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1 | From phr Tue Jul 8 10:36:19 1986 |
2 | Date: Tue, 8 Jul 86 00:52:24 EDT | |
3 | From: phr (Paul Rubin) | |
4 | To: riferguson%watmath.waterloo.edu@CSNET-RELAY.ARPA, tower | |
5 | Subject: Re: Bison documentation? | |
6 | ||
7 | The main difference between Bison and Yacc that I know of is that | |
8 | Bison supports the @N construction, which gives you access to | |
9 | the starting and ending line number and character number associated | |
10 | with any of the symbols in the current rule. | |
11 | ||
12 | Also, Bison supports the command `%expect N' which says not to mention | |
13 | the conflicts if there are N shift/reduce conflicts and no reduce/reduce | |
14 | conflicts. | |
15 | ||
16 | The differences in the algorithms stem mainly from the horrible | |
17 | kludges that Johnson had to perpetrate to make Yacc fit in a PDP-11. | |
18 | ||
19 | Also, Bison uses a faster but less space-efficient encoding for the | |
20 | parse tables (see Corbett's PhD thesis from Berkeley, "Static | |
21 | Semantics in Compiler Error Recovery", June 1985, Report No. UCB/CSD | |
9e6e7ed2 | 22 | 85/251), and more modern technique for generating the lookahead sets. |
8dd162d3 PE |
23 | (See Frank DeRemer and Thomas Pennello, "Efficient Computation of |
24 | LALR(1) Look-Ahead Sets", ACM Transactions on Programming Languages | |
25 | and Systems (TOPLAS) 4, 4 (October 1982), 615-649. Their | |
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26 | technique is the standard one now.) |
27 | ||
e9690142 JD |
28 | paul rubin |
29 | free software foundation | |
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30 | |
31 | ||
8dd162d3 PE |
32 | [DeRemer-Pennello reference corrected by Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu>, |
33 | 2004-06-21.] |