1 \input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @comment %**start of header
3 @setfilename bison.info
5 @settitle Bison @value{VERSION}
11 @c This edition has been formatted so that you can format and print it in
12 @c the smallbook format.
15 @c Set following if you have the new `shorttitlepage' command
16 @c @clear shorttitlepage-enabled
17 @c @set shorttitlepage-enabled
19 @c ISPELL CHECK: done, 14 Jan 1993 --bob
21 @c Check COPYRIGHT dates. should be updated in the titlepage, ifinfo
22 @c titlepage; should NOT be changed in the GPL. --mew
24 @c FIXME: I don't understand this `iftex'. Obsolete? --akim.
35 @comment %**end of header
39 This manual is for @acronym{GNU} Bison (version @value{VERSION},
40 @value{UPDATED}), the @acronym{GNU} parser generator.
42 Copyright @copyright{} 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1998,
43 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
46 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
47 under the terms of the @acronym{GNU} Free Documentation License,
48 Version 1.1 or any later version published by the Free Software
49 Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts
50 being ``A @acronym{GNU} Manual,'' and with the Back-Cover Texts as in
51 (a) below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
52 ``@acronym{GNU} Free Documentation License.''
54 (a) The @acronym{FSF}'s Back-Cover Text is: ``You have freedom to copy
55 and modify this @acronym{GNU} Manual, like @acronym{GNU} software.
56 Copies published by the Free Software Foundation raise funds for
57 @acronym{GNU} development.''
61 @dircategory GNU programming tools
63 * bison: (bison). @acronym{GNU} parser generator (Yacc replacement).
66 @ifset shorttitlepage-enabled
71 @subtitle The Yacc-compatible Parser Generator
72 @subtitle @value{UPDATED}, Bison Version @value{VERSION}
74 @author by Charles Donnelly and Richard Stallman
77 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
80 Published by the Free Software Foundation @*
81 59 Temple Place, Suite 330 @*
82 Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA @*
83 Printed copies are available from the Free Software Foundation.@*
84 @acronym{ISBN} 1-882114-44-2
86 Cover art by Etienne Suvasa.
100 * Copying:: The @acronym{GNU} General Public License says
101 how you can copy and share Bison
104 * Concepts:: Basic concepts for understanding Bison.
105 * Examples:: Three simple explained examples of using Bison.
108 * Grammar File:: Writing Bison declarations and rules.
109 * Interface:: C-language interface to the parser function @code{yyparse}.
110 * Algorithm:: How the Bison parser works at run-time.
111 * Error Recovery:: Writing rules for error recovery.
112 * Context Dependency:: What to do if your language syntax is too
113 messy for Bison to handle straightforwardly.
114 * Debugging:: Understanding or debugging Bison parsers.
115 * Invocation:: How to run Bison (to produce the parser source file).
116 * Table of Symbols:: All the keywords of the Bison language are explained.
117 * Glossary:: Basic concepts are explained.
118 * FAQ:: Frequently Asked Questions
119 * Copying This Manual:: License for copying this manual.
120 * Index:: Cross-references to the text.
122 @detailmenu --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
124 The Concepts of Bison
126 * Language and Grammar:: Languages and context-free grammars,
127 as mathematical ideas.
128 * Grammar in Bison:: How we represent grammars for Bison's sake.
129 * Semantic Values:: Each token or syntactic grouping can have
130 a semantic value (the value of an integer,
131 the name of an identifier, etc.).
132 * Semantic Actions:: Each rule can have an action containing C code.
133 * Bison Parser:: What are Bison's input and output,
134 how is the output used?
135 * Stages:: Stages in writing and running Bison grammars.
136 * Grammar Layout:: Overall structure of a Bison grammar file.
140 * RPN Calc:: Reverse polish notation calculator;
141 a first example with no operator precedence.
142 * Infix Calc:: Infix (algebraic) notation calculator.
143 Operator precedence is introduced.
144 * Simple Error Recovery:: Continuing after syntax errors.
145 * Location Tracking Calc:: Demonstrating the use of @@@var{n} and @@$.
146 * Multi-function Calc:: Calculator with memory and trig functions.
147 It uses multiple data-types for semantic values.
148 * Exercises:: Ideas for improving the multi-function calculator.
150 Reverse Polish Notation Calculator
152 * Decls: Rpcalc Decls. Prologue (declarations) for rpcalc.
153 * Rules: Rpcalc Rules. Grammar Rules for rpcalc, with explanation.
154 * Lexer: Rpcalc Lexer. The lexical analyzer.
155 * Main: Rpcalc Main. The controlling function.
156 * Error: Rpcalc Error. The error reporting function.
157 * Gen: Rpcalc Gen. Running Bison on the grammar file.
158 * Comp: Rpcalc Compile. Run the C compiler on the output code.
160 Grammar Rules for @code{rpcalc}
166 Location Tracking Calculator: @code{ltcalc}
168 * Decls: Ltcalc Decls. Bison and C declarations for ltcalc.
169 * Rules: Ltcalc Rules. Grammar rules for ltcalc, with explanations.
170 * Lexer: Ltcalc Lexer. The lexical analyzer.
172 Multi-Function Calculator: @code{mfcalc}
174 * Decl: Mfcalc Decl. Bison declarations for multi-function calculator.
175 * Rules: Mfcalc Rules. Grammar rules for the calculator.
176 * Symtab: Mfcalc Symtab. Symbol table management subroutines.
180 * Grammar Outline:: Overall layout of the grammar file.
181 * Symbols:: Terminal and nonterminal symbols.
182 * Rules:: How to write grammar rules.
183 * Recursion:: Writing recursive rules.
184 * Semantics:: Semantic values and actions.
185 * Declarations:: All kinds of Bison declarations are described here.
186 * Multiple Parsers:: Putting more than one Bison parser in one program.
188 Outline of a Bison Grammar
190 * Prologue:: Syntax and usage of the prologue (declarations section).
191 * Bison Declarations:: Syntax and usage of the Bison declarations section.
192 * Grammar Rules:: Syntax and usage of the grammar rules section.
193 * Epilogue:: Syntax and usage of the epilogue (additional code section).
195 Defining Language Semantics
197 * Value Type:: Specifying one data type for all semantic values.
198 * Multiple Types:: Specifying several alternative data types.
199 * Actions:: An action is the semantic definition of a grammar rule.
200 * Action Types:: Specifying data types for actions to operate on.
201 * Mid-Rule Actions:: Most actions go at the end of a rule.
202 This says when, why and how to use the exceptional
203 action in the middle of a rule.
207 * Token Decl:: Declaring terminal symbols.
208 * Precedence Decl:: Declaring terminals with precedence and associativity.
209 * Union Decl:: Declaring the set of all semantic value types.
210 * Type Decl:: Declaring the choice of type for a nonterminal symbol.
211 * Expect Decl:: Suppressing warnings about shift/reduce conflicts.
212 * Start Decl:: Specifying the start symbol.
213 * Pure Decl:: Requesting a reentrant parser.
214 * Decl Summary:: Table of all Bison declarations.
216 Parser C-Language Interface
218 * Parser Function:: How to call @code{yyparse} and what it returns.
219 * Lexical:: You must supply a function @code{yylex}
221 * Error Reporting:: You must supply a function @code{yyerror}.
222 * Action Features:: Special features for use in actions.
224 The Lexical Analyzer Function @code{yylex}
226 * Calling Convention:: How @code{yyparse} calls @code{yylex}.
227 * Token Values:: How @code{yylex} must return the semantic value
228 of the token it has read.
229 * Token Positions:: How @code{yylex} must return the text position
230 (line number, etc.) of the token, if the
232 * Pure Calling:: How the calling convention differs
233 in a pure parser (@pxref{Pure Decl, ,A Pure (Reentrant) Parser}).
235 The Bison Parser Algorithm
237 * Look-Ahead:: Parser looks one token ahead when deciding what to do.
238 * Shift/Reduce:: Conflicts: when either shifting or reduction is valid.
239 * Precedence:: Operator precedence works by resolving conflicts.
240 * Contextual Precedence:: When an operator's precedence depends on context.
241 * Parser States:: The parser is a finite-state-machine with stack.
242 * Reduce/Reduce:: When two rules are applicable in the same situation.
243 * Mystery Conflicts:: Reduce/reduce conflicts that look unjustified.
244 * Generalized LR Parsing:: Parsing arbitrary context-free grammars.
245 * Stack Overflow:: What happens when stack gets full. How to avoid it.
249 * Why Precedence:: An example showing why precedence is needed.
250 * Using Precedence:: How to specify precedence in Bison grammars.
251 * Precedence Examples:: How these features are used in the previous example.
252 * How Precedence:: How they work.
254 Handling Context Dependencies
256 * Semantic Tokens:: Token parsing can depend on the semantic context.
257 * Lexical Tie-ins:: Token parsing can depend on the syntactic context.
258 * Tie-in Recovery:: Lexical tie-ins have implications for how
259 error recovery rules must be written.
261 Understanding or Debugging Your Parser
263 * Understanding:: Understanding the structure of your parser.
264 * Tracing:: Tracing the execution of your parser.
268 * Bison Options:: All the options described in detail,
269 in alphabetical order by short options.
270 * Option Cross Key:: Alphabetical list of long options.
271 * VMS Invocation:: Bison command syntax on @acronym{VMS}.
273 Frequently Asked Questions
275 * Parser Stack Overflow:: Breaking the Stack Limits
279 * GNU Free Documentation License:: License for copying this manual.
285 @unnumbered Introduction
288 @dfn{Bison} is a general-purpose parser generator that converts a
289 grammar description for an @acronym{LALR}(1) context-free grammar into a C
290 program to parse that grammar. Once you are proficient with Bison,
291 you may use it to develop a wide range of language parsers, from those
292 used in simple desk calculators to complex programming languages.
294 Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all properly-written Yacc grammars
295 ought to work with Bison with no change. Anyone familiar with Yacc
296 should be able to use Bison with little trouble. You need to be fluent in
297 C programming in order to use Bison or to understand this manual.
299 We begin with tutorial chapters that explain the basic concepts of using
300 Bison and show three explained examples, each building on the last. If you
301 don't know Bison or Yacc, start by reading these chapters. Reference
302 chapters follow which describe specific aspects of Bison in detail.
304 Bison was written primarily by Robert Corbett; Richard Stallman made it
305 Yacc-compatible. Wilfred Hansen of Carnegie Mellon University added
306 multi-character string literals and other features.
308 This edition corresponds to version @value{VERSION} of Bison.
311 @unnumbered Conditions for Using Bison
313 As of Bison version 1.24, we have changed the distribution terms for
314 @code{yyparse} to permit using Bison's output in nonfree programs when
315 Bison is generating C code for @acronym{LALR}(1) parsers. Formerly, these
316 parsers could be used only in programs that were free software.
318 The other @acronym{GNU} programming tools, such as the @acronym{GNU} C
320 had such a requirement. They could always be used for nonfree
321 software. The reason Bison was different was not due to a special
322 policy decision; it resulted from applying the usual General Public
323 License to all of the Bison source code.
325 The output of the Bison utility---the Bison parser file---contains a
326 verbatim copy of a sizable piece of Bison, which is the code for the
327 @code{yyparse} function. (The actions from your grammar are inserted
328 into this function at one point, but the rest of the function is not
329 changed.) When we applied the @acronym{GPL} terms to the code for
331 the effect was to restrict the use of Bison output to free software.
333 We didn't change the terms because of sympathy for people who want to
334 make software proprietary. @strong{Software should be free.} But we
335 concluded that limiting Bison's use to free software was doing little to
336 encourage people to make other software free. So we decided to make the
337 practical conditions for using Bison match the practical conditions for
338 using the other @acronym{GNU} tools.
340 This exception applies only when Bison is generating C code for a
341 @acronym{LALR}(1) parser; otherwise, the @acronym{GPL} terms operate
343 tell whether the exception applies to your @samp{.c} output file by
344 inspecting it to see whether it says ``As a special exception, when
345 this file is copied by Bison into a Bison output file, you may use
346 that output file without restriction.''
351 @chapter The Concepts of Bison
353 This chapter introduces many of the basic concepts without which the
354 details of Bison will not make sense. If you do not already know how to
355 use Bison or Yacc, we suggest you start by reading this chapter carefully.
358 * Language and Grammar:: Languages and context-free grammars,
359 as mathematical ideas.
360 * Grammar in Bison:: How we represent grammars for Bison's sake.
361 * Semantic Values:: Each token or syntactic grouping can have
362 a semantic value (the value of an integer,
363 the name of an identifier, etc.).
364 * Semantic Actions:: Each rule can have an action containing C code.
365 * GLR Parsers:: Writing parsers for general context-free languages
366 * Locations Overview:: Tracking Locations.
367 * Bison Parser:: What are Bison's input and output,
368 how is the output used?
369 * Stages:: Stages in writing and running Bison grammars.
370 * Grammar Layout:: Overall structure of a Bison grammar file.
373 @node Language and Grammar
374 @section Languages and Context-Free Grammars
376 @cindex context-free grammar
377 @cindex grammar, context-free
378 In order for Bison to parse a language, it must be described by a
379 @dfn{context-free grammar}. This means that you specify one or more
380 @dfn{syntactic groupings} and give rules for constructing them from their
381 parts. For example, in the C language, one kind of grouping is called an
382 `expression'. One rule for making an expression might be, ``An expression
383 can be made of a minus sign and another expression''. Another would be,
384 ``An expression can be an integer''. As you can see, rules are often
385 recursive, but there must be at least one rule which leads out of the
388 @cindex @acronym{BNF}
389 @cindex Backus-Naur form
390 The most common formal system for presenting such rules for humans to read
391 is @dfn{Backus-Naur Form} or ``@acronym{BNF}'', which was developed in
392 order to specify the language Algol 60. Any grammar expressed in
393 @acronym{BNF} is a context-free grammar. The input to Bison is
394 essentially machine-readable @acronym{BNF}.
396 @cindex @acronym{LALR}(1) grammars
397 @cindex @acronym{LR}(1) grammars
398 There are various important subclasses of context-free grammar. Although it
399 can handle almost all context-free grammars, Bison is optimized for what
400 are called @acronym{LALR}(1) grammars.
401 In brief, in these grammars, it must be possible to
402 tell how to parse any portion of an input string with just a single
403 token of look-ahead. Strictly speaking, that is a description of an
404 @acronym{LR}(1) grammar, and @acronym{LALR}(1) involves additional
405 restrictions that are
406 hard to explain simply; but it is rare in actual practice to find an
407 @acronym{LR}(1) grammar that fails to be @acronym{LALR}(1).
408 @xref{Mystery Conflicts, ,Mysterious Reduce/Reduce Conflicts}, for
409 more information on this.
411 @cindex @acronym{GLR} parsing
412 @cindex generalized @acronym{LR} (@acronym{GLR}) parsing
413 @cindex ambiguous grammars
414 @cindex non-deterministic parsing
415 Parsers for @acronym{LALR}(1) grammars are @dfn{deterministic},
417 the next grammar rule to apply at any point in the input is uniquely
418 determined by the preceding input and a fixed, finite portion (called
419 a @dfn{look-ahead}) of the remaining input.
420 A context-free grammar can be @dfn{ambiguous}, meaning that
421 there are multiple ways to apply the grammar rules to get the some inputs.
422 Even unambiguous grammars can be @dfn{non-deterministic}, meaning that no
423 fixed look-ahead always suffices to determine the next grammar rule to apply.
424 With the proper declarations, Bison is also able to parse these more general
425 context-free grammars, using a technique known as @acronym{GLR} parsing (for
426 Generalized @acronym{LR}). Bison's @acronym{GLR} parsers are able to
427 handle any context-free
428 grammar for which the number of possible parses of any given string
431 @cindex symbols (abstract)
433 @cindex syntactic grouping
434 @cindex grouping, syntactic
435 In the formal grammatical rules for a language, each kind of syntactic unit
436 or grouping is named by a @dfn{symbol}. Those which are built by grouping
437 smaller constructs according to grammatical rules are called
438 @dfn{nonterminal symbols}; those which can't be subdivided are called
439 @dfn{terminal symbols} or @dfn{token types}. We call a piece of input
440 corresponding to a single terminal symbol a @dfn{token}, and a piece
441 corresponding to a single nonterminal symbol a @dfn{grouping}.
443 We can use the C language as an example of what symbols, terminal and
444 nonterminal, mean. The tokens of C are identifiers, constants (numeric and
445 string), and the various keywords, arithmetic operators and punctuation
446 marks. So the terminal symbols of a grammar for C include `identifier',
447 `number', `string', plus one symbol for each keyword, operator or
448 punctuation mark: `if', `return', `const', `static', `int', `char',
449 `plus-sign', `open-brace', `close-brace', `comma' and many more. (These
450 tokens can be subdivided into characters, but that is a matter of
451 lexicography, not grammar.)
453 Here is a simple C function subdivided into tokens:
457 int /* @r{keyword `int'} */
458 square (int x) /* @r{identifier, open-paren, identifier,}
459 @r{identifier, close-paren} */
460 @{ /* @r{open-brace} */
461 return x * x; /* @r{keyword `return', identifier, asterisk,
462 identifier, semicolon} */
463 @} /* @r{close-brace} */
468 int /* @r{keyword `int'} */
469 square (int x) /* @r{identifier, open-paren, identifier, identifier, close-paren} */
470 @{ /* @r{open-brace} */
471 return x * x; /* @r{keyword `return', identifier, asterisk, identifier, semicolon} */
472 @} /* @r{close-brace} */
476 The syntactic groupings of C include the expression, the statement, the
477 declaration, and the function definition. These are represented in the
478 grammar of C by nonterminal symbols `expression', `statement',
479 `declaration' and `function definition'. The full grammar uses dozens of
480 additional language constructs, each with its own nonterminal symbol, in
481 order to express the meanings of these four. The example above is a
482 function definition; it contains one declaration, and one statement. In
483 the statement, each @samp{x} is an expression and so is @samp{x * x}.
485 Each nonterminal symbol must have grammatical rules showing how it is made
486 out of simpler constructs. For example, one kind of C statement is the
487 @code{return} statement; this would be described with a grammar rule which
488 reads informally as follows:
491 A `statement' can be made of a `return' keyword, an `expression' and a
496 There would be many other rules for `statement', one for each kind of
500 One nonterminal symbol must be distinguished as the special one which
501 defines a complete utterance in the language. It is called the @dfn{start
502 symbol}. In a compiler, this means a complete input program. In the C
503 language, the nonterminal symbol `sequence of definitions and declarations'
506 For example, @samp{1 + 2} is a valid C expression---a valid part of a C
507 program---but it is not valid as an @emph{entire} C program. In the
508 context-free grammar of C, this follows from the fact that `expression' is
509 not the start symbol.
511 The Bison parser reads a sequence of tokens as its input, and groups the
512 tokens using the grammar rules. If the input is valid, the end result is
513 that the entire token sequence reduces to a single grouping whose symbol is
514 the grammar's start symbol. If we use a grammar for C, the entire input
515 must be a `sequence of definitions and declarations'. If not, the parser
516 reports a syntax error.
518 @node Grammar in Bison
519 @section From Formal Rules to Bison Input
520 @cindex Bison grammar
521 @cindex grammar, Bison
522 @cindex formal grammar
524 A formal grammar is a mathematical construct. To define the language
525 for Bison, you must write a file expressing the grammar in Bison syntax:
526 a @dfn{Bison grammar} file. @xref{Grammar File, ,Bison Grammar Files}.
528 A nonterminal symbol in the formal grammar is represented in Bison input
529 as an identifier, like an identifier in C@. By convention, it should be
530 in lower case, such as @code{expr}, @code{stmt} or @code{declaration}.
532 The Bison representation for a terminal symbol is also called a @dfn{token
533 type}. Token types as well can be represented as C-like identifiers. By
534 convention, these identifiers should be upper case to distinguish them from
535 nonterminals: for example, @code{INTEGER}, @code{IDENTIFIER}, @code{IF} or
536 @code{RETURN}. A terminal symbol that stands for a particular keyword in
537 the language should be named after that keyword converted to upper case.
538 The terminal symbol @code{error} is reserved for error recovery.
541 A terminal symbol can also be represented as a character literal, just like
542 a C character constant. You should do this whenever a token is just a
543 single character (parenthesis, plus-sign, etc.): use that same character in
544 a literal as the terminal symbol for that token.
546 A third way to represent a terminal symbol is with a C string constant
547 containing several characters. @xref{Symbols}, for more information.
549 The grammar rules also have an expression in Bison syntax. For example,
550 here is the Bison rule for a C @code{return} statement. The semicolon in
551 quotes is a literal character token, representing part of the C syntax for
552 the statement; the naked semicolon, and the colon, are Bison punctuation
556 stmt: RETURN expr ';'
561 @xref{Rules, ,Syntax of Grammar Rules}.
563 @node Semantic Values
564 @section Semantic Values
565 @cindex semantic value
566 @cindex value, semantic
568 A formal grammar selects tokens only by their classifications: for example,
569 if a rule mentions the terminal symbol `integer constant', it means that
570 @emph{any} integer constant is grammatically valid in that position. The
571 precise value of the constant is irrelevant to how to parse the input: if
572 @samp{x+4} is grammatical then @samp{x+1} or @samp{x+3989} is equally
575 But the precise value is very important for what the input means once it is
576 parsed. A compiler is useless if it fails to distinguish between 4, 1 and
577 3989 as constants in the program! Therefore, each token in a Bison grammar
578 has both a token type and a @dfn{semantic value}. @xref{Semantics,
579 ,Defining Language Semantics},
582 The token type is a terminal symbol defined in the grammar, such as
583 @code{INTEGER}, @code{IDENTIFIER} or @code{','}. It tells everything
584 you need to know to decide where the token may validly appear and how to
585 group it with other tokens. The grammar rules know nothing about tokens
588 The semantic value has all the rest of the information about the
589 meaning of the token, such as the value of an integer, or the name of an
590 identifier. (A token such as @code{','} which is just punctuation doesn't
591 need to have any semantic value.)
593 For example, an input token might be classified as token type
594 @code{INTEGER} and have the semantic value 4. Another input token might
595 have the same token type @code{INTEGER} but value 3989. When a grammar
596 rule says that @code{INTEGER} is allowed, either of these tokens is
597 acceptable because each is an @code{INTEGER}. When the parser accepts the
598 token, it keeps track of the token's semantic value.
600 Each grouping can also have a semantic value as well as its nonterminal
601 symbol. For example, in a calculator, an expression typically has a
602 semantic value that is a number. In a compiler for a programming
603 language, an expression typically has a semantic value that is a tree
604 structure describing the meaning of the expression.
606 @node Semantic Actions
607 @section Semantic Actions
608 @cindex semantic actions
609 @cindex actions, semantic
611 In order to be useful, a program must do more than parse input; it must
612 also produce some output based on the input. In a Bison grammar, a grammar
613 rule can have an @dfn{action} made up of C statements. Each time the
614 parser recognizes a match for that rule, the action is executed.
617 Most of the time, the purpose of an action is to compute the semantic value
618 of the whole construct from the semantic values of its parts. For example,
619 suppose we have a rule which says an expression can be the sum of two
620 expressions. When the parser recognizes such a sum, each of the
621 subexpressions has a semantic value which describes how it was built up.
622 The action for this rule should create a similar sort of value for the
623 newly recognized larger expression.
625 For example, here is a rule that says an expression can be the sum of
629 expr: expr '+' expr @{ $$ = $1 + $3; @}
634 The action says how to produce the semantic value of the sum expression
635 from the values of the two subexpressions.
638 @section Writing @acronym{GLR} Parsers
639 @cindex @acronym{GLR} parsing
640 @cindex generalized @acronym{LR} (@acronym{GLR}) parsing
643 @cindex shift/reduce conflicts
645 In some grammars, there will be cases where Bison's standard @acronym{LALR}(1)
646 parsing algorithm cannot decide whether to apply a certain grammar rule
647 at a given point. That is, it may not be able to decide (on the basis
648 of the input read so far) which of two possible reductions (applications
649 of a grammar rule) applies, or whether to apply a reduction or read more
650 of the input and apply a reduction later in the input. These are known
651 respectively as @dfn{reduce/reduce} conflicts (@pxref{Reduce/Reduce}),
652 and @dfn{shift/reduce} conflicts (@pxref{Shift/Reduce}).
654 To use a grammar that is not easily modified to be @acronym{LALR}(1), a more
655 general parsing algorithm is sometimes necessary. If you include
656 @code{%glr-parser} among the Bison declarations in your file
657 (@pxref{Grammar Outline}), the result will be a Generalized
658 @acronym{LR} (@acronym{GLR})
659 parser. These parsers handle Bison grammars that contain no unresolved
660 conflicts (i.e., after applying precedence declarations) identically to
661 @acronym{LALR}(1) parsers. However, when faced with unresolved
662 shift/reduce and reduce/reduce conflicts, @acronym{GLR} parsers use
663 the simple expedient of doing
664 both, effectively cloning the parser to follow both possibilities. Each
665 of the resulting parsers can again split, so that at any given time,
666 there can be any number of possible parses being explored. The parsers
667 proceed in lockstep; that is, all of them consume (shift) a given input
668 symbol before any of them proceed to the next. Each of the cloned
669 parsers eventually meets one of two possible fates: either it runs into
670 a parsing error, in which case it simply vanishes, or it merges with
671 another parser, because the two of them have reduced the input to an
672 identical set of symbols.
674 During the time that there are multiple parsers, semantic actions are
675 recorded, but not performed. When a parser disappears, its recorded
676 semantic actions disappear as well, and are never performed. When a
677 reduction makes two parsers identical, causing them to merge, Bison
678 records both sets of semantic actions. Whenever the last two parsers
679 merge, reverting to the single-parser case, Bison resolves all the
680 outstanding actions either by precedences given to the grammar rules
681 involved, or by performing both actions, and then calling a designated
682 user-defined function on the resulting values to produce an arbitrary
685 Let's consider an example, vastly simplified from C++.
689 #define YYSTYPE const char*
702 | prog stmt @{ printf ("\n"); @}
705 stmt : expr ';' %dprec 1
709 expr : ID @{ printf ("%s ", $$); @}
710 | TYPENAME '(' expr ')'
711 @{ printf ("%s <cast> ", $1); @}
712 | expr '+' expr @{ printf ("+ "); @}
713 | expr '=' expr @{ printf ("= "); @}
716 decl : TYPENAME declarator ';'
717 @{ printf ("%s <declare> ", $1); @}
718 | TYPENAME declarator '=' expr ';'
719 @{ printf ("%s <init-declare> ", $1); @}
722 declarator : ID @{ printf ("\"%s\" ", $1); @}
728 This models a problematic part of the C++ grammar---the ambiguity between
729 certain declarations and statements. For example,
736 parses as either an @code{expr} or a @code{stmt}
737 (assuming that @samp{T} is recognized as a @code{TYPENAME} and
738 @samp{x} as an @code{ID}).
739 Bison detects this as a reduce/reduce conflict between the rules
740 @code{expr : ID} and @code{declarator : ID}, which it cannot resolve at the
741 time it encounters @code{x} in the example above. The two @code{%dprec}
742 declarations, however, give precedence to interpreting the example as a
743 @code{decl}, which implies that @code{x} is a declarator.
744 The parser therefore prints
747 "x" y z + T <init-declare>
750 Consider a different input string for this parser:
757 Here, there is no ambiguity (this cannot be parsed as a declaration).
758 However, at the time the Bison parser encounters @code{x}, it does not
759 have enough information to resolve the reduce/reduce conflict (again,
760 between @code{x} as an @code{expr} or a @code{declarator}). In this
761 case, no precedence declaration is used. Instead, the parser splits
762 into two, one assuming that @code{x} is an @code{expr}, and the other
763 assuming @code{x} is a @code{declarator}. The second of these parsers
764 then vanishes when it sees @code{+}, and the parser prints
770 Suppose that instead of resolving the ambiguity, you wanted to see all
771 the possibilities. For this purpose, we must @dfn{merge} the semantic
772 actions of the two possible parsers, rather than choosing one over the
773 other. To do so, you could change the declaration of @code{stmt} as
777 stmt : expr ';' %merge <stmtMerge>
778 | decl %merge <stmtMerge>
784 and define the @code{stmtMerge} function as:
787 static YYSTYPE stmtMerge (YYSTYPE x0, YYSTYPE x1)
795 with an accompanying forward declaration
796 in the C declarations at the beginning of the file:
800 #define YYSTYPE const char*
801 static YYSTYPE stmtMerge (YYSTYPE x0, YYSTYPE x1);
806 With these declarations, the resulting parser will parse the first example
807 as both an @code{expr} and a @code{decl}, and print
810 "x" y z + T <init-declare> x T <cast> y z + = <OR>
814 @node Locations Overview
817 @cindex textual position
818 @cindex position, textual
820 Many applications, like interpreters or compilers, have to produce verbose
821 and useful error messages. To achieve this, one must be able to keep track of
822 the @dfn{textual position}, or @dfn{location}, of each syntactic construct.
823 Bison provides a mechanism for handling these locations.
825 Each token has a semantic value. In a similar fashion, each token has an
826 associated location, but the type of locations is the same for all tokens and
827 groupings. Moreover, the output parser is equipped with a default data
828 structure for storing locations (@pxref{Locations}, for more details).
830 Like semantic values, locations can be reached in actions using a dedicated
831 set of constructs. In the example above, the location of the whole grouping
832 is @code{@@$}, while the locations of the subexpressions are @code{@@1} and
835 When a rule is matched, a default action is used to compute the semantic value
836 of its left hand side (@pxref{Actions}). In the same way, another default
837 action is used for locations. However, the action for locations is general
838 enough for most cases, meaning there is usually no need to describe for each
839 rule how @code{@@$} should be formed. When building a new location for a given
840 grouping, the default behavior of the output parser is to take the beginning
841 of the first symbol, and the end of the last symbol.
844 @section Bison Output: the Parser File
846 @cindex Bison utility
847 @cindex lexical analyzer, purpose
850 When you run Bison, you give it a Bison grammar file as input. The output
851 is a C source file that parses the language described by the grammar.
852 This file is called a @dfn{Bison parser}. Keep in mind that the Bison
853 utility and the Bison parser are two distinct programs: the Bison utility
854 is a program whose output is the Bison parser that becomes part of your
857 The job of the Bison parser is to group tokens into groupings according to
858 the grammar rules---for example, to build identifiers and operators into
859 expressions. As it does this, it runs the actions for the grammar rules it
862 The tokens come from a function called the @dfn{lexical analyzer} that
863 you must supply in some fashion (such as by writing it in C). The Bison
864 parser calls the lexical analyzer each time it wants a new token. It
865 doesn't know what is ``inside'' the tokens (though their semantic values
866 may reflect this). Typically the lexical analyzer makes the tokens by
867 parsing characters of text, but Bison does not depend on this.
868 @xref{Lexical, ,The Lexical Analyzer Function @code{yylex}}.
870 The Bison parser file is C code which defines a function named
871 @code{yyparse} which implements that grammar. This function does not make
872 a complete C program: you must supply some additional functions. One is
873 the lexical analyzer. Another is an error-reporting function which the
874 parser calls to report an error. In addition, a complete C program must
875 start with a function called @code{main}; you have to provide this, and
876 arrange for it to call @code{yyparse} or the parser will never run.
877 @xref{Interface, ,Parser C-Language Interface}.
879 Aside from the token type names and the symbols in the actions you
880 write, all symbols defined in the Bison parser file itself
881 begin with @samp{yy} or @samp{YY}. This includes interface functions
882 such as the lexical analyzer function @code{yylex}, the error reporting
883 function @code{yyerror} and the parser function @code{yyparse} itself.
884 This also includes numerous identifiers used for internal purposes.
885 Therefore, you should avoid using C identifiers starting with @samp{yy}
886 or @samp{YY} in the Bison grammar file except for the ones defined in
889 In some cases the Bison parser file includes system headers, and in
890 those cases your code should respect the identifiers reserved by those
891 headers. On some non-@acronym{GNU} hosts, @code{<alloca.h>},
892 @code{<stddef.h>}, and @code{<stdlib.h>} are included as needed to
893 declare memory allocators and related types. Other system headers may
894 be included if you define @code{YYDEBUG} to a nonzero value
895 (@pxref{Tracing, ,Tracing Your Parser}).
898 @section Stages in Using Bison
899 @cindex stages in using Bison
902 The actual language-design process using Bison, from grammar specification
903 to a working compiler or interpreter, has these parts:
907 Formally specify the grammar in a form recognized by Bison
908 (@pxref{Grammar File, ,Bison Grammar Files}). For each grammatical rule
909 in the language, describe the action that is to be taken when an
910 instance of that rule is recognized. The action is described by a
911 sequence of C statements.
914 Write a lexical analyzer to process input and pass tokens to the parser.
915 The lexical analyzer may be written by hand in C (@pxref{Lexical, ,The
916 Lexical Analyzer Function @code{yylex}}). It could also be produced
917 using Lex, but the use of Lex is not discussed in this manual.
920 Write a controlling function that calls the Bison-produced parser.
923 Write error-reporting routines.
926 To turn this source code as written into a runnable program, you
927 must follow these steps:
931 Run Bison on the grammar to produce the parser.
934 Compile the code output by Bison, as well as any other source files.
937 Link the object files to produce the finished product.
941 @section The Overall Layout of a Bison Grammar
944 @cindex format of grammar file
945 @cindex layout of Bison grammar
947 The input file for the Bison utility is a @dfn{Bison grammar file}. The
948 general form of a Bison grammar file is as follows:
955 @var{Bison declarations}
964 The @samp{%%}, @samp{%@{} and @samp{%@}} are punctuation that appears
965 in every Bison grammar file to separate the sections.
967 The prologue may define types and variables used in the actions. You can
968 also use preprocessor commands to define macros used there, and use
969 @code{#include} to include header files that do any of these things.
971 The Bison declarations declare the names of the terminal and nonterminal
972 symbols, and may also describe operator precedence and the data types of
973 semantic values of various symbols.
975 The grammar rules define how to construct each nonterminal symbol from its
978 The epilogue can contain any code you want to use. Often the definition of
979 the lexical analyzer @code{yylex} goes here, plus subroutines called by the
980 actions in the grammar rules. In a simple program, all the rest of the
985 @cindex simple examples
986 @cindex examples, simple
988 Now we show and explain three sample programs written using Bison: a
989 reverse polish notation calculator, an algebraic (infix) notation
990 calculator, and a multi-function calculator. All three have been tested
991 under BSD Unix 4.3; each produces a usable, though limited, interactive
994 These examples are simple, but Bison grammars for real programming
995 languages are written the same way.
997 You can copy these examples out of the Info file and into a source file
1002 * RPN Calc:: Reverse polish notation calculator;
1003 a first example with no operator precedence.
1004 * Infix Calc:: Infix (algebraic) notation calculator.
1005 Operator precedence is introduced.
1006 * Simple Error Recovery:: Continuing after syntax errors.
1007 * Location Tracking Calc:: Demonstrating the use of @@@var{n} and @@$.
1008 * Multi-function Calc:: Calculator with memory and trig functions.
1009 It uses multiple data-types for semantic values.
1010 * Exercises:: Ideas for improving the multi-function calculator.
1014 @section Reverse Polish Notation Calculator
1015 @cindex reverse polish notation
1016 @cindex polish notation calculator
1017 @cindex @code{rpcalc}
1018 @cindex calculator, simple
1020 The first example is that of a simple double-precision @dfn{reverse polish
1021 notation} calculator (a calculator using postfix operators). This example
1022 provides a good starting point, since operator precedence is not an issue.
1023 The second example will illustrate how operator precedence is handled.
1025 The source code for this calculator is named @file{rpcalc.y}. The
1026 @samp{.y} extension is a convention used for Bison input files.
1029 * Decls: Rpcalc Decls. Prologue (declarations) for rpcalc.
1030 * Rules: Rpcalc Rules. Grammar Rules for rpcalc, with explanation.
1031 * Lexer: Rpcalc Lexer. The lexical analyzer.
1032 * Main: Rpcalc Main. The controlling function.
1033 * Error: Rpcalc Error. The error reporting function.
1034 * Gen: Rpcalc Gen. Running Bison on the grammar file.
1035 * Comp: Rpcalc Compile. Run the C compiler on the output code.
1039 @subsection Declarations for @code{rpcalc}
1041 Here are the C and Bison declarations for the reverse polish notation
1042 calculator. As in C, comments are placed between @samp{/*@dots{}*/}.
1045 /* Reverse polish notation calculator. */
1048 #define YYSTYPE double
1054 %% /* Grammar rules and actions follow. */
1057 The declarations section (@pxref{Prologue, , The prologue}) contains two
1058 preprocessor directives.
1060 The @code{#define} directive defines the macro @code{YYSTYPE}, thus
1061 specifying the C data type for semantic values of both tokens and
1062 groupings (@pxref{Value Type, ,Data Types of Semantic Values}). The
1063 Bison parser will use whatever type @code{YYSTYPE} is defined as; if you
1064 don't define it, @code{int} is the default. Because we specify
1065 @code{double}, each token and each expression has an associated value,
1066 which is a floating point number.
1068 The @code{#include} directive is used to declare the exponentiation
1069 function @code{pow}.
1071 The second section, Bison declarations, provides information to Bison
1072 about the token types (@pxref{Bison Declarations, ,The Bison
1073 Declarations Section}). Each terminal symbol that is not a
1074 single-character literal must be declared here. (Single-character
1075 literals normally don't need to be declared.) In this example, all the
1076 arithmetic operators are designated by single-character literals, so the
1077 only terminal symbol that needs to be declared is @code{NUM}, the token
1078 type for numeric constants.
1081 @subsection Grammar Rules for @code{rpcalc}
1083 Here are the grammar rules for the reverse polish notation calculator.
1091 | exp '\n' @{ printf ("\t%.10g\n", $1); @}
1094 exp: NUM @{ $$ = $1; @}
1095 | exp exp '+' @{ $$ = $1 + $2; @}
1096 | exp exp '-' @{ $$ = $1 - $2; @}
1097 | exp exp '*' @{ $$ = $1 * $2; @}
1098 | exp exp '/' @{ $$ = $1 / $2; @}
1099 /* Exponentiation */
1100 | exp exp '^' @{ $$ = pow ($1, $2); @}
1102 | exp 'n' @{ $$ = -$1; @}
1107 The groupings of the rpcalc ``language'' defined here are the expression
1108 (given the name @code{exp}), the line of input (@code{line}), and the
1109 complete input transcript (@code{input}). Each of these nonterminal
1110 symbols has several alternate rules, joined by the @samp{|} punctuator
1111 which is read as ``or''. The following sections explain what these rules
1114 The semantics of the language is determined by the actions taken when a
1115 grouping is recognized. The actions are the C code that appears inside
1116 braces. @xref{Actions}.
1118 You must specify these actions in C, but Bison provides the means for
1119 passing semantic values between the rules. In each action, the
1120 pseudo-variable @code{$$} stands for the semantic value for the grouping
1121 that the rule is going to construct. Assigning a value to @code{$$} is the
1122 main job of most actions. The semantic values of the components of the
1123 rule are referred to as @code{$1}, @code{$2}, and so on.
1132 @subsubsection Explanation of @code{input}
1134 Consider the definition of @code{input}:
1142 This definition reads as follows: ``A complete input is either an empty
1143 string, or a complete input followed by an input line''. Notice that
1144 ``complete input'' is defined in terms of itself. This definition is said
1145 to be @dfn{left recursive} since @code{input} appears always as the
1146 leftmost symbol in the sequence. @xref{Recursion, ,Recursive Rules}.
1148 The first alternative is empty because there are no symbols between the
1149 colon and the first @samp{|}; this means that @code{input} can match an
1150 empty string of input (no tokens). We write the rules this way because it
1151 is legitimate to type @kbd{Ctrl-d} right after you start the calculator.
1152 It's conventional to put an empty alternative first and write the comment
1153 @samp{/* empty */} in it.
1155 The second alternate rule (@code{input line}) handles all nontrivial input.
1156 It means, ``After reading any number of lines, read one more line if
1157 possible.'' The left recursion makes this rule into a loop. Since the
1158 first alternative matches empty input, the loop can be executed zero or
1161 The parser function @code{yyparse} continues to process input until a
1162 grammatical error is seen or the lexical analyzer says there are no more
1163 input tokens; we will arrange for the latter to happen at end-of-input.
1166 @subsubsection Explanation of @code{line}
1168 Now consider the definition of @code{line}:
1172 | exp '\n' @{ printf ("\t%.10g\n", $1); @}
1176 The first alternative is a token which is a newline character; this means
1177 that rpcalc accepts a blank line (and ignores it, since there is no
1178 action). The second alternative is an expression followed by a newline.
1179 This is the alternative that makes rpcalc useful. The semantic value of
1180 the @code{exp} grouping is the value of @code{$1} because the @code{exp} in
1181 question is the first symbol in the alternative. The action prints this
1182 value, which is the result of the computation the user asked for.
1184 This action is unusual because it does not assign a value to @code{$$}. As
1185 a consequence, the semantic value associated with the @code{line} is
1186 uninitialized (its value will be unpredictable). This would be a bug if
1187 that value were ever used, but we don't use it: once rpcalc has printed the
1188 value of the user's input line, that value is no longer needed.
1191 @subsubsection Explanation of @code{expr}
1193 The @code{exp} grouping has several rules, one for each kind of expression.
1194 The first rule handles the simplest expressions: those that are just numbers.
1195 The second handles an addition-expression, which looks like two expressions
1196 followed by a plus-sign. The third handles subtraction, and so on.
1200 | exp exp '+' @{ $$ = $1 + $2; @}
1201 | exp exp '-' @{ $$ = $1 - $2; @}
1206 We have used @samp{|} to join all the rules for @code{exp}, but we could
1207 equally well have written them separately:
1211 exp: exp exp '+' @{ $$ = $1 + $2; @} ;
1212 exp: exp exp '-' @{ $$ = $1 - $2; @} ;
1216 Most of the rules have actions that compute the value of the expression in
1217 terms of the value of its parts. For example, in the rule for addition,
1218 @code{$1} refers to the first component @code{exp} and @code{$2} refers to
1219 the second one. The third component, @code{'+'}, has no meaningful
1220 associated semantic value, but if it had one you could refer to it as
1221 @code{$3}. When @code{yyparse} recognizes a sum expression using this
1222 rule, the sum of the two subexpressions' values is produced as the value of
1223 the entire expression. @xref{Actions}.
1225 You don't have to give an action for every rule. When a rule has no
1226 action, Bison by default copies the value of @code{$1} into @code{$$}.
1227 This is what happens in the first rule (the one that uses @code{NUM}).
1229 The formatting shown here is the recommended convention, but Bison does
1230 not require it. You can add or change white space as much as you wish.
1234 exp : NUM | exp exp '+' @{$$ = $1 + $2; @} | @dots{}
1238 means the same thing as this:
1242 | exp exp '+' @{ $$ = $1 + $2; @}
1247 The latter, however, is much more readable.
1250 @subsection The @code{rpcalc} Lexical Analyzer
1251 @cindex writing a lexical analyzer
1252 @cindex lexical analyzer, writing
1254 The lexical analyzer's job is low-level parsing: converting characters
1255 or sequences of characters into tokens. The Bison parser gets its
1256 tokens by calling the lexical analyzer. @xref{Lexical, ,The Lexical
1257 Analyzer Function @code{yylex}}.
1259 Only a simple lexical analyzer is needed for the @acronym{RPN}
1261 lexical analyzer skips blanks and tabs, then reads in numbers as
1262 @code{double} and returns them as @code{NUM} tokens. Any other character
1263 that isn't part of a number is a separate token. Note that the token-code
1264 for such a single-character token is the character itself.
1266 The return value of the lexical analyzer function is a numeric code which
1267 represents a token type. The same text used in Bison rules to stand for
1268 this token type is also a C expression for the numeric code for the type.
1269 This works in two ways. If the token type is a character literal, then its
1270 numeric code is that of the character; you can use the same
1271 character literal in the lexical analyzer to express the number. If the
1272 token type is an identifier, that identifier is defined by Bison as a C
1273 macro whose definition is the appropriate number. In this example,
1274 therefore, @code{NUM} becomes a macro for @code{yylex} to use.
1276 The semantic value of the token (if it has one) is stored into the
1277 global variable @code{yylval}, which is where the Bison parser will look
1278 for it. (The C data type of @code{yylval} is @code{YYSTYPE}, which was
1279 defined at the beginning of the grammar; @pxref{Rpcalc Decls,
1280 ,Declarations for @code{rpcalc}}.)
1282 A token type code of zero is returned if the end-of-input is encountered.
1283 (Bison recognizes any nonpositive value as indicating end-of-input.)
1285 Here is the code for the lexical analyzer:
1289 /* The lexical analyzer returns a double floating point
1290 number on the stack and the token NUM, or the numeric code
1291 of the character read if not a number. It skips all blanks
1292 and tabs, and returns 0 for end-of-input. */
1303 /* Skip white space. */
1304 while ((c = getchar ()) == ' ' || c == '\t')
1308 /* Process numbers. */
1309 if (c == '.' || isdigit (c))
1312 scanf ("%lf", &yylval);
1317 /* Return end-of-input. */
1320 /* Return a single char. */
1327 @subsection The Controlling Function
1328 @cindex controlling function
1329 @cindex main function in simple example
1331 In keeping with the spirit of this example, the controlling function is
1332 kept to the bare minimum. The only requirement is that it call
1333 @code{yyparse} to start the process of parsing.
1346 @subsection The Error Reporting Routine
1347 @cindex error reporting routine
1349 When @code{yyparse} detects a syntax error, it calls the error reporting
1350 function @code{yyerror} to print an error message (usually but not
1351 always @code{"parse error"}). It is up to the programmer to supply
1352 @code{yyerror} (@pxref{Interface, ,Parser C-Language Interface}), so
1353 here is the definition we will use:
1360 yyerror (const char *s) /* called by yyparse on error */
1367 After @code{yyerror} returns, the Bison parser may recover from the error
1368 and continue parsing if the grammar contains a suitable error rule
1369 (@pxref{Error Recovery}). Otherwise, @code{yyparse} returns nonzero. We
1370 have not written any error rules in this example, so any invalid input will
1371 cause the calculator program to exit. This is not clean behavior for a
1372 real calculator, but it is adequate for the first example.
1375 @subsection Running Bison to Make the Parser
1376 @cindex running Bison (introduction)
1378 Before running Bison to produce a parser, we need to decide how to
1379 arrange all the source code in one or more source files. For such a
1380 simple example, the easiest thing is to put everything in one file. The
1381 definitions of @code{yylex}, @code{yyerror} and @code{main} go at the
1382 end, in the epilogue of the file
1383 (@pxref{Grammar Layout, ,The Overall Layout of a Bison Grammar}).
1385 For a large project, you would probably have several source files, and use
1386 @code{make} to arrange to recompile them.
1388 With all the source in a single file, you use the following command to
1389 convert it into a parser file:
1392 bison @var{file_name}.y
1396 In this example the file was called @file{rpcalc.y} (for ``Reverse Polish
1397 @sc{calc}ulator''). Bison produces a file named @file{@var{file_name}.tab.c},
1398 removing the @samp{.y} from the original file name. The file output by
1399 Bison contains the source code for @code{yyparse}. The additional
1400 functions in the input file (@code{yylex}, @code{yyerror} and @code{main})
1401 are copied verbatim to the output.
1403 @node Rpcalc Compile
1404 @subsection Compiling the Parser File
1405 @cindex compiling the parser
1407 Here is how to compile and run the parser file:
1411 # @r{List files in current directory.}
1413 rpcalc.tab.c rpcalc.y
1417 # @r{Compile the Bison parser.}
1418 # @r{@samp{-lm} tells compiler to search math library for @code{pow}.}
1419 $ @kbd{cc -lm -o rpcalc rpcalc.tab.c}
1423 # @r{List files again.}
1425 rpcalc rpcalc.tab.c rpcalc.y
1429 The file @file{rpcalc} now contains the executable code. Here is an
1430 example session using @code{rpcalc}.
1436 @kbd{3 7 + 3 4 5 *+-}
1438 @kbd{3 7 + 3 4 5 * + - n} @r{Note the unary minus, @samp{n}}
1442 @kbd{3 4 ^} @r{Exponentiation}
1444 @kbd{^D} @r{End-of-file indicator}
1449 @section Infix Notation Calculator: @code{calc}
1450 @cindex infix notation calculator
1452 @cindex calculator, infix notation
1454 We now modify rpcalc to handle infix operators instead of postfix. Infix
1455 notation involves the concept of operator precedence and the need for
1456 parentheses nested to arbitrary depth. Here is the Bison code for
1457 @file{calc.y}, an infix desk-top calculator.
1460 /* Infix notation calculator--calc */
1463 #define YYSTYPE double
1467 /* Bison Declarations */
1471 %left NEG /* negation--unary minus */
1472 %right '^' /* exponentiation */
1474 /* Grammar follows */
1476 input: /* empty string */
1481 | exp '\n' @{ printf ("\t%.10g\n", $1); @}
1484 exp: NUM @{ $$ = $1; @}
1485 | exp '+' exp @{ $$ = $1 + $3; @}
1486 | exp '-' exp @{ $$ = $1 - $3; @}
1487 | exp '*' exp @{ $$ = $1 * $3; @}
1488 | exp '/' exp @{ $$ = $1 / $3; @}
1489 | '-' exp %prec NEG @{ $$ = -$2; @}
1490 | exp '^' exp @{ $$ = pow ($1, $3); @}
1491 | '(' exp ')' @{ $$ = $2; @}
1497 The functions @code{yylex}, @code{yyerror} and @code{main} can be the
1500 There are two important new features shown in this code.
1502 In the second section (Bison declarations), @code{%left} declares token
1503 types and says they are left-associative operators. The declarations
1504 @code{%left} and @code{%right} (right associativity) take the place of
1505 @code{%token} which is used to declare a token type name without
1506 associativity. (These tokens are single-character literals, which
1507 ordinarily don't need to be declared. We declare them here to specify
1510 Operator precedence is determined by the line ordering of the
1511 declarations; the higher the line number of the declaration (lower on
1512 the page or screen), the higher the precedence. Hence, exponentiation
1513 has the highest precedence, unary minus (@code{NEG}) is next, followed
1514 by @samp{*} and @samp{/}, and so on. @xref{Precedence, ,Operator
1517 The other important new feature is the @code{%prec} in the grammar
1518 section for the unary minus operator. The @code{%prec} simply instructs
1519 Bison that the rule @samp{| '-' exp} has the same precedence as
1520 @code{NEG}---in this case the next-to-highest. @xref{Contextual
1521 Precedence, ,Context-Dependent Precedence}.
1523 Here is a sample run of @file{calc.y}:
1528 @kbd{4 + 4.5 - (34/(8*3+-3))}
1536 @node Simple Error Recovery
1537 @section Simple Error Recovery
1538 @cindex error recovery, simple
1540 Up to this point, this manual has not addressed the issue of @dfn{error
1541 recovery}---how to continue parsing after the parser detects a syntax
1542 error. All we have handled is error reporting with @code{yyerror}.
1543 Recall that by default @code{yyparse} returns after calling
1544 @code{yyerror}. This means that an erroneous input line causes the
1545 calculator program to exit. Now we show how to rectify this deficiency.
1547 The Bison language itself includes the reserved word @code{error}, which
1548 may be included in the grammar rules. In the example below it has
1549 been added to one of the alternatives for @code{line}:
1554 | exp '\n' @{ printf ("\t%.10g\n", $1); @}
1555 | error '\n' @{ yyerrok; @}
1560 This addition to the grammar allows for simple error recovery in the
1561 event of a parse error. If an expression that cannot be evaluated is
1562 read, the error will be recognized by the third rule for @code{line},
1563 and parsing will continue. (The @code{yyerror} function is still called
1564 upon to print its message as well.) The action executes the statement
1565 @code{yyerrok}, a macro defined automatically by Bison; its meaning is
1566 that error recovery is complete (@pxref{Error Recovery}). Note the
1567 difference between @code{yyerrok} and @code{yyerror}; neither one is a
1570 This form of error recovery deals with syntax errors. There are other
1571 kinds of errors; for example, division by zero, which raises an exception
1572 signal that is normally fatal. A real calculator program must handle this
1573 signal and use @code{longjmp} to return to @code{main} and resume parsing
1574 input lines; it would also have to discard the rest of the current line of
1575 input. We won't discuss this issue further because it is not specific to
1578 @node Location Tracking Calc
1579 @section Location Tracking Calculator: @code{ltcalc}
1580 @cindex location tracking calculator
1581 @cindex @code{ltcalc}
1582 @cindex calculator, location tracking
1584 This example extends the infix notation calculator with location
1585 tracking. This feature will be used to improve the error messages. For
1586 the sake of clarity, this example is a simple integer calculator, since
1587 most of the work needed to use locations will be done in the lexical
1591 * Decls: Ltcalc Decls. Bison and C declarations for ltcalc.
1592 * Rules: Ltcalc Rules. Grammar rules for ltcalc, with explanations.
1593 * Lexer: Ltcalc Lexer. The lexical analyzer.
1597 @subsection Declarations for @code{ltcalc}
1599 The C and Bison declarations for the location tracking calculator are
1600 the same as the declarations for the infix notation calculator.
1603 /* Location tracking calculator. */
1610 /* Bison declarations. */
1618 %% /* Grammar follows */
1622 Note there are no declarations specific to locations. Defining a data
1623 type for storing locations is not needed: we will use the type provided
1624 by default (@pxref{Location Type, ,Data Types of Locations}), which is a
1625 four member structure with the following integer fields:
1626 @code{first_line}, @code{first_column}, @code{last_line} and
1630 @subsection Grammar Rules for @code{ltcalc}
1632 Whether handling locations or not has no effect on the syntax of your
1633 language. Therefore, grammar rules for this example will be very close
1634 to those of the previous example: we will only modify them to benefit
1635 from the new information.
1637 Here, we will use locations to report divisions by zero, and locate the
1638 wrong expressions or subexpressions.
1649 | exp '\n' @{ printf ("%d\n", $1); @}
1654 exp : NUM @{ $$ = $1; @}
1655 | exp '+' exp @{ $$ = $1 + $3; @}
1656 | exp '-' exp @{ $$ = $1 - $3; @}
1657 | exp '*' exp @{ $$ = $1 * $3; @}
1667 fprintf (stderr, "%d.%d-%d.%d: division by zero",
1668 @@3.first_line, @@3.first_column,
1669 @@3.last_line, @@3.last_column);
1674 | '-' exp %preg NEG @{ $$ = -$2; @}
1675 | exp '^' exp @{ $$ = pow ($1, $3); @}
1676 | '(' exp ')' @{ $$ = $2; @}
1680 This code shows how to reach locations inside of semantic actions, by
1681 using the pseudo-variables @code{@@@var{n}} for rule components, and the
1682 pseudo-variable @code{@@$} for groupings.
1684 We don't need to assign a value to @code{@@$}: the output parser does it
1685 automatically. By default, before executing the C code of each action,
1686 @code{@@$} is set to range from the beginning of @code{@@1} to the end
1687 of @code{@@@var{n}}, for a rule with @var{n} components. This behavior
1688 can be redefined (@pxref{Location Default Action, , Default Action for
1689 Locations}), and for very specific rules, @code{@@$} can be computed by
1693 @subsection The @code{ltcalc} Lexical Analyzer.
1695 Until now, we relied on Bison's defaults to enable location
1696 tracking. The next step is to rewrite the lexical analyzer, and make it
1697 able to feed the parser with the token locations, as it already does for
1700 To this end, we must take into account every single character of the
1701 input text, to avoid the computed locations of being fuzzy or wrong:
1710 /* Skip white space. */
1711 while ((c = getchar ()) == ' ' || c == '\t')
1712 ++yylloc.last_column;
1715 yylloc.first_line = yylloc.last_line;
1716 yylloc.first_column = yylloc.last_column;
1720 /* Process numbers. */
1724 ++yylloc.last_column;
1725 while (isdigit (c = getchar ()))
1727 ++yylloc.last_column;
1728 yylval = yylval * 10 + c - '0';
1735 /* Return end-of-input. */
1739 /* Return a single char, and update location. */
1743 yylloc.last_column = 0;
1746 ++yylloc.last_column;
1751 Basically, the lexical analyzer performs the same processing as before:
1752 it skips blanks and tabs, and reads numbers or single-character tokens.
1753 In addition, it updates @code{yylloc}, the global variable (of type
1754 @code{YYLTYPE}) containing the token's location.
1756 Now, each time this function returns a token, the parser has its number
1757 as well as its semantic value, and its location in the text. The last
1758 needed change is to initialize @code{yylloc}, for example in the
1759 controlling function:
1766 yylloc.first_line = yylloc.last_line = 1;
1767 yylloc.first_column = yylloc.last_column = 0;
1773 Remember that computing locations is not a matter of syntax. Every
1774 character must be associated to a location update, whether it is in
1775 valid input, in comments, in literal strings, and so on.
1777 @node Multi-function Calc
1778 @section Multi-Function Calculator: @code{mfcalc}
1779 @cindex multi-function calculator
1780 @cindex @code{mfcalc}
1781 @cindex calculator, multi-function
1783 Now that the basics of Bison have been discussed, it is time to move on to
1784 a more advanced problem. The above calculators provided only five
1785 functions, @samp{+}, @samp{-}, @samp{*}, @samp{/} and @samp{^}. It would
1786 be nice to have a calculator that provides other mathematical functions such
1787 as @code{sin}, @code{cos}, etc.
1789 It is easy to add new operators to the infix calculator as long as they are
1790 only single-character literals. The lexical analyzer @code{yylex} passes
1791 back all nonnumber characters as tokens, so new grammar rules suffice for
1792 adding a new operator. But we want something more flexible: built-in
1793 functions whose syntax has this form:
1796 @var{function_name} (@var{argument})
1800 At the same time, we will add memory to the calculator, by allowing you
1801 to create named variables, store values in them, and use them later.
1802 Here is a sample session with the multi-function calculator:
1806 @kbd{pi = 3.141592653589}
1810 @kbd{alpha = beta1 = 2.3}
1816 @kbd{exp(ln(beta1))}
1821 Note that multiple assignment and nested function calls are permitted.
1824 * Decl: Mfcalc Decl. Bison declarations for multi-function calculator.
1825 * Rules: Mfcalc Rules. Grammar rules for the calculator.
1826 * Symtab: Mfcalc Symtab. Symbol table management subroutines.
1830 @subsection Declarations for @code{mfcalc}
1832 Here are the C and Bison declarations for the multi-function calculator.
1836 #include <math.h> /* For math functions, cos(), sin(), etc. */
1837 #include "calc.h" /* Contains definition of `symrec' */
1840 double val; /* For returning numbers. */
1841 symrec *tptr; /* For returning symbol-table pointers */
1844 %token <val> NUM /* Simple double precision number */
1845 %token <tptr> VAR FNCT /* Variable and Function */
1851 %left NEG /* Negation--unary minus */
1852 %right '^' /* Exponentiation */
1854 /* Grammar follows */
1859 The above grammar introduces only two new features of the Bison language.
1860 These features allow semantic values to have various data types
1861 (@pxref{Multiple Types, ,More Than One Value Type}).
1863 The @code{%union} declaration specifies the entire list of possible types;
1864 this is instead of defining @code{YYSTYPE}. The allowable types are now
1865 double-floats (for @code{exp} and @code{NUM}) and pointers to entries in
1866 the symbol table. @xref{Union Decl, ,The Collection of Value Types}.
1868 Since values can now have various types, it is necessary to associate a
1869 type with each grammar symbol whose semantic value is used. These symbols
1870 are @code{NUM}, @code{VAR}, @code{FNCT}, and @code{exp}. Their
1871 declarations are augmented with information about their data type (placed
1872 between angle brackets).
1874 The Bison construct @code{%type} is used for declaring nonterminal
1875 symbols, just as @code{%token} is used for declaring token types. We
1876 have not used @code{%type} before because nonterminal symbols are
1877 normally declared implicitly by the rules that define them. But
1878 @code{exp} must be declared explicitly so we can specify its value type.
1879 @xref{Type Decl, ,Nonterminal Symbols}.
1882 @subsection Grammar Rules for @code{mfcalc}
1884 Here are the grammar rules for the multi-function calculator.
1885 Most of them are copied directly from @code{calc}; three rules,
1886 those which mention @code{VAR} or @code{FNCT}, are new.
1895 | exp '\n' @{ printf ("\t%.10g\n", $1); @}
1896 | error '\n' @{ yyerrok; @}
1899 exp: NUM @{ $$ = $1; @}
1900 | VAR @{ $$ = $1->value.var; @}
1901 | VAR '=' exp @{ $$ = $3; $1->value.var = $3; @}
1902 | FNCT '(' exp ')' @{ $$ = (*($1->value.fnctptr))($3); @}
1903 | exp '+' exp @{ $$ = $1 + $3; @}
1904 | exp '-' exp @{ $$ = $1 - $3; @}
1905 | exp '*' exp @{ $$ = $1 * $3; @}
1906 | exp '/' exp @{ $$ = $1 / $3; @}
1907 | '-' exp %prec NEG @{ $$ = -$2; @}
1908 | exp '^' exp @{ $$ = pow ($1, $3); @}
1909 | '(' exp ')' @{ $$ = $2; @}
1911 /* End of grammar */
1916 @subsection The @code{mfcalc} Symbol Table
1917 @cindex symbol table example
1919 The multi-function calculator requires a symbol table to keep track of the
1920 names and meanings of variables and functions. This doesn't affect the
1921 grammar rules (except for the actions) or the Bison declarations, but it
1922 requires some additional C functions for support.
1924 The symbol table itself consists of a linked list of records. Its
1925 definition, which is kept in the header @file{calc.h}, is as follows. It
1926 provides for either functions or variables to be placed in the table.
1930 /* Function type. */
1931 typedef double (*func_t) (double);
1933 /* Data type for links in the chain of symbols. */
1936 char *name; /* name of symbol */
1937 int type; /* type of symbol: either VAR or FNCT */
1940 double var; /* value of a VAR */
1941 func_t fnctptr; /* value of a FNCT */
1943 struct symrec *next; /* link field */
1948 typedef struct symrec symrec;
1950 /* The symbol table: a chain of `struct symrec'. */
1951 extern symrec *sym_table;
1953 symrec *putsym (const char *, func_t);
1954 symrec *getsym (const char *);
1958 The new version of @code{main} includes a call to @code{init_table}, a
1959 function that initializes the symbol table. Here it is, and
1960 @code{init_table} as well:
1976 yyerror (const char *s) /* Called by yyparse on error */
1984 double (*fnct)(double);
1989 struct init arith_fncts[] =
2000 /* The symbol table: a chain of `struct symrec'. */
2001 symrec *sym_table = (symrec *) 0;
2005 /* Put arithmetic functions in table. */
2011 for (i = 0; arith_fncts[i].fname != 0; i++)
2013 ptr = putsym (arith_fncts[i].fname, FNCT);
2014 ptr->value.fnctptr = arith_fncts[i].fnct;
2020 By simply editing the initialization list and adding the necessary include
2021 files, you can add additional functions to the calculator.
2023 Two important functions allow look-up and installation of symbols in the
2024 symbol table. The function @code{putsym} is passed a name and the type
2025 (@code{VAR} or @code{FNCT}) of the object to be installed. The object is
2026 linked to the front of the list, and a pointer to the object is returned.
2027 The function @code{getsym} is passed the name of the symbol to look up. If
2028 found, a pointer to that symbol is returned; otherwise zero is returned.
2032 putsym (char *sym_name, int sym_type)
2035 ptr = (symrec *) malloc (sizeof (symrec));
2036 ptr->name = (char *) malloc (strlen (sym_name) + 1);
2037 strcpy (ptr->name,sym_name);
2038 ptr->type = sym_type;
2039 ptr->value.var = 0; /* Set value to 0 even if fctn. */
2040 ptr->next = (struct symrec *)sym_table;
2046 getsym (const char *sym_name)
2049 for (ptr = sym_table; ptr != (symrec *) 0;
2050 ptr = (symrec *)ptr->next)
2051 if (strcmp (ptr->name,sym_name) == 0)
2057 The function @code{yylex} must now recognize variables, numeric values, and
2058 the single-character arithmetic operators. Strings of alphanumeric
2059 characters with a leading non-digit are recognized as either variables or
2060 functions depending on what the symbol table says about them.
2062 The string is passed to @code{getsym} for look up in the symbol table. If
2063 the name appears in the table, a pointer to its location and its type
2064 (@code{VAR} or @code{FNCT}) is returned to @code{yyparse}. If it is not
2065 already in the table, then it is installed as a @code{VAR} using
2066 @code{putsym}. Again, a pointer and its type (which must be @code{VAR}) is
2067 returned to @code{yyparse}.
2069 No change is needed in the handling of numeric values and arithmetic
2070 operators in @code{yylex}.
2081 /* Ignore white space, get first nonwhite character. */
2082 while ((c = getchar ()) == ' ' || c == '\t');
2089 /* Char starts a number => parse the number. */
2090 if (c == '.' || isdigit (c))
2093 scanf ("%lf", &yylval.val);
2099 /* Char starts an identifier => read the name. */
2103 static char *symbuf = 0;
2104 static int length = 0;
2109 /* Initially make the buffer long enough
2110 for a 40-character symbol name. */
2112 length = 40, symbuf = (char *)malloc (length + 1);
2119 /* If buffer is full, make it bigger. */
2123 symbuf = (char *)realloc (symbuf, length + 1);
2125 /* Add this character to the buffer. */
2127 /* Get another character. */
2132 while (isalnum (c));
2139 s = getsym (symbuf);
2141 s = putsym (symbuf, VAR);
2146 /* Any other character is a token by itself. */
2152 This program is both powerful and flexible. You may easily add new
2153 functions, and it is a simple job to modify this code to install
2154 predefined variables such as @code{pi} or @code{e} as well.
2162 Add some new functions from @file{math.h} to the initialization list.
2165 Add another array that contains constants and their values. Then
2166 modify @code{init_table} to add these constants to the symbol table.
2167 It will be easiest to give the constants type @code{VAR}.
2170 Make the program report an error if the user refers to an
2171 uninitialized variable in any way except to store a value in it.
2175 @chapter Bison Grammar Files
2177 Bison takes as input a context-free grammar specification and produces a
2178 C-language function that recognizes correct instances of the grammar.
2180 The Bison grammar input file conventionally has a name ending in @samp{.y}.
2181 @xref{Invocation, ,Invoking Bison}.
2184 * Grammar Outline:: Overall layout of the grammar file.
2185 * Symbols:: Terminal and nonterminal symbols.
2186 * Rules:: How to write grammar rules.
2187 * Recursion:: Writing recursive rules.
2188 * Semantics:: Semantic values and actions.
2189 * Locations:: Locations and actions.
2190 * Declarations:: All kinds of Bison declarations are described here.
2191 * Multiple Parsers:: Putting more than one Bison parser in one program.
2194 @node Grammar Outline
2195 @section Outline of a Bison Grammar
2197 A Bison grammar file has four main sections, shown here with the
2198 appropriate delimiters:
2205 @var{Bison declarations}
2214 Comments enclosed in @samp{/* @dots{} */} may appear in any of the sections.
2215 As a @acronym{GNU} extension, @samp{//} introduces a comment that
2216 continues until end of line.
2219 * Prologue:: Syntax and usage of the prologue.
2220 * Bison Declarations:: Syntax and usage of the Bison declarations section.
2221 * Grammar Rules:: Syntax and usage of the grammar rules section.
2222 * Epilogue:: Syntax and usage of the epilogue.
2225 @node Prologue, Bison Declarations, , Grammar Outline
2226 @subsection The prologue
2227 @cindex declarations section
2229 @cindex declarations
2231 The @var{Prologue} section contains macro definitions and
2232 declarations of functions and variables that are used in the actions in the
2233 grammar rules. These are copied to the beginning of the parser file so
2234 that they precede the definition of @code{yyparse}. You can use
2235 @samp{#include} to get the declarations from a header file. If you don't
2236 need any C declarations, you may omit the @samp{%@{} and @samp{%@}}
2237 delimiters that bracket this section.
2239 You may have more than one @var{Prologue} section, intermixed with the
2240 @var{Bison declarations}. This allows you to have C and Bison
2241 declarations that refer to each other. For example, the @code{%union}
2242 declaration may use types defined in a header file, and you may wish to
2243 prototype functions that take arguments of type @code{YYSTYPE}. This
2244 can be done with two @var{Prologue} blocks, one before and one after the
2245 @code{%union} declaration.
2255 tree t; /* @r{@code{tree} is defined in @file{ptypes.h}.} */
2259 static void yyprint(FILE *, int, YYSTYPE);
2260 #define YYPRINT(F, N, L) yyprint(F, N, L)
2266 @node Bison Declarations
2267 @subsection The Bison Declarations Section
2268 @cindex Bison declarations (introduction)
2269 @cindex declarations, Bison (introduction)
2271 The @var{Bison declarations} section contains declarations that define
2272 terminal and nonterminal symbols, specify precedence, and so on.
2273 In some simple grammars you may not need any declarations.
2274 @xref{Declarations, ,Bison Declarations}.
2277 @subsection The Grammar Rules Section
2278 @cindex grammar rules section
2279 @cindex rules section for grammar
2281 The @dfn{grammar rules} section contains one or more Bison grammar
2282 rules, and nothing else. @xref{Rules, ,Syntax of Grammar Rules}.
2284 There must always be at least one grammar rule, and the first
2285 @samp{%%} (which precedes the grammar rules) may never be omitted even
2286 if it is the first thing in the file.
2288 @node Epilogue, , Grammar Rules, Grammar Outline
2289 @subsection The epilogue
2290 @cindex additional C code section
2292 @cindex C code, section for additional
2294 The @var{Epilogue} is copied verbatim to the end of the parser file, just as
2295 the @var{Prologue} is copied to the beginning. This is the most convenient
2296 place to put anything that you want to have in the parser file but which need
2297 not come before the definition of @code{yyparse}. For example, the
2298 definitions of @code{yylex} and @code{yyerror} often go here.
2299 @xref{Interface, ,Parser C-Language Interface}.
2301 If the last section is empty, you may omit the @samp{%%} that separates it
2302 from the grammar rules.
2304 The Bison parser itself contains many static variables whose names start
2305 with @samp{yy} and many macros whose names start with @samp{YY}. It is a
2306 good idea to avoid using any such names (except those documented in this
2307 manual) in the epilogue of the grammar file.
2310 @section Symbols, Terminal and Nonterminal
2311 @cindex nonterminal symbol
2312 @cindex terminal symbol
2316 @dfn{Symbols} in Bison grammars represent the grammatical classifications
2319 A @dfn{terminal symbol} (also known as a @dfn{token type}) represents a
2320 class of syntactically equivalent tokens. You use the symbol in grammar
2321 rules to mean that a token in that class is allowed. The symbol is
2322 represented in the Bison parser by a numeric code, and the @code{yylex}
2323 function returns a token type code to indicate what kind of token has been
2324 read. You don't need to know what the code value is; you can use the
2325 symbol to stand for it.
2327 A @dfn{nonterminal symbol} stands for a class of syntactically equivalent
2328 groupings. The symbol name is used in writing grammar rules. By convention,
2329 it should be all lower case.
2331 Symbol names can contain letters, digits (not at the beginning),
2332 underscores and periods. Periods make sense only in nonterminals.
2334 There are three ways of writing terminal symbols in the grammar:
2338 A @dfn{named token type} is written with an identifier, like an
2339 identifier in C@. By convention, it should be all upper case. Each
2340 such name must be defined with a Bison declaration such as
2341 @code{%token}. @xref{Token Decl, ,Token Type Names}.
2344 @cindex character token
2345 @cindex literal token
2346 @cindex single-character literal
2347 A @dfn{character token type} (or @dfn{literal character token}) is
2348 written in the grammar using the same syntax used in C for character
2349 constants; for example, @code{'+'} is a character token type. A
2350 character token type doesn't need to be declared unless you need to
2351 specify its semantic value data type (@pxref{Value Type, ,Data Types of
2352 Semantic Values}), associativity, or precedence (@pxref{Precedence,
2353 ,Operator Precedence}).
2355 By convention, a character token type is used only to represent a
2356 token that consists of that particular character. Thus, the token
2357 type @code{'+'} is used to represent the character @samp{+} as a
2358 token. Nothing enforces this convention, but if you depart from it,
2359 your program will confuse other readers.
2361 All the usual escape sequences used in character literals in C can be
2362 used in Bison as well, but you must not use the null character as a
2363 character literal because its numeric code, zero, signifies
2364 end-of-input (@pxref{Calling Convention, ,Calling Convention
2365 for @code{yylex}}). Also, unlike standard C, trigraphs have no
2366 special meaning in Bison character literals, nor is backslash-newline
2370 @cindex string token
2371 @cindex literal string token
2372 @cindex multicharacter literal
2373 A @dfn{literal string token} is written like a C string constant; for
2374 example, @code{"<="} is a literal string token. A literal string token
2375 doesn't need to be declared unless you need to specify its semantic
2376 value data type (@pxref{Value Type}), associativity, or precedence
2377 (@pxref{Precedence}).
2379 You can associate the literal string token with a symbolic name as an
2380 alias, using the @code{%token} declaration (@pxref{Token Decl, ,Token
2381 Declarations}). If you don't do that, the lexical analyzer has to
2382 retrieve the token number for the literal string token from the
2383 @code{yytname} table (@pxref{Calling Convention}).
2385 @strong{Warning}: literal string tokens do not work in Yacc.
2387 By convention, a literal string token is used only to represent a token
2388 that consists of that particular string. Thus, you should use the token
2389 type @code{"<="} to represent the string @samp{<=} as a token. Bison
2390 does not enforce this convention, but if you depart from it, people who
2391 read your program will be confused.
2393 All the escape sequences used in string literals in C can be used in
2394 Bison as well. However, unlike Standard C, trigraphs have no special
2395 meaning in Bison string literals, nor is backslash-newline allowed. A
2396 literal string token must contain two or more characters; for a token
2397 containing just one character, use a character token (see above).
2400 How you choose to write a terminal symbol has no effect on its
2401 grammatical meaning. That depends only on where it appears in rules and
2402 on when the parser function returns that symbol.
2404 The value returned by @code{yylex} is always one of the terminal
2405 symbols, except that a zero or negative value signifies end-of-input.
2406 Whichever way you write the token type in the grammar rules, you write
2407 it the same way in the definition of @code{yylex}. The numeric code
2408 for a character token type is simply the positive numeric code of the
2409 character, so @code{yylex} can use the identical value to generate the
2410 requisite code, though you may need to convert it to @code{unsigned
2411 char} to avoid sign-extension on hosts where @code{char} is signed.
2412 Each named token type becomes a C macro in
2413 the parser file, so @code{yylex} can use the name to stand for the code.
2414 (This is why periods don't make sense in terminal symbols.)
2415 @xref{Calling Convention, ,Calling Convention for @code{yylex}}.
2417 If @code{yylex} is defined in a separate file, you need to arrange for the
2418 token-type macro definitions to be available there. Use the @samp{-d}
2419 option when you run Bison, so that it will write these macro definitions
2420 into a separate header file @file{@var{name}.tab.h} which you can include
2421 in the other source files that need it. @xref{Invocation, ,Invoking Bison}.
2423 If you want to write a grammar that is portable to any Standard C
2424 host, you must use only non-null character tokens taken from the basic
2425 execution character set of Standard C@. This set consists of the ten
2426 digits, the 52 lower- and upper-case English letters, and the
2427 characters in the following C-language string:
2430 "\a\b\t\n\v\f\r !\"#%&'()*+,-./:;<=>?[\\]^_@{|@}~"
2433 The @code{yylex} function and Bison must use a consistent character
2434 set and encoding for character tokens. For example, if you run Bison in an
2435 @acronym{ASCII} environment, but then compile and run the resulting program
2436 in an environment that uses an incompatible character set like
2437 @acronym{EBCDIC}, the resulting program may not work because the
2438 tables generated by Bison will assume @acronym{ASCII} numeric values for
2439 character tokens. It is standard
2440 practice for software distributions to contain C source files that
2441 were generated by Bison in an @acronym{ASCII} environment, so installers on
2442 platforms that are incompatible with @acronym{ASCII} must rebuild those
2443 files before compiling them.
2445 The symbol @code{error} is a terminal symbol reserved for error recovery
2446 (@pxref{Error Recovery}); you shouldn't use it for any other purpose.
2447 In particular, @code{yylex} should never return this value. The default
2448 value of the error token is 256, unless you explicitly assigned 256 to
2449 one of your tokens with a @code{%token} declaration.
2452 @section Syntax of Grammar Rules
2454 @cindex grammar rule syntax
2455 @cindex syntax of grammar rules
2457 A Bison grammar rule has the following general form:
2461 @var{result}: @var{components}@dots{}
2467 where @var{result} is the nonterminal symbol that this rule describes,
2468 and @var{components} are various terminal and nonterminal symbols that
2469 are put together by this rule (@pxref{Symbols}).
2481 says that two groupings of type @code{exp}, with a @samp{+} token in between,
2482 can be combined into a larger grouping of type @code{exp}.
2484 White space in rules is significant only to separate symbols. You can add
2485 extra white space as you wish.
2487 Scattered among the components can be @var{actions} that determine
2488 the semantics of the rule. An action looks like this:
2491 @{@var{C statements}@}
2495 Usually there is only one action and it follows the components.
2499 Multiple rules for the same @var{result} can be written separately or can
2500 be joined with the vertical-bar character @samp{|} as follows:
2504 @var{result}: @var{rule1-components}@dots{}
2505 | @var{rule2-components}@dots{}
2513 @var{result}: @var{rule1-components}@dots{}
2514 | @var{rule2-components}@dots{}
2522 They are still considered distinct rules even when joined in this way.
2524 If @var{components} in a rule is empty, it means that @var{result} can
2525 match the empty string. For example, here is how to define a
2526 comma-separated sequence of zero or more @code{exp} groupings:
2543 It is customary to write a comment @samp{/* empty */} in each rule
2547 @section Recursive Rules
2548 @cindex recursive rule
2550 A rule is called @dfn{recursive} when its @var{result} nonterminal appears
2551 also on its right hand side. Nearly all Bison grammars need to use
2552 recursion, because that is the only way to define a sequence of any number
2553 of a particular thing. Consider this recursive definition of a
2554 comma-separated sequence of one or more expressions:
2564 @cindex left recursion
2565 @cindex right recursion
2567 Since the recursive use of @code{expseq1} is the leftmost symbol in the
2568 right hand side, we call this @dfn{left recursion}. By contrast, here
2569 the same construct is defined using @dfn{right recursion}:
2580 Any kind of sequence can be defined using either left recursion or right
2581 recursion, but you should always use left recursion, because it can
2582 parse a sequence of any number of elements with bounded stack space.
2583 Right recursion uses up space on the Bison stack in proportion to the
2584 number of elements in the sequence, because all the elements must be
2585 shifted onto the stack before the rule can be applied even once.
2586 @xref{Algorithm, ,The Bison Parser Algorithm}, for further explanation
2589 @cindex mutual recursion
2590 @dfn{Indirect} or @dfn{mutual} recursion occurs when the result of the
2591 rule does not appear directly on its right hand side, but does appear
2592 in rules for other nonterminals which do appear on its right hand
2600 | primary '+' primary
2612 defines two mutually-recursive nonterminals, since each refers to the
2616 @section Defining Language Semantics
2617 @cindex defining language semantics
2618 @cindex language semantics, defining
2620 The grammar rules for a language determine only the syntax. The semantics
2621 are determined by the semantic values associated with various tokens and
2622 groupings, and by the actions taken when various groupings are recognized.
2624 For example, the calculator calculates properly because the value
2625 associated with each expression is the proper number; it adds properly
2626 because the action for the grouping @w{@samp{@var{x} + @var{y}}} is to add
2627 the numbers associated with @var{x} and @var{y}.
2630 * Value Type:: Specifying one data type for all semantic values.
2631 * Multiple Types:: Specifying several alternative data types.
2632 * Actions:: An action is the semantic definition of a grammar rule.
2633 * Action Types:: Specifying data types for actions to operate on.
2634 * Mid-Rule Actions:: Most actions go at the end of a rule.
2635 This says when, why and how to use the exceptional
2636 action in the middle of a rule.
2640 @subsection Data Types of Semantic Values
2641 @cindex semantic value type
2642 @cindex value type, semantic
2643 @cindex data types of semantic values
2644 @cindex default data type
2646 In a simple program it may be sufficient to use the same data type for
2647 the semantic values of all language constructs. This was true in the
2648 @acronym{RPN} and infix calculator examples (@pxref{RPN Calc, ,Reverse Polish
2649 Notation Calculator}).
2651 Bison's default is to use type @code{int} for all semantic values. To
2652 specify some other type, define @code{YYSTYPE} as a macro, like this:
2655 #define YYSTYPE double
2659 This macro definition must go in the prologue of the grammar file
2660 (@pxref{Grammar Outline, ,Outline of a Bison Grammar}).
2662 @node Multiple Types
2663 @subsection More Than One Value Type
2665 In most programs, you will need different data types for different kinds
2666 of tokens and groupings. For example, a numeric constant may need type
2667 @code{int} or @code{long}, while a string constant needs type @code{char *},
2668 and an identifier might need a pointer to an entry in the symbol table.
2670 To use more than one data type for semantic values in one parser, Bison
2671 requires you to do two things:
2675 Specify the entire collection of possible data types, with the
2676 @code{%union} Bison declaration (@pxref{Union Decl, ,The Collection of
2680 Choose one of those types for each symbol (terminal or nonterminal) for
2681 which semantic values are used. This is done for tokens with the
2682 @code{%token} Bison declaration (@pxref{Token Decl, ,Token Type Names})
2683 and for groupings with the @code{%type} Bison declaration (@pxref{Type
2684 Decl, ,Nonterminal Symbols}).
2693 An action accompanies a syntactic rule and contains C code to be executed
2694 each time an instance of that rule is recognized. The task of most actions
2695 is to compute a semantic value for the grouping built by the rule from the
2696 semantic values associated with tokens or smaller groupings.
2698 An action consists of C statements surrounded by braces, much like a
2699 compound statement in C@. An action can contain any sequence of C
2700 statements. Bison does not look for trigraphs, though, so if your C
2701 code uses trigraphs you should ensure that they do not affect the
2702 nesting of braces or the boundaries of comments, strings, or character
2705 An action can be placed at any position in the rule;
2706 it is executed at that position. Most rules have just one action at the
2707 end of the rule, following all the components. Actions in the middle of
2708 a rule are tricky and used only for special purposes (@pxref{Mid-Rule
2709 Actions, ,Actions in Mid-Rule}).
2711 The C code in an action can refer to the semantic values of the components
2712 matched by the rule with the construct @code{$@var{n}}, which stands for
2713 the value of the @var{n}th component. The semantic value for the grouping
2714 being constructed is @code{$$}. (Bison translates both of these constructs
2715 into array element references when it copies the actions into the parser
2718 Here is a typical example:
2729 This rule constructs an @code{exp} from two smaller @code{exp} groupings
2730 connected by a plus-sign token. In the action, @code{$1} and @code{$3}
2731 refer to the semantic values of the two component @code{exp} groupings,
2732 which are the first and third symbols on the right hand side of the rule.
2733 The sum is stored into @code{$$} so that it becomes the semantic value of
2734 the addition-expression just recognized by the rule. If there were a
2735 useful semantic value associated with the @samp{+} token, it could be
2736 referred to as @code{$2}.
2738 Note that the vertical-bar character @samp{|} is really a rule
2739 separator, and actions are attached to a single rule. This is a
2740 difference with tools like Flex, for which @samp{|} stands for either
2741 ``or'', or ``the same action as that of the next rule''. In the
2742 following example, the action is triggered only when @samp{b} is found:
2746 a-or-b: 'a'|'b' @{ a_or_b_found = 1; @};
2750 @cindex default action
2751 If you don't specify an action for a rule, Bison supplies a default:
2752 @w{@code{$$ = $1}.} Thus, the value of the first symbol in the rule becomes
2753 the value of the whole rule. Of course, the default rule is valid only
2754 if the two data types match. There is no meaningful default action for
2755 an empty rule; every empty rule must have an explicit action unless the
2756 rule's value does not matter.
2758 @code{$@var{n}} with @var{n} zero or negative is allowed for reference
2759 to tokens and groupings on the stack @emph{before} those that match the
2760 current rule. This is a very risky practice, and to use it reliably
2761 you must be certain of the context in which the rule is applied. Here
2762 is a case in which you can use this reliably:
2766 foo: expr bar '+' expr @{ @dots{} @}
2767 | expr bar '-' expr @{ @dots{} @}
2773 @{ previous_expr = $0; @}
2778 As long as @code{bar} is used only in the fashion shown here, @code{$0}
2779 always refers to the @code{expr} which precedes @code{bar} in the
2780 definition of @code{foo}.
2783 @subsection Data Types of Values in Actions
2784 @cindex action data types
2785 @cindex data types in actions
2787 If you have chosen a single data type for semantic values, the @code{$$}
2788 and @code{$@var{n}} constructs always have that data type.
2790 If you have used @code{%union} to specify a variety of data types, then you
2791 must declare a choice among these types for each terminal or nonterminal
2792 symbol that can have a semantic value. Then each time you use @code{$$} or
2793 @code{$@var{n}}, its data type is determined by which symbol it refers to
2794 in the rule. In this example,
2805 @code{$1} and @code{$3} refer to instances of @code{exp}, so they all
2806 have the data type declared for the nonterminal symbol @code{exp}. If
2807 @code{$2} were used, it would have the data type declared for the
2808 terminal symbol @code{'+'}, whatever that might be.
2810 Alternatively, you can specify the data type when you refer to the value,
2811 by inserting @samp{<@var{type}>} after the @samp{$} at the beginning of the
2812 reference. For example, if you have defined types as shown here:
2824 then you can write @code{$<itype>1} to refer to the first subunit of the
2825 rule as an integer, or @code{$<dtype>1} to refer to it as a double.
2827 @node Mid-Rule Actions
2828 @subsection Actions in Mid-Rule
2829 @cindex actions in mid-rule
2830 @cindex mid-rule actions
2832 Occasionally it is useful to put an action in the middle of a rule.
2833 These actions are written just like usual end-of-rule actions, but they
2834 are executed before the parser even recognizes the following components.
2836 A mid-rule action may refer to the components preceding it using
2837 @code{$@var{n}}, but it may not refer to subsequent components because
2838 it is run before they are parsed.
2840 The mid-rule action itself counts as one of the components of the rule.
2841 This makes a difference when there is another action later in the same rule
2842 (and usually there is another at the end): you have to count the actions
2843 along with the symbols when working out which number @var{n} to use in
2846 The mid-rule action can also have a semantic value. The action can set
2847 its value with an assignment to @code{$$}, and actions later in the rule
2848 can refer to the value using @code{$@var{n}}. Since there is no symbol
2849 to name the action, there is no way to declare a data type for the value
2850 in advance, so you must use the @samp{$<@dots{}>@var{n}} construct to
2851 specify a data type each time you refer to this value.
2853 There is no way to set the value of the entire rule with a mid-rule
2854 action, because assignments to @code{$$} do not have that effect. The
2855 only way to set the value for the entire rule is with an ordinary action
2856 at the end of the rule.
2858 Here is an example from a hypothetical compiler, handling a @code{let}
2859 statement that looks like @samp{let (@var{variable}) @var{statement}} and
2860 serves to create a variable named @var{variable} temporarily for the
2861 duration of @var{statement}. To parse this construct, we must put
2862 @var{variable} into the symbol table while @var{statement} is parsed, then
2863 remove it afterward. Here is how it is done:
2867 stmt: LET '(' var ')'
2868 @{ $<context>$ = push_context ();
2869 declare_variable ($3); @}
2871 pop_context ($<context>5); @}
2876 As soon as @samp{let (@var{variable})} has been recognized, the first
2877 action is run. It saves a copy of the current semantic context (the
2878 list of accessible variables) as its semantic value, using alternative
2879 @code{context} in the data-type union. Then it calls
2880 @code{declare_variable} to add the new variable to that list. Once the
2881 first action is finished, the embedded statement @code{stmt} can be
2882 parsed. Note that the mid-rule action is component number 5, so the
2883 @samp{stmt} is component number 6.
2885 After the embedded statement is parsed, its semantic value becomes the
2886 value of the entire @code{let}-statement. Then the semantic value from the
2887 earlier action is used to restore the prior list of variables. This
2888 removes the temporary @code{let}-variable from the list so that it won't
2889 appear to exist while the rest of the program is parsed.
2891 Taking action before a rule is completely recognized often leads to
2892 conflicts since the parser must commit to a parse in order to execute the
2893 action. For example, the following two rules, without mid-rule actions,
2894 can coexist in a working parser because the parser can shift the open-brace
2895 token and look at what follows before deciding whether there is a
2900 compound: '@{' declarations statements '@}'
2901 | '@{' statements '@}'
2907 But when we add a mid-rule action as follows, the rules become nonfunctional:
2911 compound: @{ prepare_for_local_variables (); @}
2912 '@{' declarations statements '@}'
2915 | '@{' statements '@}'
2921 Now the parser is forced to decide whether to run the mid-rule action
2922 when it has read no farther than the open-brace. In other words, it
2923 must commit to using one rule or the other, without sufficient
2924 information to do it correctly. (The open-brace token is what is called
2925 the @dfn{look-ahead} token at this time, since the parser is still
2926 deciding what to do about it. @xref{Look-Ahead, ,Look-Ahead Tokens}.)
2928 You might think that you could correct the problem by putting identical
2929 actions into the two rules, like this:
2933 compound: @{ prepare_for_local_variables (); @}
2934 '@{' declarations statements '@}'
2935 | @{ prepare_for_local_variables (); @}
2936 '@{' statements '@}'
2942 But this does not help, because Bison does not realize that the two actions
2943 are identical. (Bison never tries to understand the C code in an action.)
2945 If the grammar is such that a declaration can be distinguished from a
2946 statement by the first token (which is true in C), then one solution which
2947 does work is to put the action after the open-brace, like this:
2951 compound: '@{' @{ prepare_for_local_variables (); @}
2952 declarations statements '@}'
2953 | '@{' statements '@}'
2959 Now the first token of the following declaration or statement,
2960 which would in any case tell Bison which rule to use, can still do so.
2962 Another solution is to bury the action inside a nonterminal symbol which
2963 serves as a subroutine:
2967 subroutine: /* empty */
2968 @{ prepare_for_local_variables (); @}
2974 compound: subroutine
2975 '@{' declarations statements '@}'
2977 '@{' statements '@}'
2983 Now Bison can execute the action in the rule for @code{subroutine} without
2984 deciding which rule for @code{compound} it will eventually use. Note that
2985 the action is now at the end of its rule. Any mid-rule action can be
2986 converted to an end-of-rule action in this way, and this is what Bison
2987 actually does to implement mid-rule actions.
2990 @section Tracking Locations
2992 @cindex textual position
2993 @cindex position, textual
2995 Though grammar rules and semantic actions are enough to write a fully
2996 functional parser, it can be useful to process some additional information,
2997 especially symbol locations.
2999 @c (terminal or not) ?
3001 The way locations are handled is defined by providing a data type, and
3002 actions to take when rules are matched.
3005 * Location Type:: Specifying a data type for locations.
3006 * Actions and Locations:: Using locations in actions.
3007 * Location Default Action:: Defining a general way to compute locations.
3011 @subsection Data Type of Locations
3012 @cindex data type of locations
3013 @cindex default location type
3015 Defining a data type for locations is much simpler than for semantic values,
3016 since all tokens and groupings always use the same type.
3018 The type of locations is specified by defining a macro called @code{YYLTYPE}.
3019 When @code{YYLTYPE} is not defined, Bison uses a default structure type with
3032 @node Actions and Locations
3033 @subsection Actions and Locations
3034 @cindex location actions
3035 @cindex actions, location
3039 Actions are not only useful for defining language semantics, but also for
3040 describing the behavior of the output parser with locations.
3042 The most obvious way for building locations of syntactic groupings is very
3043 similar to the way semantic values are computed. In a given rule, several
3044 constructs can be used to access the locations of the elements being matched.
3045 The location of the @var{n}th component of the right hand side is
3046 @code{@@@var{n}}, while the location of the left hand side grouping is
3049 Here is a basic example using the default data type for locations:
3056 @@$.first_column = @@1.first_column;
3057 @@$.first_line = @@1.first_line;
3058 @@$.last_column = @@3.last_column;
3059 @@$.last_line = @@3.last_line;
3065 printf("Division by zero, l%d,c%d-l%d,c%d",
3066 @@3.first_line, @@3.first_column,
3067 @@3.last_line, @@3.last_column);
3073 As for semantic values, there is a default action for locations that is
3074 run each time a rule is matched. It sets the beginning of @code{@@$} to the
3075 beginning of the first symbol, and the end of @code{@@$} to the end of the
3078 With this default action, the location tracking can be fully automatic. The
3079 example above simply rewrites this way:
3091 printf("Division by zero, l%d,c%d-l%d,c%d",
3092 @@3.first_line, @@3.first_column,
3093 @@3.last_line, @@3.last_column);
3099 @node Location Default Action
3100 @subsection Default Action for Locations
3101 @vindex YYLLOC_DEFAULT
3103 Actually, actions are not the best place to compute locations. Since
3104 locations are much more general than semantic values, there is room in
3105 the output parser to redefine the default action to take for each
3106 rule. The @code{YYLLOC_DEFAULT} macro is invoked each time a rule is
3107 matched, before the associated action is run.
3109 Most of the time, this macro is general enough to suppress location
3110 dedicated code from semantic actions.
3112 The @code{YYLLOC_DEFAULT} macro takes three parameters. The first one is
3113 the location of the grouping (the result of the computation). The second one
3114 is an array holding locations of all right hand side elements of the rule
3115 being matched. The last one is the size of the right hand side rule.
3117 By default, it is defined this way for simple @acronym{LALR}(1) parsers:
3121 #define YYLLOC_DEFAULT(Current, Rhs, N) \
3122 Current.first_line = Rhs[1].first_line; \
3123 Current.first_column = Rhs[1].first_column; \
3124 Current.last_line = Rhs[N].last_line; \
3125 Current.last_column = Rhs[N].last_column;
3130 and like this for @acronym{GLR} parsers:
3134 #define YYLLOC_DEFAULT(Current, Rhs, N) \
3135 Current.first_line = YYRHSLOC(Rhs,1).first_line; \
3136 Current.first_column = YYRHSLOC(Rhs,1).first_column; \
3137 Current.last_line = YYRHSLOC(Rhs,N).last_line; \
3138 Current.last_column = YYRHSLOC(Rhs,N).last_column;
3142 When defining @code{YYLLOC_DEFAULT}, you should consider that:
3146 All arguments are free of side-effects. However, only the first one (the
3147 result) should be modified by @code{YYLLOC_DEFAULT}.
3150 For consistency with semantic actions, valid indexes for the location
3151 array range from 1 to @var{n}.
3155 @section Bison Declarations
3156 @cindex declarations, Bison
3157 @cindex Bison declarations
3159 The @dfn{Bison declarations} section of a Bison grammar defines the symbols
3160 used in formulating the grammar and the data types of semantic values.
3163 All token type names (but not single-character literal tokens such as
3164 @code{'+'} and @code{'*'}) must be declared. Nonterminal symbols must be
3165 declared if you need to specify which data type to use for the semantic
3166 value (@pxref{Multiple Types, ,More Than One Value Type}).
3168 The first rule in the file also specifies the start symbol, by default.
3169 If you want some other symbol to be the start symbol, you must declare
3170 it explicitly (@pxref{Language and Grammar, ,Languages and Context-Free
3174 * Token Decl:: Declaring terminal symbols.
3175 * Precedence Decl:: Declaring terminals with precedence and associativity.
3176 * Union Decl:: Declaring the set of all semantic value types.
3177 * Type Decl:: Declaring the choice of type for a nonterminal symbol.
3178 * Expect Decl:: Suppressing warnings about shift/reduce conflicts.
3179 * Start Decl:: Specifying the start symbol.
3180 * Pure Decl:: Requesting a reentrant parser.
3181 * Decl Summary:: Table of all Bison declarations.
3185 @subsection Token Type Names
3186 @cindex declaring token type names
3187 @cindex token type names, declaring
3188 @cindex declaring literal string tokens
3191 The basic way to declare a token type name (terminal symbol) is as follows:
3197 Bison will convert this into a @code{#define} directive in
3198 the parser, so that the function @code{yylex} (if it is in this file)
3199 can use the name @var{name} to stand for this token type's code.
3201 Alternatively, you can use @code{%left}, @code{%right}, or
3202 @code{%nonassoc} instead of @code{%token}, if you wish to specify
3203 associativity and precedence. @xref{Precedence Decl, ,Operator
3206 You can explicitly specify the numeric code for a token type by appending
3207 an integer value in the field immediately following the token name:
3214 It is generally best, however, to let Bison choose the numeric codes for
3215 all token types. Bison will automatically select codes that don't conflict
3216 with each other or with normal characters.
3218 In the event that the stack type is a union, you must augment the
3219 @code{%token} or other token declaration to include the data type
3220 alternative delimited by angle-brackets (@pxref{Multiple Types, ,More
3221 Than One Value Type}).
3227 %union @{ /* define stack type */
3231 %token <val> NUM /* define token NUM and its type */
3235 You can associate a literal string token with a token type name by
3236 writing the literal string at the end of a @code{%token}
3237 declaration which declares the name. For example:
3244 For example, a grammar for the C language might specify these names with
3245 equivalent literal string tokens:
3248 %token <operator> OR "||"
3249 %token <operator> LE 134 "<="
3254 Once you equate the literal string and the token name, you can use them
3255 interchangeably in further declarations or the grammar rules. The
3256 @code{yylex} function can use the token name or the literal string to
3257 obtain the token type code number (@pxref{Calling Convention}).
3259 @node Precedence Decl
3260 @subsection Operator Precedence
3261 @cindex precedence declarations
3262 @cindex declaring operator precedence
3263 @cindex operator precedence, declaring
3265 Use the @code{%left}, @code{%right} or @code{%nonassoc} declaration to
3266 declare a token and specify its precedence and associativity, all at
3267 once. These are called @dfn{precedence declarations}.
3268 @xref{Precedence, ,Operator Precedence}, for general information on
3269 operator precedence.
3271 The syntax of a precedence declaration is the same as that of
3272 @code{%token}: either
3275 %left @var{symbols}@dots{}
3282 %left <@var{type}> @var{symbols}@dots{}
3285 And indeed any of these declarations serves the purposes of @code{%token}.
3286 But in addition, they specify the associativity and relative precedence for
3287 all the @var{symbols}:
3291 The associativity of an operator @var{op} determines how repeated uses
3292 of the operator nest: whether @samp{@var{x} @var{op} @var{y} @var{op}
3293 @var{z}} is parsed by grouping @var{x} with @var{y} first or by
3294 grouping @var{y} with @var{z} first. @code{%left} specifies
3295 left-associativity (grouping @var{x} with @var{y} first) and
3296 @code{%right} specifies right-associativity (grouping @var{y} with
3297 @var{z} first). @code{%nonassoc} specifies no associativity, which
3298 means that @samp{@var{x} @var{op} @var{y} @var{op} @var{z}} is
3299 considered a syntax error.
3302 The precedence of an operator determines how it nests with other operators.
3303 All the tokens declared in a single precedence declaration have equal
3304 precedence and nest together according to their associativity.
3305 When two tokens declared in different precedence declarations associate,
3306 the one declared later has the higher precedence and is grouped first.
3310 @subsection The Collection of Value Types
3311 @cindex declaring value types
3312 @cindex value types, declaring
3315 The @code{%union} declaration specifies the entire collection of possible
3316 data types for semantic values. The keyword @code{%union} is followed by a
3317 pair of braces containing the same thing that goes inside a @code{union} in
3332 This says that the two alternative types are @code{double} and @code{symrec
3333 *}. They are given names @code{val} and @code{tptr}; these names are used
3334 in the @code{%token} and @code{%type} declarations to pick one of the types
3335 for a terminal or nonterminal symbol (@pxref{Type Decl, ,Nonterminal Symbols}).
3337 Note that, unlike making a @code{union} declaration in C, you do not write
3338 a semicolon after the closing brace.
3341 @subsection Nonterminal Symbols
3342 @cindex declaring value types, nonterminals
3343 @cindex value types, nonterminals, declaring
3347 When you use @code{%union} to specify multiple value types, you must
3348 declare the value type of each nonterminal symbol for which values are
3349 used. This is done with a @code{%type} declaration, like this:
3352 %type <@var{type}> @var{nonterminal}@dots{}
3356 Here @var{nonterminal} is the name of a nonterminal symbol, and
3357 @var{type} is the name given in the @code{%union} to the alternative
3358 that you want (@pxref{Union Decl, ,The Collection of Value Types}). You
3359 can give any number of nonterminal symbols in the same @code{%type}
3360 declaration, if they have the same value type. Use spaces to separate
3363 You can also declare the value type of a terminal symbol. To do this,
3364 use the same @code{<@var{type}>} construction in a declaration for the
3365 terminal symbol. All kinds of token declarations allow
3366 @code{<@var{type}>}.
3369 @subsection Suppressing Conflict Warnings
3370 @cindex suppressing conflict warnings
3371 @cindex preventing warnings about conflicts
3372 @cindex warnings, preventing
3373 @cindex conflicts, suppressing warnings of
3376 Bison normally warns if there are any conflicts in the grammar
3377 (@pxref{Shift/Reduce, ,Shift/Reduce Conflicts}), but most real grammars
3378 have harmless shift/reduce conflicts which are resolved in a predictable
3379 way and would be difficult to eliminate. It is desirable to suppress
3380 the warning about these conflicts unless the number of conflicts
3381 changes. You can do this with the @code{%expect} declaration.
3383 The declaration looks like this:
3389 Here @var{n} is a decimal integer. The declaration says there should be
3390 no warning if there are @var{n} shift/reduce conflicts and no
3391 reduce/reduce conflicts. An error, instead of the usual warning, is
3392 given if there are either more or fewer conflicts, or if there are any
3393 reduce/reduce conflicts.
3395 In general, using @code{%expect} involves these steps:
3399 Compile your grammar without @code{%expect}. Use the @samp{-v} option
3400 to get a verbose list of where the conflicts occur. Bison will also
3401 print the number of conflicts.
3404 Check each of the conflicts to make sure that Bison's default
3405 resolution is what you really want. If not, rewrite the grammar and
3406 go back to the beginning.
3409 Add an @code{%expect} declaration, copying the number @var{n} from the
3410 number which Bison printed.
3413 Now Bison will stop annoying you about the conflicts you have checked, but
3414 it will warn you again if changes in the grammar result in additional
3418 @subsection The Start-Symbol
3419 @cindex declaring the start symbol
3420 @cindex start symbol, declaring
3421 @cindex default start symbol
3424 Bison assumes by default that the start symbol for the grammar is the first
3425 nonterminal specified in the grammar specification section. The programmer
3426 may override this restriction with the @code{%start} declaration as follows:
3433 @subsection A Pure (Reentrant) Parser
3434 @cindex reentrant parser
3436 @findex %pure-parser
3438 A @dfn{reentrant} program is one which does not alter in the course of
3439 execution; in other words, it consists entirely of @dfn{pure} (read-only)
3440 code. Reentrancy is important whenever asynchronous execution is possible;
3441 for example, a non-reentrant program may not be safe to call from a signal
3442 handler. In systems with multiple threads of control, a non-reentrant
3443 program must be called only within interlocks.
3445 Normally, Bison generates a parser which is not reentrant. This is
3446 suitable for most uses, and it permits compatibility with Yacc. (The
3447 standard Yacc interfaces are inherently nonreentrant, because they use
3448 statically allocated variables for communication with @code{yylex},
3449 including @code{yylval} and @code{yylloc}.)
3451 Alternatively, you can generate a pure, reentrant parser. The Bison
3452 declaration @code{%pure-parser} says that you want the parser to be
3453 reentrant. It looks like this:
3459 The result is that the communication variables @code{yylval} and
3460 @code{yylloc} become local variables in @code{yyparse}, and a different
3461 calling convention is used for the lexical analyzer function
3462 @code{yylex}. @xref{Pure Calling, ,Calling Conventions for Pure
3463 Parsers}, for the details of this. The variable @code{yynerrs} also
3464 becomes local in @code{yyparse} (@pxref{Error Reporting, ,The Error
3465 Reporting Function @code{yyerror}}). The convention for calling
3466 @code{yyparse} itself is unchanged.
3468 Whether the parser is pure has nothing to do with the grammar rules.
3469 You can generate either a pure parser or a nonreentrant parser from any
3473 @subsection Bison Declaration Summary
3474 @cindex Bison declaration summary
3475 @cindex declaration summary
3476 @cindex summary, Bison declaration
3478 Here is a summary of the declarations used to define a grammar:
3482 Declare the collection of data types that semantic values may have
3483 (@pxref{Union Decl, ,The Collection of Value Types}).
3486 Declare a terminal symbol (token type name) with no precedence
3487 or associativity specified (@pxref{Token Decl, ,Token Type Names}).
3490 Declare a terminal symbol (token type name) that is right-associative
3491 (@pxref{Precedence Decl, ,Operator Precedence}).
3494 Declare a terminal symbol (token type name) that is left-associative
3495 (@pxref{Precedence Decl, ,Operator Precedence}).
3498 Declare a terminal symbol (token type name) that is nonassociative
3499 (using it in a way that would be associative is a syntax error)
3500 (@pxref{Precedence Decl, ,Operator Precedence}).
3503 Declare the type of semantic values for a nonterminal symbol
3504 (@pxref{Type Decl, ,Nonterminal Symbols}).
3507 Specify the grammar's start symbol (@pxref{Start Decl, ,The
3511 Declare the expected number of shift-reduce conflicts
3512 (@pxref{Expect Decl, ,Suppressing Conflict Warnings}).
3517 In order to change the behavior of @command{bison}, use the following
3522 In the parser file, define the macro @code{YYDEBUG} to 1 if it is not
3523 already defined, so that the debugging facilities are compiled.
3524 @xref{Tracing, ,Tracing Your Parser}.
3527 Write an extra output file containing macro definitions for the token
3528 type names defined in the grammar and the semantic value type
3529 @code{YYSTYPE}, as well as a few @code{extern} variable declarations.
3531 If the parser output file is named @file{@var{name}.c} then this file
3532 is named @file{@var{name}.h}.
3534 This output file is essential if you wish to put the definition of
3535 @code{yylex} in a separate source file, because @code{yylex} needs to
3536 be able to refer to token type codes and the variable
3537 @code{yylval}. @xref{Token Values, ,Semantic Values of Tokens}.
3539 @item %file-prefix="@var{prefix}"
3540 Specify a prefix to use for all Bison output file names. The names are
3541 chosen as if the input file were named @file{@var{prefix}.y}.
3543 @c @item %header-extension
3544 @c Specify the extension of the parser header file generated when
3545 @c @code{%define} or @samp{-d} are used.
3547 @c For example, a grammar file named @file{foo.ypp} and containing a
3548 @c @code{%header-extension .hh} directive will produce a header file
3549 @c named @file{foo.tab.hh}
3552 Generate the code processing the locations (@pxref{Action Features,
3553 ,Special Features for Use in Actions}). This mode is enabled as soon as
3554 the grammar uses the special @samp{@@@var{n}} tokens, but if your
3555 grammar does not use it, using @samp{%locations} allows for more
3556 accurate parse error messages.
3558 @item %name-prefix="@var{prefix}"
3559 Rename the external symbols used in the parser so that they start with
3560 @var{prefix} instead of @samp{yy}. The precise list of symbols renamed
3561 is @code{yyparse}, @code{yylex}, @code{yyerror}, @code{yynerrs},
3562 @code{yylval}, @code{yychar}, @code{yydebug}, and possible
3563 @code{yylloc}. For example, if you use @samp{%name-prefix="c_"}, the
3564 names become @code{c_parse}, @code{c_lex}, and so on. @xref{Multiple
3565 Parsers, ,Multiple Parsers in the Same Program}.
3568 Do not include any C code in the parser file; generate tables only. The
3569 parser file contains just @code{#define} directives and static variable
3572 This option also tells Bison to write the C code for the grammar actions
3573 into a file named @file{@var{filename}.act}, in the form of a
3574 brace-surrounded body fit for a @code{switch} statement.
3577 Don't generate any @code{#line} preprocessor commands in the parser
3578 file. Ordinarily Bison writes these commands in the parser file so that
3579 the C compiler and debuggers will associate errors and object code with
3580 your source file (the grammar file). This directive causes them to
3581 associate errors with the parser file, treating it an independent source
3582 file in its own right.
3584 @item %output="@var{filename}"
3585 Specify the @var{filename} for the parser file.
3588 Request a pure (reentrant) parser program (@pxref{Pure Decl, ,A Pure
3589 (Reentrant) Parser}).
3591 @c @item %source-extension
3592 @c Specify the extension of the parser output file.
3594 @c For example, a grammar file named @file{foo.yy} and containing a
3595 @c @code{%source-extension .cpp} directive will produce a parser file
3596 @c named @file{foo.tab.cpp}
3599 Generate an array of token names in the parser file. The name of the
3600 array is @code{yytname}; @code{yytname[@var{i}]} is the name of the
3601 token whose internal Bison token code number is @var{i}. The first
3602 three elements of @code{yytname} are always @code{"$end"},
3603 @code{"error"}, and @code{"$undefined"}; after these come the symbols
3604 defined in the grammar file.
3606 For single-character literal tokens and literal string tokens, the name
3607 in the table includes the single-quote or double-quote characters: for
3608 example, @code{"'+'"} is a single-character literal and @code{"\"<=\""}
3609 is a literal string token. All the characters of the literal string
3610 token appear verbatim in the string found in the table; even
3611 double-quote characters are not escaped. For example, if the token
3612 consists of three characters @samp{*"*}, its string in @code{yytname}
3613 contains @samp{"*"*"}. (In C, that would be written as
3616 When you specify @code{%token-table}, Bison also generates macro
3617 definitions for macros @code{YYNTOKENS}, @code{YYNNTS}, and
3618 @code{YYNRULES}, and @code{YYNSTATES}:
3622 The highest token number, plus one.
3624 The number of nonterminal symbols.
3626 The number of grammar rules,
3628 The number of parser states (@pxref{Parser States}).
3632 Write an extra output file containing verbose descriptions of the
3633 parser states and what is done for each type of look-ahead token in
3634 that state. @xref{Understanding, , Understanding Your Parser}, for more
3640 Pretend the option @option{--yacc} was given, i.e., imitate Yacc,
3641 including its naming conventions. @xref{Bison Options}, for more.
3647 @node Multiple Parsers
3648 @section Multiple Parsers in the Same Program
3650 Most programs that use Bison parse only one language and therefore contain
3651 only one Bison parser. But what if you want to parse more than one
3652 language with the same program? Then you need to avoid a name conflict
3653 between different definitions of @code{yyparse}, @code{yylval}, and so on.
3655 The easy way to do this is to use the option @samp{-p @var{prefix}}
3656 (@pxref{Invocation, ,Invoking Bison}). This renames the interface
3657 functions and variables of the Bison parser to start with @var{prefix}
3658 instead of @samp{yy}. You can use this to give each parser distinct
3659 names that do not conflict.
3661 The precise list of symbols renamed is @code{yyparse}, @code{yylex},
3662 @code{yyerror}, @code{yynerrs}, @code{yylval}, @code{yychar} and
3663 @code{yydebug}. For example, if you use @samp{-p c}, the names become
3664 @code{cparse}, @code{clex}, and so on.
3666 @strong{All the other variables and macros associated with Bison are not
3667 renamed.} These others are not global; there is no conflict if the same
3668 name is used in different parsers. For example, @code{YYSTYPE} is not
3669 renamed, but defining this in different ways in different parsers causes
3670 no trouble (@pxref{Value Type, ,Data Types of Semantic Values}).
3672 The @samp{-p} option works by adding macro definitions to the beginning
3673 of the parser source file, defining @code{yyparse} as
3674 @code{@var{prefix}parse}, and so on. This effectively substitutes one
3675 name for the other in the entire parser file.
3678 @chapter Parser C-Language Interface
3679 @cindex C-language interface
3682 The Bison parser is actually a C function named @code{yyparse}. Here we
3683 describe the interface conventions of @code{yyparse} and the other
3684 functions that it needs to use.
3686 Keep in mind that the parser uses many C identifiers starting with
3687 @samp{yy} and @samp{YY} for internal purposes. If you use such an
3688 identifier (aside from those in this manual) in an action or in epilogue
3689 in the grammar file, you are likely to run into trouble.
3692 * Parser Function:: How to call @code{yyparse} and what it returns.
3693 * Lexical:: You must supply a function @code{yylex}
3695 * Error Reporting:: You must supply a function @code{yyerror}.
3696 * Action Features:: Special features for use in actions.
3699 @node Parser Function
3700 @section The Parser Function @code{yyparse}
3703 You call the function @code{yyparse} to cause parsing to occur. This
3704 function reads tokens, executes actions, and ultimately returns when it
3705 encounters end-of-input or an unrecoverable syntax error. You can also
3706 write an action which directs @code{yyparse} to return immediately
3707 without reading further.
3709 The value returned by @code{yyparse} is 0 if parsing was successful (return
3710 is due to end-of-input).
3712 The value is 1 if parsing failed (return is due to a syntax error).
3714 In an action, you can cause immediate return from @code{yyparse} by using
3720 Return immediately with value 0 (to report success).
3724 Return immediately with value 1 (to report failure).
3728 @section The Lexical Analyzer Function @code{yylex}
3730 @cindex lexical analyzer
3732 The @dfn{lexical analyzer} function, @code{yylex}, recognizes tokens from
3733 the input stream and returns them to the parser. Bison does not create
3734 this function automatically; you must write it so that @code{yyparse} can
3735 call it. The function is sometimes referred to as a lexical scanner.
3737 In simple programs, @code{yylex} is often defined at the end of the Bison
3738 grammar file. If @code{yylex} is defined in a separate source file, you
3739 need to arrange for the token-type macro definitions to be available there.
3740 To do this, use the @samp{-d} option when you run Bison, so that it will
3741 write these macro definitions into a separate header file
3742 @file{@var{name}.tab.h} which you can include in the other source files
3743 that need it. @xref{Invocation, ,Invoking Bison}.
3746 * Calling Convention:: How @code{yyparse} calls @code{yylex}.
3747 * Token Values:: How @code{yylex} must return the semantic value
3748 of the token it has read.
3749 * Token Positions:: How @code{yylex} must return the text position
3750 (line number, etc.) of the token, if the
3752 * Pure Calling:: How the calling convention differs
3753 in a pure parser (@pxref{Pure Decl, ,A Pure (Reentrant) Parser}).
3756 @node Calling Convention
3757 @subsection Calling Convention for @code{yylex}
3759 The value that @code{yylex} returns must be the positive numeric code
3760 for the type of token it has just found; a zero or negative value
3761 signifies end-of-input.
3763 When a token is referred to in the grammar rules by a name, that name
3764 in the parser file becomes a C macro whose definition is the proper
3765 numeric code for that token type. So @code{yylex} can use the name
3766 to indicate that type. @xref{Symbols}.
3768 When a token is referred to in the grammar rules by a character literal,
3769 the numeric code for that character is also the code for the token type.
3770 So @code{yylex} can simply return that character code, possibly converted
3771 to @code{unsigned char} to avoid sign-extension. The null character
3772 must not be used this way, because its code is zero and that
3773 signifies end-of-input.
3775 Here is an example showing these things:
3782 if (c == EOF) /* Detect end-of-input. */
3785 if (c == '+' || c == '-')
3786 return c; /* Assume token type for `+' is '+'. */
3788 return INT; /* Return the type of the token. */
3794 This interface has been designed so that the output from the @code{lex}
3795 utility can be used without change as the definition of @code{yylex}.
3797 If the grammar uses literal string tokens, there are two ways that
3798 @code{yylex} can determine the token type codes for them:
3802 If the grammar defines symbolic token names as aliases for the
3803 literal string tokens, @code{yylex} can use these symbolic names like
3804 all others. In this case, the use of the literal string tokens in
3805 the grammar file has no effect on @code{yylex}.
3808 @code{yylex} can find the multicharacter token in the @code{yytname}
3809 table. The index of the token in the table is the token type's code.
3810 The name of a multicharacter token is recorded in @code{yytname} with a
3811 double-quote, the token's characters, and another double-quote. The
3812 token's characters are not escaped in any way; they appear verbatim in
3813 the contents of the string in the table.
3815 Here's code for looking up a token in @code{yytname}, assuming that the
3816 characters of the token are stored in @code{token_buffer}.
3819 for (i = 0; i < YYNTOKENS; i++)
3822 && yytname[i][0] == '"'
3823 && ! strncmp (yytname[i] + 1, token_buffer,
3824 strlen (token_buffer))
3825 && yytname[i][strlen (token_buffer) + 1] == '"'
3826 && yytname[i][strlen (token_buffer) + 2] == 0)
3831 The @code{yytname} table is generated only if you use the
3832 @code{%token-table} declaration. @xref{Decl Summary}.
3836 @subsection Semantic Values of Tokens
3839 In an ordinary (non-reentrant) parser, the semantic value of the token must
3840 be stored into the global variable @code{yylval}. When you are using
3841 just one data type for semantic values, @code{yylval} has that type.
3842 Thus, if the type is @code{int} (the default), you might write this in
3848 yylval = value; /* Put value onto Bison stack. */
3849 return INT; /* Return the type of the token. */
3854 When you are using multiple data types, @code{yylval}'s type is a union
3855 made from the @code{%union} declaration (@pxref{Union Decl, ,The
3856 Collection of Value Types}). So when you store a token's value, you
3857 must use the proper member of the union. If the @code{%union}
3858 declaration looks like this:
3871 then the code in @code{yylex} might look like this:
3876 yylval.intval = value; /* Put value onto Bison stack. */
3877 return INT; /* Return the type of the token. */
3882 @node Token Positions
3883 @subsection Textual Positions of Tokens
3886 If you are using the @samp{@@@var{n}}-feature (@pxref{Locations, ,
3887 Tracking Locations}) in actions to keep track of the
3888 textual locations of tokens and groupings, then you must provide this
3889 information in @code{yylex}. The function @code{yyparse} expects to
3890 find the textual location of a token just parsed in the global variable
3891 @code{yylloc}. So @code{yylex} must store the proper data in that
3894 By default, the value of @code{yylloc} is a structure and you need only
3895 initialize the members that are going to be used by the actions. The
3896 four members are called @code{first_line}, @code{first_column},
3897 @code{last_line} and @code{last_column}. Note that the use of this
3898 feature makes the parser noticeably slower.
3901 The data type of @code{yylloc} has the name @code{YYLTYPE}.
3904 @subsection Calling Conventions for Pure Parsers
3906 When you use the Bison declaration @code{%pure-parser} to request a
3907 pure, reentrant parser, the global communication variables @code{yylval}
3908 and @code{yylloc} cannot be used. (@xref{Pure Decl, ,A Pure (Reentrant)
3909 Parser}.) In such parsers the two global variables are replaced by
3910 pointers passed as arguments to @code{yylex}. You must declare them as
3911 shown here, and pass the information back by storing it through those
3916 yylex (YYSTYPE *lvalp, YYLTYPE *llocp)
3919 *lvalp = value; /* Put value onto Bison stack. */
3920 return INT; /* Return the type of the token. */
3925 If the grammar file does not use the @samp{@@} constructs to refer to
3926 textual positions, then the type @code{YYLTYPE} will not be defined. In
3927 this case, omit the second argument; @code{yylex} will be called with
3930 @vindex YYPARSE_PARAM
3931 If you use a reentrant parser, you can optionally pass additional
3932 parameter information to it in a reentrant way. To do so, define the
3933 macro @code{YYPARSE_PARAM} as a variable name. This modifies the
3934 @code{yyparse} function to accept one argument, of type @code{void *},
3937 When you call @code{yyparse}, pass the address of an object, casting the
3938 address to @code{void *}. The grammar actions can refer to the contents
3939 of the object by casting the pointer value back to its proper type and
3940 then dereferencing it. Here's an example. Write this in the parser:
3944 struct parser_control
3950 #define YYPARSE_PARAM parm
3955 Then call the parser like this:
3958 struct parser_control
3967 struct parser_control foo;
3968 @dots{} /* @r{Store proper data in @code{foo}.} */
3969 value = yyparse ((void *) &foo);
3975 In the grammar actions, use expressions like this to refer to the data:
3978 ((struct parser_control *) parm)->randomness
3982 If you wish to pass the additional parameter data to @code{yylex},
3983 define the macro @code{YYLEX_PARAM} just like @code{YYPARSE_PARAM}, as
3988 struct parser_control
3994 #define YYPARSE_PARAM parm
3995 #define YYLEX_PARAM parm
3999 You should then define @code{yylex} to accept one additional
4000 argument---the value of @code{parm}. (This makes either two or three
4001 arguments in total, depending on whether an argument of type
4002 @code{YYLTYPE} is passed.) You can declare the argument as a pointer to
4003 the proper object type, or you can declare it as @code{void *} and
4004 access the contents as shown above.
4006 You can use @samp{%pure-parser} to request a reentrant parser without
4007 also using @code{YYPARSE_PARAM}. Then you should call @code{yyparse}
4008 with no arguments, as usual.
4010 @node Error Reporting
4011 @section The Error Reporting Function @code{yyerror}
4012 @cindex error reporting function
4015 @cindex syntax error
4017 The Bison parser detects a @dfn{parse error} or @dfn{syntax error}
4018 whenever it reads a token which cannot satisfy any syntax rule. An
4019 action in the grammar can also explicitly proclaim an error, using the
4020 macro @code{YYERROR} (@pxref{Action Features, ,Special Features for Use
4023 The Bison parser expects to report the error by calling an error
4024 reporting function named @code{yyerror}, which you must supply. It is
4025 called by @code{yyparse} whenever a syntax error is found, and it
4026 receives one argument. For a parse error, the string is normally
4027 @w{@code{"parse error"}}.
4029 @findex YYERROR_VERBOSE
4030 If you define the macro @code{YYERROR_VERBOSE} in the Bison declarations
4031 section (@pxref{Bison Declarations, ,The Bison Declarations Section}),
4032 then Bison provides a more verbose and specific error message string
4033 instead of just plain @w{@code{"parse error"}}. It doesn't matter what
4034 definition you use for @code{YYERROR_VERBOSE}, just whether you define
4037 The parser can detect one other kind of error: stack overflow. This
4038 happens when the input contains constructions that are very deeply
4039 nested. It isn't likely you will encounter this, since the Bison
4040 parser extends its stack automatically up to a very large limit. But
4041 if overflow happens, @code{yyparse} calls @code{yyerror} in the usual
4042 fashion, except that the argument string is @w{@code{"parser stack
4045 The following definition suffices in simple programs:
4054 fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", s);
4059 After @code{yyerror} returns to @code{yyparse}, the latter will attempt
4060 error recovery if you have written suitable error recovery grammar rules
4061 (@pxref{Error Recovery}). If recovery is impossible, @code{yyparse} will
4062 immediately return 1.
4065 The variable @code{yynerrs} contains the number of syntax errors
4066 encountered so far. Normally this variable is global; but if you
4067 request a pure parser (@pxref{Pure Decl, ,A Pure (Reentrant) Parser})
4068 then it is a local variable which only the actions can access.
4070 @node Action Features
4071 @section Special Features for Use in Actions
4072 @cindex summary, action features
4073 @cindex action features summary
4075 Here is a table of Bison constructs, variables and macros that
4076 are useful in actions.
4080 Acts like a variable that contains the semantic value for the
4081 grouping made by the current rule. @xref{Actions}.
4084 Acts like a variable that contains the semantic value for the
4085 @var{n}th component of the current rule. @xref{Actions}.
4087 @item $<@var{typealt}>$
4088 Like @code{$$} but specifies alternative @var{typealt} in the union
4089 specified by the @code{%union} declaration. @xref{Action Types, ,Data
4090 Types of Values in Actions}.
4092 @item $<@var{typealt}>@var{n}
4093 Like @code{$@var{n}} but specifies alternative @var{typealt} in the
4094 union specified by the @code{%union} declaration.
4095 @xref{Action Types, ,Data Types of Values in Actions}.
4098 Return immediately from @code{yyparse}, indicating failure.
4099 @xref{Parser Function, ,The Parser Function @code{yyparse}}.
4102 Return immediately from @code{yyparse}, indicating success.
4103 @xref{Parser Function, ,The Parser Function @code{yyparse}}.
4105 @item YYBACKUP (@var{token}, @var{value});
4107 Unshift a token. This macro is allowed only for rules that reduce
4108 a single value, and only when there is no look-ahead token.
4109 It is also disallowed in @acronym{GLR} parsers.
4110 It installs a look-ahead token with token type @var{token} and
4111 semantic value @var{value}; then it discards the value that was
4112 going to be reduced by this rule.
4114 If the macro is used when it is not valid, such as when there is
4115 a look-ahead token already, then it reports a syntax error with
4116 a message @samp{cannot back up} and performs ordinary error
4119 In either case, the rest of the action is not executed.
4123 Value stored in @code{yychar} when there is no look-ahead token.
4127 Cause an immediate syntax error. This statement initiates error
4128 recovery just as if the parser itself had detected an error; however, it
4129 does not call @code{yyerror}, and does not print any message. If you
4130 want to print an error message, call @code{yyerror} explicitly before
4131 the @samp{YYERROR;} statement. @xref{Error Recovery}.
4134 This macro stands for an expression that has the value 1 when the parser
4135 is recovering from a syntax error, and 0 the rest of the time.
4136 @xref{Error Recovery}.
4139 Variable containing the current look-ahead token. (In a pure parser,
4140 this is actually a local variable within @code{yyparse}.) When there is
4141 no look-ahead token, the value @code{YYEMPTY} is stored in the variable.
4142 @xref{Look-Ahead, ,Look-Ahead Tokens}.
4145 Discard the current look-ahead token. This is useful primarily in
4146 error rules. @xref{Error Recovery}.
4149 Resume generating error messages immediately for subsequent syntax
4150 errors. This is useful primarily in error rules.
4151 @xref{Error Recovery}.
4155 Acts like a structure variable containing information on the textual position
4156 of the grouping made by the current rule. @xref{Locations, ,
4157 Tracking Locations}.
4159 @c Check if those paragraphs are still useful or not.
4163 @c int first_line, last_line;
4164 @c int first_column, last_column;
4168 @c Thus, to get the starting line number of the third component, you would
4169 @c use @samp{@@3.first_line}.
4171 @c In order for the members of this structure to contain valid information,
4172 @c you must make @code{yylex} supply this information about each token.
4173 @c If you need only certain members, then @code{yylex} need only fill in
4176 @c The use of this feature makes the parser noticeably slower.
4180 Acts like a structure variable containing information on the textual position
4181 of the @var{n}th component of the current rule. @xref{Locations, ,
4182 Tracking Locations}.
4187 @chapter The Bison Parser Algorithm
4188 @cindex Bison parser algorithm
4189 @cindex algorithm of parser
4192 @cindex parser stack
4193 @cindex stack, parser
4195 As Bison reads tokens, it pushes them onto a stack along with their
4196 semantic values. The stack is called the @dfn{parser stack}. Pushing a
4197 token is traditionally called @dfn{shifting}.
4199 For example, suppose the infix calculator has read @samp{1 + 5 *}, with a
4200 @samp{3} to come. The stack will have four elements, one for each token
4203 But the stack does not always have an element for each token read. When
4204 the last @var{n} tokens and groupings shifted match the components of a
4205 grammar rule, they can be combined according to that rule. This is called
4206 @dfn{reduction}. Those tokens and groupings are replaced on the stack by a
4207 single grouping whose symbol is the result (left hand side) of that rule.
4208 Running the rule's action is part of the process of reduction, because this
4209 is what computes the semantic value of the resulting grouping.
4211 For example, if the infix calculator's parser stack contains this:
4218 and the next input token is a newline character, then the last three
4219 elements can be reduced to 15 via the rule:
4222 expr: expr '*' expr;
4226 Then the stack contains just these three elements:
4233 At this point, another reduction can be made, resulting in the single value
4234 16. Then the newline token can be shifted.
4236 The parser tries, by shifts and reductions, to reduce the entire input down
4237 to a single grouping whose symbol is the grammar's start-symbol
4238 (@pxref{Language and Grammar, ,Languages and Context-Free Grammars}).
4240 This kind of parser is known in the literature as a bottom-up parser.
4243 * Look-Ahead:: Parser looks one token ahead when deciding what to do.
4244 * Shift/Reduce:: Conflicts: when either shifting or reduction is valid.
4245 * Precedence:: Operator precedence works by resolving conflicts.
4246 * Contextual Precedence:: When an operator's precedence depends on context.
4247 * Parser States:: The parser is a finite-state-machine with stack.
4248 * Reduce/Reduce:: When two rules are applicable in the same situation.
4249 * Mystery Conflicts:: Reduce/reduce conflicts that look unjustified.
4250 * Generalized LR Parsing:: Parsing arbitrary context-free grammars.
4251 * Stack Overflow:: What happens when stack gets full. How to avoid it.
4255 @section Look-Ahead Tokens
4256 @cindex look-ahead token
4258 The Bison parser does @emph{not} always reduce immediately as soon as the
4259 last @var{n} tokens and groupings match a rule. This is because such a
4260 simple strategy is inadequate to handle most languages. Instead, when a
4261 reduction is possible, the parser sometimes ``looks ahead'' at the next
4262 token in order to decide what to do.
4264 When a token is read, it is not immediately shifted; first it becomes the
4265 @dfn{look-ahead token}, which is not on the stack. Now the parser can
4266 perform one or more reductions of tokens and groupings on the stack, while
4267 the look-ahead token remains off to the side. When no more reductions
4268 should take place, the look-ahead token is shifted onto the stack. This
4269 does not mean that all possible reductions have been done; depending on the
4270 token type of the look-ahead token, some rules may choose to delay their
4273 Here is a simple case where look-ahead is needed. These three rules define
4274 expressions which contain binary addition operators and postfix unary
4275 factorial operators (@samp{!}), and allow parentheses for grouping.
4292 Suppose that the tokens @w{@samp{1 + 2}} have been read and shifted; what
4293 should be done? If the following token is @samp{)}, then the first three
4294 tokens must be reduced to form an @code{expr}. This is the only valid
4295 course, because shifting the @samp{)} would produce a sequence of symbols
4296 @w{@code{term ')'}}, and no rule allows this.
4298 If the following token is @samp{!}, then it must be shifted immediately so
4299 that @w{@samp{2 !}} can be reduced to make a @code{term}. If instead the
4300 parser were to reduce before shifting, @w{@samp{1 + 2}} would become an
4301 @code{expr}. It would then be impossible to shift the @samp{!} because
4302 doing so would produce on the stack the sequence of symbols @code{expr
4303 '!'}. No rule allows that sequence.
4306 The current look-ahead token is stored in the variable @code{yychar}.
4307 @xref{Action Features, ,Special Features for Use in Actions}.
4310 @section Shift/Reduce Conflicts
4312 @cindex shift/reduce conflicts
4313 @cindex dangling @code{else}
4314 @cindex @code{else}, dangling
4316 Suppose we are parsing a language which has if-then and if-then-else
4317 statements, with a pair of rules like this:
4323 | IF expr THEN stmt ELSE stmt
4329 Here we assume that @code{IF}, @code{THEN} and @code{ELSE} are
4330 terminal symbols for specific keyword tokens.
4332 When the @code{ELSE} token is read and becomes the look-ahead token, the
4333 contents of the stack (assuming the input is valid) are just right for
4334 reduction by the first rule. But it is also legitimate to shift the
4335 @code{ELSE}, because that would lead to eventual reduction by the second
4338 This situation, where either a shift or a reduction would be valid, is
4339 called a @dfn{shift/reduce conflict}. Bison is designed to resolve
4340 these conflicts by choosing to shift, unless otherwise directed by
4341 operator precedence declarations. To see the reason for this, let's
4342 contrast it with the other alternative.
4344 Since the parser prefers to shift the @code{ELSE}, the result is to attach
4345 the else-clause to the innermost if-statement, making these two inputs
4349 if x then if y then win (); else lose;
4351 if x then do; if y then win (); else lose; end;
4354 But if the parser chose to reduce when possible rather than shift, the
4355 result would be to attach the else-clause to the outermost if-statement,
4356 making these two inputs equivalent:
4359 if x then if y then win (); else lose;
4361 if x then do; if y then win (); end; else lose;
4364 The conflict exists because the grammar as written is ambiguous: either
4365 parsing of the simple nested if-statement is legitimate. The established
4366 convention is that these ambiguities are resolved by attaching the
4367 else-clause to the innermost if-statement; this is what Bison accomplishes
4368 by choosing to shift rather than reduce. (It would ideally be cleaner to
4369 write an unambiguous grammar, but that is very hard to do in this case.)
4370 This particular ambiguity was first encountered in the specifications of
4371 Algol 60 and is called the ``dangling @code{else}'' ambiguity.
4373 To avoid warnings from Bison about predictable, legitimate shift/reduce
4374 conflicts, use the @code{%expect @var{n}} declaration. There will be no
4375 warning as long as the number of shift/reduce conflicts is exactly @var{n}.
4376 @xref{Expect Decl, ,Suppressing Conflict Warnings}.
4378 The definition of @code{if_stmt} above is solely to blame for the
4379 conflict, but the conflict does not actually appear without additional
4380 rules. Here is a complete Bison input file that actually manifests the
4385 %token IF THEN ELSE variable
4397 | IF expr THEN stmt ELSE stmt
4406 @section Operator Precedence
4407 @cindex operator precedence
4408 @cindex precedence of operators
4410 Another situation where shift/reduce conflicts appear is in arithmetic
4411 expressions. Here shifting is not always the preferred resolution; the
4412 Bison declarations for operator precedence allow you to specify when to
4413 shift and when to reduce.
4416 * Why Precedence:: An example showing why precedence is needed.
4417 * Using Precedence:: How to specify precedence in Bison grammars.
4418 * Precedence Examples:: How these features are used in the previous example.
4419 * How Precedence:: How they work.
4422 @node Why Precedence
4423 @subsection When Precedence is Needed
4425 Consider the following ambiguous grammar fragment (ambiguous because the
4426 input @w{@samp{1 - 2 * 3}} can be parsed in two different ways):
4440 Suppose the parser has seen the tokens @samp{1}, @samp{-} and @samp{2};
4441 should it reduce them via the rule for the subtraction operator? It
4442 depends on the next token. Of course, if the next token is @samp{)}, we
4443 must reduce; shifting is invalid because no single rule can reduce the
4444 token sequence @w{@samp{- 2 )}} or anything starting with that. But if
4445 the next token is @samp{*} or @samp{<}, we have a choice: either
4446 shifting or reduction would allow the parse to complete, but with
4449 To decide which one Bison should do, we must consider the results. If
4450 the next operator token @var{op} is shifted, then it must be reduced
4451 first in order to permit another opportunity to reduce the difference.
4452 The result is (in effect) @w{@samp{1 - (2 @var{op} 3)}}. On the other
4453 hand, if the subtraction is reduced before shifting @var{op}, the result
4454 is @w{@samp{(1 - 2) @var{op} 3}}. Clearly, then, the choice of shift or
4455 reduce should depend on the relative precedence of the operators
4456 @samp{-} and @var{op}: @samp{*} should be shifted first, but not
4459 @cindex associativity
4460 What about input such as @w{@samp{1 - 2 - 5}}; should this be
4461 @w{@samp{(1 - 2) - 5}} or should it be @w{@samp{1 - (2 - 5)}}? For most
4462 operators we prefer the former, which is called @dfn{left association}.
4463 The latter alternative, @dfn{right association}, is desirable for
4464 assignment operators. The choice of left or right association is a
4465 matter of whether the parser chooses to shift or reduce when the stack
4466 contains @w{@samp{1 - 2}} and the look-ahead token is @samp{-}: shifting
4467 makes right-associativity.
4469 @node Using Precedence
4470 @subsection Specifying Operator Precedence
4475 Bison allows you to specify these choices with the operator precedence
4476 declarations @code{%left} and @code{%right}. Each such declaration
4477 contains a list of tokens, which are operators whose precedence and
4478 associativity is being declared. The @code{%left} declaration makes all
4479 those operators left-associative and the @code{%right} declaration makes
4480 them right-associative. A third alternative is @code{%nonassoc}, which
4481 declares that it is a syntax error to find the same operator twice ``in a
4484 The relative precedence of different operators is controlled by the
4485 order in which they are declared. The first @code{%left} or
4486 @code{%right} declaration in the file declares the operators whose
4487 precedence is lowest, the next such declaration declares the operators
4488 whose precedence is a little higher, and so on.
4490 @node Precedence Examples
4491 @subsection Precedence Examples
4493 In our example, we would want the following declarations:
4501 In a more complete example, which supports other operators as well, we
4502 would declare them in groups of equal precedence. For example, @code{'+'} is
4503 declared with @code{'-'}:
4506 %left '<' '>' '=' NE LE GE
4512 (Here @code{NE} and so on stand for the operators for ``not equal''
4513 and so on. We assume that these tokens are more than one character long
4514 and therefore are represented by names, not character literals.)
4516 @node How Precedence
4517 @subsection How Precedence Works
4519 The first effect of the precedence declarations is to assign precedence
4520 levels to the terminal symbols declared. The second effect is to assign
4521 precedence levels to certain rules: each rule gets its precedence from
4522 the last terminal symbol mentioned in the components. (You can also
4523 specify explicitly the precedence of a rule. @xref{Contextual
4524 Precedence, ,Context-Dependent Precedence}.)
4526 Finally, the resolution of conflicts works by comparing the precedence
4527 of the rule being considered with that of the look-ahead token. If the
4528 token's precedence is higher, the choice is to shift. If the rule's
4529 precedence is higher, the choice is to reduce. If they have equal
4530 precedence, the choice is made based on the associativity of that
4531 precedence level. The verbose output file made by @samp{-v}
4532 (@pxref{Invocation, ,Invoking Bison}) says how each conflict was
4535 Not all rules and not all tokens have precedence. If either the rule or
4536 the look-ahead token has no precedence, then the default is to shift.
4538 @node Contextual Precedence
4539 @section Context-Dependent Precedence
4540 @cindex context-dependent precedence
4541 @cindex unary operator precedence
4542 @cindex precedence, context-dependent
4543 @cindex precedence, unary operator
4546 Often the precedence of an operator depends on the context. This sounds
4547 outlandish at first, but it is really very common. For example, a minus
4548 sign typically has a very high precedence as a unary operator, and a
4549 somewhat lower precedence (lower than multiplication) as a binary operator.
4551 The Bison precedence declarations, @code{%left}, @code{%right} and
4552 @code{%nonassoc}, can only be used once for a given token; so a token has
4553 only one precedence declared in this way. For context-dependent
4554 precedence, you need to use an additional mechanism: the @code{%prec}
4557 The @code{%prec} modifier declares the precedence of a particular rule by
4558 specifying a terminal symbol whose precedence should be used for that rule.
4559 It's not necessary for that symbol to appear otherwise in the rule. The
4560 modifier's syntax is:
4563 %prec @var{terminal-symbol}
4567 and it is written after the components of the rule. Its effect is to
4568 assign the rule the precedence of @var{terminal-symbol}, overriding
4569 the precedence that would be deduced for it in the ordinary way. The
4570 altered rule precedence then affects how conflicts involving that rule
4571 are resolved (@pxref{Precedence, ,Operator Precedence}).
4573 Here is how @code{%prec} solves the problem of unary minus. First, declare
4574 a precedence for a fictitious terminal symbol named @code{UMINUS}. There
4575 are no tokens of this type, but the symbol serves to stand for its
4585 Now the precedence of @code{UMINUS} can be used in specific rules:
4592 | '-' exp %prec UMINUS
4597 @section Parser States
4598 @cindex finite-state machine
4599 @cindex parser state
4600 @cindex state (of parser)
4602 The function @code{yyparse} is implemented using a finite-state machine.
4603 The values pushed on the parser stack are not simply token type codes; they
4604 represent the entire sequence of terminal and nonterminal symbols at or
4605 near the top of the stack. The current state collects all the information
4606 about previous input which is relevant to deciding what to do next.
4608 Each time a look-ahead token is read, the current parser state together
4609 with the type of look-ahead token are looked up in a table. This table
4610 entry can say, ``Shift the look-ahead token.'' In this case, it also
4611 specifies the new parser state, which is pushed onto the top of the
4612 parser stack. Or it can say, ``Reduce using rule number @var{n}.''
4613 This means that a certain number of tokens or groupings are taken off
4614 the top of the stack, and replaced by one grouping. In other words,
4615 that number of states are popped from the stack, and one new state is
4618 There is one other alternative: the table can say that the look-ahead token
4619 is erroneous in the current state. This causes error processing to begin
4620 (@pxref{Error Recovery}).
4623 @section Reduce/Reduce Conflicts
4624 @cindex reduce/reduce conflict
4625 @cindex conflicts, reduce/reduce
4627 A reduce/reduce conflict occurs if there are two or more rules that apply
4628 to the same sequence of input. This usually indicates a serious error
4631 For example, here is an erroneous attempt to define a sequence
4632 of zero or more @code{word} groupings.
4635 sequence: /* empty */
4636 @{ printf ("empty sequence\n"); @}
4639 @{ printf ("added word %s\n", $2); @}
4642 maybeword: /* empty */
4643 @{ printf ("empty maybeword\n"); @}
4645 @{ printf ("single word %s\n", $1); @}
4650 The error is an ambiguity: there is more than one way to parse a single
4651 @code{word} into a @code{sequence}. It could be reduced to a
4652 @code{maybeword} and then into a @code{sequence} via the second rule.
4653 Alternatively, nothing-at-all could be reduced into a @code{sequence}
4654 via the first rule, and this could be combined with the @code{word}
4655 using the third rule for @code{sequence}.
4657 There is also more than one way to reduce nothing-at-all into a
4658 @code{sequence}. This can be done directly via the first rule,
4659 or indirectly via @code{maybeword} and then the second rule.
4661 You might think that this is a distinction without a difference, because it
4662 does not change whether any particular input is valid or not. But it does
4663 affect which actions are run. One parsing order runs the second rule's
4664 action; the other runs the first rule's action and the third rule's action.
4665 In this example, the output of the program changes.
4667 Bison resolves a reduce/reduce conflict by choosing to use the rule that
4668 appears first in the grammar, but it is very risky to rely on this. Every
4669 reduce/reduce conflict must be studied and usually eliminated. Here is the
4670 proper way to define @code{sequence}:
4673 sequence: /* empty */
4674 @{ printf ("empty sequence\n"); @}
4676 @{ printf ("added word %s\n", $2); @}
4680 Here is another common error that yields a reduce/reduce conflict:
4683 sequence: /* empty */
4685 | sequence redirects
4692 redirects:/* empty */
4693 | redirects redirect
4698 The intention here is to define a sequence which can contain either
4699 @code{word} or @code{redirect} groupings. The individual definitions of
4700 @code{sequence}, @code{words} and @code{redirects} are error-free, but the
4701 three together make a subtle ambiguity: even an empty input can be parsed
4702 in infinitely many ways!
4704 Consider: nothing-at-all could be a @code{words}. Or it could be two
4705 @code{words} in a row, or three, or any number. It could equally well be a
4706 @code{redirects}, or two, or any number. Or it could be a @code{words}
4707 followed by three @code{redirects} and another @code{words}. And so on.
4709 Here are two ways to correct these rules. First, to make it a single level
4713 sequence: /* empty */
4719 Second, to prevent either a @code{words} or a @code{redirects}
4723 sequence: /* empty */
4725 | sequence redirects
4733 | redirects redirect
4737 @node Mystery Conflicts
4738 @section Mysterious Reduce/Reduce Conflicts
4740 Sometimes reduce/reduce conflicts can occur that don't look warranted.
4748 def: param_spec return_spec ','
4752 | name_list ':' type
4770 | name ',' name_list
4775 It would seem that this grammar can be parsed with only a single token
4776 of look-ahead: when a @code{param_spec} is being read, an @code{ID} is
4777 a @code{name} if a comma or colon follows, or a @code{type} if another
4778 @code{ID} follows. In other words, this grammar is @acronym{LR}(1).
4780 @cindex @acronym{LR}(1)
4781 @cindex @acronym{LALR}(1)
4782 However, Bison, like most parser generators, cannot actually handle all
4783 @acronym{LR}(1) grammars. In this grammar, two contexts, that after
4785 at the beginning of a @code{param_spec} and likewise at the beginning of
4786 a @code{return_spec}, are similar enough that Bison assumes they are the
4787 same. They appear similar because the same set of rules would be
4788 active---the rule for reducing to a @code{name} and that for reducing to
4789 a @code{type}. Bison is unable to determine at that stage of processing
4790 that the rules would require different look-ahead tokens in the two
4791 contexts, so it makes a single parser state for them both. Combining
4792 the two contexts causes a conflict later. In parser terminology, this
4793 occurrence means that the grammar is not @acronym{LALR}(1).
4795 In general, it is better to fix deficiencies than to document them. But
4796 this particular deficiency is intrinsically hard to fix; parser
4797 generators that can handle @acronym{LR}(1) grammars are hard to write
4799 produce parsers that are very large. In practice, Bison is more useful
4802 When the problem arises, you can often fix it by identifying the two
4803 parser states that are being confused, and adding something to make them
4804 look distinct. In the above example, adding one rule to
4805 @code{return_spec} as follows makes the problem go away:
4816 /* This rule is never used. */
4822 This corrects the problem because it introduces the possibility of an
4823 additional active rule in the context after the @code{ID} at the beginning of
4824 @code{return_spec}. This rule is not active in the corresponding context
4825 in a @code{param_spec}, so the two contexts receive distinct parser states.
4826 As long as the token @code{BOGUS} is never generated by @code{yylex},
4827 the added rule cannot alter the way actual input is parsed.
4829 In this particular example, there is another way to solve the problem:
4830 rewrite the rule for @code{return_spec} to use @code{ID} directly
4831 instead of via @code{name}. This also causes the two confusing
4832 contexts to have different sets of active rules, because the one for
4833 @code{return_spec} activates the altered rule for @code{return_spec}
4834 rather than the one for @code{name}.
4839 | name_list ':' type
4847 @node Generalized LR Parsing
4848 @section Generalized @acronym{LR} (@acronym{GLR}) Parsing
4849 @cindex @acronym{GLR} parsing
4850 @cindex generalized @acronym{LR} (@acronym{GLR}) parsing
4851 @cindex ambiguous grammars
4852 @cindex non-deterministic parsing
4854 Bison produces @emph{deterministic} parsers that choose uniquely
4855 when to reduce and which reduction to apply
4856 based on a summary of the preceding input and on one extra token of lookahead.
4857 As a result, normal Bison handles a proper subset of the family of
4858 context-free languages.
4859 Ambiguous grammars, since they have strings with more than one possible
4860 sequence of reductions cannot have deterministic parsers in this sense.
4861 The same is true of languages that require more than one symbol of
4862 lookahead, since the parser lacks the information necessary to make a
4863 decision at the point it must be made in a shift-reduce parser.
4864 Finally, as previously mentioned (@pxref{Mystery Conflicts}),
4865 there are languages where Bison's particular choice of how to
4866 summarize the input seen so far loses necessary information.
4868 When you use the @samp{%glr-parser} declaration in your grammar file,
4869 Bison generates a parser that uses a different algorithm, called
4870 Generalized @acronym{LR} (or @acronym{GLR}). A Bison @acronym{GLR}
4871 parser uses the same basic
4872 algorithm for parsing as an ordinary Bison parser, but behaves
4873 differently in cases where there is a shift-reduce conflict that has not
4874 been resolved by precedence rules (@pxref{Precedence}) or a
4875 reduce-reduce conflict. When a @acronym{GLR} parser encounters such a
4877 effectively @emph{splits} into a several parsers, one for each possible
4878 shift or reduction. These parsers then proceed as usual, consuming
4879 tokens in lock-step. Some of the stacks may encounter other conflicts
4880 and split further, with the result that instead of a sequence of states,
4881 a Bison @acronym{GLR} parsing stack is what is in effect a tree of states.
4883 In effect, each stack represents a guess as to what the proper parse
4884 is. Additional input may indicate that a guess was wrong, in which case
4885 the appropriate stack silently disappears. Otherwise, the semantics
4886 actions generated in each stack are saved, rather than being executed
4887 immediately. When a stack disappears, its saved semantic actions never
4888 get executed. When a reduction causes two stacks to become equivalent,
4889 their sets of semantic actions are both saved with the state that
4890 results from the reduction. We say that two stacks are equivalent
4891 when they both represent the same sequence of states,
4892 and each pair of corresponding states represents a
4893 grammar symbol that produces the same segment of the input token
4896 Whenever the parser makes a transition from having multiple
4897 states to having one, it reverts to the normal @acronym{LALR}(1) parsing
4898 algorithm, after resolving and executing the saved-up actions.
4899 At this transition, some of the states on the stack will have semantic
4900 values that are sets (actually multisets) of possible actions. The
4901 parser tries to pick one of the actions by first finding one whose rule
4902 has the highest dynamic precedence, as set by the @samp{%dprec}
4903 declaration. Otherwise, if the alternative actions are not ordered by
4904 precedence, but there the same merging function is declared for both
4905 rules by the @samp{%merge} declaration,
4906 Bison resolves and evaluates both and then calls the merge function on
4907 the result. Otherwise, it reports an ambiguity.
4909 It is possible to use a data structure for the @acronym{GLR} parsing tree that
4910 permits the processing of any @acronym{LALR}(1) grammar in linear time (in the
4911 size of the input), any unambiguous (not necessarily
4912 @acronym{LALR}(1)) grammar in
4913 quadratic worst-case time, and any general (possibly ambiguous)
4914 context-free grammar in cubic worst-case time. However, Bison currently
4915 uses a simpler data structure that requires time proportional to the
4916 length of the input times the maximum number of stacks required for any
4917 prefix of the input. Thus, really ambiguous or non-deterministic
4918 grammars can require exponential time and space to process. Such badly
4919 behaving examples, however, are not generally of practical interest.
4920 Usually, non-determinism in a grammar is local---the parser is ``in
4921 doubt'' only for a few tokens at a time. Therefore, the current data
4922 structure should generally be adequate. On @acronym{LALR}(1) portions of a
4923 grammar, in particular, it is only slightly slower than with the default
4926 @node Stack Overflow
4927 @section Stack Overflow, and How to Avoid It
4928 @cindex stack overflow
4929 @cindex parser stack overflow
4930 @cindex overflow of parser stack
4932 The Bison parser stack can overflow if too many tokens are shifted and
4933 not reduced. When this happens, the parser function @code{yyparse}
4934 returns a nonzero value, pausing only to call @code{yyerror} to report
4937 Because Bison parsers have growing stacks, hitting the upper limit
4938 usually results from using a right recursion instead of a left
4939 recursion, @xref{Recursion, ,Recursive Rules}.
4942 By defining the macro @code{YYMAXDEPTH}, you can control how deep the
4943 parser stack can become before a stack overflow occurs. Define the
4944 macro with a value that is an integer. This value is the maximum number
4945 of tokens that can be shifted (and not reduced) before overflow.
4946 It must be a constant expression whose value is known at compile time.
4948 The stack space allowed is not necessarily allocated. If you specify a
4949 large value for @code{YYMAXDEPTH}, the parser actually allocates a small
4950 stack at first, and then makes it bigger by stages as needed. This
4951 increasing allocation happens automatically and silently. Therefore,
4952 you do not need to make @code{YYMAXDEPTH} painfully small merely to save
4953 space for ordinary inputs that do not need much stack.
4955 @cindex default stack limit
4956 The default value of @code{YYMAXDEPTH}, if you do not define it, is
4960 You can control how much stack is allocated initially by defining the
4961 macro @code{YYINITDEPTH}. This value too must be a compile-time
4962 constant integer. The default is 200.
4964 @c FIXME: C++ output.
4965 Because of semantical differences between C and C++, the
4966 @acronym{LALR}(1) parsers
4967 in C produced by Bison by compiled as C++ cannot grow. In this precise
4968 case (compiling a C parser as C++) you are suggested to grow
4969 @code{YYINITDEPTH}. In the near future, a C++ output output will be
4970 provided which addresses this issue.
4972 @node Error Recovery
4973 @chapter Error Recovery
4974 @cindex error recovery
4975 @cindex recovery from errors
4977 It is not usually acceptable to have a program terminate on a parse
4978 error. For example, a compiler should recover sufficiently to parse the
4979 rest of the input file and check it for errors; a calculator should accept
4982 In a simple interactive command parser where each input is one line, it may
4983 be sufficient to allow @code{yyparse} to return 1 on error and have the
4984 caller ignore the rest of the input line when that happens (and then call
4985 @code{yyparse} again). But this is inadequate for a compiler, because it
4986 forgets all the syntactic context leading up to the error. A syntax error
4987 deep within a function in the compiler input should not cause the compiler
4988 to treat the following line like the beginning of a source file.
4991 You can define how to recover from a syntax error by writing rules to
4992 recognize the special token @code{error}. This is a terminal symbol that
4993 is always defined (you need not declare it) and reserved for error
4994 handling. The Bison parser generates an @code{error} token whenever a
4995 syntax error happens; if you have provided a rule to recognize this token
4996 in the current context, the parse can continue.
5001 stmnts: /* empty string */
5007 The fourth rule in this example says that an error followed by a newline
5008 makes a valid addition to any @code{stmnts}.
5010 What happens if a syntax error occurs in the middle of an @code{exp}? The
5011 error recovery rule, interpreted strictly, applies to the precise sequence
5012 of a @code{stmnts}, an @code{error} and a newline. If an error occurs in
5013 the middle of an @code{exp}, there will probably be some additional tokens
5014 and subexpressions on the stack after the last @code{stmnts}, and there
5015 will be tokens to read before the next newline. So the rule is not
5016 applicable in the ordinary way.
5018 But Bison can force the situation to fit the rule, by discarding part of
5019 the semantic context and part of the input. First it discards states and
5020 objects from the stack until it gets back to a state in which the
5021 @code{error} token is acceptable. (This means that the subexpressions
5022 already parsed are discarded, back to the last complete @code{stmnts}.) At
5023 this point the @code{error} token can be shifted. Then, if the old
5024 look-ahead token is not acceptable to be shifted next, the parser reads
5025 tokens and discards them until it finds a token which is acceptable. In
5026 this example, Bison reads and discards input until the next newline
5027 so that the fourth rule can apply.
5029 The choice of error rules in the grammar is a choice of strategies for
5030 error recovery. A simple and useful strategy is simply to skip the rest of
5031 the current input line or current statement if an error is detected:
5034 stmnt: error ';' /* On error, skip until ';' is read. */
5037 It is also useful to recover to the matching close-delimiter of an
5038 opening-delimiter that has already been parsed. Otherwise the
5039 close-delimiter will probably appear to be unmatched, and generate another,
5040 spurious error message:
5043 primary: '(' expr ')'
5049 Error recovery strategies are necessarily guesses. When they guess wrong,
5050 one syntax error often leads to another. In the above example, the error
5051 recovery rule guesses that an error is due to bad input within one
5052 @code{stmnt}. Suppose that instead a spurious semicolon is inserted in the
5053 middle of a valid @code{stmnt}. After the error recovery rule recovers
5054 from the first error, another syntax error will be found straightaway,
5055 since the text following the spurious semicolon is also an invalid
5058 To prevent an outpouring of error messages, the parser will output no error
5059 message for another syntax error that happens shortly after the first; only
5060 after three consecutive input tokens have been successfully shifted will
5061 error messages resume.
5063 Note that rules which accept the @code{error} token may have actions, just
5064 as any other rules can.
5067 You can make error messages resume immediately by using the macro
5068 @code{yyerrok} in an action. If you do this in the error rule's action, no
5069 error messages will be suppressed. This macro requires no arguments;
5070 @samp{yyerrok;} is a valid C statement.
5073 The previous look-ahead token is reanalyzed immediately after an error. If
5074 this is unacceptable, then the macro @code{yyclearin} may be used to clear
5075 this token. Write the statement @samp{yyclearin;} in the error rule's
5078 For example, suppose that on a parse error, an error handling routine is
5079 called that advances the input stream to some point where parsing should
5080 once again commence. The next symbol returned by the lexical scanner is
5081 probably correct. The previous look-ahead token ought to be discarded
5082 with @samp{yyclearin;}.
5084 @vindex YYRECOVERING
5085 The macro @code{YYRECOVERING} stands for an expression that has the
5086 value 1 when the parser is recovering from a syntax error, and 0 the
5087 rest of the time. A value of 1 indicates that error messages are
5088 currently suppressed for new syntax errors.
5090 @node Context Dependency
5091 @chapter Handling Context Dependencies
5093 The Bison paradigm is to parse tokens first, then group them into larger
5094 syntactic units. In many languages, the meaning of a token is affected by
5095 its context. Although this violates the Bison paradigm, certain techniques
5096 (known as @dfn{kludges}) may enable you to write Bison parsers for such
5100 * Semantic Tokens:: Token parsing can depend on the semantic context.
5101 * Lexical Tie-ins:: Token parsing can depend on the syntactic context.
5102 * Tie-in Recovery:: Lexical tie-ins have implications for how
5103 error recovery rules must be written.
5106 (Actually, ``kludge'' means any technique that gets its job done but is
5107 neither clean nor robust.)
5109 @node Semantic Tokens
5110 @section Semantic Info in Token Types
5112 The C language has a context dependency: the way an identifier is used
5113 depends on what its current meaning is. For example, consider this:
5119 This looks like a function call statement, but if @code{foo} is a typedef
5120 name, then this is actually a declaration of @code{x}. How can a Bison
5121 parser for C decide how to parse this input?
5123 The method used in @acronym{GNU} C is to have two different token types,
5124 @code{IDENTIFIER} and @code{TYPENAME}. When @code{yylex} finds an
5125 identifier, it looks up the current declaration of the identifier in order
5126 to decide which token type to return: @code{TYPENAME} if the identifier is
5127 declared as a typedef, @code{IDENTIFIER} otherwise.
5129 The grammar rules can then express the context dependency by the choice of
5130 token type to recognize. @code{IDENTIFIER} is accepted as an expression,
5131 but @code{TYPENAME} is not. @code{TYPENAME} can start a declaration, but
5132 @code{IDENTIFIER} cannot. In contexts where the meaning of the identifier
5133 is @emph{not} significant, such as in declarations that can shadow a
5134 typedef name, either @code{TYPENAME} or @code{IDENTIFIER} is
5135 accepted---there is one rule for each of the two token types.
5137 This technique is simple to use if the decision of which kinds of
5138 identifiers to allow is made at a place close to where the identifier is
5139 parsed. But in C this is not always so: C allows a declaration to
5140 redeclare a typedef name provided an explicit type has been specified
5144 typedef int foo, bar, lose;
5145 static foo (bar); /* @r{redeclare @code{bar} as static variable} */
5146 static int foo (lose); /* @r{redeclare @code{foo} as function} */
5149 Unfortunately, the name being declared is separated from the declaration
5150 construct itself by a complicated syntactic structure---the ``declarator''.
5152 As a result, part of the Bison parser for C needs to be duplicated, with
5153 all the nonterminal names changed: once for parsing a declaration in
5154 which a typedef name can be redefined, and once for parsing a
5155 declaration in which that can't be done. Here is a part of the
5156 duplication, with actions omitted for brevity:
5160 declarator maybeasm '='
5162 | declarator maybeasm
5166 notype_declarator maybeasm '='
5168 | notype_declarator maybeasm
5173 Here @code{initdcl} can redeclare a typedef name, but @code{notype_initdcl}
5174 cannot. The distinction between @code{declarator} and
5175 @code{notype_declarator} is the same sort of thing.
5177 There is some similarity between this technique and a lexical tie-in
5178 (described next), in that information which alters the lexical analysis is
5179 changed during parsing by other parts of the program. The difference is
5180 here the information is global, and is used for other purposes in the
5181 program. A true lexical tie-in has a special-purpose flag controlled by
5182 the syntactic context.
5184 @node Lexical Tie-ins
5185 @section Lexical Tie-ins
5186 @cindex lexical tie-in
5188 One way to handle context-dependency is the @dfn{lexical tie-in}: a flag
5189 which is set by Bison actions, whose purpose is to alter the way tokens are
5192 For example, suppose we have a language vaguely like C, but with a special
5193 construct @samp{hex (@var{hex-expr})}. After the keyword @code{hex} comes
5194 an expression in parentheses in which all integers are hexadecimal. In
5195 particular, the token @samp{a1b} must be treated as an integer rather than
5196 as an identifier if it appears in that context. Here is how you can do it:
5215 @{ $$ = make_sum ($1, $3); @}
5229 Here we assume that @code{yylex} looks at the value of @code{hexflag}; when
5230 it is nonzero, all integers are parsed in hexadecimal, and tokens starting
5231 with letters are parsed as integers if possible.
5233 The declaration of @code{hexflag} shown in the prologue of the parser file
5234 is needed to make it accessible to the actions (@pxref{Prologue, ,The Prologue}).
5235 You must also write the code in @code{yylex} to obey the flag.
5237 @node Tie-in Recovery
5238 @section Lexical Tie-ins and Error Recovery
5240 Lexical tie-ins make strict demands on any error recovery rules you have.
5241 @xref{Error Recovery}.
5243 The reason for this is that the purpose of an error recovery rule is to
5244 abort the parsing of one construct and resume in some larger construct.
5245 For example, in C-like languages, a typical error recovery rule is to skip
5246 tokens until the next semicolon, and then start a new statement, like this:
5250 | IF '(' expr ')' stmt @{ @dots{} @}
5257 If there is a syntax error in the middle of a @samp{hex (@var{expr})}
5258 construct, this error rule will apply, and then the action for the
5259 completed @samp{hex (@var{expr})} will never run. So @code{hexflag} would
5260 remain set for the entire rest of the input, or until the next @code{hex}
5261 keyword, causing identifiers to be misinterpreted as integers.
5263 To avoid this problem the error recovery rule itself clears @code{hexflag}.
5265 There may also be an error recovery rule that works within expressions.
5266 For example, there could be a rule which applies within parentheses
5267 and skips to the close-parenthesis:
5279 If this rule acts within the @code{hex} construct, it is not going to abort
5280 that construct (since it applies to an inner level of parentheses within
5281 the construct). Therefore, it should not clear the flag: the rest of
5282 the @code{hex} construct should be parsed with the flag still in effect.
5284 What if there is an error recovery rule which might abort out of the
5285 @code{hex} construct or might not, depending on circumstances? There is no
5286 way you can write the action to determine whether a @code{hex} construct is
5287 being aborted or not. So if you are using a lexical tie-in, you had better
5288 make sure your error recovery rules are not of this kind. Each rule must
5289 be such that you can be sure that it always will, or always won't, have to
5292 @c ================================================== Debugging Your Parser
5295 @chapter Debugging Your Parser
5297 Developing a parser can be a challenge, especially if you don't
5298 understand the algorithm (@pxref{Algorithm, ,The Bison Parser
5299 Algorithm}). Even so, sometimes a detailed description of the automaton
5300 can help (@pxref{Understanding, , Understanding Your Parser}), or
5301 tracing the execution of the parser can give some insight on why it
5302 behaves improperly (@pxref{Tracing, , Tracing Your Parser}).
5305 * Understanding:: Understanding the structure of your parser.
5306 * Tracing:: Tracing the execution of your parser.
5310 @section Understanding Your Parser
5312 As documented elsewhere (@pxref{Algorithm, ,The Bison Parser Algorithm})
5313 Bison parsers are @dfn{shift/reduce automata}. In some cases (much more
5314 frequent than one would hope), looking at this automaton is required to
5315 tune or simply fix a parser. Bison provides two different
5316 representation of it, either textually or graphically (as a @acronym{VCG}
5319 The textual file is generated when the options @option{--report} or
5320 @option{--verbose} are specified, see @xref{Invocation, , Invoking
5321 Bison}. Its name is made by removing @samp{.tab.c} or @samp{.c} from
5322 the parser output file name, and adding @samp{.output} instead.
5323 Therefore, if the input file is @file{foo.y}, then the parser file is
5324 called @file{foo.tab.c} by default. As a consequence, the verbose
5325 output file is called @file{foo.output}.
5327 The following grammar file, @file{calc.y}, will be used in the sequel:
5344 @command{bison} reports:
5347 calc.y: warning: 1 useless nonterminal and 1 useless rule
5348 calc.y:11.1-7: warning: useless nonterminal: useless
5349 calc.y:11.8-12: warning: useless rule: useless: STR
5350 calc.y contains 7 shift/reduce conflicts.
5353 When given @option{--report=state}, in addition to @file{calc.tab.c}, it
5354 creates a file @file{calc.output} with contents detailed below. The
5355 order of the output and the exact presentation might vary, but the
5356 interpretation is the same.
5358 The first section includes details on conflicts that were solved thanks
5359 to precedence and/or associativity:
5362 Conflict in state 8 between rule 2 and token '+' resolved as reduce.
5363 Conflict in state 8 between rule 2 and token '-' resolved as reduce.
5364 Conflict in state 8 between rule 2 and token '*' resolved as shift.
5369 The next section lists states that still have conflicts.
5372 State 8 contains 1 shift/reduce conflict.
5373 State 9 contains 1 shift/reduce conflict.
5374 State 10 contains 1 shift/reduce conflict.
5375 State 11 contains 4 shift/reduce conflicts.
5379 @cindex token, useless
5380 @cindex useless token
5381 @cindex nonterminal, useless
5382 @cindex useless nonterminal
5383 @cindex rule, useless
5384 @cindex useless rule
5385 The next section reports useless tokens, nonterminal and rules. Useless
5386 nonterminals and rules are removed in order to produce a smaller parser,
5387 but useless tokens are preserved, since they might be used by the
5388 scanner (note the difference between ``useless'' and ``not used''
5392 Useless nonterminals:
5395 Terminals which are not used:
5403 The next section reproduces the exact grammar that Bison used:
5409 0 5 $accept -> exp $end
5410 1 5 exp -> exp '+' exp
5411 2 6 exp -> exp '-' exp
5412 3 7 exp -> exp '*' exp
5413 4 8 exp -> exp '/' exp
5418 and reports the uses of the symbols:
5421 Terminals, with rules where they appear
5431 Nonterminals, with rules where they appear
5436 on left: 1 2 3 4 5, on right: 0 1 2 3 4
5441 @cindex pointed rule
5442 @cindex rule, pointed
5443 Bison then proceeds onto the automaton itself, describing each state
5444 with it set of @dfn{items}, also known as @dfn{pointed rules}. Each
5445 item is a production rule together with a point (marked by @samp{.})
5446 that the input cursor.
5451 $accept -> . exp $ (rule 0)
5453 NUM shift, and go to state 1
5458 This reads as follows: ``state 0 corresponds to being at the very
5459 beginning of the parsing, in the initial rule, right before the start
5460 symbol (here, @code{exp}). When the parser returns to this state right
5461 after having reduced a rule that produced an @code{exp}, the control
5462 flow jumps to state 2. If there is no such transition on a nonterminal
5463 symbol, and the lookahead is a @code{NUM}, then this token is shifted on
5464 the parse stack, and the control flow jumps to state 1. Any other
5465 lookahead triggers a parse error.''
5467 @cindex core, item set
5468 @cindex item set core
5469 @cindex kernel, item set
5470 @cindex item set core
5471 Even though the only active rule in state 0 seems to be rule 0, the
5472 report lists @code{NUM} as a lookahead symbol because @code{NUM} can be
5473 at the beginning of any rule deriving an @code{exp}. By default Bison
5474 reports the so-called @dfn{core} or @dfn{kernel} of the item set, but if
5475 you want to see more detail you can invoke @command{bison} with
5476 @option{--report=itemset} to list all the items, include those that can
5482 $accept -> . exp $ (rule 0)
5483 exp -> . exp '+' exp (rule 1)
5484 exp -> . exp '-' exp (rule 2)
5485 exp -> . exp '*' exp (rule 3)
5486 exp -> . exp '/' exp (rule 4)
5487 exp -> . NUM (rule 5)
5489 NUM shift, and go to state 1
5500 exp -> NUM . (rule 5)
5502 $default reduce using rule 5 (exp)
5506 the rule 5, @samp{exp: NUM;}, is completed. Whatever the lookahead
5507 (@samp{$default}), the parser will reduce it. If it was coming from
5508 state 0, then, after this reduction it will return to state 0, and will
5509 jump to state 2 (@samp{exp: go to state 2}).
5514 $accept -> exp . $ (rule 0)
5515 exp -> exp . '+' exp (rule 1)
5516 exp -> exp . '-' exp (rule 2)
5517 exp -> exp . '*' exp (rule 3)
5518 exp -> exp . '/' exp (rule 4)
5520 $ shift, and go to state 3
5521 '+' shift, and go to state 4
5522 '-' shift, and go to state 5
5523 '*' shift, and go to state 6
5524 '/' shift, and go to state 7
5528 In state 2, the automaton can only shift a symbol. For instance,
5529 because of the item @samp{exp -> exp . '+' exp}, if the lookahead if
5530 @samp{+}, it will be shifted on the parse stack, and the automaton
5531 control will jump to state 4, corresponding to the item @samp{exp -> exp
5532 '+' . exp}. Since there is no default action, any other token than
5533 those listed above will trigger a parse error.
5535 The state 3 is named the @dfn{final state}, or the @dfn{accepting
5541 $accept -> exp $ . (rule 0)
5547 the initial rule is completed (the start symbol and the end
5548 of input were read), the parsing exits successfully.
5550 The interpretation of states 4 to 7 is straightforward, and is left to
5556 exp -> exp '+' . exp (rule 1)
5558 NUM shift, and go to state 1
5564 exp -> exp '-' . exp (rule 2)
5566 NUM shift, and go to state 1
5572 exp -> exp '*' . exp (rule 3)
5574 NUM shift, and go to state 1
5580 exp -> exp '/' . exp (rule 4)
5582 NUM shift, and go to state 1
5587 As was announced in beginning of the report, @samp{State 8 contains 1
5588 shift/reduce conflict}:
5593 exp -> exp . '+' exp (rule 1)
5594 exp -> exp '+' exp . (rule 1)
5595 exp -> exp . '-' exp (rule 2)
5596 exp -> exp . '*' exp (rule 3)
5597 exp -> exp . '/' exp (rule 4)
5599 '*' shift, and go to state 6
5600 '/' shift, and go to state 7
5602 '/' [reduce using rule 1 (exp)]
5603 $default reduce using rule 1 (exp)
5606 Indeed, there are two actions associated to the lookahead @samp{/}:
5607 either shifting (and going to state 7), or reducing rule 1. The
5608 conflict means that either the grammar is ambiguous, or the parser lacks
5609 information to make the right decision. Indeed the grammar is
5610 ambiguous, as, since we did not specify the precedence of @samp{/}, the
5611 sentence @samp{NUM + NUM / NUM} can be parsed as @samp{NUM + (NUM /
5612 NUM)}, which corresponds to shifting @samp{/}, or as @samp{(NUM + NUM) /
5613 NUM}, which corresponds to reducing rule 1.
5615 Because in @acronym{LALR}(1) parsing a single decision can be made, Bison
5616 arbitrarily chose to disable the reduction, see @ref{Shift/Reduce, ,
5617 Shift/Reduce Conflicts}. Discarded actions are reported in between
5620 Note that all the previous states had a single possible action: either
5621 shifting the next token and going to the corresponding state, or
5622 reducing a single rule. In the other cases, i.e., when shifting
5623 @emph{and} reducing is possible or when @emph{several} reductions are
5624 possible, the lookahead is required to select the action. State 8 is
5625 one such state: if the lookahead is @samp{*} or @samp{/} then the action
5626 is shifting, otherwise the action is reducing rule 1. In other words,
5627 the first two items, corresponding to rule 1, are not eligible when the
5628 lookahead is @samp{*}, since we specified that @samp{*} has higher
5629 precedence that @samp{+}. More generally, some items are eligible only
5630 with some set of possible lookaheads. When run with
5631 @option{--report=lookahead}, Bison specifies these lookaheads:
5636 exp -> exp . '+' exp [$, '+', '-', '/'] (rule 1)
5637 exp -> exp '+' exp . [$, '+', '-', '/'] (rule 1)
5638 exp -> exp . '-' exp (rule 2)
5639 exp -> exp . '*' exp (rule 3)
5640 exp -> exp . '/' exp (rule 4)
5642 '*' shift, and go to state 6
5643 '/' shift, and go to state 7
5645 '/' [reduce using rule 1 (exp)]
5646 $default reduce using rule 1 (exp)
5649 The remaining states are similar:
5654 exp -> exp . '+' exp (rule 1)
5655 exp -> exp . '-' exp (rule 2)
5656 exp -> exp '-' exp . (rule 2)
5657 exp -> exp . '*' exp (rule 3)
5658 exp -> exp . '/' exp (rule 4)
5660 '*' shift, and go to state 6
5661 '/' shift, and go to state 7
5663 '/' [reduce using rule 2 (exp)]
5664 $default reduce using rule 2 (exp)
5668 exp -> exp . '+' exp (rule 1)
5669 exp -> exp . '-' exp (rule 2)
5670 exp -> exp . '*' exp (rule 3)
5671 exp -> exp '*' exp . (rule 3)
5672 exp -> exp . '/' exp (rule 4)
5674 '/' shift, and go to state 7
5676 '/' [reduce using rule 3 (exp)]
5677 $default reduce using rule 3 (exp)
5681 exp -> exp . '+' exp (rule 1)
5682 exp -> exp . '-' exp (rule 2)
5683 exp -> exp . '*' exp (rule 3)
5684 exp -> exp . '/' exp (rule 4)
5685 exp -> exp '/' exp . (rule 4)
5687 '+' shift, and go to state 4
5688 '-' shift, and go to state 5
5689 '*' shift, and go to state 6
5690 '/' shift, and go to state 7
5692 '+' [reduce using rule 4 (exp)]
5693 '-' [reduce using rule 4 (exp)]
5694 '*' [reduce using rule 4 (exp)]
5695 '/' [reduce using rule 4 (exp)]
5696 $default reduce using rule 4 (exp)
5700 Observe that state 11 contains conflicts due to the lack of precedence
5701 of @samp{/} wrt @samp{+}, @samp{-}, and @samp{*}, but also because the
5702 associativity of @samp{/} is not specified.
5706 @section Tracing Your Parser
5709 @cindex tracing the parser
5711 If a Bison grammar compiles properly but doesn't do what you want when it
5712 runs, the @code{yydebug} parser-trace feature can help you figure out why.
5714 There are several means to enable compilation of trace facilities:
5717 @item the macro @code{YYDEBUG}
5719 Define the macro @code{YYDEBUG} to a nonzero value when you compile the
5720 parser. This is compliant with @acronym{POSIX} Yacc. You could use
5721 @samp{-DYYDEBUG=1} as a compiler option or you could put @samp{#define
5722 YYDEBUG 1} in the prologue of the grammar file (@pxref{Prologue, , The
5725 @item the option @option{-t}, @option{--debug}
5726 Use the @samp{-t} option when you run Bison (@pxref{Invocation,
5727 ,Invoking Bison}). This is @acronym{POSIX} compliant too.
5729 @item the directive @samp{%debug}
5731 Add the @code{%debug} directive (@pxref{Decl Summary, ,Bison
5732 Declaration Summary}). This is a Bison extension, which will prove
5733 useful when Bison will output parsers for languages that don't use a
5734 preprocessor. Unless @acronym{POSIX} and Yacc portability matter to
5736 the preferred solution.
5739 We suggest that you always enable the debug option so that debugging is
5742 The trace facility outputs messages with macro calls of the form
5743 @code{YYFPRINTF (stderr, @var{format}, @var{args})} where
5744 @var{format} and @var{args} are the usual @code{printf} format and
5745 arguments. If you define @code{YYDEBUG} to a nonzero value but do not
5746 define @code{YYFPRINTF}, @code{<stdio.h>} is automatically included
5747 and @code{YYPRINTF} is defined to @code{fprintf}.
5749 Once you have compiled the program with trace facilities, the way to
5750 request a trace is to store a nonzero value in the variable @code{yydebug}.
5751 You can do this by making the C code do it (in @code{main}, perhaps), or
5752 you can alter the value with a C debugger.
5754 Each step taken by the parser when @code{yydebug} is nonzero produces a
5755 line or two of trace information, written on @code{stderr}. The trace
5756 messages tell you these things:
5760 Each time the parser calls @code{yylex}, what kind of token was read.
5763 Each time a token is shifted, the depth and complete contents of the
5764 state stack (@pxref{Parser States}).
5767 Each time a rule is reduced, which rule it is, and the complete contents
5768 of the state stack afterward.
5771 To make sense of this information, it helps to refer to the listing file
5772 produced by the Bison @samp{-v} option (@pxref{Invocation, ,Invoking
5773 Bison}). This file shows the meaning of each state in terms of
5774 positions in various rules, and also what each state will do with each
5775 possible input token. As you read the successive trace messages, you
5776 can see that the parser is functioning according to its specification in
5777 the listing file. Eventually you will arrive at the place where
5778 something undesirable happens, and you will see which parts of the
5779 grammar are to blame.
5781 The parser file is a C program and you can use C debuggers on it, but it's
5782 not easy to interpret what it is doing. The parser function is a
5783 finite-state machine interpreter, and aside from the actions it executes
5784 the same code over and over. Only the values of variables show where in
5785 the grammar it is working.
5788 The debugging information normally gives the token type of each token
5789 read, but not its semantic value. You can optionally define a macro
5790 named @code{YYPRINT} to provide a way to print the value. If you define
5791 @code{YYPRINT}, it should take three arguments. The parser will pass a
5792 standard I/O stream, the numeric code for the token type, and the token
5793 value (from @code{yylval}).
5795 Here is an example of @code{YYPRINT} suitable for the multi-function
5796 calculator (@pxref{Mfcalc Decl, ,Declarations for @code{mfcalc}}):
5799 #define YYPRINT(file, type, value) yyprint (file, type, value)
5802 yyprint (FILE *file, int type, YYSTYPE value)
5805 fprintf (file, " %s", value.tptr->name);
5806 else if (type == NUM)
5807 fprintf (file, " %d", value.val);
5811 @c ================================================= Invoking Bison
5814 @chapter Invoking Bison
5815 @cindex invoking Bison
5816 @cindex Bison invocation
5817 @cindex options for invoking Bison
5819 The usual way to invoke Bison is as follows:
5825 Here @var{infile} is the grammar file name, which usually ends in
5826 @samp{.y}. The parser file's name is made by replacing the @samp{.y}
5827 with @samp{.tab.c}. Thus, the @samp{bison foo.y} filename yields
5828 @file{foo.tab.c}, and the @samp{bison hack/foo.y} filename yields
5829 @file{hack/foo.tab.c}. It's also possible, in case you are writing
5830 C++ code instead of C in your grammar file, to name it @file{foo.ypp}
5831 or @file{foo.y++}. Then, the output files will take an extension like
5832 the given one as input (respectively @file{foo.tab.cpp} and
5833 @file{foo.tab.c++}).
5834 This feature takes effect with all options that manipulate filenames like
5835 @samp{-o} or @samp{-d}.
5840 bison -d @var{infile.yxx}
5843 will produce @file{infile.tab.cxx} and @file{infile.tab.hxx}, and
5846 bison -d -o @var{output.c++} @var{infile.y}
5849 will produce @file{output.c++} and @file{outfile.h++}.
5852 * Bison Options:: All the options described in detail,
5853 in alphabetical order by short options.
5854 * Option Cross Key:: Alphabetical list of long options.
5855 * VMS Invocation:: Bison command syntax on @acronym{VMS}.
5859 @section Bison Options
5861 Bison supports both traditional single-letter options and mnemonic long
5862 option names. Long option names are indicated with @samp{--} instead of
5863 @samp{-}. Abbreviations for option names are allowed as long as they
5864 are unique. When a long option takes an argument, like
5865 @samp{--file-prefix}, connect the option name and the argument with
5868 Here is a list of options that can be used with Bison, alphabetized by
5869 short option. It is followed by a cross key alphabetized by long
5872 @c Please, keep this ordered as in `bison --help'.
5878 Print a summary of the command-line options to Bison and exit.
5882 Print the version number of Bison and exit.
5887 Equivalent to @samp{-o y.tab.c}; the parser output file is called
5888 @file{y.tab.c}, and the other outputs are called @file{y.output} and
5889 @file{y.tab.h}. The purpose of this option is to imitate Yacc's output
5890 file name conventions. Thus, the following shell script can substitute
5903 @itemx --skeleton=@var{file}
5904 Specify the skeleton to use. You probably don't need this option unless
5905 you are developing Bison.
5909 In the parser file, define the macro @code{YYDEBUG} to 1 if it is not
5910 already defined, so that the debugging facilities are compiled.
5911 @xref{Tracing, ,Tracing Your Parser}.
5914 Pretend that @code{%locations} was specified. @xref{Decl Summary}.
5916 @item -p @var{prefix}
5917 @itemx --name-prefix=@var{prefix}
5918 Pretend that @code{%name-prefix="@var{prefix}"} was specified.
5919 @xref{Decl Summary}.
5923 Don't put any @code{#line} preprocessor commands in the parser file.
5924 Ordinarily Bison puts them in the parser file so that the C compiler
5925 and debuggers will associate errors with your source file, the
5926 grammar file. This option causes them to associate errors with the
5927 parser file, treating it as an independent source file in its own right.
5931 Pretend that @code{%no-parser} was specified. @xref{Decl Summary}.
5934 @itemx --token-table
5935 Pretend that @code{%token-table} was specified. @xref{Decl Summary}.
5944 Pretend that @code{%defines} was specified, i.e., write an extra output
5945 file containing macro definitions for the token type names defined in
5946 the grammar and the semantic value type @code{YYSTYPE}, as well as a few
5947 @code{extern} variable declarations. @xref{Decl Summary}.
5949 @item --defines=@var{defines-file}
5950 Same as above, but save in the file @var{defines-file}.
5952 @item -b @var{file-prefix}
5953 @itemx --file-prefix=@var{prefix}
5954 Pretend that @code{%verbose} was specified, i.e, specify prefix to use
5955 for all Bison output file names. @xref{Decl Summary}.
5957 @item -r @var{things}
5958 @itemx --report=@var{things}
5959 Write an extra output file containing verbose description of the comma
5960 separated list of @var{things} among:
5964 Description of the grammar, conflicts (resolved and unresolved), and
5965 @acronym{LALR} automaton.
5968 Implies @code{state} and augments the description of the automaton with
5969 each rule's lookahead set.
5972 Implies @code{state} and augments the description of the automaton with
5973 the full set of items for each state, instead of its core only.
5976 For instance, on the following grammar
5980 Pretend that @code{%verbose} was specified, i.e, write an extra output
5981 file containing verbose descriptions of the grammar and
5982 parser. @xref{Decl Summary}.
5984 @item -o @var{filename}
5985 @itemx --output=@var{filename}
5986 Specify the @var{filename} for the parser file.
5988 The other output files' names are constructed from @var{filename} as
5989 described under the @samp{-v} and @samp{-d} options.
5992 Output a @acronym{VCG} definition of the @acronym{LALR}(1) grammar
5993 automaton computed by Bison. If the grammar file is @file{foo.y}, the
5994 @acronym{VCG} output file will
5997 @item --graph=@var{graph-file}
5998 The behavior of @var{--graph} is the same than @samp{-g}. The only
5999 difference is that it has an optional argument which is the name of
6000 the output graph filename.
6003 @node Option Cross Key
6004 @section Option Cross Key
6006 Here is a list of options, alphabetized by long option, to help you find
6007 the corresponding short option.
6010 \def\leaderfill{\leaders\hbox to 1em{\hss.\hss}\hfill}
6013 \line{ --debug \leaderfill -t}
6014 \line{ --defines \leaderfill -d}
6015 \line{ --file-prefix \leaderfill -b}
6016 \line{ --graph \leaderfill -g}
6017 \line{ --help \leaderfill -h}
6018 \line{ --name-prefix \leaderfill -p}
6019 \line{ --no-lines \leaderfill -l}
6020 \line{ --no-parser \leaderfill -n}
6021 \line{ --output \leaderfill -o}
6022 \line{ --token-table \leaderfill -k}
6023 \line{ --verbose \leaderfill -v}
6024 \line{ --version \leaderfill -V}
6025 \line{ --yacc \leaderfill -y}
6032 --defines=@var{defines-file} -d
6033 --file-prefix=@var{prefix} -b @var{file-prefix}
6034 --graph=@var{graph-file} -d
6036 --name-prefix=@var{prefix} -p @var{name-prefix}
6039 --output=@var{outfile} -o @var{outfile}
6047 @node VMS Invocation
6048 @section Invoking Bison under @acronym{VMS}
6049 @cindex invoking Bison under @acronym{VMS}
6050 @cindex @acronym{VMS}
6052 The command line syntax for Bison on @acronym{VMS} is a variant of the usual
6053 Bison command syntax---adapted to fit @acronym{VMS} conventions.
6055 To find the @acronym{VMS} equivalent for any Bison option, start with the long
6056 option, and substitute a @samp{/} for the leading @samp{--}, and
6057 substitute a @samp{_} for each @samp{-} in the name of the long option.
6058 For example, the following invocation under @acronym{VMS}:
6061 bison /debug/name_prefix=bar foo.y
6065 is equivalent to the following command under @acronym{POSIX}.
6068 bison --debug --name-prefix=bar foo.y
6071 The @acronym{VMS} file system does not permit filenames such as
6072 @file{foo.tab.c}. In the above example, the output file
6073 would instead be named @file{foo_tab.c}.
6075 @c ================================================= Invoking Bison
6078 @chapter Frequently Asked Questions
6079 @cindex frequently asked questions
6082 Several questions about Bison come up occasionally. Here some of them
6086 * Parser Stack Overflow:: Breaking the Stack Limits
6089 @node Parser Stack Overflow
6090 @section Parser Stack Overflow
6093 My parser returns with error with a @samp{parser stack overflow}
6094 message. What can I do?
6097 This question is already addressed elsewhere, @xref{Recursion,
6100 @c ================================================= Table of Symbols
6102 @node Table of Symbols
6103 @appendix Bison Symbols
6104 @cindex Bison symbols, table of
6105 @cindex symbols in Bison, table of
6109 In an action, the location of the left-hand side of the rule.
6110 @xref{Locations, , Locations Overview}.
6113 In an action, the location of the @var{n}-th symbol of the right-hand
6114 side of the rule. @xref{Locations, , Locations Overview}.
6117 In an action, the semantic value of the left-hand side of the rule.
6121 In an action, the semantic value of the @var{n}-th symbol of the
6122 right-hand side of the rule. @xref{Actions}.
6125 The predefined nonterminal whose only rule is @samp{$accept: @var{start}
6126 $end}, where @var{start} is the start symbol. @xref{Start Decl, , The
6127 Start-Symbol}. It cannot be used in the grammar.
6130 The predefined token marking the end of the token stream. It cannot be
6131 used in the grammar.
6134 The predefined token onto which all undefined values returned by
6135 @code{yylex} are mapped. It cannot be used in the grammar, rather, use
6139 A token name reserved for error recovery. This token may be used in
6140 grammar rules so as to allow the Bison parser to recognize an error in
6141 the grammar without halting the process. In effect, a sentence
6142 containing an error may be recognized as valid. On a parse error, the
6143 token @code{error} becomes the current look-ahead token. Actions
6144 corresponding to @code{error} are then executed, and the look-ahead
6145 token is reset to the token that originally caused the violation.
6146 @xref{Error Recovery}.
6149 Macro to pretend that an unrecoverable syntax error has occurred, by
6150 making @code{yyparse} return 1 immediately. The error reporting
6151 function @code{yyerror} is not called. @xref{Parser Function, ,The
6152 Parser Function @code{yyparse}}.
6155 Macro to pretend that a complete utterance of the language has been
6156 read, by making @code{yyparse} return 0 immediately.
6157 @xref{Parser Function, ,The Parser Function @code{yyparse}}.
6160 Macro to discard a value from the parser stack and fake a look-ahead
6161 token. @xref{Action Features, ,Special Features for Use in Actions}.
6164 Macro to define to equip the parser with tracing code. @xref{Tracing,
6165 ,Tracing Your Parser}.
6168 Macro to pretend that a syntax error has just been detected: call
6169 @code{yyerror} and then perform normal error recovery if possible
6170 (@pxref{Error Recovery}), or (if recovery is impossible) make
6171 @code{yyparse} return 1. @xref{Error Recovery}.
6173 @item YYERROR_VERBOSE
6174 Macro that you define with @code{#define} in the Bison declarations
6175 section to request verbose, specific error message strings when
6176 @code{yyerror} is called.
6179 Macro for specifying the initial size of the parser stack.
6180 @xref{Stack Overflow}.
6183 Macro for specifying an extra argument (or list of extra arguments) for
6184 @code{yyparse} to pass to @code{yylex}. @xref{Pure Calling,, Calling
6185 Conventions for Pure Parsers}.
6188 Macro for the data type of @code{yylloc}; a structure with four
6189 members. @xref{Location Type, , Data Types of Locations}.
6192 Default value for YYLTYPE.
6195 Macro for specifying the maximum size of the parser stack.
6196 @xref{Stack Overflow}.
6199 Macro for specifying the name of a parameter that @code{yyparse} should
6200 accept. @xref{Pure Calling,, Calling Conventions for Pure Parsers}.
6203 Macro whose value indicates whether the parser is recovering from a
6204 syntax error. @xref{Action Features, ,Special Features for Use in Actions}.
6206 @item YYSTACK_USE_ALLOCA
6207 Macro used to control the use of @code{alloca}. If defined to @samp{0},
6208 the parser will not use @code{alloca} but @code{malloc} when trying to
6209 grow its internal stacks. Do @emph{not} define @code{YYSTACK_USE_ALLOCA}
6213 Macro for the data type of semantic values; @code{int} by default.
6214 @xref{Value Type, ,Data Types of Semantic Values}.
6217 External integer variable that contains the integer value of the current
6218 look-ahead token. (In a pure parser, it is a local variable within
6219 @code{yyparse}.) Error-recovery rule actions may examine this variable.
6220 @xref{Action Features, ,Special Features for Use in Actions}.
6223 Macro used in error-recovery rule actions. It clears the previous
6224 look-ahead token. @xref{Error Recovery}.
6227 External integer variable set to zero by default. If @code{yydebug}
6228 is given a nonzero value, the parser will output information on input
6229 symbols and parser action. @xref{Tracing, ,Tracing Your Parser}.
6232 Macro to cause parser to recover immediately to its normal mode
6233 after a parse error. @xref{Error Recovery}.
6236 User-supplied function to be called by @code{yyparse} on error. The
6237 function receives one argument, a pointer to a character string
6238 containing an error message. @xref{Error Reporting, ,The Error
6239 Reporting Function @code{yyerror}}.
6242 User-supplied lexical analyzer function, called with no arguments to get
6243 the next token. @xref{Lexical, ,The Lexical Analyzer Function
6247 External variable in which @code{yylex} should place the semantic
6248 value associated with a token. (In a pure parser, it is a local
6249 variable within @code{yyparse}, and its address is passed to
6250 @code{yylex}.) @xref{Token Values, ,Semantic Values of Tokens}.
6253 External variable in which @code{yylex} should place the line and column
6254 numbers associated with a token. (In a pure parser, it is a local
6255 variable within @code{yyparse}, and its address is passed to
6256 @code{yylex}.) You can ignore this variable if you don't use the
6257 @samp{@@} feature in the grammar actions. @xref{Token Positions,
6258 ,Textual Positions of Tokens}.
6261 Global variable which Bison increments each time there is a parse error.
6262 (In a pure parser, it is a local variable within @code{yyparse}.)
6263 @xref{Error Reporting, ,The Error Reporting Function @code{yyerror}}.
6266 The parser function produced by Bison; call this function to start
6267 parsing. @xref{Parser Function, ,The Parser Function @code{yyparse}}.
6270 Equip the parser for debugging. @xref{Decl Summary}.
6273 Bison declaration to create a header file meant for the scanner.
6274 @xref{Decl Summary}.
6277 Bison declaration to assign a precedence to a rule that is used at parse
6278 time to resolve reduce/reduce conflicts. @xref{GLR Parsers, ,Writing
6279 @acronym{GLR} Parsers}.
6281 @item %file-prefix="@var{prefix}"
6282 Bison declaration to set the prefix of the output files. @xref{Decl
6286 Bison declaration to produce a @acronym{GLR} parser. @xref{GLR
6287 Parsers, ,Writing @acronym{GLR} Parsers}.
6289 @c @item %source-extension
6290 @c Bison declaration to specify the generated parser output file extension.
6291 @c @xref{Decl Summary}.
6293 @c @item %header-extension
6294 @c Bison declaration to specify the generated parser header file extension
6295 @c if required. @xref{Decl Summary}.
6298 Bison declaration to assign left associativity to token(s).
6299 @xref{Precedence Decl, ,Operator Precedence}.
6302 Bison declaration to assign a merging function to a rule. If there is a
6303 reduce/reduce conflict with a rule having the same merging function, the
6304 function is applied to the two semantic values to get a single result.
6305 @xref{GLR Parsers, ,Writing @acronym{GLR} Parsers}.
6307 @item %name-prefix="@var{prefix}"
6308 Bison declaration to rename the external symbols. @xref{Decl Summary}.
6311 Bison declaration to avoid generating @code{#line} directives in the
6312 parser file. @xref{Decl Summary}.
6315 Bison declaration to assign non-associativity to token(s).
6316 @xref{Precedence Decl, ,Operator Precedence}.
6318 @item %output="@var{filename}"
6319 Bison declaration to set the name of the parser file. @xref{Decl
6323 Bison declaration to assign a precedence to a specific rule.
6324 @xref{Contextual Precedence, ,Context-Dependent Precedence}.
6327 Bison declaration to request a pure (reentrant) parser.
6328 @xref{Pure Decl, ,A Pure (Reentrant) Parser}.
6331 Bison declaration to assign right associativity to token(s).
6332 @xref{Precedence Decl, ,Operator Precedence}.
6335 Bison declaration to specify the start symbol. @xref{Start Decl, ,The
6339 Bison declaration to declare token(s) without specifying precedence.
6340 @xref{Token Decl, ,Token Type Names}.
6343 Bison declaration to include a token name table in the parser file.
6344 @xref{Decl Summary}.
6347 Bison declaration to declare nonterminals. @xref{Type Decl,
6348 ,Nonterminal Symbols}.
6351 Bison declaration to specify several possible data types for semantic
6352 values. @xref{Union Decl, ,The Collection of Value Types}.
6357 These are the punctuation and delimiters used in Bison input:
6361 Delimiter used to separate the grammar rule section from the
6362 Bison declarations section or the epilogue.
6363 @xref{Grammar Layout, ,The Overall Layout of a Bison Grammar}.
6366 All code listed between @samp{%@{} and @samp{%@}} is copied directly to
6367 the output file uninterpreted. Such code forms the prologue of the input
6368 file. @xref{Grammar Outline, ,Outline of a Bison
6372 Comment delimiters, as in C.
6375 Separates a rule's result from its components. @xref{Rules, ,Syntax of
6379 Terminates a rule. @xref{Rules, ,Syntax of Grammar Rules}.
6382 Separates alternate rules for the same result nonterminal.
6383 @xref{Rules, ,Syntax of Grammar Rules}.
6391 @item Backus-Naur Form (@acronym{BNF}; also called ``Backus Normal Form'')
6392 Formal method of specifying context-free grammars originally proposed
6393 by John Backus, and slightly improved by Peter Naur in his 1960-01-02
6394 committee document contributing to what became the Algol 60 report.
6395 @xref{Language and Grammar, ,Languages and Context-Free Grammars}.
6397 @item Context-free grammars
6398 Grammars specified as rules that can be applied regardless of context.
6399 Thus, if there is a rule which says that an integer can be used as an
6400 expression, integers are allowed @emph{anywhere} an expression is
6401 permitted. @xref{Language and Grammar, ,Languages and Context-Free
6404 @item Dynamic allocation
6405 Allocation of memory that occurs during execution, rather than at
6406 compile time or on entry to a function.
6409 Analogous to the empty set in set theory, the empty string is a
6410 character string of length zero.
6412 @item Finite-state stack machine
6413 A ``machine'' that has discrete states in which it is said to exist at
6414 each instant in time. As input to the machine is processed, the
6415 machine moves from state to state as specified by the logic of the
6416 machine. In the case of the parser, the input is the language being
6417 parsed, and the states correspond to various stages in the grammar
6418 rules. @xref{Algorithm, ,The Bison Parser Algorithm}.
6420 @item Generalized @acronym{LR} (@acronym{GLR})
6421 A parsing algorithm that can handle all context-free grammars, including those
6422 that are not @acronym{LALR}(1). It resolves situations that Bison's
6423 usual @acronym{LALR}(1)
6424 algorithm cannot by effectively splitting off multiple parsers, trying all
6425 possible parsers, and discarding those that fail in the light of additional
6426 right context. @xref{Generalized LR Parsing, ,Generalized
6427 @acronym{LR} Parsing}.
6430 A language construct that is (in general) grammatically divisible;
6431 for example, `expression' or `declaration' in C@.
6432 @xref{Language and Grammar, ,Languages and Context-Free Grammars}.
6434 @item Infix operator
6435 An arithmetic operator that is placed between the operands on which it
6436 performs some operation.
6439 A continuous flow of data between devices or programs.
6441 @item Language construct
6442 One of the typical usage schemas of the language. For example, one of
6443 the constructs of the C language is the @code{if} statement.
6444 @xref{Language and Grammar, ,Languages and Context-Free Grammars}.
6446 @item Left associativity
6447 Operators having left associativity are analyzed from left to right:
6448 @samp{a+b+c} first computes @samp{a+b} and then combines with
6449 @samp{c}. @xref{Precedence, ,Operator Precedence}.
6451 @item Left recursion
6452 A rule whose result symbol is also its first component symbol; for
6453 example, @samp{expseq1 : expseq1 ',' exp;}. @xref{Recursion, ,Recursive
6456 @item Left-to-right parsing
6457 Parsing a sentence of a language by analyzing it token by token from
6458 left to right. @xref{Algorithm, ,The Bison Parser Algorithm}.
6460 @item Lexical analyzer (scanner)
6461 A function that reads an input stream and returns tokens one by one.
6462 @xref{Lexical, ,The Lexical Analyzer Function @code{yylex}}.
6464 @item Lexical tie-in
6465 A flag, set by actions in the grammar rules, which alters the way
6466 tokens are parsed. @xref{Lexical Tie-ins}.
6468 @item Literal string token
6469 A token which consists of two or more fixed characters. @xref{Symbols}.
6471 @item Look-ahead token
6472 A token already read but not yet shifted. @xref{Look-Ahead, ,Look-Ahead
6475 @item @acronym{LALR}(1)
6476 The class of context-free grammars that Bison (like most other parser
6477 generators) can handle; a subset of @acronym{LR}(1). @xref{Mystery
6478 Conflicts, ,Mysterious Reduce/Reduce Conflicts}.
6480 @item @acronym{LR}(1)
6481 The class of context-free grammars in which at most one token of
6482 look-ahead is needed to disambiguate the parsing of any piece of input.
6484 @item Nonterminal symbol
6485 A grammar symbol standing for a grammatical construct that can
6486 be expressed through rules in terms of smaller constructs; in other
6487 words, a construct that is not a token. @xref{Symbols}.
6490 An error encountered during parsing of an input stream due to invalid
6491 syntax. @xref{Error Recovery}.
6494 A function that recognizes valid sentences of a language by analyzing
6495 the syntax structure of a set of tokens passed to it from a lexical
6498 @item Postfix operator
6499 An arithmetic operator that is placed after the operands upon which it
6500 performs some operation.
6503 Replacing a string of nonterminals and/or terminals with a single
6504 nonterminal, according to a grammar rule. @xref{Algorithm, ,The Bison
6508 A reentrant subprogram is a subprogram which can be in invoked any
6509 number of times in parallel, without interference between the various
6510 invocations. @xref{Pure Decl, ,A Pure (Reentrant) Parser}.
6512 @item Reverse polish notation
6513 A language in which all operators are postfix operators.
6515 @item Right recursion
6516 A rule whose result symbol is also its last component symbol; for
6517 example, @samp{expseq1: exp ',' expseq1;}. @xref{Recursion, ,Recursive
6521 In computer languages, the semantics are specified by the actions
6522 taken for each instance of the language, i.e., the meaning of
6523 each statement. @xref{Semantics, ,Defining Language Semantics}.
6526 A parser is said to shift when it makes the choice of analyzing
6527 further input from the stream rather than reducing immediately some
6528 already-recognized rule. @xref{Algorithm, ,The Bison Parser Algorithm}.
6530 @item Single-character literal
6531 A single character that is recognized and interpreted as is.
6532 @xref{Grammar in Bison, ,From Formal Rules to Bison Input}.
6535 The nonterminal symbol that stands for a complete valid utterance in
6536 the language being parsed. The start symbol is usually listed as the
6537 first nonterminal symbol in a language specification.
6538 @xref{Start Decl, ,The Start-Symbol}.
6541 A data structure where symbol names and associated data are stored
6542 during parsing to allow for recognition and use of existing
6543 information in repeated uses of a symbol. @xref{Multi-function Calc}.
6546 A basic, grammatically indivisible unit of a language. The symbol
6547 that describes a token in the grammar is a terminal symbol.
6548 The input of the Bison parser is a stream of tokens which comes from
6549 the lexical analyzer. @xref{Symbols}.
6551 @item Terminal symbol
6552 A grammar symbol that has no rules in the grammar and therefore is
6553 grammatically indivisible. The piece of text it represents is a token.
6554 @xref{Language and Grammar, ,Languages and Context-Free Grammars}.
6557 @node Copying This Manual
6558 @appendix Copying This Manual
6561 * GNU Free Documentation License:: License for copying this manual.