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pt(n)                            Parser Tools                            pt(n)



______________________________________________________________________________


NAME

       pt - Parser Tools Application


SYNOPSIS

       package require Tcl  8.5

       pt generate resultformat ?options...? resultfile inputformat inputfile

_________________________________________________________________


DESCRIPTION

       Are  you  lost ?  Do you have trouble understanding this document ?  In
       that case please read the overview  provided  by  the  Introduction  to
       Parser  Tools.  This document is the entrypoint to the whole system the
       current package is a part of.

       This document describes pt, the  main  application  of  the  module,  a
       parser generator. Its intended audience are people who wish to create a
       parser for some language of theirs.  Should  you  wish  to  modify  the
       application  instead,  please  see  the section about the application's
       Internals for the basic references.

       It resides in the User Application Layer of Parser Tools.

       IMAGE: arch_user_app



COMMAND LINE

       pt generate resultformat ?options...? resultfile inputformat inputfile
              This sub-command of the application reads the parsing expression
              grammar  stored in the inputfile in the format inputformat, con-
              verts it to the resultformat under the direction of the (format-
              specific)  set  of  options specified by the user and stores the
              result in the resultfile.

              The inputfile has to exist, while the resultfile may be created,
              overwriting  any  pre-existing  content of the file. Any missing
              directory in the path to the resultfile will be created as well.

              The  exact  form  of the result for, and the set of options sup-
              ported by the known result-formats, are explained in the  upcom-
              ing  sections of this document, with the list below providing an
              index mapping between format name and its associated section. In
              alphabetical order:


              c      A resultformat. See section C Parser.

              container
                     A resultformat. See section Grammar Container.

              critcl A resultformat. See section C Parser Embedded In Tcl.

              json   A  input-  and  resultformat.  See  section  JSON Grammar
                     Exchange.

              oo     A resultformat. See section TclOO Parser.

              peg    A input- and resultformat. See section PEG  Specification
                     Language.

              snit   A resultformat. See section Snit Parser.

       Of the seven possible results four are parsers outright (c, critcl, oo,
       and snit), one (container) provides code which can be used in  conjunc-
       tion  with  a generic parser (also known as a grammar interpreter), and
       the last two (json and peg) are doing  double-duty  as  input  formats,
       allowing the transformation of grammars for exchange, reformatting, and
       the like.

       The created parsers fall into three categories:

       IMAGE: gen_options


       Specialized parsers implemented in C
              The fastest parsers are created when using the result formats  c
              and  critcl.  The  first  returns the raw C code for the parser,
              while the latter wraps it into a Tcl package using CriTcl.

              This makes the latter much easier to use than the former. On the
              other hand, the former can be adapted to the users' requirements
              through a multitude of options, allowing for things  like  usage
              of the parser outside of a Tcl environment, something the critcl
              format doesn't support. As such the c format is meant  for  more
              advanced users, or users with special needs.

              A disadvantage of all the parsers in this section is the need to
              run them through a C compiler to make them actually  executable.
              This  is not something everyone has the necessary tools for. The
              parsers in the next section are for people under  such  restric-
              tions.

       Specialized parsers implemented in Tcl
              As  the  parsers in this section are implemented in Tcl they are
              quite a bit slower than anything from the previous  section.  On
              the  other hand this allows them to be used in pure-Tcl environ-
              ments, or in environments which allow  only  a  limited  set  of
              binary  packages.  In the latter case it will be advantageous to
              lobby for the inclusion of the C-based  runtime  support  (notes
              below) into the environment to reduce the impact of Tcl's on the
              speed of these parsers.

              The relevant formats are snit and oo. Both  place  their  result
              into  a  Tcl  package  containing  a  snit::type, or TclOO class
              respectively.

              Of the supporting runtime, which is  the  package  pt::rde,  the
              user  has  to  know  nothing but that it does exist and that the
              parsers are dependent on it. Knowledge of the  API  exported  by
              the  runtime for the parsers' consumption is not required by the
              parsers' users.

       Interpreted parsing implemented in Tcl
              The last category, grammar interpretation. This  means  that  an
              interpreter  for  parsing expression grammars takes the descrip-
              tion of the grammar to parse input for, and uses  it  guide  the
              parsing  process.  This is the slowest of the available options,
              as the interpreter has to continually run through the configured
              grammar,  whereas  the  specialized parsers of the previous sec-
              tions have the relevant knowledge about the grammar  baked  into
              them.

              The  only  places where using interpretation make sense is where
              the grammar for some input may be changed interactively  by  the
              user,  as  the  interpretation allows for quick turnaround after
              each change, whereas the previous methods require the generation
              of a whole new parser, which is not as fast.  On the other hand,
              wherever the grammar to use is fixed, the previous  methods  are
              much  more  advantageous  as  the time to generate the parser is
              minuscule compared to the time the parser code is in use.

              The relevant result format is container.  It (quickly) generates
              grammar  descriptions (instead of a full parser) which match the
              API expected by ParserTools' grammar interpreter.  The latter is
              provided by the package pt::peg::interp.

       All  the  parsers  generated  by  critcl, snit, and oo, and the grammar
       interpreter share a common API for access to the actual  parsing  func-
       tionality,  making  them  all  plug-compatible.  It is described in the
       Parser API specification document.


PEG SPECIFICATION LANGUAGE

       peg, a language for the specification of parsing expression grammars is
       meant  to be human readable, and writable as well, yet strict enough to
       allow its processing by machine. Like any  computer  language.  It  was
       defined  to make writing the specification of a grammar easy, something
       the other formats found in the Parser Tools do not lend themselves too.

       For  either  an introduction to or the formal specification of the lan-
       guage, please go and read the PEG Language Tutorial.

       When used  as  a  result-format  this  format  supports  the  following
       options:

       -file string
              The value of this option is the name of the file or other entity
              from which the grammar came, for which the command is  run.  The
              default value is unknown.

       -name string
              The  value of this option is the name of the grammar we are pro-
              cessing.  The default value is a_pe_grammar.

       -user string
              The value of this option is the name of the user for  which  the
              command is run. The default value is unknown.

       -template string
              The  value of this option is a string into which to put the gen-
              erated text and the values of the  other  options.  The  various
              locations  for  user-data  are expected to be specified with the
              placeholders listed below. The default value is "@code@".

              @user@ To be replaced with the value of the option -user.

              @format@
                     To be replaced with the the constant PEG.

              @file@ To be replaced with the value of the option -file.

              @name@ To be replaced with the value of the option -name.

              @code@ To be replaced with the generated text.



JSON GRAMMAR EXCHANGE

       The json format for parsing expression grammars was written as  a  data
       exchange  format not bound to Tcl. It was defined to allow the exchange
       of grammars with PackRat/PEG based parser  generators  for  other  lan-
       guages.

       For  the  formal  specification  of  the  JSON grammar exchange format,
       please go and read The JSON Grammar Exchange Format.

       When used  as  a  result-format  this  format  supports  the  following
       options:

       -file string
              The value of this option is the name of the file or other entity
              from which the grammar came, for which the command is  run.  The
              default value is unknown.

       -name string
              The  value of this option is the name of the grammar we are pro-
              cessing.  The default value is a_pe_grammar.

       -user string
              The value of this option is the name of the user for  which  the
              command is run. The default value is unknown.

       -indented boolean
              If  this  option is set the system will break the generated JSON
              across lines and indent it according  to  its  inner  structure,
              with each key of a dictionary on a separate line.

              If  the  option  is not set (the default), the whole JSON object
              will be written on a single line, with minimum  spacing  between
              all elements.

       -aligned boolean
              If this option is set the system will ensure that the values for
              the keys in a dictionary are vertically aligned with each other,
              for  a  nice  table effect.  To make this work this also implies
              that -indented is set.

              If the option is not set (the default), the output is  formatted
              as per the value of indented, without trying to align the values
              for dictionary keys.



C PARSER EMBEDDED IN TCL

       The critcl format is executable code, a parser for the grammar. It is a
       Tcl  package  with  the  actual  parser implementation written in C and
       embedded in Tcl via the critcl package.

       This result-format supports the following options:

       -file string
              The value of this option is the name of the file or other entity
              from  which  the grammar came, for which the command is run. The
              default value is unknown.

       -name string
              The value of this option is the name of the grammar we are  pro-
              cessing.  The default value is a_pe_grammar.

       -user string
              The  value  of this option is the name of the user for which the
              command is run. The default value is unknown.

       -class string
              The value of this option is the name of the class  to  generate,
              without leading colons.  The default value is CLASS.

              For a simple value X without colons, like CLASS, the parser com-
              mand will be X::X. Whereas  for  a  namespaced  value  X::Y  the
              parser command will be X::Y.

       -package string
              The value of this option is the name of the package to generate.
              The default value is PACKAGE.



C PARSER

       The c format is executable code, a parser for the grammar.  The  parser
       implementation  is  written in C and can be tweaked to the users' needs
       through a multitude of options.

       The critcl format, for example, is implemented as a  canned  configura-
       tion of these options on top of the generator for c.

       This result-format supports the following options:

       -file string
              The value of this option is the name of the file or other entity
              from which the grammar came, for which the command is  run.  The
              default value is unknown.

       -name string
              The  value of this option is the name of the grammar we are pro-
              cessing.  The default value is a_pe_grammar.

       -user string
              The value of this option is the name of the user for  which  the
              command is run. The default value is unknown.

       -template string
              The  value of this option is a string into which to put the gen-
              erated text and the other configuration  settings.  The  various
              locations  for  user-data  are expected to be specified with the
              placeholders listed below. The default value is "@code@".

              @user@ To be replaced with the value of the option -user.

              @format@
                     To be replaced with the the constant C/PARAM.

              @file@ To be replaced with the value of the option -file.

              @name@ To be replaced with the value of the option -name.

              @code@ To be replaced with the generated Tcl code.
       The following options are special, in that they will occur  within  the
       generated code, and are replaced there as well.

              @statedecl@
                     To be replaced with the value of the option state-decl.

              @stateref@
                     To be replaced with the value of the option state-ref.

              @strings@
                     To  be  replaced with the value of the option string-var-
                     name.

              @self@ To be replaced with the value of the option self-command.

              @def@  To  be  replaced  with the value of the option fun-quali-
                     fier.

              @ns@   To be replaced with the value of the option namespace.

              @main@ To be replaced with the value of the option main.

              @prelude@
                     To be replaced with the value of the option prelude.

       -state-decl string
              A C string representing the argument declaration to use  in  the
              generated  parsing  functions  to refer to the parsing state. In
              essence type and argument name.  The default value is the string
              RDE_PARAM p.

       -state-ref string
              A C string representing the argument named used in the generated
              parsing functions to refer to the parsing  state.   The  default
              value is the string p.

       -self-command string
              A  C string representing the reference needed to call the gener-
              ated parser function (methods ...) from another parser fonction,
              per  the  chosen framework (template).  The default value is the
              empty string.

       -fun-qualifier string
              A C string containing the attributes to give  to  the  generated
              functions  (methods  ...),  per the chosen framework (template).
              The default value is static.

       -namespace string
              The name of the C namespace the parser functions (methods,  ...)
              shall  reside  in,  or  a  general prefix to add to the function
              names.  The default value is the empty string.

       -main string
              The name of the main function (method, ...) to be called by  the
              chosen framework (template) to start parsing input.  The default
              value is __main.

       -string-varname string
              The name of the variable used for the table of strings  used  by
              the  generated  parser,  i.e. error messages, symbol names, etc.
              The default value is p_string.

       -prelude string
              A snippet of code to be inserted at the head of  each  generated
              parsing function.  The default value is the empty string.

       -indent integer
              The  number  of  characters to indent each line of the generated
              code by.  The default value is 0.



SNIT PARSER

       The snit format is executable code, a parser for the grammar. It  is  a
       Tcl  package  holding  a  snit::type, i.e. a class, whose instances are
       parsers for the input grammar.

       This result-format supports the following options:

       -file string
              The value of this option is the name of the file or other entity
              from  which  the grammar came, for which the command is run. The
              default value is unknown.

       -name string
              The value of this option is the name of the grammar we are  pro-
              cessing.  The default value is a_pe_grammar.

       -user string
              The  value  of this option is the name of the user for which the
              command is run. The default value is unknown.

       -class string
              The value of this option is the name of the class  to  generate,
              without  leading colons. Note, it serves double-duty as the name
              of the package to generate too.  The default value is CLASS.



TCLOO PARSER

       The oo format is executable code, a parser for the grammar. It is a Tcl
       package  holding  a  TclOO  class,  whose instances are parsers for the
       input grammar.

       This result-format supports the following options:

       -file string
              The value of this option is the name of the file or other entity
              from  which  the grammar came, for which the command is run. The
              default value is unknown.

       -name string
              The value of this option is the name of the grammar we are  pro-
              cessing.  The default value is a_pe_grammar.

       -user string
              The  value  of this option is the name of the user for which the
              command is run. The default value is unknown.

       -class string
              The value of this option is the name of the class  to  generate,
              without  leading colons. Note, it serves double-duty as the name
              of the package to generate too.  The default value is CLASS.



GRAMMAR CONTAINER

       The container format is another form of describing  parsing  expression
       grammars.  While  data in this format is executable it does not consti-
       tute a parser for the grammar. It always has to be used in  conjunction
       with the package pt::peg::interp, a grammar interpreter.

       The  format  represents  grammars  by  a  snit::type, i.e. class, whose
       instances are API-compatible to the instances of the pt::peg::container
       package, and which are preloaded with the grammar in question.

       This result-format supports the following options:

       -file string
              The value of this option is the name of the file or other entity
              from which the grammar came, for which the command is  run.  The
              default value is unknown.

       -name string
              The  value of this option is the name of the grammar we are pro-
              cessing.  The default value is a_pe_grammar.

       -user string
              The value of this option is the name of the user for  which  the
              command is run. The default value is unknown.

       -mode bulk|incremental
              The value of this option controls which methods of pt::peg::con-
              tainer instances are used to specify the grammar,  i.e.  preload
              it  into  the  container.  There are two legal values, as listed
              below. The default is bulk.

              bulk   In this mode the methods start, add, modes, and rules are
                     used  to  specify the grammar in a bulk manner, i.e. as a
                     set of nonterminal symbols, and two dictionaries  mapping
                     from  the  symbols  to  their  semantic modes and parsing
                     expressions.

                     This mode is the default.

              incremental
                     In this mode the methods start, add, mode, and  rule  are
                     used to specify the grammar piecemal, with each nontermi-
                     nal having its own block of defining commands.

       -template string
              The value of this option is a string into which to put the  gen-
              erated  code  and  the other configuration settings. The various
              locations for user-data are expected to be  specified  with  the
              placeholders listed below. The default value is "@code@".

              @user@ To be replaced with the value of the option -user.

              @format@
                     To be replaced with the the constant CONTAINER.

              @file@ To be replaced with the value of the option -file.

              @name@ To be replaced with the value of the option -name.

              @mode@ To be replaced with the value of the option -mode.

              @code@ To be replaced with the generated code.



EXAMPLE

       In  this section we are working a complete example, starting with a PEG
       grammar and ending with running the parser generated from it over  some
       input, following the outline shown in the figure below:

       IMAGE: flow

       Our grammar, assumed to the stored in the file "calculator.peg" is

       PEG calculator (Expression)
           Digit      <- '0'/'1'/'2'/'3'/'4'/'5'/'6'/'7'/'8'/'9'   ;
           Sign       <- '-' / '+'                       ;
           Number     <- Sign? Digit+                         ;
           Expression <- '(' Expression ')' / (Factor (MulOp Factor)*)  ;
           MulOp      <- '*' / '/'                       ;
           Factor     <- Term (AddOp Term)*                   ;
           AddOp      <- '+'/'-'                         ;
           Term       <- Number                     ;
       END;

       From this we create a snit-based parser via

       pt generate  snit calculator.tcl  -class calculator  -name  calculator  peg calculator.peg

       which  leaves  us with the parser package and class written to the file
       "calculator.tcl".   Assuming  that  this  package  is   then   properly
       installed  in  a  place where Tcl can find it we can now use this class
       via a script like

           package require calculator

           lassign $argv input
           set channel [open $input r]

           set parser [calculator]
           set ast [$parser parse $channel]
           $parser destroy
           close $channel

           ... now process the returned abstract syntax tree ...

       where the abstract syntax tree stored in the variable will look like


       set ast {Expression 0 4
           {Factor 0 4
               {Term 0 2
                   {Number 0 2
                       {Digit 0 0}
                       {Digit 1 1}
                       {Digit 2 2}
                   }
               }
               {AddOp 3 3}
               {Term 4 4
                   {Number 4 4
                       {Digit 4 4}
                   }
               }
           }
       }


       assuming that the input file and channel contained the text
        120+5
       A more graphical representation of the tree would be

       IMAGE: expr_ast

       Regardless, at this point it is the user's responsibility to work  with
       the tree to reach whatever goal she desires. I.e. analyze it, transform
       it, etc. The package pt::ast should be of help here, providing commands
       to walk such ASTs structures in various ways.

       One important thing to note is that the parsers used here return a data
       structure representing the structure  of  the  input  per  the  grammar
       underlying  the  parser.  There  are  no  callbacks  during the parsing
       process, i.e. no parsing actions, as most other parsers will have.

       Going back to the last snippet of code, the execution of the parser for
       some  input,  note how the parser instance follows the specified Parser
       API.


INTERNALS

       This section is intended for users of the  application  which  wish  to
       modify or extend it. Users only interested in the generation of parsers
       can ignore it.

       The main functionality of the application is encapsulated in the  pack-
       age pt::pgen. Please read it for more information.


BUGS, IDEAS, FEEDBACK

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


KEYWORDS

       EBNF,  LL(k),  PEG,  TDPL, context-free languages, expression, grammar,
       matching, parser, parsing expression, parsing expression grammar,  push
       down  automaton,  recursive descent, state, top-down parsing languages,
       transducer


CATEGORY

       Parsing and Grammars


COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2009 Andreas Kupries <andreas_kupries@users.sourceforge.net>




pt                                     1                                 pt(n)

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