|
ActiveTcl User Guide |
|
[ Main table Of Contents | Tcllib Table Of Contents | Tcllib Index ]
grammar::me::tcl(n) 0.1 "Grammar operations and usage"
grammar::me::tcl - Virtual machine implementation I for parsing
token streams
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
API
MACHINE
STATE
MACHINE
INSTRUCTIONS
KEYWORDS
COPYRIGHT
package require Tcl 8.4
package require grammar::me::tcl ?0.1?
This package provides an implementation of the ME virtual
machine. Please go and read the document grammar::me_intro first if you do not
know what a ME virtual machine is.
This implementation is tied very strongly to Tcl. All the stacks
in the machine state are handled through the Tcl stack, all control
flow is handled by Tcl commands, and the remaining machine
instructions are directly mapped to Tcl commands. Especially the
matching of nonterminal symbols is handled by Tcl procedures as
well, essentially extending the machine implementation with custom
instructions.
Further on the implementation handles only a single machine
which is uninteruptible during execution and hardwired for pull
operation. I.e. it explicitly requests each new token through a
callback, pulling them into its state.
A related package is grammar::peg::interp
which provides a generic interpreter / parser for parsing
expression grammars (PEGs), implemented on top of this
implementation of the ME virtual machine.
The commands documented in this section do not implement any of
the instructions of the ME virtual machine. They provide the
facilities for the initialization of the machine and the retrieval
of important information.
- ::grammar::me::tcl
cmd ...
- This is an ensemble command providing access to the commands
listed in this section. See the methods themselves for detailed
specifications.
- ::grammar::me::tcl
init nextcmd ?tokmap?
- This command (re)initializes the machine. It returns the empty
string. This command has to be invoked before any other command of
this package.
The command prefix nextcmd represents the input
stream of characters and is invoked by the machine whenever the a
new character from the stream is required. The instruction for
handling this is ict_advance. The callback has to return
either the empty list, or a list of 4 elements containing the
token, its lexeme attribute, and its location as line number and
column index, in this order. The empty list is the signal that the
end of the input stream has been reached. The lexeme attribute is
stored in the terminal cache, but otherwise not used by the
machine.
The optional dictionary tokmap maps from tokens
to integer numbers. If present the numbers impose an order on the
tokens, which is subsequently used by ict_match_tokrange
to determine if a token is in the specified range or not. If no
token map is specified the lexicographic order of th token names
will be used instead. This choice is especially asensible when
using characters as tokens.
- ::grammar::me::tcl
lc location
- This command converts the location of a token given as offset
in the input stream into the associated line number and column
index. The result of the command is a 2-element list containing the
two values, in the order mentioned in the previous sentence. This
allows higher levels to convert the location information found in
the error status and the generated AST into more human readable
data.
Note that the command is not able to convert locations
which have not been reached by the machine yet. In other words, if
the machine has read 7 tokens the command is able to convert the
offsets 0 to 6, but nothing
beyond that. This also shows that it is not possible to convert
offsets which refer to locations before the beginning of the
stream.
After a call of init the state used for the
conversion is cleared, making further conversions impossible until
the machine has read tokens again.
- ::grammar::me::tcl
tok from ?to?
- This command returns a Tcl list containing the part of the
input stream between the locations from and to (both inclusive). If to is
not specified it will default to the value of from.
Each element of the returned list is a list of four elements, the
token, its associated lexeme, line number, and column index, in
this order. In other words, each element has the same structure as
the result of the nextcmd callback given to ::grammar::me::tcl::init
This command places the same restrictions on its location
arguments as ::grammar::me::tcl::lc.
- ::grammar::me::tcl
tokens
- This command returns the number of tokens currently known to
the ME virtual machine.
- ::grammar::me::tcl
sv
- This command returns the current semantic value SV
stored in the machine. This is an abstract syntax tree as specified
in the document grammar::me_ast , section AST
VALUES.
- ::grammar::me::tcl
ast
- This method returns the abstract syntax tree currently at the
top of the AST stack of the ME virtual machine. This is an abstract
syntax tree as specified in the document grammar::me_ast , section AST
VALUES.
- ::grammar::me::tcl
astall
- This method returns the whole stack of abstract syntax trees
currently known to the ME virtual machine. Each element of the
returned list is an abstract syntax tree as specified in the
document grammar::me_ast
, section AST VALUES. The top of the stack resides at the
end of the list.
- ::grammar::me::tcl
ctok
- This method returns the current token considered by the ME
virtual machine.
- ::grammar::me::tcl
nc
- This method returns the contents of the nonterminal cache as a
dictionary mapping from
"symbol,location" to match
information.
- ::grammar::me::tcl
next
- This method returns the next token callback as specified during
initialization of the ME virtual machine.
- ::grammar::me::tcl
ord
- This method returns a dictionary containing the tokmap specified during initialization of the ME virtual
machine. ::grammar::me::tcl::ok
This variable contains the current match status OK. It is
provided as variable instead of a command because that makes access
to this information faster, and the speed of access is considered
very important here as this information is used constantly to
determine the control flow.
Please go and read the document grammar::me_vm first for a specification
of the basic ME virtual machine and its state.
This implementation manages the state described in that
document, except for the stacks minus the AST stack. In other
words, location stack, error stack, return stack, and ast marker
stack are implicitly managed through standard Tcl scoping, i.e. Tcl
variables in procedures, outside of this implementation.
Please go and read the document grammar::me_vm first for a specification
of the basic ME virtual machine and its instruction set.
This implementation maps all instructions to Tcl commands in the
namespace "::grammar::me::tcl", except for the stack related
commands, nonterminal symbols and control flow. Here we simply list
the commands and explain the differences to the specified
instructions, if there are any. For their semantics see the
aforementioned specification. The machine commands are not
reachable through the ensemble command ::grammar::me::tcl.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::ict_advance
message
- No changes.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::ict_match_token tok message
- No changes.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::ict_match_tokrange tokbegin tokend message
- If, and only if a token map was specified during initialization
then the arguments are the numeric representations of the smallest
and largest tokens in the range. Otherwise they are the relevant
tokens themselves and lexicographic comparison is used.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::ict_match_tokclass code message
- No changes.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::inc_restore
nt
- Instead of taking a branchlabel the command returns a boolean
value. The result will be true if and only if
cached information was found. The caller has to perform the
appropriate branching.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::inc_save nt startlocation
- The command takes the start location as additional argument, as
it is managed on the Tcl stack, and not in the machine state.
- icf_ntcall branchlabel
- icf_ntreturn
- These two instructions are not mapped to commands. They are
control flow instructions and handled in Tcl.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::iok_ok
- No changes.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::iok_fail
- No changes.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::iok_negate
- No changes.
- icf_jalways branchlabel
- icf_jok branchlabel
- icf_jfail branchlabel
- icf_halt
- These four instructions are not mapped to commands. They are
control flow instructions and handled in Tcl.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::icl_get
- This command returns the current location CL in the
input. It replaces icl_push.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::icl_rewind
oldlocation
- The command takes the location as argument as it comes from the
Tcl stack, not the machine state.
- icl_pop
- Not mapped, the stacks are not managed by the package.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::ier_get
- This command returns the current error state ER. It
replaces ier_push.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::ier_clear
- No changes.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::ier_nonterminal message location
- The command takes the location as argument as it comes from the
Tcl stack, not the machine state.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::ier_merge
olderror
- The command takes the second error state to merge as argument
as it comes from the Tcl stack, not the machine state.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::isv_clear
- No changes.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::isv_terminal
- No changes.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::isv_nonterminal_leaf nt startlocation
- The command takes the start location as argument as it comes
from the Tcl stack, not the machine state.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::isv_nonterminal_range nt startlocation
- The command takes the start location as argument as it comes
from the Tcl stack, not the machine state.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::isv_nonterminal_reduce nt startlocation ?marker?
- The command takes start location and marker as argument as it
comes from the Tcl stack, not the machine state.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::ias_push
- No changes.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::ias_mark
- This command returns a marker for the current state of the AST
stack AS. The marker stack is not managed by the
machine.
- ::grammar::me::tcl::ias_pop2mark marker
- The command takes the marker as argument as it comes from the
Tcl stack, not the machine state. It replaces
ias_mpop.
grammar , parsing , virtual machine
Copyright © 2005 Andreas Kupries
<andreas_kupries@users.sourceforge.net>