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1 ======================================================================
2
3 CHANGES_SUMMARY.TXT
4
5 A QUICK overview of changes from 1.33 in reverse order
6
7 A summary of additions rather than bug fixes and minor code changes.
8
9 Numbers refer to items in CHANGES_FROM_133*.TXT
10 which may contain additional information.
11
12 DISCLAIMER
13
14 The software and these notes are provided "as is". They may include
15 typographical or technical errors and their authors disclaims all
16 liability of any kind or nature for damages due to error, fault,
17 defect, or deficiency regardless of cause. All warranties of any
18 kind, either express or implied, including, but not limited to, the
19 implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular
20 purpose are disclaimed.
21
22 ======================================================================
23
24 #258. You can specify a user-defined base class for your parser
25
26 The base class must constructor must have a signature similar to
27 that of ANTLRParser.
28
29 #253. Generation of block preamble (-preamble and -preamble_first)
30
31 The antlr option -preamble causes antlr to insert the code
32 BLOCK_PREAMBLE at the start of each rule and block.
33
34 The antlr option -preamble_first is similar, but inserts the
35 code BLOCK_PREAMBLE_FIRST(PreambleFirst_123) where the symbol
36 PreambleFirst_123 is equivalent to the first set defined by
37 the #FirstSetSymbol described in Item #248.
38
39 #248. Generate symbol for first set of an alternative
40
41 rr : #FirstSetSymbol(rr_FirstSet) ( Foo | Bar ) ;
42
43 #216. Defer token fetch for C++ mode
44
45 When the ANTLRParser class is built with the pre-processor option
46 ZZDEFER_FETCH defined, the fetch of new tokens by consume() is deferred
47 until LA(i) or LT(i) is called.
48
49 #215. Use reset() to reset DLGLexerBase
50 #188. Added pccts/h/DLG_stream_input.h
51 #180. Added ANTLRParser::getEofToken()
52 #173. -glms for Microsoft style filenames with -gl
53 #170. Suppression for predicates with lookahead depth >1
54
55 Consider the following grammar with -ck 2 and the predicate in rule
56 "a" with depth 2:
57
58 r1 : (ab)* "@"
59 ;
60
61 ab : a
62 | b
63 ;
64
65 a : (A B)? => <<p(LATEXT(2))>>? A B C
66 ;
67
68 b : A B C
69 ;
70
71 Normally, the predicate would be hoisted into rule r1 in order to
72 determine whether to call rule "ab". However it should *not* be
73 hoisted because, even if p is false, there is a valid alternative
74 in rule b. With "-mrhoistk on" the predicate will be suppressed.
75
76 If "-info p" command line option is present the following information
77 will appear in the generated code:
78
79 while ( (LA(1)==A)
80 #if 0
81
82 Part (or all) of predicate with depth > 1 suppressed by alternative
83 without predicate
84
85 pred << p(LATEXT(2))>>?
86 depth=k=2 ("=>" guard) rule a line 8 t1.g
87 tree context:
88 (root = A
89 B
90 )
91
92 The token sequence which is suppressed: ( A B )
93 The sequence of references which generate that sequence of tokens:
94
95 1 to ab r1/1 line 1 t1.g
96 2 ab ab/1 line 4 t1.g
97 3 to b ab/2 line 5 t1.g
98 4 b b/1 line 11 t1.g
99 5 #token A b/1 line 11 t1.g
100 6 #token B b/1 line 11 t1.g
101
102 #endif
103
104 A slightly more complicated example:
105
106 r1 : (ab)* "@"
107 ;
108
109 ab : a
110 | b
111 ;
112
113 a : (A B)? => <<p(LATEXT(2))>>? (A B | D E)
114 ;
115
116 b : <<q(LATEXT(2))>>? D E
117 ;
118
119
120 In this case, the sequence (D E) in rule "a" which lies behind
121 the guard is used to suppress the predicate with context (D E)
122 in rule b.
123
124 while ( (LA(1)==A || LA(1)==D)
125 #if 0
126
127 Part (or all) of predicate with depth > 1 suppressed by alternative
128 without predicate
129
130 pred << q(LATEXT(2))>>?
131 depth=k=2 rule b line 11 t2.g
132 tree context:
133 (root = D
134 E
135 )
136
137 The token sequence which is suppressed: ( D E )
138 The sequence of references which generate that sequence of tokens:
139
140 1 to ab r1/1 line 1 t2.g
141 2 ab ab/1 line 4 t2.g
142 3 to a ab/1 line 4 t2.g
143 4 a a/1 line 8 t2.g
144 5 #token D a/1 line 8 t2.g
145 6 #token E a/1 line 8 t2.g
146
147 #endif
148 &&
149 #if 0
150
151 pred << p(LATEXT(2))>>?
152 depth=k=2 ("=>" guard) rule a line 8 t2.g
153 tree context:
154 (root = A
155 B
156 )
157
158 #endif
159
160 (! ( LA(1)==A && LA(2)==B ) || p(LATEXT(2)) ) {
161 ab();
162 ...
163
164 #165. (Changed in MR13) option -newAST
165
166 To create ASTs from an ANTLRTokenPtr antlr usually calls
167 "new AST(ANTLRTokenPtr)". This option generates a call
168 to "newAST(ANTLRTokenPtr)" instead. This allows a user
169 to define a parser member function to create an AST object.
170
171 #161. (Changed in MR13) Switch -gxt inhibits generation of tokens.h
172
173 #158. (Changed in MR13) #header causes problem for pre-processors
174
175 A user who runs the C pre-processor on antlr source suggested
176 that another syntax be allowed. With MR13 such directives
177 such as #header, #pragma, etc. may be written as "\#header",
178 "\#pragma", etc. For escaping pre-processor directives inside
179 a #header use something like the following:
180
181 \#header
182 <<
183 \#include <stdio.h>
184 >>
185
186 #155. (Changed in MR13) Context behind predicates can suppress
187
188 With -mrhoist enabled the context behind a guarded predicate can
189 be used to suppress other predicates. Consider the following grammar:
190
191 r0 : (r1)+;
192
193 r1 : rp
194 | rq
195 ;
196 rp : <<p LATEXT(1)>>? B ;
197 rq : (A)? => <<q LATEXT(1)>>? (A|B);
198
199 In earlier versions both predicates "p" and "q" would be hoisted into
200 rule r0. With MR12c predicate p is suppressed because the context which
201 follows predicate q includes "B" which can "cover" predicate "p". In
202 other words, in trying to decide in r0 whether to call r1, it doesn't
203 really matter whether p is false or true because, either way, there is
204 a valid choice within r1.
205
206 #154. (Changed in MR13) Making hoist suppression explicit using <<nohoist>>
207
208 A common error, even among experienced pccts users, is to code
209 an init-action to inhibit hoisting rather than a leading action.
210 An init-action does not inhibit hoisting.
211
212 This was coded:
213
214 rule1 : <<;>> rule2
215
216 This is what was meant:
217
218 rule1 : <<;>> <<;>> rule2
219
220 With MR13, the user can code:
221
222 rule1 : <<;>> <<nohoist>> rule2
223
224 The following will give an error message:
225
226 rule1 : <<nohoist>> rule2
227
228 If the <<nohoist>> appears as an init-action rather than a leading
229 action an error message is issued. The meaning of an init-action
230 containing "nohoist" is unclear: does it apply to just one
231 alternative or to all alternatives ?
232
233 #151a. Addition of ANTLRParser::getLexer(), ANTLRTokenStream::getLexer()
234
235 You must manually cast the ANTLRTokenStream to your program's
236 lexer class. Because the name of the lexer's class is not fixed.
237 Thus it is impossible to incorporate it into the DLGLexerBase
238 class.
239
240 #151b.(Changed in MR12) ParserBlackBox member getLexer()
241
242 #150. (Changed in MR12) syntaxErrCount and lexErrCount now public
243
244 #149. (Changed in MR12) antlr option -info o (letter o for orphan)
245
246 If there is more than one rule which is not referenced by any
247 other rule then all such rules are listed. This is useful for
248 alerting one to rules which are not used, but which can still
249 contribute to ambiguity.
250
251 #148. (Changed in MR11) #token names appearing in zztokens,token_tbl
252
253 One can write:
254
255 #token Plus ("+") "\+"
256 #token RP ("(") "\("
257 #token COM ("comment begin") "/\*"
258
259 The string in parenthesis will be used in syntax error messages.
260
261 #146. (Changed in MR11) Option -treport for locating "difficult" alts
262
263 It can be difficult to determine which alternatives are causing
264 pccts to work hard to resolve an ambiguity. In some cases the
265 ambiguity is successfully resolved after much CPU time so there
266 is no message at all.
267
268 A rough measure of the amount of work being peformed which is
269 independent of the CPU speed and system load is the number of
270 tnodes created. Using "-info t" gives information about the
271 total number of tnodes created and the peak number of tnodes.
272
273 Tree Nodes: peak 1300k created 1416k lost 0
274
275 It also puts in the generated C or C++ file the number of tnodes
276 created for a rule (at the end of the rule). However this
277 information is not sufficient to locate the alternatives within
278 a rule which are causing the creation of tnodes.
279
280 Using:
281
282 antlr -treport 100000 ....
283
284 causes antlr to list on stdout any alternatives which require the
285 creation of more than 100,000 tnodes, along with the lookahead sets
286 for those alternatives.
287
288 The following is a trivial case from the ansi.g grammar which shows
289 the format of the report. This report might be of more interest
290 in cases where 1,000,000 tuples were created to resolve the ambiguity.
291
292 -------------------------------------------------------------------------
293 There were 0 tuples whose ambiguity could not be resolved
294 by full lookahead
295 There were 157 tnodes created to resolve ambiguity between:
296
297 Choice 1: statement/2 line 475 file ansi.g
298 Choice 2: statement/3 line 476 file ansi.g
299
300 Intersection of lookahead[1] sets:
301
302 IDENTIFIER
303
304 Intersection of lookahead[2] sets:
305
306 LPARENTHESIS COLON AMPERSAND MINUS
307 STAR PLUSPLUS MINUSMINUS ONESCOMPLEMENT
308 NOT SIZEOF OCTALINT DECIMALINT
309 HEXADECIMALINT FLOATONE FLOATTWO IDENTIFIER
310 STRING CHARACTER
311 -------------------------------------------------------------------------
312
313 #143. (Changed in MR11) Optional ";" at end of #token statement
314
315 Fixes problem of:
316
317 #token X "x"
318
319 <<
320 parser action
321 >>
322
323 Being confused with:
324
325 #token X "x" <<lexical action>>
326
327 #142. (Changed in MR11) class BufFileInput subclass of DLGInputStream
328
329 Alexey Demakov (demakov@kazbek.ispras.ru) has supplied class
330 BufFileInput derived from DLGInputStream which provides a
331 function lookahead(char *string) to test characters in the
332 input stream more than one character ahead.
333 The class is located in pccts/h/BufFileInput.* of the kit.
334
335 #140. #pred to define predicates
336
337 +---------------------------------------------------+
338 | Note: Assume "-prc on" for this entire discussion |
339 +---------------------------------------------------+
340
341 A problem with predicates is that each one is regarded as
342 unique and capable of disambiguating cases where two
343 alternatives have identical lookahead. For example:
344
345 rule : <<pred(LATEXT(1))>>? A
346 | <<pred(LATEXT(1))>>? A
347 ;
348
349 will not cause any error messages or warnings to be issued
350 by earlier versions of pccts. To compare the text of the
351 predicates is an incomplete solution.
352
353 In 1.33MR11 I am introducing the #pred statement in order to
354 solve some problems with predicates. The #pred statement allows
355 one to give a symbolic name to a "predicate literal" or a
356 "predicate expression" in order to refer to it in other predicate
357 expressions or in the rules of the grammar.
358
359 The predicate literal associated with a predicate symbol is C
360 or C++ code which can be used to test the condition. A
361 predicate expression defines a predicate symbol in terms of other
362 predicate symbols using "!", "&&", and "||". A predicate symbol
363 can be defined in terms of a predicate literal, a predicate
364 expression, or *both*.
365
366 When a predicate symbol is defined with both a predicate literal
367 and a predicate expression, the predicate literal is used to generate
368 code, but the predicate expression is used to check for two
369 alternatives with identical predicates in both alternatives.
370
371 Here are some examples of #pred statements:
372
373 #pred IsLabel <<isLabel(LATEXT(1))>>?
374 #pred IsLocalVar <<isLocalVar(LATEXT(1))>>?
375 #pred IsGlobalVar <<isGlobalVar(LATEXT(1)>>?
376 #pred IsVar <<isVar(LATEXT(1))>>? IsLocalVar || IsGlobalVar
377 #pred IsScoped <<isScoped(LATEXT(1))>>? IsLabel || IsLocalVar
378
379 I hope that the use of EBNF notation to describe the syntax of the
380 #pred statement will not cause problems for my readers (joke).
381
382 predStatement : "#pred"
383 CapitalizedName
384 (
385 "<<predicate_literal>>?"
386 | "<<predicate_literal>>?" predOrExpr
387 | predOrExpr
388 )
389 ;
390
391 predOrExpr : predAndExpr ( "||" predAndExpr ) * ;
392
393 predAndExpr : predPrimary ( "&&" predPrimary ) * ;
394
395 predPrimary : CapitalizedName
396 | "!" predPrimary
397 | "(" predOrExpr ")"
398 ;
399
400 What is the purpose of this nonsense ?
401
402 To understand how predicate symbols help, you need to realize that
403 predicate symbols are used in two different ways with two different
404 goals.
405
406 a. Allow simplification of predicates which have been combined
407 during predicate hoisting.
408
409 b. Allow recognition of identical predicates which can't disambiguate
410 alternatives with common lookahead.
411
412 First we will discuss goal (a). Consider the following rule:
413
414 rule0: rule1
415 | ID
416 | ...
417 ;
418
419 rule1: rule2
420 | rule3
421 ;
422
423 rule2: <<isX(LATEXT(1))>>? ID ;
424 rule3: <<!isX(LATEXT(1)>>? ID ;
425
426 When the predicates in rule2 and rule3 are combined by hoisting
427 to create a prediction expression for rule1 the result is:
428
429 if ( LA(1)==ID
430 && ( isX(LATEXT(1) || !isX(LATEXT(1) ) ) { rule1(); ...
431
432 This is inefficient, but more importantly, can lead to false
433 assumptions that the predicate expression distinguishes the rule1
434 alternative with some other alternative with lookahead ID. In
435 MR11 one can write:
436
437 #pred IsX <<isX(LATEXT(1))>>?
438
439 ...
440
441 rule2: <<IsX>>? ID ;
442 rule3: <<!IsX>>? ID ;
443
444 During hoisting MR11 recognizes this as a special case and
445 eliminates the predicates. The result is a prediction
446 expression like the following:
447
448 if ( LA(1)==ID ) { rule1(); ...
449
450 Please note that the following cases which appear to be equivalent
451 *cannot* be simplified by MR11 during hoisting because the hoisting
452 logic only checks for a "!" in the predicate action, not in the
453 predicate expression for a predicate symbol.
454
455 *Not* equivalent and is not simplified during hoisting:
456
457 #pred IsX <<isX(LATEXT(1))>>?
458 #pred NotX <<!isX(LATEXT(1))>>?
459 ...
460 rule2: <<IsX>>? ID ;
461 rule3: <<NotX>>? ID ;
462
463 *Not* equivalent and is not simplified during hoisting:
464
465 #pred IsX <<isX(LATEXT(1))>>?
466 #pred NotX !IsX
467 ...
468 rule2: <<IsX>>? ID ;
469 rule3: <<NotX>>? ID ;
470
471 Now we will discuss goal (b).
472
473 When antlr discovers that there is a lookahead ambiguity between
474 two alternatives it attempts to resolve the ambiguity by searching
475 for predicates in both alternatives. In the past any predicate
476 would do, even if the same one appeared in both alternatives:
477
478 rule: <<p(LATEXT(1))>>? X
479 | <<p(LATEXT(1))>>? X
480 ;
481
482 The #pred statement is a start towards solving this problem.
483 During ambiguity resolution (*not* predicate hoisting) the
484 predicates for the two alternatives are expanded and compared.
485 Consider the following example:
486
487 #pred Upper <<isUpper(LATEXT(1))>>?
488 #pred Lower <<isLower(LATEXT(1))>>?
489 #pred Alpha <<isAlpha(LATEXT(1))>>? Upper || Lower
490
491 rule0: rule1
492 | <<Alpha>>? ID
493 ;
494
495 rule1:
496 | rule2
497 | rule3
498 ...
499 ;
500
501 rule2: <<Upper>>? ID;
502 rule3: <<Lower>>? ID;
503
504 The definition of #pred Alpha expresses:
505
506 a. to test the predicate use the C code "isAlpha(LATEXT(1))"
507
508 b. to analyze the predicate use the information that
509 Alpha is equivalent to the union of Upper and Lower,
510
511 During ambiguity resolution the definition of Alpha is expanded
512 into "Upper || Lower" and compared with the predicate in the other
513 alternative, which is also "Upper || Lower". Because they are
514 identical MR11 will report a problem.
515
516 -------------------------------------------------------------------------
517 t10.g, line 5: warning: the predicates used to disambiguate rule rule0
518 (file t10.g alt 1 line 5 and alt 2 line 6)
519 are identical when compared without context and may have no
520 resolving power for some lookahead sequences.
521 -------------------------------------------------------------------------
522
523 If you use the "-info p" option the output file will contain:
524
525 +----------------------------------------------------------------------+
526 |#if 0 |
527 | |
528 |The following predicates are identical when compared without |
529 | lookahead context information. For some ambiguous lookahead |
530 | sequences they may not have any power to resolve the ambiguity. |
531 | |
532 |Choice 1: rule0/1 alt 1 line 5 file t10.g |
533 | |
534 | The original predicate for choice 1 with available context |
535 | information: |
536 | |
537 | OR expr |
538 | |
539 | pred << Upper>>? |
540 | depth=k=1 rule rule2 line 14 t10.g |
541 | set context: |
542 | ID |
543 | |
544 | pred << Lower>>? |
545 | depth=k=1 rule rule3 line 15 t10.g |
546 | set context: |
547 | ID |
548 | |
549 | The predicate for choice 1 after expansion (but without context |
550 | information): |
551 | |
552 | OR expr |
553 | |
554 | pred << isUpper(LATEXT(1))>>? |
555 | depth=k=1 rule line 1 t10.g |
556 | |
557 | pred << isLower(LATEXT(1))>>? |
558 | depth=k=1 rule line 2 t10.g |
559 | |
560 | |
561 |Choice 2: rule0/2 alt 2 line 6 file t10.g |
562 | |
563 | The original predicate for choice 2 with available context |
564 | information: |
565 | |
566 | pred << Alpha>>? |
567 | depth=k=1 rule rule0 line 6 t10.g |
568 | set context: |
569 | ID |
570 | |
571 | The predicate for choice 2 after expansion (but without context |
572 | information): |
573 | |
574 | OR expr |
575 | |
576 | pred << isUpper(LATEXT(1))>>? |
577 | depth=k=1 rule line 1 t10.g |
578 | |
579 | pred << isLower(LATEXT(1))>>? |
580 | depth=k=1 rule line 2 t10.g |
581 | |
582 | |
583 |#endif |
584 +----------------------------------------------------------------------+
585
586 The comparison of the predicates for the two alternatives takes
587 place without context information, which means that in some cases
588 the predicates will be considered identical even though they operate
589 on disjoint lookahead sets. Consider:
590
591 #pred Alpha
592
593 rule1: <<Alpha>>? ID
594 | <<Alpha>>? Label
595 ;
596
597 Because the comparison of predicates takes place without context
598 these will be considered identical. The reason for comparing
599 without context is that otherwise it would be necessary to re-evaluate
600 the entire predicate expression for each possible lookahead sequence.
601 This would require more code to be written and more CPU time during
602 grammar analysis, and it is not yet clear whether anyone will even make
603 use of the new #pred facility.
604
605 A temporary workaround might be to use different #pred statements
606 for predicates you know have different context. This would avoid
607 extraneous warnings.
608
609 The above example might be termed a "false positive". Comparison
610 without context will also lead to "false negatives". Consider the
611 following example:
612
613 #pred Alpha
614 #pred Beta
615
616 rule1: <<Alpha>>? A
617 | rule2
618 ;
619
620 rule2: <<Alpha>>? A
621 | <<Beta>>? B
622 ;
623
624 The predicate used for alt 2 of rule1 is (Alpha || Beta). This
625 appears to be different than the predicate Alpha used for alt1.
626 However, the context of Beta is B. Thus when the lookahead is A
627 Beta will have no resolving power and Alpha will be used for both
628 alternatives. Using the same predicate for both alternatives isn't
629 very helpful, but this will not be detected with 1.33MR11.
630
631 To properly handle this the predicate expression would have to be
632 evaluated for each distinct lookahead context.
633
634 To determine whether two predicate expressions are identical is
635 difficult. The routine may fail to identify identical predicates.
636
637 The #pred feature also compares predicates to see if a choice between
638 alternatives which is resolved by a predicate which makes the second
639 choice unreachable. Consider the following example:
640
641 #pred A <<A(LATEXT(1)>>?
642 #pred B <<B(LATEXT(1)>>?
643 #pred A_or_B A || B
644
645 r : s
646 | t
647 ;
648 s : <<A_or_B>>? ID
649 ;
650 t : <<A>>? ID
651 ;
652
653 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
654 t11.g, line 5: warning: the predicate used to disambiguate the
655 first choice of rule r
656 (file t11.g alt 1 line 5 and alt 2 line 6)
657 appears to "cover" the second predicate when compared without context.
658 The second predicate may have no resolving power for some lookahead
659 sequences.
660 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
661
662 #132. (Changed in 1.33MR11) Recognition of identical predicates in alts
663
664 Prior to 1.33MR11, there would be no ambiguity warning when the
665 very same predicate was used to disambiguate both alternatives:
666
667 test: ref B
668 | ref C
669 ;
670
671 ref : <<pred(LATEXT(1)>>? A
672
673 In 1.33MR11 this will cause the warning:
674
675 warning: the predicates used to disambiguate rule test
676 (file v98.g alt 1 line 1 and alt 2 line 2)
677 are identical and have no resolving power
678
679 ----------------- Note -----------------
680
681 This is different than the following case
682
683 test: <<pred(LATEXT(1))>>? A B
684 | <<pred(LATEXT(1)>>? A C
685 ;
686
687 In this case there are two distinct predicates
688 which have exactly the same text. In the first
689 example there are two references to the same
690 predicate. The problem represented by this
691 grammar will be addressed later.
692
693
694 #127. (Changed in 1.33MR11)
695
696 Count Syntax Errors Count DLG Errors
697 ------------------- ----------------
698
699 C++ mode ANTLRParser:: DLGLexerBase::
700 syntaxErrCount lexErrCount
701 C mode zzSyntaxErrCount zzLexErrCount
702
703 The C mode variables are global and initialized to 0.
704 They are *not* reset to 0 automatically when antlr is
705 restarted.
706
707 The C++ mode variables are public. They are initialized
708 to 0 by the constructors. They are *not* reset to 0 by the
709 ANTLRParser::init() method.
710
711 Suggested by Reinier van den Born (reinier@vnet.ibm.com).
712
713 #126. (Changed in 1.33MR11) Addition of #first <<...>>
714
715 The #first <<...>> inserts the specified text in the output
716 files before any other #include statements required by pccts.
717 The only things before the #first text are comments and
718 a #define ANTLR_VERSION.
719
720 Requested by and Esa Pulkkinen (esap@cs.tut.fi) and Alexin
721 Zoltan (alexin@inf.u-szeged.hu).
722
723 #124. A Note on the New "&&" Style Guarded Predicates
724
725 I've been asked several times, "What is the difference between
726 the old "=>" style guard predicates and the new style "&&" guard
727 predicates, and how do you choose one over the other" ?
728
729 The main difference is that the "=>" does not apply the
730 predicate if the context guard doesn't match, whereas
731 the && form always does. What is the significance ?
732
733 If you have a predicate which is not on the "leading edge"
734 it is cannot be hoisted. Suppose you need a predicate that
735 looks at LA(2). You must introduce it manually. The
736 classic example is:
737
738 castExpr :
739 LP typeName RP
740 | ....
741 ;
742
743 typeName : <<isTypeName(LATEXT(1))>>? ID
744 | STRUCT ID
745 ;
746
747 The problem is that isTypeName() isn't on the leading edge
748 of typeName, so it won't be hoisted into castExpr to help
749 make a decision on which production to choose.
750
751 The *first* attempt to fix it is this:
752
753 castExpr :
754 <<isTypeName(LATEXT(2))>>?
755 LP typeName RP
756 | ....
757 ;
758
759 Unfortunately, this won't work because it ignores
760 the problem of STRUCT. The solution is to apply
761 isTypeName() in castExpr if LA(2) is an ID and
762 don't apply it when LA(2) is STRUCT:
763
764 castExpr :
765 (LP ID)? => <<isTypeName(LATEXT(2))>>?
766 LP typeName RP
767 | ....
768 ;
769
770 In conclusion, the "=>" style guarded predicate is
771 useful when:
772
773 a. the tokens required for the predicate
774 are not on the leading edge
775 b. there are alternatives in the expression
776 selected by the predicate for which the
777 predicate is inappropriate
778
779 If (b) were false, then one could use a simple
780 predicate (assuming "-prc on"):
781
782 castExpr :
783 <<isTypeName(LATEXT(2))>>?
784 LP typeName RP
785 | ....
786 ;
787
788 typeName : <<isTypeName(LATEXT(1))>>? ID
789 ;
790
791 So, when do you use the "&&" style guarded predicate ?
792
793 The new-style "&&" predicate should always be used with
794 predicate context. The context guard is in ADDITION to
795 the automatically computed context. Thus it useful for
796 predicates which depend on the token type for reasons
797 other than context.
798
799 The following example is contributed by Reinier van den Born
800 (reinier@vnet.ibm.com).
801
802 +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
803 | This grammar has two ways to call functions: |
804 | |
805 | - a "standard" call syntax with parens and comma separated args |
806 | - a shell command like syntax (no parens and spacing separated args) |
807 | |
808 | The former also allows a variable to hold the name of the function, |
809 | the latter can also be used to call external commands. |
810 | |
811 | The grammar (simplified) looks like this: |
812 | |
813 | fun_call : ID "(" { expr ("," expr)* } ")" |
814 | /* ID is function name */ |
815 | | "@" ID "(" { expr ("," expr)* } ")" |
816 | /* ID is var containing fun name */ |
817 | ; |
818 | |
819 | command : ID expr* /* ID is function name */ |
820 | | path expr* /* path is external command name */ |
821 | ; |
822 | |
823 | path : ID /* left out slashes and such */ |
824 | | "@" ID /* ID is environment var */ |
825 | ; |
826 | |
827 | expr : .... |
828 | | "(" expr ")"; |
829 | |
830 | call : fun_call |
831 | | command |
832 | ; |
833 | |
834 | Obviously the call is wildly ambiguous. This is more or less how this |
835 | is to be resolved: |
836 | |
837 | A call begins with an ID or an @ followed by an ID. |
838 | |
839 | If it is an ID and if it is an ext. command name -> command |
840 | if followed by a paren -> fun_call |
841 | otherwise -> command |
842 | |
843 | If it is an @ and if the ID is a var name -> fun_call |
844 | otherwise -> command |
845 | |
846 | One can implement these rules quite neatly using && predicates: |
847 | |
848 | call : ("@" ID)? && <<isVarName(LT(2))>>? fun_call |
849 | | (ID)? && <<isExtCmdName>>? command |
850 | | (ID "(")? fun_call |
851 | | command |
852 | ; |
853 | |
854 | This can be done better, so it is not an ideal example, but it |
855 | conveys the principle. |
856 +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
857
858 #122. (Changed in 1.33MR11) Member functions to reset DLG in C++ mode
859
860 void DLGFileReset(FILE *f) { input = f; found_eof = 0; }
861 void DLGStringReset(DLGChar *s) { input = s; p = &input[0]; }
862
863 Supplied by R.A. Nelson (cowboy@VNET.IBM.COM)
864
865 #119. (Changed in 1.33MR11) Ambiguity aid for grammars
866
867 The user can ask for additional information on ambiguities reported
868 by antlr to stdout. At the moment, only one ambiguity report can
869 be created in an antlr run.
870
871 This feature is enabled using the "-aa" (Ambiguity Aid) option.
872
873 The following options control the reporting of ambiguities:
874
875 -aa ruleName Selects reporting by name of rule
876 -aa lineNumber Selects reporting by line number
877 (file name not compared)
878
879 -aam Selects "multiple" reporting for a token
880 in the intersection set of the
881 alternatives.
882
883 For instance, the token ID may appear dozens
884 of times in various paths as the program
885 explores the rules which are reachable from
886 the point of an ambiguity. With option -aam
887 every possible path the search program
888 encounters is reported.
889
890 Without -aam only the first encounter is
891 reported. This may result in incomplete
892 information, but the information may be
893 sufficient and much shorter.
894
895 -aad depth Selects the depth of the search.
896 The default value is 1.
897
898 The number of paths to be searched, and the
899 size of the report can grow geometrically
900 with the -ck value if a full search for all
901 contributions to the source of the ambiguity
902 is explored.
903
904 The depth represents the number of tokens
905 in the lookahead set which are matched against
906 the set of ambiguous tokens. A depth of 1
907 means that the search stops when a lookahead
908 sequence of just one token is matched.
909
910 A k=1 ck=6 grammar might generate 5,000 items
911 in a report if a full depth 6 search is made
912 with the Ambiguity Aid. The source of the
913 problem may be in the first token and obscured
914 by the volume of data - I hesitate to call
915 it information.
916
917 When the user selects a depth > 1, the search
918 is first performed at depth=1 for both
919 alternatives, then depth=2 for both alternatives,
920 etc.
921
922 Sample output for rule grammar in antlr.g itself:
923
924 +---------------------------------------------------------------------+
925 | Ambiguity Aid |
926 | |
927 | Choice 1: grammar/70 line 632 file a.g |
928 | Choice 2: grammar/82 line 644 file a.g |
929 | |
930 | Intersection of lookahead[1] sets: |
931 | |
932 | "\}" "class" "#errclass" "#tokclass" |
933 | |
934 | Choice:1 Depth:1 Group:1 ("#errclass") |
935 | 1 in (...)* block grammar/70 line 632 a.g |
936 | 2 to error grammar/73 line 635 a.g |
937 | 3 error error/1 line 894 a.g |
938 | 4 #token "#errclass" error/2 line 895 a.g |
939 | |
940 | Choice:1 Depth:1 Group:2 ("#tokclass") |
941 | 2 to tclass grammar/74 line 636 a.g |
942 | 3 tclass tclass/1 line 937 a.g |
943 | 4 #token "#tokclass" tclass/2 line 938 a.g |
944 | |
945 | Choice:1 Depth:1 Group:3 ("class") |
946 | 2 to class_def grammar/75 line 637 a.g |
947 | 3 class_def class_def/1 line 669 a.g |
948 | 4 #token "class" class_def/3 line 671 a.g |
949 | |
950 | Choice:1 Depth:1 Group:4 ("\}") |
951 | 2 #token "\}" grammar/76 line 638 a.g |
952 | |
953 | Choice:2 Depth:1 Group:5 ("#errclass") |
954 | 1 in (...)* block grammar/83 line 645 a.g |
955 | 2 to error grammar/93 line 655 a.g |
956 | 3 error error/1 line 894 a.g |
957 | 4 #token "#errclass" error/2 line 895 a.g |
958 | |
959 | Choice:2 Depth:1 Group:6 ("#tokclass") |
960 | 2 to tclass grammar/94 line 656 a.g |
961 | 3 tclass tclass/1 line 937 a.g |
962 | 4 #token "#tokclass" tclass/2 line 938 a.g |
963 | |
964 | Choice:2 Depth:1 Group:7 ("class") |
965 | 2 to class_def grammar/95 line 657 a.g |
966 | 3 class_def class_def/1 line 669 a.g |
967 | 4 #token "class" class_def/3 line 671 a.g |
968 | |
969 | Choice:2 Depth:1 Group:8 ("\}") |
970 | 2 #token "\}" grammar/96 line 658 a.g |
971 +---------------------------------------------------------------------+
972
973 For a linear lookahead set ambiguity (where k=1 or for k>1 but
974 when all lookahead sets [i] with i<k all have degree one) the
975 reports appear in the following order:
976
977 for (depth=1 ; depth <= "-aad depth" ; depth++) {
978 for (alternative=1; alternative <=2 ; alternative++) {
979 while (matches-are-found) {
980 group++;
981 print-report
982 };
983 };
984 };
985
986 For reporting a k-tuple ambiguity, the reports appear in the
987 following order:
988
989 for (depth=1 ; depth <= "-aad depth" ; depth++) {
990 while (matches-are-found) {
991 for (alternative=1; alternative <=2 ; alternative++) {
992 group++;
993 print-report
994 };
995 };
996 };
997
998 This is because matches are generated in different ways for
999 linear lookahead and k-tuples.
1000
1001 #117. (Changed in 1.33MR10) new EXPERIMENTAL predicate hoisting code
1002
1003 The hoisting of predicates into rules to create prediction
1004 expressions is a problem in antlr. Consider the following
1005 example (k=1 with -prc on):
1006
1007 start : (a)* "@" ;
1008 a : b | c ;
1009 b : <<isUpper(LATEXT(1))>>? A ;
1010 c : A ;
1011
1012 Prior to 1.33MR10 the code generated for "start" would resemble:
1013
1014 while {
1015 if (LA(1)==A &&
1016 (!LA(1)==A || isUpper())) {
1017 a();
1018 }
1019 };
1020
1021 This code is wrong because it makes rule "c" unreachable from
1022 "start". The essence of the problem is that antlr fails to
1023 recognize that there can be a valid alternative within "a" even
1024 when the predicate <<isUpper(LATEXT(1))>>? is false.
1025
1026 In 1.33MR10 with -mrhoist the hoisting of the predicate into
1027 "start" is suppressed because it recognizes that "c" can
1028 cover all the cases where the predicate is false:
1029
1030 while {
1031 if (LA(1)==A) {
1032 a();
1033 }
1034 };
1035
1036 With the antlr "-info p" switch the user will receive information
1037 about the predicate suppression in the generated file:
1038
1039 --------------------------------------------------------------
1040 #if 0
1041
1042 Hoisting of predicate suppressed by alternative without predicate.
1043 The alt without the predicate includes all cases where
1044 the predicate is false.
1045
1046 WITH predicate: line 7 v1.g
1047 WITHOUT predicate: line 7 v1.g
1048
1049 The context set for the predicate:
1050
1051 A
1052
1053 The lookahead set for the alt WITHOUT the semantic predicate:
1054
1055 A
1056
1057 The predicate:
1058
1059 pred << isUpper(LATEXT(1))>>?
1060 depth=k=1 rule b line 9 v1.g
1061 set context:
1062 A
1063 tree context: null
1064
1065 Chain of referenced rules:
1066
1067 #0 in rule start (line 5 v1.g) to rule a
1068 #1 in rule a (line 7 v1.g)
1069
1070 #endif
1071 --------------------------------------------------------------
1072
1073 A predicate can be suppressed by a combination of alternatives
1074 which, taken together, cover a predicate:
1075
1076 start : (a)* "@" ;
1077
1078 a : b | ca | cb | cc ;
1079
1080 b : <<isUpper(LATEXT(1))>>? ( A | B | C ) ;
1081
1082 ca : A ;
1083 cb : B ;
1084 cc : C ;
1085
1086 Consider a more complex example in which "c" covers only part of
1087 a predicate:
1088
1089 start : (a)* "@" ;
1090
1091 a : b
1092 | c
1093 ;
1094
1095 b : <<isUpper(LATEXT(1))>>?
1096 ( A
1097 | X
1098 );
1099
1100 c : A
1101 ;
1102
1103 Prior to 1.33MR10 the code generated for "start" would resemble:
1104
1105 while {
1106 if ( (LA(1)==A || LA(1)==X) &&
1107 (! (LA(1)==A || LA(1)==X) || isUpper()) {
1108 a();
1109 }
1110 };
1111
1112 With 1.33MR10 and -mrhoist the predicate context is restricted to
1113 the non-covered lookahead. The code resembles:
1114
1115 while {
1116 if ( (LA(1)==A || LA(1)==X) &&
1117 (! (LA(1)==X) || isUpper()) {
1118 a();
1119 }
1120 };
1121
1122 With the antlr "-info p" switch the user will receive information
1123 about the predicate restriction in the generated file:
1124
1125 --------------------------------------------------------------
1126 #if 0
1127
1128 Restricting the context of a predicate because of overlap
1129 in the lookahead set between the alternative with the
1130 semantic predicate and one without
1131 Without this restriction the alternative without the predicate
1132 could not be reached when input matched the context of the
1133 predicate and the predicate was false.
1134
1135 WITH predicate: line 11 v4.g
1136 WITHOUT predicate: line 12 v4.g
1137
1138 The original context set for the predicate:
1139
1140 A X
1141
1142 The lookahead set for the alt WITHOUT the semantic predicate:
1143
1144 A
1145
1146 The intersection of the two sets
1147
1148 A
1149
1150 The original predicate:
1151
1152 pred << isUpper(LATEXT(1))>>?
1153 depth=k=1 rule b line 15 v4.g
1154 set context:
1155 A X
1156 tree context: null
1157
1158 The new (modified) form of the predicate:
1159
1160 pred << isUpper(LATEXT(1))>>?
1161 depth=k=1 rule b line 15 v4.g
1162 set context:
1163 X
1164 tree context: null
1165
1166 #endif
1167 --------------------------------------------------------------
1168
1169 The bad news about -mrhoist:
1170
1171 (a) -mrhoist does not analyze predicates with lookahead
1172 depth > 1.
1173
1174 (b) -mrhoist does not look past a guarded predicate to
1175 find context which might cover other predicates.
1176
1177 For these cases you might want to use syntactic predicates.
1178 When a semantic predicate fails during guess mode the guess
1179 fails and the next alternative is tried.
1180
1181 Limitation (a) is illustrated by the following example:
1182
1183 start : (stmt)* EOF ;
1184
1185 stmt : cast
1186 | expr
1187 ;
1188 cast : <<isTypename(LATEXT(2))>>? LP ID RP ;
1189
1190 expr : LP ID RP ;
1191
1192 This is not much different from the first example, except that
1193 it requires two tokens of lookahead context to determine what
1194 to do. This predicate is NOT suppressed because the current version
1195 is unable to handle predicates with depth > 1.
1196
1197 A predicate can be combined with other predicates during hoisting.
1198 In those cases the depth=1 predicates are still handled. Thus,
1199 in the following example the isUpper() predicate will be suppressed
1200 by line #4 when hoisted from "bizarre" into "start", but will still
1201 be present in "bizarre" in order to predict "stmt".
1202
1203 start : (bizarre)* EOF ; // #1
1204 // #2
1205 bizarre : stmt // #3
1206 | A // #4
1207 ;
1208
1209 stmt : cast
1210 | expr
1211 ;
1212
1213 cast : <<isTypename(LATEXT(2))>>? LP ID RP ;
1214
1215 expr : LP ID RP ;
1216 | <<isUpper(LATEXT(1))>>? A
1217
1218 Limitation (b) is illustrated by the following example of a
1219 context guarded predicate:
1220
1221 rule : (A)? <<p>>? // #1
1222 (A // #2
1223 |B // #3
1224 ) // #4
1225 | <<q>> B // #5
1226 ;
1227
1228 Recall that this means that when the lookahead is NOT A then
1229 the predicate "p" is ignored and it attempts to match "A|B".
1230 Ideally, the "B" at line #3 should suppress predicate "q".
1231 However, the current version does not attempt to look past
1232 the guard predicate to find context which might suppress other
1233 predicates.
1234
1235 In some cases -mrhoist will lead to the reporting of ambiguities
1236 which were not visible before:
1237
1238 start : (a)* "@";
1239 a : bc | d;
1240 bc : b | c ;
1241
1242 b : <<isUpper(LATEXT(1))>>? A;
1243 c : A ;
1244
1245 d : A ;
1246
1247 In this case there is a true ambiguity in "a" between "bc" and "d"
1248 which can both match "A". Without -mrhoist the predicate in "b"
1249 is hoisted into "a" and there is no ambiguity reported. However,
1250 with -mrhoist, the predicate in "b" is suppressed by "c" (as it
1251 should be) making the ambiguity in "a" apparent.
1252
1253 The motivations for these changes were hoisting problems reported
1254 by Reinier van den Born (reinier@vnet.ibm.com) and several others.
1255
1256 #113. (Changed in 1.33MR10) new context guarded pred: (g)? && <<p>>? expr
1257
1258 The existing context guarded predicate:
1259
1260 rule : (guard)? => <<p>>? expr
1261 | next_alternative
1262 ;
1263
1264 generates code which resembles:
1265
1266 if (lookahead(expr) && (!guard || pred)) {
1267 expr()
1268 } else ....
1269
1270 This is not suitable for some applications because it allows
1271 expr() to be invoked when the predicate is false. This is
1272 intentional because it is meant to mimic automatically computed
1273 predicate context.
1274
1275 The new context guarded predicate uses the guard information
1276 differently because it has a different goal. Consider:
1277
1278 rule : (guard)? && <<p>>? expr
1279 | next_alternative
1280 ;
1281
1282 The new style of context guarded predicate is equivalent to:
1283
1284 rule : <<guard==true && pred>>? expr
1285 | next_alternative
1286 ;
1287
1288 It generates code which resembles:
1289
1290 if (lookahead(expr) && guard && pred) {
1291 expr();
1292 } else ...
1293
1294 Both forms of guarded predicates severely restrict the form of
1295 the context guard: it can contain no rule references, no
1296 (...)*, no (...)+, and no {...}. It may contain token and
1297 token class references, and alternation ("|").
1298
1299 Addition for 1.33MR11: in the token expression all tokens must
1300 be at the same height of the token tree:
1301
1302 (A ( B | C))? && ... is ok (all height 2)
1303 (A ( B | ))? && ... is not ok (some 1, some 2)
1304 (A B C D | E F G H)? && ... is ok (all height 4)
1305 (A B C D | E )? && ... is not ok (some 4, some 1)
1306
1307 This restriction is required in order to properly compute the lookahead
1308 set for expressions like:
1309
1310 rule1 : (A B C)? && <<pred>>? rule2 ;
1311 rule2 : (A|X) (B|Y) (C|Z);
1312
1313 This addition was suggested by Rienier van den Born (reinier@vnet.ibm.com)
1314
1315 #109. (Changed in 1.33MR10) improved trace information
1316
1317 The quality of the trace information provided by the "-gd"
1318 switch has been improved significantly. Here is an example
1319 of the output from a test program. It shows the rule name,
1320 the first token of lookahead, the call depth, and the guess
1321 status:
1322
1323 exit rule gusxx {"?"} depth 2
1324 enter rule gusxx {"?"} depth 2
1325 enter rule gus1 {"o"} depth 3 guessing
1326 guess done - returning to rule gus1 {"o"} at depth 3
1327 (guess mode continues - an enclosing guess is still active)
1328 guess done - returning to rule gus1 {"Z"} at depth 3
1329 (guess mode continues - an enclosing guess is still active)
1330 exit rule gus1 {"Z"} depth 3 guessing
1331 guess done - returning to rule gusxx {"o"} at depth 2 (guess mode ends)
1332 enter rule gus1 {"o"} depth 3
1333 guess done - returning to rule gus1 {"o"} at depth 3 (guess mode ends)
1334 guess done - returning to rule gus1 {"Z"} at depth 3 (guess mode ends)
1335 exit rule gus1 {"Z"} depth 3
1336 line 1: syntax error at "Z" missing SC
1337 ...
1338
1339 Rule trace reporting is controlled by the value of the integer
1340 [zz]traceOptionValue: when it is positive tracing is enabled,
1341 otherwise it is disabled. Tracing during guess mode is controlled
1342 by the value of the integer [zz]traceGuessOptionValue. When
1343 it is positive AND [zz]traceOptionValue is positive rule trace
1344 is reported in guess mode.
1345
1346 The values of [zz]traceOptionValue and [zz]traceGuessOptionValue
1347 can be adjusted by subroutine calls listed below.
1348
1349 Depending on the presence or absence of the antlr -gd switch
1350 the variable [zz]traceOptionValueDefault is set to 0 or 1. When
1351 the parser is initialized or [zz]traceReset() is called the
1352 value of [zz]traceOptionValueDefault is copied to [zz]traceOptionValue.
1353 The value of [zz]traceGuessOptionValue is always initialzed to 1,
1354 but, as noted earlier, nothing will be reported unless
1355 [zz]traceOptionValue is also positive.
1356
1357 When the parser state is saved/restored the value of the trace
1358 variables are also saved/restored. If a restore causes a change in
1359 reporting behavior from on to off or vice versa this will be reported.
1360
1361 When the -gd option is selected, the macro "#define zzTRACE_RULES"
1362 is added to appropriate output files.
1363
1364 C++ mode
1365 --------
1366 int traceOption(int delta)
1367 int traceGuessOption(int delta)
1368 void traceReset()
1369 int traceOptionValueDefault
1370
1371 C mode
1372 --------
1373 int zzTraceOption(int delta)
1374 int zzTraceGuessOption(int delta)
1375 void zzTraceReset()
1376 int zzTraceOptionValueDefault
1377
1378 The argument "delta" is added to the traceOptionValue. To
1379 turn on trace when inside a particular rule one:
1380
1381 rule : <<traceOption(+1);>>
1382 (
1383 rest-of-rule
1384 )
1385 <<traceOption(-1);>>
1386 ; /* fail clause */ <<traceOption(-1);>>
1387
1388 One can use the same idea to turn *off* tracing within a
1389 rule by using a delta of (-1).
1390
1391 An improvement in the rule trace was suggested by Sramji
1392 Ramanathan (ps@kumaran.com).
1393
1394 #108. A Note on Deallocation of Variables Allocated in Guess Mode
1395
1396 NOTE
1397 ------------------------------------------------------
1398 This mechanism only works for heap allocated variables
1399 ------------------------------------------------------
1400
1401 The rewrite of the trace provides the machinery necessary
1402 to properly free variables or undo actions following a
1403 failed guess.
1404
1405 The macro zzUSER_GUESS_HOOK(guessSeq,zzrv) is expanded
1406 as part of the zzGUESS macro. When a guess is opened
1407 the value of zzrv is 0. When a longjmp() is executed to
1408 undo the guess, the value of zzrv will be 1.
1409
1410 The macro zzUSER_GUESS_DONE_HOOK(guessSeq) is expanded
1411 as part of the zzGUESS_DONE macro. This is executed
1412 whether the guess succeeds or fails as part of closing
1413 the guess.
1414
1415 The guessSeq is a sequence number which is assigned to each
1416 guess and is incremented by 1 for each guess which becomes
1417 active. It is needed by the user to associate the start of
1418 a guess with the failure and/or completion (closing) of a
1419 guess.
1420
1421 Guesses are nested. They must be closed in the reverse
1422 of the order that they are opened.
1423
1424 In order to free memory used by a variable during a guess
1425 a user must write a routine which can be called to
1426 register the variable along with the current guess sequence
1427 number provided by the zzUSER_GUESS_HOOK macro. If the guess
1428 fails, all variables tagged with the corresponding guess
1429 sequence number should be released. This is ugly, but
1430 it would require a major rewrite of antlr 1.33 to use
1431 some mechanism other than setjmp()/longjmp().
1432
1433 The order of calls for a *successful* guess would be:
1434
1435 zzUSER_GUESS_HOOK(guessSeq,0);
1436 zzUSER_GUESS_DONE_HOOK(guessSeq);
1437
1438 The order of calls for a *failed* guess would be:
1439
1440 zzUSER_GUESS_HOOK(guessSeq,0);
1441 zzUSER_GUESS_HOOK(guessSeq,1);
1442 zzUSER_GUESS_DONE_HOOK(guessSeq);
1443
1444 The default definitions of these macros are empty strings.
1445
1446 Here is an example in C++ mode. The zzUSER_GUESS_HOOK and
1447 zzUSER_GUESS_DONE_HOOK macros and myGuessHook() routine
1448 can be used without change in both C and C++ versions.
1449
1450 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
1451 <<
1452
1453 #include "AToken.h"
1454
1455 typedef ANTLRCommonToken ANTLRToken;
1456
1457 #include "DLGLexer.h"
1458
1459 int main() {
1460
1461 {
1462 DLGFileInput in(stdin);
1463 DLGLexer lexer(&in,2000);
1464 ANTLRTokenBuffer pipe(&lexer,1);
1465 ANTLRCommonToken aToken;
1466 P parser(&pipe);
1467
1468 lexer.setToken(&aToken);
1469 parser.init();
1470 parser.start();
1471 };
1472
1473 fclose(stdin);
1474 fclose(stdout);
1475 return 0;
1476 }
1477
1478 >>
1479
1480 <<
1481 char *s=NULL;
1482
1483 #undef zzUSER_GUESS_HOOK
1484 #define zzUSER_GUESS_HOOK(guessSeq,zzrv) myGuessHook(guessSeq,zzrv);
1485 #undef zzUSER_GUESS_DONE_HOOK
1486 #define zzUSER_GUESS_DONE_HOOK(guessSeq) myGuessHook(guessSeq,2);
1487
1488 void myGuessHook(int guessSeq,int zzrv) {
1489 if (zzrv == 0) {
1490 fprintf(stderr,"User hook: starting guess #%d\n",guessSeq);
1491 } else if (zzrv == 1) {
1492 free (s);
1493 s=NULL;
1494 fprintf(stderr,"User hook: failed guess #%d\n",guessSeq);
1495 } else if (zzrv == 2) {
1496 free (s);
1497 s=NULL;
1498 fprintf(stderr,"User hook: ending guess #%d\n",guessSeq);
1499 };
1500 }
1501
1502 >>
1503
1504 #token A "a"
1505 #token "[\t \ \n]" <<skip();>>
1506
1507 class P {
1508
1509 start : (top)+
1510 ;
1511
1512 top : (which) ? <<fprintf(stderr,"%s is a which\n",s); free(s); s=NULL; >>
1513 | other <<fprintf(stderr,"%s is an other\n",s); free(s); s=NULL; >>
1514 ; <<if (s != NULL) free(s); s=NULL; >>
1515
1516 which : which2
1517 ;
1518
1519 which2 : which3
1520 ;
1521 which3
1522 : (label)? <<fprintf(stderr,"%s is a label\n",s);>>
1523 | (global)? <<fprintf(stderr,"%s is a global\n",s);>>
1524 | (exclamation)? <<fprintf(stderr,"%s is an exclamation\n",s);>>
1525 ;
1526
1527 label : <<s=strdup(LT(1)->getText());>> A ":" ;
1528
1529 global : <<s=strdup(LT(1)->getText());>> A "::" ;
1530
1531 exclamation : <<s=strdup(LT(1)->getText());>> A "!" ;
1532
1533 other : <<s=strdup(LT(1)->getText());>> "other" ;
1534
1535 }
1536 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
1537
1538 This is a silly example, but illustrates the idea. For the input
1539 "a ::" with tracing enabled the output begins:
1540
1541 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
1542 enter rule "start" depth 1
1543 enter rule "top" depth 2
1544 User hook: starting guess #1
1545 enter rule "which" depth 3 guessing
1546 enter rule "which2" depth 4 guessing
1547 enter rule "which3" depth 5 guessing
1548 User hook: starting guess #2
1549 enter rule "label" depth 6 guessing
1550 guess failed
1551 User hook: failed guess #2
1552 guess done - returning to rule "which3" at depth 5 (guess mode continues
1553 - an enclosing guess is still active)
1554 User hook: ending guess #2
1555 User hook: starting guess #3
1556 enter rule "global" depth 6 guessing
1557 exit rule "global" depth 6 guessing
1558 guess done - returning to rule "which3" at depth 5 (guess mode continues
1559 - an enclosing guess is still active)
1560 User hook: ending guess #3
1561 enter rule "global" depth 6 guessing
1562 exit rule "global" depth 6 guessing
1563 exit rule "which3" depth 5 guessing
1564 exit rule "which2" depth 4 guessing
1565 exit rule "which" depth 3 guessing
1566 guess done - returning to rule "top" at depth 2 (guess mode ends)
1567 User hook: ending guess #1
1568 enter rule "which" depth 3
1569 .....
1570 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
1571
1572 Remember:
1573
1574 (a) Only init-actions are executed during guess mode.
1575 (b) A rule can be invoked multiple times during guess mode.
1576 (c) If the guess succeeds the rule will be called once more
1577 without guess mode so that normal actions will be executed.
1578 This means that the init-action might need to distinguish
1579 between guess mode and non-guess mode using the variable
1580 [zz]guessing.
1581
1582 #101. (Changed in 1.33MR10) antlr -info command line switch
1583
1584 -info
1585
1586 p - extra predicate information in generated file
1587
1588 t - information about tnode use:
1589 at the end of each rule in generated file
1590 summary on stderr at end of program
1591
1592 m - monitor progress
1593 prints name of each rule as it is started
1594 flushes output at start of each rule
1595
1596 f - first/follow set information to stdout
1597
1598 0 - no operation (added in 1.33MR11)
1599
1600 The options may be combined and may appear in any order.
1601 For example:
1602
1603 antlr -info ptm -CC -gt -mrhoist on mygrammar.g
1604
1605 #100a. (Changed in 1.33MR10) Predicate tree simplification
1606
1607 When the same predicates can be referenced in more than one
1608 alternative of a block large predicate trees can be formed.
1609
1610 The difference that these optimizations make is so dramatic
1611 that I have decided to use it even when -mrhoist is not selected.
1612
1613 Consider the following grammar:
1614
1615 start : ( all )* ;
1616
1617 all : a
1618 | d
1619 | e
1620 | f
1621 ;
1622
1623 a : c A B
1624 | c A C
1625 ;
1626
1627 c : <<AAA(LATEXT(2))>>?
1628 ;
1629
1630 d : <<BBB(LATEXT(2))>>? B C
1631 ;
1632
1633 e : <<CCC(LATEXT(2))>>? B C
1634 ;
1635
1636 f : e X Y
1637 ;
1638
1639 In rule "a" there is a reference to rule "c" in both alternatives.
1640 The length of the predicate AAA is k=2 and it can be followed in
1641 alternative 1 only by (A B) while in alternative 2 it can be
1642 followed only by (A C). Thus they do not have identical context.
1643
1644 In rule "all" the alternatives which refer to rules "e" and "f" allow
1645 elimination of the duplicate reference to predicate CCC.
1646
1647 The table below summarized the kind of simplification performed by
1648 1.33MR10. In the table, X and Y stand for single predicates
1649 (not trees).
1650
1651 (OR X (OR Y (OR Z))) => (OR X Y Z)
1652 (AND X (AND Y (AND Z))) => (AND X Y Z)
1653
1654 (OR X (... (OR X Y) ... )) => (OR X (... Y ... ))
1655 (AND X (... (AND X Y) ... )) => (AND X (... Y ... ))
1656 (OR X (... (AND X Y) ... )) => (OR X (... ... ))
1657 (AND X (... (OR X Y) ... )) => (AND X (... ... ))
1658
1659 (AND X) => X
1660 (OR X) => X
1661
1662 In a test with a complex grammar for a real application, a predicate
1663 tree with six OR nodes and 12 leaves was reduced to "(OR X Y Z)".
1664
1665 In 1.33MR10 there is a greater effort to release memory used
1666 by predicates once they are no longer in use.
1667
1668 #100b. (Changed in 1.33MR10) Suppression of extra predicate tests
1669
1670 The following optimizations require that -mrhoist be selected.
1671
1672 It is relatively easy to optimize the code generated for predicate
1673 gates when they are of the form:
1674
1675 (AND X Y Z ...)
1676 or (OR X Y Z ...)
1677
1678 where X, Y, Z, and "..." represent individual predicates (leaves) not
1679 predicate trees.
1680
1681 If the predicate is an AND the contexts of the X, Y, Z, etc. are
1682 ANDed together to create a single Tree context for the group and
1683 context tests for the individual predicates are suppressed:
1684
1685 --------------------------------------------------
1686 Note: This was incorrect. The contexts should be
1687 ORed together. This has been fixed. A more
1688 complete description is available in item #152.
1689 ---------------------------------------------------
1690
1691 Optimization 1: (AND X Y Z ...)
1692
1693 Suppose the context for Xtest is LA(1)==LP and the context for
1694 Ytest is LA(1)==LP && LA(2)==ID.
1695
1696 Without the optimization the code would resemble:
1697
1698 if (lookaheadContext &&
1699 !(LA(1)==LP && LA(1)==LP && LA(2)==ID) ||
1700 ( (! LA(1)==LP || Xtest) &&
1701 (! (LA(1)==LP || LA(2)==ID) || Xtest)
1702 )) {...
1703
1704 With the -mrhoist optimization the code would resemble:
1705
1706 if (lookaheadContext &&
1707 ! (LA(1)==LP && LA(2)==ID) || (Xtest && Ytest) {...
1708
1709 Optimization 2: (OR X Y Z ...) with identical contexts
1710
1711 Suppose the context for Xtest is LA(1)==ID and for Ytest
1712 the context is also LA(1)==ID.
1713
1714 Without the optimization the code would resemble:
1715
1716 if (lookaheadContext &&
1717 ! (LA(1)==ID || LA(1)==ID) ||
1718 (LA(1)==ID && Xtest) ||
1719 (LA(1)==ID && Ytest) {...
1720
1721 With the -mrhoist optimization the code would resemble:
1722
1723 if (lookaheadContext &&
1724 (! LA(1)==ID) || (Xtest || Ytest) {...
1725
1726 Optimization 3: (OR X Y Z ...) with distinct contexts
1727
1728 Suppose the context for Xtest is LA(1)==ID and for Ytest
1729 the context is LA(1)==LP.
1730
1731 Without the optimization the code would resemble:
1732
1733 if (lookaheadContext &&
1734 ! (LA(1)==ID || LA(1)==LP) ||
1735 (LA(1)==ID && Xtest) ||
1736 (LA(1)==LP && Ytest) {...
1737
1738 With the -mrhoist optimization the code would resemble:
1739
1740 if (lookaheadContext &&
1741 (zzpf=0,
1742 (LA(1)==ID && (zzpf=1) && Xtest) ||
1743 (LA(1)==LP && (zzpf=1) && Ytest) ||
1744 !zzpf) {
1745
1746 These may appear to be of similar complexity at first,
1747 but the non-optimized version contains two tests of each
1748 context while the optimized version contains only one
1749 such test, as well as eliminating some of the inverted
1750 logic (" !(...) || ").
1751
1752 Optimization 4: Computation of predicate gate trees
1753
1754 When generating code for the gates of predicate expressions
1755 antlr 1.33 vanilla uses a recursive procedure to generate
1756 "&&" and "||" expressions for testing the lookahead. As each
1757 layer of the predicate tree is exposed a new set of "&&" and
1758 "||" expressions on the lookahead are generated. In many
1759 cases the lookahead being tested has already been tested.
1760
1761 With -mrhoist a lookahead tree is computed for the entire
1762 lookahead expression. This means that predicates with identical
1763 context or context which is a subset of another predicate's
1764 context disappear.
1765
1766 This is especially important for predicates formed by rules
1767 like the following:
1768
1769 uppperCaseVowel : <<isUpperCase(LATEXT(1))>>? vowel;
1770 vowel: : <<isVowel(LATEXT(1))>>? LETTERS;
1771
1772 These predicates are combined using AND since both must be
1773 satisfied for rule upperCaseVowel. They have identical
1774 context which makes this optimization very effective.
1775
1776 The affect of Items #100a and #100b together can be dramatic. In
1777 a very large (but real world) grammar one particular predicate
1778 expression was reduced from an (unreadable) 50 predicate leaves,
1779 195 LA(1) terms, and 5500 characters to an (easily comprehensible)
1780 3 predicate leaves (all different) and a *single* LA(1) term.
1781
1782 #98. (Changed in 1.33MR10) Option "-info p"
1783
1784 When the user selects option "-info p" the program will generate
1785 detailed information about predicates. If the user selects
1786 "-mrhoist on" additional detail will be provided explaining
1787 the promotion and suppression of predicates. The output is part
1788 of the generated file and sandwiched between #if 0/#endif statements.
1789
1790 Consider the following k=1 grammar:
1791
1792 start : ( all ) * ;
1793
1794 all : ( a
1795 | b
1796 )
1797 ;
1798
1799 a : c B
1800 ;
1801
1802 c : <<LATEXT(1)>>?
1803 | B
1804 ;
1805
1806 b : <<LATEXT(1)>>? X
1807 ;
1808
1809 Below is an excerpt of the output for rule "start" for the three
1810 predicate options (off, on, and maintenance release style hoisting).
1811
1812 For those who do not wish to use the "-mrhoist on" option for code
1813 generation the option can be used in a "diagnostic" mode to provide
1814 valuable information:
1815
1816 a. where one should insert null actions to inhibit hoisting
1817 b. a chain of rule references which shows where predicates are
1818 being hoisted
1819
1820 ======================================================================
1821 Example of "-info p" with "-mrhoist on"
1822 ======================================================================
1823 #if 0
1824
1825 Hoisting of predicate suppressed by alternative without predicate.
1826 The alt without the predicate includes all cases where the
1827 predicate is false.
1828
1829 WITH predicate: line 11 v36.g
1830 WITHOUT predicate: line 12 v36.g
1831
1832 The context set for the predicate:
1833
1834 B
1835
1836 The lookahead set for alt WITHOUT the semantic predicate:
1837
1838 B
1839
1840 The predicate:
1841
1842 pred << LATEXT(1)>>? depth=k=1 rule c line 11 v36.g
1843
1844 set context:
1845 B
1846 tree context: null
1847
1848 Chain of referenced rules:
1849
1850 #0 in rule start (line 1 v36.g) to rule all
1851 #1 in rule all (line 3 v36.g) to rule a
1852 #2 in rule a (line 8 v36.g) to rule c
1853 #3 in rule c (line 11 v36.g)
1854
1855 #endif
1856 &&
1857 #if 0
1858
1859 pred << LATEXT(1)>>? depth=k=1 rule b line 15 v36.g
1860
1861 set context:
1862 X
1863 tree context: null
1864
1865 #endif
1866 ======================================================================
1867 Example of "-info p" with the default -prc setting ( "-prc off")
1868 ======================================================================
1869 #if 0
1870
1871 OR
1872 pred << LATEXT(1)>>? depth=k=1 rule c line 11 v36.g
1873
1874 set context:
1875 nil
1876 tree context: null
1877
1878 pred << LATEXT(1)>>? depth=k=1 rule b line 15 v36.g
1879
1880 set context:
1881 nil
1882 tree context: null
1883
1884 #endif
1885 ======================================================================
1886 Example of "-info p" with "-prc on" and "-mrhoist off"
1887 ======================================================================
1888 #if 0
1889
1890 OR
1891 pred << LATEXT(1)>>? depth=k=1 rule c line 11 v36.g
1892
1893 set context:
1894 B
1895 tree context: null
1896
1897 pred << LATEXT(1)>>? depth=k=1 rule b line 15 v36.g
1898
1899 set context:
1900 X
1901 tree context: null
1902
1903 #endif
1904 ======================================================================
1905
1906 #60. (Changed in 1.33MR7) Major changes to exception handling
1907
1908 There were significant problems in the handling of exceptions
1909 in 1.33 vanilla. The general problem is that it can only
1910 process one level of exception handler. For example, a named
1911 exception handler, an exception handler for an alternative, or
1912 an exception for a subrule always went to the rule's exception
1913 handler if there was no "catch" which matched the exception.
1914
1915 In 1.33MR7 the exception handlers properly "nest". If an
1916 exception handler does not have a matching "catch" then the
1917 nextmost outer exception handler is checked for an appropriate
1918 "catch" clause, and so on until an exception handler with an
1919 appropriate "catch" is found.
1920
1921 There are still undesirable features in the way exception
1922 handlers are implemented, but I do not have time to fix them
1923 at the moment:
1924
1925 The exception handlers for alternatives are outside the
1926 block containing the alternative. This makes it impossible
1927 to access variables declared in a block or to resume the
1928 parse by "falling through". The parse can still be easily
1929 resumed in other ways, but not in the most natural fashion.
1930
1931 This results in an inconsistentcy between named exception
1932 handlers and exception handlers for alternatives. When
1933 an exception handler for an alternative "falls through"
1934 it goes to the nextmost outer handler - not the "normal
1935 action".
1936
1937 A major difference between 1.33MR7 and 1.33 vanilla is
1938 the default action after an exception is caught:
1939
1940 1.33 Vanilla
1941 ------------
1942 In 1.33 vanilla the signal value is set to zero ("NoSignal")
1943 and the code drops through to the code following the exception.
1944 For named exception handlers this is the "normal action".
1945 For alternative exception handlers this is the rule's handler.
1946
1947 1.33MR7
1948 -------
1949 In 1.33MR7 the signal value is NOT automatically set to zero.
1950
1951 There are two cases:
1952
1953 For named exception handlers: if the signal value has been
1954 set to zero the code drops through to the "normal action".
1955
1956 For all other cases the code branches to the nextmost outer
1957 exception handler until it reaches the handler for the rule.
1958
1959 The following macros have been defined for convenience:
1960
1961 C/C++ Mode Name
1962 --------------------
1963 (zz)suppressSignal
1964 set signal & return signal arg to 0 ("NoSignal")
1965 (zz)setSignal(intValue)
1966 set signal & return signal arg to some value
1967 (zz)exportSignal
1968 copy the signal value to the return signal arg
1969
1970 I'm not sure why PCCTS make a distinction between the local
1971 signal value and the return signal argument, but I'm loathe
1972 to change the code. The burden of copying the local signal
1973 value to the return signal argument can be given to the
1974 default signal handler, I suppose.
1975
1976 #53. (Explanation for 1.33MR6) What happens after an exception is caught ?
1977
1978 The Book is silent about what happens after an exception
1979 is caught.
1980
1981 The following code fragment prints "Error Action" followed
1982 by "Normal Action".
1983
1984 test : Word ex:Number <<printf("Normal Action\n");>>
1985 exception[ex]
1986 catch NoViableAlt:
1987 <<printf("Error Action\n");>>
1988 ;
1989
1990 The reason for "Normal Action" is that the normal flow of the
1991 program after a user-written exception handler is to "drop through".
1992 In the case of an exception handler for a rule this results in
1993 the exection of a "return" statement. In the case of an
1994 exception handler attached to an alternative, rule, or token
1995 this is the code that would have executed had there been no
1996 exception.
1997
1998 The user can achieve the desired result by using a "return"
1999 statement.
2000
2001 test : Word ex:Number <<printf("Normal Action\n");>>
2002 exception[ex]
2003 catch NoViableAlt:
2004 <<printf("Error Action\n"); return;>>
2005 ;
2006
2007 The most powerful mechanism for recovery from parse errors
2008 in pccts is syntactic predicates because they provide
2009 backtracking. Exceptions allow "return", "break",
2010 "consumeUntil(...)", "goto _handler", "goto _fail", and
2011 changing the _signal value.
2012
2013 #41. (Added in 1.33MR6) antlr -stdout
2014
2015 Using "antlr -stdout ..." forces the text that would
2016 normally go to the grammar.c or grammar.cpp file to
2017 stdout.
2018
2019 #40. (Added in 1.33MR6) antlr -tab to change tab stops
2020
2021 Using "antlr -tab number ..." changes the tab stops
2022 for the grammar.c or grammar.cpp file. The number
2023 must be between 0 and 8. Using 0 gives tab characters,
2024 values between 1 and 8 give the appropriate number of
2025 space characters.
2026
2027 #34. (Added to 1.33MR1) Add public DLGLexerBase::set_line(int newValue)
2028
2029 Previously there was no public function for changing the line
2030 number maintained by the lexer.
2031
2032 #28. (Added to 1.33MR1) More control over DLG header
2033
2034 Version 1.33MR1 adds the following directives to PCCTS
2035 for C++ mode:
2036
2037 #lexprefix <<source code>>
2038
2039 Adds source code to the DLGLexer.h file
2040 after the #include "DLexerBase.h" but
2041 before the start of the class definition.
2042
2043 #lexmember <<source code>>
2044
2045 Adds source code to the DLGLexer.h file
2046 as part of the DLGLexer class body. It
2047 appears immediately after the start of
2048 the class and a "public: statement.
2049