NAME
Marpa::R3::Tutorial2 - Marpa Tutorial 2
Synopsis
use Marpa::R3;
my $dsl = <<'END_OF_DSL';
Calculator ::= Expression action => ::first
Factor ::= Number action => ::first
Term ::=
Term '*' Factor action => do_multiply
| Factor action => ::first
Expression ::=
Expression '+' Term action => do_add
| Term action => ::first
Number ~ digits
digits ~ [\d]+
:discard ~ whitespace
whitespace ~ [\s]+
END_OF_DSL
my $grammar = Marpa::R3::Scanless::G->new( { source => \$dsl } );
my $recce = Marpa::R3::Scanless::R->new(
{ grammar => $grammar, semantics_package => 'My_Actions' } );
my $input = '42 * 1 + 7';
my $length_read = $recce->read( \$input );
die "Read ended after $length_read of ", length $input, " characters"
if $length_read != length $input;
if ( my $ambiguous_status = $recce->ambiguous() ) {
chomp $ambiguous_status;
die "Parse is ambiguous\n", $ambiguous_status;
}
my $value_ref = $recce->value;
my $value = ${$value_ref};
sub My_Actions::do_add {
my ( undef, $values ) = @_;
my ( $t1, undef, $t2 ) = @{$values};
return $t1 + $t2;
}
sub My_Actions::do_multiply {
my ( undef, $values ) = @_;
my ( $t1, undef, $t2 ) = @{$values};
return $t1 * $t2;
}
Description
Overview
This document contains a second tutorial of the Scanless interface (SLIF), which demonstrates a lower level of method calls. These lower level calls allow access to more of Marpa's features. For example, users will need to use the lower level calls
to use SLIF parse events;
to examine the values of multiple parses of an ambiguous parse;
and to get finer control of the response to Marpa errors.
This uses the same extremely simple calculator as the tutorial in the landing page. Most of the code is exactly the same in fact, and we will skip it. Here is what is new:
Marpa::R3::Scanless::R::new
my $recce = Marpa::R3::Scanless::R->new(
{ grammar => $grammar, semantics_package => 'My_Actions' } );
Marpa::R3::Scanless::R::new
creates a new SLIF recognizer. Its arguments are references to hashes of named arguments. In this example the first named argument is the required argument: "grammar
". The value of the grammar
named argument must be a Marpa::R3 SLIF grammar.
The second argument is optional, but you will use it frequently. The "semantics_package
" named argument tells Marpa in which Perl package to look for the closures implementing the semantics for this grammar.
Marpa::R3::Scanless::R::read
my $input = '42 * 1 + 7';
my $length_read = $recce->read( \$input );
To parse a string, we use the Marpa::R3::Scanless::R::read()
method. In its simplest form, as here, the Marpa::R3::Scanless::R::read()
method takes a reference to a string containing the input stream as its argument.
Checking for a premature end
die "Read ended after $length_read of ", length $input, " characters"
if $length_read != length $input;
Most premature endings occur when a parse is exhausted. A parse is "exhausted" when there is no possible way for it to continue on to success. Premature parse exhaustion is thrown as a failure by the Marpa::R3::Scanless::R::read()
method, and it is not necessary to check for it explicitly.
There are other premature endings that are not necessarily failures, and which therefore are not thrown. These are Marpa's SLIF parse events. SLIF parse events are an advanced feature, and are described elsewhere. In this example, any premature ending caused by the triggering of a SLIF parse event will be caused by stray parse events -- unexpected parse events due to a mistake in writing the DSL.
Programming a stray parse event is a programming mistake that you are not likely to make, so arguably this check is not really necessary. There are no SLIF parse events, stray or otherwise, in this example. But this check is included for completeness, and as an example of a cautious programming style.
Checking for an ambiguous parse
if ( my $ambiguous_status = $recce->ambiguous() ) {
chomp $ambiguous_status;
die "Parse is ambiguous\n", $ambiguous_status;
}
Much more likely than stray SLIF parse events are ambiguous parses -- parses where the input can be parsed in two or more ways. Ambiguous parses are not necessarily a problem -- some applications may not care about them. Other applications, as an advanced technique, actually exploit ambiguity,
Beginners should regard an ambiguous parse as a sign of trouble. The existence of ambiguous parses should be tolerated only if you understand the kind of ambiguity that exists in your grammar, and only if you know that ambiguities of that kind will not cause trouble. The above code uses the recognizer's ambigous()
method to spot ambiguous parses. The ambigous()
method returns the empty string if there was exactly one parse. If there was no parse, the ambigous()
method returns a string stating that. If there were two or more parses, the ambigous()
method returns a string describing the ambiguity.
Marpa::R3::Scanless::R::value
my $value_ref = $recce->value;
my $value = ${$value_ref};
The Marpa::R3::Scanless::R::value()
method returns a reference to the parse result's value, if there was a parse result. If there was no parse result, Marpa::R3::Scanless::R::value()
returns undef
. This code does not check for the case where there is no parse result, because we already performed that check along with the check for ambiguity.
The value of the parse is exactly the same, and computed in exactly the same way, as in the previous tutorial.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Marpa::R3 is Copyright (C) 2016, Jeffrey Kegler.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl 5.10.1. For more details, see the full text
of the licenses in the directory LICENSES.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be
useful, but without any warranty; without even the implied
warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.