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NAME
    MarpaX::Simple::Lexer - simplify lexing for Marpa parser

SYNOPSIS
        use 5.010;
        use strict;
        use warnings;
        use lib 'lib/';

        use Marpa::XS;
        use MarpaX::Simple::Lexer;

        my $grammar = Marpa::XS::Grammar->new( {
            actions => 'main',
            default_action => 'do_what_I_mean',
            start   => 'query',
            rules   => [
                {
                    lhs => 'query', rhs => [qw(condition)],
                    min => 1, separator => 'OP', proper => 1, keep => 1,
                },
                [ condition => [qw(word)] ],
                [ condition => [qw(quoted)] ],
                [ condition => [qw(OPEN-PAREN SPACE? query SPACE? CLOSE-PAREN)] ],
                [ condition => [qw(NOT condition)] ],

                [ 'SPACE?' => [] ],
                [ 'SPACE?' => [qw(SPACE)] ],
            ],
            lhs_terminals => 0,
        });
        $grammar->precompute;
        my $recognizer = Marpa::XS::Recognizer->new( { grammar => $grammar } );

        use Regexp::Common qw /delimited/;

        my $lexer = MyLexer->new(
            recognizer => $recognizer,
            tokens => {
                word          => qr{\b\w+\b},
                'quoted'      => qr[$RE{delimited}{-delim=>qq{\'\"}}],
                OP            => qr{\s+(OR)\s+|\s+},
                NOT           => '!',
                'OPEN-PAREN'  => '(',
                'CLOSE-PAREN' => ')',
                'SPACE'       => qr{\s+()},
            },
            debug => 1,
        );

        $lexer->recognize(\*DATA);

        use Data::Dumper;
        print Dumper $recognizer->value;

        sub do_what_I_mean {
            shift;
            my @children = grep defined && length, @_;
            return scalar @children > 1 ? \@children : shift @children;
        }

        package MyLexer;
        use base 'MarpaX::Simple::Lexer';

        sub grow_buffer {
            my $self = shift;
            my $rv = $self->SUPER::grow_buffer( @_ );
            ${ $self->buffer } =~ s/[\r\n]+//g;
            return $rv;
        }

        package main;
        __DATA__
        hello !world OR "he hehe hee" ( foo OR !boo )

WARNING
    This is experimental module in alpha stage I cooked during weekend to
    simplify and speed up writing marpa grammar and lexer for vCards.

    I'm publishing it to collect feedback and because I believe it can be
    very useful to people experimenting with Marpa.

DESCRIPTION
    This module helps you start with Marpa::XS parser and simplifies lexing.

TUTORIAL
  Where to start
    Here is template you can start a new parser from:

        use strict; use warnings;

        use Marpa::XS;
        use MarpaX::Simple::Lexer;

        my $grammar = Marpa::XS::Grammar->new( {
            start   => 'query',
            rules   => [
                [ query => [qw(something)] ],
            ],
            lhs_terminals => 0,
        });
        $grammar->precompute;
        my $recognizer = Marpa::XS::Recognizer->new( { grammar => $grammar } );
        my $lexer = MarpaX::Simple::Lexer->new(
            recognizer => $recognizer,
            tokens => {},
            debug => 1,
        );

        $lexer->recognize(\*DATA);

        __DATA__
        hello !world "he hehe hee" ( foo OR boo )

    It's a working program that prints the following output:

        Expect token(s): 'something'
        Buffer start: hello !world "he heh...
        Unknown token: 'something'
        Unexpected message, type "parse exhausted" at ...

    First line says that at this moment parser expects 'something'. It's
    going to look for it in the following text (second line). Third line
    says that lexer doesn't know anything about 'something'. It's not a
    surprise that parsing fails.

    What can we do with 'something'? We either put it into grammar or lexer.
    In above example it's pretty obvious that it's gonna be in the grammar.

  Put some grammar
        rules   => [
            # over query is a sequence of conditions separated with OPs
            {
                lhs => 'query', rhs => [qw(condition)],
                min => 1, separator => 'OP', proper => 1, keep => 1,
            },
            # each condition can be one of the following
            [ condition => [qw(word)] ],
            [ condition => [qw(quoted)] ],
            [ condition => [qw(OPEN-PAREN SPACE? query SPACE? CLOSE-PAREN)] ],
            [ condition => [qw(NOT condition)] ],
        ],

    Our program works and gives us helpful results:

        Expect token(s): 'word', 'quoted', 'OPEN-PAREN', 'NOT'
        Buffer start: hello !world OR "he ...
        Unknown token: 'word'
        ...

  First token
        tokens => {
            word => qr{\w+},
        },

    Ouput:

        Expect token(s): 'word', 'quoted', 'OPEN-PAREN', 'NOT'
        Buffer start: hello !world OR "he ...
        Token 'word' matched hello
        Unknown token: 'quoted'
        Unknown token: 'OPEN-PAREN'
        Unknown token: 'NOT'
        Expect token(s): 'OP'

    Congrats! First token matched. More tokens:

        use Regexp::Common qw /delimited/;

        my $lexer = MarpaX::Simple::Lexer->new(
            recognizer => $recognizer,
            tokens => {
                word => qr{\b\w+\b},
                OP => qr{\s+|\s+OR\s+},
                NOT => '!',
                'OPEN-PAREN' => '(',
                'CLOSE-PAREN' => ')',
                'quoted' => qr[$RE{delimited}{-delim=>qq{\'\"}}],
            },
            debug => 1,
        );

  Tokens matching empty string
    You can not have such. In our example grammar we have 'SPACE?' that is
    optional. You could try to use "qr{\s*}", but lexer would die with an
    error. Instead use the following:

        rules   => [
            ...
            [ 'SPACE?' => [] ],
            [ 'SPACE?' => [qw(SPACE)] ],
        ],
        ...
        tokens => {
            ...
            'SPACE'       => qr{\s+},
        },

  Lexer's ambiguity
    This module uses marpa's alternative input model what allows you to
    describe ambiguous lexer, e.g. several tokens starts at the same point.
    This is not always give you multiple results, but allows to start faster
    and keep improving tokens and grammar to avoid unnecessary ambiguity
    cases.

  Longest token match
    Let's look at string "x OR y". It should match "word OP word", but it
    matches "word OP word OP word". This happens because of how we defined
    OP token. If we change it to "qr{\s+OR\s+|\s+}" then results are better.

  Input buffer
    By default lexer reads data from the input stream in chunks into a
    buffer and grow the buffer only when it's shorter than "min_buffer"
    bytes. By default it's 4kb. This is good for memory consuption, but it
    can result in troubles when a terminal may be larger than a buffer. For
    example consider a document with embedded base64 encoded binary files.
    You can use several solutions to workaround this problem.

    Read everything into memory. Simplest way out. It's not default value to
    avoid encouragement:

        my $lexer = MarpaX::Simple::Lexer->new(
            min_buffer => 0,
            ...
        );

    Use larger buffer:

        my $lexer = MarpaX::Simple::Lexer->new(
            min_buffer => 10*1024*1024, # 10MB
            ...
        );

    Use built in protection from such cases. When a regular expression token
    matches whole buffer and buffer still can grow then lexer grows buffer
    and retries. This allows you to write a regular expression that matches
    till end of token or end of buffer ("$"). Note that this may result in
    token incomplete match if input ends right in the middle of it.

        tokens => {
            ...
            'text-paragraph' => qr{\w[\w\s]+?(?:\n\n|$)},
        },

    Adjust grammar. In most cases you can split long terminal into multiple
    terminals with limitted length. For example:

        rules   => [
            ...
            { lhs => 'text', rhs => 'text-chunk', min => 1 },
        ],

  Filtering input
    Input can be filtered with subclassing grow_buffer method:

        package MyLexer;
        use base 'MarpaX::Simple::Lexer';

        sub grow_buffer {
            my $self = shift;
            my $rv = $self->SUPER::grow_buffer( @_ );
            ${ $self->buffer } =~ s/[\r\n]+//g;
            return $rv;
        }

  Actions
    The simplest possible action that can produce some results:

        my $grammar = Marpa::XS::Grammar->new( {
            actions => 'main',
            default_action => 'do_what_I_mean',
            ...
        );
        sub do_what_I_mean {
            shift;
            my @children = grep defined && length, @_;
            return @children > 1 ? \@children : shift @children;
        }
        ...

        $lexer->recognize(\*DATA);

        use Data::Dumper;
        print Dumper $recognizer->value;

  Token's values
    Values of tokens are set to whatever token matches in the input, however
    for regexp tokens you can use $1 to set value. Here is part of data from
    our example:

        '(',
        ' ',
        [ ...

    Paren is followed by optional space. We can change SPACE token:

            'SPACE'       => qr{\s+()},

    New token captures empty string into $1 and it skipped by default
    action.

    Similar trick can be used with OP, but to cature 'OR' without spaces:

            OP            => qr{\s+(OR)\s+|\s+},

  What's next
    Add more actions. Experiment. Enjoy.

AUTHOR
    Ruslan Zakirov <[email protected]>

LICENSE
    Under the same terms as perl itself.

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