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Nathan Sobo (author)
Fri Mar 14 17:33:05 -0700 2008
commit 63236d020207c794e603298a3a00cfff18bdd3c2
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treetop /
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.gitignore | Fri Mar 07 14:19:56 -0800 2008 | [pivotal] |
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README | Fri Jan 11 11:08:34 -0800 2008 | [Nathan Sobo] |
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Rakefile | Fri Mar 07 11:48:28 -0800 2008 | [pivotal] |
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Treetop.tmbundle/ | Fri Jan 11 11:44:27 -0800 2008 | [Nathan Sobo] |
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bin/ | Fri Jan 11 11:08:34 -0800 2008 | [Nathan Sobo] |
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doc/ | Fri Mar 07 14:07:45 -0800 2008 | [pivotal] |
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examples/ | Fri Jan 11 11:08:34 -0800 2008 | [Nathan Sobo] |
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lib/ | Fri Mar 14 17:33:05 -0700 2008 | [Nathan Sobo] |
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spec/ | Fri Mar 14 17:21:49 -0700 2008 | [Nathan Sobo] |
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textra/ | Fri Mar 14 16:47:20 -0700 2008 | [Nathan Sobo] |
README
Tutorial
========
Languages can be split into two components, their *syntax* and their *semantics*. It's your understanding of English
syntax that tells you the stream of words "Sleep furiously green ideas colorless" is not a valid sentence. Semantics is
deeper. Even if we rearrange the above sentence to be "Colorless green ideas sleep furiously", which is syntactically
correct, it remains nonsensical on a semantic level. With Treetop, you'll be dealing with languages that are much
simpler than English, but these basic concepts apply. Your programs will need to address both the syntax and the
semantics of the languages they interpret.
Treetop equips you with powerful tools for each of these two aspects of interpreter writing. You'll describe the syntax
of your language with a *parsing expression grammar*. From this description, Treetop will generate a Ruby parser that
transforms streams of characters written into your language into *abstract syntax trees* representing their structure.
You'll then describe the semantics of your language in Ruby by defining methods on the syntax trees the parser
generates.
Parsing Expression Grammars, The Basics
=======================================
The first step in using Treetop is defining a grammar in a file with the `.treetop` extension. Here's a grammar that's
useless because it's empty:
# my_grammar.treetop
grammar MyGrammar
end
Next, you start filling your grammar with rules. Each rule associates a name with a parsing expression, like the
following:
# my_grammar.treetop
grammar MyGrammar
rule hello
'hello chomsky'
end
end
The first rule becomes the *root* of the grammar, causing its expression to be matched when a parser for the grammar is
fed a string. The above grammar can now be used in a Ruby program. Notice how a string matching the first rule parses
successfully, but a second nonmatching string does not.
# use_grammar.rb
require 'rubygems'
require 'treetop'
Treetop.load 'my_grammar'
parser = MyGrammarParser.new
puts parser.parse('hello chomsky').success? # => true
puts parser.parse('silly generativists!').success? # => false
Users of *regular expressions* will find parsing expressions familiar. They share the same basic purpose, matching
strings against patterns. However, parsing expressions can recognize a broader category of languages than their less
expressive brethren. Before we get into demonstrating that, lets cover some basics. At first parsing expressions won't
seem much different. Trust that they are.
Terminal Symbols
----------------
The expression in the grammar above is a terminal symbol. It will only match a string that matches it exactly. There are
two other kinds of terminal symbols, which we'll revisit later. Terminals are called *atomic expressions* because they
aren't composed of smaller expressions.
Ordered Choices
---------------
Ordered choices are *composite expressions*, which allow for any of several subexpressions to be matched. These should
be familiar from regular expressions, but in parsing expressions, they are delimited by the `/` character. Its important
to note that the choices are prioritized in the order they appear. If an earlier expression is matched, no subsequent
expressions are tried. Here's an example:
# my_grammar.treetop
grammar MyGrammar
rule hello
'hello chomsky' / 'hello lambek'
end
end
# fragment of use_grammar.rb
puts parser.parse('hello chomsky').success? # => true
puts parser.parse('hello lambek').success? # => true
puts parser.parse('silly generativists!').success? # => false
Sequences
---------
Sequences are composed of other parsing expressions separated by spaces. Using sequences, we can tighten up the above
grammar.
# my_grammar.treetop
grammar MyGrammar
rule hello
'hello ' ('chomsky' / 'lambek')
end
end
Node the use of parentheses to override the default precedence rules, which bind sequences more tightly than choices.
Nonterminal Symbols
-------------------
Here we leave regular expressions behind. Nonterminals allow expressions to refer to other expressions by name. A
trivial use of this facility would allow us to make the above grammar more readable should the list of names grow
longer.
# my_grammar.treetop
grammar MyGrammar
rule hello
'hello ' linguist
end
rule linguist
'chomsky' / 'lambek' / 'jacobsen' / 'frege'
end
end
The true power of this facility, however, is unleashed when writing *recursive expressions*. Here is a self-referential
expression that can match any number of open parentheses followed by any number of closed parentheses. This is
theoretically impossible with regular expressions due to the *pumping lemma*.
# parentheses.treetop
grammar Parentheses
rule parens
'(' parens ')' / ''
end
end
The `parens` expression simply states that a `parens` is a set of parentheses surrounding another `parens` expression
or, if that doesn't match, the empty string. If you are uncomfortable with recursion, its time to get comfortable,
because it is the basis of language. Here's a tip: Don't try and imagine the parser circling round and round through the
same rule. Instead, imagine the rule is *already* defined while you are defining it. If you imagine that `parens`
already matches a string of matching parentheses, then its easy to think of `parens` as an open and closing parentheses
around another set of matching parentheses, which conveniently, you happen to be defining. You know that `parens` is
supposed to represent a string of matched parentheses, so trust in that meaning, even if you haven't fully implemented
it yet.
Features to cover in the talk
=============================
* Treetop files
* Grammar definition
* Rules
* Loading a grammar
* Compiling a grammar with the `tt` command
* Accessing a parser for the grammar from Ruby
* Parsing Expressions of all kinds
? Left recursion and factorization
- Here I can talk about function application, discussing how the operator
could be an arbitrary expression
* Inline node class eval blocks
* Node class declarations
* Labels
* Use of super within within labels
* Grammar composition with include
* Use of super with grammar composition




