Guacamole - A parser toolkit for Standard Perl
version 0.008
use Guacamole;
my ($ast) = Guacamole->parse($string);
Guacamole is a Perl parser toolkit.
It can:
-
Parse Standard Perl
This is explained in this document.
For Standard Perl, see the next clause.
-
Check a file is written in Standard Perl
This is done by standard, which is where Standard Perl is described.
-
Lint your code
See Guacamole::Linter.
-
Deparse your code
See Guacamole::Deparse.
-
Rewrite your code
There is a proof-of-concept for this and we hope to provide this as a framework.
Guacamole only works on Standard Perl. You can read about it here: standard.
my ($ast) = Guacamole->parse($string);
To parse a string, call Gaucamole's parse
method. (This might turn to an
object-oriented interface in the future.)
It returns a list of results. If it ever returns more than one, this is a bug that means it couldn't ambiguously parse something. This will later be enforced in the interface. The current interface is not official.
Guacamole returns an AST with two types of nodes.
my ($ast) = Guacamole->parse('$foo = 1');
The above will generate a larger AST than you imagine (which might be pruned in the future). We'll focus on two types of nodes that will appear above.
Rules are the top level expressions. They include the definitions for rules. They include information on location in the file, length, line, and column.
$rule = {
'children' => [...],
'column' => 2,
'length' => 3,
'line' => 1,
'name' => 'VarIdentExpr',
'start_pos' => 1,
'type' => 'rule',
},
This rule is a VarIdentExpr
which is an expression for a variable identity.
In the code above, it refers to the foo
in $foo
- which is the identity
itself.
It has one child, described below under Lexemes
.
The child for the VarIdentExpr
rule should be the value of the identity.
$lexeme = {
'name' => '',
'type' => 'lexeme',
'value' => 'foo',
};
The name
attribute for all lexemes is empty. This is to make it easy to
write code that checks for the value of a rule without having to check whether
it's a rule first.
-
Damian Conway
For helping understand what is feasible, what isn't, and why, and for having infinite patience in explaining these.
-
Jeffrey Kegler
For Marpa and helping understand how to use Marpa better.
-
Gonzalo Diethelm
For continuous feedback and support.
-
H. Merijn Brand (@Tux)
For providing the initial production-level test of Guacamole to help shake many of the bugs in the BNF.
- Sawyer X
- Vickenty Fesunov
This software is Copyright (c) 2022 by Sawyer X.
This is free software, licensed under:
The MIT (X11) License