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ft_lexiq is a C library for analyzing and interpreting context-free languages defined by a set of rules that makes up a context-free grammar (See the Chomsky hierarchy).

The engine may finds itself as a pushdown automaton, which is below turing machines in the automata theory.

A collection of grammars can be found in the lexiq_interpreter/rules folder.

ft_lexiq can also define regular languages that can be expressed with regular expressions, which is the main core of the engine.

So how does this engine implements regular expressions goes as the first question to answer.

Table of content

What is a regular expression ?

A regular expression (or regex) is a way to define a search pattern, wich is usually used for 'find' operations on documents and any type of text. There are many regex engines out there in almost all programming languages, and they all follow the same syntax, there could be some differences but in general they do not vary that much.

ft_lexiq

The regex engine (used by the lexiq engine) that i am going to present you works differently, and has a whole different syntax. But still follows the same 'idea', meaning that each character in a regular expression is still either a metacharacter, which are in number of two, or a literal character. This will be explained later, we will first talk about how it differs from most regex engines and why it could be powerfull.

First of all, it is important to know that it has started as a school project, so it may not be perfect, and has definetely a tons of flaws.

Secondly, the lexiq engine tries to avoid dynamic allocations which means that it does not compile or precompile or whatever, it just reads the expression character by character. It uses the concept of 'rules' which is where the main difference and power stands, we will get to it later.

Thirdly, this engine was first a regular expression engine and was not supposed to become a generic parser, meaning that it has not been optimised for this task.

So, before diving into the code, and learn how to use the lexiq library, let's first have a look at the syntax it uses.

How a regular expression works ?

As told earlier, a regular expression is just a bunch of charcaters that are either a metacharacter or a literal character. A metacharacter do not define itself, and controls how the matching is done where a literal character define itself. For example the regex abc. abc are literal characters, which matches just abc, while . is a metacharacter, which matches any single character. So this regex might match different strings that starts with abc and ends with any single character. This regex engine would rather define the regex as abc?.

Well i wont give a whole tutorial on how regular expression works as it is defenitely not the goal of this. But you could check this website to learn more.

Two metacharacters are enough

I talked about this engine having only two metacharacter and it should be enough to match any possible string, this is the first reason of it being limited to two, the second one is to keep it simple and generic.

They are:

  • *, the wildcard might match multiple times, and is kind of a 'while' loop.
  • ?, the question mark will match only once, and is more of an 'if'.

Something else to know that i forgot to mention, is that there is no such as backslashing character, so to match the ?, \? will not work. The backslash character is a literal character. I refused to choose the backslash character because things could get ugly really quickly as the C language already use the backslash inside quotes, you would need to backslash the backslash etc.

But how would you match these metacharacters you ask me ? Well i will go straight to the answer : ?[?].

Here we used the square brackets [] to have more control on what should match, we specifed inside the only characters that shall match, in this case the question mark. If you remember the question mark means match only once, so the wildcard (*[?]) awaits any number of question marks and will eventually match strings that only contains question marks.

So as i said earlier this engine follows the same 'idea', and in this context the square brackets works the same, so to specify a range for example, *[A-Z0-9?*] will match any uppercase characters, digits, question marks or wildcards, and we used the wildcard metacharacter which means that it wont stop after the firs letter but will continue if possible.

Negating and quantifying

You can negate a match by following a metacharacter with an exlamation mark ?![...] or *![...], so ?![A-Za-z] will match any single character that is not a letter (neither an uppercase letter nor a lowercase letter).

We use quantifiers to control how many times a match shall occur, it is possible with the @ sign inside of the square brackets and with the * metacharacter: *[A-Z@=4] matches exactly four times characters that are uppercase letters. And *![A-Z@=4] matches exactly four times characters that are not uppercase letters.

Now what if you want an '@' sign inside of a character set as there is no such as backslash ? To do this, you would need to understand that the square brackets always takes the last occurence of the '@' sign to delimit the character set field and the quantifier field. ?[@@@] the character set here is made of two '@' sign, the last one is the delimitation of the quantifier

So with quantifying we could mimic the question mark behaviour with the wildcard for example *[...@=1]. Never forget that quantifying only works with the wildcard metacharacter and wont have any effect with the question mark metacharacter, it wont make any sense otherwise.

There are three other operators that are used for quantifying matches, they are:

  • [...@<n], the match shall occur less than n times.
  • [...@>n], the match shall occur more than n times.
  • [...@?], the match is optional, and will result in a zero-length match if the match failed. This quantifier works with the question mark too.

It is possible to give an empty character set to both of the metacharacters, for the wildcard it means match any single character between one and unlimited times, while the wildcard alone means match between zero and unlimited times. For the question mark it doesn't change its behaviour and will always match any single character once and only once.

Backslash limitation

There is a question that has not been raised yet which concerns how the square brackets works and how to have any possible character in a character set, because as we know we can't backslash a closing square bracket and with the concept of 'rules' things could have get really messy, so we had to counter the problem by letting the user control what starts a character set and what closes it.

An opening square bracket followed by n opening curly bracket shall be closed by n closing curly bracket followed by a closing square bracket.

We would get something like this ?[{{...}}], and here we reached the limitation of not using backslashes, because with this solution how would you have a character set that starts with an opening curly bracket ? You may think that this question does not make any sense as the order of a character set shall not change its behaviour, well it is true for this context but not for the context of rules, that are going to be seen in the next part (finally).

To counter this other problem, backslashing is coming back but stays only for the very first character, and it just cancels the meaning of the backslash and the opening curly bracket characters. So the solution of the problem is ?[{\{...}] or ?[{{{{\\....}}}}] or ?[{...]...}]. The '@' sign should always appair before whatever closing has been used: ?[{{...@=3}}].

At this point we solve the backslashing problem.

The concept of rules

We finally get to the main power of the lexiq engine. The rules.

A rule is no more than the equivalent of a function in programming languages. It takes an input (the string), and gives an output (does it match and how many times). A rule is just a way to group other expressions, for example we could imagine a rule that checks if the match is an alphabetic character: alpha:?[A-Za-z]. So when we call the alpha rule it will, in fact, check if the character is between 'A' and 'Z' or 'a' and 'z'. And this rule already exists, and there are many others that abstracts a bunch of things.

To call a rule you would need to put the rule name right after the '@' sign: ?[@alnum] is the equivalent of ?[a-zA-Z0-9]. And all of the negating and quantifying stuff still works: *![@digit>3] will awaits more than three characters that are not digits. And all the other features that are available in other regex engines are available in this engine through rules.

It is mainly the case of the or rule, that should simply match one of the alternatives: *[ok?[@digit]|?[@alpha]@or] shall match one or more times; the literal characters ok followed by a digit; or an alphabetic character. And this could be a rule: strange_rule:*[ok?[@digit]|?[@alpha]@or], you should have seen that what separates the expressions is the | character so in this context it loses its literal meaning, and if we wanted to match this character we would do the same as for the metacharacters ?[|]. And in this example we understand that rules receives in reality two input, the string to match and an optional argument which is specified before the '@' sign.

The truth is that everything is a rule, and even when you try to match a character set: ?[abc] you are in fact calling a rule named 'DEFAULT', so it is the same as typing ?[abc@DEFAULT]. And at this point the DEFAULT rule cannot call other rules, as it is the lowest rule. Which is good, because it means that a rule doesn't need to call other rules in order to work, they can also call C functions ! We can conclude that rules are not limited to the power of other rules but of the C programming language !!

It is commonly known that regex engines are limited, and this engine is no exception, but with the concept of rules we break all limitations.

Here is a non-exhaustive list of available rules.

Name Description Method Example Explanation
@or One of the subexpression, seperated by an |, given in argument shall match C function reg?[ex?[es@or?]|ular expression?[s@?]@or] Might match 'regex' 'regular expression' 'regexes' or 'regular expressions'
@case Compare the strings ignoring case C function ?[hello@case] world Will match any possible form of the 'hello' string followed by exactly ' world'
@^ Beginning of string C function ?[@^]hello The string 'hello' matches only if it is at the beginning of a string
@$ End of string C function hello?[@$] The string 'hello' matches only if it is at the end of a string
@^n Beginning of string or line C function ?[@^n]hello The string 'hello' matches only if it is at the beginning of a string or a line
@$n End of string or line C function hello?[@$n] The string 'hello' matches only if it is at the end of a string or a line
@^w Beginning of string, line or word C function ?[@^w]hello The string 'hello' matches only if it is at the beginning of a string, line or word
@$w End of string, line or word C function hello?[@$w] The string 'hello' matches only if it is at the end of a string, line or word
@upper Any uppercase letter Inline expression *![@upper=3] Matches three characters that are not uppercase letters
@lower Any lowercase letter Inline expression ?[@upper]*[@lower] An uppercase letter followed by any number of lowercase letters
@and All of the subexpressions, seperated by an &, given in argument shall match C function *[?![@upper]&?![@lower]@and] Any number of characters that are neither an uppercase letter nor a lowercase letter, equivalent of *![@alpha]
@word Any word character that is either an alphabetic character, a digit or an underscore. Inline expression ?[@^w]*[@word=3]?[@$w] Three word characters between word boundaries
@space Any space character Inline expression ?![@space] Match any character that is not a space.
@int A valid integer Inline expression ?[@int] An integer might start with zero or more space followed by; a minus or a plus sign or nothing; followed by one or more digits.
@X The subexpression given in argument shall match C function *[?[@int]:*;@X=3] Awaits three times an integer followed by ':' then zero or more of any single character that ends with ';'. This rule is deprecated, use @or or @and instead.
@R Recurses the entire pattern C function (*[?![()]|?[@R]@or]) Match nested parenthesis, this can also be done with a rule calling itself
@E Perform arithmetic expressions or assignements on variables C function ?[n=e+6@E] Add 6 to the variable e and puts the result in the variable n
@G Memorizes the part of the string that matched the expression given in argument C function ?[*[@word]@G] Memorize an entire word into a capturing group
@B Backreferences to a previously memorized substring specified by an index read from the argument C function ?[*[@word]@G]:?[1@B] The memorized substring generated by the previous call of @G which has been indexed on 1, is rematched by the @B rule.
@debug Print informations about the current state of the engine without matching any characters C function ?[@debug] Print informations
@write Write on the standard output the given argument. It can also print the value of a variable by preceeding it with a % C function ?[The number is %n lol@write] Prints 'The number is ', then the value of n, then ' lol'.

Variables

Another interestring feature available with this engine is the possibility of using variables throughout the regular expression. Thanks to the @E rule you have access to 52 variables (26 lowercase letter and 26 uppercase letter). They can be instanciated to a literal value ?[n=3@E], or another variable ?[x=C@E], the first example puts the value 3 to the variable n and the second one sets the value of x to the value of C. You also have the possibility of using arithmetic expressions with variables, ?[n=3+P@E] will add 3 to the current value of P and will put the result to the variable n.

These are the available arithmetic operators

Operator Descrption
+ Returns the addition of the two variables
- Returns the subtraction of the two variables
- Returns the multiplication of the two variables
/ Returns the division of the two variables
= Returns 1 if the two variables are equal or 0 otherwise
! Returns 1 if the two variables are different or 0 otherwise
> Returns 1 if the first variable is greater than the second one or 0 otherwise
< Returns 1 if the first variable is less than the second one or 0 otherwise

It is important to mention that this rule is a zero-length match meaning that it wont consume any characters, it will just change the current state of variables. But it is possible to use it as a condition checker, by placing a 0 instead of a variable name as a first character. ?[0=n=3@E] will check if n is equal to 3, the 0= means that we want to return true if the resut of the expression is different than zero or false if it is equal to zero.

You also have the possibility to store the return of an expression inside of a variable by using a colon (':') or a semicolon (';') instead of an equal sign ('=') as a second character. ?[n:*[@space]@E] will store in the variable n the number of space characters that were met or -1 if the expression has failed. Here we used the colon operator so the space characters that were met wont be consumed, to consume them you will need to match them right after the call of the @E rule (?[n:*[@space]@E]*[@space]), this is the difference with the semicolon operator which will consume the matched characters at the same time, but will fail if the subexpression has failed.

The point of variables is to use them for quantifying instead of using literal values. *[@digit=n] awaits n digits.

Capturing groups and backreferencing

Another important and powerfull concept about regular expressions that this engine implements is the possibility of capturing chuncks of strings.

To capture a group you need to use the @G rule, this rule takes in argument an expression which will store the matched part of the string. The captured groups can then be reused via a backreference with the @B rule that takes the index of which group to reuse, in arguemnt.

The expression ?[*[@alpha]@G]:?[0@B] will first store the alphabetical characters in a group, then will match a colon, then will backreference to the first captured group. For example the string hello:hello will match but hello:no wont.

A more usefull and explicit example would be to define an expression that matches opening tags and closing tags for the HTML syntax: <?[*[@word]@G]*>*</?[1@B]>.

ft_lexiq

The latest version of the ft_lexiq function is available in the libft library.

Now that we have seen how this engine works (and why it might be powerfull ?) let's dive into the code and let's see how we can use it.

Everything is done through one and only one function:

#include "libft/includes/ft_lexiq.h"

int ft_lexiq(int flags, const char *expression, const char *string, ...)

The way it behaves depends on the flags it receives, expression is performed on string which is the subject of it.

By default, with no flags, the string argument shall entirely match the expression string.

ft_lexiq(0, "?[@upper]*[@lower]", "Hello")

In this example the match is correct, and the function returns the number of matches which is 5.

But

ft_lexiq(0, "?[@upper]", "Hello")

Wont match because the expression only asks for an uppercase letter, so the function returns -1.

The LQ_END flag will allow us to match string that at least starts with the given search pattern.

ft_lexiq(LQ_END, "?[@upper]", "Hello")

Matches only once, because it at least starts with an uppercase letter, this call returns 1.

The LQ_POS makes ft_lexiq to return an extra information which is the position of the matched string, so it doesn't need to start with the search pattern, the extra information is stored in an int whose address is sent in parameter to the function.

int pos;
int len = ft_lexiq(LQ_POS | LQ_END, "*[@digit>2]", "The number is 12 or 569 ?", &pos);

Will match the first three or more following digits in the string which is 569, pos is equal to 20 as it is the position of the matched pattern, and len is the number of matched characters which is 3.

The global flag

There are other flags, but it is not really usefull to mention them as they are used by the most important one: LQ_GLOBAL. This flag will store all the matching pattern in a linked list of t_lq_match structures.

t_list *matches;
int num_of_matches = ft_lexiq(LQ_GLOBAL, "*[@word]", "Regular expressions are amazing !", &matches);

You can use the ft_print_matches function to hightlight all the matches in a human readable way

void ft_print_matches(const char *string, t_list *matches)
  • ft_print_matches output

Here, we've asked to match only words, but also to capture the vowels of these words, this is the reason why they are colored differently. The 0 at the end at the end indicates the id of the last called rule of the matched pattern.

The t_lq_match structure is defined as follow:

struct t_lq_match
{
  const char  *str; // A pointer to the start of the match
  int         pos; // The position of the matched pattern
  int         len; // The length of the matched pattern
  int         id; // An identifier to precise what matched
  const char  *id_str; //  The name of the last called rule.
  t_list      *groups; // The captured groups
};

The fourth attribute is a way to distinguish what matched, and it is related to rules, we will see it in the next part.

After using the returned list you can free it properly with the following call

ft_lexiq(LQ_FREE, NULL, NULL, &matches)

Adding rules

As told earlier with the concept of rules, we can add rules by ourselves.

Only one rule

The LQ_ADD flag adds one rule, by taking the expression parameter as the rule name and the string parameter as the expression definition.

ft_lexiq(LQ_ADD, "three_char_word", "?[@^w]*[@word=3]?[@$w]", NULL)

This call will add a rule named 'three_char_word' that defines words of excactly three characters long. The function returns the id that has been assigned to the rule which can be used to differenciate it from other rules. The 'three_char_word' rule can now be called in any ft_lexiq call:

ft_lexiq(LQ_GLOBAL, "?[@three_char_word]", "Hello budy, how are you ?", &matches)

This call will match three times ('how' 'are' and 'you'), without the word boundaries (?[@^w] and ?[@$w]) we would have also matched the first three characters of 'Hello' and 'budy'.

Now lets imagine a scenario were we would need to match three character words and five character words too, but still be able to distinguish these two possible match. For this case we would need to keep the 'three_char_word' rule and add another one that matches five character words:

ft_lexiq(LQ_ADD, "five_char_word", "?[@^w]*[@word=5]?[@$w]", NULL)

Then we will ask the engine to match 'three_char_word' or 'five_char_word'.

ft_lexiq(LQ_GLOBAL, "?[?[@three_char_word]|?[@five_char_word]@or]", "Hello budy, how are you ?", &matches)

The linked list returned will, now, have a fourth match from the initial ones which is 'Hello', but this time the t_lq_match.id attribute will point to different rules depending on what matched.

You might have noticed the 'NULL' parameter at the end, well, you have to know that a rule is either an inline expression, meaning that it is defined by another expression, or a function callback which means that if the rule is called it will call a C function specified by the last parameter. But it cant be both. The callback function must follow this prototype:

int (*callback)(t_lq_eng *, t_lq_rule *)

The function receives two structures, t_lq_eng gives informations about the engine and t_lq_rule gives information about the rule:

struct t_lq_eng
{
  const char  *str_begin; // Pointer to the beginning of the string subject
  const char  *expr_begin; // Pointer to the beginning of the expression
  const char  *str; // Current position in the string
  const char  *expr; // Current position in the expression
  int         len; // The number of matched characters
  int         *vars; // All the 52 variables
  int         flags; // Currently enabled flags
  void        *data; // The data received in parameter of ft_lexiq if the LQ_DATA flag is enabled
};
struct t_lq_rule
{
  const char  *rule; // The rule name
  const char  *arg; // The argument received before the '@' sign.
                    // Keep in mind that it is not a duplicate of the argument
                    // but just a pointer to the beginning of the argument in the 'expr_begin' string
  int         len_rule; // The length of the rule name
  int         len_arg; // The length of the received argument
};

There are two ways of consuming characters with this method, the first one is to simply return the number of matched characters and the second one is to increment directly the t_lq_eng.str pointer, the difference is that with the last method the matched characters wont be added to the final return of the ft_lexiq function, (the boundary rules uses this last method @$n and @$w). If you want the match to fail the function must return -1.

Importing multiple rules from a file

You can also import one or more rules from a file. For instance the 'rules.lq' file is formatted as

#import "other.lq"
rule0  "expression ..."
rule1 "expression ..."

And can be imported with the ft_lexiq function using the LQ_IMPORT flag.

ft_lexiq(LQ_IMPORT, "rules.lq", NULL)

The file asks first to import the 'other.lq' file so all the rules declared in this file are imported too. Then we declare two rules 'rule0' and 'rule1' their expression is specified inside the double quotes.

The amount of added rules is then returned by the function. Something else to know is that the rules are added with the LQ_READABLE flag allowing the definition to be humanly readable, it means that the engine will ignore any space characters (spaces, tabulations and new lines) that are inside of a regular expression (Raw expressions or any rule that allows subexpressions in their argument like @or, @X, @G etc.).

Default and temporary rules

When adding rules, you are in fact pushing them into a default list that can be requested with the LQ_GET flag.

t_list *rules;
ft_lexiq(LQ_GET, NULL, NULL, &rules)

The rules variable now points to the current default list that the engine uses. The reason of this is that you can push rules into some other lists instead.

t_list *custom = NULL;
ft_lexiq(LQ_SET, NULL, NULL, &custom);

After this call, all the added rules will be pushed into the list custom. The LQ_SET flag overwrites the current default list, so it may be a good idea to store it somewhere first by requesting it with an LQ_GET call.

Temporary rules

We've seen that we can change the current default list, but what about adding rules to a custom list without changing the current default list, this is possible with the LQ_TO flag, that allows you to change the current default list only for the current call.

t_list *list = NULL;
ft_lexiq(LQ_IMPORT | LQ_TO, "rules.lq", NULL, &list);

The 'rules.lq' file will be imported into the local list list. The current default list will remain unchanged.

Flags

Flag Description Prototype
LQ_EXPRN Only the first n characters of the expression are considered (not yet implemented). int exprn
LQ_STRN Only the first n characters of the string needs to match (not yet implemented). int strn
LQ_POS Returns the starting position of the matched pattern. int *pos
LQ_END The string subject must at least start with the given pattern, wiith the LQ_POS flag it must contain at least once the search pattern somewhere in the string.
LQ_VAR By default the ft_lexiq function creates and uses its own 52 variables, but it is possible to send yours so the ft_lexiq function will use them, and all modifications made are left unchanged. int vars[52]
LQ_ID Returns the id of the last called rule in an int pointer. With the LQ_ADD flag it lets you specify the id that will be assigned to the rule int *id or int id
LQ_GLOBAL Stores in a linked list the matching parts of the string t_list **matches
LQ_UGLOBAL Stores in a linked list the non-matching part of the string (negates the expression), it 'splits' the string, to be distinguished from other matches, their id is equal to -1 t_list **matches
LQ_GROUP At the end of an ft_lexiq call, the capturing groups, if any, are destroyed by default. This flag will instead return the captured group in a linked list of t_lq_group structure. t_list **groups
LQ_DATA Sends an extra data. void *data
LQ_READABLE Ignores all space characters in the expression and all other rules that allows sub expressions in argument. this flag is disabled when calling a rule that is an inline expression. For an inline expression rule to be readable, it needs to have the LQ_READABLE flag enabled when adding it with the LQ_ADD flag.
LQ_ADD Add a rule to the lexiq engine t_lq_funcptr *func
LQ_ADD_MULTI Add rules from an array of t_lq_func structures t_lq_func *funcs, size_t len
LQ_IMPORT The engine will import the rules from a file formatted as rule_name "expression ...", each rules are added with the LQ_READABLE flag automatically
LQ_GET Returns the current default list t_list **rules
LQ_SET Sets the current default list with the specified local list t_list **rules
LQ_TO Must go with LQ_ADD or LQ_IMPORT. It pushes the rule(s) into a specified local list. With LQ_CLEAN it cleans the specified rules list. t_list **rules
LQ_FREE Free the linked list previously returned by a call of ft_lexiq with the LQ_GLOBAL, LQ_UGLOBAL or LQ_GROUP flag t_list **matches
LQ_CLEAN Clean and free all the rules that were added manually by the ft_lexiq function with the LQ_ADD or LQ_IMPORT flag

And here is a table of all the possible combination with their order:

Flags Prototyping order
LQ_EXPRN | LQ_STRN | LQ_POS | LQ_END | LQ_VAR | LQ_ID | LQ_DATA | LQ_READABLE | LQ_GROUP int exprn, int strn, int *pos, int *id, t_list **groups, void *data, int vars[52]
LQ_EXPRN | LQ_STRN | LQ_GLOBAL | LQ_UGLOBAL | LQ_VAR | LQ_DATA | LQ_READABLE int exprn, int strn, t_list **matches, void *data, int vars[52]
LQ_ADD | LQ_ID | LQ_READABLE | LQ_TO t_list **rules, t_lq_funcptr *func, int id
LQ_ADD_MULTI t_list **rules, t_lq_funcs *funcs, size_t len
LQ_IMPORT | LQ_TO const char *expression <, t_list **rules
LQ_GET t_list **rules
LQ_SET t_list **rules
LQ_FREE t_list **matches
LQ_CLEAN | LQ_TO t_list **rules

lol

The true power of the lexiq engine

Let's get to the real power of the lexiq engine, because until now we've just seen the lexiq's regex power, let's now see it's parsing power.

In this part i will explain how the ft_lexiq function can be used to literally parse anything, by combining two major concepts; Nested capturing groups and recursive rules.

Our goal will be to create a rule that can parse any json file. And by parsing i literally mean parsing. Understand the extraction of each part of the json file in a structured way, with only one ft_lexiq call.

Nested capturing groups

You might already have an idea of how capturing groups empowers the lexiq engine, but what i am about to show might blow your mind.

When the engine sees a capturing group ?[blabla@G] it pushes it into a list of t_lq_group structures defined as

struct t_lq_group
{
  const char  *str; // A pointer to the start of the captured string
  int         pos; // The position of the captured string
  int         len; // The length of the captured string
  int         id; // The id of the last called rule in the regex expression that captured the string
  const char  *id_str; // The name of the last called rule of the captured group.
  t_list      *groups; // The captured groups of this captured groups
};

You might have noticed the similarity with the t_lq_match structure. The truth is that t_lq_group is just an alias of t_lq_match, they are literally the same structure (struct s_lexiq_match). Theoretically a capturing group is different than a match but practically it doesn't need to be.

Imagine a scenario where we would need to capture key value pairs seperated by a colon with possibly spaces between it, we would use this expression: ?[ ?[ *[@word] @G] *[@spaces?] : *[@spaces?] ?[ *[@word] @G] @G] (the spaces are for the readability). Here we have 3 capturing groups, one for all the match, and the two others for the key and the value respectively. The generated list will in fact have the form of a tree, the root being the capturing group surrounding all the match and its two sons (?[*[@word]@G]) being the key and the value.

For the subject string 'hello:world', the resulting tree would be

        'hello:word'
       /            \
'hello'              'world'

'hello' and 'world' are the captured groups of 'hello:world', they were pushed into the t_lq_group.groups list of 'hello:world'.

The t_lq_group.id attribute shows its use when the matching string complexifies, because when iterating through the tree it would be usefull to know what matched exactly at this place without having to rematch the regex (saving time), for the example above we need to add two rules 'KEY' and 'VALUE' for differentiating these two part of the match

/* imported file: rule.rgx */

  WORD_VOWEL "*[ ?[ *[aeiou] @G] | ?[@word] @or]"
  KEY "?[@WORD_VOWEL]"
  VALUE "?[@WORD_VOWEL]"
  
/* end of file: rule.rgx */

ft_regex(... "?[ ?[ ?[@KEY] @G] *[@space?] : *[@space?] ?[ ?[@VALUE] @G] @G]", ...);

Now, when reaching the captured group 'hello', we will know that the 'KEY' rule matched because its t_lq_group.id will be equal to whatever id has been assigned to 'KEY'. This is not really usefull for this example, but it would be for the 'VALUE' rule as a value can be different things (integers, strings, arrays, etc.), so it would be usefull to know the type of the value directly at parsing time by creating a rule for each type. I've added the @WORD_VOWEL rule just for fun, it matches any word characters and captures the vowels. For the subject string 'hallelujah:yailahi', the generated tree would be

             'hallelujah:yailahi'
            /                   \
  'hallelujah'                 'yailahi'
  /  |    |  \                /  |  |  \
'a' 'e'  'u' 'a'             'a' | 'a' 'i'
                                'i'

Recursive rules

To understand and master the recursive rules concept, the bracket example will be of a great help, so let's go for it.

The bracket example is about matching nested brackets of any kind (square [], round () and curly {}) with possibly characters inside of them.

From now on, we will add rules as if we were adding them from a file with the LQ_IMPORT flag.

Let's start simple by making a rule that matches only nested round brackets.

  • Round brackets might start with an opening round bracket, followed by zero or more characters, followed by a closing round bracket.
ROUND_BRACKET "(*)"
  • That was the simplest form. It will directly stop once a closing round bracket is met, meaning that if another round bracket were to be opened, its closing would be taken as for the end of the expression. For example the subject string '(blabla(bla)bla)' would have matched until the first closing round bracket and not the second one which is not correct because it has been opened previously, it must continue to the next closing round bracket. We need a way to 'jump' the nested parenthesis. The best solution is to use recursivity.
ROUND_BRACKET "( *[ ?![()] | ?[@ROUND_BRACKET] @or?] )"
  • Here we've asked the engine to match an opening round bracket, followed by zero or more times a character that is neither an opening nor a closing round bracket otherwise, if it is an opening one, retry 'ROUND_BRACKET', or else if it is a closing one, stop the loop, then finally match a closing round bracket. Notice the question mark after the @or, it stands for the case of an empty parenthesis (()), allowing the @or rule to loop zero times.
  • At this point, making a rule for the square and curly brackets, must be easy.
ROUND_BRACKET "( *[ ?![()] | ?[@ROUND_BRACKET] @or?] )"
SQUARE_BRACKET "[ *[ ?![{[]}] | ?[@SQUARE_BRACKET] @or?] ]"
CURLY_BRACKET "{ *[ ?![\\{}] | ?[@CURLY_BRACKET] @or?] }"
  • Notice the special character escaping used for the square and curly brackets ([{[]}] and [\\{}]), i redirect you to the backslashing problem we encountered earlier for a full explanation of why it is needed.
  • You may think that this is done, but there is one last thing to do to accomplish our goal. Indeed, we still need a rule for matching these three possible brackets. This is done by simply adding a rule that or's these three rules.
BRACKET "?[ ?[@ROUND_BRACKET] | ?[@SQUARE_BRACKET] | ?[@CURLY_BRACKET] @or]"

ROUND_BRACKET "( *[ ?![{(){}[]}] | ?[@BRACKET] @or?] )"
SQUARE_BRACKET "[ *[ ?![{(){}[]}] | ?[@BRACKET] @or?] ]"
CURLY_BRACKET "{ *[ ?![{(){}[]}] | ?[@BRACKET] @or?] }"
  • We've finally reached our objective, which is to have a rule that matches nested brackets of any kind (by calling ?[@BRACKET]). I want you to notice and understand by yourself why the changes inside the brackets rules were necessary (?![{(){}[]}] and why calling ?[@BRACKET] ?).

Combining the two

Before getting into our main exercise (making a json parser), we need to do one last thing; Combining nested capturing groups and recursive rules.

We will reuse our last example with a slight change: capturing every nested brackets

BRACKET "?[ ?[ ?[@ROUND_BRACKET] | ?[@SQUARE_BRACKET] | ?[@CURLY_BRACKET] @or] @G]"

ROUND_BRACKET "( *[ ?![{(){}[]}] | ?[@BRACKET] @or?] )"
SQUARE_BRACKET "[ *[ ?![{(){}[]}] | ?[@BRACKET] @or?] ]"
CURLY_BRACKET "{ *[ ?![{(){}[]}] | ?[@BRACKET] @or?] }"

Pretty simple, we've just surrounded the @or with a capturing group, so everytime the BRACKET rule is called, the entire bracket from its opening to its corresponding closing is captured. Besides that, we can also know the type of the bracket thanks to t_lq_group.id which will point to ROUND_BRACKET, SQUARE_BRACKET or CURLY_BRACKET depending on what has been captured.

The string Lorem (ipsum (do{l}or) [sit] amet), consectetur ({ad(ip)iscing} elit) generates the following tree:

       (ipsum (do{l}or) [sit] emet)         ({ad(ip)iscing} elit)
              /           \                       /
         (do{l}or)         [sit]             {ad(ip)scing}
             |                                   |
            {l}                                 (ip)

The ft_print_matches function provides us this nice output

  • ft_print_matches output