A lexical analyzer generator for Standard ML.
Version 1.6.0, October 1994
Andrew W. Appel
James S. Mattson
David R. Tarditi
Department of Computer Science, Princeton University
School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
(c) 1989-94 Andrew W. Appel, James S. Mattson, David R. Tarditi
This software comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY. It is subject only to
the terms of the ML-Yacc NOTICE, LICENSE, and DISCLAIMER (in the
file COPYRIGHT distributed with this software).
New in this version:
-
REJECT is much less costly than before.
- Lexical analyzers with more than 255 states can now compile in your
lifetime.
Table of Contents
1 General Description
Computer programs often need to divide their input into words and
distinguish between different kinds of words. Compilers, for
example, need to distinguish between integers, reserved words, and
identifiers. Applications programs often need to be able to
recognize components of typed commands from users.
The problem of segmenting input into words and recognizing classes of
words is known as lexical analysis. Small cases of this problem,
such as reading text strings separated by spaces, can be solved by
using hand-written programs. Larger cases of this problem, such as
tokenizing an input stream for a compiler, can also be solved using
hand-written programs.
A hand-written program for a large lexical analysis problem, however,
suffers from two major problems. First, the program requires a fair
amount of programmer time to create. Second, the description of
classes of words is not explicit in the program. It must be inferred
from the program code. This makes it difficult to verify if the
program recognizes the correct words for each class. It also makes
future maintenance of the program difficult.
Lex, a programming tool for the Unix system, is a successful solution
to the general problem of lexical analysis. It uses regular
expressions to describe classes of words. A program fragment is
associated with each class of words. This information is given to
Lex as a specification (a Lex program). Lex produces a program for a
function that can be used to perform lexical analysis.
The function operates as follows. It finds the longest word starting
from the current position in the input stream that is in one of the
word classes. It executes the program fragment associated with the
class, and sets the current position in the input stream to be the
character after the word. The program fragment has the actual text
of the word available to it, and may be any piece of code. For many
applications it returns some kind of value.
Lex allows the programmer to make the language description explicit,
and to concentrate on what to do with the recognized words, not how
to recognize the words. It saves programmer time and increases
program maintainability.
Unfortunately, Lex is targeted only C. It also places artificial
limits on the size of strings that can be recognized.
ML-Lex is a variant of Lex for the ML programming language. ML-Lex
has a syntax similar to Lex, and produces an ML program instead of a
C program. ML-Lex produces a program that runs very efficiently.
Typically the program will be as fast or even faster than a
hand-coded lexer implemented in Standard ML.
The program typically uses only a small amount of space.
ML-Lex thus allows ML programmers the same benefits that Lex allows C
programmers. It also does not place artificial limits on the size of
recognized strings.
2 ML-Lex specifications
An ML-Lex specification has the general format:
user declarations
%%
ML-Lex definitions
%%
rules
Each section is separated from the others by a %%
delimiter.
The rules are used to define the lexical analysis function. Each
rule has two parts---a regular expression and an action. The regular
expression defines the word class that a rule matches. The action is
a program fragment to be executed when a rule matches the input. The
actions are used to compute values, and must all return values of the
same type.
The user can define values available to all rule actions in the user
declarations section. The user must define two values in this
section---a type lexresult and a function eof. Lexresult defines the
type of values returned by the rule actions. The function `eof' is
called by the lexer when the end of the input stream is reached. It
will typically return a value signalling eof or raise an exception.
It is called with the same argument as lex (see %arg
, below),
and must return a value of type lexresult.
In the definitions section, the user can define named regular
expressions, a set of start states, and specify which of the various
bells and whistles of ML-Lex are desired.
The start states allow the user to control when certain rules are
matched. Rules may be defined to match only when the lexer is in
specific start states. The user may change the lexer's start state
in a rule action. This allows the user to specify special handling
of lexical objects.
This feature is typically used to handle quoted strings with escapes
to denote special characters. The rules to recognize the inside
contents of a string are defined for only one start state. This
start state is entered when the beginning of a string is recognized,
and exited when the end of the string is recognized.
3 Regular expressions
Regular expressions are a simple language for denoting classes of
strings. A regular expression is defined inductively over an
alphabet with a set of basic operations. The alphabet for ML-Lex is
the Ascii character set (character codes 0--127; or if
%full
is used, 0--255).
The syntax and semantics of regular expressions will be described in
order of decreasing precedence (from the most tightly binding operators
to the most weakly binding):
-
An individual character stands for itself, except for the
reserved characters ? * + | ( ) $ / ; . = < > [
{ "
\
A backslash followed by one of the reserved characters stands
for that character.
- A set of characters enclosed in square brackets [ ] stands
for any one of those characters. Inside the brackets, only
the symbols
\ - ^
are reserved. An initial up-arrow
^
stands
for the complement of the characters listed, e.g. [^abc]
stands any character except a, b, or c. The hyphen - denotes
a range of characters, e.g. [a-z]
stands for any lower-case
alphabetic character, and [0-9a-fA-F]
stands for any hexadecimal
digit. To include ^
literally in a bracketed set, put it anywhere
but first; to include -
literally in a set, put it first or last.
- . The dot
.
character stands for any character except newline,
i.e. the same as [^\n]
- The following special escape sequences are available, inside
or outside of square-brackets:
\b |
backspace |
\n |
newline |
\t |
tab |
\h |
stands for all characters with codes >127, |
|
when 7-bit characters are used. |
\ddd |
where ddd is a 3 digit decimal escape. |
|
- " A sequence of characters will stand for itself (reserved
characters will be taken literally) if it is enclosed in
double quotes
" "
.
- {} A named regular expression (defined in the ``definitions''
section) may be referred to by enclosing its name in
braces
{ }
.
- () Any regular expression may be enclosed in parentheses
( )
for syntactic (but, as usual, not semantic) effect.
- * The postfix operator
*
stands for Kleene closure:
zero or more repetitions of the preceding expression.
- + The postfix operator
+
stands for one or more repetitions
of the preceding expression.
- ? The postfix operator
?
stands for zero or one occurrence of
the preceding expression.
- A postfix repetition range {n1,n2} where n1 and n2 are small
integers stands for any number of repetitions between n1 and n2
of the preceding expression. The notation {n1} stands for
exactly n1 repetitions.
- Concatenation of expressions denotes concatenation of strings.
The expression e1 e2 stands for any string that results from
the concatenation of one string that matches e1 with another
string that matches e2.
- | The infix operator
|
stands for alternation. The expression
e1 | e2 stands for anything that either e1 or e2 stands for.
- / The infix operator
/
denotes lookahead. Lookahead is not
implemented and cannot be used, because there is a bug
in the algorithm for generating lexers with lookahead. If
it could be used, the expression e1 / e2 would match any string
that e1 stands for, but only when that string is followed by a
string that matches e2.
- When the up-arrow
^
occurs at the beginning of an expression,
that expression will only match strings that occur at the
beginning of a line (right after a newline character).
- $ The dollar sign of C Lex $ is not implemented, since it is an abbreviation
for lookahead involving the newline character (that is, it
is an abbreviation for
/\n
).
Here are some examples of regular expressions, and descriptions of the
set of strings they denote:
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
A single digit between 0 and 3 |
[0123] |
A single digit between 0 and 3 |
0123 |
The string ``0123" |
0* |
All strings of 0 or more 0's |
00* |
All strings of 1 or more 0's |
0+ |
All strings of 1 or more 0's |
[0-9]{3} |
Any three-digit decimal number. |
\\[ntb] |
A newline, tab, or backspace. |
(00)* |
Any string with an even number of 0's. |
4 ML-Lex syntax summary
4.1 User declarations
Anything up to the first %%
is in the user declarations section. The
user should note that no symbolic identifier containing
%%
can be
used in this section.
4.2 ML-Lex definitions
Start states can be defined with
%s
identifier list ;
An identifier list consists of one or more identifiers.
An identifier consists of one or more letters, digits, underscores,
or primes, and must begin with a letter.
Named expressions can be defined with
identifier = regular expression ;
Regular expressions are defined below.
The following % commands are also available:
-
%reject
- create REJECT() function
- %count
- count newlines using yylineno
- %posarg
- pass initial-position argument to makeLexer
- %full
- create lexer for the full 8-bit character set,
with characters in the range 0--255 permitted
as input.
- %structure {identifier}
- name the structure in the output program
identifier instead of Mlex
- %header
- use code following it to create header for lexer
structure
- %arg
- extra (curried) formal parameter argument to be
passed to the lex functions, and to be passed
to the eof function in place of ()
These functions are discussed in section 5.
Each rule has the format:
<
start state list>
regular expression => (
code );
All parentheses in code must be balanced, including those
used in strings and comments.
The start state list is optional. It consists of a list of
identifiers separated by commas, and is delimited by triangle
brackets < >
. Each identifier must be a start state defined in the
%s
section above.
The regular expression is only recognized when the lexer is in one of
the start states in the start state list. If no start state list is
given, the expression is recognized in all start states.
The lexer begins in a pre-defined start state called INITIAL
.
The lexer resolves conflicts among rules by choosing the rule with
the longest match, and in the case two rules match the same string,
choosing the rule listed first in the specification.
The rules should match all possible input. If some input occurs that
does not match any rule, the lexer created by ML-Lex will raise an
exception LexError. Note that this differs from C Lex, which prints
any unmatched input on the standard output.
5 Values available inside the code associated with a rule.
ML-Lex places the value of the string matched by a regular expression
in yytext
, a string variable.
The user may recursively
call the lexing function with lex()
. (If %arg
is used, the
lexing function may be re-invoked with the same argument by using
continue().) This is convenient for ignoring white space or comments silently:
[\ \t\n]+ => ( lex());
To switch start states, the user may call YYBEGIN
with the name of a
start state.
The following values will be available only if the corresponding %
command is in the ML-Lex definitions sections:
|
Value |
% command |
description |
|
REJECT |
%reject |
REJECT() causes the current
rule to be ``rejected.''
The lexer behaves as if the
current rule had not matched;
another rule that matches this
string, or that matches the longest
possible prefix of this string,
is used instead. |
yypos |
|
The position of the first character
of yytext, relative to the beginning of the file. |
yylineno |
%count |
Current line number |
|
These values should be used only if necessary. Adding REJECT to a
lexer will slow it down by 20%; adding yylineno will slow it down by
another 20%, or more. (It is much more efficient to
recognize \n
and
have an action that increments the line-number variable.) The use of
the lookahead operator / will also slow down the entire lexer.
The character-position, yypos, is not costly to maintain, however.
Bug: The position of the first character in the file
is reported as 2 (unless the %posarg feature is used).
To preserve compatibility, this bug has not been fixed.
6 Running ML-Lex
From the Unix shell, run sml-lex myfile.lex
The output file will be myfile.lex.sml. The extension .lex is not
required but is recommended.
Within an interactive system [not the preferred method]:
Use lexgen.sml; this will create a structure LexGen. The function
LexGen.lexGen creates a program for a lexer from an input
specification. It takes a string argument -- the name of the file
containing the input specification. The output file name is
determined by appending ``.sml'' to the input file name.
7 Using the program produced by ML-Lex
When the output file is loaded, it will create a structure Mlex that
contains the function makeLexer which takes a function from
int->string and returns a lexing function:
val makeLexer : (int->string) -> yyarg -> lexresult
where yyarg is the type given in the %yyarg directive,
or unit if there is no %yyarg directive.
For example,
val lexer = Mlex.makeLexer (inputc (open_in "f"))
creates a lexer that operates on the file whose name is f.
When the %posarg directive is used, the type of
makeLexer is
val makeLexer : ((int->string)*int) -> yyarg -> lexresult
where the extra int argument is one less than the yypos
of the first character in the input. The value k would be used,
for example, when creating
a lexer to start in the middle of a file, when k characters have
already been read. At the beginning of the file, k=0 should be used.
The int->string function
should read a string of characters
from the input stream. It should return a null string to indicate
that the end of the stream has been reached. The integer is the
number of characters that the lexer wishes to read; the function may
return any non-zero number of characters. For example,
val lexer =
let val input_line = fn f =>
let fun loop result =
let val c = input (f,1)
val result = c :: result
in if String.size c = 0 orelse c = "\n" then
String.implode (rev result)
else loop result
end
in loop nil
end
in Mlex.makeLexer (fn n => input_line std_in)
end
is appropriate for interactive streams where prompting, etc. occurs;
the lexer won't care that input_line
might return a string of more
than or less than n characters.
The lexer tries to read a large number of characters from the input
function at once, and it is desirable that the input function return
as many as possible. Reading many characters at once makes the lexer
more efficient. Fewer input calls and buffering operations are
needed, and input is more efficient in large block reads. For
interactive streams this is less of a concern, as the limiting factor
is the speed at which the user can type.
To obtain a value, invoke the lexer by passing it a unit:
val nextToken = lexer()
If one wanted to restart the lexer, one would just discard lexer
and create a new lexer on the same stream with another call to
makeLexer. This is the best way to discard any characters buffered
internally by the lexer.
All code in the user declarations section is placed inside a
structure UserDeclarations. To access this structure, use the path name
Mlex.UserDeclarations.
If any input cannot be matched, the program will raise the exception
Mlex.LexError. An internal error (i.e. bug) will cause the
exception Internal.LexerError to be raised.
If %structure is used, remember that the structure name will no
longer be Mlex, but the one specified in the command.
8 Sample
Here is a sample lexer for a calculator program:
datatype lexresult= DIV | EOF | EOS | ID of string | LPAREN |
NUM of int | PLUS | PRINT | RPAREN | SUB | TIMES
val linenum = ref 1
fun inc r = r := !r + 1
fun error s = (print s; print "\n")
fun eof() = EOF
%%
%structure CalcLex
alpha=[A-Za-z];
digit=[0-9];
ws = [\ \t];
%%
\n => (inc linenum; lex());
{ws}+ => (lex());
"/" => (DIV);
";" => (EOS);
"(" => (LPAREN);
{digit}+ => (NUM (foldl (fn(a,r)=>ord(a)-ord(#"0")+10*r) 0 (explode yytext)));
")" => (RPAREN);
"+" => (PLUS);
{alpha}+ => (if yytext="print" then PRINT else ID yytext);
"-" => (SUB);
"*" => (TIMES);
. => (error ("calc: ignoring bad character "^yytext); lex());
Here is the parser for the calculator:
(* Sample interactive calculator to demonstrate use of lexer
The original grammar was
stmt_list -> stmt_list stmt
stmt -> print exp ; | exp ;
exp -> exp + t | exp - t | t
t -> t * f | t/f | f
f -> (exp) | id | num
The function parse takes a stream and parses it for the calculator
program.
If a syntax error occurs, parse prints an error message and calls
itself on the stream. On this system that has the effect of ignoring
all input to the end of a line.
*)
structure Calc =
struct
open CalcLex
open UserDeclarations
exception Error
fun parse strm =
let
val say = print
val input_line = fn f =>
let fun loop result =
case TextIO.input1 f
of (NONE | SOME #"\n") => String.implode (rev result)
| SOME c => loop (c::result)
in loop nil
end
val lexer = makeLexer (fn n => input_line strm)
val nexttok = ref (lexer())
val advance = fn () => (nexttok := lexer(); !nexttok)
val error = fn () => (say ("calc: syntax error on line" ^
(Int.toString(!linenum)) ^ "\n"); raise Error)
val lookup = fn i =>
if i = "ONE" then 1
else if i = "TWO" then 2
else (say ("calc: unknown identifier '" ^ i ^ "'\n"); raise Error)
fun STMT_LIST () =
case !nexttok of
EOF => ()
| _ => (STMT(); STMT_LIST())
and STMT() =
(case !nexttok
of EOS => ()
| PRINT => (advance(); say ((Int.toString (E())) ^ "\n"); ())
| _ => (E(); ());
case !nexttok
of EOS => (advance())
| _ => error())
and E () = E' (T())
and E' (i : int ) =
case !nexttok of
PLUS => (advance (); E'(i+T()))
| SUB => (advance (); E'(i-T()))
| RPAREN => i
| EOF => i
| EOS => i
| _ => error()
and T () = T'(F())
and T' i =
case !nexttok of
PLUS => i
| SUB => i
| TIMES => (advance(); T'(i*F()))
| DIV => (advance (); T'(i div F()))
| EOF => i
| EOS => i
| RPAREN => i
| _ => error()
and F () =
case !nexttok of
ID i => (advance(); lookup i)
| LPAREN =>
let val v = (advance(); E())
in if !nexttok = RPAREN then (advance (); v) else error()
end
| NUM i => (advance(); i)
| _ => error()
in STMT_LIST () handle Error => parse strm
end
fun main _ =
let val is = TextIO.openIn "calc.in"
in parse is
; TextIO.closeIn is
end
end
This document was translated from LATEX by
HEVEA.