oracular (3) pt_parser_api.3tcl.gz

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NAME

       pt_parser_api - Parser API

SYNOPSIS

       package require Tcl  8.5

       className ?objectName?

       objectName destroy

       objectName parse chan

       objectName parset text

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       Are  you lost ?  Do you have trouble understanding this document ?  In that case please read the overview
       provided by the Introduction to Parser Tools. This document is the entrypoint to  the  whole  system  the
       current package is a part of.

       This document describes the API shared by the grammar interpreter provided by the package pt::peg::interp
       and the parsers generated by the pt application for the result formats critcl,  snit,  and  oo  regarding
       access to the actual parsing functionality.

       Its  intended  audience  are  people who wish to create a parser for some language of theirs and then use
       that parser within a Tcl-based package or application.

       It resides in the User Layer of Parser Tools.

       IMAGE: arch_user_pkg

CLASS API

       className ?objectName?
              The class command constructs parser instances, i.e. objects. The result  of  the  command  is  the
              fully-qualified name of the instance command.

              If no objectName is specified the class will generate and use an automatic name. If the objectName
              was specified, but is not fully qualified the command will be created in the current namespace.

INSTANCE API

       All parser instances provide at least the methods shown below:

       objectName destroy
              This method destroys the parser instance, releasing all claimed memory and  other  resources,  and
              deleting the instance command.

              The result of the command is the empty string.

       objectName parse chan
              This  method runs the parser using the contents of chan as input (starting at the current location
              in the channel), until parsing is not possible anymore, either because parsing has  completed,  or
              run into a syntax error.

              Note here that the Parser Tools are based on Tcl 8.5+. In other words, the channel argument is not
              restricted to files, sockets, etc. We have the full power of reflected channels available.

              It should also be noted that the parser pulls the characters from the input  stream  as  it  needs
              them.  If a parser created by this package has to be operated in a push aka event-driven manner it
              will be necessary to go to Tcl 8.6+ and use the coroutine::auto to wrap it into a coroutine  where
              read is properly changed for push-operation.

              Upon successful completion the command returns an abstract syntax tree as its result.  This AST is
              in the form specified in section AST serialization format.  As a plain nested Tcl-list it can then
              be  processed  with  any Tcl commands the user likes, doing transformations, semantic checks, etc.
              To help in this the package pt::ast provides a set of convenience commands for validation  of  the
              tree's  basic  structure,  printing it for debugging, and walking it either from the bottom up, or
              top down.

              When encountering a syntax error the command will throw an error instead.  This error  will  be  a
              4-element Tcl-list, containing, in the order listed below:

              [1]    The string pt::rde identifying it as parser runtime error.

              [2]    The  location  of  the  parse  error,  as character offset from the beginning of the parsed
                     input.

              [3]    The location of parse error, now as a 2-element list containing line-number and  column  in
                     the line.

              [4]    A  set  of atomic parsing expressions indicating encoding the characters and/or nonterminal
                     symbols the parser expected to see at the location of the parse error,  but  did  not  get.
                     For the specification of atomic parsing expressions please see the section PE serialization
                     format.

       objectName parset text
              This method runs the parser using the string in text as input.  In all other ways it behaves  like
              the method parse, shown above.

USAGE

       A generated parser is used like this

                  package require the-parser-package ;# Generated by result-formats 'critcl', 'snit' or 'oo' of 'pt'.
                  set parser [the-parser-class]

                  set ast [$parser parse $channel]
                  ... process the abstract syntax tree ...

       When using a grammar interpreter for parsing some differences creep in

                  package require the-grammar-package ;# Generated by result-format 'container' of 'pt'.
                  set grammar [the-grammar-class]

                  package require pt::peg::interp
                  set parser [pt::peg::interp]

                  $parser use $grammar

                  set ast [$parser parse $channel]
                  $parser destroy

                  ... process the abstract syntax tree ...

AST SERIALIZATION FORMAT

       Here  we  specify  the  format  used  by  the  Parser  Tools to serialize Abstract Syntax Trees (ASTs) as
       immutable values for transport, comparison, etc.

       Each node in an AST represents a nonterminal symbol of a grammar, and the range of  tokens/characters  in
       the  input  covered  by  it.  ASTs  do not contain terminal symbols, i.e. tokens/characters. These can be
       recovered from the input given a symbol's location.

       We distinguish between regular and canonical serializations.  While a tree may have more than one regular
       serialization only exactly one of them will be canonical.

       Regular serialization

              [1]    The serialization of any AST is the serialization of its root node.

              [2]    The serialization of any node is a Tcl list containing at least three elements.

                     [1]    The first element is the name of the nonterminal symbol stored in the node.

                     [2]    The  second  and  third element are the locations of the first and last token in the
                            token stream the node represents (covers).

                            [1]    Locations are provided as non-negative integer offsets from the beginning  of
                                   the  token stream, with the first token found in the stream located at offset
                                   0 (zero).

                            [2]    The end location has to be equal to or larger than the start location.

                     [3]    All elements after the first three represent the children of  the  node,  which  are
                            themselves nodes. This means that the serializations of nodes without children, i.e.
                            leaf nodes, have exactly three elements.  The children are stored in the  list  with
                            the leftmost child first, and the rightmost child last.

       Canonical serialization
              The canonical serialization of an abstract syntax tree has the format as specified in the previous
              item, and then additionally satisfies the constraints below, which make it unique  among  all  the
              possible serializations of this tree.

              [1]    The  string representation of the value is the canonical representation of a pure Tcl list.
                     I.e. it does not contain superfluous whitespace.

   EXAMPLE
       Assuming the parsing expression grammar below

              PEG calculator (Expression)
                  Digit      <- '0'/'1'/'2'/'3'/'4'/'5'/'6'/'7'/'8'/'9'       ;
                  Sign       <- '-' / '+'                                     ;
                  Number     <- Sign? Digit+                                  ;
                  Expression <- Term (AddOp Term)*                            ;
                  MulOp      <- '*' / '/'                                     ;
                  Term       <- Factor (MulOp Factor)*                        ;
                  AddOp      <- '+'/'-'                                       ;
                  Factor     <- '(' Expression ')' / Number                   ;
              END;

       and the input string

               120+5
       then a parser should deliver the abstract syntax tree below (except for whitespace)

              set ast {Expression 0 4
                  {Factor 0 4
                      {Term 0 2
                          {Number 0 2
                              {Digit 0 0}
                              {Digit 1 1}
                              {Digit 2 2}
                          }
                      }
                      {AddOp 3 3}
                      {Term 4 4
                          {Number 4 4
                              {Digit 4 4}
                          }
                      }
                  }
              }

       Or, more graphical

       .nf  +-  Digit  0  0  |  1  |             |  +-  Term  0  2  ---  Number  0  2  -+-  Digit  1  1  |  2  |
       |             |  |                            +- Digit 2 2 | 0 |                                        |
       Expression   0   4   ---   Factor   0   4   -+-----------------------------   AddOp   3   3   |    +    |
       | +- Term 4 4 --- Number 4 4 --- Digit 4 4 | 5 .fi

PE SERIALIZATION FORMAT

       Here  we specify the format used by the Parser Tools to serialize Parsing Expressions as immutable values
       for transport, comparison, etc.

       We distinguish between regular and canonical serializations.  While a parsing expression  may  have  more
       than one regular serialization only exactly one of them will be canonical.

       Regular serialization

              Atomic Parsing Expressions

                     [1]    The string epsilon is an atomic parsing expression. It matches the empty string.

                     [2]    The string dot is an atomic parsing expression. It matches any character.

                     [3]    The string alnum is an atomic parsing expression. It matches any Unicode alphabet or
                            digit character. This is a custom extension of PEs based on  Tcl's  builtin  command
                            string is.

                     [4]    The  string  alpha  is an atomic parsing expression. It matches any Unicode alphabet
                            character. This is a custom extension of PEs based on Tcl's builtin  command  string
                            is.

                     [5]    The  string  ascii is an atomic parsing expression. It matches any Unicode character
                            below U0080. This is a custom extension of PEs based on Tcl's builtin command string
                            is.

                     [6]    The  string  control is an atomic parsing expression. It matches any Unicode control
                            character. This is a custom extension of PEs based on Tcl's builtin  command  string
                            is.

                     [7]    The  string  digit  is  an  atomic  parsing expression. It matches any Unicode digit
                            character. Note that this includes characters outside of the [0..9] range. This is a
                            custom extension of PEs based on Tcl's builtin command string is.

                     [8]    The  string  graph  is an atomic parsing expression. It matches any Unicode printing
                            character, except for space. This is a  custom  extension  of  PEs  based  on  Tcl's
                            builtin command string is.

                     [9]    The  string lower is an atomic parsing expression. It matches any Unicode lower-case
                            alphabet character. This is a custom extension of PEs based on Tcl's builtin command
                            string is.

                     [10]   The  string  print  is an atomic parsing expression. It matches any Unicode printing
                            character, including space. This is a custom extension of PEs based on Tcl's builtin
                            command string is.

                     [11]   The string punct is an atomic parsing expression. It matches any Unicode punctuation
                            character. This is a custom extension of PEs based on Tcl's builtin  command  string
                            is.

                     [12]   The  string  space  is  an  atomic  parsing expression. It matches any Unicode space
                            character. This is a custom extension of PEs based on Tcl's builtin  command  string
                            is.

                     [13]   The  string upper is an atomic parsing expression. It matches any Unicode upper-case
                            alphabet character. This is a custom extension of PEs based on Tcl's builtin command
                            string is.

                     [14]   The  string  wordchar  is  an atomic parsing expression. It matches any Unicode word
                            character. This is  any  alphanumeric  character  (see  alnum),  and  any  connector
                            punctuation  characters  (e.g.  underscore). This is a custom extension of PEs based
                            on Tcl's builtin command string is.

                     [15]   The string xdigit is an atomic parsing expression. It matches any hexadecimal  digit
                            character.  This  is a custom extension of PEs based on Tcl's builtin command string
                            is.

                     [16]   The string ddigit is an atomic parsing expression.  It  matches  any  decimal  digit
                            character. This is a custom extension of PEs based on Tcl's builtin command regexp.

                     [17]   The  expression  [list t x] is an atomic parsing expression. It matches the terminal
                            string x.

                     [18]   The expression  [list  n  A]  is  an  atomic  parsing  expression.  It  matches  the
                            nonterminal A.

              Combined Parsing Expressions

                     [1]    For  parsing  expressions e1, e2, ... the result of [list / e1 e2 ... ] is a parsing
                            expression as well.  This is the ordered choice, aka prioritized choice.

                     [2]    For parsing expressions e1, e2, ... the result of [list x e1 e2 ... ] is  a  parsing
                            expression as well.  This is the sequence.

                     [3]    For a parsing expression e the result of [list * e] is a parsing expression as well.
                            This is the kleene closure, describing zero or more repetitions.

                     [4]    For a parsing expression e the result of [list + e] is a parsing expression as well.
                            This is the positive kleene closure, describing one or more repetitions.

                     [5]    For a parsing expression e the result of [list & e] is a parsing expression as well.
                            This is the and lookahead predicate.

                     [6]    For a parsing expression e the result of [list ! e] is a parsing expression as well.
                            This is the not lookahead predicate.

                     [7]    For a parsing expression e the result of [list ? e] is a parsing expression as well.
                            This is the optional input.

       Canonical serialization
              The canonical serialization of a parsing expression has the format as specified  in  the  previous
              item,  and  then  additionally satisfies the constraints below, which make it unique among all the
              possible serializations of this parsing expression.

              [1]    The string representation of the value is the canonical representation of a pure Tcl  list.
                     I.e. it does not contain superfluous whitespace.

              [2]    Terminals are not encoded as ranges (where start and end of the range are identical).

   EXAMPLE
       Assuming the parsing expression shown on the right-hand side of the rule

                  Expression <- Term (AddOp Term)*

       then its canonical serialization (except for whitespace) is

                  {x {n Term} {* {x {n AddOp} {n Term}}}}

BUGS, IDEAS, FEEDBACK

       This  document,  and  the package it describes, will undoubtedly contain bugs and other problems.  Please
       report such in the category pt of the  Tcllib  Trackers  [http://core.tcl.tk/tcllib/reportlist].   Please
       also report any ideas for enhancements you may have for either package and/or documentation.

       When proposing code changes, please provide unified diffs, i.e the output of diff -u.

       Note  further  that  attachments  are strongly preferred over inlined patches. Attachments can be made by
       going to the Edit form of the ticket immediately after its creation, and then using the left-most  button
       in the secondary navigation bar.

KEYWORDS

       EBNF,   LL(k),  PEG,  TDPL,  context-free  languages,  expression,  grammar,  matching,  parser,  parsing
       expression, parsing expression grammar, push down automaton, recursive descent, state,  top-down  parsing
       languages, transducer

CATEGORY

       Parsing and Grammars

       Copyright (c) 2009 Andreas Kupries <andreas_kupries@users.sourceforge.net>