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grammar::me::cpu(n)      Grammar operations and usage      grammar::me::cpu(n)



______________________________________________________________________________


NAME

       grammar::me::cpu  - Virtual machine implementation II for parsing token
       streams


SYNOPSIS

       package require Tcl  8.4

       package require grammar::me::cpu  ?0.2?

       ::grammar::me::cpu meName matchcode

       meName option ?arg arg ...?

       meName lc location

       meName tok ?from ?to??

       meName pc state

       meName iseof state

       meName at state

       meName cc state

       meName sv

       meName ok

       meName error

       meName lstk state

       meName astk state

       meName mstk state

       meName estk state

       meName rstk state

       meName nc state

       meName ast

       meName halted

       meName code

       meName eof

       meName put tok lex line col

       meName putstring string lvar cvar

       meName run ?n?

       meName pull nextcmd

       meName reset

       meName destroy

_________________________________________________________________


DESCRIPTION

       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 provides an object-based API and the  machines  are
       not truly tied to Tcl. A C implementation of the same API is quite pos-
       sible.

       Internally the package actually uses the value-based machine  manipula-
       tion commands as provided by the package grammar::me::cpu::core to per-
       form its duties.


API

   CLASS API
       The package directly provides only a single command for  the  construc-
       tion of ME virtual machines.

       ::grammar::me::cpu meName matchcode
              The  command  creates a new ME machine object with an associated
              global Tcl command whose name is meName.  This  command  may  be
              used  to  invoke  various operations on the machine.  It has the
              following general form:

              meName option ?arg arg ...?
                     Option and the args determine the exact behavior  of  the
                     command.

       The  argument matchcode contains the match instructions the machine has
       to execute while parsing the input stream. Please  read  section  MATCH
       CODE   REPRESENTATION  of  the  documentation  for  the  package  gram-
       mar::me::cpu::core for the  specification  of  the  structure  of  this
       value.

       The tokmap argument taken by the implementation provided by the package
       grammar::me::tcl is here hidden inside of the  match  instructions  and
       therefore not needed.



   OBJECT API
       All  ME  virtual machine objects created by the class command specified
       in section CLASS API support the methods listed below.

       The machines provided by this package provide methods for operation  in
       both  push-  and  pull-styles.  Push-style means that tokens are pushed
       into the machine state when they arrive, triggering  further  execution
       until  they are consumed. In other words, this allows the machine to be
       suspended and resumed at will and an arbitrary  number  of  times,  the
       quasi-parallel operation of several machines, and the operation as part
       of the event loop.

       meName lc location
              This method 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.

       meName tok ?from ?to??
              This  method 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.  If from
              is not specified either the whole input stream is returned.

              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.  This command places the same restrictions on its
              location arguments as the method lc.

       meName pc state
              This  method  takes  the state value of a ME virtual machine and
              returns the current value of the stored program counter.

       meName iseof state
              This method takes the state value of a ME  virtual  machine  and
              returns the current value of the stored eof flag.

       meName at state
              This  method  takes  the state value of a ME virtual machine and
              returns the current location in the input stream.

       meName cc state
              This method takes the state value of a ME  virtual  machine  and
              returns the current token.

       meName 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.

       meName ok
              This method returns the current match status OK.

       meName error
              This method returns the current error status ER.

       meName lstk state
              This  method  takes  the state value of a ME virtual machine and
              returns the location stack.

       meName astk state
              This method takes the state value of a ME  virtual  machine  and
              returns the AST stack.

       meName mstk state
              This  method  takes  the state value of a ME virtual machine and
              returns the AST marker stack.

       meName estk state
              This method takes the state value of a ME  virtual  machine  and
              returns the error stack.

       meName rstk state
              This  method  takes  the state value of a ME virtual machine and
              returns the subroutine return stack.

       meName nc state
              This method takes the state value of a ME  virtual  machine  and
              returns the nonterminal match cache as a dictionary.

       meName ast
              This  method  returns the current top entry of the AST stack AS.
              This is an abstract syntax tree as  specified  in  the  document
              grammar::me_ast, section AST VALUES.

       meName halted
              This  method  returns a boolean value telling the caller whether
              the engine has halted execution or not. Halt means that no  fur-
              ther matching is possible, and the information retrieved via the
              other method is final.  Attempts  to  run  the  engine  will  be
              ignored, until a reset is made.

       meName code
              This  method  returns the code information used to construct the
              object. In other  words,  the  match  program  executed  by  the
              machine.

       meName eof
              This  method  adds an end of file marker to the end of the input
              stream.  This signals the machine that the current  contents  of
              the  input  queue  are  the final parts of the input and nothing
              will come after. Attempts to put more characters into the  queue
              will fail.

       meName put tok lex line col
              This  method  adds the token tok to the end of the input stream,
              with associated lexeme data lex and line/column information.

       meName putstring string lvar cvar
              This method adds each individual character in the  string  as  a
              token  to  the  end of the input stream, from first to last. The
              lexemes will be empty and the line/col information  is  computed
              based  on  the  characters encountered and the data in the vari-
              ables lvar and cvar.

       meName run ?n?
              This methods causes the engine  to  execute  match  instructions
              until either

              o      n instructions have been executed, or

              o      a halt instruction was executed, or

              o      the  input queue is empty and the code is asking for more
                     tokens to process.

       If no limit n was set only the last two conditions are checked for.

       meName pull nextcmd
              This method implements pull-style operation of the  machine.  It
              causes  it  to  execute  match  instructions until either a halt
              instruction is reached, or the command prefix nextcmd ceases  to
              deliver more tokens.

              The  command prefix nextcmd represents the input stream of char-
              acters and is invoked by the machine whenever the a new  charac-
              ter  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 end of the input stream for this method does not imply  that
              method  eof  is  called  for the machine as a whole. By avoiding
              this and still asking for an explicit call of the method  it  is
              possible  to mix push- and pull-style operation during the life-
              time of the machine.

       meName reset
              This method resets the machine to its initial state,  discarding
              any state it may have.

       meName destroy
              This  method  deletes  the  object  and releases all resurces it
              claimed.



BUGS, IDEAS, FEEDBACK

       This document, and the package it describes, will  undoubtedly  contain
       bugs and other problems.  Please report such in the category grammar_me
       of       the       Tcllib       SF       Trackers       [http://source-
       forge.net/tracker/?group_id=12883].   Please  also report any ideas for
       enhancements you may have for either package and/or documentation.


KEYWORDS

       grammar, parsing, virtual machine


CATEGORY

       Grammars and finite automata


COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2005-2006 Andreas Kupries <andreas_kupries@users.sourceforge.net>




grammar_me                            0.2                  grammar::me::cpu(n)

Mac OS X 10.8 - Generated Sun Sep 9 15:24:49 CDT 2012
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