package parsexp
S-expression parsing library
Install
Dune Dependency
Authors
Maintainers
Sources
parsexp-v0.12.0.tar.gz
sha256=cc6176e643c7eb35d22ee61252f63ab227b497d4da2b7f4d5fc6c3cfe4d72f54
md5=741b2c6f59b9618e3affabaa34d468a2
README.org.html
README.org
* Parsexp - S-expression parser =Parsexp= contains functionality for parsing s-expressions, which are defined in the [[https://github.com/janestreet/base][Base]] library as follows: #+begin_src ocaml module Sexp : sig type t = Atom of string | List of t list end #+end_src =Parsexp= is platform independent and as such doesn't provide IO operations. The companion library [[https://github.com/janestreet/parsexp_io][Parsexp_io]] provides facilities for loading s-expressions from files. ** Syntax of s-expression *** Lexical conventions of s-expression Whitespace, which consists of space, newline, horizontal tab, and form feed, is ignored unless within an OCaml-string, where it is treated according to OCaml-conventions. The left parenthesis opens a new list, the right one closes it. Lists can be empty. The double quote denotes the beginning and end of a string using similar lexing conventions to the ones of OCaml (see the [[http://caml.inria.fr/pub/docs/manual-ocaml/][OCaml-manual]] for details). Differences are: - octal escape sequences (=\o123=) are not supported by parsexp - backslash that's not a part of any escape sequence is kept as it is instead of resulting in parse error - a backslash followed by a space does not form an escape sequence, so it's interpreted as is, while it is interpreted as just a space by OCaml All characters other than double quotes, left- and right parentheses, whitespace, carriage return, and comment-introducing characters or sequences (see next paragraph) are considered part of a contiguous string. *** Comments There are three kinds of comments: - _line comments_ are introduced with =;=, and end at the newline. - _sexp comments_ are introduced with =#;=, and end at the end of the following s-expression - _block comments_ are introduced with =#|= and end with =|#=. These can be nested, and double-quotes within them must be balanced and be lexically correct OCaml strings. *** Grammar of s-expressions s-expressions are either strings (= atoms) or lists. The lists can recursively contain further s-expressions or be empty, and must be balanced, /i.e./ parentheses must match. *** Examples #+begin_src scheme this_is_an_atom_123'&^%! ; this is a comment "another atom in an OCaml-string \"string in a string\" \123" ; empty list follows below () ; a more complex example ( ( list in a list ; comment within a list (list in a list in a list) 42 is the answer to all questions #; (this S-expression (has been commented out) ) #| Block comments #| can be "nested" |# |# ) ) #+end_src ** API =Parsexp= offers a few different parsers. Each of them comes in 3 variants: 1. =single=, for parsing a source expected to contain a single s-expression. Zero or more than 1 s-expressions is considered an error and reported as such. 2. =many=, for parsing a source expected to contain multiple s-expressions, returned as a list 3. =eager=, for reporting s-expressions to the user as soon as they are found in the input source Parsers all implement the same API. For each parsers, =Parsexp= offers a low-level API, where one feeds characters one-by-one to the parser, as well as a convenience functions to parse a whole string. *** Low-level API With the low-level API, ones must create a parser state and feed it characters one by one. This allows =Parsexp= to be used with any kind of input as well as to be =Lwt= or =Async= friendly. Essentially, if you want to parse from a different input source, you have to write the fetch-character-feed-to-parser loop yourself. *** Parsers =Parsexp= offers the following parsers: - _normal parsers_ returning values of type =Sexp.t= - _with positions_ returning s-expressions as well as a set of positions (see next section) - _just positions_ returning only a set of positions - _CST_ return a concrete syntax tree, including all comment and locations In addition, it provides convenience functions for parsing strings and converting the result with a =Sexp.t -> 'a= function, reporting errors with accurate locations. Each parsing/conversion functions comes in two variants: one raising exception in case of error and one returning a =Result.t= value. In general you should use the latter since parsing is an operation that can always fail. *** Positions sets and error reporting To deal with error locations when converting S-expressions to OCaml values, =Parsexp= introduces the notion of compact positions sets. A positions set represents positions in the input source of all s-expressions. It has a small memory footprint and is relatively cheap to construct. Using a positions set and the corresponding s-expression, one can reconstruct the location of any sub s-expressions in the input source. Depending on the input source, one can either: - parse a first time without recording positions and parse a second time only producing positions in case of error - parse only once producing both the s-expressions and the positions sets The first method has the advantage that it is faster where there are no errors, however it is not suitable for sources that can't guarantee repeatable reads such as files.
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