Marpa::R2::Advanced::Thin(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Marpa::R2::Advanced::Thin(3pm) |
Marpa::R2::Advanced::Thin - Direct access to Libmarpa
Most Marpa users can ignore this document. It describes Marpa's "thin" interface, which provides efficient access to Marpa's core library, Libmarpa.
The "thin" interface is very low-level and is not designed to be convenient to use. User-friendliness is expected to be provided by an upper layer. The "thin" interface is intended for use in writing those upper layers. Libmarpa is also intended for writing applications, when the programmer wants to eliminate the overhead of an upper layer, or wants the flexibility provided by direct access to Libmarpa, and is willing to go to some extra effort.
This document assumes that the reader is familiar with the other Marpa::R2 documentation, as well as with the Libmarpa API document. This means its reader will have to know some C language -- at least enough to understand a discussion written in terms of C functions, their parameters and return values, and C language macros.
This document avoids duplicating the material in the Libmarpa API document. Most Marpa thin interface functions correspond directly to a Libmarpa method, and their implementation follows a "general pattern". This document describes that "general pattern".
Methods that follow the general pattern are usually not mentioned specifically. Methods that are exceptions to the general pattern are always mentioned, and behaviors which deviate from the general pattern are always described in detail. This document also identifies those Libmarpa methods to which no Marpa thin interface method directly corresponds.
This style of documentation is very efficient, which is one reason that it is the standard for C library interfaces to Perl. Admittedly, however, it is also very terse. As an aid to the reader, an example of a script using the Marpa thin interface is presented below. While small, the example is non-trival. It is also full, in the sense it contains a complete logic flow, starting with the definition of the grammar and continuing all the way to the iteration of the values of an ambiguous parse.
While the thin interface has a few methods of its own, most of its methods are wrappers for a method from the Libmarpa interface. On the other hand, many Libmarpa methods do not have Marpa thin interface wrappers. No internal Libmarpa method is part of the Marpa thin interface.
Additionally, many of the external Libmarpa methods are omitted because their function is performed by the Marpa thin interface. No thin interface method corresponds to the "marpa_check_version()" static method, because the Marpa thin interface interface handles its own version matching.
No thin interface method corresponds to any of the Libmarpa configuration class methods. No Marpa thin interface object corresponds to Libmarpa's configuration objects. Configuration in the Marpa thin interface is done using Perl variables.
No Marpa thin interface method corresponds to the "marpa_g_ref()" and "marpa_g_unref()" methods because the thin interface handles the reference counting of the Libmarpa objects it creates. The application can rely on Libmarpa objects being cleaned up properly as part of Perl's usual garbage collection. For the same reason, no Marpa thin interface method corresponds to the "ref" and "unref" methods of the other Libmarpa time classes.
Whenever an external Libmarpa method is not mentioned in this document, the reader can assume that it has a wrapper that is implemented according to the general pattern, as described below. Where the implementation of an external Libmarpa method is an exception to the general pattern, its implementation will be explicitly described and any corresponding Marpa thin interface method will have a section devoted to it and specifying its differences from the general pattern.
As a reminder, Libmarpa's major classes are, in sequence, configuration, grammar, recognizer, bocage, ordering, tree and value. The one-letter abbreviations for these are, respectively, "c", "g", "r", "b", "o", "t" and "v".
Marpa_Config Marpa::R2::Thin::C Marpa_Grammar Marpa::R2::Thin::G Marpa_Recognizer Marpa::R2::Thin::R Marpa_Bocage Marpa::R2::Thin::B Marpa_Ordering Marpa::R2::Thin::O Marpa_Tree Marpa::R2::Thin::T Marpa_Value Marpa::R2::Thin::V
The thin interface implements a Perl class corresponding to each of Libmarpa time classes. The thin interface does not implement a Perl class corresponding to Libmarpa's configuration class.
Objects in the thin Marpa classes should be treated as opaque scalars. Applications must not define new methods, constants or variables in a thin Marpa classes. Similarly, applications must not redefine, overload or remove existing elements. Thin Marpa classes must not be subclassed. Applications should restrict their operation on objects in the Marpa thin classes to assignments; calling methods of the class; and, in those cases where this document states that it is appropriate, passing them as arguments.
Constructors for the time objects may be called using the "new" method of the corresponding Perl class. For example,
my $recce = Marpa::R2::Thin::R->new($grammar);
Perl applications can destroy objects of the Marpa thin classes by undefining them, or by letting them go out of scope. Application programmers do not need to concern themselves with the reference counting of Libmarpa objects. The Marpa thin interface handles this.
One of the most important functions of the Marpa thin interface to adapt Libmarpa's error reporting to Perl. Perl allows two kinds of error reporting. Perl methods can communicate failure via their return values, or they can throw exceptions.
Each has its place. Throwing failure as an exception is the default in the Marpa thin interface because it is safer, and because it is convenient for prototyping and the first cuts at a new application. On the other hand, for Marpa thin applications to have access to the full flexibility and power of Libmarpa, they must be able to set the Marpa thin interface to return failure, instead of throwing failure as an exception.
In choosing whether or not to throw a failure as an exception, almost every Marpa thin method obeys the throw setting. If the throw setting is 1, failure is thrown. If the throw setting is 0, failure is returned.
The throw setting is 1 in newly created grammar objects. Once created, the throw setting of a grammar object can be changed using the "throw_set()" method The throw setting of other objects is that of their base grammar.
Nearly every Marpa thin method always obeys the throw setting. Only three methods never obey the throw setting. They are exceptions because their logic controls the throw setting, so that a problem with them suggests the throw setting itself may not be correct. The methods which never obey the throw setting, are "Marpa::R2::Thin::G->new()", "throw_set()" and "ruby_slippers_set()". These methods throw all failures.
One method allows the throw setting to be overriden. For convenience in using the Ruby Slippers technique, the behavior of the "alternative()" method is also affected by a separate "Ruby Slippers" flag. For details, see the description of that method.
Errors in the Marpa thin interface come from two sources: Libmarpa, and the Marpa thin interface itself. These will be called Libmarpa errors and thin interface errors, respectively.
Internally, Marpa maintains two variables to track recent errors. These are the error code and the error description. For every defined error code, there is an error name. Together, the error code, the error name and the error descriptions are called the "error variables".
When the most recent error was a Libmarpa error, the error code is the Libmarpa error code, as described in the Libmarpa API document. A Libmarpa error code is a non-negative integer. When the most recent error was a thin interface error, the error code is a Perl "undef".
Libmarpa's integral error codes are rarely used directly, either in C or in Perl. In C, the error codes are referred to using macros. The macro names are available through the thin interface as error names. For details see the section on error methods. Thin interface errors do not have error names.
In addition to error names, there are error descriptions.
Error descriptions, while typically longer than error names, are intended for situations where it is most convenient if they fit into a single line, or at most two. The Libmarpa API document contains a section on the Libmarpa error codes. and there the descriptions are often longer and more detailed.
Error codes and error descriptions should be considered valid only if the most recently called Marpa thin method indicated that it set the error code. An application should assume that the error codes and error descriptions will be overwritten by the next call to any thin interface method other than the "error()" method.
A method indicates failure either by throwing an exception or by returning a value that indicates failure. If a method follows the general pattern, it indicates failure if and only if its return value is less than or equal to -2. Other methods indicate failure as stated in their descriptions in this document.
Whenever a method indicates failure, that also indicates that it has set the error variables. On Libmarpa failures, the error code is set to the Libmarpa error code. On thin interface failure, the error code is set to a Perl "undef". For both Libmarpa and thin interface failures, the error description is set to a text that describes the error.
On success, a method will take one of the following three actions with respect to the error variables:
The Libmarpa API document sometimes specifies what a Libmarpa method does with the error code on success. The Libmarpa API document always specifies if and when a method sets an informational error code. If Libmarpa API document is silent, the application should regard it as unspecified whether the error code is reset or left as is.
Most Marpa thin interface methods correspond directly to a Libmarpa method, and their behaviors are in most cases exactly the same. These behaviors are called the "general pattern" in this document. To avoid repetition, Marpa thin interface methods that follow the general pattern exactly are usually not described explicitly in this document.
The name of a general pattern method is that of its corresponding Libmarpa method, minus the 8-letter prefix which indicates its Libmarpa class. For example, the Marpa thin interface method that corresponds to "marpa_g_start_symbol_set" is "$g->start_symbol_set()". The class of the general pattern method will be the Marpa thin class corresponding to the time class of the Libmarpa method. For example, "$g->start_symbol_set()" will be in the "Marpa::R2::Thin:G" Perl class.
Libmarpa's class instance methods take an object of the their class as their first ("self") argument. Zero or more non-self arguments follow the self argument. The arguments of the corresponding general pattern Marpa thin method will be the same, converted from C types to Perl as described next. (This discussion follows the convention used in perlobj, and considers the "self" object to be a Perl method's first argument.)
In the general pattern, every argument whose type is one of Libmarpa's time classes is converted to the corresponding Marpa thin interface class. Arguments which belong to Libmarpa's numbered classes ("Marpa_Earley_Set_ID", "Marpa_Rank", "Marpa_Rule_ID" and "Marpa_Symbol_ID") are converted to Perl scalar integers. C language "int"'s are also converted to Perl scalar integers.
The Marpa thin interface does not recognize booleans, either in C or in Perl. For example, if a Perl true value is not a numeric 1, it will not be converted to a numeric 1 in C, even in a situation where the Libmarpa method is clearly looking for a boolean. The intent is to allow for future extensions to the Libmarpa interface that accept and interpret other numeric values.
In the general pattern, the return value from a Libmarpa method will always either belong to one of Libmarpa's numbered classes, or be a C language "int". If the Libmarpa return value is a non-negative integer, the corresponding general pattern Marpa thin method will return a numeric Perl scalar. If the Libmarpa method returns -1, its corresponding general pattern Marpa thin method will return a Perl "undef".
General pattern methods consider failure to be a Libmarpa return value of -2 or less. Failure is thrown if the throw setting is 1. On unthrown failure, the return value of the Libmarpa method will be returned by the Marpa thin method as a numeric Perl scalar.
Here is an example of a Libmarpa function whose corresponding Marpa thin method follows the general pattern.
marpa_g_start_symbol_set (grammar, symbol_S);
and here is the corresonding thin Marpa call:
$grammar->start_symbol_set($symbol_S);
The thin interface to Libmarpa provides error methods more appropriate to the Perl environment than Libmarpa's own.
my ( $error_code, $error_description ) = $grammar->error(); my @error_names = Marpa::R2::Thin::error_names(); my $error_name = $error_names[$error_code];
In scalar context, the "error()" method returns the error description. In array context, it returns a 2-element array. The first element of the array is the error code, and the second element is the error description. Applications should assume that a call to any other Marpa thin method will overwrite the error code and error description. For "error()" to successfully query the error code or error description of a method, "error()" should be the next Marpa thin interface method called.
The "error_clear()" method follows the general pattern.
For a synopsis, see the section on the "$g->error()" method. The "error_names()" method returns a reference to an array of error names, indexed by Libmarpa error code.
$grammar->throw_set(0);
The "throw_set()" method turns the throw flag for the grammar on or off, according to whether its argument is 1 or 0. "throw_set()" fails if its argument is not a numeric 0 or 1. "throw_set()" itself never returns failure -- it always throws an exception.
All of the methods of Libmarpa's configuration class are omitted in the Marpa thin interface. The functions performed by Libmarpa's configuration methods are handled in a more Perl-centric way by the Marpa thin interface.
my $grammar = Marpa::R2::Thin::G->new( { if => 1 } );
The one argument to the Marpa thin interface's grammar constructor, is a reference to a hash of named arguments. On success, the return value is a thin interface grammar object. "new()" does not obey the throw setting -- errors are always thrown.
At present the only named argument allowed is "if", the interface number. This argument is required and currently is required to have a value of 1, which specifies interface 1. The intent of the "if" argument is to provide for backward compatibility in the future.
Although there is no error message or warning if the hash ref argument is omitted, new code should treat the hash ref argument as a required argument. Calling "new()" without an argument is deprecated. If the hash ref argument is omitted, the thin layer uses interface 0. Interface 0 cannot be specified directly, and is deprecated. The difference between interface 0 and interface 1 is that, in interface 0, the default throw setting of the newly created grammar object is unspecified. (In fact, the interface 0 throw setting depends on an undocumented and deprecated global variable.)
my ( $event_type, $value ) = $grammar->event( $event_ix++ );
The "event()" method returns a two-element array on success. The first element is a string naming the event type, and the second is a scalar representing its value. The string for an event type is its macro name, as given in the Libmarpa API document.
Some event types have an event "value". All event values are numeric Perl scalars. The number is either a symbol ID or a count, as described in the Libmarpa API document.
The permissible range of event indexes can be found with the Marpa thin interface's "event_count()" grammar method, which corresponds to Libmarpa's "marpa_g_event_count()" method. The thin interface's "event_count()" method follows the general pattern.
Since "event()" returns the event value whenever it exists, the Libmarpa "marpa_g_event_value()" method is unneeded. The Libmarpa "marpa_g_event_value()" method has no corresponding Marpa thin interface method.
"event()" obeys the throw setting. On unthrown failure, "event()" returns a Perl "undef".
my $start_rule_id = $grammar->rule_new( $symbol_S, [$symbol_E] );
The "rule_new()" grammar method is the Libmarpa thin interface method corresponding to the "marpa_g_rule_new()" method. It takes two arguments, both required. The first argument is a symbol ID representing the rule's LHS, and the second argument is a reference to an array of symbol ID's. The symbol ID's in the array represent the RHS. On success, the return value is the ID of the new rule.
"rule_new()" obeys the throw setting. On unthrown failure, it returns -2.
my $sequence_rule_id = $grammar->sequence_new( $symbol_S, $symbol_a, { separator => $symbol_sep, proper => 0, min => 1 } );
The "sequence_new()" grammar method is the Libmarpa thin interface method corresponding to the "marpa_g_sequence_new()" method. It takes three arguments, all required. The first argument is a symbol ID representing the sequence's LHS. The second argument is a symbol ID representing the sequence's RHS. The third argument is a reference to a hash of named arguments.
The hash of named arguments may be empty. If not empty, its keys, and their values, must be one of the following:
On success, the return value is the rule ID of the new sequence.
Users should be aware that all sequences at the Marpa thin interface level are "keep separation". This differs from the higher-level interface, which discards separators by default. At the Marpa thin interface level, it is up to the programmer to discard separators, if that is what is wanted.
"sequence_new()" obeys the throw setting. On unthrown failure, it returns -2.
$grammar->precompute();
The "precompute()" method follows the general pattern. In addition to errors, "precompute()" also reports events. Events are queried using the grammar's "event()" method.
On success, "precompute()" returns an event count. But, even when there is an error, "precompute()" often reports one or more events. It is not safe to assume that no events occurred unless "precompute()" succeeds and reports an event count of zero.
The "rule_rank()" method is based on Libmarpa's "marpa_g_rule_rank()" method. Its argument is the rule ID, and its return value is the rank, or a -2 to indicate an unthrown error.
Note a return value of -2 is ambiguous -- it can indicate that the rank was -2, or that a failure occurred. To distinguish the cases, the application can look at the error code. The error code will be "MARPA_ERR_NONE" if and only if the call was successful. The error code can be found using the "error()" method. Applications may find it more convenient to have "rule_rank()" always throw its errors.
The "rule_rank_set()" method is based on Libmarpa's "marpa_g_rule_rank_set()" method. Its two arguments are the rule ID and a rule rank. Its return value is the new value of the rank, or a -2 to indicate an unthrown error.
Note a return value of -2 is ambiguous -- it can indicate that the rank was -2, or that a failure occurred. To distinguish the cases, the application can look at the error code. The error code will be "MARPA_ERR_NONE" if and only if the call was successful. The error code can be found using the "error()" method. Applications may find it more convenient to have "rule_rank_set()" always throw its errors.
The "marpa_g_ref()" and "marpa_g_unref()" methods are omitted because the Marpa thin interface performs their function. The "marpa_g_event_value()" method is omitted because its function is absorbed into the thin interface's "event()" grammar method.
All grammar methods that are part of the Libmarpa external interface, but that are not mentioned explicitly in this document, are implemented following the general pattern, as described above.
my $recce = Marpa::R2::Thin::R->new($grammar);
The "new()" method takes a Marpa thin grammar object as its one argument. On success, it returns a Marpa thin recognizer object. "new()" obeys the throw setting. On unthrown failure, it returns a Perl "undef".
$recce->ruby_slippers_set(1);
With an argument of 1, the "ruby_slippers_set()" method enables "Ruby Slippers" mode. An argument of 0 disables "Ruby Slippers" mode. By default, Ruby Slippers mode is disabled. Note that this default (disabled) is the opposite of that in the higher level Marpa::R2 interface.
The "alternative()" method will only throw exceptions when "Ruby Slippers" mode is disabled and the throw flag is on. One way of describing Ruby Slippers mode is as an override of the throw setting, one which only applies to the "alternative()" method.
The "ruby_slippers_set()" method itself does not obey the throw setting. All failures by "ruby_slippers_set()" are thrown as exceptions.
$recce->alternative( $symbol_number, 2, 1 );
In the Libmarpa API the "alternative()" method returns an error code, with "MARPA_ERR_NONE" being the code returned if there was no error. The "alternative()" method will throw the error code as an exception if and only if all three of the following are true:
Of major interest is the error code "MARPA_ERR_UNEXPECTED_TOKEN_ID", which indicates that a token was not accepted because its token ID was not one of those expected. Catching and recovering from this error is the basis of the Ruby Slippers parsing technique. For more on the Ruby Slippers flag, see "ruby_slippers_set()".
my @terminals = $recce->terminals_expected();
The "terminals_expected()" method takes no arguments. On success, it returns an array containing the symbol ID's of the expected terminals. Note that the array of expected terminal ID's may be empty, so that an empty array is NOT a failure indicator. "terminals_expected()" obeys the throw setting. On unthrown failure, "terminals_expected()" returns a Perl "undef".
my $ordinal = $recce->latest_earley_set(); $recce->progress_report_start($ordinal); ITEM: while (1) { my ($rule_id, $dot_position, $origin) = $recce->progress_item(); last ITEM if not defined $rule_id; push @{$report}, [$rule_id, $dot_position, $origin]; } $recce->progress_report_finish();
The "progress_item()" method takes no arguments. On success, it returns an array of 3 elements: the rule ID, the dot position, and the earley set ID of the origin. If there are no more items, "progress_item()" returns a Perl "undef".
"progress_item()" obeys the throw setting. On unthrown failure, the rule ID element in the array returned by "progress_item()" will have a value of -2.
Because the Marpa thin interface handles reference counting internally, it does not implement methods directly corresponding to Libmarpa's "marpa_r_ref()" and "marpa_r_unref()" methods.
There are Marpa thin methods corresponding to Libmarpa's "marpa_r_earley_set_value()" and "marpa_r_earley_set_value_set()" methods, but not to Libmarpa's "marpa_r_earley_set_values()" and "marpa_r_earley_set_values_set()" methods. The difference between these is that the "values" form allows an integer and a pointer value to be set, while the "value" form allows only an integer to be set. Perl applications which want to associate non-integer data with an Earley set should create an array, and use the integer to index the array. The elements of the array can contain arbitrary data.
The thin interface does not implement a way to set the Earley set pointer value, because to do so would not add value. The thin interface would have to track the reference count of a pointer, and this can done as easily and efficiently, and with more flexibility, at the Perl level.
All recognizer methods that are part of the Libmarpa external interface, but that are not mentioned explicitly in this document, are implemented following the general pattern, as described above.
my $latest_earley_set_ID = $recce->latest_earley_set(); my $bocage = Marpa::R2::Thin::B->new( $recce, $latest_earley_set_ID );
The "new()" method takes a Marpa thin recognizer object as its one argument. On success, it returns a Marpa thin bocage object. "new()" obeys the throw setting. On unthrown failure, it returns a Perl "undef".
Because the Marpa thin interface handles reference counting internally, it does not implement methods directly corresponding to Libmarpa's "marpa_b_ref()" and "marpa_b_unref()" methods.
All bocage methods that are part of the Libmarpa external interface, but that are not mentioned explicitly in this document, are implemented following the general pattern, as described above.
my $order = Marpa::R2::Thin::O->new($bocage);
The "new()" method takes a Marpa thin bocage object as its one argument. On success, it returns a Marpa thin ordering object. "new()" obeys the throw setting. On unthrown failure, it returns a Perl "undef".
Because the Marpa thin interface handles reference counting internally, it does not implement methods directly corresponding to Libmarpa's "marpa_o_ref()" and "marpa_o_unref()" methods.
All ordering methods that are part of the Libmarpa external interface, but that are not mentioned explicitly in this document, are implemented following the general pattern, as described above.
my $tree = Marpa::R2::Thin::T->new($order);
The "new()" method takes a Marpa thin ordering object as its one argument. On success, it returns a Marpa thin tree object. "new()" obeys the throw setting. On unthrown failure, it returns a Perl "undef".
Because the Marpa thin interface handles reference counting internally, it does not implement methods directly corresponding to Libmarpa's "marpa_t_ref()" and "marpa_t_unref()" methods.
All tree methods that are part of the Libmarpa external interface, but that are not mentioned explicitly in this document, are implemented following the general pattern, as described above.
my $valuator = Marpa::R2::Thin::V->new($tree);
The "new()" method takes a Marpa thin tree object as its one argument. On success, it returns a Marpa thin value object. "new()" obeys the throw setting. On unthrown failure, it returns a Perl "undef".
$type = $valuator->step_type(); my ( $start, $end ) = $valuator->location(); if ( $type eq 'MARPA_STEP_RULE' ) { my ($rule_id) = @step_data; $locations_report .= "Rule $rule_id is from $start to $end\n"; } if ( $type eq 'MARPA_STEP_TOKEN' ) { my ($token_id) = @step_data; $locations_report .= "Token $token_id is from $start to $end\n"; } if ( $type eq 'MARPA_STEP_NULLING_SYMBOL' ) { my ($symbol_id) = @step_data; $locations_report .= "Nulling symbol $symbol_id is from $start to $end\n"; }
The "location()" method takes no arguments. The "location()" method always succeeds, returning either an empty array or an array of two elements.
my ( $type, @step_data ) = $valuator->step();
The "step()" method takes no arguments. On success, "step()" returns an array, whose contents are as follows:
As a reminder, Libmarpa's token values are always integers. Applications will often have a richer or different semantics for token values. One approach such applications can take is to use Libmarpa's token values as indexes into an array.
"step()" obeys the throw setting. On unthrown failure, "step()" returns an array whose only element is a string not reserved by Libmarpa. A string is not reserved by Libmarpa if it does not begin with ""MARPA_"" in one of its capitalization variants. The string will usually be a description of the error.
$type = $valuator->step_type();
The "step_type()" method takes no arguments. On success, "step_type()" returns the string indicating the type of the last Libmarpa valuator step. If the last call of the "step()" method succeeded, the string returned by "step_type()" will be the same as the one that was the first element of the array returned by "step()".
"step_type()" obeys the throw setting. On unthrown failure, "step()" returns an array whose only element is a string not reserved by Libmarpa. A string is not reserved by Libmarpa if it does not begin with ""MARPA_"" in one of its capitalization variants. The string will usually be a description of the error.
Because the Marpa thin interface handles reference counting internally, it does not implement methods directly corresponding to Libmarpa's "marpa_v_ref()" and "marpa_v_unref()" methods. The step accessor macros are folded into the thin interface's "$v->step()" and "$v->location()" methods. For this reason, no thin interface macro corresponds directly to most of the individual step accessors.
All value methods that are part of the Libmarpa external interface, but that are not mentioned explicitly in this document, are implemented following the general pattern, as described above.
my $grammar = Marpa::R2::Thin::G->new( { if => 1 } ); $grammar->force_valued(); my $symbol_S = $grammar->symbol_new(); my $symbol_E = $grammar->symbol_new(); $grammar->start_symbol_set($symbol_S); my $symbol_op = $grammar->symbol_new(); my $symbol_number = $grammar->symbol_new(); my $start_rule_id = $grammar->rule_new( $symbol_S, [$symbol_E] ); my $op_rule_id = $grammar->rule_new( $symbol_E, [ $symbol_E, $symbol_op, $symbol_E ] ); my $number_rule_id = $grammar->rule_new( $symbol_E, [$symbol_number] ); $grammar->precompute(); my $recce = Marpa::R2::Thin::R->new($grammar); $recce->start_input(); # The numbers from 1 to 3 are themselves -- # that is, they index their own token value. # Important: zero cannot be itself! my @token_values = ( 0 .. 3 ); my $zero = -1 + push @token_values, 0; my $minus_token_value = -1 + push @token_values, q{-}; my $plus_token_value = -1 + push @token_values, q{+}; my $multiply_token_value = -1 + push @token_values, q{*}; $recce->alternative( $symbol_number, 2, 1 ); $recce->earleme_complete(); $recce->alternative( $symbol_op, $minus_token_value, 1 ); $recce->earleme_complete(); $recce->alternative( $symbol_number, $zero, 1 ); $recce->earleme_complete(); $recce->alternative( $symbol_op, $multiply_token_value, 1 ); $recce->earleme_complete(); $recce->alternative( $symbol_number, 3, 1 ); $recce->earleme_complete(); $recce->alternative( $symbol_op, $plus_token_value, 1 ); $recce->earleme_complete(); $recce->alternative( $symbol_number, 1, 1 ); $recce->earleme_complete(); my $latest_earley_set_ID = $recce->latest_earley_set(); my $bocage = Marpa::R2::Thin::B->new( $recce, $latest_earley_set_ID ); my $order = Marpa::R2::Thin::O->new($bocage); my $tree = Marpa::R2::Thin::T->new($order); my @actual_values = (); while ( $tree->next() ) { my $valuator = Marpa::R2::Thin::V->new($tree); my @stack = (); STEP: while ( 1 ) { my ( $type, @step_data ) = $valuator->step(); last STEP if not defined $type; if ( $type eq 'MARPA_STEP_TOKEN' ) { my ( undef, $token_value_ix, $arg_n ) = @step_data; $stack[$arg_n] = $token_values[$token_value_ix]; next STEP; } if ( $type eq 'MARPA_STEP_RULE' ) { my ( $rule_id, $arg_0, $arg_n ) = @step_data; if ( $rule_id == $start_rule_id ) { my ( $string, $value ) = @{ $stack[$arg_n] }; $stack[$arg_0] = "$string == $value"; next STEP; } if ( $rule_id == $number_rule_id ) { my $number = $stack[$arg_0]; $stack[$arg_0] = [ $number, $number ]; next STEP; } if ( $rule_id == $op_rule_id ) { my $op = $stack[ $arg_0 + 1 ]; my ( $right_string, $right_value ) = @{ $stack[$arg_n] }; my ( $left_string, $left_value ) = @{ $stack[$arg_0] }; my $value; my $text = '(' . $left_string . $op . $right_string . ')'; if ( $op eq q{+} ) { $stack[$arg_0] = [ $text, $left_value + $right_value ]; next STEP; } if ( $op eq q{-} ) { $stack[$arg_0] = [ $text, $left_value - $right_value ]; next STEP; } if ( $op eq q{*} ) { $stack[$arg_0] = [ $text, $left_value * $right_value ]; next STEP; } die "Unknown op: $op"; } ## end if ( $rule_id == $op_rule_id ) die "Unknown rule $rule_id"; } ## end if ( $type eq 'MARPA_STEP_RULE' ) die "Unexpected step type: $type"; } ## end while ( my ( $type, @step_data ) = $valuator->step() ) push @actual_values, $stack[0]; } ## end while ( $tree->next() )
Copyright 2014 Jeffrey Kegler This file is part of Marpa::R2. Marpa::R2 is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. Marpa::R2 is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with Marpa::R2. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
2021-01-22 | perl v5.32.0 |