module Racc
Racc
is an LALR(1) parser generator. It is written in Ruby itself, and generates Ruby programs.
Command-line Reference¶ ↑
racc [-o<var>filename</var>] [--output-file=<var>filename</var>] [-e<var>rubypath</var>] [--executable=<var>rubypath</var>] [-v] [--verbose] [-O<var>filename</var>] [--log-file=<var>filename</var>] [-g] [--debug] [-E] [--embedded] [-l] [--no-line-convert] [-c] [--line-convert-all] [-a] [--no-omit-actions] [-C] [--check-only] [-S] [--output-status] [--version] [--copyright] [--help] <var>grammarfile</var>
grammarfile
-
Racc
grammar file. Any extension is permitted. - -o+outfile+, –output-file=
outfile
-
A filename for output. default is <
filename
>.tab.rb - -O+filename+, –log-file=
filename
-
Place logging output in file
filename
. Default log file name is <filename
>.output. - -e+rubypath+, –executable=
rubypath
-
output executable file(mode 755). where
path
is the Ruby interpreter. - -v, –verbose
-
verbose mode. create
filename
.output file, like yacc’s y.output file. - -g, –debug
-
add debug code to parser class. To display debugging information, use this ‘-g’ option and set @yydebug true in parser class.
- -E, –embedded
-
Output parser which doesn’t need runtime files (racc/parser.rb).
- -F, –frozen
-
Output parser which declares frozen_string_literals: true
- -C, –check-only
-
Check syntax of racc grammar file and quit.
- -S, –output-status
-
Print messages time to time while compiling.
- -l, –no-line-convert
-
turns off line number converting.
- -c, –line-convert-all
-
Convert line number of actions, inner, header and footer.
- -a, –no-omit-actions
-
Call all actions, even if an action is empty.
- –version
-
print
Racc
version and quit. - –copyright
-
Print copyright and quit.
- –help
-
Print usage and quit.
Generating Parser
Using Racc
¶ ↑
To compile Racc
grammar file, simply type:
$ racc parse.y
This creates Ruby script file “parse.tab.y”. The -o option can change the output filename.
Writing A Racc
Grammar File¶ ↑
If you want your own parser, you have to write a grammar file. A grammar file contains the name of your parser class, grammar for the parser, user code, and anything else. When writing a grammar file, yacc’s knowledge is helpful. If you have not used yacc before, Racc
is not too difficult.
Here’s an example Racc
grammar file.
class Calcparser rule target: exp { print val[0] } exp: exp '+' exp | exp '*' exp | '(' exp ')' | NUMBER end
Racc
grammar files resemble yacc files. But (of course), this is Ruby code. yacc’s $$ is the ‘result’, $0, $1… is an array called ‘val’, and $-1, $-2… is an array called ‘_values’.
See the Grammar File Reference for more information on grammar files.
Parser
¶ ↑
Then you must prepare the parse entry method. There are two types of parse methods in Racc
, Racc::Parser#do_parse and Racc::Parser#yyparse
Racc::Parser#do_parse is simple.
It’s yyparse() of yacc, and Racc::Parser#next_token
is yylex(). This method must returns an array like [TOKENSYMBOL, ITS_VALUE]. EOF is [false, false]. (TOKENSYMBOL is a Ruby symbol (taken from String#intern) by default. If you want to change this, see the grammar reference.
Racc::Parser#yyparse is little complicated, but useful. It does not use Racc::Parser#next_token
, instead it gets tokens from any iterator.
For example, yyparse(obj, :scan)
causes calling +obj#scan+, and you can return tokens by yielding them from +obj#scan+.
Debugging¶ ↑
When debugging, “-v” or/and the “-g” option is helpful.
“-v” creates verbose log file (.output). “-g” creates a “Verbose Parser”. Verbose Parser
prints the internal status when parsing. But it’s not automatic. You must use -g option and set +@yydebug+ to true
in order to get output. -g option only creates the verbose parser.
Racc
reported syntax error.¶ ↑
Isn’t there too many “end”? grammar of racc file is changed in v0.10.
Racc
does not use ‘%’ mark, while yacc uses huge number of ‘%’ marks..
Racc
reported “XXXX conflicts”.¶ ↑
Try “racc -v xxxx.y”. It causes producing racc’s internal log file, xxxx.output.
Generated parsers does not work correctly¶ ↑
Try “racc -g xxxx.y”. This command let racc generate “debugging parser”. Then set @yydebug=true in your parser. It produces a working log of your parser.
Re-distributing Racc
runtime¶ ↑
A parser, which is created by Racc
, requires the Racc
runtime module; racc/parser.rb.
Ruby 1.8.x comes with Racc
runtime module, you need NOT distribute Racc
runtime files.
If you want to include the Racc
runtime module with your parser. This can be done by using ‘-E’ option:
$ racc -E -omyparser.rb myparser.y
This command creates myparser.rb which ‘includes’ Racc
runtime. Only you must do is to distribute your parser file (myparser.rb).
Note: parser.rb is ruby license, but your parser is not. Your own parser is completely yours.
Racc
is an LALR(1) parser generator. It is written in Ruby itself, and generates Ruby programs.
Command-line Reference¶ ↑
racc [-o<var>filename</var>] [--output-file=<var>filename</var>] [-e<var>rubypath</var>] [--executable=<var>rubypath</var>] [-v] [--verbose] [-O<var>filename</var>] [--log-file=<var>filename</var>] [-g] [--debug] [-E] [--embedded] [-l] [--no-line-convert] [-c] [--line-convert-all] [-a] [--no-omit-actions] [-C] [--check-only] [-S] [--output-status] [--version] [--copyright] [--help] <var>grammarfile</var>
grammarfile
-
Racc
grammar file. Any extension is permitted. - -o+outfile+, –output-file=
outfile
-
A filename for output. default is <
filename
>.tab.rb - -O+filename+, –log-file=
filename
-
Place logging output in file
filename
. Default log file name is <filename
>.output. - -e+rubypath+, –executable=
rubypath
-
output executable file(mode 755). where
path
is the Ruby interpreter. - -v, –verbose
-
verbose mode. create
filename
.output file, like yacc’s y.output file. - -g, –debug
-
add debug code to parser class. To display debugging information, use this ‘-g’ option and set @yydebug true in parser class.
- -E, –embedded
-
Output parser which doesn’t need runtime files (racc/parser.rb).
- -F, –frozen
-
Output parser which declares frozen_string_literals: true
- -C, –check-only
-
Check syntax of racc grammar file and quit.
- -S, –output-status
-
Print messages time to time while compiling.
- -l, –no-line-convert
-
turns off line number converting.
- -c, –line-convert-all
-
Convert line number of actions, inner, header and footer.
- -a, –no-omit-actions
-
Call all actions, even if an action is empty.
- –version
-
print
Racc
version and quit. - –copyright
-
Print copyright and quit.
- –help
-
Print usage and quit.
Generating Parser
Using Racc
¶ ↑
To compile Racc
grammar file, simply type:
$ racc parse.y
This creates Ruby script file “parse.tab.y”. The -o option can change the output filename.
Writing A Racc
Grammar File¶ ↑
If you want your own parser, you have to write a grammar file. A grammar file contains the name of your parser class, grammar for the parser, user code, and anything else. When writing a grammar file, yacc’s knowledge is helpful. If you have not used yacc before, Racc
is not too difficult.
Here’s an example Racc
grammar file.
class Calcparser rule target: exp { print val[0] } exp: exp '+' exp | exp '*' exp | '(' exp ')' | NUMBER end
Racc
grammar files resemble yacc files. But (of course), this is Ruby code. yacc’s $$ is the ‘result’, $0, $1… is an array called ‘val’, and $-1, $-2… is an array called ‘_values’.
See the Grammar File Reference for more information on grammar files.
Parser
¶ ↑
Then you must prepare the parse entry method. There are two types of parse methods in Racc
, Racc::Parser#do_parse and Racc::Parser#yyparse
Racc::Parser#do_parse is simple.
It’s yyparse() of yacc, and Racc::Parser#next_token
is yylex(). This method must returns an array like [TOKENSYMBOL, ITS_VALUE]. EOF is [false, false]. (TOKENSYMBOL is a Ruby symbol (taken from String#intern) by default. If you want to change this, see the grammar reference.
Racc::Parser#yyparse is little complicated, but useful. It does not use Racc::Parser#next_token
, instead it gets tokens from any iterator.
For example, yyparse(obj, :scan)
causes calling +obj#scan+, and you can return tokens by yielding them from +obj#scan+.
Debugging¶ ↑
When debugging, “-v” or/and the “-g” option is helpful.
“-v” creates verbose log file (.output). “-g” creates a “Verbose Parser”. Verbose Parser
prints the internal status when parsing. But it’s not automatic. You must use -g option and set +@yydebug+ to true
in order to get output. -g option only creates the verbose parser.
Racc
reported syntax error.¶ ↑
Isn’t there too many “end”? grammar of racc file is changed in v0.10.
Racc
does not use ‘%’ mark, while yacc uses huge number of ‘%’ marks..
Racc
reported “XXXX conflicts”.¶ ↑
Try “racc -v xxxx.y”. It causes producing racc’s internal log file, xxxx.output.
Generated parsers does not work correctly¶ ↑
Try “racc -g xxxx.y”. This command let racc generate “debugging parser”. Then set @yydebug=true in your parser. It produces a working log of your parser.
Re-distributing Racc
runtime¶ ↑
A parser, which is created by Racc
, requires the Racc
runtime module; racc/parser.rb.
Ruby 1.8.x comes with Racc
runtime module, you need NOT distribute Racc
runtime files.
If you want to include the Racc
runtime module with your parser. This can be done by using ‘-E’ option:
$ racc -E -omyparser.rb myparser.y
This command creates myparser.rb which ‘includes’ Racc
runtime. Only you must do is to distribute your parser file (myparser.rb).
Note: parser.rb is ruby license, but your parser is not. Your own parser is completely yours.
Constants
- Copyright
- VERSION
- Version