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DESCRIPTION
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DESCRIPTION
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Package: dparser
Title: Port of 'Dparser' Package
Version: 1.3.1-11
Authors@R: c(person("Matthew", "Fidler", email = "matthew.fidler@gmail.com", role = c("aut", "cre")),
person("John", "Plevyak", role = c("aut", "cph"), email = "jplevyak@gmail.com"))
Imports:
digest,
methods
Suggests:
rex,
covr,
testthat,
knitr,
devtools
Description: A Scannerless GLR parser/parser generator. Note that GLR standing for "generalized LR", where L stands for "left-to-right" and
R stands for "rightmost (derivation)". For more information see <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GLR_parser>. This parser is based on the Tomita
(1987) algorithm. (Paper can be found at <https://aclanthology.org/P84-1073.pdf>).
The original 'dparser' package documentation can be found at <https://dparser.sourceforge.net/>. This allows you to add mini-languages to R (like
rxode2's ODE mini-language Wang, Hallow, and James 2015 <DOI:10.1002/psp4.12052>) or to parse other languages like 'NONMEM' to automatically translate
them to R code. To use this in your code, add a LinkingTo dparser in your DESCRIPTION file and instead of using #include <dparse.h> use
#include <dparser.h>. This also provides a R-based port of the make_dparser <https://dparser.sourceforge.net/d/make_dparser.cat> command called
mkdparser(). Additionally you can parse an arbitrary grammar within R using the dparse() function, which works on most OSes and is mainly for grammar
testing. The fastest parsing, of course, occurs at the C level, and is suggested.
Depends:
R (>= 3.3)
License: BSD_3_clause + file LICENSE
BugReports: https://github.com/nlmixr2/dparser-R/issues/
URL: https://nlmixr2.github.io/dparser-R/,
https://github.com/nlmixr2/dparser-R/
Encoding: UTF-8
RoxygenNote: 7.2.3