /dogs/ { $::species = 'cats' }
cats: /cats/
will match the string ``two dogs cats cats'' completely, whereas it will only match the string ``two dogs dogs dogs'' up to the eighth letter. If the rule name were ``early bound'' (that is, evaluated only the first time the directive is encountered in a production), the reverse behaviour would be expected.
Note that the matchrule
directive takes a string that is to be treated
as a rule name, not as a rule invocation. That is,
it's like a Perl symbolic reference, not an eval
. Just as you can say:
$subname = 'foo';
# and later...
&{$foo}(@args);
but not:
$subname = 'foo(@args)';
# and later...
&{$foo};
likewise you can say:
$rulename = 'foo';
# and in the grammar...
<matchrule:$rulename>[@args]
but not:
$rulename = 'foo[@args]';
# and in the grammar...
<matchrule:$rulename>
The <defer:...>
directive is used to specify an action to be
performed when (and only if!) the current production ultimately succeeds.
Whenever a <defer:...>
directive appears, the code it specifies
is converted to a closure (an anonymous subroutine reference) which is
queued within the active parser object. Note that,
because the deferred code is converted to a closure, the values of any
``local'' variable (such as $text
, <@item>, etc.) are preserved
until the deferred code is actually executed.
If the parse ultimately succeeds
and the production in which the <defer:...>
directive was
evaluated formed part of the successful parse, then the deferred code is
executed immediately before the parse returns. If however the production
which queued a deferred action fails, or one of the higher-level
rules which called that production fails, then the deferred action is
removed from the queue, and hence is never executed.
For example, given the grammar:
sentence: noun trans noun | noun intrans
noun: 'the dog' { print "$item[1]\t(noun)\n" } | 'the meat' { print "$item[1]\t(noun)\n" }
trans: 'ate' { print "$item[1]\t(transitive)\n" }
intrans: 'ate' { print "$item[1]\t(intransitive)\n" } | 'barked' { print "$item[1]\t(intransitive)\n" }
then parsing the sentence "the dog ate"
would produce the output:
the dog (noun) ate (transitive) the dog (noun) ate (intransitive)
This is because, even though the first production of sentence
ultimately fails, its initial subrules noun
and trans
do match,
and hence they execute their associated actions.
Then the second production of sentence
succeeds, causing the
actions of the subrules noun
and intrans
to be executed as well.
On the other hand, if the actions were replaced by <defer:...>
directives:
sentence: noun trans noun | noun intrans
noun: 'the dog' <defer: print "$item[1]\t(noun)\n" > | 'the meat' <defer: print "$item[1]\t(noun)\n" >
trans: 'ate' <defer: print "$item[1]\t(transitive)\n" >
intrans: 'ate' <defer: print "$item[1]\t(intransitive)\n" > | 'barked' <defer: print "$item[1]\t(intransitive)\n" >
the output would be:
the dog (noun) ate (intransitive)
since deferred actions are only executed if they were evaluated in a production which ultimately contributes to the successful parse.
In this case, even though the first production of sentence
caused
the subrules noun
and trans
to match, that production ultimately
failed and so the deferred actions queued by those subrules were subsequently
disgarded. The second production then succeeded, causing the entire
parse to succeed, and so the deferred actions queued by the (second) match of
the noun
subrule and the subsequent match of intrans
are preserved and
eventually executed.
Deferred actions provide a means of improving the performance of a parser, by only executing those actions which are part of the final parse-tree for the input data.
Alternatively, deferred actions can be viewed as a mechanism for building (and executing) a customized subroutine corresponding to the given input data, much in the same way that autoactions (see Autoactions) can be used to build a customized data structure for specific input.
Whether or not the action it specifies is ever executed,
a <defer:...>
directive always succeeds, returning the
number of deferred actions currently queued at that point.
Parse::RecDescent provides limited support for parsing subsets of Perl, namely: quote-like operators, Perl variables, and complete code blocks.
The <perl_quotelike>
directive can be used to parse any Perl
quote-like operator: 'a string'
, m/a pattern/
, tr{ans}{lation}
,
etc. It does this by calling Text::Balanced::quotelike().
If a quote-like operator is found, a reference to an array of eight elements is returned. Those elements are identical to the last eight elements returned by Text::Balanced::extract_quotelike() in an array context, namely:
the name of the quotelike operator -- 'q', 'qq', 'm', 's', 'tr' -- if the
operator was named; otherwise undef
,
the left delimiter of the first block of the operation,
the text of the first block of the operation (that is, the contents of a quote, the regex of a match, or substitution or the target list of a translation),
the right delimiter of the first block of the operation,
the left delimiter of the second block of the operation if there is one
(that is, if it is a s
, tr
, or y
); otherwise undef
,
the text of the second block of the operation if there is one
(that is, the replacement of a substitution or the translation list
of a translation); otherwise undef
,
the right delimiter of the second block of the operation (if any);
otherwise undef
,
the trailing modifiers on the operation (if any); otherwise undef
.
If a quote-like expression is not found, the directive fails with the usual
undef
value.
The <perl_variable>
directive can be used to parse any Perl
variable: $scalar, @array, %hash, $ref->{field}[$index], etc.
It does this by calling Text::Balanced::extract_variable().
If the directive matches text representing a valid Perl variable
specification, it returns that text. Otherwise it fails with the usual
undef
value.
The <perl_codeblock>
directive can be used to parse curly-brace-delimited block of Perl code, such as: { $a = 1; f()
=~ m/pat/; }.
It does this by calling Text::Balanced::extract_codeblock().
If the directive matches text representing a valid Perl code block,
it returns that text. Otherwise it fails with the usual undef
value.
You can also tell it what kind of brackets to use as the outermost delimiters. For example:
arglist: <perl_codeblock ()>
causes an arglist to match a perl code block whose outermost delimiters
are (...)
(rather than the default {...}
).
Eventually, Parse::RecDescent will be able to parse tokenized input, as
well as ordinary strings. In preparation for this joyous day, the
<token:...>
directive has been provided.
This directive creates a token which will be suitable for
input to a Parse::RecDescent parser (when it eventually supports
tokenized input).
The text of the token is the value of the
immediately preceding item in the production. A
<token:...>
directive always succeeds with a return
value which is the hash reference that is the new token. It also
sets the return value for the production to that hash ref.
The <token:...>
directive makes it easy to build
a Parse::RecDescent-compatible lexer in Parse::RecDescent:
my $lexer = new Parse::RecDescent q { lex: token(s)
token: /a\b/ <token:INDEF> | /the\b/ <token:DEF> | /fly\b/ <token:NOUN,VERB> | /[a-z]+/i { lc $item[1] } <token:ALPHA> | <error: Unknown token>
};
which will eventually be able to be used with a regular Parse::RecDescent grammar:
my $parser = new Parse::RecDescent q { startrule: subrule1 subrule 2 # ETC... };
either with a pre-lexing phase:
$parser->startrule( $lexer->lex($data) );
or with a lex-on-demand approach:
$parser->startrule( sub{$lexer->token(\$data)} );
But at present, only the <token:...>
directive is
actually implemented. The rest is vapourware.
One of the commonest requirements when building a parser is to specify binary operators. Unfortunately, in a normal grammar, the rules for such things are awkward:
disjunction: conjunction ('or' conjunction)(s?) { $return = [ $item[1], @{$item[2]} ] }
conjunction: atom ('and' atom)(s?) { $return = [ $item[1], @{$item[2]} ] }
or inefficient:
disjunction: conjunction 'or' disjunction { $return = [ $item[1], @{$item[2]} ] } | conjunction { $return = [ $item[1] ] }
conjunction: atom 'and' conjunction { $return = [ $item[1], @{$item[2]} ] } | atom { $return = [ $item[1] ] }
and either way is ugly and hard to get right.
The <leftop:...>
and <rightop:...>
directives provide an
easier way of specifying such operations. Using <leftop:...>
the
above examples become:
disjunction: <leftop: conjunction 'or' conjunction> conjunction: <leftop: atom 'and' atom>
The <leftop:...>
directive specifies a left-associative binary operator.
It is specified around three other grammar elements
(typically subrules or terminals), which match the left operand,
the operator itself, and the right operand respectively.
A <leftop:...>
directive such as:
disjunction: <leftop: conjunction 'or' conjunction>
is converted to the following:
disjunction: ( conjunction ('or' conjunction)(s?) { $return = [ $item[1], @{$item[2]} ] } )
In other words, a <leftop:...>
directive matches the left operand followed by zero
or more repetitions of both the operator and the right operand. It then
flattens the matched items into an anonymous array which becomes the
(single) value of the entire <leftop:...>
directive.
For example, an <leftop:...>
directive such as:
output: <leftop: ident '<<' expr >
when given a string such as:
cout << var << "str" << 3
would match, and $item[1]
would be set to:
[ 'cout', 'var', '"str"', '3' ]
In other words:
output: <leftop: ident '<<' expr >
is equivalent to a left-associative operator:
output: ident { $return = [$item[1]] } | ident '<<' expr { $return = [@item[1,3]] } | ident '<<' expr '<<' expr { $return = [@item[1,3,5]] } | ident '<<' expr '<<' expr '<<' expr { $return = [@item[1,3,5,7]] } # ...etc...
Similarly, the <rightop:...>
directive takes a left operand, an operator, and a right operand:
assign: <rightop: var '=' expr >
and converts them to:
assign: ( (var '=' {$return=$item[1]})(s?) expr { $return = [ @{$item[1]}, $item[2] ] } )
which is equivalent to a right-associative operator:
assign: var { $return = [$item[1]] } | var '=' expr { $return = [@item[1,3]] } | var '=' var '=' expr { $return = [@item[1,3,5]] } | var '=' var '=' var '=' expr { $return = [@item[1,3,5,7]] } # ...etc...
Note that for both the <leftop:...>
and <rightop:...>
directives, the directive does not normally
return the operator itself, just a list of the operands involved. This is
particularly handy for specifying lists:
list: '(' <leftop: list_item ',' list_item> ')' { $return = $item[2] }
There is, however, a problem: sometimes the operator is itself significant.
For example, in a Perl list a comma and a =>
are both
valid separators, but the =>
has additional stringification semantics.
Hence it's important to know which was used in each case.
To solve this problem the
<leftop:...>
and <rightop:...>
directives
do return the operator(s)
as well, under two circumstances.
The first case is where the operator is specified as a subrule. In that instance,
whatever the operator matches is returned (on the assumption that if the operator
is important enough to have its own subrule, then it's important enough to return).
The second case is where the operator is specified as a regular
expression. In that case, if the first bracketed subpattern of the
regular expression matches, that matching value is returned (this is analogous to
the behaviour of the Perl split
function, except that only the first subpattern
is returned).
In other words, given the input:
( a=>1, b=>2 )
the specifications:
list: '(' <leftop: list_item separator list_item> ')'
separator: ',' | '=>'
or:
list: '(' <leftop: list_item /(,|=>)/ list_item> ')'
cause the list separators to be interleaved with the operands in the
anonymous array in $item[2]
:
[ 'a', '=>', '1', ',', 'b', '=>', '2' ]
But the following version:
list: '(' <leftop: list_item /,|=>/ list_item> ')'
returns only the operators:
[ 'a', '1', 'b', '2' ] Of course, none of the above specifications handle the case of an empty list, since the C<E<lt>leftop:...E<gt>> and C<E<lt>rightop:...E<gt>> directives require at least a single right or left operand to match. To specify that the operator can match "trivially", it's necessary to add a C<(?)> qualifier to the directive:
list: '(' <leftop: list_item /(,|=>)/ list_item>(?) ')'
Note that in almost all the above examples, the first and third arguments
of the <leftop:...>
directive were the same subrule. That is because
<leftop:...>
's are frequently used to specify ``separated'' lists of the
same type of item. To make such lists easier to specify, the following
syntax:
list: element(s /,/)
is exactly equivalent to:
list: <leftop: element /,/ element>
Note that the separator must be specified as a raw pattern (i.e. not a string or subrule).
By default, Parse::RecDescent grammar rules always accept the first production that matches the input. But if two or more productions may potentially match the same input, choosing the first that does so may not be optimal.
For example, if you were parsing the sentence ``time flies like an arrow'', you might use a rule like this:
sentence: verb noun preposition article noun { [@item] } | adjective noun verb article noun { [@item] } | noun verb preposition article noun { [@item] }
Each of these productions matches the sentence, but the third one is the most likely interpretation. However, if the sentence had been ``fruit flies like a banana'', then the second production is probably the right match.
To cater for such situtations, the <score:...>
can be used.
The directive is equivalent to an unconditional <reject>
,
except that it allows you to specify a ``score'' for the current
production. If that score is numerically greater than the best
score of any preceding production, the current production is cached for later
consideration. If no later production matches, then the cached
production is treated as having matched, and the value of the
item immediately before its <score:...>
directive is returned as the
result.
In other words, by putting a <score:...>
directive at the end of
each production, you can select which production matches using
criteria other than specification order. For example:
sentence: verb noun preposition article noun { [@item] } <score: sensible(@item)> | adjective noun verb article noun { [@item] } <score: sensible(@item)> | noun verb preposition article noun { [@item] } <score: sensible(@item)>
Now, when each production reaches its respective <score:...>
directive, the subroutine sensible
will be called to evaluate the
matched items (somehow). Once all productions have been tried, the
one which sensible
scored most highly will be the one that is
accepted as a match for the rule.
The variable $score always holds the current best score of any production, and the variable $score_return holds the corresponding return value.
As another example, the following grammar matches lines that may be separated by commas, colons, or semi-colons. This can be tricky if a colon-separated line also contains commas, or vice versa. The grammar resolves the ambiguity by selecting the rule that results in the fewest fields:
line: seplist[sep=>','] <score: -@{$item[1]}> | seplist[sep=>':'] <score: -@{$item[1]}> | seplist[sep=>" "] <score: -@{$item[1]}>
seplist: <skip:""> <leftop: /[^$arg{sep}]*/ "$arg{sep}" /[^$arg{sep}]*/>
Note the use of negation within the <score:...>
directive
to ensure that the seplist with the most items gets the lowest score.
As the above examples indicate, it is often the case that all productions
in a rule use exactly the same <score:...>
directive. It is
tedious to have to repeat this identical directive in every production, so
Parse::RecDescent also provides the <autoscore:...>
directive.
If an <autoscore:...>
directive appears in any
production of a rule, the code it specifies is used as the scoring
code for every production of that rule, except productions that already
end with an explicit <score:...>
directive. Thus the rules above could
be rewritten:
line: <autoscore: -@{$item[1]}> line: seplist[sep=>','] | seplist[sep=>':'] | seplist[sep=>" "]
sentence: <autoscore: sensible(@item)> | verb noun preposition article noun { [@item] } | adjective noun verb article noun { [@item] } | noun verb preposition article noun { [@item] }
Note that the <autoscore:...>
directive itself acts as an
unconditional <reject>
, and (like the <rulevar:...>
directive) is pruned at compile-time wherever possible.
During the compilation phase of parser construction, Parse::RecDescent performs a small number of checks on the grammar it's given. Specifically it checks that the grammar is not left-recursive, that there are no ``insatiable'' constructs of the form:
rule: subrule(s) subrule
and that there are no rules missing (i.e. referred to, but never defined).
These checks are important during development, but can slow down parser construction in stable code. So Parse::RecDescent provides the <nocheck> directive to turn them off. The directive can only appear before the first rule definition, and switches off checking throughout the rest of the current grammar.
Typically, this directive would be added when a parser has been thoroughly tested and is ready for release.
It is occasionally useful to pass data to a subrule which is being invoked. For example, consider the following grammar fragment:
classdecl: keyword decl
keyword: 'struct' | 'class';
decl: # WHATEVER
The decl
rule might wish to know which of the two keywords was used
(since it may affect some aspect of the way the subsequent declaration
is interpreted). Parse::RecDescent
allows the grammar designer to
pass data into a rule, by placing that data in an argument list
(that is, in square brackets) immediately after any subrule item in a
production. Hence, we could pass the keyword to decl
as follows:
classdecl: keyword decl[ $item[1] ]
keyword: 'struct' | 'class';
decl: # WHATEVER
The argument list can consist of any number (including zero!) of comma-separated
Perl expressions. In other words, it looks exactly like a Perl anonymous
array reference. For example, we could pass the keyword, the name of the
surrounding rule, and the literal 'keyword' to decl
like so:
classdecl: keyword decl[$item[1],$item[0],'keyword']
keyword: 'struct' | 'class';
decl: # WHATEVER
Within the rule to which the data is passed (decl
in the above examples)
that data is available as the elements of a local variable @arg
. Hence
decl
might report its intentions as follows:
classdecl: keyword decl[$item[1],$item[0],'keyword']
keyword: 'struct' | 'class';
decl: { print "Declaring $arg[0] (a $arg[2])\n"; print "(this rule called by $arg[1])" }
Subrule argument lists can also be interpreted as hashes, simply by using
the local variable %arg
instead of @arg
. Hence we could rewrite the
previous example:
classdecl: keyword decl[keyword => $item[1], caller => $item[0], type => 'keyword']
keyword: 'struct' | 'class';
decl: { print "Declaring $arg{keyword} (a $arg{type})\n"; print "(this rule called by $arg{caller})" }
Both @arg
and %arg
are always available, so the grammar designer may
choose whichever convention (or combination of conventions) suits best.
Subrule argument lists are also useful for creating ``rule templates''
(especially when used in conjunction with the <matchrule:...>
directive). For example, the subrule:
list: <matchrule:$arg{rule}> /$arg{sep}/ list[%arg] { $return = [ $item[1], @{$item[3]} ] } | <matchrule:$arg{rule}> { $return = [ $item[1]] }
is a handy template for the common problem of matching a separated list. For example:
function: 'func' name '(' list[rule=>'param',sep=>';'] ')'
param: list[rule=>'name',sep=>','] ':' typename
name: /\w+/
typename: name
When a subrule argument list is used with a repeated subrule, the argument list goes before the repetition specifier:
list: /some|many/ thing[ $item[1] ](s)
The argument list is ``late bound''. That is, it is re-evaluated for every repetition of the repeated subrule. This means that each repeated attempt to match the subrule may be passed a completely different set of arguments if the value of the expression in the argument list changes between attempts. So, for example, the grammar:
{ $::species = 'dogs' }
pair: 'two' animal[$::species](s)
animal: /$arg[0]/ { $::species = 'cats' }
will match the string ``two dogs cats cats'' completely, whereas it will only match the string ``two dogs dogs dogs'' up to the eighth letter. If the value of the argument list were ``early bound'' (that is, evaluated only the first time a repeated subrule match is attempted), one would expect the matching behaviours to be reversed.
Of course, it is possible to effectively ``early bind'' such argument lists by passing them a value which does not change on each repetition. For example:
{ $::species = 'dogs' }
pair: 'two' { $::species } animal[$item[2]](s)
animal: /$arg[0]/ { $::species = 'cats' }
Arguments can also be passed to the start rule, simply by appending them to the argument list with which the start rule is called (after the ``line number'' parameter). For example, given:
$parser = new Parse::RecDescent ( $grammar );
$parser->data($text, 1, "str", 2, \@arr);
# ^^^^^ ^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ # | | | # TEXT TO BE PARSED | | # STARTING LINE NUMBER | # ELEMENTS OF @arg WHICH IS PASSED TO RULE data
then within the productions of the rule data
, the array @arg
will contain
("str", 2, \@arr)
.
Alternations are implicit (unnamed) rules defined as part of a production. An alternation is defined as a series of '|'-separated productions inside a pair of round brackets. For example:
character: 'the' ( good | bad | ugly ) /dude/
Every alternation implicitly defines a new subrule, whose automatically-generated name indicates its origin: ``_alternation_<I>_of_production_<P>_of_rule<R>'' for the appropriate values of <I>, <P>, and <R>. A call to this implicit subrule is then inserted in place of the brackets. Hence the above example is merely a convenient short-hand for:
character: 'the' _alternation_1_of_production_1_of_rule_character /dude/
_alternation_1_of_production_1_of_rule_character: good | bad | ugly
Since alternations are parsed by recursively calling the parser generator,
any type(s)
of item can appear in an alternation. For example:
character: 'the' ( 'high' "plains" # Silent, with poncho | /no[- ]name/ # Silent, no poncho | vengeance_seeking # Poncho-optional | <error> ) drifter
In this case, if an error occurred, the automatically generated message would be:
ERROR (line <N>): Invalid implicit subrule: Expected 'high' or /no[- ]name/ or generic, but found "pacifist" instead
Since every alternation actually has a name, it's even possible to extend or replace them:
parser->Replace( "_alternation_1_of_production_1_of_rule_character: 'generic Eastwood'" );
More importantly, since alternations are a form of subrule, they can be given repetition specifiers:
character: 'the' ( good | bad | ugly )(?) /dude/
Parse::RecDescent
provides two methods - Extend
and Replace
- which
can be used to alter the grammar matched by a parser. Both methods
take the same argument as Parse::RecDescent::new
, namely a
grammar specification string
Parse::RecDescent::Extend
interprets the grammar specification and adds any
productions it finds to the end of the rules for which they are specified. For
example:
$add = "name: 'Jimmy-Bob' | 'Bobby-Jim'\ndesc: colour /necks?/"; parser->Extend($add);
adds two productions to the rule ``name'' (creating it if necessary) and one production to the rule ``desc''.
Parse::RecDescent::Replace
is identical, except that it first resets are
rule specified in the additional grammar, removing any existing productions.
Hence after:
$add = "name: 'Jimmy-Bob' | 'Bobby-Jim'\ndesc: colour /necks?/"; parser->Replace($add);
are are only valid ``name''s and the one possible description.
A more interesting use of the Extend
and Replace
methods is to call them
inside the action of an executing parser. For example:
typedef: 'typedef' type_name identifier ';' { $thisparser->Extend("type_name: '$item[3]'") } | <error>
identifier: ...!type_name /[A-Za-z_]w*/
which automatically prevents type names from being typedef'd, or:
command: 'map' key_name 'to' abort_key { $thisparser->Replace("abort_key: '$item[2]'") } | 'map' key_name 'to' key_name { map_key($item[2],$item[4]) } | abort_key { exit if confirm("abort?") }
abort_key: 'q'
key_name: ...!abort_key /[A-Za-z]/
which allows the user to change the abort key binding, but not to unbind it.
The careful use of such constructs makes it possible to reconfigure a
a running parser, eliminating the need for semantic feedback by
providing syntactic feedback instead. However, as currently implemented,
Replace()
and Extend()
have to regenerate and re-eval
the
entire parser whenever they are called. This makes them quite slow for
large grammars.
In such cases, the judicious use of an interpolated regex is likely to be far more efficient:
typedef: 'typedef' type_name/ identifier ';' { $thisparser->{local}{type_name} .= "|$item[3]" } | <error>
identifier: ...!type_name /[A-Za-z_]w*/
type_name: /$thisparser->{local}{type_name}/
Normally Parse::RecDescent builds a parser from a grammar at run-time. That approach simplifies the design and implementation of parsing code, but has the disadvantage that it slows the parsing process down - you have to wait for Parse::RecDescent to build the parser every time the program runs. Long or complex grammars can be particularly slow to build, leading to unacceptable delays at start-up.
To overcome this, the module provides a way of ``pre-building'' a parser object and saving it in a separate module. That module can then be used to create clones of the original parser.
A grammar may be precompiled using the Precompile
class method.
For example, to precompile a grammar stored in the scalar $grammar,
and produce a class named PreGrammar in a module file named PreGrammar.pm,
you could use:
use Parse::RecDescent;
Parse::RecDescent->Precompile($grammar, "PreGrammar");
The first argument is the grammar string, the second is the name of the class to be built. The name of the module file is generated automatically by appending ``.pm'' to the last element of the class name. Thus
Parse::RecDescent->Precompile($grammar, "My::New::Parser");
would produce a module file named Parser.pm.
It is somewhat tedious to have to write a small Perl program just to generate a precompiled grammar class, so Parse::RecDescent has some special magic that allows you to do the job directly from the command-line.
If your grammar is specified in a file named grammar, you can generate a class named Yet::Another::Grammar like so:
> perl -MParse::RecDescent - grammar Yet::Another::Grammar
This would produce a file named Grammar.pm containing the full definition of a class called Yet::Another::Grammar. Of course, to use that class, you would need to put the Grammar.pm file in a directory named Yet/Another, somewhere in your Perl include path.
Having created the new class, it's very easy to use it to build
a parser. You simply use
the new module, and then call its
new
method to create a parser object. For example:
use Yet::Another::Grammar; my $parser = Yet::Another::Grammar->new();
The effect of these two lines is exactly the same as:
use Parse::RecDescent;
open GRAMMAR_FILE, "grammar" or die; local $/; my $grammar = <GRAMMAR_FILE>;
my $parser = Parse::RecDescent->new($grammar);
only considerably faster.
Note however that the parsers produced by either approach are exactly the same, so whilst precompilation has an effect on set-up speed, it has no effect on parsing speed. RecDescent 2.0 will address that problem.
Parse::RecDescent
The following is a specification of grammar format accepted by
Parse::RecDescent::new
(specified in the Parse::RecDescent
grammar format!):
grammar : components(s)
component : rule | comment
rule : "\n" identifier ":" production(s?)
production : items(s)
item : lookahead(?) simpleitem | directive | comment
lookahead : '...' | '...!' # +'ve or -'ve lookahead simpleitem : subrule args(?) # match another rule | repetition # match repeated subrules | terminal # match the next input | bracket args(?) # match alternative items | action # do something
subrule : identifier # the name of the rule
args : {extract_codeblock($text,'[]')} # just like a [...] array ref
repetition : subrule args(?) howoften
howoften : '(?)' # 0 or 1 times | '(s?)' # 0 or more times | '(s)' # 1 or more times | /(\d+)[.][.](/\d+)/ # $1 to $2 times | /[.][.](/\d*)/ # at most $1 times | /(\d*)[.][.])/ # at least $1 times
terminal : /[/]([\][/]|[^/])*[/]/ # interpolated pattern | /"([\]"|[^"])*"/ # interpolated literal | /'([\]'|[^'])*'/ # uninterpolated literal
action : { extract_codeblock($text) } # embedded Perl code
bracket : '(' Item(s) production(s?) ')' # alternative subrules
directive : '<commit>' # commit to production | '<uncommit>' # cancel commitment | '<resync>' # skip to newline | '<resync:' pattern '>' # skip <pattern> | '<reject>' # fail this production | '<reject:' condition '>' # fail if <condition> | '<error>' # report an error | '<error:' string '>' # report error as "<string>" | '<error?>' # error only if committed | '<error?:' string '>' # " " " " | '<rulevar:' /[^>]+/ '>' # define rule-local variable | '<matchrule:' string '>' # invoke rule named in string
identifier : /[a-z]\w*/i # must start with alpha
comment : /#[^\n]*/ # same as Perl
pattern : {extract_bracketed($text,'<')} # allow embedded "<..>"
condition : {extract_codeblock($text,'{<')} # full Perl expression
string : {extract_variable($text)} # any Perl variable | {extract_quotelike($text)} # or quotelike string | {extract_bracketed($text,'<')} # or balanced brackets
This section describes common mistakes that grammar writers seem to make on a regular basis.
A common mistake when using error messages is to write the grammar like this:
file: line(s)
line: line_type_1 | line_type_2 | line_type_3 | <error>
The expectation seems to be that any line that is not of type 1, 2 or 3 will
invoke the <error>
directive and thereby cause the parse to fail.
Unfortunately, that only happens if the error occurs in the very first line.
The first rule states that a file
is matched by one or more lines, so if
even a single line succeeds, the first rule is completely satisfied and the
parse as a whole succeeds. That means that any error messages generated by
subsequent failures in the line
rule are quietly ignored.
Typically what's really needed is this:
file: line(s) eofile { $return = $item[1] }
line: line_type_1 | line_type_2 | line_type_3 | <error>
eofile: /^\Z/
The addition of the eofile
subrule to the first production means that
a file only matches a series of successful line
matches that consume the
complete input text. If any input text remains after the lines are matched,
there must have been an error in the last line
. In that case the eofile
rule will fail, causing the entire file
rule to fail too.
Note too that eofile
must match /^\Z/
(end-of-text), not
/^\cZ/
or /^\cD/
(end-of-file).
And don't forget the action at the end of the production. If you just write:
file: line(s) eofile
then the value returned by the file
rule will be the value of its
last item: eofile
. Since eofile
always returns an empty string
on success, that will cause the file
rule to return that empty
string. Apart from returning the wrong value, returning an empty string
will trip up code such as:
$parser->file($filetext) || die;
(since ``'' is false).
Remember that Parse::RecDescent returns undef on failure, so the only safe test for failure is:
defined($parser->file($filetext)) || die;
Diagnostics are intended to be self-explanatory (particularly if you
use -RD_HINT (under perl -s) or define $::RD_HINT
inside the program).
Parse::RecDescent
currently diagnoses the following:
Invalid regular expressions used as pattern terminals (fatal error).
Invalid Perl code in code blocks (fatal error).
Lookahead used in the wrong place or in a nonsensical way (fatal error).
``Obvious'' cases of left-recursion (fatal error).
Missing or extra components in a <leftop>
or <rightop>
directive.
Unrecognisable components in the grammar specification (fatal error).
``Orphaned'' rule components specified before the first rule (fatal error)
or after an <error>
directive (level 3 warning).
Missing rule definitions (this only generates a level 3 warning, since you
may be providing them later via Parse::RecDescent::Extend()
).
Instances where greedy repetition behaviour will almost certainly cause the failure of a production (a level 3 warning - see ON-GOING ISSUES AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS below).
Attempts to define rules named 'Replace' or 'Extend', which cannot be
called directly through the parser object because of the predefined
meaning of Parse::RecDescent::Replace
and
Parse::RecDescent::Extend
. (Only a level 2 warning is generated, since
such rules can still be used as subrules).
Productions which consist of a single <error?>
directive, and which therefore may succeed unexpectedly
(a level 2 warning, since this might conceivably be the desired effect).
Multiple consecutive lookahead specifiers (a level 1 warning only, since their effects simply accumulate).
Productions which start with a <reject>
or <rulevar:...>
directive. Such productions are optimized away (a level 1 warning).
Rules which are autogenerated under $::AUTOSTUB
(a level 1 warning).
Damian Conway (damian@conway.org)
There are undoubtedly serious bugs lurking somewhere in this much code :-) Bug reports and other feedback are most welcome.
Ongoing annoyances include:
There's no support for parsing directly from an input stream. If and when the Perl Gods give us regular expressions on streams, this should be trivial (ahem!) to implement.
The parser generator can get confused if actions aren't properly closed or if they contain particularly nasty Perl syntax errors (especially unmatched curly brackets).
The generator only detects the most obvious form of left recursion (potential recursion on the first subrule in a rule). More subtle forms of left recursion (for example, through the second item in a rule after a ``zero'' match of a preceding ``zero-or-more'' repetition, or after a match of a subrule with an empty production) are not found.
Instead of complaining about left-recursion, the generator should silently transform the grammar to remove it. Don't expect this feature any time soon as it would require a more sophisticated approach to parser generation than is currently used.
The generated parsers don't always run as fast as might be wished.
The meta-parser should be bootstrapped using Parse::RecDescent
:-)
Repetitions are ``incorrigibly greedy'' in that they will eat everything they can and won't backtrack if that behaviour causes a production to fail needlessly. So, for example:
rule: subrule(s) subrule
will never succeed, because the repetition will eat all the
subrules it finds, leaving none to match the second item. Such
constructions are relatively rare (and Parse::RecDescent::new
generates a
warning whenever they occur) so this may not be a problem, especially
since the insatiable behaviour can be overcome ``manually'' by writing:
rule: penultimate_subrule(s) subrule
penultimate_subrule: subrule ...subrule
The issue is that this construction is exactly twice as expensive as the
original, whereas backtracking would add only 1/N to the cost (for
matching N repetitions of subrule
). I would welcome feedback on
the need for backtracking; particularly on cases where the lack of it
makes parsing performance problematical.
Having opened that can of worms, it's also necessary to consider whether there is a need for non-greedy repetition specifiers. Again, it's possible (at some cost) to manually provide the required functionality:
rule: nongreedy_subrule(s) othersubrule
nongreedy_subrule: subrule ...!othersubrule
Overall, the issue is whether the benefit of this extra functionality outweighs the drawbacks of further complicating the (currently minimalist) grammar specification syntax, and (worse) introducing more overhead into the generated parsers.
An <autocommit>
directive would be nice. That is, it would be useful to be
able to say:
command: <autocommit> command: 'find' name | 'find' address | 'do' command 'at' time 'if' condition | 'do' command 'at' time | 'do' command | unusual_command
and have the generator work out that this should be ``pruned'' thus:
command: 'find' name | 'find' <commit> address | 'do' <commit> command <uncommit> 'at' time 'if' <commit> condition | 'do' <commit> command <uncommit> 'at' <commit> time | 'do' <commit> command | unusual_command
There are several issues here. Firstly, should the
<autocommit>
automatically install an <uncommit>
at the start of the last production (on the grounds that the ``command''
rule doesn't know whether an ``unusual_command'' might start with ``find''
or ``do'') or should the ``unusual_command'' subgraph be analysed (to see
if it might be viable after a ``find'' or ``do'')?
The second issue is how regular expressions should be treated. The simplest approach would be simply to uncommit before them (on the grounds that they might match). Better efficiency would be obtained by analyzing all preceding literal tokens to determine whether the pattern would match them.
Overall, the issues are: can such automated ``pruning'' approach a hand-tuned version sufficiently closely to warrant the extra set-up expense, and (more importantly) is the problem important enough to even warrant the non-trivial effort of building an automated solution?
Copyright (c) 1997-2000, Damian Conway. All Rights Reserved. This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed and/or modified under the terms of the Perl Artistic License (see http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html)