| <html> |
| <head> |
| <title>PLY (Python Lex-Yacc)</title> |
| </head> |
| <body bgcolor="#ffffff"> |
| |
| <h1>PLY (Python Lex-Yacc)</h1> |
| |
| <b> |
| David M. Beazley <br> |
| dave@dabeaz.com<br> |
| </b> |
| |
| <p> |
| <b>PLY Version: 3.11</b> |
| <p> |
| |
| <!-- INDEX --> |
| <div class="sectiontoc"> |
| <ul> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn0">Preface and Requirements</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn1">Introduction</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn2">PLY Overview</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn3">Lex</a> |
| <ul> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn4">Lex Example</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn5">The tokens list</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn6">Specification of tokens</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn7">Token values</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn8">Discarded tokens</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn9">Line numbers and positional information</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn10">Ignored characters</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn11">Literal characters</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn12">Error handling</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn14">EOF Handling</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn13">Building and using the lexer</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn14b">The @TOKEN decorator</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn15">Optimized mode</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn16">Debugging</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn17">Alternative specification of lexers</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn18">Maintaining state</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn19">Lexer cloning</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn20">Internal lexer state</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn21">Conditional lexing and start conditions</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn21b">Miscellaneous Issues</a> |
| </ul> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn22">Parsing basics</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn23">Yacc</a> |
| <ul> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn24">An example</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn25">Combining Grammar Rule Functions</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn26">Character Literals</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn26b">Empty Productions</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn28">Changing the starting symbol</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn27">Dealing With Ambiguous Grammars</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn28b">The parser.out file</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn29">Syntax Error Handling</a> |
| <ul> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn30">Recovery and resynchronization with error rules</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn31">Panic mode recovery</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn35">Signalling an error from a production</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn38">When Do Syntax Errors Get Reported</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn32">General comments on error handling</a> |
| </ul> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn33">Line Number and Position Tracking</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn34">AST Construction</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn35b">Embedded Actions</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn36">Miscellaneous Yacc Notes</a> |
| </ul> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn37">Multiple Parsers and Lexers</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn38b">Using Python's Optimized Mode</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn44">Advanced Debugging</a> |
| <ul> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn45">Debugging the lex() and yacc() commands</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn46">Run-time Debugging</a> |
| </ul> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn49">Packaging Advice</a> |
| <li><a href="#ply_nn39">Where to go from here?</a> |
| </ul> |
| </div> |
| <!-- INDEX --> |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| <H2><a name="ply_nn0"></a>1. Preface and Requirements</H2> |
| |
| |
| <p> |
| This document provides an overview of lexing and parsing with PLY. |
| Given the intrinsic complexity of parsing, I would strongly advise |
| that you read (or at least skim) this entire document before jumping |
| into a big development project with PLY. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| PLY-3.5 is compatible with both Python 2 and Python 3. If you are using |
| Python 2, you have to use Python 2.6 or newer. |
| </p> |
| |
| <H2><a name="ply_nn1"></a>2. Introduction</H2> |
| |
| |
| PLY is a pure-Python implementation of the popular compiler |
| construction tools lex and yacc. The main goal of PLY is to stay |
| fairly faithful to the way in which traditional lex/yacc tools work. |
| This includes supporting LALR(1) parsing as well as providing |
| extensive input validation, error reporting, and diagnostics. Thus, |
| if you've used yacc in another programming language, it should be |
| relatively straightforward to use PLY. |
| |
| <p> |
| Early versions of PLY were developed to support an Introduction to |
| Compilers Course I taught in 2001 at the University of Chicago. |
| Since PLY was primarily developed as an instructional tool, you will |
| find it to be fairly picky about token and grammar rule |
| specification. In part, this |
| added formality is meant to catch common programming mistakes made by |
| novice users. However, advanced users will also find such features to |
| be useful when building complicated grammars for real programming |
| languages. It should also be noted that PLY does not provide much in |
| the way of bells and whistles (e.g., automatic construction of |
| abstract syntax trees, tree traversal, etc.). Nor would I consider it |
| to be a parsing framework. Instead, you will find a bare-bones, yet |
| fully capable lex/yacc implementation written entirely in Python. |
| |
| <p> |
| The rest of this document assumes that you are somewhat familiar with |
| parsing theory, syntax directed translation, and the use of compiler |
| construction tools such as lex and yacc in other programming |
| languages. If you are unfamiliar with these topics, you will probably |
| want to consult an introductory text such as "Compilers: Principles, |
| Techniques, and Tools", by Aho, Sethi, and Ullman. O'Reilly's "Lex |
| and Yacc" by John Levine may also be handy. In fact, the O'Reilly book can be |
| used as a reference for PLY as the concepts are virtually identical. |
| |
| <H2><a name="ply_nn2"></a>3. PLY Overview</H2> |
| |
| |
| <p> |
| PLY consists of two separate modules; <tt>lex.py</tt> and |
| <tt>yacc.py</tt>, both of which are found in a Python package |
| called <tt>ply</tt>. The <tt>lex.py</tt> module is used to break input text into a |
| collection of tokens specified by a collection of regular expression |
| rules. <tt>yacc.py</tt> is used to recognize language syntax that has |
| been specified in the form of a context free grammar. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| The two tools are meant to work together. Specifically, |
| <tt>lex.py</tt> provides an external interface in the form of a |
| <tt>token()</tt> function that returns the next valid token on the |
| input stream. <tt>yacc.py</tt> calls this repeatedly to retrieve |
| tokens and invoke grammar rules. The output of <tt>yacc.py</tt> is |
| often an Abstract Syntax Tree (AST). However, this is entirely up to |
| the user. If desired, <tt>yacc.py</tt> can also be used to implement |
| simple one-pass compilers. |
| |
| <p> |
| Like its Unix counterpart, <tt>yacc.py</tt> provides most of the |
| features you expect including extensive error checking, grammar |
| validation, support for empty productions, error tokens, and ambiguity |
| resolution via precedence rules. In fact, almost everything that is possible in traditional yacc |
| should be supported in PLY. |
| |
| <p> |
| The primary difference between |
| <tt>yacc.py</tt> and Unix <tt>yacc</tt> is that <tt>yacc.py</tt> |
| doesn't involve a separate code-generation process. |
| Instead, PLY relies on reflection (introspection) |
| to build its lexers and parsers. Unlike traditional lex/yacc which |
| require a special input file that is converted into a separate source |
| file, the specifications given to PLY <em>are</em> valid Python |
| programs. This means that there are no extra source files nor is |
| there a special compiler construction step (e.g., running yacc to |
| generate Python code for the compiler). Since the generation of the |
| parsing tables is relatively expensive, PLY caches the results and |
| saves them to a file. If no changes are detected in the input source, |
| the tables are read from the cache. Otherwise, they are regenerated. |
| |
| <H2><a name="ply_nn3"></a>4. Lex</H2> |
| |
| |
| <tt>lex.py</tt> is used to tokenize an input string. For example, suppose |
| you're writing a programming language and a user supplied the following input string: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| x = 3 + 42 * (s - t) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| A tokenizer splits the string into individual tokens |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| 'x','=', '3', '+', '42', '*', '(', 's', '-', 't', ')' |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Tokens are usually given names to indicate what they are. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| 'ID','EQUALS','NUMBER','PLUS','NUMBER','TIMES', |
| 'LPAREN','ID','MINUS','ID','RPAREN' |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| More specifically, the input is broken into pairs of token types and values. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| ('ID','x'), ('EQUALS','='), ('NUMBER','3'), |
| ('PLUS','+'), ('NUMBER','42), ('TIMES','*'), |
| ('LPAREN','('), ('ID','s'), ('MINUS','-'), |
| ('ID','t'), ('RPAREN',')' |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| The identification of tokens is typically done by writing a series of regular expression |
| rules. The next section shows how this is done using <tt>lex.py</tt>. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn4"></a>4.1 Lex Example</H3> |
| |
| |
| The following example shows how <tt>lex.py</tt> is used to write a simple tokenizer. |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| # ------------------------------------------------------------ |
| # calclex.py |
| # |
| # tokenizer for a simple expression evaluator for |
| # numbers and +,-,*,/ |
| # ------------------------------------------------------------ |
| import ply.lex as lex |
| |
| # List of token names. This is always required |
| tokens = ( |
| 'NUMBER', |
| 'PLUS', |
| 'MINUS', |
| 'TIMES', |
| 'DIVIDE', |
| 'LPAREN', |
| 'RPAREN', |
| ) |
| |
| # Regular expression rules for simple tokens |
| t_PLUS = r'\+' |
| t_MINUS = r'-' |
| t_TIMES = r'\*' |
| t_DIVIDE = r'/' |
| t_LPAREN = r'\(' |
| t_RPAREN = r'\)' |
| |
| # A regular expression rule with some action code |
| def t_NUMBER(t): |
| r'\d+' |
| t.value = int(t.value) |
| return t |
| |
| # Define a rule so we can track line numbers |
| def t_newline(t): |
| r'\n+' |
| t.lexer.lineno += len(t.value) |
| |
| # A string containing ignored characters (spaces and tabs) |
| t_ignore = ' \t' |
| |
| # Error handling rule |
| def t_error(t): |
| print("Illegal character '%s'" % t.value[0]) |
| t.lexer.skip(1) |
| |
| # Build the lexer |
| lexer = lex.lex() |
| |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| To use the lexer, you first need to feed it some input text using |
| its <tt>input()</tt> method. After that, repeated calls |
| to <tt>token()</tt> produce tokens. The following code shows how this |
| works: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| |
| # Test it out |
| data = ''' |
| 3 + 4 * 10 |
| + -20 *2 |
| ''' |
| |
| # Give the lexer some input |
| lexer.input(data) |
| |
| # Tokenize |
| while True: |
| tok = lexer.token() |
| if not tok: |
| break # No more input |
| print(tok) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| When executed, the example will produce the following output: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| $ python example.py |
| LexToken(NUMBER,3,2,1) |
| LexToken(PLUS,'+',2,3) |
| LexToken(NUMBER,4,2,5) |
| LexToken(TIMES,'*',2,7) |
| LexToken(NUMBER,10,2,10) |
| LexToken(PLUS,'+',3,14) |
| LexToken(MINUS,'-',3,16) |
| LexToken(NUMBER,20,3,18) |
| LexToken(TIMES,'*',3,20) |
| LexToken(NUMBER,2,3,21) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Lexers also support the iteration protocol. So, you can write the above loop as follows: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| for tok in lexer: |
| print(tok) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| The tokens returned by <tt>lexer.token()</tt> are instances |
| of <tt>LexToken</tt>. This object has |
| attributes <tt>tok.type</tt>, <tt>tok.value</tt>, |
| <tt>tok.lineno</tt>, and <tt>tok.lexpos</tt>. The following code shows an example of |
| accessing these attributes: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| # Tokenize |
| while True: |
| tok = lexer.token() |
| if not tok: |
| break # No more input |
| print(tok.type, tok.value, tok.lineno, tok.lexpos) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| The <tt>tok.type</tt> and <tt>tok.value</tt> attributes contain the |
| type and value of the token itself. |
| <tt>tok.line</tt> and <tt>tok.lexpos</tt> contain information about |
| the location of the token. <tt>tok.lexpos</tt> is the index of the |
| token relative to the start of the input text. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn5"></a>4.2 The tokens list</H3> |
| |
| |
| <p> |
| All lexers must provide a list <tt>tokens</tt> that defines all of the possible token |
| names that can be produced by the lexer. This list is always required |
| and is used to perform a variety of validation checks. The tokens list is also used by the |
| <tt>yacc.py</tt> module to identify terminals. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| In the example, the following code specified the token names: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| tokens = ( |
| 'NUMBER', |
| 'PLUS', |
| 'MINUS', |
| 'TIMES', |
| 'DIVIDE', |
| 'LPAREN', |
| 'RPAREN', |
| ) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn6"></a>4.3 Specification of tokens</H3> |
| |
| |
| Each token is specified by writing a regular expression rule compatible with Python's <tt>re</tt> module. Each of these rules |
| are defined by making declarations with a special prefix <tt>t_</tt> to indicate that it |
| defines a token. For simple tokens, the regular expression can |
| be specified as strings such as this (note: Python raw strings are used since they are the |
| most convenient way to write regular expression strings): |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| t_PLUS = r'\+' |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| In this case, the name following the <tt>t_</tt> must exactly match one of the |
| names supplied in <tt>tokens</tt>. If some kind of action needs to be performed, |
| a token rule can be specified as a function. For example, this rule matches numbers and |
| converts the string into a Python integer. |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def t_NUMBER(t): |
| r'\d+' |
| t.value = int(t.value) |
| return t |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| When a function is used, the regular expression rule is specified in the function documentation string. |
| The function always takes a single argument which is an instance of |
| <tt>LexToken</tt>. This object has attributes of <tt>t.type</tt> which is the token type (as a string), |
| <tt>t.value</tt> which is the lexeme (the actual text matched), <tt>t.lineno</tt> which is the current line number, and <tt>t.lexpos</tt> which |
| is the position of the token relative to the beginning of the input text. |
| By default, <tt>t.type</tt> is set to the name following the <tt>t_</tt> prefix. The action |
| function can modify the contents of the <tt>LexToken</tt> object as appropriate. However, |
| when it is done, the resulting token should be returned. If no value is returned by the action |
| function, the token is simply discarded and the next token read. |
| |
| <p> |
| Internally, <tt>lex.py</tt> uses the <tt>re</tt> module to do its pattern matching. Patterns are compiled |
| using the <tt>re.VERBOSE</tt> flag which can be used to help readability. However, be aware that unescaped |
| whitespace is ignored and comments are allowed in this mode. If your pattern involves whitespace, make sure you |
| use <tt>\s</tt>. If you need to match the <tt>#</tt> character, use <tt>[#]</tt>. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| When building the master regular expression, |
| rules are added in the following order: |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| <ol> |
| <li>All tokens defined by functions are added in the same order as they appear in the lexer file. |
| <li>Tokens defined by strings are added next by sorting them in order of decreasing regular expression length (longer expressions |
| are added first). |
| </ol> |
| <p> |
| Without this ordering, it can be difficult to correctly match certain types of tokens. For example, if you |
| wanted to have separate tokens for "=" and "==", you need to make sure that "==" is checked first. By sorting regular |
| expressions in order of decreasing length, this problem is solved for rules defined as strings. For functions, |
| the order can be explicitly controlled since rules appearing first are checked first. |
| |
| <p> |
| To handle reserved words, you should write a single rule to match an |
| identifier and do a special name lookup in a function like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| reserved = { |
| 'if' : 'IF', |
| 'then' : 'THEN', |
| 'else' : 'ELSE', |
| 'while' : 'WHILE', |
| ... |
| } |
| |
| tokens = ['LPAREN','RPAREN',...,'ID'] + list(reserved.values()) |
| |
| def t_ID(t): |
| r'[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]*' |
| t.type = reserved.get(t.value,'ID') # Check for reserved words |
| return t |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| This approach greatly reduces the number of regular expression rules and is likely to make things a little faster. |
| |
| <p> |
| <b>Note:</b> You should avoid writing individual rules for reserved words. For example, if you write rules like this, |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| t_FOR = r'for' |
| t_PRINT = r'print' |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| those rules will be triggered for identifiers that include those words as a prefix such as "forget" or "printed". This is probably not |
| what you want. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn7"></a>4.4 Token values</H3> |
| |
| |
| When tokens are returned by lex, they have a value that is stored in the <tt>value</tt> attribute. Normally, the value is the text |
| that was matched. However, the value can be assigned to any Python object. For instance, when lexing identifiers, you may |
| want to return both the identifier name and information from some sort of symbol table. To do this, you might write a rule like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def t_ID(t): |
| ... |
| # Look up symbol table information and return a tuple |
| t.value = (t.value, symbol_lookup(t.value)) |
| ... |
| return t |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| It is important to note that storing data in other attribute names is <em>not</em> recommended. The <tt>yacc.py</tt> module only exposes the |
| contents of the <tt>value</tt> attribute. Thus, accessing other attributes may be unnecessarily awkward. If you |
| need to store multiple values on a token, assign a tuple, dictionary, or instance to <tt>value</tt>. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn8"></a>4.5 Discarded tokens</H3> |
| |
| |
| To discard a token, such as a comment, simply define a token rule that returns no value. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def t_COMMENT(t): |
| r'\#.*' |
| pass |
| # No return value. Token discarded |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Alternatively, you can include the prefix "ignore_" in the token declaration to force a token to be ignored. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| t_ignore_COMMENT = r'\#.*' |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Be advised that if you are ignoring many different kinds of text, you may still want to use functions since these provide more precise |
| control over the order in which regular expressions are matched (i.e., functions are matched in order of specification whereas strings are |
| sorted by regular expression length). |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn9"></a>4.6 Line numbers and positional information</H3> |
| |
| |
| <p>By default, <tt>lex.py</tt> knows nothing about line numbers. This is because <tt>lex.py</tt> doesn't know anything |
| about what constitutes a "line" of input (e.g., the newline character or even if the input is textual data). |
| To update this information, you need to write a special rule. In the example, the <tt>t_newline()</tt> rule shows how to do this. |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| # Define a rule so we can track line numbers |
| def t_newline(t): |
| r'\n+' |
| t.lexer.lineno += len(t.value) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| Within the rule, the <tt>lineno</tt> attribute of the underlying lexer <tt>t.lexer</tt> is updated. |
| After the line number is updated, the token is simply discarded since nothing is returned. |
| |
| <p> |
| <tt>lex.py</tt> does not perform any kind of automatic column tracking. However, it does record positional |
| information related to each token in the <tt>lexpos</tt> attribute. Using this, it is usually possible to compute |
| column information as a separate step. For instance, just count backwards until you reach a newline. |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| # Compute column. |
| # input is the input text string |
| # token is a token instance |
| def find_column(input, token): |
| line_start = input.rfind('\n', 0, token.lexpos) + 1 |
| return (token.lexpos - line_start) + 1 |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Since column information is often only useful in the context of error handling, calculating the column |
| position can be performed when needed as opposed to doing it for each token. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn10"></a>4.7 Ignored characters</H3> |
| |
| |
| <p> |
| The special <tt>t_ignore</tt> rule is reserved by <tt>lex.py</tt> for characters |
| that should be completely ignored in the input stream. |
| Usually this is used to skip over whitespace and other non-essential characters. |
| Although it is possible to define a regular expression rule for whitespace in a manner |
| similar to <tt>t_newline()</tt>, the use of <tt>t_ignore</tt> provides substantially better |
| lexing performance because it is handled as a special case and is checked in a much |
| more efficient manner than the normal regular expression rules. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| The characters given in <tt>t_ignore</tt> are not ignored when such characters are part of |
| other regular expression patterns. For example, if you had a rule to capture quoted text, |
| that pattern can include the ignored characters (which will be captured in the normal way). The |
| main purpose of <tt>t_ignore</tt> is to ignore whitespace and other padding between the |
| tokens that you actually want to parse. |
| </p> |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn11"></a>4.8 Literal characters</H3> |
| |
| |
| <p> |
| Literal characters can be specified by defining a variable <tt>literals</tt> in your lexing module. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| literals = [ '+','-','*','/' ] |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| or alternatively |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| literals = "+-*/" |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| A literal character is simply a single character that is returned "as is" when encountered by the lexer. Literals are checked |
| after all of the defined regular expression rules. Thus, if a rule starts with one of the literal characters, it will always |
| take precedence. |
| |
| <p> |
| When a literal token is returned, both its <tt>type</tt> and <tt>value</tt> attributes are set to the character itself. For example, <tt>'+'</tt>. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| It's possible to write token functions that perform additional actions |
| when literals are matched. However, you'll need to set the token type |
| appropriately. For example: |
| </p> |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| literals = [ '{', '}' ] |
| |
| def t_lbrace(t): |
| r'\{' |
| t.type = '{' # Set token type to the expected literal |
| return t |
| |
| def t_rbrace(t): |
| r'\}' |
| t.type = '}' # Set token type to the expected literal |
| return t |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn12"></a>4.9 Error handling</H3> |
| |
| |
| <p> |
| The <tt>t_error()</tt> |
| function is used to handle lexing errors that occur when illegal |
| characters are detected. In this case, the <tt>t.value</tt> attribute contains the |
| rest of the input string that has not been tokenized. In the example, the error function |
| was defined as follows: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| # Error handling rule |
| def t_error(t): |
| print("Illegal character '%s'" % t.value[0]) |
| t.lexer.skip(1) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| In this case, we simply print the offending character and skip ahead one character by calling <tt>t.lexer.skip(1)</tt>. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn14"></a>4.10 EOF Handling</H3> |
| |
| |
| <p> |
| The <tt>t_eof()</tt> function is used to handle an end-of-file (EOF) condition in the input. As input, it |
| receives a token type <tt>'eof'</tt> with the <tt>lineno</tt> and <tt>lexpos</tt> attributes set appropriately. |
| The main use of this function is provide more input to the lexer so that it can continue to parse. Here is an |
| example of how this works: |
| </p> |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| # EOF handling rule |
| def t_eof(t): |
| # Get more input (Example) |
| more = raw_input('... ') |
| if more: |
| self.lexer.input(more) |
| return self.lexer.token() |
| return None |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| The EOF function should return the next available token (by calling <tt>self.lexer.token())</tt> or <tt>None</tt> to |
| indicate no more data. Be aware that setting more input with the <tt>self.lexer.input()</tt> method does |
| NOT reset the lexer state or the <tt>lineno</tt> attribute used for position tracking. The <tt>lexpos</tt> |
| attribute is reset so be aware of that if you're using it in error reporting. |
| </p> |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn13"></a>4.11 Building and using the lexer</H3> |
| |
| |
| <p> |
| To build the lexer, the function <tt>lex.lex()</tt> is used. For example:</p> |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| lexer = lex.lex() |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p>This function |
| uses Python reflection (or introspection) to read the regular expression rules |
| out of the calling context and build the lexer. Once the lexer has been built, two methods can |
| be used to control the lexer. |
| </p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><tt>lexer.input(data)</tt>. Reset the lexer and store a new input string. |
| <li><tt>lexer.token()</tt>. Return the next token. Returns a special <tt>LexToken</tt> instance on success or |
| None if the end of the input text has been reached. |
| </ul> |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn14b"></a>4.12 The @TOKEN decorator</H3> |
| |
| |
| In some applications, you may want to define build tokens from as a series of |
| more complex regular expression rules. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| digit = r'([0-9])' |
| nondigit = r'([_A-Za-z])' |
| identifier = r'(' + nondigit + r'(' + digit + r'|' + nondigit + r')*)' |
| |
| def t_ID(t): |
| # want docstring to be identifier above. ????? |
| ... |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| In this case, we want the regular expression rule for <tt>ID</tt> to be one of the variables above. However, there is no |
| way to directly specify this using a normal documentation string. To solve this problem, you can use the <tt>@TOKEN</tt> |
| decorator. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| from ply.lex import TOKEN |
| |
| @TOKEN(identifier) |
| def t_ID(t): |
| ... |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| This will attach <tt>identifier</tt> to the docstring for <tt>t_ID()</tt> allowing <tt>lex.py</tt> to work normally. |
| </p> |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn15"></a>4.13 Optimized mode</H3> |
| |
| |
| For improved performance, it may be desirable to use Python's |
| optimized mode (e.g., running Python with the <tt>-O</tt> |
| option). However, doing so causes Python to ignore documentation |
| strings. This presents special problems for <tt>lex.py</tt>. To |
| handle this case, you can create your lexer using |
| the <tt>optimize</tt> option as follows: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| lexer = lex.lex(optimize=1) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Next, run Python in its normal operating mode. When you do |
| this, <tt>lex.py</tt> will write a file called <tt>lextab.py</tt> in |
| the same directory as the module containing the lexer specification. |
| This file contains all of the regular |
| expression rules and tables used during lexing. On subsequent |
| executions, |
| <tt>lextab.py</tt> will simply be imported to build the lexer. This |
| approach substantially improves the startup time of the lexer and it |
| works in Python's optimized mode. |
| |
| <p> |
| To change the name of the lexer-generated module, use the <tt>lextab</tt> keyword argument. For example: |
| </p> |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| lexer = lex.lex(optimize=1,lextab="footab") |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| When running in optimized mode, it is important to note that lex disables most error checking. Thus, this is really only recommended |
| if you're sure everything is working correctly and you're ready to start releasing production code. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn16"></a>4.14 Debugging</H3> |
| |
| |
| For the purpose of debugging, you can run <tt>lex()</tt> in a debugging mode as follows: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| lexer = lex.lex(debug=1) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| This will produce various sorts of debugging information including all of the added rules, |
| the master regular expressions used by the lexer, and tokens generating during lexing. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| In addition, <tt>lex.py</tt> comes with a simple main function which |
| will either tokenize input read from standard input or from a file specified |
| on the command line. To use it, simply put this in your lexer: |
| </p> |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| lex.runmain() |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Please refer to the "Debugging" section near the end for some more advanced details |
| of debugging. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn17"></a>4.15 Alternative specification of lexers</H3> |
| |
| |
| As shown in the example, lexers are specified all within one Python module. If you want to |
| put token rules in a different module from the one in which you invoke <tt>lex()</tt>, use the |
| <tt>module</tt> keyword argument. |
| |
| <p> |
| For example, you might have a dedicated module that just contains |
| the token rules: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| # module: tokrules.py |
| # This module just contains the lexing rules |
| |
| # List of token names. This is always required |
| tokens = ( |
| 'NUMBER', |
| 'PLUS', |
| 'MINUS', |
| 'TIMES', |
| 'DIVIDE', |
| 'LPAREN', |
| 'RPAREN', |
| ) |
| |
| # Regular expression rules for simple tokens |
| t_PLUS = r'\+' |
| t_MINUS = r'-' |
| t_TIMES = r'\*' |
| t_DIVIDE = r'/' |
| t_LPAREN = r'\(' |
| t_RPAREN = r'\)' |
| |
| # A regular expression rule with some action code |
| def t_NUMBER(t): |
| r'\d+' |
| t.value = int(t.value) |
| return t |
| |
| # Define a rule so we can track line numbers |
| def t_newline(t): |
| r'\n+' |
| t.lexer.lineno += len(t.value) |
| |
| # A string containing ignored characters (spaces and tabs) |
| t_ignore = ' \t' |
| |
| # Error handling rule |
| def t_error(t): |
| print("Illegal character '%s'" % t.value[0]) |
| t.lexer.skip(1) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Now, if you wanted to build a tokenizer from these rules from within a different module, you would do the following (shown for Python interactive mode): |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| >>> import tokrules |
| >>> <b>lexer = lex.lex(module=tokrules)</b> |
| >>> lexer.input("3 + 4") |
| >>> lexer.token() |
| LexToken(NUMBER,3,1,1,0) |
| >>> lexer.token() |
| LexToken(PLUS,'+',1,2) |
| >>> lexer.token() |
| LexToken(NUMBER,4,1,4) |
| >>> lexer.token() |
| None |
| >>> |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| The <tt>module</tt> option can also be used to define lexers from instances of a class. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| import ply.lex as lex |
| |
| class MyLexer(object): |
| # List of token names. This is always required |
| tokens = ( |
| 'NUMBER', |
| 'PLUS', |
| 'MINUS', |
| 'TIMES', |
| 'DIVIDE', |
| 'LPAREN', |
| 'RPAREN', |
| ) |
| |
| # Regular expression rules for simple tokens |
| t_PLUS = r'\+' |
| t_MINUS = r'-' |
| t_TIMES = r'\*' |
| t_DIVIDE = r'/' |
| t_LPAREN = r'\(' |
| t_RPAREN = r'\)' |
| |
| # A regular expression rule with some action code |
| # Note addition of self parameter since we're in a class |
| def t_NUMBER(self,t): |
| r'\d+' |
| t.value = int(t.value) |
| return t |
| |
| # Define a rule so we can track line numbers |
| def t_newline(self,t): |
| r'\n+' |
| t.lexer.lineno += len(t.value) |
| |
| # A string containing ignored characters (spaces and tabs) |
| t_ignore = ' \t' |
| |
| # Error handling rule |
| def t_error(self,t): |
| print("Illegal character '%s'" % t.value[0]) |
| t.lexer.skip(1) |
| |
| <b># Build the lexer |
| def build(self,**kwargs): |
| self.lexer = lex.lex(module=self, **kwargs)</b> |
| |
| # Test it output |
| def test(self,data): |
| self.lexer.input(data) |
| while True: |
| tok = self.lexer.token() |
| if not tok: |
| break |
| print(tok) |
| |
| # Build the lexer and try it out |
| m = MyLexer() |
| m.build() # Build the lexer |
| m.test("3 + 4") # Test it |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| |
| When building a lexer from class, <em>you should construct the lexer from |
| an instance of the class</em>, not the class object itself. This is because |
| PLY only works properly if the lexer actions are defined by bound-methods. |
| |
| <p> |
| When using the <tt>module</tt> option to <tt>lex()</tt>, PLY collects symbols |
| from the underlying object using the <tt>dir()</tt> function. There is no |
| direct access to the <tt>__dict__</tt> attribute of the object supplied as a |
| module value. </p> |
| |
| <P> |
| Finally, if you want to keep things nicely encapsulated, but don't want to use a |
| full-fledged class definition, lexers can be defined using closures. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| import ply.lex as lex |
| |
| # List of token names. This is always required |
| tokens = ( |
| 'NUMBER', |
| 'PLUS', |
| 'MINUS', |
| 'TIMES', |
| 'DIVIDE', |
| 'LPAREN', |
| 'RPAREN', |
| ) |
| |
| def MyLexer(): |
| # Regular expression rules for simple tokens |
| t_PLUS = r'\+' |
| t_MINUS = r'-' |
| t_TIMES = r'\*' |
| t_DIVIDE = r'/' |
| t_LPAREN = r'\(' |
| t_RPAREN = r'\)' |
| |
| # A regular expression rule with some action code |
| def t_NUMBER(t): |
| r'\d+' |
| t.value = int(t.value) |
| return t |
| |
| # Define a rule so we can track line numbers |
| def t_newline(t): |
| r'\n+' |
| t.lexer.lineno += len(t.value) |
| |
| # A string containing ignored characters (spaces and tabs) |
| t_ignore = ' \t' |
| |
| # Error handling rule |
| def t_error(t): |
| print("Illegal character '%s'" % t.value[0]) |
| t.lexer.skip(1) |
| |
| # Build the lexer from my environment and return it |
| return lex.lex() |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| <b>Important note:</b> If you are defining a lexer using a class or closure, be aware that PLY still requires you to only |
| define a single lexer per module (source file). There are extensive validation/error checking parts of the PLY that |
| may falsely report error messages if you don't follow this rule. |
| </p> |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn18"></a>4.16 Maintaining state</H3> |
| |
| |
| In your lexer, you may want to maintain a variety of state |
| information. This might include mode settings, symbol tables, and |
| other details. As an example, suppose that you wanted to keep |
| track of how many NUMBER tokens had been encountered. |
| |
| <p> |
| One way to do this is to keep a set of global variables in the module |
| where you created the lexer. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| num_count = 0 |
| def t_NUMBER(t): |
| r'\d+' |
| global num_count |
| num_count += 1 |
| t.value = int(t.value) |
| return t |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| If you don't like the use of a global variable, another place to store |
| information is inside the Lexer object created by <tt>lex()</tt>. |
| To this, you can use the <tt>lexer</tt> attribute of tokens passed to |
| the various rules. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def t_NUMBER(t): |
| r'\d+' |
| t.lexer.num_count += 1 # Note use of lexer attribute |
| t.value = int(t.value) |
| return t |
| |
| lexer = lex.lex() |
| lexer.num_count = 0 # Set the initial count |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| This latter approach has the advantage of being simple and working |
| correctly in applications where multiple instantiations of a given |
| lexer exist in the same application. However, this might also feel |
| like a gross violation of encapsulation to OO purists. |
| Just to put your mind at some ease, all |
| internal attributes of the lexer (with the exception of <tt>lineno</tt>) have names that are prefixed |
| by <tt>lex</tt> (e.g., <tt>lexdata</tt>,<tt>lexpos</tt>, etc.). Thus, |
| it is perfectly safe to store attributes in the lexer that |
| don't have names starting with that prefix or a name that conflicts with one of the |
| predefined methods (e.g., <tt>input()</tt>, <tt>token()</tt>, etc.). |
| |
| <p> |
| If you don't like assigning values on the lexer object, you can define your lexer as a class as |
| shown in the previous section: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| class MyLexer: |
| ... |
| def t_NUMBER(self,t): |
| r'\d+' |
| self.num_count += 1 |
| t.value = int(t.value) |
| return t |
| |
| def build(self, **kwargs): |
| self.lexer = lex.lex(object=self,**kwargs) |
| |
| def __init__(self): |
| self.num_count = 0 |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| The class approach may be the easiest to manage if your application is |
| going to be creating multiple instances of the same lexer and you need |
| to manage a lot of state. |
| |
| <p> |
| State can also be managed through closures. For example, in Python 3: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def MyLexer(): |
| num_count = 0 |
| ... |
| def t_NUMBER(t): |
| r'\d+' |
| nonlocal num_count |
| num_count += 1 |
| t.value = int(t.value) |
| return t |
| ... |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn19"></a>4.17 Lexer cloning</H3> |
| |
| |
| <p> |
| If necessary, a lexer object can be duplicated by invoking its <tt>clone()</tt> method. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| lexer = lex.lex() |
| ... |
| newlexer = lexer.clone() |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| When a lexer is cloned, the copy is exactly identical to the original lexer |
| including any input text and internal state. However, the clone allows a |
| different set of input text to be supplied which may be processed separately. |
| This may be useful in situations when you are writing a parser/compiler that |
| involves recursive or reentrant processing. For instance, if you |
| needed to scan ahead in the input for some reason, you could create a |
| clone and use it to look ahead. Or, if you were implementing some kind of preprocessor, |
| cloned lexers could be used to handle different input files. |
| |
| <p> |
| Creating a clone is different than calling <tt>lex.lex()</tt> in that |
| PLY doesn't regenerate any of the internal tables or regular expressions. |
| |
| <p> |
| Special considerations need to be made when cloning lexers that also |
| maintain their own internal state using classes or closures. Namely, |
| you need to be aware that the newly created lexers will share all of |
| this state with the original lexer. For example, if you defined a |
| lexer as a class and did this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| m = MyLexer() |
| a = lex.lex(object=m) # Create a lexer |
| |
| b = a.clone() # Clone the lexer |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Then both <tt>a</tt> and <tt>b</tt> are going to be bound to the same |
| object <tt>m</tt> and any changes to <tt>m</tt> will be reflected in both lexers. It's |
| important to emphasize that <tt>clone()</tt> is only meant to create a new lexer |
| that reuses the regular expressions and environment of another lexer. If you |
| need to make a totally new copy of a lexer, then call <tt>lex()</tt> again. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn20"></a>4.18 Internal lexer state</H3> |
| |
| |
| A Lexer object <tt>lexer</tt> has a number of internal attributes that may be useful in certain |
| situations. |
| |
| <p> |
| <tt>lexer.lexpos</tt> |
| <blockquote> |
| This attribute is an integer that contains the current position within the input text. If you modify |
| the value, it will change the result of the next call to <tt>token()</tt>. Within token rule functions, this points |
| to the first character <em>after</em> the matched text. If the value is modified within a rule, the next returned token will be |
| matched at the new position. |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| <tt>lexer.lineno</tt> |
| <blockquote> |
| The current value of the line number attribute stored in the lexer. PLY only specifies that the attribute |
| exists---it never sets, updates, or performs any processing with it. If you want to track line numbers, |
| you will need to add code yourself (see the section on line numbers and positional information). |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| <tt>lexer.lexdata</tt> |
| <blockquote> |
| The current input text stored in the lexer. This is the string passed with the <tt>input()</tt> method. It |
| would probably be a bad idea to modify this unless you really know what you're doing. |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <P> |
| <tt>lexer.lexmatch</tt> |
| <blockquote> |
| This is the raw <tt>Match</tt> object returned by the Python <tt>re.match()</tt> function (used internally by PLY) for the |
| current token. If you have written a regular expression that contains named groups, you can use this to retrieve those values. |
| Note: This attribute is only updated when tokens are defined and processed by functions. |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn21"></a>4.19 Conditional lexing and start conditions</H3> |
| |
| |
| In advanced parsing applications, it may be useful to have different |
| lexing states. For instance, you may want the occurrence of a certain |
| token or syntactic construct to trigger a different kind of lexing. |
| PLY supports a feature that allows the underlying lexer to be put into |
| a series of different states. Each state can have its own tokens, |
| lexing rules, and so forth. The implementation is based largely on |
| the "start condition" feature of GNU flex. Details of this can be found |
| at <a |
| href="http://flex.sourceforge.net/manual/Start-Conditions.html">http://flex.sourceforge.net/manual/Start-Conditions.html</a>. |
| |
| <p> |
| To define a new lexing state, it must first be declared. This is done by including a "states" declaration in your |
| lex file. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| states = ( |
| ('foo','exclusive'), |
| ('bar','inclusive'), |
| ) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| This declaration declares two states, <tt>'foo'</tt> |
| and <tt>'bar'</tt>. States may be of two types; <tt>'exclusive'</tt> |
| and <tt>'inclusive'</tt>. An exclusive state completely overrides the |
| default behavior of the lexer. That is, lex will only return tokens |
| and apply rules defined specifically for that state. An inclusive |
| state adds additional tokens and rules to the default set of rules. |
| Thus, lex will return both the tokens defined by default in addition |
| to those defined for the inclusive state. |
| |
| <p> |
| Once a state has been declared, tokens and rules are declared by including the |
| state name in token/rule declaration. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| t_foo_NUMBER = r'\d+' # Token 'NUMBER' in state 'foo' |
| t_bar_ID = r'[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*' # Token 'ID' in state 'bar' |
| |
| def t_foo_newline(t): |
| r'\n' |
| t.lexer.lineno += 1 |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| A token can be declared in multiple states by including multiple state names in the declaration. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| t_foo_bar_NUMBER = r'\d+' # Defines token 'NUMBER' in both state 'foo' and 'bar' |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Alternative, a token can be declared in all states using the 'ANY' in the name. |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| t_ANY_NUMBER = r'\d+' # Defines a token 'NUMBER' in all states |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| If no state name is supplied, as is normally the case, the token is associated with a special state <tt>'INITIAL'</tt>. For example, |
| these two declarations are identical: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| t_NUMBER = r'\d+' |
| t_INITIAL_NUMBER = r'\d+' |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| States are also associated with the special <tt>t_ignore</tt>, <tt>t_error()</tt>, and <tt>t_eof()</tt> declarations. For example, if a state treats |
| these differently, you can declare:</p> |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| t_foo_ignore = " \t\n" # Ignored characters for state 'foo' |
| |
| def t_bar_error(t): # Special error handler for state 'bar' |
| pass |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| By default, lexing operates in the <tt>'INITIAL'</tt> state. This state includes all of the normally defined tokens. |
| For users who aren't using different states, this fact is completely transparent. If, during lexing or parsing, you want to change |
| the lexing state, use the <tt>begin()</tt> method. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def t_begin_foo(t): |
| r'start_foo' |
| t.lexer.begin('foo') # Starts 'foo' state |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| To get out of a state, you use <tt>begin()</tt> to switch back to the initial state. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def t_foo_end(t): |
| r'end_foo' |
| t.lexer.begin('INITIAL') # Back to the initial state |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| The management of states can also be done with a stack. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def t_begin_foo(t): |
| r'start_foo' |
| t.lexer.push_state('foo') # Starts 'foo' state |
| |
| def t_foo_end(t): |
| r'end_foo' |
| t.lexer.pop_state() # Back to the previous state |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| The use of a stack would be useful in situations where there are many ways of entering a new lexing state and you merely want to go back |
| to the previous state afterwards. |
| |
| <P> |
| An example might help clarify. Suppose you were writing a parser and you wanted to grab sections of arbitrary C code enclosed by |
| curly braces. That is, whenever you encounter a starting brace '{', you want to read all of the enclosed code up to the ending brace '}' |
| and return it as a string. Doing this with a normal regular expression rule is nearly (if not actually) impossible. This is because braces can |
| be nested and can be included in comments and strings. Thus, simply matching up to the first matching '}' character isn't good enough. Here is how |
| you might use lexer states to do this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| # Declare the state |
| states = ( |
| ('ccode','exclusive'), |
| ) |
| |
| # Match the first {. Enter ccode state. |
| def t_ccode(t): |
| r'\{' |
| t.lexer.code_start = t.lexer.lexpos # Record the starting position |
| t.lexer.level = 1 # Initial brace level |
| t.lexer.begin('ccode') # Enter 'ccode' state |
| |
| # Rules for the ccode state |
| def t_ccode_lbrace(t): |
| r'\{' |
| t.lexer.level +=1 |
| |
| def t_ccode_rbrace(t): |
| r'\}' |
| t.lexer.level -=1 |
| |
| # If closing brace, return the code fragment |
| if t.lexer.level == 0: |
| t.value = t.lexer.lexdata[t.lexer.code_start:t.lexer.lexpos+1] |
| t.type = "CCODE" |
| t.lexer.lineno += t.value.count('\n') |
| t.lexer.begin('INITIAL') |
| return t |
| |
| # C or C++ comment (ignore) |
| def t_ccode_comment(t): |
| r'(/\*(.|\n)*?\*/)|(//.*)' |
| pass |
| |
| # C string |
| def t_ccode_string(t): |
| r'\"([^\\\n]|(\\.))*?\"' |
| |
| # C character literal |
| def t_ccode_char(t): |
| r'\'([^\\\n]|(\\.))*?\'' |
| |
| # Any sequence of non-whitespace characters (not braces, strings) |
| def t_ccode_nonspace(t): |
| r'[^\s\{\}\'\"]+' |
| |
| # Ignored characters (whitespace) |
| t_ccode_ignore = " \t\n" |
| |
| # For bad characters, we just skip over it |
| def t_ccode_error(t): |
| t.lexer.skip(1) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| In this example, the occurrence of the first '{' causes the lexer to record the starting position and enter a new state <tt>'ccode'</tt>. A collection of rules then match |
| various parts of the input that follow (comments, strings, etc.). All of these rules merely discard the token (by not returning a value). |
| However, if the closing right brace is encountered, the rule <tt>t_ccode_rbrace</tt> collects all of the code (using the earlier recorded starting |
| position), stores it, and returns a token 'CCODE' containing all of that text. When returning the token, the lexing state is restored back to its |
| initial state. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn21b"></a>4.20 Miscellaneous Issues</H3> |
| |
| |
| <P> |
| <li>The lexer requires input to be supplied as a single input string. Since most machines have more than enough memory, this |
| rarely presents a performance concern. However, it means that the lexer currently can't be used with streaming data |
| such as open files or sockets. This limitation is primarily a side-effect of using the <tt>re</tt> module. You might be |
| able to work around this by implementing an appropriate <tt>def t_eof()</tt> end-of-file handling rule. The main complication |
| here is that you'll probably need to ensure that data is fed to the lexer in a way so that it doesn't split in in the middle |
| of a token.</p> |
| |
| <p> |
| <li>The lexer should work properly with both Unicode strings given as token and pattern matching rules as |
| well as for input text. |
| |
| <p> |
| <li>If you need to supply optional flags to the re.compile() function, use the reflags option to lex. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| lex.lex(reflags=re.UNICODE | re.VERBOSE) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Note: by default, <tt>reflags</tt> is set to <tt>re.VERBOSE</tt>. If you provide |
| your own flags, you may need to include this for PLY to preserve its normal behavior. |
| |
| <p> |
| <li>Since the lexer is written entirely in Python, its performance is |
| largely determined by that of the Python <tt>re</tt> module. Although |
| the lexer has been written to be as efficient as possible, it's not |
| blazingly fast when used on very large input files. If |
| performance is concern, you might consider upgrading to the most |
| recent version of Python, creating a hand-written lexer, or offloading |
| the lexer into a C extension module. |
| |
| <p> |
| If you are going to create a hand-written lexer and you plan to use it with <tt>yacc.py</tt>, |
| it only needs to conform to the following requirements: |
| |
| <ul> |
| <li>It must provide a <tt>token()</tt> method that returns the next token or <tt>None</tt> if no more |
| tokens are available. |
| <li>The <tt>token()</tt> method must return an object <tt>tok</tt> that has <tt>type</tt> and <tt>value</tt> attributes. If |
| line number tracking is being used, then the token should also define a <tt>lineno</tt> attribute. |
| </ul> |
| |
| <H2><a name="ply_nn22"></a>5. Parsing basics</H2> |
| |
| |
| <tt>yacc.py</tt> is used to parse language syntax. Before showing an |
| example, there are a few important bits of background that must be |
| mentioned. First, <em>syntax</em> is usually specified in terms of a BNF grammar. |
| For example, if you wanted to parse |
| simple arithmetic expressions, you might first write an unambiguous |
| grammar specification like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| expression : expression + term |
| | expression - term |
| | term |
| |
| term : term * factor |
| | term / factor |
| | factor |
| |
| factor : NUMBER |
| | ( expression ) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| In the grammar, symbols such as <tt>NUMBER</tt>, <tt>+</tt>, <tt>-</tt>, <tt>*</tt>, and <tt>/</tt> are known |
| as <em>terminals</em> and correspond to raw input tokens. Identifiers such as <tt>term</tt> and <tt>factor</tt> refer to |
| grammar rules comprised of a collection of terminals and other rules. These identifiers are known as <em>non-terminals</em>. |
| <P> |
| |
| The semantic behavior of a language is often specified using a |
| technique known as syntax directed translation. In syntax directed |
| translation, attributes are attached to each symbol in a given grammar |
| rule along with an action. Whenever a particular grammar rule is |
| recognized, the action describes what to do. For example, given the |
| expression grammar above, you might write the specification for a |
| simple calculator like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| Grammar Action |
| -------------------------------- -------------------------------------------- |
| expression0 : expression1 + term expression0.val = expression1.val + term.val |
| | expression1 - term expression0.val = expression1.val - term.val |
| | term expression0.val = term.val |
| |
| term0 : term1 * factor term0.val = term1.val * factor.val |
| | term1 / factor term0.val = term1.val / factor.val |
| | factor term0.val = factor.val |
| |
| factor : NUMBER factor.val = int(NUMBER.lexval) |
| | ( expression ) factor.val = expression.val |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| A good way to think about syntax directed translation is to |
| view each symbol in the grammar as a kind of object. Associated |
| with each symbol is a value representing its "state" (for example, the |
| <tt>val</tt> attribute above). Semantic |
| actions are then expressed as a collection of functions or methods |
| that operate on the symbols and associated values. |
| |
| <p> |
| Yacc uses a parsing technique known as LR-parsing or shift-reduce parsing. LR parsing is a |
| bottom up technique that tries to recognize the right-hand-side of various grammar rules. |
| Whenever a valid right-hand-side is found in the input, the appropriate action code is triggered and the |
| grammar symbols are replaced by the grammar symbol on the left-hand-side. |
| |
| <p> |
| LR parsing is commonly implemented by shifting grammar symbols onto a |
| stack and looking at the stack and the next input token for patterns that |
| match one of the grammar rules. |
| The details of the algorithm can be found in a compiler textbook, but the |
| following example illustrates the steps that are performed if you |
| wanted to parse the expression |
| <tt>3 + 5 * (10 - 20)</tt> using the grammar defined above. In the example, |
| the special symbol <tt>$</tt> represents the end of input. |
| |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| Step Symbol Stack Input Tokens Action |
| ---- --------------------- --------------------- ------------------------------- |
| 1 3 + 5 * ( 10 - 20 )$ Shift 3 |
| 2 3 + 5 * ( 10 - 20 )$ Reduce factor : NUMBER |
| 3 factor + 5 * ( 10 - 20 )$ Reduce term : factor |
| 4 term + 5 * ( 10 - 20 )$ Reduce expr : term |
| 5 expr + 5 * ( 10 - 20 )$ Shift + |
| 6 expr + 5 * ( 10 - 20 )$ Shift 5 |
| 7 expr + 5 * ( 10 - 20 )$ Reduce factor : NUMBER |
| 8 expr + factor * ( 10 - 20 )$ Reduce term : factor |
| 9 expr + term * ( 10 - 20 )$ Shift * |
| 10 expr + term * ( 10 - 20 )$ Shift ( |
| 11 expr + term * ( 10 - 20 )$ Shift 10 |
| 12 expr + term * ( 10 - 20 )$ Reduce factor : NUMBER |
| 13 expr + term * ( factor - 20 )$ Reduce term : factor |
| 14 expr + term * ( term - 20 )$ Reduce expr : term |
| 15 expr + term * ( expr - 20 )$ Shift - |
| 16 expr + term * ( expr - 20 )$ Shift 20 |
| 17 expr + term * ( expr - 20 )$ Reduce factor : NUMBER |
| 18 expr + term * ( expr - factor )$ Reduce term : factor |
| 19 expr + term * ( expr - term )$ Reduce expr : expr - term |
| 20 expr + term * ( expr )$ Shift ) |
| 21 expr + term * ( expr ) $ Reduce factor : (expr) |
| 22 expr + term * factor $ Reduce term : term * factor |
| 23 expr + term $ Reduce expr : expr + term |
| 24 expr $ Reduce expr |
| 25 $ Success! |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| When parsing the expression, an underlying state machine and the |
| current input token determine what happens next. If the next token |
| looks like part of a valid grammar rule (based on other items on the |
| stack), it is generally shifted onto the stack. If the top of the |
| stack contains a valid right-hand-side of a grammar rule, it is |
| usually "reduced" and the symbols replaced with the symbol on the |
| left-hand-side. When this reduction occurs, the appropriate action is |
| triggered (if defined). If the input token can't be shifted and the |
| top of stack doesn't match any grammar rules, a syntax error has |
| occurred and the parser must take some kind of recovery step (or bail |
| out). A parse is only successful if the parser reaches a state where |
| the symbol stack is empty and there are no more input tokens. |
| |
| <p> |
| It is important to note that the underlying implementation is built |
| around a large finite-state machine that is encoded in a collection of |
| tables. The construction of these tables is non-trivial and |
| beyond the scope of this discussion. However, subtle details of this |
| process explain why, in the example above, the parser chooses to shift |
| a token onto the stack in step 9 rather than reducing the |
| rule <tt>expr : expr + term</tt>. |
| |
| <H2><a name="ply_nn23"></a>6. Yacc</H2> |
| |
| |
| The <tt>ply.yacc</tt> module implements the parsing component of PLY. |
| The name "yacc" stands for "Yet Another Compiler Compiler" and is |
| borrowed from the Unix tool of the same name. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn24"></a>6.1 An example</H3> |
| |
| |
| Suppose you wanted to make a grammar for simple arithmetic expressions as previously described. Here is |
| how you would do it with <tt>yacc.py</tt>: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| # Yacc example |
| |
| import ply.yacc as yacc |
| |
| # Get the token map from the lexer. This is required. |
| from calclex import tokens |
| |
| def p_expression_plus(p): |
| 'expression : expression PLUS term' |
| p[0] = p[1] + p[3] |
| |
| def p_expression_minus(p): |
| 'expression : expression MINUS term' |
| p[0] = p[1] - p[3] |
| |
| def p_expression_term(p): |
| 'expression : term' |
| p[0] = p[1] |
| |
| def p_term_times(p): |
| 'term : term TIMES factor' |
| p[0] = p[1] * p[3] |
| |
| def p_term_div(p): |
| 'term : term DIVIDE factor' |
| p[0] = p[1] / p[3] |
| |
| def p_term_factor(p): |
| 'term : factor' |
| p[0] = p[1] |
| |
| def p_factor_num(p): |
| 'factor : NUMBER' |
| p[0] = p[1] |
| |
| def p_factor_expr(p): |
| 'factor : LPAREN expression RPAREN' |
| p[0] = p[2] |
| |
| # Error rule for syntax errors |
| def p_error(p): |
| print("Syntax error in input!") |
| |
| # Build the parser |
| parser = yacc.yacc() |
| |
| while True: |
| try: |
| s = raw_input('calc > ') |
| except EOFError: |
| break |
| if not s: continue |
| result = parser.parse(s) |
| print(result) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| In this example, each grammar rule is defined by a Python function |
| where the docstring to that function contains the appropriate |
| context-free grammar specification. The statements that make up the |
| function body implement the semantic actions of the rule. Each function |
| accepts a single argument <tt>p</tt> that is a sequence containing the |
| values of each grammar symbol in the corresponding rule. The values |
| of <tt>p[i]</tt> are mapped to grammar symbols as shown here: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_expression_plus(p): |
| 'expression : expression PLUS term' |
| # ^ ^ ^ ^ |
| # p[0] p[1] p[2] p[3] |
| |
| p[0] = p[1] + p[3] |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| For tokens, the "value" of the corresponding <tt>p[i]</tt> is the |
| <em>same</em> as the <tt>p.value</tt> attribute assigned in the lexer |
| module. For non-terminals, the value is determined by whatever is |
| placed in <tt>p[0]</tt> when rules are reduced. This value can be |
| anything at all. However, it probably most common for the value to be |
| a simple Python type, a tuple, or an instance. In this example, we |
| are relying on the fact that the <tt>NUMBER</tt> token stores an |
| integer value in its value field. All of the other rules simply |
| perform various types of integer operations and propagate the result. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| Note: The use of negative indices have a special meaning in |
| yacc---specially <tt>p[-1]</tt> does not have the same value |
| as <tt>p[3]</tt> in this example. Please see the section on "Embedded |
| Actions" for further details. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| The first rule defined in the yacc specification determines the |
| starting grammar symbol (in this case, a rule for <tt>expression</tt> |
| appears first). Whenever the starting rule is reduced by the parser |
| and no more input is available, parsing stops and the final value is |
| returned (this value will be whatever the top-most rule placed |
| in <tt>p[0]</tt>). Note: an alternative starting symbol can be |
| specified using the <tt>start</tt> keyword argument to |
| <tt>yacc()</tt>. |
| |
| <p>The <tt>p_error(p)</tt> rule is defined to catch syntax errors. |
| See the error handling section below for more detail. |
| |
| <p> |
| To build the parser, call the <tt>yacc.yacc()</tt> function. This |
| function looks at the module and attempts to construct all of the LR |
| parsing tables for the grammar you have specified. The first |
| time <tt>yacc.yacc()</tt> is invoked, you will get a message such as |
| this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| $ python calcparse.py |
| Generating LALR tables |
| calc > |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| Since table construction is relatively expensive (especially for large |
| grammars), the resulting parsing table is written to |
| a file called <tt>parsetab.py</tt>. In addition, a |
| debugging file called <tt>parser.out</tt> is created. On subsequent |
| executions, <tt>yacc</tt> will reload the table from |
| <tt>parsetab.py</tt> unless it has detected a change in the underlying |
| grammar (in which case the tables and <tt>parsetab.py</tt> file are |
| regenerated). Both of these files are written to the same directory |
| as the module in which the parser is specified. |
| The name of the <tt>parsetab</tt> module can be changed using the |
| <tt>tabmodule</tt> keyword argument to <tt>yacc()</tt>. For example: |
| </p> |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| parser = yacc.yacc(tabmodule='fooparsetab') |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| If any errors are detected in your grammar specification, <tt>yacc.py</tt> will produce |
| diagnostic messages and possibly raise an exception. Some of the errors that can be detected include: |
| |
| <ul> |
| <li>Duplicated function names (if more than one rule function have the same name in the grammar file). |
| <li>Shift/reduce and reduce/reduce conflicts generated by ambiguous grammars. |
| <li>Badly specified grammar rules. |
| <li>Infinite recursion (rules that can never terminate). |
| <li>Unused rules and tokens |
| <li>Undefined rules and tokens |
| </ul> |
| |
| The next few sections discuss grammar specification in more detail. |
| |
| <p> |
| The final part of the example shows how to actually run the parser |
| created by |
| <tt>yacc()</tt>. To run the parser, you simply have to call |
| the <tt>parse()</tt> with a string of input text. This will run all |
| of the grammar rules and return the result of the entire parse. This |
| result return is the value assigned to <tt>p[0]</tt> in the starting |
| grammar rule. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn25"></a>6.2 Combining Grammar Rule Functions</H3> |
| |
| |
| When grammar rules are similar, they can be combined into a single function. |
| For example, consider the two rules in our earlier example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_expression_plus(p): |
| 'expression : expression PLUS term' |
| p[0] = p[1] + p[3] |
| |
| def p_expression_minus(t): |
| 'expression : expression MINUS term' |
| p[0] = p[1] - p[3] |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Instead of writing two functions, you might write a single function like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_expression(p): |
| '''expression : expression PLUS term |
| | expression MINUS term''' |
| if p[2] == '+': |
| p[0] = p[1] + p[3] |
| elif p[2] == '-': |
| p[0] = p[1] - p[3] |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| In general, the doc string for any given function can contain multiple grammar rules. So, it would |
| have also been legal (although possibly confusing) to write this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_binary_operators(p): |
| '''expression : expression PLUS term |
| | expression MINUS term |
| term : term TIMES factor |
| | term DIVIDE factor''' |
| if p[2] == '+': |
| p[0] = p[1] + p[3] |
| elif p[2] == '-': |
| p[0] = p[1] - p[3] |
| elif p[2] == '*': |
| p[0] = p[1] * p[3] |
| elif p[2] == '/': |
| p[0] = p[1] / p[3] |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| When combining grammar rules into a single function, it is usually a good idea for all of the rules to have |
| a similar structure (e.g., the same number of terms). Otherwise, the corresponding action code may be more |
| complicated than necessary. However, it is possible to handle simple cases using len(). For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_expressions(p): |
| '''expression : expression MINUS expression |
| | MINUS expression''' |
| if (len(p) == 4): |
| p[0] = p[1] - p[3] |
| elif (len(p) == 3): |
| p[0] = -p[2] |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| If parsing performance is a concern, you should resist the urge to put |
| too much conditional processing into a single grammar rule as shown in |
| these examples. When you add checks to see which grammar rule is |
| being handled, you are actually duplicating the work that the parser |
| has already performed (i.e., the parser already knows exactly what rule it |
| matched). You can eliminate this overhead by using a |
| separate <tt>p_rule()</tt> function for each grammar rule. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn26"></a>6.3 Character Literals</H3> |
| |
| |
| If desired, a grammar may contain tokens defined as single character literals. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_binary_operators(p): |
| '''expression : expression '+' term |
| | expression '-' term |
| term : term '*' factor |
| | term '/' factor''' |
| if p[2] == '+': |
| p[0] = p[1] + p[3] |
| elif p[2] == '-': |
| p[0] = p[1] - p[3] |
| elif p[2] == '*': |
| p[0] = p[1] * p[3] |
| elif p[2] == '/': |
| p[0] = p[1] / p[3] |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| A character literal must be enclosed in quotes such as <tt>'+'</tt>. In addition, if literals are used, they must be declared in the |
| corresponding <tt>lex</tt> file through the use of a special <tt>literals</tt> declaration. |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| # Literals. Should be placed in module given to lex() |
| literals = ['+','-','*','/' ] |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <b>Character literals are limited to a single character</b>. Thus, it is not legal to specify literals such as <tt>'<='</tt> or <tt>'=='</tt>. For this, use |
| the normal lexing rules (e.g., define a rule such as <tt>t_EQ = r'=='</tt>). |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn26b"></a>6.4 Empty Productions</H3> |
| |
| |
| <tt>yacc.py</tt> can handle empty productions by defining a rule like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_empty(p): |
| 'empty :' |
| pass |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Now to use the empty production, simply use 'empty' as a symbol. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_optitem(p): |
| 'optitem : item' |
| ' | empty' |
| ... |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Note: You can write empty rules anywhere by simply specifying an empty |
| right hand side. However, I personally find that writing an "empty" |
| rule and using "empty" to denote an empty production is easier to read |
| and more clearly states your intentions. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn28"></a>6.5 Changing the starting symbol</H3> |
| |
| |
| Normally, the first rule found in a yacc specification defines the starting grammar rule (top level rule). To change this, simply |
| supply a <tt>start</tt> specifier in your file. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| start = 'foo' |
| |
| def p_bar(p): |
| 'bar : A B' |
| |
| # This is the starting rule due to the start specifier above |
| def p_foo(p): |
| 'foo : bar X' |
| ... |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| The use of a <tt>start</tt> specifier may be useful during debugging |
| since you can use it to have yacc build a subset of a larger grammar. |
| For this purpose, it is also possible to specify a starting symbol as |
| an argument to <tt>yacc()</tt>. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| parser = yacc.yacc(start='foo') |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn27"></a>6.6 Dealing With Ambiguous Grammars</H3> |
| |
| |
| The expression grammar given in the earlier example has been written |
| in a special format to eliminate ambiguity. However, in many |
| situations, it is extremely difficult or awkward to write grammars in |
| this format. A much more natural way to express the grammar is in a |
| more compact form like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| expression : expression PLUS expression |
| | expression MINUS expression |
| | expression TIMES expression |
| | expression DIVIDE expression |
| | LPAREN expression RPAREN |
| | NUMBER |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Unfortunately, this grammar specification is ambiguous. For example, |
| if you are parsing the string "3 * 4 + 5", there is no way to tell how |
| the operators are supposed to be grouped. For example, does the |
| expression mean "(3 * 4) + 5" or is it "3 * (4+5)"? |
| |
| <p> |
| When an ambiguous grammar is given to <tt>yacc.py</tt> it will print |
| messages about "shift/reduce conflicts" or "reduce/reduce conflicts". |
| A shift/reduce conflict is caused when the parser generator can't |
| decide whether or not to reduce a rule or shift a symbol on the |
| parsing stack. For example, consider the string "3 * 4 + 5" and the |
| internal parsing stack: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| Step Symbol Stack Input Tokens Action |
| ---- --------------------- --------------------- ------------------------------- |
| 1 $ 3 * 4 + 5$ Shift 3 |
| 2 $ 3 * 4 + 5$ Reduce : expression : NUMBER |
| 3 $ expr * 4 + 5$ Shift * |
| 4 $ expr * 4 + 5$ Shift 4 |
| 5 $ expr * 4 + 5$ Reduce: expression : NUMBER |
| 6 $ expr * expr + 5$ SHIFT/REDUCE CONFLICT ???? |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| In this case, when the parser reaches step 6, it has two options. One |
| is to reduce the rule <tt>expr : expr * expr</tt> on the stack. The |
| other option is to shift the token <tt>+</tt> on the stack. Both |
| options are perfectly legal from the rules of the |
| context-free-grammar. |
| |
| <p> |
| By default, all shift/reduce conflicts are resolved in favor of |
| shifting. Therefore, in the above example, the parser will always |
| shift the <tt>+</tt> instead of reducing. Although this strategy |
| works in many cases (for example, the case of |
| "if-then" versus "if-then-else"), it is not enough for arithmetic expressions. In fact, |
| in the above example, the decision to shift <tt>+</tt> is completely |
| wrong---we should have reduced <tt>expr * expr</tt> since |
| multiplication has higher mathematical precedence than addition. |
| |
| <p>To resolve ambiguity, especially in expression |
| grammars, <tt>yacc.py</tt> allows individual tokens to be assigned a |
| precedence level and associativity. This is done by adding a variable |
| <tt>precedence</tt> to the grammar file like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| precedence = ( |
| ('left', 'PLUS', 'MINUS'), |
| ('left', 'TIMES', 'DIVIDE'), |
| ) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| This declaration specifies that <tt>PLUS</tt>/<tt>MINUS</tt> have the |
| same precedence level and are left-associative and that |
| <tt>TIMES</tt>/<tt>DIVIDE</tt> have the same precedence and are |
| left-associative. Within the <tt>precedence</tt> declaration, tokens |
| are ordered from lowest to highest precedence. Thus, this declaration |
| specifies that <tt>TIMES</tt>/<tt>DIVIDE</tt> have higher precedence |
| than <tt>PLUS</tt>/<tt>MINUS</tt> (since they appear later in the |
| precedence specification). |
| |
| <p> |
| The precedence specification works by associating a numerical |
| precedence level value and associativity direction to the listed |
| tokens. For example, in the above example you get: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| PLUS : level = 1, assoc = 'left' |
| MINUS : level = 1, assoc = 'left' |
| TIMES : level = 2, assoc = 'left' |
| DIVIDE : level = 2, assoc = 'left' |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| These values are then used to attach a numerical precedence value and |
| associativity direction to each grammar rule. <em>This is always |
| determined by looking at the precedence of the right-most terminal |
| symbol.</em> For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| expression : expression PLUS expression # level = 1, left |
| | expression MINUS expression # level = 1, left |
| | expression TIMES expression # level = 2, left |
| | expression DIVIDE expression # level = 2, left |
| | LPAREN expression RPAREN # level = None (not specified) |
| | NUMBER # level = None (not specified) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| When shift/reduce conflicts are encountered, the parser generator resolves the conflict by |
| looking at the precedence rules and associativity specifiers. |
| |
| <p> |
| <ol> |
| <li>If the current token has higher precedence than the rule on the stack, it is shifted. |
| <li>If the grammar rule on the stack has higher precedence, the rule is reduced. |
| <li>If the current token and the grammar rule have the same precedence, the |
| rule is reduced for left associativity, whereas the token is shifted for right associativity. |
| <li>If nothing is known about the precedence, shift/reduce conflicts are resolved in |
| favor of shifting (the default). |
| </ol> |
| |
| For example, if "expression PLUS expression" has been parsed and the |
| next token is "TIMES", the action is going to be a shift because |
| "TIMES" has a higher precedence level than "PLUS". On the other hand, |
| if "expression TIMES expression" has been parsed and the next token is |
| "PLUS", the action is going to be reduce because "PLUS" has a lower |
| precedence than "TIMES." |
| |
| <p> |
| When shift/reduce conflicts are resolved using the first three |
| techniques (with the help of precedence rules), <tt>yacc.py</tt> will |
| report no errors or conflicts in the grammar (although it will print |
| some information in the <tt>parser.out</tt> debugging file). |
| |
| <p> |
| One problem with the precedence specifier technique is that it is |
| sometimes necessary to change the precedence of an operator in certain |
| contexts. For example, consider a unary-minus operator in "3 + 4 * |
| -5". Mathematically, the unary minus is normally given a very high |
| precedence--being evaluated before the multiply. However, in our |
| precedence specifier, MINUS has a lower precedence than TIMES. To |
| deal with this, precedence rules can be given for so-called "fictitious tokens" |
| like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| precedence = ( |
| ('left', 'PLUS', 'MINUS'), |
| ('left', 'TIMES', 'DIVIDE'), |
| ('right', 'UMINUS'), # Unary minus operator |
| ) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Now, in the grammar file, we can write our unary minus rule like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_expr_uminus(p): |
| 'expression : MINUS expression %prec UMINUS' |
| p[0] = -p[2] |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| In this case, <tt>%prec UMINUS</tt> overrides the default rule precedence--setting it to that |
| of UMINUS in the precedence specifier. |
| |
| <p> |
| At first, the use of UMINUS in this example may appear very confusing. |
| UMINUS is not an input token or a grammar rule. Instead, you should |
| think of it as the name of a special marker in the precedence table. When you use the <tt>%prec</tt> qualifier, you're simply |
| telling yacc that you want the precedence of the expression to be the same as for this special marker instead of the usual precedence. |
| |
| <p> |
| It is also possible to specify non-associativity in the <tt>precedence</tt> table. This would |
| be used when you <em>don't</em> want operations to chain together. For example, suppose |
| you wanted to support comparison operators like <tt><</tt> and <tt>></tt> but you didn't want to allow |
| combinations like <tt>a < b < c</tt>. To do this, simply specify a rule like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| precedence = ( |
| ('nonassoc', 'LESSTHAN', 'GREATERTHAN'), # Nonassociative operators |
| ('left', 'PLUS', 'MINUS'), |
| ('left', 'TIMES', 'DIVIDE'), |
| ('right', 'UMINUS'), # Unary minus operator |
| ) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| If you do this, the occurrence of input text such as <tt> a < b < c</tt> will result in a syntax error. However, simple |
| expressions such as <tt>a < b</tt> will still be fine. |
| |
| <p> |
| Reduce/reduce conflicts are caused when there are multiple grammar |
| rules that can be applied to a given set of symbols. This kind of |
| conflict is almost always bad and is always resolved by picking the |
| rule that appears first in the grammar file. Reduce/reduce conflicts |
| are almost always caused when different sets of grammar rules somehow |
| generate the same set of symbols. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| assignment : ID EQUALS NUMBER |
| | ID EQUALS expression |
| |
| expression : expression PLUS expression |
| | expression MINUS expression |
| | expression TIMES expression |
| | expression DIVIDE expression |
| | LPAREN expression RPAREN |
| | NUMBER |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| In this case, a reduce/reduce conflict exists between these two rules: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| assignment : ID EQUALS NUMBER |
| expression : NUMBER |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| For example, if you wrote "a = 5", the parser can't figure out if this |
| is supposed to be reduced as <tt>assignment : ID EQUALS NUMBER</tt> or |
| whether it's supposed to reduce the 5 as an expression and then reduce |
| the rule <tt>assignment : ID EQUALS expression</tt>. |
| |
| <p> |
| It should be noted that reduce/reduce conflicts are notoriously |
| difficult to spot simply looking at the input grammar. When a |
| reduce/reduce conflict occurs, <tt>yacc()</tt> will try to help by |
| printing a warning message such as this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| WARNING: 1 reduce/reduce conflict |
| WARNING: reduce/reduce conflict in state 15 resolved using rule (assignment -> ID EQUALS NUMBER) |
| WARNING: rejected rule (expression -> NUMBER) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| This message identifies the two rules that are in conflict. However, |
| it may not tell you how the parser arrived at such a state. To try |
| and figure it out, you'll probably have to look at your grammar and |
| the contents of the |
| <tt>parser.out</tt> debugging file with an appropriately high level of |
| caffeination. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn28b"></a>6.7 The parser.out file</H3> |
| |
| |
| Tracking down shift/reduce and reduce/reduce conflicts is one of the finer pleasures of using an LR |
| parsing algorithm. To assist in debugging, <tt>yacc.py</tt> creates a debugging file called |
| 'parser.out' when it generates the parsing table. The contents of this file look like the following: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| Unused terminals: |
| |
| |
| Grammar |
| |
| Rule 1 expression -> expression PLUS expression |
| Rule 2 expression -> expression MINUS expression |
| Rule 3 expression -> expression TIMES expression |
| Rule 4 expression -> expression DIVIDE expression |
| Rule 5 expression -> NUMBER |
| Rule 6 expression -> LPAREN expression RPAREN |
| |
| Terminals, with rules where they appear |
| |
| TIMES : 3 |
| error : |
| MINUS : 2 |
| RPAREN : 6 |
| LPAREN : 6 |
| DIVIDE : 4 |
| PLUS : 1 |
| NUMBER : 5 |
| |
| Nonterminals, with rules where they appear |
| |
| expression : 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 6 0 |
| |
| |
| Parsing method: LALR |
| |
| |
| state 0 |
| |
| S' -> . expression |
| expression -> . expression PLUS expression |
| expression -> . expression MINUS expression |
| expression -> . expression TIMES expression |
| expression -> . expression DIVIDE expression |
| expression -> . NUMBER |
| expression -> . LPAREN expression RPAREN |
| |
| NUMBER shift and go to state 3 |
| LPAREN shift and go to state 2 |
| |
| |
| state 1 |
| |
| S' -> expression . |
| expression -> expression . PLUS expression |
| expression -> expression . MINUS expression |
| expression -> expression . TIMES expression |
| expression -> expression . DIVIDE expression |
| |
| PLUS shift and go to state 6 |
| MINUS shift and go to state 5 |
| TIMES shift and go to state 4 |
| DIVIDE shift and go to state 7 |
| |
| |
| state 2 |
| |
| expression -> LPAREN . expression RPAREN |
| expression -> . expression PLUS expression |
| expression -> . expression MINUS expression |
| expression -> . expression TIMES expression |
| expression -> . expression DIVIDE expression |
| expression -> . NUMBER |
| expression -> . LPAREN expression RPAREN |
| |
| NUMBER shift and go to state 3 |
| LPAREN shift and go to state 2 |
| |
| |
| state 3 |
| |
| expression -> NUMBER . |
| |
| $ reduce using rule 5 |
| PLUS reduce using rule 5 |
| MINUS reduce using rule 5 |
| TIMES reduce using rule 5 |
| DIVIDE reduce using rule 5 |
| RPAREN reduce using rule 5 |
| |
| |
| state 4 |
| |
| expression -> expression TIMES . expression |
| expression -> . expression PLUS expression |
| expression -> . expression MINUS expression |
| expression -> . expression TIMES expression |
| expression -> . expression DIVIDE expression |
| expression -> . NUMBER |
| expression -> . LPAREN expression RPAREN |
| |
| NUMBER shift and go to state 3 |
| LPAREN shift and go to state 2 |
| |
| |
| state 5 |
| |
| expression -> expression MINUS . expression |
| expression -> . expression PLUS expression |
| expression -> . expression MINUS expression |
| expression -> . expression TIMES expression |
| expression -> . expression DIVIDE expression |
| expression -> . NUMBER |
| expression -> . LPAREN expression RPAREN |
| |
| NUMBER shift and go to state 3 |
| LPAREN shift and go to state 2 |
| |
| |
| state 6 |
| |
| expression -> expression PLUS . expression |
| expression -> . expression PLUS expression |
| expression -> . expression MINUS expression |
| expression -> . expression TIMES expression |
| expression -> . expression DIVIDE expression |
| expression -> . NUMBER |
| expression -> . LPAREN expression RPAREN |
| |
| NUMBER shift and go to state 3 |
| LPAREN shift and go to state 2 |
| |
| |
| state 7 |
| |
| expression -> expression DIVIDE . expression |
| expression -> . expression PLUS expression |
| expression -> . expression MINUS expression |
| expression -> . expression TIMES expression |
| expression -> . expression DIVIDE expression |
| expression -> . NUMBER |
| expression -> . LPAREN expression RPAREN |
| |
| NUMBER shift and go to state 3 |
| LPAREN shift and go to state 2 |
| |
| |
| state 8 |
| |
| expression -> LPAREN expression . RPAREN |
| expression -> expression . PLUS expression |
| expression -> expression . MINUS expression |
| expression -> expression . TIMES expression |
| expression -> expression . DIVIDE expression |
| |
| RPAREN shift and go to state 13 |
| PLUS shift and go to state 6 |
| MINUS shift and go to state 5 |
| TIMES shift and go to state 4 |
| DIVIDE shift and go to state 7 |
| |
| |
| state 9 |
| |
| expression -> expression TIMES expression . |
| expression -> expression . PLUS expression |
| expression -> expression . MINUS expression |
| expression -> expression . TIMES expression |
| expression -> expression . DIVIDE expression |
| |
| $ reduce using rule 3 |
| PLUS reduce using rule 3 |
| MINUS reduce using rule 3 |
| TIMES reduce using rule 3 |
| DIVIDE reduce using rule 3 |
| RPAREN reduce using rule 3 |
| |
| ! PLUS [ shift and go to state 6 ] |
| ! MINUS [ shift and go to state 5 ] |
| ! TIMES [ shift and go to state 4 ] |
| ! DIVIDE [ shift and go to state 7 ] |
| |
| state 10 |
| |
| expression -> expression MINUS expression . |
| expression -> expression . PLUS expression |
| expression -> expression . MINUS expression |
| expression -> expression . TIMES expression |
| expression -> expression . DIVIDE expression |
| |
| $ reduce using rule 2 |
| PLUS reduce using rule 2 |
| MINUS reduce using rule 2 |
| RPAREN reduce using rule 2 |
| TIMES shift and go to state 4 |
| DIVIDE shift and go to state 7 |
| |
| ! TIMES [ reduce using rule 2 ] |
| ! DIVIDE [ reduce using rule 2 ] |
| ! PLUS [ shift and go to state 6 ] |
| ! MINUS [ shift and go to state 5 ] |
| |
| state 11 |
| |
| expression -> expression PLUS expression . |
| expression -> expression . PLUS expression |
| expression -> expression . MINUS expression |
| expression -> expression . TIMES expression |
| expression -> expression . DIVIDE expression |
| |
| $ reduce using rule 1 |
| PLUS reduce using rule 1 |
| MINUS reduce using rule 1 |
| RPAREN reduce using rule 1 |
| TIMES shift and go to state 4 |
| DIVIDE shift and go to state 7 |
| |
| ! TIMES [ reduce using rule 1 ] |
| ! DIVIDE [ reduce using rule 1 ] |
| ! PLUS [ shift and go to state 6 ] |
| ! MINUS [ shift and go to state 5 ] |
| |
| state 12 |
| |
| expression -> expression DIVIDE expression . |
| expression -> expression . PLUS expression |
| expression -> expression . MINUS expression |
| expression -> expression . TIMES expression |
| expression -> expression . DIVIDE expression |
| |
| $ reduce using rule 4 |
| PLUS reduce using rule 4 |
| MINUS reduce using rule 4 |
| TIMES reduce using rule 4 |
| DIVIDE reduce using rule 4 |
| RPAREN reduce using rule 4 |
| |
| ! PLUS [ shift and go to state 6 ] |
| ! MINUS [ shift and go to state 5 ] |
| ! TIMES [ shift and go to state 4 ] |
| ! DIVIDE [ shift and go to state 7 ] |
| |
| state 13 |
| |
| expression -> LPAREN expression RPAREN . |
| |
| $ reduce using rule 6 |
| PLUS reduce using rule 6 |
| MINUS reduce using rule 6 |
| TIMES reduce using rule 6 |
| DIVIDE reduce using rule 6 |
| RPAREN reduce using rule 6 |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| The different states that appear in this file are a representation of |
| every possible sequence of valid input tokens allowed by the grammar. |
| When receiving input tokens, the parser is building up a stack and |
| looking for matching rules. Each state keeps track of the grammar |
| rules that might be in the process of being matched at that point. Within each |
| rule, the "." character indicates the current location of the parse |
| within that rule. In addition, the actions for each valid input token |
| are listed. When a shift/reduce or reduce/reduce conflict arises, |
| rules <em>not</em> selected are prefixed with an !. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| ! TIMES [ reduce using rule 2 ] |
| ! DIVIDE [ reduce using rule 2 ] |
| ! PLUS [ shift and go to state 6 ] |
| ! MINUS [ shift and go to state 5 ] |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| By looking at these rules (and with a little practice), you can usually track down the source |
| of most parsing conflicts. It should also be stressed that not all shift-reduce conflicts are |
| bad. However, the only way to be sure that they are resolved correctly is to look at <tt>parser.out</tt>. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn29"></a>6.8 Syntax Error Handling</H3> |
| |
| |
| If you are creating a parser for production use, the handling of |
| syntax errors is important. As a general rule, you don't want a |
| parser to simply throw up its hands and stop at the first sign of |
| trouble. Instead, you want it to report the error, recover if possible, and |
| continue parsing so that all of the errors in the input get reported |
| to the user at once. This is the standard behavior found in compilers |
| for languages such as C, C++, and Java. |
| |
| In PLY, when a syntax error occurs during parsing, the error is immediately |
| detected (i.e., the parser does not read any more tokens beyond the |
| source of the error). However, at this point, the parser enters a |
| recovery mode that can be used to try and continue further parsing. |
| As a general rule, error recovery in LR parsers is a delicate |
| topic that involves ancient rituals and black-magic. The recovery mechanism |
| provided by <tt>yacc.py</tt> is comparable to Unix yacc so you may want |
| consult a book like O'Reilly's "Lex and Yacc" for some of the finer details. |
| |
| <p> |
| When a syntax error occurs, <tt>yacc.py</tt> performs the following steps: |
| |
| <ol> |
| <li>On the first occurrence of an error, the user-defined <tt>p_error()</tt> function |
| is called with the offending token as an argument. However, if the syntax error is due to |
| reaching the end-of-file, <tt>p_error()</tt> is called with an |
| argument of <tt>None</tt>. |
| Afterwards, the parser enters |
| an "error-recovery" mode in which it will not make future calls to <tt>p_error()</tt> until it |
| has successfully shifted at least 3 tokens onto the parsing stack. |
| |
| <p> |
| <li>If no recovery action is taken in <tt>p_error()</tt>, the offending lookahead token is replaced |
| with a special <tt>error</tt> token. |
| |
| <p> |
| <li>If the offending lookahead token is already set to <tt>error</tt>, the top item of the parsing stack is |
| deleted. |
| |
| <p> |
| <li>If the entire parsing stack is unwound, the parser enters a restart state and attempts to start |
| parsing from its initial state. |
| |
| <p> |
| <li>If a grammar rule accepts <tt>error</tt> as a token, it will be |
| shifted onto the parsing stack. |
| |
| <p> |
| <li>If the top item of the parsing stack is <tt>error</tt>, lookahead tokens will be discarded until the |
| parser can successfully shift a new symbol or reduce a rule involving <tt>error</tt>. |
| </ol> |
| |
| <H4><a name="ply_nn30"></a>6.8.1 Recovery and resynchronization with error rules</H4> |
| |
| |
| The most well-behaved approach for handling syntax errors is to write grammar rules that include the <tt>error</tt> |
| token. For example, suppose your language had a grammar rule for a print statement like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_statement_print(p): |
| 'statement : PRINT expr SEMI' |
| ... |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| To account for the possibility of a bad expression, you might write an additional grammar rule like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_statement_print_error(p): |
| 'statement : PRINT error SEMI' |
| print("Syntax error in print statement. Bad expression") |
| |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| In this case, the <tt>error</tt> token will match any sequence of |
| tokens that might appear up to the first semicolon that is |
| encountered. Once the semicolon is reached, the rule will be |
| invoked and the <tt>error</tt> token will go away. |
| |
| <p> |
| This type of recovery is sometimes known as parser resynchronization. |
| The <tt>error</tt> token acts as a wildcard for any bad input text and |
| the token immediately following <tt>error</tt> acts as a |
| synchronization token. |
| |
| <p> |
| It is important to note that the <tt>error</tt> token usually does not appear as the last token |
| on the right in an error rule. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_statement_print_error(p): |
| 'statement : PRINT error' |
| print("Syntax error in print statement. Bad expression") |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| This is because the first bad token encountered will cause the rule to |
| be reduced--which may make it difficult to recover if more bad tokens |
| immediately follow. |
| |
| <H4><a name="ply_nn31"></a>6.8.2 Panic mode recovery</H4> |
| |
| |
| An alternative error recovery scheme is to enter a panic mode recovery in which tokens are |
| discarded to a point where the parser might be able to recover in some sensible manner. |
| |
| <p> |
| Panic mode recovery is implemented entirely in the <tt>p_error()</tt> function. For example, this |
| function starts discarding tokens until it reaches a closing '}'. Then, it restarts the |
| parser in its initial state. |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_error(p): |
| print("Whoa. You are seriously hosed.") |
| if not p: |
| print("End of File!") |
| return |
| |
| # Read ahead looking for a closing '}' |
| while True: |
| tok = parser.token() # Get the next token |
| if not tok or tok.type == 'RBRACE': |
| break |
| parser.restart() |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| This function simply discards the bad token and tells the parser that the error was ok. |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_error(p): |
| if p: |
| print("Syntax error at token", p.type) |
| # Just discard the token and tell the parser it's okay. |
| parser.errok() |
| else: |
| print("Syntax error at EOF") |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <P> |
| More information on these methods is as follows: |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><tt>parser.errok()</tt>. This resets the parser state so it doesn't think it's in error-recovery |
| mode. This will prevent an <tt>error</tt> token from being generated and will reset the internal |
| error counters so that the next syntax error will call <tt>p_error()</tt> again. |
| |
| <p> |
| <li><tt>parser.token()</tt>. This returns the next token on the input stream. |
| |
| <p> |
| <li><tt>parser.restart()</tt>. This discards the entire parsing stack and resets the parser |
| to its initial state. |
| </ul> |
| |
| <p> |
| To supply the next lookahead token to the parser, <tt>p_error()</tt> can return a token. This might be |
| useful if trying to synchronize on special characters. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_error(p): |
| # Read ahead looking for a terminating ";" |
| while True: |
| tok = parser.token() # Get the next token |
| if not tok or tok.type == 'SEMI': break |
| parser.errok() |
| |
| # Return SEMI to the parser as the next lookahead token |
| return tok |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| Keep in mind in that the above error handling functions, |
| <tt>parser</tt> is an instance of the parser created by |
| <tt>yacc()</tt>. You'll need to save this instance someplace in your |
| code so that you can refer to it during error handling. |
| </p> |
| |
| <H4><a name="ply_nn35"></a>6.8.3 Signalling an error from a production</H4> |
| |
| |
| If necessary, a production rule can manually force the parser to enter error recovery. This |
| is done by raising the <tt>SyntaxError</tt> exception like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_production(p): |
| 'production : some production ...' |
| raise SyntaxError |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| The effect of raising <tt>SyntaxError</tt> is the same as if the last symbol shifted onto the |
| parsing stack was actually a syntax error. Thus, when you do this, the last symbol shifted is popped off |
| of the parsing stack and the current lookahead token is set to an <tt>error</tt> token. The parser |
| then enters error-recovery mode where it tries to reduce rules that can accept <tt>error</tt> tokens. |
| The steps that follow from this point are exactly the same as if a syntax error were detected and |
| <tt>p_error()</tt> were called. |
| |
| <P> |
| One important aspect of manually setting an error is that the <tt>p_error()</tt> function will <b>NOT</b> be |
| called in this case. If you need to issue an error message, make sure you do it in the production that |
| raises <tt>SyntaxError</tt>. |
| |
| <P> |
| Note: This feature of PLY is meant to mimic the behavior of the YYERROR macro in yacc. |
| |
| <H4><a name="ply_nn38"></a>6.8.4 When Do Syntax Errors Get Reported</H4> |
| |
| |
| <p> |
| In most cases, yacc will handle errors as soon as a bad input token is |
| detected on the input. However, be aware that yacc may choose to |
| delay error handling until after it has reduced one or more grammar |
| rules first. This behavior might be unexpected, but it's related to |
| special states in the underlying parsing table known as "defaulted |
| states." A defaulted state is parsing condition where the same |
| grammar rule will be reduced regardless of what <em>valid</em> token |
| comes next on the input. For such states, yacc chooses to go ahead |
| and reduce the grammar rule <em>without reading the next input |
| token</em>. If the next token is bad, yacc will eventually get around to reading it and |
| report a syntax error. It's just a little unusual in that you might |
| see some of your grammar rules firing immediately prior to the syntax |
| error. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| Usually, the delayed error reporting with defaulted states is harmless |
| (and there are other reasons for wanting PLY to behave in this way). |
| However, if you need to turn this behavior off for some reason. You |
| can clear the defaulted states table like this: |
| </p> |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| parser = yacc.yacc() |
| parser.defaulted_states = {} |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| Disabling defaulted states is not recommended if your grammar makes use |
| of embedded actions as described in Section 6.11.</p> |
| |
| <H4><a name="ply_nn32"></a>6.8.5 General comments on error handling</H4> |
| |
| |
| For normal types of languages, error recovery with error rules and resynchronization characters is probably the most reliable |
| technique. This is because you can instrument the grammar to catch errors at selected places where it is relatively easy |
| to recover and continue parsing. Panic mode recovery is really only useful in certain specialized applications where you might want |
| to discard huge portions of the input text to find a valid restart point. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn33"></a>6.9 Line Number and Position Tracking</H3> |
| |
| |
| Position tracking is often a tricky problem when writing compilers. |
| By default, PLY tracks the line number and position of all tokens. |
| This information is available using the following functions: |
| |
| <ul> |
| <li><tt>p.lineno(num)</tt>. Return the line number for symbol <em>num</em> |
| <li><tt>p.lexpos(num)</tt>. Return the lexing position for symbol <em>num</em> |
| </ul> |
| |
| For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_expression(p): |
| 'expression : expression PLUS expression' |
| line = p.lineno(2) # line number of the PLUS token |
| index = p.lexpos(2) # Position of the PLUS token |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| As an optional feature, <tt>yacc.py</tt> can automatically track line |
| numbers and positions for all of the grammar symbols as well. |
| However, this extra tracking requires extra processing and can |
| significantly slow down parsing. Therefore, it must be enabled by |
| passing the |
| <tt>tracking=True</tt> option to <tt>yacc.parse()</tt>. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| yacc.parse(data,tracking=True) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Once enabled, the <tt>lineno()</tt> and <tt>lexpos()</tt> methods work |
| for all grammar symbols. In addition, two additional methods can be |
| used: |
| |
| <ul> |
| <li><tt>p.linespan(num)</tt>. Return a tuple (startline,endline) with the starting and ending line number for symbol <em>num</em>. |
| <li><tt>p.lexspan(num)</tt>. Return a tuple (start,end) with the starting and ending positions for symbol <em>num</em>. |
| </ul> |
| |
| For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_expression(p): |
| 'expression : expression PLUS expression' |
| p.lineno(1) # Line number of the left expression |
| p.lineno(2) # line number of the PLUS operator |
| p.lineno(3) # line number of the right expression |
| ... |
| start,end = p.linespan(3) # Start,end lines of the right expression |
| starti,endi = p.lexspan(3) # Start,end positions of right expression |
| |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Note: The <tt>lexspan()</tt> function only returns the range of values up to the start of the last grammar symbol. |
| |
| <p> |
| Although it may be convenient for PLY to track position information on |
| all grammar symbols, this is often unnecessary. For example, if you |
| are merely using line number information in an error message, you can |
| often just key off of a specific token in the grammar rule. For |
| example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_bad_func(p): |
| 'funccall : fname LPAREN error RPAREN' |
| # Line number reported from LPAREN token |
| print("Bad function call at line", p.lineno(2)) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| Similarly, you may get better parsing performance if you only |
| selectively propagate line number information where it's needed using |
| the <tt>p.set_lineno()</tt> method. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_fname(p): |
| 'fname : ID' |
| p[0] = p[1] |
| p.set_lineno(0,p.lineno(1)) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| PLY doesn't retain line number information from rules that have already been |
| parsed. If you are building an abstract syntax tree and need to have line numbers, |
| you should make sure that the line numbers appear in the tree itself. |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn34"></a>6.10 AST Construction</H3> |
| |
| |
| <tt>yacc.py</tt> provides no special functions for constructing an |
| abstract syntax tree. However, such construction is easy enough to do |
| on your own. |
| |
| <p>A minimal way to construct a tree is to simply create and |
| propagate a tuple or list in each grammar rule function. There |
| are many possible ways to do this, but one example would be something |
| like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_expression_binop(p): |
| '''expression : expression PLUS expression |
| | expression MINUS expression |
| | expression TIMES expression |
| | expression DIVIDE expression''' |
| |
| p[0] = ('binary-expression',p[2],p[1],p[3]) |
| |
| def p_expression_group(p): |
| 'expression : LPAREN expression RPAREN' |
| p[0] = ('group-expression',p[2]) |
| |
| def p_expression_number(p): |
| 'expression : NUMBER' |
| p[0] = ('number-expression',p[1]) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| Another approach is to create a set of data structure for different |
| kinds of abstract syntax tree nodes and assign nodes to <tt>p[0]</tt> |
| in each rule. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| class Expr: pass |
| |
| class BinOp(Expr): |
| def __init__(self,left,op,right): |
| self.type = "binop" |
| self.left = left |
| self.right = right |
| self.op = op |
| |
| class Number(Expr): |
| def __init__(self,value): |
| self.type = "number" |
| self.value = value |
| |
| def p_expression_binop(p): |
| '''expression : expression PLUS expression |
| | expression MINUS expression |
| | expression TIMES expression |
| | expression DIVIDE expression''' |
| |
| p[0] = BinOp(p[1],p[2],p[3]) |
| |
| def p_expression_group(p): |
| 'expression : LPAREN expression RPAREN' |
| p[0] = p[2] |
| |
| def p_expression_number(p): |
| 'expression : NUMBER' |
| p[0] = Number(p[1]) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| The advantage to this approach is that it may make it easier to attach more complicated |
| semantics, type checking, code generation, and other features to the node classes. |
| |
| <p> |
| To simplify tree traversal, it may make sense to pick a very generic |
| tree structure for your parse tree nodes. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| class Node: |
| def __init__(self,type,children=None,leaf=None): |
| self.type = type |
| if children: |
| self.children = children |
| else: |
| self.children = [ ] |
| self.leaf = leaf |
| |
| def p_expression_binop(p): |
| '''expression : expression PLUS expression |
| | expression MINUS expression |
| | expression TIMES expression |
| | expression DIVIDE expression''' |
| |
| p[0] = Node("binop", [p[1],p[3]], p[2]) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn35b"></a>6.11 Embedded Actions</H3> |
| |
| |
| The parsing technique used by yacc only allows actions to be executed at the end of a rule. For example, |
| suppose you have a rule like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_foo(p): |
| "foo : A B C D" |
| print("Parsed a foo", p[1],p[2],p[3],p[4]) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| In this case, the supplied action code only executes after all of the |
| symbols <tt>A</tt>, <tt>B</tt>, <tt>C</tt>, and <tt>D</tt> have been |
| parsed. Sometimes, however, it is useful to execute small code |
| fragments during intermediate stages of parsing. For example, suppose |
| you wanted to perform some action immediately after <tt>A</tt> has |
| been parsed. To do this, write an empty rule like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_foo(p): |
| "foo : A seen_A B C D" |
| print("Parsed a foo", p[1],p[3],p[4],p[5]) |
| print("seen_A returned", p[2]) |
| |
| def p_seen_A(p): |
| "seen_A :" |
| print("Saw an A = ", p[-1]) # Access grammar symbol to left |
| p[0] = some_value # Assign value to seen_A |
| |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| In this example, the empty <tt>seen_A</tt> rule executes immediately |
| after <tt>A</tt> is shifted onto the parsing stack. Within this |
| rule, <tt>p[-1]</tt> refers to the symbol on the stack that appears |
| immediately to the left of the <tt>seen_A</tt> symbol. In this case, |
| it would be the value of <tt>A</tt> in the <tt>foo</tt> rule |
| immediately above. Like other rules, a value can be returned from an |
| embedded action by simply assigning it to <tt>p[0]</tt> |
| |
| <p> |
| The use of embedded actions can sometimes introduce extra shift/reduce conflicts. For example, |
| this grammar has no conflicts: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_foo(p): |
| """foo : abcd |
| | abcx""" |
| |
| def p_abcd(p): |
| "abcd : A B C D" |
| |
| def p_abcx(p): |
| "abcx : A B C X" |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| However, if you insert an embedded action into one of the rules like this, |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_foo(p): |
| """foo : abcd |
| | abcx""" |
| |
| def p_abcd(p): |
| "abcd : A B C D" |
| |
| def p_abcx(p): |
| "abcx : A B seen_AB C X" |
| |
| def p_seen_AB(p): |
| "seen_AB :" |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| an extra shift-reduce conflict will be introduced. This conflict is |
| caused by the fact that the same symbol <tt>C</tt> appears next in |
| both the <tt>abcd</tt> and <tt>abcx</tt> rules. The parser can either |
| shift the symbol (<tt>abcd</tt> rule) or reduce the empty |
| rule <tt>seen_AB</tt> (<tt>abcx</tt> rule). |
| |
| <p> |
| A common use of embedded rules is to control other aspects of parsing |
| such as scoping of local variables. For example, if you were parsing C code, you might |
| write code like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_statements_block(p): |
| "statements: LBRACE new_scope statements RBRACE""" |
| # Action code |
| ... |
| pop_scope() # Return to previous scope |
| |
| def p_new_scope(p): |
| "new_scope :" |
| # Create a new scope for local variables |
| s = new_scope() |
| push_scope(s) |
| ... |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| In this case, the embedded action <tt>new_scope</tt> executes |
| immediately after a <tt>LBRACE</tt> (<tt>{</tt>) symbol is parsed. |
| This might adjust internal symbol tables and other aspects of the |
| parser. Upon completion of the rule <tt>statements_block</tt>, code |
| might undo the operations performed in the embedded action |
| (e.g., <tt>pop_scope()</tt>). |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn36"></a>6.12 Miscellaneous Yacc Notes</H3> |
| |
| |
| <ul> |
| |
| <li>By default, <tt>yacc.py</tt> relies on <tt>lex.py</tt> for tokenizing. However, an alternative tokenizer |
| can be supplied as follows: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| parser = yacc.parse(lexer=x) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| in this case, <tt>x</tt> must be a Lexer object that minimally has a <tt>x.token()</tt> method for retrieving the next |
| token. If an input string is given to <tt>yacc.parse()</tt>, the lexer must also have an <tt>x.input()</tt> method. |
| |
| <p> |
| <li>By default, the yacc generates tables in debugging mode (which produces the parser.out file and other output). |
| To disable this, use |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| parser = yacc.yacc(debug=False) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| <li>To change the name of the <tt>parsetab.py</tt> file, use: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| parser = yacc.yacc(tabmodule="foo") |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <P> |
| Normally, the <tt>parsetab.py</tt> file is placed into the same directory as |
| the module where the parser is defined. If you want it to go somewhere else, you can |
| given an absolute package name for <tt>tabmodule</tt> instead. In that case, the |
| tables will be written there. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| <li>To change the directory in which the <tt>parsetab.py</tt> file (and other output files) are written, use: |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| parser = yacc.yacc(tabmodule="foo",outputdir="somedirectory") |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| Note: Be aware that unless the directory specified is also on Python's path (<tt>sys.path</tt>), subsequent |
| imports of the table file will fail. As a general rule, it's better to specify a destination using the |
| <tt>tabmodule</tt> argument instead of directly specifying a directory using the <tt>outputdir</tt> argument. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| <li>To prevent yacc from generating any kind of parser table file, use: |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| parser = yacc.yacc(write_tables=False) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Note: If you disable table generation, yacc() will regenerate the parsing tables |
| each time it runs (which may take awhile depending on how large your grammar is). |
| |
| <P> |
| <li>To print copious amounts of debugging during parsing, use: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| parser.parse(input_text, debug=True) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| <li>Since the generation of the LALR tables is relatively expensive, previously generated tables are |
| cached and reused if possible. The decision to regenerate the tables is determined by taking an MD5 |
| checksum of all grammar rules and precedence rules. Only in the event of a mismatch are the tables regenerated. |
| |
| <p> |
| It should be noted that table generation is reasonably efficient, even for grammars that involve around a 100 rules |
| and several hundred states. </li> |
| |
| |
| <p> |
| <li>Since LR parsing is driven by tables, the performance of the parser is largely independent of the |
| size of the grammar. The biggest bottlenecks will be the lexer and the complexity of the code in your grammar rules. |
| </li> |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| <li><tt>yacc()</tt> also allows parsers to be defined as classes and as closures (see the section on alternative specification of |
| lexers). However, be aware that only one parser may be defined in a single module (source file). There are various |
| error checks and validation steps that may issue confusing error messages if you try to define multiple parsers |
| in the same source file. |
| </li> |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| <li>Decorators of production rules have to update the wrapped function's line number. <tt>wrapper.co_firstlineno = func.__code__.co_firstlineno</tt>: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| from functools import wraps |
| from nodes import Collection |
| |
| |
| def strict(*types): |
| def decorate(func): |
| @wraps(func) |
| def wrapper(p): |
| func(p) |
| if not isinstance(p[0], types): |
| raise TypeError |
| |
| wrapper.co_firstlineno = func.__code__.co_firstlineno |
| return wrapper |
| |
| return decorate |
| |
| @strict(Collection) |
| def p_collection(p): |
| """ |
| collection : sequence |
| | map |
| """ |
| p[0] = p[1] |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| </li> |
| </p> |
| |
| |
| </ul> |
| </p> |
| |
| |
| <H2><a name="ply_nn37"></a>7. Multiple Parsers and Lexers</H2> |
| |
| |
| In advanced parsing applications, you may want to have multiple |
| parsers and lexers. |
| |
| <p> |
| As a general rules this isn't a problem. However, to make it work, |
| you need to carefully make sure everything gets hooked up correctly. |
| First, make sure you save the objects returned by <tt>lex()</tt> and |
| <tt>yacc()</tt>. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| lexer = lex.lex() # Return lexer object |
| parser = yacc.yacc() # Return parser object |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Next, when parsing, make sure you give the <tt>parse()</tt> function a reference to the lexer it |
| should be using. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| parser.parse(text,lexer=lexer) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| If you forget to do this, the parser will use the last lexer |
| created--which is not always what you want. |
| |
| <p> |
| Within lexer and parser rule functions, these objects are also |
| available. In the lexer, the "lexer" attribute of a token refers to |
| the lexer object that triggered the rule. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def t_NUMBER(t): |
| r'\d+' |
| ... |
| print(t.lexer) # Show lexer object |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| In the parser, the "lexer" and "parser" attributes refer to the lexer |
| and parser objects respectively. |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| def p_expr_plus(p): |
| 'expr : expr PLUS expr' |
| ... |
| print(p.parser) # Show parser object |
| print(p.lexer) # Show lexer object |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| If necessary, arbitrary attributes can be attached to the lexer or parser object. |
| For example, if you wanted to have different parsing modes, you could attach a mode |
| attribute to the parser object and look at it later. |
| |
| <H2><a name="ply_nn38b"></a>8. Using Python's Optimized Mode</H2> |
| |
| |
| Because PLY uses information from doc-strings, parsing and lexing |
| information must be gathered while running the Python interpreter in |
| normal mode (i.e., not with the -O or -OO options). However, if you |
| specify optimized mode like this: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| lex.lex(optimize=1) |
| yacc.yacc(optimize=1) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| then PLY can later be used when Python runs in optimized mode. To make this work, |
| make sure you first run Python in normal mode. Once the lexing and parsing tables |
| have been generated the first time, run Python in optimized mode. PLY will use |
| the tables without the need for doc strings. |
| |
| <p> |
| Beware: running PLY in optimized mode disables a lot of error |
| checking. You should only do this when your project has stabilized |
| and you don't need to do any debugging. One of the purposes of |
| optimized mode is to substantially decrease the startup time of |
| your compiler (by assuming that everything is already properly |
| specified and works). |
| |
| <H2><a name="ply_nn44"></a>9. Advanced Debugging</H2> |
| |
| |
| <p> |
| Debugging a compiler is typically not an easy task. PLY provides some |
| advanced diagostic capabilities through the use of Python's |
| <tt>logging</tt> module. The next two sections describe this: |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn45"></a>9.1 Debugging the lex() and yacc() commands</H3> |
| |
| |
| <p> |
| Both the <tt>lex()</tt> and <tt>yacc()</tt> commands have a debugging |
| mode that can be enabled using the <tt>debug</tt> flag. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| lex.lex(debug=True) |
| yacc.yacc(debug=True) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| Normally, the output produced by debugging is routed to either |
| standard error or, in the case of <tt>yacc()</tt>, to a file |
| <tt>parser.out</tt>. This output can be more carefully controlled |
| by supplying a logging object. Here is an example that adds |
| information about where different debugging messages are coming from: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| # Set up a logging object |
| import logging |
| logging.basicConfig( |
| level = logging.DEBUG, |
| filename = "parselog.txt", |
| filemode = "w", |
| format = "%(filename)10s:%(lineno)4d:%(message)s" |
| ) |
| log = logging.getLogger() |
| |
| lex.lex(debug=True,debuglog=log) |
| yacc.yacc(debug=True,debuglog=log) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| If you supply a custom logger, the amount of debugging |
| information produced can be controlled by setting the logging level. |
| Typically, debugging messages are either issued at the <tt>DEBUG</tt>, |
| <tt>INFO</tt>, or <tt>WARNING</tt> levels. |
| |
| <p> |
| PLY's error messages and warnings are also produced using the logging |
| interface. This can be controlled by passing a logging object |
| using the <tt>errorlog</tt> parameter. |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| lex.lex(errorlog=log) |
| yacc.yacc(errorlog=log) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| If you want to completely silence warnings, you can either pass in a |
| logging object with an appropriate filter level or use the <tt>NullLogger</tt> |
| object defined in either <tt>lex</tt> or <tt>yacc</tt>. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| yacc.yacc(errorlog=yacc.NullLogger()) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <H3><a name="ply_nn46"></a>9.2 Run-time Debugging</H3> |
| |
| |
| <p> |
| To enable run-time debugging of a parser, use the <tt>debug</tt> option to parse. This |
| option can either be an integer (which simply turns debugging on or off) or an instance |
| of a logger object. For example: |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| log = logging.getLogger() |
| parser.parse(input,debug=log) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| If a logging object is passed, you can use its filtering level to control how much |
| output gets generated. The <tt>INFO</tt> level is used to produce information |
| about rule reductions. The <tt>DEBUG</tt> level will show information about the |
| parsing stack, token shifts, and other details. The <tt>ERROR</tt> level shows information |
| related to parsing errors. |
| |
| <p> |
| For very complicated problems, you should pass in a logging object that |
| redirects to a file where you can more easily inspect the output after |
| execution. |
| |
| <H2><a name="ply_nn49"></a>10. Packaging Advice</H2> |
| |
| |
| <p> |
| If you are distributing a package that makes use of PLY, you should |
| spend a few moments thinking about how you want to handle the files |
| that are automatically generated. For example, the <tt>parsetab.py</tt> |
| file generated by the <tt>yacc()</tt> function.</p> |
| |
| <p> |
| Starting in PLY-3.6, the table files are created in the same directory |
| as the file where a parser is defined. This means that the |
| <tt>parsetab.py</tt> file will live side-by-side with your parser |
| specification. In terms of packaging, this is probably the easiest and |
| most sane approach to manage. You don't need to give <tt>yacc()</tt> |
| any extra arguments and it should just "work."</p> |
| |
| <p> |
| One concern is the management of the <tt>parsetab.py</tt> file itself. |
| For example, should you have this file checked into version control (e.g., GitHub), |
| should it be included in a package distribution as a normal file, or should you |
| just let PLY generate it automatically for the user when they install your package? |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| As of PLY-3.6, the <tt>parsetab.py</tt> file should be compatible across all versions |
| of Python including Python 2 and 3. Thus, a table file generated in Python 2 should |
| work fine if it's used on Python 3. Because of this, it should be relatively harmless |
| to distribute the <tt>parsetab.py</tt> file yourself if you need to. However, be aware |
| that older/newer versions of PLY may try to regenerate the file if there are future |
| enhancements or changes to its format. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| To make the generation of table files easier for the purposes of installation, you might |
| way to make your parser files executable using the <tt>-m</tt> option or similar. For |
| example: |
| </p> |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| # calc.py |
| ... |
| ... |
| def make_parser(): |
| parser = yacc.yacc() |
| return parser |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| make_parser() |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <p> |
| You can then use a command such as <tt>python -m calc.py</tt> to generate the tables. Alternatively, |
| a <tt>setup.py</tt> script, can import the module and use <tt>make_parser()</tt> to create the |
| parsing tables. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| If you're willing to sacrifice a little startup time, you can also instruct PLY to never write the |
| tables using <tt>yacc.yacc(write_tables=False, debug=False)</tt>. In this mode, PLY will regenerate |
| the parsing tables from scratch each time. For a small grammar, you probably won't notice. For a |
| large grammar, you should probably reconsider--the parsing tables are meant to dramatically speed up this process. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| During operation, is is normal for PLY to produce diagnostic error |
| messages (usually printed to standard error). These are generated |
| entirely using the <tt>logging</tt> module. If you want to redirect |
| these messages or silence them, you can provide your own logging |
| object to <tt>yacc()</tt>. For example: |
| </p> |
| |
| <blockquote> |
| <pre> |
| import logging |
| log = logging.getLogger('ply') |
| ... |
| parser = yacc.yacc(errorlog=log) |
| </pre> |
| </blockquote> |
| |
| <H2><a name="ply_nn39"></a>11. Where to go from here?</H2> |
| |
| |
| The <tt>examples</tt> directory of the PLY distribution contains several simple examples. Please consult a |
| compilers textbook for the theory and underlying implementation details or LR parsing. |
| |
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