| author | Christian Urban <urbanc@in.tum.de> | 
| Sun, 27 Oct 2019 11:46:06 +0000 | |
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| permissions | -rw-r--r-- | 
| 584 | 1 | |
| 595 | 2 | % !TEX program = xelatex | 
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changeset | 3 | \documentclass{article}
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changeset | 4 | \usepackage{../style}
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changeset | 5 | \usepackage{../langs}
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| 588 | 6 | \usepackage{../grammar}
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changeset | 8 | \begin{document}
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changeset | 10 | \section*{Handout 6 (Parser Combinators)}
 | 
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| 584 | 12 | This handout explains how \emph{parser combinators} work and how they
 | 
| 587 | 13 | can be implemented in Scala. Their most distinguishing feature is that | 
| 14 | they are very easy to implement (admittedly it is only easy in a | |
| 15 | functional programming language). Another good point of parser | |
| 16 | combinators is that they can deal with any kind of input as long as | |
| 17 | this input is of ``sequence-kind'', for example a string or a list of | |
| 18 | tokens. The only two properties of the input we need is to be able to | |
| 19 | test when it is empty and ``sequentially'' take it apart. Strings and | |
| 20 | lists fit this bill. However, parser combinators also have their | |
| 21 | drawbacks. For example they require that the grammar to be parsed is | |
| 22 | \emph{not} left-recursive and they are efficient only when the grammar
 | |
| 23 | is unambiguous. It is the responsibility of the grammar designer to | |
| 591 | 24 | ensure these two properties hold. | 
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changeset | 25 | |
| 587 | 26 | The general idea behind parser combinators is to transform the input | 
| 27 | into sets of pairs, like so | |
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changeset | 28 | |
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changeset | 29 | \begin{center}
 | 
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changeset | 30 | $\underbrace{\text{list of tokens}}_{\text{input}}$ 
 | 
| 594 | 31 | $\quad\Rightarrow\quad$ | 
| 591 | 32 | $\underbrace{\text{set of (parsed part, unprocessed part)}}_{\text{output}}$
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changeset | 33 | \end{center} 
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changeset | 34 | |
| 587 | 35 | \noindent | 
| 590 | 36 | Given the extended effort we have spent implementing a lexer in order | 
| 591 | 37 | to generate lists of tokens, it might be surprising that in what | 
| 38 | follows we shall often use strings as input, rather than lists of | |
| 39 | tokens. This is for making the explanation more lucid and for quick | |
| 40 | examples. It does not make our previous work on lexers obsolete | |
| 41 | (remember they transform a string into a list of tokens). Lexers will | |
| 42 | still be needed for building a somewhat realistic compiler. | |
| 584 | 43 | |
| 590 | 44 | As mentioned above, parser combinators are relatively agnostic about what | 
| 587 | 45 | kind of input they process. In my Scala code I use the following | 
| 46 | polymorphic types for parser combinators: | |
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changeset | 47 | |
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changeset | 48 | \begin{center}
 | 
| 584 | 49 | input:\;\; \texttt{I}  \qquad output:\;\; \texttt{T}
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changeset | 50 | \end{center}
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changeset | 51 | |
| 587 | 52 | \noindent That is they take as input something of type \texttt{I} and
 | 
| 590 | 53 | return a set of pairs of type \texttt{Set[(T, I)]}. Since the input
 | 
| 54 | needs to be of ``sequence-kind'', I actually have to often write | |
| 591 | 55 | \texttt{I <\% Seq[\_]} for the input type. This ensures the
 | 
| 56 | input is a subtype of Scala sequences. The first component of the | |
| 57 | generated pairs corresponds to what the parser combinator was able to | |
| 58 | parse from the input and the second is the unprocessed, or | |
| 59 | leftover, part of the input (therefore the type of this unprocessed part is | |
| 60 | the same as the input). A parser combinator might return more than one | |
| 61 | such pair; the idea is that there are potentially several ways of how | |
| 62 | to parse the input. As a concrete example, consider the string | |
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changeset | 63 | |
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changeset | 64 | \begin{center}
 | 
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changeset | 65 | \tt\Grid{iffoo\VS testbar}
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changeset | 66 | \end{center}
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changeset | 67 | |
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changeset | 68 | \noindent We might have a parser combinator which tries to | 
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changeset | 69 | interpret this string as a keyword (\texttt{if}) or as an
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changeset | 70 | identifier (\texttt{iffoo}). Then the output will be the set
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changeset | 71 | |
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changeset | 72 | \begin{center}
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changeset | 73 | $\left\{ \left(\texttt{\Grid{if}}\;,\; \texttt{\Grid{foo\VS testbar}}\right), 
 | 
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changeset | 74 |            \left(\texttt{\Grid{iffoo}}\;,\; \texttt{\Grid{\VS testbar}}\right) \right\}$
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changeset | 75 | \end{center}
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changeset | 76 | |
| 587 | 77 | \noindent where the first pair means the parser could recognise | 
| 590 | 78 | \texttt{if} from the input and leaves the \texttt{foo\VS testbar} as
 | 
| 591 | 79 | unprocessed part; in the other case it could recognise | 
| 587 | 80 | \texttt{iffoo} and leaves \texttt{\VS testbar} as unprocessed. If the
 | 
| 81 | parser cannot recognise anything from the input at all, then parser | |
| 82 | combinators just return the empty set $\{\}$. This will indicate
 | |
| 83 | something ``went wrong''\ldots or more precisely, nothing could be | |
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changeset | 84 | parsed. | 
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changeset | 85 | |
| 594 | 86 | Also important to note is that the output type \texttt{T} for the
 | 
| 87 | processed part can potentially be different from the input type | |
| 88 | \texttt{I} in the parser. In the example above is just happens to be
 | |
| 89 | the same. The reason for the difference is that in general we are | |
| 90 | interested in transforming our input into something | |
| 91 | ``different''\ldots for example into a tree; or if we implement the | |
| 92 | grammar for arithmetic expressions, we might be interested in the | |
| 93 | actual integer number the arithmetic expression, say \texttt{1 + 2 *
 | |
| 94 | 3}, stands for. In this way we can use parser combinators to | |
| 95 | implement relatively easily a calculator, for instance (we shall do | |
| 96 | this later on). | |
| 584 | 97 | |
| 594 | 98 | The main driving force behind parser combinators is that we can easily | 
| 99 | build parser combinators out of smaller components following very | |
| 100 | closely the structure of a grammar. In order to implement this in a | |
| 591 | 101 | functional/object-oriented programming language, like Scala, we need | 
| 102 | to specify an abstract class for parser combinators. In the abstract | |
| 103 | class we specify that \texttt{I} is the \emph{input type} of the
 | |
| 593 | 104 | parser combinator and that \texttt{T} is the \emph{output type}.  This
 | 
| 591 | 105 | implies that the function \texttt{parse} takes an argument of type
 | 
| 106 | \texttt{I} and returns a set of type \mbox{\texttt{Set[(T, I)]}}.
 | |
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changeset | 108 | \begin{center}
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changeset | 109 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala]
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changeset | 110 | abstract class Parser[I, T] {
 | 
| 590 | 111 | def parse(in: I) : Set[(T, I)] | 
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changeset | 112 | |
| 590 | 113 | def parse_all(in: I) : Set[T] = | 
| 114 | for ((head, tail) <- parse(in); if (tail.isEmpty)) | |
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changeset | 115 | yield head | 
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changeset | 116 | } | 
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changeset | 117 | \end{lstlisting}
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changeset | 118 | \end{center}
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changeset | 119 | |
| 591 | 120 | \noindent It is the obligation in each instance of this class to | 
| 584 | 121 | supply an implementation for \texttt{parse}.  From this function we
 | 
| 122 | can then ``centrally'' derive the function \texttt{parse\_all}, which
 | |
| 123 | just filters out all pairs whose second component is not empty (that | |
| 124 | is has still some unprocessed part). The reason is that at the end of | |
| 125 | the parsing we are only interested in the results where all the input | |
| 126 | has been consumed and no unprocessed part is left over. | |
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changeset | 128 | One of the simplest parser combinators recognises just a | 
| 584 | 129 | single character, say $c$, from the beginning of strings. Its | 
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changeset | 130 | behaviour can be described as follows: | 
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changeset | 131 | |
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changeset | 132 | \begin{itemize}
 | 
| 584 | 133 | \item If the head of the input string starts with a $c$, then return | 
| 134 | the set | |
| 135 |   \[\{(c, \textit{tail of}\; s)\}\]
 | |
| 136 |   where \textit{tail of} 
 | |
| 137 | $s$ is the unprocessed part of the input string. | |
| 138 | \item Otherwise return the empty set $\{\}$.	
 | |
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changeset | 139 | \end{itemize}
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changeset | 140 | |
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changeset | 141 | \noindent | 
| 590 | 142 | The input type of this simple parser combinator is \texttt{String} and
 | 
| 143 | the output type is \texttt{Char}. This means \texttt{parse} returns
 | |
| 144 | \mbox{\texttt{Set[(Char, String)]}}.  The code in Scala is as follows:
 | |
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changeset | 146 | \begin{center}
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changeset | 147 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none]
 | 
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changeset | 148 | case class CharParser(c: Char) extends Parser[String, Char] {
 | 
| 587 | 149 | def parse(in: String) = | 
| 150 | if (in.head == c) Set((c, in.tail)) else Set() | |
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changeset | 151 | } | 
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changeset | 152 | \end{lstlisting}
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changeset | 153 | \end{center}
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changeset | 154 | |
| 589 | 155 | \noindent You can see \texttt{parse} tests whether the
 | 
| 587 | 156 | first character of the input string \texttt{in} is equal to
 | 
| 584 | 157 | \texttt{c}. If yes, then it splits the string into the recognised part
 | 
| 587 | 158 | \texttt{c} and the unprocessed part \texttt{in.tail}. In case
 | 
| 159 | \texttt{in} does not start with \texttt{c} then the parser returns the
 | |
| 584 | 160 | empty set (in Scala \texttt{Set()}). Since this parser recognises
 | 
| 161 | characters and just returns characters as the processed part, the | |
| 162 | output type of the parser is \texttt{Char}.
 | |
| 163 | ||
| 164 | If we want to parse a list of tokens and interested in recognising a | |
| 590 | 165 | number token, for example, we could write something like this | 
| 584 | 166 | |
| 167 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 168 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily,numbers=none]
 | |
| 169 | case object NumParser extends Parser[List[Token], Int] {
 | |
| 170 |   def parse(ts: List[Token]) = ts match {
 | |
| 171 | case Num_token(s)::ts => Set((s.toInt, ts)) | |
| 172 | case _ => Set () | |
| 173 | } | |
| 174 | } | |
| 175 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 176 | \end{center}
 | |
| 177 | ||
| 178 | \noindent | |
| 179 | In this parser the input is of type \texttt{List[Token]}. The function
 | |
| 180 | parse looks at the input \texttt{ts} and checks whether the first
 | |
| 589 | 181 | token is a \texttt{Num\_token} (let us assume our lexer generated
 | 
| 182 | these tokens for numbers). But this parser does not just return this | |
| 584 | 183 | token (and the rest of the list), like the \texttt{CharParser} above,
 | 
| 590 | 184 | rather it extracts also the string \texttt{s} from the token and
 | 
| 185 | converts it into an integer. The hope is that the lexer did its work | |
| 186 | well and this conversion always succeeds. The consequence of this is | |
| 187 | that the output type for this parser is \texttt{Int}, not
 | |
| 188 | \texttt{Token}. Such a conversion would be needed if we want to
 | |
| 189 | implement a simple calculator program, because string-numbers need to | |
| 190 | be transformed into \texttt{Int}-numbers in order to do the
 | |
| 191 | calculations. | |
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| 584 | 194 | These simple parsers that just look at the input and do a simple | 
| 195 | transformation are often called \emph{atomic} parser combinators.
 | |
| 196 | More interesting are the parser combinators that build larger parsers | |
| 587 | 197 | out of smaller component parsers. There are three such parser | 
| 198 | combinators that can be implemented generically. The \emph{alternative
 | |
| 584 | 199 | parser combinator} is as follows: given two parsers, say, $p$ and | 
| 200 | $q$, we apply both parsers to the input (remember parsers are | |
| 587 | 201 | functions) and combine the output (remember they are sets of pairs): | 
| 202 | ||
| 203 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 204 | $p(\text{input}) \cup q(\text{input})$
 | |
| 205 | \end{center}
 | |
| 206 | ||
| 207 | \noindent In Scala we can implement alternative parser | |
| 208 | combinator as follows | |
| 209 | ||
| 210 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 211 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala, numbers=none]
 | |
| 212 | class AltParser[I, T] | |
| 213 | (p: => Parser[I, T], | |
| 214 |         q: => Parser[I, T]) extends Parser[I, T] {
 | |
| 215 | def parse(in: I) = p.parse(in) ++ q.parse(in) | |
| 216 | } | |
| 217 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 218 | \end{center}
 | |
| 219 | ||
| 220 | \noindent The types of this parser combinator are again generic (we | |
| 221 | have \texttt{I} for the input type, and \texttt{T} for the output
 | |
| 222 | type). The alternative parser builds a new parser out of two existing | |
| 590 | 223 | parsers \texttt{p} and \texttt{q} which are given as arguments.  Both
 | 
| 224 | parsers need to be able to process input of type \texttt{I} and return
 | |
| 225 | in \texttt{parse} the same output type \texttt{Set[(T,
 | |
| 587 | 226 |   I)]}.\footnote{There is an interesting detail of Scala, namely the
 | 
| 227 |   \texttt{=>} in front of the types of \texttt{p} and \texttt{q}. They
 | |
| 228 | will prevent the evaluation of the arguments before they are | |
| 229 |   used. This is often called \emph{lazy evaluation} of the
 | |
| 590 | 230 | arguments. We will explain this later.} The alternative parser runs | 
| 231 | the input with the first parser \texttt{p} (producing a set of pairs)
 | |
| 232 | and then runs the same input with \texttt{q} (producing another set of
 | |
| 233 | pairs). The result should be then just the union of both sets, which | |
| 234 | is the operation \texttt{++} in Scala.
 | |
| 587 | 235 | |
| 236 | The alternative parser combinator allows us to construct a parser that | |
| 237 | parses either a character \texttt{a} or \texttt{b} using the
 | |
| 238 | \texttt{CharParser} shown above. For this we can write
 | |
| 239 | ||
| 240 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 241 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala, numbers=none]
 | |
| 242 | new AltParser(CharParser('a'), CharParser('b'))
 | |
| 243 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 244 | \end{center}
 | |
| 245 | ||
| 246 | \noindent Later on we will use Scala mechanism for introducing some | |
| 589 | 247 | more readable shorthand notation for this, like \texttt{"a" |
 | 
| 587 | 248 | "b"}. Let us look in detail at what this parser combinator produces | 
| 590 | 249 | with some sample strings. | 
| 587 | 250 | |
| 251 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 252 | \begin{tabular}{rcl}
 | |
| 253 | input strings & & output\medskip\\ | |
| 254 | \texttt{\Grid{acde}} & $\rightarrow$ & $\left\{(\texttt{\Grid{a}}, \texttt{\Grid{cde}})\right\}$\\
 | |
| 255 | \texttt{\Grid{bcde}} & $\rightarrow$ & $\left\{(\texttt{\Grid{b}}, \texttt{\Grid{cde}})\right\}$\\
 | |
| 256 | \texttt{\Grid{ccde}} & $\rightarrow$ & $\{\}$
 | |
| 257 | \end{tabular}
 | |
| 258 | \end{center}
 | |
| 259 | ||
| 260 | \noindent We receive in the first two cases a successful | |
| 261 | output (that is a non-empty set). In each case, either | |
| 591 | 262 | \pcode{a} or \pcode{b} is in the parsed part, and
 | 
| 587 | 263 | \pcode{cde} in the unprocessed part. Clearly this parser cannot
 | 
| 264 | parse anything with \pcode{ccde}, therefore the empty
 | |
| 265 | set is returned. | |
| 266 | ||
| 267 | A bit more interesting is the \emph{sequence parser combinator}. Given
 | |
| 268 | two parsers, say again, $p$ and $q$, we want to apply first the input | |
| 590 | 269 | to $p$ producing a set of pairs; then apply $q$ to all the unparsed | 
| 587 | 270 | parts in the pairs; and then combine the results. Mathematically we would | 
| 591 | 271 | write something like this for the set of pairs: | 
| 587 | 272 | |
| 273 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 274 | \begin{tabular}{lcl}
 | |
| 275 | $\{((\textit{output}_1, \textit{output}_2), u_2)$ & $\,|\,$ & 
 | |
| 276 | $(\textit{output}_1, u_1) \in p(\text{input}) 
 | |
| 277 | \;\wedge\;$\\ | |
| 278 | && $(\textit{output}_2, u_2) \in q(u_1)\}$
 | |
| 279 | \end{tabular}
 | |
| 280 | \end{center}
 | |
| 281 | ||
| 282 | \noindent Notice that the $p$ will first be run on the input, | |
| 590 | 283 | producing pairs of the form $(\textit{output}_1, u_1)$ where the $u_1$
 | 
| 591 | 284 | stands for the unprocessed, or leftover, parts of $p$. We want that | 
| 590 | 285 | $q$ runs on all these unprocessed parts $u_1$. Therefore these | 
| 286 | unprocessed parts are fed into the second parser $q$. The overall | |
| 287 | result of the sequence parser combinator is pairs of the form | |
| 584 | 288 | $((\textit{output}_1, \textit{output}_2), u_2)$. This means the
 | 
| 593 | 289 | unprocessed part of the sequence parser combinator is the unprocessed | 
| 591 | 290 | part the second parser $q$ leaves as leftover. The parsed parts of the | 
| 291 | component parsers are combined in a pair, namely | |
| 292 | $(\textit{output}_1, \textit{output}_2)$. The reason is we want to
 | |
| 293 | know what $p$ and $q$ were able to parse. This behaviour can be | |
| 294 | implemented in Scala as follows: | |
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changeset | 296 | \begin{center}
 | 
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changeset | 297 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,numbers=none]
 | 
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changeset | 298 | class SeqParser[I, T, S] | 
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changeset | 299 | (p: => Parser[I, T], | 
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changeset | 300 |         q: => Parser[I, S]) extends Parser[I, (T, S)] {
 | 
| 587 | 301 | def parse(in: I) = | 
| 302 | for ((output1, u1) <- p.parse(in); | |
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changeset | 303 | (output2, u2) <- q.parse(u1)) | 
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changeset | 304 | yield ((output1, output2), u2) | 
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changeset | 305 | } | 
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changeset | 306 | \end{lstlisting}
 | 
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changeset | 307 | \end{center}
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changeset | 308 | |
| 587 | 309 | \noindent This parser takes again as arguments two parsers, \texttt{p}
 | 
| 591 | 310 | and \texttt{q}. It implements \texttt{parse} as follows: first run the
 | 
| 311 | parser \texttt{p} on the input producing a set of pairs
 | |
| 587 | 312 | (\texttt{output1}, \texttt{u1}). The \texttt{u1} stands for the
 | 
| 591 | 313 | unprocessed parts left over by \texttt{p} (recall that there can be
 | 
| 314 | several such pairs). Let then \texttt{q} run on these unprocessed
 | |
| 315 | parts producing again a set of pairs. The output of the sequence | |
| 316 | parser combinator is then a set containing pairs where the first | |
| 317 | components are again pairs, namely what the first parser could parse | |
| 318 | together with what the second parser could parse; the second component | |
| 319 | is the unprocessed part left over after running the second parser | |
| 320 | \texttt{q}. Note that the input type of the sequence parser combinator
 | |
| 321 | is as usual \texttt{I}, but the output type is
 | |
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changeset | 323 | \begin{center}
 | 
| 590 | 324 | \texttt{(T, S)}
 | 
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changeset | 325 | \end{center}
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changeset | 326 | |
| 584 | 327 | \noindent | 
| 591 | 328 | Consequently, the function \texttt{parse} in the sequence parser
 | 
| 329 | combinator returns sets of type \texttt{Set[((T, S), I)]}.  That means
 | |
| 330 | we have essentially two output types for the sequence parser | |
| 331 | combinator (packaged in a pair), because in general \textit{p} and
 | |
| 332 | \textit{q} might produce different things (for example we recognise a
 | |
| 333 | number with \texttt{p} and then with \texttt{q} a string corresponding
 | |
| 334 | to an operator).  If any of the runs of \textit{p} and \textit{q}
 | |
| 335 | fail, that is produce the empty set, then \texttt{parse} will also
 | |
| 336 | produce the empty set. | |
| 584 | 337 | |
| 587 | 338 | With the shorthand notation we shall introduce later for the sequence | 
| 339 | parser combinator, we can write for example \pcode{"a" ~ "b"}, which
 | |
| 340 | is the parser combinator that first recognises the character | |
| 341 | \texttt{a} from a string and then \texttt{b}. Let us look again at
 | |
| 591 | 342 | some examples of how this parser combinator processes some strings: | 
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changeset | 343 | |
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changeset | 344 | \begin{center}
 | 
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changeset | 345 | \begin{tabular}{rcl}
 | 
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changeset | 346 | input strings & & output\medskip\\ | 
| 584 | 347 | \texttt{\Grid{abcde}} & $\rightarrow$ & $\left\{((\texttt{\Grid{a}}, \texttt{\Grid{b}}), \texttt{\Grid{cde}})\right\}$\\
 | 
| 348 | \texttt{\Grid{bacde}} & $\rightarrow$ & $\{\}$\\
 | |
| 349 | \texttt{\Grid{cccde}} & $\rightarrow$ & $\{\}$
 | |
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changeset | 350 | \end{tabular}
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changeset | 351 | \end{center}
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changeset | 352 | |
| 586 | 353 | \noindent In the first line we have a successful parse, because the | 
| 587 | 354 | string starts with \texttt{ab}, which is the prefix we are looking
 | 
| 584 | 355 | for. But since the parsing combinator is constructed as sequence of | 
| 356 | the two simple (atomic) parsers for \texttt{a} and \texttt{b}, the
 | |
| 357 | result is a nested pair of the form \texttt{((a, b), cde)}. It is
 | |
| 586 | 358 | \emph{not} a simple pair \texttt{(ab, cde)} as one might erroneously
 | 
| 587 | 359 | expect. The parser returns the empty set in the other examples, | 
| 584 | 360 | because they do not fit with what the parser is supposed to parse. | 
| 361 | ||
| 362 | ||
| 589 | 363 | A slightly more complicated parser is \pcode{("a" | "b") ~ "c"} which
 | 
| 587 | 364 | parses as first character either an \texttt{a} or \texttt{b}, followed
 | 
| 365 | by a \texttt{c}. This parser produces the following outputs.
 | |
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changeset | 366 | |
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changeset | 367 | \begin{center}
 | 
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changeset | 368 | \begin{tabular}{rcl}
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changeset | 369 | input strings & & output\medskip\\ | 
| 585 | 370 | \texttt{\Grid{acde}} & $\rightarrow$ & $\left\{((\texttt{\Grid{a}}, \texttt{\Grid{c}}), \texttt{\Grid{de}})\right\}$\\
 | 
| 371 | \texttt{\Grid{bcde}} & $\rightarrow$ & $\left\{((\texttt{\Grid{b}}, \texttt{\Grid{c}}), \texttt{\Grid{de}})\right\}$\\
 | |
| 372 | \texttt{\Grid{abde}} & $\rightarrow$ & $\{\}$
 | |
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changeset | 373 | \end{tabular}
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changeset | 374 | \end{center}
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changeset | 375 | |
| 585 | 376 | \noindent | 
| 377 | Now consider the parser \pcode{("a" ~ "b") ~ "c"} which parses
 | |
| 378 | \texttt{a}, \texttt{b}, \texttt{c} in sequence. This parser produces
 | |
| 379 | the following outputs. | |
| 380 | ||
| 381 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 382 | \begin{tabular}{rcl}
 | |
| 383 | input strings & & output\medskip\\ | |
| 384 | \texttt{\Grid{abcde}} & $\rightarrow$ & $\left\{(((\texttt{\Grid{a}},\texttt{\Grid{b}}), \texttt{\Grid{c}}), \texttt{\Grid{de}})\right\}$\\
 | |
| 385 | \texttt{\Grid{abde}} & $\rightarrow$ & $\{\}$\\
 | |
| 386 | \texttt{\Grid{bcde}} & $\rightarrow$ & $\{\}$
 | |
| 387 | \end{tabular}
 | |
| 388 | \end{center}
 | |
| 389 | ||
| 390 | ||
| 391 | \noindent The second and third example fail, because something is | |
| 590 | 392 | ``missing'' in the sequence we are looking for. The first succeeds but | 
| 393 | notice how the results nest with sequences: the parsed part is a | |
| 394 | nested pair of the form \pcode{((a, b), c)}. If we nest the sequence
 | |
| 591 | 395 | parser differently, say \pcode{"a" ~ ("b" ~ "c")}, then also
 | 
| 590 | 396 | our output pairs nest differently | 
| 589 | 397 | |
| 398 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 399 | \begin{tabular}{rcl}
 | |
| 400 | input strings & & output\medskip\\ | |
| 401 | \texttt{\Grid{abcde}} & $\rightarrow$ & $\left\{((\texttt{\Grid{a}},(\texttt{\Grid{b}}, \texttt{\Grid{c}})), \texttt{\Grid{de}})\right\}$\\
 | |
| 402 | \end{tabular}
 | |
| 403 | \end{center}
 | |
| 404 | ||
| 405 | \noindent | |
| 406 | Two more examples: first consider the parser | |
| 585 | 407 | \pcode{("a" ~ "a") ~ "a"} and the input \pcode{aaaa}:
 | 
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changeset | 409 | \begin{center}
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changeset | 410 | \begin{tabular}{rcl}
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changeset | 411 | input string & & output\medskip\\ | 
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changeset | 412 | \texttt{\Grid{aaaa}} & $\rightarrow$ & 
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changeset | 413 | $\left\{(((\texttt{\Grid{a}}, \texttt{\Grid{a}}), \texttt{\Grid{a}}), \texttt{\Grid{a}})\right\}$\\
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changeset | 414 | \end{tabular}
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changeset | 415 | \end{center}
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changeset | 416 | |
| 591 | 417 | \noindent Notice again how the results nest deeper and deeper as pairs (the | 
| 585 | 418 | last \pcode{a} is in the unprocessed part). To consume everything of
 | 
| 419 | this string we can use the parser \pcode{(("a" ~ "a") ~ "a") ~
 | |
| 420 | "a"}. Then the output is as follows: | |
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changeset | 422 | \begin{center}
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changeset | 423 | \begin{tabular}{rcl}
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changeset | 425 | \texttt{\Grid{aaaa}} & $\rightarrow$ & 
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changeset | 426 | $\left\{((((\texttt{\Grid{a}}, \texttt{\Grid{a}}), \texttt{\Grid{a}}), \texttt{\Grid{a}}), \texttt{""})\right\}$\\
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changeset | 427 | \end{tabular}
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changeset | 428 | \end{center}
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changeset | 429 | |
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changeset | 430 | \noindent This is an instance where the parser consumed | 
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changeset | 431 | completely the input, meaning the unprocessed part is just the | 
| 587 | 432 | empty string. So if we called \pcode{parse_all}, instead of \pcode{parse},
 | 
| 585 | 433 | we would get back the result | 
| 434 | ||
| 435 | \[ | |
| 436 | \left\{(((\texttt{\Grid{a}}, \texttt{\Grid{a}}), \texttt{\Grid{a}}), \texttt{\Grid{a}})\right\}
 | |
| 437 | \] | |
| 438 | ||
| 439 | \noindent where the unprocessed (empty) parts have been stripped away | |
| 440 | from the pairs; everything where the second part was not empty has | |
| 587 | 441 | been thrown away as well, because they represent | 
| 590 | 442 | ultimately-unsuccessful-parses. The main point is that the sequence | 
| 443 | parser combinator returns pairs that can nest according to the | |
| 444 | nesting of the component parsers. | |
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| 590 | 447 | Consider also carefully that constructing a parser such \pcode{"a" |
 | 
| 448 |   ("a" ~ "b")} will result in a typing error. The intention with this
 | |
| 591 | 449 | parser is that we want to parse either an \texttt{a}, or an \texttt{a}
 | 
| 590 | 450 | followed by a \texttt{b}. However, the first parser has as output type
 | 
| 451 | a single character (recall the type of \texttt{CharParser}), but the
 | |
| 452 | second parser produces a pair of characters as output. The alternative | |
| 453 | parser is required to have both component parsers to have the same | |
| 591 | 454 | type---the reason is that we need to be able to build the union of two | 
| 455 | sets, which requires in Scala that the sets have the same type. Since | |
| 456 | they are not in this case, there is a typing error. We will see later | |
| 457 | how we can build this parser without the typing error. | |
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changeset | 458 | |
| 587 | 459 | The next parser combinator, called \emph{semantic action}, does not
 | 
| 591 | 460 | actually combine two smaller parsers, but applies a function to the result | 
| 587 | 461 | of a parser. It is implemented in Scala as follows | 
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changeset | 463 | \begin{center}
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changeset | 464 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none]
 | 
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changeset | 465 | class FunParser[I, T, S] | 
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changeset | 467 |           f: T => S) extends Parser[I, S] {
 | 
| 587 | 468 | def parse(in: I) = | 
| 469 | for ((head, tail) <- p.parse(in)) yield (f(head), tail) | |
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changeset | 470 | } | 
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changeset | 471 | \end{lstlisting}
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changeset | 472 | \end{center}
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| 590 | 475 | \noindent This parser combinator takes a parser \texttt{p} (with input
 | 
| 476 | type \texttt{I} and output type \texttt{T}) as one argument but also a
 | |
| 477 | function \texttt{f} (with type \texttt{T => S}). The parser \texttt{p}
 | |
| 478 | produces sets of type \texttt{Set[(T, I)]}. The semantic action
 | |
| 479 | combinator then applies the function \texttt{f} to all the `processed'
 | |
| 480 | parser outputs. Since this function is of type \texttt{T => S}, we
 | |
| 481 | obtain a parser with output type \texttt{S}. Again Scala lets us
 | |
| 482 | introduce some shorthand notation for this parser | |
| 591 | 483 | combinator. Therefore we will write short \texttt{p ==> f} for it.
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| 589 | 485 | What are semantic actions good for? Well, they allow you to transform | 
| 590 | 486 | the parsed input into datastructures you can use for further | 
| 591 | 487 | processing. A simple (contrived) example would be to transform parsed | 
| 488 | characters into ASCII numbers. Suppose we define a function \texttt{f}
 | |
| 489 | (from characters to \texttt{Int}s) and use a \texttt{CharParser} for parsing
 | |
| 589 | 490 | the character \texttt{c}.
 | 
| 587 | 491 | |
| 591 | 492 | |
| 587 | 493 | \begin{center}
 | 
| 494 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none]
 | |
| 495 | val f = (c: Char) => c.toInt | |
| 496 | val c = new CharParser('c')
 | |
| 497 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 498 | \end{center}
 | |
| 499 | ||
| 500 | \noindent | |
| 589 | 501 | We then can run the following two parsers on the input \texttt{cbd}:
 | 
| 587 | 502 | |
| 503 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 504 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none]
 | |
| 505 | c.parse("cbd")
 | |
| 506 | (c ==> f).parse("cbd")
 | |
| 507 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 508 | \end{center}
 | |
| 509 | ||
| 510 | \noindent | |
| 589 | 511 | In the first line we obtain the expected result \texttt{Set(('c',
 | 
| 512 |   "bd"))}, whereas the second produces \texttt{Set((99, "bd"))}---the
 | |
| 513 | character has been transformed into an ASCII number. | |
| 588 | 514 | |
| 515 | A slightly less contrived example is about parsing numbers (recall | |
| 591 | 516 | \texttt{NumParser} above). However, we want to do this here for
 | 
| 517 | strings, not for tokens. For this assume we have the following | |
| 518 | (atomic) \texttt{RegexParser}.
 | |
| 588 | 519 | |
| 520 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 521 |   \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,xleftmargin=0mm,
 | |
| 522 | basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none] | |
| 523 | import scala.util.matching.Regex | |
| 524 | ||
| 525 | case class RegexParser(reg: Regex) extends Parser[String, String] {
 | |
| 526 |   def parse(in: String) = reg.findPrefixMatchOf(in) match {
 | |
| 527 | case None => Set() | |
| 528 | case Some(m) => Set((m.matched, m.after.toString)) | |
| 529 | } | |
| 530 | } | |
| 531 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 532 | \end{center}
 | |
| 533 | ||
| 534 | \noindent | |
| 535 | This parser takes a regex as argument and splits up a string into a | |
| 536 | prefix and the rest according to this regex | |
| 537 | (\texttt{reg.findPrefixMatchOf} generates a match---in the successful
 | |
| 538 | case---and the corresponding strings can be extracted with | |
| 591 | 539 | \texttt{matched} and \texttt{after}). The input and output type for
 | 
| 540 | this parser is \texttt{String}. Using \texttt{RegexParser} we can
 | |
| 541 | define a \texttt{NumParser} for \texttt{Strings} to \texttt{Int} as
 | |
| 542 | follows: | |
| 588 | 543 | |
| 544 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 545 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none]
 | |
| 546 | val NumParser = RegexParser("[0-9]+".r)
 | |
| 547 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 548 | \end{center}
 | |
| 549 | ||
| 550 | \noindent | |
| 591 | 551 | This parser will recognise a number at the beginning of a string. For | 
| 588 | 552 | example | 
| 553 | ||
| 554 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 555 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none]
 | |
| 556 | NumParser.parse("123abc")
 | |
| 557 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 558 | \end{center}  
 | |
| 559 | ||
| 560 | \noindent | |
| 561 | produces \texttt{Set((123,abc))}. The problem is that \texttt{123} is
 | |
| 590 | 562 | still a string (the required double-quotes are not printed by | 
| 563 | Scala). We want to convert this string into the corresponding | |
| 564 | \texttt{Int}. We can do this as follows using a semantic action
 | |
| 588 | 565 | |
| 566 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 567 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none]
 | |
| 568 | (NumParser ==> (s => s.toInt)).parse("123abc")
 | |
| 569 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 570 | \end{center}  
 | |
| 571 | ||
| 572 | \noindent | |
| 589 | 573 | The function in the semantic action converts a string into an | 
| 591 | 574 | \texttt{Int}. Now \texttt{parse} generates \texttt{Set((123,abc))},
 | 
| 575 | but this time \texttt{123} is an \texttt{Int}. Let us come back to
 | |
| 576 | semantic actions when we are going to implement actual context-free | |
| 593 | 577 | grammars. | 
| 587 | 578 | |
| 579 | \subsubsection*{Shorthand notation for parser combinators}
 | |
| 580 | ||
| 581 | Before we proceed, let us just explain the shorthand notation for | |
| 582 | parser combinators. Like for regular expressions, the shorthand notation | |
| 590 | 583 | will make our life much easier when writing actual parsers. We can define | 
| 591 | 584 | some implicits which allow us to write | 
| 585 | ||
| 586 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 587 | \begin{tabular}{ll}  
 | |
| 588 |   \pcode{p | q} & alternative parser\\
 | |
| 589 |   \pcode{p ~ q} & sequence parser\\ 
 | |
| 590 |   \pcode{p ==> f} & semantic action parser
 | |
| 591 | \end{tabular}
 | |
| 592 | \end{center}
 | |
| 593 | ||
| 594 | \noindent | |
| 595 | as well as to use plain strings for specifying simple string parsers. | |
| 590 | 596 | |
| 597 | The idea is that this shorthand notation allows us to easily translate | |
| 598 | context-free grammars into code. For example recall our context-free | |
| 599 | grammar for palindromes: | |
| 600 | ||
| 601 | \begin{plstx}[margin=3cm]
 | |
| 591 | 602 | : \meta{Pal} ::=  a\cdot \meta{Pal}\cdot a | b\cdot \meta{Pal}\cdot b | a | b | \epsilon\\
 | 
| 590 | 603 | \end{plstx}
 | 
| 604 | ||
| 605 | \noindent | |
| 606 | Each alternative in this grammar translates into an alternative parser | |
| 607 | combinator. The $\cdot$ can be translated to a sequence parser | |
| 608 | combinator. The parsers for $a$, $b$ and $\epsilon$ can be simply | |
| 609 | written as \texttt{"a"}, \texttt{"b"} and \texttt{""}.
 | |
| 610 | ||
| 587 | 611 | |
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| 588 | 614 | The beauty of parser combinators is the ease with which they can be | 
| 615 | implemented and how easy it is to translate context-free grammars into | |
| 616 | code (though the grammars need to be non-left-recursive). To | |
| 591 | 617 | demonstrate this consider again the grammar for palindromes from above. | 
| 590 | 618 | The first idea would be to translate it into the following code | 
| 588 | 619 | |
| 620 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 621 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none]
 | |
| 622 | lazy val Pal : Parser[String, String] = | |
| 623 |   (("a" ~ Pal ~ "a") | ("b" ~ Pal ~ "b") | "a" | "b" | "")
 | |
| 624 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 625 | \end{center}
 | |
| 626 | ||
| 627 | \noindent | |
| 590 | 628 | Unfortunately, this does not quite work yet as it produces a typing | 
| 629 | error. The reason is that the parsers \texttt{"a"}, \texttt{"b"} and
 | |
| 630 | \texttt{""} all produce strings as output type and therefore can be
 | |
| 631 | put into an alternative \texttt{...| "a" | "b" | ""}. But both
 | |
| 591 | 632 | sequence parsers \pcode{"a" ~ Pal ~ "a"} and \pcode{"b" ~ Pal ~ "b"}
 | 
| 633 | produce pairs of the form | |
| 634 | ||
| 635 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 636 | (((\texttt{a}-part, \texttt{Pal}-part), \texttt{a}-part), unprocessed part)
 | |
| 637 | \end{center}
 | |
| 638 | ||
| 639 | \noindent That is how the | |
| 640 | sequence parser combinator nests results when \pcode{\~} is used
 | |
| 641 | between two components. The solution is to use a semantic action that | |
| 642 | ``flattens'' these pairs and appends the corresponding strings, like | |
| 588 | 643 | |
| 644 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 645 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none]
 | |
| 646 | lazy val Pal : Parser[String, String] = | |
| 647 |   (("a" ~ Pal ~ "a") ==> { case ((x, y), z) => x + y + z } |
 | |
| 648 |    ("b" ~ Pal ~ "b") ==> { case ((x, y), z) => x + y + z } |
 | |
| 649 | "a" | "b" | "") | |
| 650 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 651 | \end{center}
 | |
| 652 | ||
| 589 | 653 | \noindent | 
| 591 | 654 | How does this work? Well, recall again what the pairs look like for | 
| 655 | the parser \pcode{"a" ~ Pal ~ "a"}.  The pattern in the semantic
 | |
| 656 | action matches the nested pairs (the \texttt{x} with the
 | |
| 657 | \texttt{a}-part and so on).  Unfortunately when we have such nested
 | |
| 658 | pairs, Scala requires us to define the function using the | |
| 659 | \pcode{case}-syntax
 | |
| 660 | ||
| 661 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 662 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none]
 | |
| 663 | { case ((x, y), z) => ... }
 | |
| 664 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 665 | \end{center}
 | |
| 666 | ||
| 667 | \noindent | |
| 668 | If we have more sequence parser combinators or have them differently nested, | |
| 669 | then the pattern in the semantic action needs to be adjusted accordingly. | |
| 670 | The action we implement above is to concatenate all three strings, which | |
| 671 | means after the semantic action is applied the output type of the parser | |
| 672 | is \texttt{String}, which means it fits with the alternative parsers
 | |
| 673 | \texttt{...| "a" | "b" | ""}.
 | |
| 674 | ||
| 675 | If we run the parser above with \pcode{Pal.parse_all("abaaaba")} we obtain
 | |
| 593 | 676 | as result the \pcode{Set(abaaaba)}, which indicates that the string is a palindrome
 | 
| 591 | 677 | (an empty set would mean something is wrong). But also notice what the | 
| 678 | intermediate results are generated by \pcode{Pal.parse("abaaaba")}
 | |
| 679 | ||
| 680 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 681 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none]
 | |
| 682 | Set((abaaaba,""),(aba,aaba), (a,baaaba), ("",abaaaba))
 | |
| 683 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 684 | \end{center}
 | |
| 685 | ||
| 686 | \noindent | |
| 687 | That there are more than one output might be slightly unexpected, but | |
| 688 | can be explained as follows: the pairs represent all possible | |
| 689 | (partial) parses of the string \pcode{"abaaaba"}. The first pair above
 | |
| 593 | 690 | corresponds to a complete parse (all output is consumed) and this is | 
| 591 | 691 | what \pcode{Pal.parse_all} returns. The second pair is a small
 | 
| 692 | ``sub-palindrome'' that can also be parsed, but the parse fails with | |
| 693 | the rest \pcode{aaba}, which is therefore left as unprocessed. The
 | |
| 694 | third one is an attempt to parse the whole string with the | |
| 695 | single-character parser \pcode{a}. That of course only partially
 | |
| 696 | succeeds, by leaving \pcode{"baaaba"} as the unprocessed
 | |
| 593 | 697 | part. Finally, since we allow the empty string to be a palindrome we | 
| 591 | 698 | also obtain the last pair, where actually nothing is consumed from the | 
| 699 | input string. While all this works as intended, we need to be careful | |
| 700 | with this (especially with including the \pcode{""} parser in our
 | |
| 701 | grammar): if during parsing the set of parsing attempts gets too big, | |
| 702 | then the parsing process can become very slow as the potential | |
| 703 | candidates for applying rules can snowball. | |
| 589 | 704 | |
| 705 | ||
| 591 | 706 | Important is also to note is that we must define the | 
| 707 | \texttt{Pal}-parser as a \emph{lazy} value in Scala. Look again at the
 | |
| 708 | code: \texttt{Pal} occurs on the right-hand side of the definition. If we had
 | |
| 709 | just written | |
| 710 | ||
| 711 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 712 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none]
 | |
| 713 | val Pal : Parser[String, String] = ...rhs... | |
| 714 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 715 | \end{center}
 | |
| 716 | ||
| 589 | 717 | \noindent | 
| 593 | 718 | then Scala before making this assignment to \texttt{Pal} attempts to
 | 
| 591 | 719 | find out what the expression on the right-hand side evaluates to. This | 
| 720 | is straightforward in case of simple expressions \texttt{2 + 3}, but
 | |
| 721 | the expression above contains \texttt{Pal} in the right-hand
 | |
| 722 | side. Without \pcode{lazy} it would try to evaluate what \texttt{Pal}
 | |
| 723 | evaluates to and start a new recursion, which means it falls into an | |
| 724 | infinite loop. The definition of \texttt{Pal} is recursive and the
 | |
| 725 | \pcode{lazy} key-word prevents it from being fully evaluated. Therefore
 | |
| 726 | whenever we want to define a recursive parser we have to write | |
| 727 | ||
| 728 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 729 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none]
 | |
| 730 | lazy val SomeParser : Parser[...,...] = ...rhs... | |
| 731 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 732 | \end{center}
 | |
| 733 | ||
| 734 | \noindent That was not necessary for our atomic parsers, like | |
| 735 | \texttt{RegexParser} or \texttt{CharParser}, because they are not recursive.
 | |
| 736 | Note that this is also the reason why we had to write | |
| 737 | ||
| 738 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 739 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none]
 | |
| 740 | class AltParser[I, T] | |
| 741 | (p: => Parser[I, T], | |
| 742 |         q: => Parser[I, T]) extends Parser[I, T] {...}
 | |
| 743 | ||
| 744 | class SeqParser[I, T, S] | |
| 745 | (p: => Parser[I, T], | |
| 746 |         q: => Parser[I, S]) extends Parser[I, (T, S)] {...}
 | |
| 747 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 748 | \end{center}
 | |
| 749 | ||
| 750 | \noindent where the \texttt{\textbf{\textcolor{codepurple}{=>}}} in front of
 | |
| 751 | the argument types for \texttt{p} and \texttt{q} prevent Scala from
 | |
| 752 | evaluating the arguments. Normally, Scala would first evaluate what | |
| 753 | kind of parsers \texttt{p} and \texttt{q} are, and only then generate
 | |
| 593 | 754 | the alternative parser combinator, respectively sequence parser | 
| 755 | combinator. Since the arguments can be recursive parsers, such as | |
| 591 | 756 | \texttt{Pal}, this would lead again to an infinite loop.
 | 
| 757 | ||
| 758 | As a final example in this section, let us consider the grammar for | |
| 759 | well-nested parentheses: | |
| 760 | ||
| 761 | \begin{plstx}[margin=3cm]
 | |
| 762 | : \meta{P} ::=  (\cdot \meta{P}\cdot ) \cdot \meta{P} | \epsilon\\
 | |
| 763 | \end{plstx}
 | |
| 764 | ||
| 765 | \noindent | |
| 766 | Let us assume we want to not just recognise strings of | |
| 593 | 767 | well-nested parentheses but also transform round parentheses | 
| 591 | 768 | into curly braces. We can do this by using a semantic | 
| 769 | action: | |
| 770 | ||
| 771 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 772 |   \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily,
 | |
| 773 | xleftmargin=0mm, numbers=none] | |
| 774 | lazy val P : Parser[String, String] = | |
| 775 |   "(" ~ P ~ ")" ~ P ==> { case (((_,x),_),y) => "{" + x + "}" + y } | ""
 | |
| 776 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 777 | \end{center}
 | |
| 778 | ||
| 779 | \noindent | |
| 780 | Here we define a function where which ignores the parentheses in the | |
| 781 | pairs, but replaces them in the right places with curly braces when | |
| 782 | assembling the new string in the right-hand side. If we run | |
| 783 | \pcode{P.parse_all("(((()()))())")} we obtain
 | |
| 784 | \texttt{Set(\{\{\{\{\}\{\}\}\}\{\}\})} as expected.
 | |
| 785 | ||
| 786 | ||
| 588 | 787 | |
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| 593 | 790 | The first step before implementing an interpreter for a full-blown | 
| 592 | 791 | language is to implement a simple calculator for arithmetic | 
| 792 | expressions. Suppose our arithmetic expressions are given by the | |
| 793 | grammar: | |
| 794 | ||
| 795 | \begin{plstx}[margin=3cm,one per line]
 | |
| 593 | 796 | : \meta{E} ::= \meta{E} \cdot + \cdot \meta{E} 
 | 
| 592 | 797 |    | \meta{E} \cdot - \cdot \meta{E} 
 | 
| 798 |    | \meta{E} \cdot * \cdot \meta{E} 
 | |
| 799 |    | ( \cdot \meta{E} \cdot )
 | |
| 800 | | Number \\ | |
| 801 | \end{plstx}
 | |
| 802 | ||
| 803 | \noindent | |
| 804 | Naturally we want to implement the grammar in such a way that we can | |
| 593 | 805 | calculate what the result of, for example, \texttt{4*2+3} is---we are
 | 
| 806 | interested in an \texttt{Int} rather than a string. This means every
 | |
| 807 | component parser needs to have as output type \texttt{Int} and when we
 | |
| 808 | assemble the intermediate results, strings like \texttt{"+"},
 | |
| 809 | \texttt{"*"} and so on, need to be translated into the appropriate
 | |
| 810 | Scala operation of adding, multiplying and so on. Being inspired by | |
| 811 | the parser for well-nested parentheses above and ignoring the fact | |
| 812 | that we want $*$ to take precedence over $+$ and $-$, we might want to | |
| 813 | write something like | |
| 592 | 814 | |
| 815 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 816 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none]
 | |
| 817 | lazy val E: Parser[String, Int] = | |
| 818 |   (E ~ "+" ~ E ==> { case ((x, y), z) => x + z} |
 | |
| 819 |    E ~ "-" ~ E ==> { case ((x, y), z) => x - z} |
 | |
| 820 |    E ~ "*" ~ E ==> { case ((x, y), z) => x * z} |
 | |
| 821 |    "(" ~ E ~ ")" ==> { case ((x, y), z) => y} |
 | |
| 822 | NumParserInt) | |
| 823 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 824 | \end{center}
 | |
| 825 | ||
| 826 | \noindent | |
| 593 | 827 | Consider again carefully how the semantic actions pick out the correct | 
| 828 | arguments for the calculation. In case of plus, we need \texttt{x} and
 | |
| 829 | \texttt{z}, because they correspond to the results of the component
 | |
| 830 | parser \texttt{E}. We can just add \texttt{x + z} in order to obtain
 | |
| 831 | an \texttt{Int} because the output type of \texttt{E} is
 | |
| 832 | \texttt{Int}.  Similarly with subtraction and multiplication. In
 | |
| 833 | contrast in the fourth clause we need to return \texttt{y}, because it
 | |
| 834 | is the result enclosed inside the parentheses. The information about | |
| 835 | parentheses, roughly speaking, we just throw away. | |
| 592 | 836 | |
| 837 | So far so good. The problem arises when we try to call \pcode{parse_all} with the
 | |
| 838 | expression \texttt{"1+2+3"}. Lets try it
 | |
| 839 | ||
| 840 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 841 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none]
 | |
| 842 | E.parse_all("1+2+3")
 | |
| 843 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 844 | \end{center}
 | |
| 845 | ||
| 846 | \noindent | |
| 593 | 847 | \ldots and we wait and wait and \ldots still wait. What is the | 
| 848 | problem? Actually, the parser just fell into an infinite loop! The | |
| 849 | reason is that the above grammar is left-recursive and recall that our | |
| 850 | parser combinators cannot deal with such left-recursive | |
| 851 | grammars. Fortunately, every left-recursive context-free grammar can be | |
| 852 | transformed into a non-left-recursive grammars that still recognises | |
| 853 | the same strings. This allows us to design the following grammar | |
| 854 | ||
| 855 | \begin{plstx}[margin=3cm]
 | |
| 856 |   : \meta{E} ::=  \meta{T} \cdot + \cdot \meta{E} |  \meta{T} \cdot - \cdot \meta{E} | \meta{T}\\
 | |
| 857 | : \meta{T} ::=  \meta{F} \cdot * \cdot \meta{T} | \meta{F}\\
 | |
| 858 | : \meta{F} ::= ( \cdot \meta{E} \cdot ) | Number\\
 | |
| 859 | \end{plstx}
 | |
| 860 | ||
| 861 | \noindent | |
| 862 | Recall what left-recursive means from Handout 5 and make sure you see | |
| 863 | why this grammar is \emph{non} left-recursive. This version of the grammar
 | |
| 864 | also deals with the fact that $*$ should have a higher precedence. This does not | |
| 865 | affect which strings this grammar can recognise, but in which order we are going | |
| 866 | to evaluate any arithmetic expression. We can translate this grammar into | |
| 867 | parsing combinators as follows: | |
| 592 | 868 | |
| 869 | ||
| 593 | 870 | \begin{center}
 | 
| 871 | \begin{lstlisting}[language=Scala,basicstyle=\small\ttfamily, numbers=none]
 | |
| 872 | lazy val E: Parser[String, Int] = | |
| 873 |   (T ~ "+" ~ E) ==> { case ((x, y), z) => x + z } |
 | |
| 874 |   (T ~ "-" ~ E) ==> { case ((x, y), z) => x - z } | T 
 | |
| 875 | lazy val T: Parser[String, Int] = | |
| 876 |   (F ~ "*" ~ T) ==> { case ((x, y), z) => x * z } | F
 | |
| 877 | lazy val F: Parser[String, Int] = | |
| 878 |   ("(" ~ E ~ ")") ==> { case ((x, y), z) => y } | NumParserInt
 | |
| 879 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 880 | \end{center}
 | |
| 592 | 881 | |
| 593 | 882 | \noindent | 
| 594 | 883 | Let us try out some examples: | 
| 592 | 884 | |
| 593 | 885 | \begin{center}
 | 
| 886 | \begin{tabular}{rcl}
 | |
| 887 |   input strings & & output of \pcode{parse_all}\medskip\\
 | |
| 888 |   \texttt{\Grid{1+2+3}} & $\rightarrow$ & \texttt{Set(6)}\\
 | |
| 889 |   \texttt{\Grid{4*2+3}} & $\rightarrow$ & \texttt{Set(11)}\\
 | |
| 890 |   \texttt{\Grid{4*(2+3)}} & $\rightarrow$ & \texttt{Set(20)}\\
 | |
| 594 | 891 |   \texttt{\Grid{(4)*((2+3))}} & $\rightarrow$ & \texttt{Set(20)}\\
 | 
| 593 | 892 |   \texttt{\Grid{4/2+3}} & $\rightarrow$ & \texttt{Set()}\\
 | 
| 893 |   \texttt{\Grid{1\VS +\VS 2\VS +\VS 3}} & $\rightarrow$ & \texttt{Set()}\\                      
 | |
| 894 | \end{tabular}
 | |
| 895 | \end{center}
 | |
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| 593 | 897 | \noindent | 
| 594 | 898 | Note that we call \pcode{parse_all}, not \pcode{parse}.  The examples
 | 
| 899 | should be quite self-explanatory. The last two example do not produce | |
| 900 | any integer result because our parser does not define what to do in | |
| 901 | case of division (could be easily added), but also has no idea what to | |
| 595 | 902 | do with whitespaces. To deal with them is the task of the lexer! Yes, | 
| 594 | 903 | we can deal with them inside the grammar, but that would render many | 
| 904 | grammars becoming unintelligible, including this one.\footnote{If you
 | |
| 905 | think an easy solution is to extend the notion of what a number | |
| 906 | should be, then think again---you still would have to deal with | |
| 595 | 907 |   cases like \texttt{\Grid{(\VS (\VS 2+3)\VS )}}. Just think of the mess 
 | 
| 908 | you would have in a grammar for a full-blown language where there are | |
| 909 | numerous such cases.} | |
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