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- Lime: An LALR(1) parser generator in and for PHP.
- Interpretter pattern got you down? Time to use a real parser? Welcome to Lime.
- If you're familiar with BISON or YACC, you may want to read the metagrammar.
- It's written in the Lime input language, so you'll get a head-start on
- understanding how to use Lime.
- 0. If you're not running Linux on an IA32 box, then you will have to rebuild
- lime_scan_tokens for your system. It should be enough to erase it,
- and then type "CFLAGS=-O2 make lime_scan_tokens" at the bash prompt.
- 1. Stare at the file lime/metagrammar to understand the syntax. You're seeing
- slightly modified and tweaked Backus-Naur forms. The main differences
- are that you get to name your components, instead of refering to them
- by numbers the way that BISON demands. This idea was stolen from the
- C-based "Lemon" parser from which Lime derives its name. Incidentally,
- the author of Lemon disclaimed copyright, so you get a copy of the C
- code that taught me LALR(1) parsing better than any book, despite the
- obvious difficulties in understanding it. Oh, and one other thing:
- symbols are terminal if the scanner feeds them to the parser. They
- are non-terminal if they appear on the left side of a production rule.
- Lime names semantic categories using strings instead of the numbers
- that BISON-based parsers use, so you don't have to declare any list of
- terminal symbols anywhere.
- 2. Look at the file lime/lime.php to see what pragmas are defined. To be more
- specific, you might look at the method lime::pragma(), which at the
- time of this writing, supports "%left", "%right", "%nonassoc",
- "%start", and "%class". The first three are for operator precedence.
- The last two declare the start symbol and the name of a PHP class to
- generate which will hold all the bottom-up parsing tables.
- 3. Write a grammar file.
- 4. php /path/to/lime/lime.php list-of-grammar-files > my_parser.php
- 5. Read the function parse_lime_grammar() in lime.php to understand
- how to integrate your parser into your program.
- 6. Integrate your parser as follows:
- --------------- CUT ---------------
- include_once "lime/parse_engine.php";
- include_once "my_parser.php";
- #
- # Later:
- #
- $parser = new parse_engine(new my_parser());
- #
- # And still later:
- #
- try {
- while (..something..) {
- $parser->eat($type, $val);
- # You figure out how to get the parameters.
- }
- # And after the last token has been eaten:
- $parser->eat_eof();
- } catch (parse_error $e) {
- die($e->getMessage());
- }
- return $parser->semantic;
- --------------- CUT ---------------
- 7. You now have the computed semantic value of whatever you parsed. Add salt
- and pepper to taste, and serve.
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