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Commit | Line | Data |
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ff1b7a13 | 1 | * Short term |
836dc334 AD |
2 | ** push-parser |
3 | Check it too when checking the different kinds of parsers. And be | |
4 | sure to check that the initial-action is performed once per parsing. | |
5 | ||
d27c5e65 AD |
6 | ** m4 names |
7 | b4_shared_declarations is no longer what it is. Make it | |
8 | b4_parser_declaration for instance. | |
9 | ||
51c994d8 AD |
10 | ** yychar in lalr1.cc |
11 | There is a large difference bw maint and master on the handling of | |
12 | yychar (which was removed in lalr1.cc). See what needs to be | |
13 | back-ported. | |
14 | ||
15 | ||
16 | /* User semantic actions sometimes alter yychar, and that requires | |
17 | that yytoken be updated with the new translation. We take the | |
18 | approach of translating immediately before every use of yytoken. | |
19 | One alternative is translating here after every semantic action, | |
20 | but that translation would be missed if the semantic action | |
21 | invokes YYABORT, YYACCEPT, or YYERROR immediately after altering | |
22 | yychar. In the case of YYABORT or YYACCEPT, an incorrect | |
23 | destructor might then be invoked immediately. In the case of | |
24 | YYERROR, subsequent parser actions might lead to an incorrect | |
25 | destructor call or verbose syntax error message before the | |
26 | lookahead is translated. */ | |
27 | ||
28 | /* Make sure we have latest lookahead translation. See comments at | |
29 | user semantic actions for why this is necessary. */ | |
30 | yytoken = yytranslate_ (yychar); | |
31 | ||
32 | ||
c28e8b68 AD |
33 | ** $ and others in epilogue |
34 | A stray $ is a warning in the actions, but an error in the epilogue. | |
35 | IMHO, it should not even be a warning in the epilogue. | |
36 | ||
5de5b987 AD |
37 | ** stack.hh |
38 | Get rid of it. The original idea is nice, but actually it makes | |
39 | the code harder to follow, and uselessly different from the other | |
40 | skeletons. | |
41 | ||
ff1b7a13 AD |
42 | ** Variable names. |
43 | What should we name `variant' and `lex_symbol'? | |
44 | ||
ff1b7a13 AD |
45 | ** Get rid of fake #lines [Bison: ...] |
46 | Possibly as simple as checking whether the column number is nonnegative. | |
47 | ||
48 | I have seen messages like the following from GCC. | |
49 | ||
50 | <built-in>:0: fatal error: opening dependency file .deps/libltdl/argz.Tpo: No such file or directory | |
51 | ||
52 | ||
53 | ** Discuss about %printer/%destroy in the case of C++. | |
54 | It would be very nice to provide the symbol classes with an operator<< | |
55 | and a destructor. Unfortunately the syntax we have chosen for | |
56 | %destroy and %printer make them hard to reuse. For instance, the user | |
57 | is invited to write something like | |
58 | ||
59 | %printer { debug_stream() << $$; } <my_type>; | |
60 | ||
61 | which is hard to reuse elsewhere since it wants to use | |
62 | "debug_stream()" to find the stream to use. The same applies to | |
63 | %destroy: we told the user she could use the members of the Parser | |
64 | class in the printers/destructors, which is not good for an operator<< | |
65 | since it is no longer bound to a particular parser, it's just a | |
66 | (standalone symbol). | |
67 | ||
68 | ** Rename LR0.cc | |
69 | as lr0.cc, why upper case? | |
70 | ||
71 | ** bench several bisons. | |
72 | Enhance bench.pl with %b to run different bisons. | |
73 | ||
74 | * Various | |
ff1b7a13 AD |
75 | ** YYERRCODE |
76 | Defined to 256, but not used, not documented. Probably the token | |
77 | number for the error token, which POSIX wants to be 256, but which | |
78 | Bison might renumber if the user used number 256. Keep fix and doc? | |
79 | Throw away? | |
80 | ||
81 | Also, why don't we output the token name of the error token in the | |
82 | output? It is explicitly skipped: | |
83 | ||
84 | /* Skip error token and tokens without identifier. */ | |
85 | if (sym != errtoken && id) | |
86 | ||
87 | Of course there are issues with name spaces, but if we disable we have | |
88 | something which seems to be more simpler and more consistent instead | |
89 | of the special case YYERRCODE. | |
90 | ||
91 | enum yytokentype { | |
92 | error = 256, | |
93 | // ... | |
94 | }; | |
95 | ||
96 | ||
97 | We could (should?) also treat the case of the undef_token, which is | |
98 | numbered 257 for yylex, and 2 internal. Both appear for instance in | |
99 | toknum: | |
100 | ||
101 | const unsigned short int | |
102 | parser::yytoken_number_[] = | |
103 | { | |
104 | 0, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261, 262, 263, 264, | |
105 | ||
106 | while here | |
107 | ||
108 | enum yytokentype { | |
109 | TOK_EOF = 0, | |
110 | TOK_EQ = 258, | |
111 | ||
112 | so both 256 and 257 are "mysterious". | |
113 | ||
114 | const char* | |
115 | const parser::yytname_[] = | |
116 | { | |
117 | "\"end of command\"", "error", "$undefined", "\"=\"", "\"break\"", | |
118 | ||
119 | ||
ff1b7a13 AD |
120 | ** yychar == yyempty_ |
121 | The code in yyerrlab reads: | |
122 | ||
123 | if (yychar <= YYEOF) | |
124 | { | |
125 | /* Return failure if at end of input. */ | |
126 | if (yychar == YYEOF) | |
127 | YYABORT; | |
128 | } | |
129 | ||
130 | There are only two yychar that can be <= YYEOF: YYEMPTY and YYEOF. | |
131 | But I can't produce the situation where yychar is YYEMPTY here, is it | |
132 | really possible? The test suite does not exercise this case. | |
133 | ||
134 | This shows that it would be interesting to manage to install skeleton | |
135 | coverage analysis to the test suite. | |
136 | ||
137 | ** Table definitions | |
138 | It should be very easy to factor the definition of the various tables, | |
139 | including the separation bw declaration and definition. See for | |
140 | instance b4_table_define in lalr1.cc. This way, we could even factor | |
141 | C vs. C++ definitions. | |
142 | ||
143 | * From lalr1.cc to yacc.c | |
144 | ** Single stack | |
145 | Merging the three stacks in lalr1.cc simplified the code, prompted for | |
146 | other improvements and also made it faster (probably because memory | |
147 | management is performed once instead of three times). I suggest that | |
148 | we do the same in yacc.c. | |
149 | ||
150 | ** yysyntax_error | |
151 | The code bw glr.c and yacc.c is really alike, we can certainly factor | |
152 | some parts. | |
416bd7a9 | 153 | |
3c146b5e | 154 | |
2ab9a04f | 155 | * Report |
ec3bc396 | 156 | |
ff1b7a13 AD |
157 | ** Figures |
158 | Some statistics about the grammar and the parser would be useful, | |
159 | especially when asking the user to send some information about the | |
160 | grammars she is working on. We should probably also include some | |
161 | information about the variables (I'm not sure for instance we even | |
162 | specify what LR variant was used). | |
163 | ||
2ab9a04f AD |
164 | ** GLR |
165 | How would Paul like to display the conflicted actions? In particular, | |
742e4900 | 166 | what when two reductions are possible on a given lookahead token, but one is |
2ab9a04f AD |
167 | part of $default. Should we make the two reductions explicit, or just |
168 | keep $default? See the following point. | |
d7215705 | 169 | |
2ab9a04f AD |
170 | ** Disabled Reductions |
171 | See `tests/conflicts.at (Defaulted Conflicted Reduction)', and decide | |
172 | what we want to do. | |
d7215705 | 173 | |
2ab9a04f | 174 | ** Documentation |
bc933ef1 AD |
175 | Extend with error productions. The hard part will probably be finding |
176 | the right rule so that a single state does not exhibit too many yet | |
177 | undocumented ``features''. Maybe an empty action ought to be | |
178 | presented too. Shall we try to make a single grammar with all these | |
179 | features, or should we have several very small grammars? | |
ec3bc396 | 180 | |
2ab9a04f AD |
181 | ** --report=conflict-path |
182 | Provide better assistance for understanding the conflicts by providing | |
183 | a sample text exhibiting the (LALR) ambiguity. See the paper from | |
184 | DeRemer and Penello: they already provide the algorithm. | |
185 | ||
38eb7751 PE |
186 | ** Statically check for potential ambiguities in GLR grammars. See |
187 | <http://www.i3s.unice.fr/~schmitz/papers.html#expamb> for an approach. | |
188 | ||
ec3bc396 | 189 | |
948be909 | 190 | * Extensions |
2ab9a04f | 191 | |
959e5f51 AD |
192 | ** $-1 |
193 | We should find a means to provide an access to values deep in the | |
194 | stack. For instance, instead of | |
195 | ||
ff1b7a13 | 196 | baz: qux { $$ = $<foo>-1 + $<bar>0 + $1; } |
959e5f51 AD |
197 | |
198 | we should be able to have: | |
199 | ||
200 | foo($foo) bar($bar) baz($bar): qux($qux) { $baz = $foo + $bar + $qux; } | |
201 | ||
202 | Or something like this. | |
203 | ||
f0e48240 AD |
204 | ** %if and the like |
205 | It should be possible to have %if/%else/%endif. The implementation is | |
206 | not clear: should it be lexical or syntactic. Vadim Maslow thinks it | |
207 | must be in the scanner: we must not parse what is in a switched off | |
208 | part of %if. Akim Demaille thinks it should be in the parser, so as | |
209 | to avoid falling into another CPP mistake. | |
210 | ||
ca752c34 AD |
211 | ** XML Output |
212 | There are couple of available extensions of Bison targeting some XML | |
213 | output. Some day we should consider including them. One issue is | |
214 | that they seem to be quite orthogonal to the parsing technique, and | |
215 | seem to depend mostly on the possibility to have some code triggered | |
216 | for each reduction. As a matter of fact, such hooks could also be | |
217 | used to generate the yydebug traces. Some generic scheme probably | |
218 | exists in there. | |
219 | ||
220 | XML output for GNU Bison and gcc | |
221 | http://www.cs.may.ie/~jpower/Research/bisonXML/ | |
222 | ||
223 | XML output for GNU Bison | |
224 | http://yaxx.sourceforge.net/ | |
f0e48240 | 225 | |
fa770c86 AD |
226 | * Unit rules |
227 | Maybe we could expand unit rules, i.e., transform | |
228 | ||
ff1b7a13 AD |
229 | exp: arith | bool; |
230 | arith: exp '+' exp; | |
231 | bool: exp '&' exp; | |
fa770c86 AD |
232 | |
233 | into | |
234 | ||
ff1b7a13 | 235 | exp: exp '+' exp | exp '&' exp; |
fa770c86 AD |
236 | |
237 | when there are no actions. This can significantly speed up some | |
d7215705 AD |
238 | grammars. I can't find the papers. In particular the book `LR |
239 | parsing: Theory and Practice' is impossible to find, but according to | |
240 | `Parsing Techniques: a Practical Guide', it includes information about | |
241 | this issue. Does anybody have it? | |
fa770c86 | 242 | |
51dec47b | 243 | |
51dec47b | 244 | |
2ab9a04f | 245 | * Documentation |
51dec47b | 246 | |
2ab9a04f AD |
247 | ** History/Bibliography |
248 | Some history of Bison and some bibliography would be most welcome. | |
249 | Are there any Texinfo standards for bibliography? | |
250 | ||
2ab9a04f AD |
251 | * Coding system independence |
252 | Paul notes: | |
253 | ||
ff1b7a13 AD |
254 | Currently Bison assumes 8-bit bytes (i.e. that UCHAR_MAX is |
255 | 255). It also assumes that the 8-bit character encoding is | |
256 | the same for the invocation of 'bison' as it is for the | |
257 | invocation of 'cc', but this is not necessarily true when | |
258 | people run bison on an ASCII host and then use cc on an EBCDIC | |
259 | host. I don't think these topics are worth our time | |
260 | addressing (unless we find a gung-ho volunteer for EBCDIC or | |
261 | PDP-10 ports :-) but they should probably be documented | |
262 | somewhere. | |
fa770c86 | 263 | |
ff1b7a13 AD |
264 | More importantly, Bison does not currently allow NUL bytes in |
265 | tokens, either via escapes (e.g., "x\0y") or via a NUL byte in | |
266 | the source code. This should get fixed. | |
aef1ffd5 | 267 | |
bcb05e75 | 268 | * --graph |
45567173 | 269 | Show reductions. |
bcb05e75 | 270 | |
704a47c4 | 271 | * Broken options ? |
45567173 AD |
272 | ** %token-table |
273 | ** Skeleton strategy | |
728c4be2 | 274 | Must we keep %token-table? |
416bd7a9 | 275 | |
0e95c1dd | 276 | * Precedence |
2ab9a04f AD |
277 | |
278 | ** Partial order | |
0e95c1dd AD |
279 | It is unfortunate that there is a total order for precedence. It |
280 | makes it impossible to have modular precedence information. We should | |
2ab9a04f | 281 | move to partial orders (sounds like series/parallel orders to me). |
0e95c1dd | 282 | |
2ab9a04f AD |
283 | ** RR conflicts |
284 | See if we can use precedence between rules to solve RR conflicts. See | |
285 | what POSIX says. | |
286 | ||
287 | ||
69991a58 AD |
288 | * $undefined |
289 | From Hans: | |
290 | - If the Bison generated parser experiences an undefined number in the | |
291 | character range, that character is written out in diagnostic messages, an | |
292 | addition to the $undefined value. | |
293 | ||
294 | Suggest: Change the name $undefined to undefined; looks better in outputs. | |
295 | ||
2ab9a04f | 296 | |
69991a58 AD |
297 | * Default Action |
298 | From Hans: | |
299 | - For use with my C++ parser, I transported the "switch (yyn)" statement | |
300 | that Bison writes to the bison.simple skeleton file. This way, I can remove | |
301 | the current default rule $$ = $1 implementation, which causes a double | |
302 | assignment to $$ which may not be OK under C++, replacing it with a | |
303 | "default:" part within the switch statement. | |
304 | ||
305 | Note that the default rule $$ = $1, when typed, is perfectly OK under C, | |
306 | but in the C++ implementation I made, this rule is different from | |
307 | $<type_name>$ = $<type_name>1. I therefore think that one should implement | |
308 | a Bison option where every typed default rule is explicitly written out | |
309 | (same typed ruled can of course be grouped together). | |
310 | ||
311 | * Pre and post actions. | |
312 | From: Florian Krohm <florian@edamail.fishkill.ibm.com> | |
313 | Subject: YYACT_EPILOGUE | |
314 | To: bug-bison@gnu.org | |
315 | X-Sent: 1 week, 4 days, 14 hours, 38 minutes, 11 seconds ago | |
316 | ||
317 | The other day I had the need for explicitly building the parse tree. I | |
318 | used %locations for that and defined YYLLOC_DEFAULT to call a function | |
319 | that returns the tree node for the production. Easy. But I also needed | |
320 | to assign the S-attribute to the tree node. That cannot be done in | |
321 | YYLLOC_DEFAULT, because it is invoked before the action is executed. | |
322 | The way I solved this was to define a macro YYACT_EPILOGUE that would | |
323 | be invoked after the action. For reasons of symmetry I also added | |
324 | YYACT_PROLOGUE. Although I had no use for that I can envision how it | |
325 | might come in handy for debugging purposes. | |
76551463 | 326 | All is needed is to add |
69991a58 AD |
327 | |
328 | #if YYLSP_NEEDED | |
329 | YYACT_EPILOGUE (yyval, (yyvsp - yylen), yylen, yyloc, (yylsp - yylen)); | |
330 | #else | |
331 | YYACT_EPILOGUE (yyval, (yyvsp - yylen), yylen); | |
332 | #endif | |
333 | ||
334 | at the proper place to bison.simple. Ditto for YYACT_PROLOGUE. | |
335 | ||
336 | I was wondering what you think about adding YYACT_PROLOGUE/EPILOGUE | |
337 | to bison. If you're interested, I'll work on a patch. | |
338 | ||
35fe0834 PE |
339 | * Better graphics |
340 | Equip the parser with a means to create the (visual) parse tree. | |
d7215705 | 341 | |
ff1b7a13 AD |
342 | * Complaint submessage indentation. |
343 | We already have an implementation that works fairly well for named | |
344 | reference messages, but it would be nice to use it consistently for all | |
345 | submessages from Bison. For example, the "previous definition" | |
346 | submessage or the list of correct values for a %define variable might | |
347 | look better with indentation. | |
348 | ||
349 | However, the current implementation makes the assumption that the | |
350 | location printed on the first line is not usually much shorter than the | |
351 | locations printed on the submessage lines that follow. That assumption | |
352 | may not hold true as often for some kinds of submessages especially if | |
353 | we ever support multiple grammar files. | |
354 | ||
355 | Here's a proposal for how a new implementation might look: | |
356 | ||
357 | http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bison-patches/2009-09/msg00086.html | |
358 | ||
359 | ||
360 | Local Variables: | |
361 | mode: outline | |
362 | coding: utf-8 | |
363 | End: | |
364 | ||
f294a2c2 AD |
365 | ----- |
366 | ||
c932d613 | 367 | Copyright (C) 2001-2004, 2006, 2008-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
f294a2c2 | 368 | |
51cbef6f | 369 | This file is part of Bison, the GNU Compiler Compiler. |
f294a2c2 | 370 | |
f16b0819 | 371 | This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify |
f294a2c2 | 372 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by |
f16b0819 PE |
373 | the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or |
374 | (at your option) any later version. | |
f294a2c2 | 375 | |
f16b0819 | 376 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
f294a2c2 AD |
377 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
378 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the | |
379 | GNU General Public License for more details. | |
380 | ||
381 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License | |
f16b0819 | 382 | along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. |