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 want to document %default-prec and %no-default-prec.
16 @c This feature is experimental and may change in future Bison versions.
29 @comment %**end of header
33 This manual (@value{UPDATED}) is for GNU Bison (version
34 @value{VERSION}), the GNU parser generator.
36 Copyright @copyright{} 1988-1993, 1995, 1998-2012 Free Software
40 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
41 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License,
42 Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software
43 Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts
44 being ``A GNU Manual,'' and with the Back-Cover Texts as in
45 (a) below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
46 ``GNU Free Documentation License.''
48 (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have the freedom to copy and
49 modify this GNU manual. Buying copies from the FSF
50 supports it in developing GNU and promoting software
55 @dircategory Software development
57 * bison: (bison). GNU parser generator (Yacc replacement).
62 @subtitle The Yacc-compatible Parser Generator
63 @subtitle @value{UPDATED}, Bison Version @value{VERSION}
65 @author by Charles Donnelly and Richard Stallman
68 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
71 Published by the Free Software Foundation @*
72 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor @*
73 Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA @*
74 Printed copies are available from the Free Software Foundation.@*
77 Cover art by Etienne Suvasa.
91 * Copying:: The GNU General Public License says
92 how you can copy and share Bison.
95 * Concepts:: Basic concepts for understanding Bison.
96 * Examples:: Three simple explained examples of using Bison.
99 * Grammar File:: Writing Bison declarations and rules.
100 * Interface:: C-language interface to the parser function @code{yyparse}.
101 * Algorithm:: How the Bison parser works at run-time.
102 * Error Recovery:: Writing rules for error recovery.
103 * Context Dependency:: What to do if your language syntax is too
104 messy for Bison to handle straightforwardly.
105 * Debugging:: Understanding or debugging Bison parsers.
106 * Invocation:: How to run Bison (to produce the parser implementation).
107 * Other Languages:: Creating C++ and Java parsers.
108 * FAQ:: Frequently Asked Questions
109 * Table of Symbols:: All the keywords of the Bison language are explained.
110 * Glossary:: Basic concepts are explained.
111 * Copying This Manual:: License for copying this manual.
112 * Bibliography:: Publications cited in this manual.
113 * Index:: Cross-references to the text.
116 --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
118 The Concepts of Bison
120 * Language and Grammar:: Languages and context-free grammars,
121 as mathematical ideas.
122 * Grammar in Bison:: How we represent grammars for Bison's sake.
123 * Semantic Values:: Each token or syntactic grouping can have
124 a semantic value (the value of an integer,
125 the name of an identifier, etc.).
126 * Semantic Actions:: Each rule can have an action containing C code.
127 * GLR Parsers:: Writing parsers for general context-free languages.
128 * Locations:: Overview of location tracking.
129 * Bison Parser:: What are Bison's input and output,
130 how is the output used?
131 * Stages:: Stages in writing and running Bison grammars.
132 * Grammar Layout:: Overall structure of a Bison grammar file.
136 * Simple GLR Parsers:: Using GLR parsers on unambiguous grammars.
137 * Merging GLR Parses:: Using GLR parsers to resolve ambiguities.
138 * GLR Semantic Actions:: Deferred semantic actions have special concerns.
139 * Compiler Requirements:: GLR parsers require a modern C compiler.
143 * RPN Calc:: Reverse polish notation calculator;
144 a first example with no operator precedence.
145 * Infix Calc:: Infix (algebraic) notation calculator.
146 Operator precedence is introduced.
147 * Simple Error Recovery:: Continuing after syntax errors.
148 * Location Tracking Calc:: Demonstrating the use of @@@var{n} and @@$.
149 * Multi-function Calc:: Calculator with memory and trig functions.
150 It uses multiple data-types for semantic values.
151 * Exercises:: Ideas for improving the multi-function calculator.
153 Reverse Polish Notation Calculator
155 * Rpcalc Declarations:: Prologue (declarations) for rpcalc.
156 * Rpcalc Rules:: Grammar Rules for rpcalc, with explanation.
157 * Rpcalc Lexer:: The lexical analyzer.
158 * Rpcalc Main:: The controlling function.
159 * Rpcalc Error:: The error reporting function.
160 * Rpcalc Generate:: Running Bison on the grammar file.
161 * Rpcalc Compile:: Run the C compiler on the output code.
163 Grammar Rules for @code{rpcalc}
169 Location Tracking Calculator: @code{ltcalc}
171 * Ltcalc Declarations:: Bison and C declarations for ltcalc.
172 * Ltcalc Rules:: Grammar rules for ltcalc, with explanations.
173 * Ltcalc Lexer:: The lexical analyzer.
175 Multi-Function Calculator: @code{mfcalc}
177 * Mfcalc Declarations:: Bison declarations for multi-function calculator.
178 * Mfcalc Rules:: Grammar rules for the calculator.
179 * Mfcalc Symbol Table:: Symbol table management subroutines.
183 * Grammar Outline:: Overall layout of the grammar file.
184 * Symbols:: Terminal and nonterminal symbols.
185 * Rules:: How to write grammar rules.
186 * Recursion:: Writing recursive rules.
187 * Semantics:: Semantic values and actions.
188 * Tracking Locations:: Locations and actions.
189 * Named References:: Using named references in actions.
190 * Declarations:: All kinds of Bison declarations are described here.
191 * Multiple Parsers:: Putting more than one Bison parser in one program.
193 Outline of a Bison Grammar
195 * Prologue:: Syntax and usage of the prologue.
196 * Prologue Alternatives:: Syntax and usage of alternatives to the prologue.
197 * Bison Declarations:: Syntax and usage of the Bison declarations section.
198 * Grammar Rules:: Syntax and usage of the grammar rules section.
199 * Epilogue:: Syntax and usage of the epilogue.
201 Defining Language Semantics
203 * Value Type:: Specifying one data type for all semantic values.
204 * Multiple Types:: Specifying several alternative data types.
205 * Actions:: An action is the semantic definition of a grammar rule.
206 * Action Types:: Specifying data types for actions to operate on.
207 * Mid-Rule Actions:: Most actions go at the end of a rule.
208 This says when, why and how to use the exceptional
209 action in the middle of a rule.
213 * Location Type:: Specifying a data type for locations.
214 * Actions and Locations:: Using locations in actions.
215 * Location Default Action:: Defining a general way to compute locations.
219 * Require Decl:: Requiring a Bison version.
220 * Token Decl:: Declaring terminal symbols.
221 * Precedence Decl:: Declaring terminals with precedence and associativity.
222 * Union Decl:: Declaring the set of all semantic value types.
223 * Type Decl:: Declaring the choice of type for a nonterminal symbol.
224 * Initial Action Decl:: Code run before parsing starts.
225 * Destructor Decl:: Declaring how symbols are freed.
226 * Printer Decl:: Declaring how symbol values are displayed.
227 * Expect Decl:: Suppressing warnings about parsing conflicts.
228 * Start Decl:: Specifying the start symbol.
229 * Pure Decl:: Requesting a reentrant parser.
230 * Push Decl:: Requesting a push parser.
231 * Decl Summary:: Table of all Bison declarations.
232 * %define Summary:: Defining variables to adjust Bison's behavior.
233 * %code Summary:: Inserting code into the parser source.
235 Parser C-Language Interface
237 * Parser Function:: How to call @code{yyparse} and what it returns.
238 * Push Parser Function:: How to call @code{yypush_parse} and what it returns.
239 * Pull Parser Function:: How to call @code{yypull_parse} and what it returns.
240 * Parser Create Function:: How to call @code{yypstate_new} and what it returns.
241 * Parser Delete Function:: How to call @code{yypstate_delete} and what it returns.
242 * Lexical:: You must supply a function @code{yylex}
244 * Error Reporting:: You must supply a function @code{yyerror}.
245 * Action Features:: Special features for use in actions.
246 * Internationalization:: How to let the parser speak in the user's
249 The Lexical Analyzer Function @code{yylex}
251 * Calling Convention:: How @code{yyparse} calls @code{yylex}.
252 * Token Values:: How @code{yylex} must return the semantic value
253 of the token it has read.
254 * Token Locations:: How @code{yylex} must return the text location
255 (line number, etc.) of the token, if the
257 * Pure Calling:: How the calling convention differs in a pure parser
258 (@pxref{Pure Decl, ,A Pure (Reentrant) Parser}).
260 The Bison Parser Algorithm
262 * Lookahead:: Parser looks one token ahead when deciding what to do.
263 * Shift/Reduce:: Conflicts: when either shifting or reduction is valid.
264 * Precedence:: Operator precedence works by resolving conflicts.
265 * Contextual Precedence:: When an operator's precedence depends on context.
266 * Parser States:: The parser is a finite-state-machine with stack.
267 * Reduce/Reduce:: When two rules are applicable in the same situation.
268 * Mysterious Conflicts:: Conflicts that look unjustified.
269 * Tuning LR:: How to tune fundamental aspects of LR-based parsing.
270 * Generalized LR Parsing:: Parsing arbitrary context-free grammars.
271 * Memory Management:: What happens when memory is exhausted. How to avoid it.
275 * Why Precedence:: An example showing why precedence is needed.
276 * Using Precedence:: How to specify precedence in Bison grammars.
277 * Precedence Examples:: How these features are used in the previous example.
278 * How Precedence:: How they work.
282 * LR Table Construction:: Choose a different construction algorithm.
283 * Default Reductions:: Disable default reductions.
284 * LAC:: Correct lookahead sets in the parser states.
285 * Unreachable States:: Keep unreachable parser states for debugging.
287 Handling Context Dependencies
289 * Semantic Tokens:: Token parsing can depend on the semantic context.
290 * Lexical Tie-ins:: Token parsing can depend on the syntactic context.
291 * Tie-in Recovery:: Lexical tie-ins have implications for how
292 error recovery rules must be written.
294 Debugging Your Parser
296 * Understanding:: Understanding the structure of your parser.
297 * Tracing:: Tracing the execution of your parser.
301 * Enabling Traces:: Activating run-time trace support
302 * Mfcalc Traces:: Extending @code{mfcalc} to support traces
303 * The YYPRINT Macro:: Obsolete interface for semantic value reports
307 * Bison Options:: All the options described in detail,
308 in alphabetical order by short options.
309 * Option Cross Key:: Alphabetical list of long options.
310 * Yacc Library:: Yacc-compatible @code{yylex} and @code{main}.
312 Parsers Written In Other Languages
314 * C++ Parsers:: The interface to generate C++ parser classes
315 * Java Parsers:: The interface to generate Java parser classes
319 * C++ Bison Interface:: Asking for C++ parser generation
320 * C++ Semantic Values:: %union vs. C++
321 * C++ Location Values:: The position and location classes
322 * C++ Parser Interface:: Instantiating and running the parser
323 * C++ Scanner Interface:: Exchanges between yylex and parse
324 * A Complete C++ Example:: Demonstrating their use
328 * C++ position:: One point in the source file
329 * C++ location:: Two points in the source file
331 A Complete C++ Example
333 * Calc++ --- C++ Calculator:: The specifications
334 * Calc++ Parsing Driver:: An active parsing context
335 * Calc++ Parser:: A parser class
336 * Calc++ Scanner:: A pure C++ Flex scanner
337 * Calc++ Top Level:: Conducting the band
341 * Java Bison Interface:: Asking for Java parser generation
342 * Java Semantic Values:: %type and %token vs. Java
343 * Java Location Values:: The position and location classes
344 * Java Parser Interface:: Instantiating and running the parser
345 * Java Scanner Interface:: Specifying the scanner for the parser
346 * Java Action Features:: Special features for use in actions
347 * Java Differences:: Differences between C/C++ and Java Grammars
348 * Java Declarations Summary:: List of Bison declarations used with Java
350 Frequently Asked Questions
352 * Memory Exhausted:: Breaking the Stack Limits
353 * How Can I Reset the Parser:: @code{yyparse} Keeps some State
354 * Strings are Destroyed:: @code{yylval} Loses Track of Strings
355 * Implementing Gotos/Loops:: Control Flow in the Calculator
356 * Multiple start-symbols:: Factoring closely related grammars
357 * Secure? Conform?:: Is Bison POSIX safe?
358 * I can't build Bison:: Troubleshooting
359 * Where can I find help?:: Troubleshouting
360 * Bug Reports:: Troublereporting
361 * More Languages:: Parsers in C++, Java, and so on
362 * Beta Testing:: Experimenting development versions
363 * Mailing Lists:: Meeting other Bison users
367 * Copying This Manual:: License for copying this manual.
373 @unnumbered Introduction
376 @dfn{Bison} is a general-purpose parser generator that converts an
377 annotated context-free grammar into a deterministic LR or generalized
378 LR (GLR) parser employing LALR(1) parser tables. As an experimental
379 feature, Bison can also generate IELR(1) or canonical LR(1) parser
380 tables. Once you are proficient with Bison, you can use it to develop
381 a wide range of language parsers, from those used in simple desk
382 calculators to complex programming languages.
384 Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all properly-written Yacc
385 grammars ought to work with Bison with no change. Anyone familiar
386 with Yacc should be able to use Bison with little trouble. You need
387 to be fluent in C or C++ programming in order to use Bison or to
388 understand this manual. Java is also supported as an experimental
391 We begin with tutorial chapters that explain the basic concepts of
392 using Bison and show three explained examples, each building on the
393 last. If you don't know Bison or Yacc, start by reading these
394 chapters. Reference chapters follow, which describe specific aspects
397 Bison was written originally by Robert Corbett. Richard Stallman made
398 it Yacc-compatible. Wilfred Hansen of Carnegie Mellon University
399 added multi-character string literals and other features. Since then,
400 Bison has grown more robust and evolved many other new features thanks
401 to the hard work of a long list of volunteers. For details, see the
402 @file{THANKS} and @file{ChangeLog} files included in the Bison
405 This edition corresponds to version @value{VERSION} of Bison.
408 @unnumbered Conditions for Using Bison
410 The distribution terms for Bison-generated parsers permit using the
411 parsers in nonfree programs. Before Bison version 2.2, these extra
412 permissions applied only when Bison was generating LALR(1)
413 parsers in C@. And before Bison version 1.24, Bison-generated
414 parsers could be used only in programs that were free software.
416 The other GNU programming tools, such as the GNU C
418 had such a requirement. They could always be used for nonfree
419 software. The reason Bison was different was not due to a special
420 policy decision; it resulted from applying the usual General Public
421 License to all of the Bison source code.
423 The main output of the Bison utility---the Bison parser implementation
424 file---contains a verbatim copy of a sizable piece of Bison, which is
425 the code for the parser's implementation. (The actions from your
426 grammar are inserted into this implementation at one point, but most
427 of the rest of the implementation is not changed.) When we applied
428 the GPL terms to the skeleton code for the parser's implementation,
429 the effect was to restrict the use of Bison output to free software.
431 We didn't change the terms because of sympathy for people who want to
432 make software proprietary. @strong{Software should be free.} But we
433 concluded that limiting Bison's use to free software was doing little to
434 encourage people to make other software free. So we decided to make the
435 practical conditions for using Bison match the practical conditions for
436 using the other GNU tools.
438 This exception applies when Bison is generating code for a parser.
439 You can tell whether the exception applies to a Bison output file by
440 inspecting the file for text beginning with ``As a special
441 exception@dots{}''. The text spells out the exact terms of the
445 @unnumbered GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
446 @include gpl-3.0.texi
449 @chapter The Concepts of Bison
451 This chapter introduces many of the basic concepts without which the
452 details of Bison will not make sense. If you do not already know how to
453 use Bison or Yacc, we suggest you start by reading this chapter carefully.
456 * Language and Grammar:: Languages and context-free grammars,
457 as mathematical ideas.
458 * Grammar in Bison:: How we represent grammars for Bison's sake.
459 * Semantic Values:: Each token or syntactic grouping can have
460 a semantic value (the value of an integer,
461 the name of an identifier, etc.).
462 * Semantic Actions:: Each rule can have an action containing C code.
463 * GLR Parsers:: Writing parsers for general context-free languages.
464 * Locations:: Overview of location tracking.
465 * Bison Parser:: What are Bison's input and output,
466 how is the output used?
467 * Stages:: Stages in writing and running Bison grammars.
468 * Grammar Layout:: Overall structure of a Bison grammar file.
471 @node Language and Grammar
472 @section Languages and Context-Free Grammars
474 @cindex context-free grammar
475 @cindex grammar, context-free
476 In order for Bison to parse a language, it must be described by a
477 @dfn{context-free grammar}. This means that you specify one or more
478 @dfn{syntactic groupings} and give rules for constructing them from their
479 parts. For example, in the C language, one kind of grouping is called an
480 `expression'. One rule for making an expression might be, ``An expression
481 can be made of a minus sign and another expression''. Another would be,
482 ``An expression can be an integer''. As you can see, rules are often
483 recursive, but there must be at least one rule which leads out of the
487 @cindex Backus-Naur form
488 The most common formal system for presenting such rules for humans to read
489 is @dfn{Backus-Naur Form} or ``BNF'', which was developed in
490 order to specify the language Algol 60. Any grammar expressed in
491 BNF is a context-free grammar. The input to Bison is
492 essentially machine-readable BNF.
494 @cindex LALR grammars
495 @cindex IELR grammars
497 There are various important subclasses of context-free grammars. Although
498 it can handle almost all context-free grammars, Bison is optimized for what
499 are called LR(1) grammars. In brief, in these grammars, it must be possible
500 to tell how to parse any portion of an input string with just a single token
501 of lookahead. For historical reasons, Bison by default is limited by the
502 additional restrictions of LALR(1), which is hard to explain simply.
503 @xref{Mysterious Conflicts}, for more information on this. As an
504 experimental feature, you can escape these additional restrictions by
505 requesting IELR(1) or canonical LR(1) parser tables. @xref{LR Table
506 Construction}, to learn how.
509 @cindex generalized LR (GLR) parsing
510 @cindex ambiguous grammars
511 @cindex nondeterministic parsing
513 Parsers for LR(1) grammars are @dfn{deterministic}, meaning
514 roughly that the next grammar rule to apply at any point in the input is
515 uniquely determined by the preceding input and a fixed, finite portion
516 (called a @dfn{lookahead}) of the remaining input. A context-free
517 grammar can be @dfn{ambiguous}, meaning that there are multiple ways to
518 apply the grammar rules to get the same inputs. Even unambiguous
519 grammars can be @dfn{nondeterministic}, meaning that no fixed
520 lookahead always suffices to determine the next grammar rule to apply.
521 With the proper declarations, Bison is also able to parse these more
522 general context-free grammars, using a technique known as GLR
523 parsing (for Generalized LR). Bison's GLR parsers
524 are able to handle any context-free grammar for which the number of
525 possible parses of any given string is finite.
527 @cindex symbols (abstract)
529 @cindex syntactic grouping
530 @cindex grouping, syntactic
531 In the formal grammatical rules for a language, each kind of syntactic
532 unit or grouping is named by a @dfn{symbol}. Those which are built by
533 grouping smaller constructs according to grammatical rules are called
534 @dfn{nonterminal symbols}; those which can't be subdivided are called
535 @dfn{terminal symbols} or @dfn{token types}. We call a piece of input
536 corresponding to a single terminal symbol a @dfn{token}, and a piece
537 corresponding to a single nonterminal symbol a @dfn{grouping}.
539 We can use the C language as an example of what symbols, terminal and
540 nonterminal, mean. The tokens of C are identifiers, constants (numeric
541 and string), and the various keywords, arithmetic operators and
542 punctuation marks. So the terminal symbols of a grammar for C include
543 `identifier', `number', `string', plus one symbol for each keyword,
544 operator or punctuation mark: `if', `return', `const', `static', `int',
545 `char', `plus-sign', `open-brace', `close-brace', `comma' and many more.
546 (These tokens can be subdivided into characters, but that is a matter of
547 lexicography, not grammar.)
549 Here is a simple C function subdivided into tokens:
552 int /* @r{keyword `int'} */
553 square (int x) /* @r{identifier, open-paren, keyword `int',}
554 @r{identifier, close-paren} */
555 @{ /* @r{open-brace} */
556 return x * x; /* @r{keyword `return', identifier, asterisk,}
557 @r{identifier, semicolon} */
558 @} /* @r{close-brace} */
561 The syntactic groupings of C include the expression, the statement, the
562 declaration, and the function definition. These are represented in the
563 grammar of C by nonterminal symbols `expression', `statement',
564 `declaration' and `function definition'. The full grammar uses dozens of
565 additional language constructs, each with its own nonterminal symbol, in
566 order to express the meanings of these four. The example above is a
567 function definition; it contains one declaration, and one statement. In
568 the statement, each @samp{x} is an expression and so is @samp{x * x}.
570 Each nonterminal symbol must have grammatical rules showing how it is made
571 out of simpler constructs. For example, one kind of C statement is the
572 @code{return} statement; this would be described with a grammar rule which
573 reads informally as follows:
576 A `statement' can be made of a `return' keyword, an `expression' and a
581 There would be many other rules for `statement', one for each kind of
585 One nonterminal symbol must be distinguished as the special one which
586 defines a complete utterance in the language. It is called the @dfn{start
587 symbol}. In a compiler, this means a complete input program. In the C
588 language, the nonterminal symbol `sequence of definitions and declarations'
591 For example, @samp{1 + 2} is a valid C expression---a valid part of a C
592 program---but it is not valid as an @emph{entire} C program. In the
593 context-free grammar of C, this follows from the fact that `expression' is
594 not the start symbol.
596 The Bison parser reads a sequence of tokens as its input, and groups the
597 tokens using the grammar rules. If the input is valid, the end result is
598 that the entire token sequence reduces to a single grouping whose symbol is
599 the grammar's start symbol. If we use a grammar for C, the entire input
600 must be a `sequence of definitions and declarations'. If not, the parser
601 reports a syntax error.
603 @node Grammar in Bison
604 @section From Formal Rules to Bison Input
605 @cindex Bison grammar
606 @cindex grammar, Bison
607 @cindex formal grammar
609 A formal grammar is a mathematical construct. To define the language
610 for Bison, you must write a file expressing the grammar in Bison syntax:
611 a @dfn{Bison grammar} file. @xref{Grammar File, ,Bison Grammar Files}.
613 A nonterminal symbol in the formal grammar is represented in Bison input
614 as an identifier, like an identifier in C@. By convention, it should be
615 in lower case, such as @code{expr}, @code{stmt} or @code{declaration}.
617 The Bison representation for a terminal symbol is also called a @dfn{token
618 type}. Token types as well can be represented as C-like identifiers. By
619 convention, these identifiers should be upper case to distinguish them from
620 nonterminals: for example, @code{INTEGER}, @code{IDENTIFIER}, @code{IF} or
621 @code{RETURN}. A terminal symbol that stands for a particular keyword in
622 the language should be named after that keyword converted to upper case.
623 The terminal symbol @code{error} is reserved for error recovery.
626 A terminal symbol can also be represented as a character literal, just like
627 a C character constant. You should do this whenever a token is just a
628 single character (parenthesis, plus-sign, etc.): use that same character in
629 a literal as the terminal symbol for that token.
631 A third way to represent a terminal symbol is with a C string constant
632 containing several characters. @xref{Symbols}, for more information.
634 The grammar rules also have an expression in Bison syntax. For example,
635 here is the Bison rule for a C @code{return} statement. The semicolon in
636 quotes is a literal character token, representing part of the C syntax for
637 the statement; the naked semicolon, and the colon, are Bison punctuation
641 stmt: RETURN expr ';' ;
645 @xref{Rules, ,Syntax of Grammar Rules}.
647 @node Semantic Values
648 @section Semantic Values
649 @cindex semantic value
650 @cindex value, semantic
652 A formal grammar selects tokens only by their classifications: for example,
653 if a rule mentions the terminal symbol `integer constant', it means that
654 @emph{any} integer constant is grammatically valid in that position. The
655 precise value of the constant is irrelevant to how to parse the input: if
656 @samp{x+4} is grammatical then @samp{x+1} or @samp{x+3989} is equally
659 But the precise value is very important for what the input means once it is
660 parsed. A compiler is useless if it fails to distinguish between 4, 1 and
661 3989 as constants in the program! Therefore, each token in a Bison grammar
662 has both a token type and a @dfn{semantic value}. @xref{Semantics,
663 ,Defining Language Semantics},
666 The token type is a terminal symbol defined in the grammar, such as
667 @code{INTEGER}, @code{IDENTIFIER} or @code{','}. It tells everything
668 you need to know to decide where the token may validly appear and how to
669 group it with other tokens. The grammar rules know nothing about tokens
672 The semantic value has all the rest of the information about the
673 meaning of the token, such as the value of an integer, or the name of an
674 identifier. (A token such as @code{','} which is just punctuation doesn't
675 need to have any semantic value.)
677 For example, an input token might be classified as token type
678 @code{INTEGER} and have the semantic value 4. Another input token might
679 have the same token type @code{INTEGER} but value 3989. When a grammar
680 rule says that @code{INTEGER} is allowed, either of these tokens is
681 acceptable because each is an @code{INTEGER}. When the parser accepts the
682 token, it keeps track of the token's semantic value.
684 Each grouping can also have a semantic value as well as its nonterminal
685 symbol. For example, in a calculator, an expression typically has a
686 semantic value that is a number. In a compiler for a programming
687 language, an expression typically has a semantic value that is a tree
688 structure describing the meaning of the expression.
690 @node Semantic Actions
691 @section Semantic Actions
692 @cindex semantic actions
693 @cindex actions, semantic
695 In order to be useful, a program must do more than parse input; it must
696 also produce some output based on the input. In a Bison grammar, a grammar
697 rule can have an @dfn{action} made up of C statements. Each time the
698 parser recognizes a match for that rule, the action is executed.
701 Most of the time, the purpose of an action is to compute the semantic value
702 of the whole construct from the semantic values of its parts. For example,
703 suppose we have a rule which says an expression can be the sum of two
704 expressions. When the parser recognizes such a sum, each of the
705 subexpressions has a semantic value which describes how it was built up.
706 The action for this rule should create a similar sort of value for the
707 newly recognized larger expression.
709 For example, here is a rule that says an expression can be the sum of
713 expr: expr '+' expr @{ $$ = $1 + $3; @} ;
717 The action says how to produce the semantic value of the sum expression
718 from the values of the two subexpressions.
721 @section Writing GLR Parsers
723 @cindex generalized LR (GLR) parsing
726 @cindex shift/reduce conflicts
727 @cindex reduce/reduce conflicts
729 In some grammars, Bison's deterministic
730 LR(1) parsing algorithm cannot decide whether to apply a
731 certain grammar rule at a given point. That is, it may not be able to
732 decide (on the basis of the input read so far) which of two possible
733 reductions (applications of a grammar rule) applies, or whether to apply
734 a reduction or read more of the input and apply a reduction later in the
735 input. These are known respectively as @dfn{reduce/reduce} conflicts
736 (@pxref{Reduce/Reduce}), and @dfn{shift/reduce} conflicts
737 (@pxref{Shift/Reduce}).
739 To use a grammar that is not easily modified to be LR(1), a
740 more general parsing algorithm is sometimes necessary. If you include
741 @code{%glr-parser} among the Bison declarations in your file
742 (@pxref{Grammar Outline}), the result is a Generalized LR
743 (GLR) parser. These parsers handle Bison grammars that
744 contain no unresolved conflicts (i.e., after applying precedence
745 declarations) identically to deterministic parsers. However, when
746 faced with unresolved shift/reduce and reduce/reduce conflicts,
747 GLR parsers use the simple expedient of doing both,
748 effectively cloning the parser to follow both possibilities. Each of
749 the resulting parsers can again split, so that at any given time, there
750 can be any number of possible parses being explored. The parsers
751 proceed in lockstep; that is, all of them consume (shift) a given input
752 symbol before any of them proceed to the next. Each of the cloned
753 parsers eventually meets one of two possible fates: either it runs into
754 a parsing error, in which case it simply vanishes, or it merges with
755 another parser, because the two of them have reduced the input to an
756 identical set of symbols.
758 During the time that there are multiple parsers, semantic actions are
759 recorded, but not performed. When a parser disappears, its recorded
760 semantic actions disappear as well, and are never performed. When a
761 reduction makes two parsers identical, causing them to merge, Bison
762 records both sets of semantic actions. Whenever the last two parsers
763 merge, reverting to the single-parser case, Bison resolves all the
764 outstanding actions either by precedences given to the grammar rules
765 involved, or by performing both actions, and then calling a designated
766 user-defined function on the resulting values to produce an arbitrary
770 * Simple GLR Parsers:: Using GLR parsers on unambiguous grammars.
771 * Merging GLR Parses:: Using GLR parsers to resolve ambiguities.
772 * GLR Semantic Actions:: Deferred semantic actions have special concerns.
773 * Compiler Requirements:: GLR parsers require a modern C compiler.
776 @node Simple GLR Parsers
777 @subsection Using GLR on Unambiguous Grammars
778 @cindex GLR parsing, unambiguous grammars
779 @cindex generalized LR (GLR) parsing, unambiguous grammars
783 @cindex reduce/reduce conflicts
784 @cindex shift/reduce conflicts
786 In the simplest cases, you can use the GLR algorithm
787 to parse grammars that are unambiguous but fail to be LR(1).
788 Such grammars typically require more than one symbol of lookahead.
790 Consider a problem that
791 arises in the declaration of enumerated and subrange types in the
792 programming language Pascal. Here are some examples:
795 type subrange = lo .. hi;
796 type enum = (a, b, c);
800 The original language standard allows only numeric
801 literals and constant identifiers for the subrange bounds (@samp{lo}
802 and @samp{hi}), but Extended Pascal (ISO/IEC
803 10206) and many other
804 Pascal implementations allow arbitrary expressions there. This gives
805 rise to the following situation, containing a superfluous pair of
809 type subrange = (a) .. b;
813 Compare this to the following declaration of an enumerated
814 type with only one value:
821 (These declarations are contrived, but they are syntactically
822 valid, and more-complicated cases can come up in practical programs.)
824 These two declarations look identical until the @samp{..} token.
825 With normal LR(1) one-token lookahead it is not
826 possible to decide between the two forms when the identifier
827 @samp{a} is parsed. It is, however, desirable
828 for a parser to decide this, since in the latter case
829 @samp{a} must become a new identifier to represent the enumeration
830 value, while in the former case @samp{a} must be evaluated with its
831 current meaning, which may be a constant or even a function call.
833 You could parse @samp{(a)} as an ``unspecified identifier in parentheses'',
834 to be resolved later, but this typically requires substantial
835 contortions in both semantic actions and large parts of the
836 grammar, where the parentheses are nested in the recursive rules for
839 You might think of using the lexer to distinguish between the two
840 forms by returning different tokens for currently defined and
841 undefined identifiers. But if these declarations occur in a local
842 scope, and @samp{a} is defined in an outer scope, then both forms
843 are possible---either locally redefining @samp{a}, or using the
844 value of @samp{a} from the outer scope. So this approach cannot
847 A simple solution to this problem is to declare the parser to
848 use the GLR algorithm.
849 When the GLR parser reaches the critical state, it
850 merely splits into two branches and pursues both syntax rules
851 simultaneously. Sooner or later, one of them runs into a parsing
852 error. If there is a @samp{..} token before the next
853 @samp{;}, the rule for enumerated types fails since it cannot
854 accept @samp{..} anywhere; otherwise, the subrange type rule
855 fails since it requires a @samp{..} token. So one of the branches
856 fails silently, and the other one continues normally, performing
857 all the intermediate actions that were postponed during the split.
859 If the input is syntactically incorrect, both branches fail and the parser
860 reports a syntax error as usual.
862 The effect of all this is that the parser seems to ``guess'' the
863 correct branch to take, or in other words, it seems to use more
864 lookahead than the underlying LR(1) algorithm actually allows
865 for. In this example, LR(2) would suffice, but also some cases
866 that are not LR(@math{k}) for any @math{k} can be handled this way.
868 In general, a GLR parser can take quadratic or cubic worst-case time,
869 and the current Bison parser even takes exponential time and space
870 for some grammars. In practice, this rarely happens, and for many
871 grammars it is possible to prove that it cannot happen.
872 The present example contains only one conflict between two
873 rules, and the type-declaration context containing the conflict
874 cannot be nested. So the number of
875 branches that can exist at any time is limited by the constant 2,
876 and the parsing time is still linear.
878 Here is a Bison grammar corresponding to the example above. It
879 parses a vastly simplified form of Pascal type declarations.
882 %token TYPE DOTDOT ID
892 type_decl: TYPE ID '=' type ';' ;
921 When used as a normal LR(1) grammar, Bison correctly complains
922 about one reduce/reduce conflict. In the conflicting situation the
923 parser chooses one of the alternatives, arbitrarily the one
924 declared first. Therefore the following correct input is not
931 The parser can be turned into a GLR parser, while also telling Bison
932 to be silent about the one known reduce/reduce conflict, by adding
933 these two declarations to the Bison grammar file (before the first
942 No change in the grammar itself is required. Now the
943 parser recognizes all valid declarations, according to the
944 limited syntax above, transparently. In fact, the user does not even
945 notice when the parser splits.
947 So here we have a case where we can use the benefits of GLR,
948 almost without disadvantages. Even in simple cases like this, however,
949 there are at least two potential problems to beware. First, always
950 analyze the conflicts reported by Bison to make sure that GLR
951 splitting is only done where it is intended. A GLR parser
952 splitting inadvertently may cause problems less obvious than an
953 LR parser statically choosing the wrong alternative in a
954 conflict. Second, consider interactions with the lexer (@pxref{Semantic
955 Tokens}) with great care. Since a split parser consumes tokens without
956 performing any actions during the split, the lexer cannot obtain
957 information via parser actions. Some cases of lexer interactions can be
958 eliminated by using GLR to shift the complications from the
959 lexer to the parser. You must check the remaining cases for
962 In our example, it would be safe for the lexer to return tokens based on
963 their current meanings in some symbol table, because no new symbols are
964 defined in the middle of a type declaration. Though it is possible for
965 a parser to define the enumeration constants as they are parsed, before
966 the type declaration is completed, it actually makes no difference since
967 they cannot be used within the same enumerated type declaration.
969 @node Merging GLR Parses
970 @subsection Using GLR to Resolve Ambiguities
971 @cindex GLR parsing, ambiguous grammars
972 @cindex generalized LR (GLR) parsing, ambiguous grammars
976 @cindex reduce/reduce conflicts
978 Let's consider an example, vastly simplified from a C++ grammar.
983 #define YYSTYPE char const *
985 void yyerror (char const *);
999 | prog stmt @{ printf ("\n"); @}
1008 ID @{ printf ("%s ", $$); @}
1009 | TYPENAME '(' expr ')'
1010 @{ printf ("%s <cast> ", $1); @}
1011 | expr '+' expr @{ printf ("+ "); @}
1012 | expr '=' expr @{ printf ("= "); @}
1016 TYPENAME declarator ';'
1017 @{ printf ("%s <declare> ", $1); @}
1018 | TYPENAME declarator '=' expr ';'
1019 @{ printf ("%s <init-declare> ", $1); @}
1023 ID @{ printf ("\"%s\" ", $1); @}
1024 | '(' declarator ')'
1029 This models a problematic part of the C++ grammar---the ambiguity between
1030 certain declarations and statements. For example,
1037 parses as either an @code{expr} or a @code{stmt}
1038 (assuming that @samp{T} is recognized as a @code{TYPENAME} and
1039 @samp{x} as an @code{ID}).
1040 Bison detects this as a reduce/reduce conflict between the rules
1041 @code{expr : ID} and @code{declarator : ID}, which it cannot resolve at the
1042 time it encounters @code{x} in the example above. Since this is a
1043 GLR parser, it therefore splits the problem into two parses, one for
1044 each choice of resolving the reduce/reduce conflict.
1045 Unlike the example from the previous section (@pxref{Simple GLR Parsers}),
1046 however, neither of these parses ``dies,'' because the grammar as it stands is
1047 ambiguous. One of the parsers eventually reduces @code{stmt : expr ';'} and
1048 the other reduces @code{stmt : decl}, after which both parsers are in an
1049 identical state: they've seen @samp{prog stmt} and have the same unprocessed
1050 input remaining. We say that these parses have @dfn{merged.}
1052 At this point, the GLR parser requires a specification in the
1053 grammar of how to choose between the competing parses.
1054 In the example above, the two @code{%dprec}
1055 declarations specify that Bison is to give precedence
1056 to the parse that interprets the example as a
1057 @code{decl}, which implies that @code{x} is a declarator.
1058 The parser therefore prints
1061 "x" y z + T <init-declare>
1064 The @code{%dprec} declarations only come into play when more than one
1065 parse survives. Consider a different input string for this parser:
1072 This is another example of using GLR to parse an unambiguous
1073 construct, as shown in the previous section (@pxref{Simple GLR Parsers}).
1074 Here, there is no ambiguity (this cannot be parsed as a declaration).
1075 However, at the time the Bison parser encounters @code{x}, it does not
1076 have enough information to resolve the reduce/reduce conflict (again,
1077 between @code{x} as an @code{expr} or a @code{declarator}). In this
1078 case, no precedence declaration is used. Again, the parser splits
1079 into two, one assuming that @code{x} is an @code{expr}, and the other
1080 assuming @code{x} is a @code{declarator}. The second of these parsers
1081 then vanishes when it sees @code{+}, and the parser prints
1087 Suppose that instead of resolving the ambiguity, you wanted to see all
1088 the possibilities. For this purpose, you must merge the semantic
1089 actions of the two possible parsers, rather than choosing one over the
1090 other. To do so, you could change the declaration of @code{stmt} as
1095 expr ';' %merge <stmtMerge>
1096 | decl %merge <stmtMerge>
1101 and define the @code{stmtMerge} function as:
1105 stmtMerge (YYSTYPE x0, YYSTYPE x1)
1113 with an accompanying forward declaration
1114 in the C declarations at the beginning of the file:
1118 #define YYSTYPE char const *
1119 static YYSTYPE stmtMerge (YYSTYPE x0, YYSTYPE x1);
1124 With these declarations, the resulting parser parses the first example
1125 as both an @code{expr} and a @code{decl}, and prints
1128 "x" y z + T <init-declare> x T <cast> y z + = <OR>
1131 Bison requires that all of the
1132 productions that participate in any particular merge have identical
1133 @samp{%merge} clauses. Otherwise, the ambiguity would be unresolvable,
1134 and the parser will report an error during any parse that results in
1135 the offending merge.
1137 @node GLR Semantic Actions
1138 @subsection GLR Semantic Actions
1140 @cindex deferred semantic actions
1141 By definition, a deferred semantic action is not performed at the same time as
1142 the associated reduction.
1143 This raises caveats for several Bison features you might use in a semantic
1144 action in a GLR parser.
1147 @cindex GLR parsers and @code{yychar}
1149 @cindex GLR parsers and @code{yylval}
1151 @cindex GLR parsers and @code{yylloc}
1152 In any semantic action, you can examine @code{yychar} to determine the type of
1153 the lookahead token present at the time of the associated reduction.
1154 After checking that @code{yychar} is not set to @code{YYEMPTY} or @code{YYEOF},
1155 you can then examine @code{yylval} and @code{yylloc} to determine the
1156 lookahead token's semantic value and location, if any.
1157 In a nondeferred semantic action, you can also modify any of these variables to
1158 influence syntax analysis.
1159 @xref{Lookahead, ,Lookahead Tokens}.
1162 @cindex GLR parsers and @code{yyclearin}
1163 In a deferred semantic action, it's too late to influence syntax analysis.
1164 In this case, @code{yychar}, @code{yylval}, and @code{yylloc} are set to
1165 shallow copies of the values they had at the time of the associated reduction.
1166 For this reason alone, modifying them is dangerous.
1167 Moreover, the result of modifying them is undefined and subject to change with
1168 future versions of Bison.
1169 For example, if a semantic action might be deferred, you should never write it
1170 to invoke @code{yyclearin} (@pxref{Action Features}) or to attempt to free
1171 memory referenced by @code{yylval}.
1174 @cindex GLR parsers and @code{YYERROR}
1175 Another Bison feature requiring special consideration is @code{YYERROR}
1176 (@pxref{Action Features}), which you can invoke in a semantic action to
1177 initiate error recovery.
1178 During deterministic GLR operation, the effect of @code{YYERROR} is
1179 the same as its effect in a deterministic parser.
1180 In a deferred semantic action, its effect is undefined.
1181 @c The effect is probably a syntax error at the split point.
1183 Also, see @ref{Location Default Action, ,Default Action for Locations}, which
1184 describes a special usage of @code{YYLLOC_DEFAULT} in GLR parsers.
1186 @node Compiler Requirements
1187 @subsection Considerations when Compiling GLR Parsers
1188 @cindex @code{inline}
1189 @cindex GLR parsers and @code{inline}
1191 The GLR parsers require a compiler for ISO C89 or
1192 later. In addition, they use the @code{inline} keyword, which is not
1193 C89, but is C99 and is a common extension in pre-C99 compilers. It is
1194 up to the user of these parsers to handle
1195 portability issues. For instance, if using Autoconf and the Autoconf
1196 macro @code{AC_C_INLINE}, a mere
1205 will suffice. Otherwise, we suggest
1209 #if (__STDC_VERSION__ < 199901 && ! defined __GNUC__ \
1210 && ! defined inline)
1219 @cindex textual location
1220 @cindex location, textual
1222 Many applications, like interpreters or compilers, have to produce verbose
1223 and useful error messages. To achieve this, one must be able to keep track of
1224 the @dfn{textual location}, or @dfn{location}, of each syntactic construct.
1225 Bison provides a mechanism for handling these locations.
1227 Each token has a semantic value. In a similar fashion, each token has an
1228 associated location, but the type of locations is the same for all tokens
1229 and groupings. Moreover, the output parser is equipped with a default data
1230 structure for storing locations (@pxref{Tracking Locations}, for more
1233 Like semantic values, locations can be reached in actions using a dedicated
1234 set of constructs. In the example above, the location of the whole grouping
1235 is @code{@@$}, while the locations of the subexpressions are @code{@@1} and
1238 When a rule is matched, a default action is used to compute the semantic value
1239 of its left hand side (@pxref{Actions}). In the same way, another default
1240 action is used for locations. However, the action for locations is general
1241 enough for most cases, meaning there is usually no need to describe for each
1242 rule how @code{@@$} should be formed. When building a new location for a given
1243 grouping, the default behavior of the output parser is to take the beginning
1244 of the first symbol, and the end of the last symbol.
1247 @section Bison Output: the Parser Implementation File
1248 @cindex Bison parser
1249 @cindex Bison utility
1250 @cindex lexical analyzer, purpose
1253 When you run Bison, you give it a Bison grammar file as input. The
1254 most important output is a C source file that implements a parser for
1255 the language described by the grammar. This parser is called a
1256 @dfn{Bison parser}, and this file is called a @dfn{Bison parser
1257 implementation file}. Keep in mind that the Bison utility and the
1258 Bison parser are two distinct programs: the Bison utility is a program
1259 whose output is the Bison parser implementation file that becomes part
1262 The job of the Bison parser is to group tokens into groupings according to
1263 the grammar rules---for example, to build identifiers and operators into
1264 expressions. As it does this, it runs the actions for the grammar rules it
1267 The tokens come from a function called the @dfn{lexical analyzer} that
1268 you must supply in some fashion (such as by writing it in C). The Bison
1269 parser calls the lexical analyzer each time it wants a new token. It
1270 doesn't know what is ``inside'' the tokens (though their semantic values
1271 may reflect this). Typically the lexical analyzer makes the tokens by
1272 parsing characters of text, but Bison does not depend on this.
1273 @xref{Lexical, ,The Lexical Analyzer Function @code{yylex}}.
1275 The Bison parser implementation file is C code which defines a
1276 function named @code{yyparse} which implements that grammar. This
1277 function does not make a complete C program: you must supply some
1278 additional functions. One is the lexical analyzer. Another is an
1279 error-reporting function which the parser calls to report an error.
1280 In addition, a complete C program must start with a function called
1281 @code{main}; you have to provide this, and arrange for it to call
1282 @code{yyparse} or the parser will never run. @xref{Interface, ,Parser
1283 C-Language Interface}.
1285 Aside from the token type names and the symbols in the actions you
1286 write, all symbols defined in the Bison parser implementation file
1287 itself begin with @samp{yy} or @samp{YY}. This includes interface
1288 functions such as the lexical analyzer function @code{yylex}, the
1289 error reporting function @code{yyerror} and the parser function
1290 @code{yyparse} itself. This also includes numerous identifiers used
1291 for internal purposes. Therefore, you should avoid using C
1292 identifiers starting with @samp{yy} or @samp{YY} in the Bison grammar
1293 file except for the ones defined in this manual. Also, you should
1294 avoid using the C identifiers @samp{malloc} and @samp{free} for
1295 anything other than their usual meanings.
1297 In some cases the Bison parser implementation file includes system
1298 headers, and in those cases your code should respect the identifiers
1299 reserved by those headers. On some non-GNU hosts, @code{<alloca.h>},
1300 @code{<malloc.h>}, @code{<stddef.h>}, and @code{<stdlib.h>} are
1301 included as needed to declare memory allocators and related types.
1302 @code{<libintl.h>} is included if message translation is in use
1303 (@pxref{Internationalization}). Other system headers may be included
1304 if you define @code{YYDEBUG} to a nonzero value (@pxref{Tracing,
1305 ,Tracing Your Parser}).
1308 @section Stages in Using Bison
1309 @cindex stages in using Bison
1312 The actual language-design process using Bison, from grammar specification
1313 to a working compiler or interpreter, has these parts:
1317 Formally specify the grammar in a form recognized by Bison
1318 (@pxref{Grammar File, ,Bison Grammar Files}). For each grammatical rule
1319 in the language, describe the action that is to be taken when an
1320 instance of that rule is recognized. The action is described by a
1321 sequence of C statements.
1324 Write a lexical analyzer to process input and pass tokens to the parser.
1325 The lexical analyzer may be written by hand in C (@pxref{Lexical, ,The
1326 Lexical Analyzer Function @code{yylex}}). It could also be produced
1327 using Lex, but the use of Lex is not discussed in this manual.
1330 Write a controlling function that calls the Bison-produced parser.
1333 Write error-reporting routines.
1336 To turn this source code as written into a runnable program, you
1337 must follow these steps:
1341 Run Bison on the grammar to produce the parser.
1344 Compile the code output by Bison, as well as any other source files.
1347 Link the object files to produce the finished product.
1350 @node Grammar Layout
1351 @section The Overall Layout of a Bison Grammar
1352 @cindex grammar file
1354 @cindex format of grammar file
1355 @cindex layout of Bison grammar
1357 The input file for the Bison utility is a @dfn{Bison grammar file}. The
1358 general form of a Bison grammar file is as follows:
1365 @var{Bison declarations}
1374 The @samp{%%}, @samp{%@{} and @samp{%@}} are punctuation that appears
1375 in every Bison grammar file to separate the sections.
1377 The prologue may define types and variables used in the actions. You can
1378 also use preprocessor commands to define macros used there, and use
1379 @code{#include} to include header files that do any of these things.
1380 You need to declare the lexical analyzer @code{yylex} and the error
1381 printer @code{yyerror} here, along with any other global identifiers
1382 used by the actions in the grammar rules.
1384 The Bison declarations declare the names of the terminal and nonterminal
1385 symbols, and may also describe operator precedence and the data types of
1386 semantic values of various symbols.
1388 The grammar rules define how to construct each nonterminal symbol from its
1391 The epilogue can contain any code you want to use. Often the
1392 definitions of functions declared in the prologue go here. In a
1393 simple program, all the rest of the program can go here.
1397 @cindex simple examples
1398 @cindex examples, simple
1400 Now we show and explain several sample programs written using Bison: a
1401 reverse polish notation calculator, an algebraic (infix) notation
1402 calculator --- later extended to track ``locations'' ---
1403 and a multi-function calculator. All
1404 produce usable, though limited, interactive desk-top calculators.
1406 These examples are simple, but Bison grammars for real programming
1407 languages are written the same way. You can copy these examples into a
1408 source file to try them.
1411 * RPN Calc:: Reverse polish notation calculator;
1412 a first example with no operator precedence.
1413 * Infix Calc:: Infix (algebraic) notation calculator.
1414 Operator precedence is introduced.
1415 * Simple Error Recovery:: Continuing after syntax errors.
1416 * Location Tracking Calc:: Demonstrating the use of @@@var{n} and @@$.
1417 * Multi-function Calc:: Calculator with memory and trig functions.
1418 It uses multiple data-types for semantic values.
1419 * Exercises:: Ideas for improving the multi-function calculator.
1423 @section Reverse Polish Notation Calculator
1424 @cindex reverse polish notation
1425 @cindex polish notation calculator
1426 @cindex @code{rpcalc}
1427 @cindex calculator, simple
1429 The first example is that of a simple double-precision @dfn{reverse polish
1430 notation} calculator (a calculator using postfix operators). This example
1431 provides a good starting point, since operator precedence is not an issue.
1432 The second example will illustrate how operator precedence is handled.
1434 The source code for this calculator is named @file{rpcalc.y}. The
1435 @samp{.y} extension is a convention used for Bison grammar files.
1438 * Rpcalc Declarations:: Prologue (declarations) for rpcalc.
1439 * Rpcalc Rules:: Grammar Rules for rpcalc, with explanation.
1440 * Rpcalc Lexer:: The lexical analyzer.
1441 * Rpcalc Main:: The controlling function.
1442 * Rpcalc Error:: The error reporting function.
1443 * Rpcalc Generate:: Running Bison on the grammar file.
1444 * Rpcalc Compile:: Run the C compiler on the output code.
1447 @node Rpcalc Declarations
1448 @subsection Declarations for @code{rpcalc}
1450 Here are the C and Bison declarations for the reverse polish notation
1451 calculator. As in C, comments are placed between @samp{/*@dots{}*/}.
1454 /* Reverse polish notation calculator. */
1457 #define YYSTYPE double
1460 void yyerror (char const *);
1465 %% /* Grammar rules and actions follow. */
1468 The declarations section (@pxref{Prologue, , The prologue}) contains two
1469 preprocessor directives and two forward declarations.
1471 The @code{#define} directive defines the macro @code{YYSTYPE}, thus
1472 specifying the C data type for semantic values of both tokens and
1473 groupings (@pxref{Value Type, ,Data Types of Semantic Values}). The
1474 Bison parser will use whatever type @code{YYSTYPE} is defined as; if you
1475 don't define it, @code{int} is the default. Because we specify
1476 @code{double}, each token and each expression has an associated value,
1477 which is a floating point number.
1479 The @code{#include} directive is used to declare the exponentiation
1480 function @code{pow}.
1482 The forward declarations for @code{yylex} and @code{yyerror} are
1483 needed because the C language requires that functions be declared
1484 before they are used. These functions will be defined in the
1485 epilogue, but the parser calls them so they must be declared in the
1488 The second section, Bison declarations, provides information to Bison
1489 about the token types (@pxref{Bison Declarations, ,The Bison
1490 Declarations Section}). Each terminal symbol that is not a
1491 single-character literal must be declared here. (Single-character
1492 literals normally don't need to be declared.) In this example, all the
1493 arithmetic operators are designated by single-character literals, so the
1494 only terminal symbol that needs to be declared is @code{NUM}, the token
1495 type for numeric constants.
1498 @subsection Grammar Rules for @code{rpcalc}
1500 Here are the grammar rules for the reverse polish notation calculator.
1513 | exp '\n' @{ printf ("%.10g\n", $1); @}
1520 | exp exp '+' @{ $$ = $1 + $2; @}
1521 | exp exp '-' @{ $$ = $1 - $2; @}
1522 | exp exp '*' @{ $$ = $1 * $2; @}
1523 | exp exp '/' @{ $$ = $1 / $2; @}
1524 | exp exp '^' @{ $$ = pow ($1, $2); @} /* Exponentiation */
1525 | exp 'n' @{ $$ = -$1; @} /* Unary minus */
1531 The groupings of the rpcalc ``language'' defined here are the expression
1532 (given the name @code{exp}), the line of input (@code{line}), and the
1533 complete input transcript (@code{input}). Each of these nonterminal
1534 symbols has several alternate rules, joined by the vertical bar @samp{|}
1535 which is read as ``or''. The following sections explain what these rules
1538 The semantics of the language is determined by the actions taken when a
1539 grouping is recognized. The actions are the C code that appears inside
1540 braces. @xref{Actions}.
1542 You must specify these actions in C, but Bison provides the means for
1543 passing semantic values between the rules. In each action, the
1544 pseudo-variable @code{$$} stands for the semantic value for the grouping
1545 that the rule is going to construct. Assigning a value to @code{$$} is the
1546 main job of most actions. The semantic values of the components of the
1547 rule are referred to as @code{$1}, @code{$2}, and so on.
1556 @subsubsection Explanation of @code{input}
1558 Consider the definition of @code{input}:
1567 This definition reads as follows: ``A complete input is either an empty
1568 string, or a complete input followed by an input line''. Notice that
1569 ``complete input'' is defined in terms of itself. This definition is said
1570 to be @dfn{left recursive} since @code{input} appears always as the
1571 leftmost symbol in the sequence. @xref{Recursion, ,Recursive Rules}.
1573 The first alternative is empty because there are no symbols between the
1574 colon and the first @samp{|}; this means that @code{input} can match an
1575 empty string of input (no tokens). We write the rules this way because it
1576 is legitimate to type @kbd{Ctrl-d} right after you start the calculator.
1577 It's conventional to put an empty alternative first and write the comment
1578 @samp{/* empty */} in it.
1580 The second alternate rule (@code{input line}) handles all nontrivial input.
1581 It means, ``After reading any number of lines, read one more line if
1582 possible.'' The left recursion makes this rule into a loop. Since the
1583 first alternative matches empty input, the loop can be executed zero or
1586 The parser function @code{yyparse} continues to process input until a
1587 grammatical error is seen or the lexical analyzer says there are no more
1588 input tokens; we will arrange for the latter to happen at end-of-input.
1591 @subsubsection Explanation of @code{line}
1593 Now consider the definition of @code{line}:
1598 | exp '\n' @{ printf ("%.10g\n", $1); @}
1602 The first alternative is a token which is a newline character; this means
1603 that rpcalc accepts a blank line (and ignores it, since there is no
1604 action). The second alternative is an expression followed by a newline.
1605 This is the alternative that makes rpcalc useful. The semantic value of
1606 the @code{exp} grouping is the value of @code{$1} because the @code{exp} in
1607 question is the first symbol in the alternative. The action prints this
1608 value, which is the result of the computation the user asked for.
1610 This action is unusual because it does not assign a value to @code{$$}. As
1611 a consequence, the semantic value associated with the @code{line} is
1612 uninitialized (its value will be unpredictable). This would be a bug if
1613 that value were ever used, but we don't use it: once rpcalc has printed the
1614 value of the user's input line, that value is no longer needed.
1617 @subsubsection Explanation of @code{expr}
1619 The @code{exp} grouping has several rules, one for each kind of expression.
1620 The first rule handles the simplest expressions: those that are just numbers.
1621 The second handles an addition-expression, which looks like two expressions
1622 followed by a plus-sign. The third handles subtraction, and so on.
1627 | exp exp '+' @{ $$ = $1 + $2; @}
1628 | exp exp '-' @{ $$ = $1 - $2; @}
1633 We have used @samp{|} to join all the rules for @code{exp}, but we could
1634 equally well have written them separately:
1638 exp: exp exp '+' @{ $$ = $1 + $2; @};
1639 exp: exp exp '-' @{ $$ = $1 - $2; @};
1643 Most of the rules have actions that compute the value of the expression in
1644 terms of the value of its parts. For example, in the rule for addition,
1645 @code{$1} refers to the first component @code{exp} and @code{$2} refers to
1646 the second one. The third component, @code{'+'}, has no meaningful
1647 associated semantic value, but if it had one you could refer to it as
1648 @code{$3}. When @code{yyparse} recognizes a sum expression using this
1649 rule, the sum of the two subexpressions' values is produced as the value of
1650 the entire expression. @xref{Actions}.
1652 You don't have to give an action for every rule. When a rule has no
1653 action, Bison by default copies the value of @code{$1} into @code{$$}.
1654 This is what happens in the first rule (the one that uses @code{NUM}).
1656 The formatting shown here is the recommended convention, but Bison does
1657 not require it. You can add or change white space as much as you wish.
1661 exp: NUM | exp exp '+' @{$$ = $1 + $2; @} | @dots{} ;
1665 means the same thing as this:
1670 | exp exp '+' @{ $$ = $1 + $2; @}
1676 The latter, however, is much more readable.
1679 @subsection The @code{rpcalc} Lexical Analyzer
1680 @cindex writing a lexical analyzer
1681 @cindex lexical analyzer, writing
1683 The lexical analyzer's job is low-level parsing: converting characters
1684 or sequences of characters into tokens. The Bison parser gets its
1685 tokens by calling the lexical analyzer. @xref{Lexical, ,The Lexical
1686 Analyzer Function @code{yylex}}.
1688 Only a simple lexical analyzer is needed for the RPN
1690 lexical analyzer skips blanks and tabs, then reads in numbers as
1691 @code{double} and returns them as @code{NUM} tokens. Any other character
1692 that isn't part of a number is a separate token. Note that the token-code
1693 for such a single-character token is the character itself.
1695 The return value of the lexical analyzer function is a numeric code which
1696 represents a token type. The same text used in Bison rules to stand for
1697 this token type is also a C expression for the numeric code for the type.
1698 This works in two ways. If the token type is a character literal, then its
1699 numeric code is that of the character; you can use the same
1700 character literal in the lexical analyzer to express the number. If the
1701 token type is an identifier, that identifier is defined by Bison as a C
1702 macro whose definition is the appropriate number. In this example,
1703 therefore, @code{NUM} becomes a macro for @code{yylex} to use.
1705 The semantic value of the token (if it has one) is stored into the
1706 global variable @code{yylval}, which is where the Bison parser will look
1707 for it. (The C data type of @code{yylval} is @code{YYSTYPE}, which was
1708 defined at the beginning of the grammar; @pxref{Rpcalc Declarations,
1709 ,Declarations for @code{rpcalc}}.)
1711 A token type code of zero is returned if the end-of-input is encountered.
1712 (Bison recognizes any nonpositive value as indicating end-of-input.)
1714 Here is the code for the lexical analyzer:
1718 /* The lexical analyzer returns a double floating point
1719 number on the stack and the token NUM, or the numeric code
1720 of the character read if not a number. It skips all blanks
1721 and tabs, and returns 0 for end-of-input. */
1732 /* Skip white space. */
1733 while ((c = getchar ()) == ' ' || c == '\t')
1737 /* Process numbers. */
1738 if (c == '.' || isdigit (c))
1741 scanf ("%lf", &yylval);
1746 /* Return end-of-input. */
1749 /* Return a single char. */
1756 @subsection The Controlling Function
1757 @cindex controlling function
1758 @cindex main function in simple example
1760 In keeping with the spirit of this example, the controlling function is
1761 kept to the bare minimum. The only requirement is that it call
1762 @code{yyparse} to start the process of parsing.
1775 @subsection The Error Reporting Routine
1776 @cindex error reporting routine
1778 When @code{yyparse} detects a syntax error, it calls the error reporting
1779 function @code{yyerror} to print an error message (usually but not
1780 always @code{"syntax error"}). It is up to the programmer to supply
1781 @code{yyerror} (@pxref{Interface, ,Parser C-Language Interface}), so
1782 here is the definition we will use:
1790 /* Called by yyparse on error. */
1792 yyerror (char const *s)
1794 fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", s);
1799 After @code{yyerror} returns, the Bison parser may recover from the error
1800 and continue parsing if the grammar contains a suitable error rule
1801 (@pxref{Error Recovery}). Otherwise, @code{yyparse} returns nonzero. We
1802 have not written any error rules in this example, so any invalid input will
1803 cause the calculator program to exit. This is not clean behavior for a
1804 real calculator, but it is adequate for the first example.
1806 @node Rpcalc Generate
1807 @subsection Running Bison to Make the Parser
1808 @cindex running Bison (introduction)
1810 Before running Bison to produce a parser, we need to decide how to
1811 arrange all the source code in one or more source files. For such a
1812 simple example, the easiest thing is to put everything in one file,
1813 the grammar file. The definitions of @code{yylex}, @code{yyerror} and
1814 @code{main} go at the end, in the epilogue of the grammar file
1815 (@pxref{Grammar Layout, ,The Overall Layout of a Bison Grammar}).
1817 For a large project, you would probably have several source files, and use
1818 @code{make} to arrange to recompile them.
1820 With all the source in the grammar file, you use the following command
1821 to convert it into a parser implementation file:
1828 In this example, the grammar file is called @file{rpcalc.y} (for
1829 ``Reverse Polish @sc{calc}ulator''). Bison produces a parser
1830 implementation file named @file{@var{file}.tab.c}, removing the
1831 @samp{.y} from the grammar file name. The parser implementation file
1832 contains the source code for @code{yyparse}. The additional functions
1833 in the grammar file (@code{yylex}, @code{yyerror} and @code{main}) are
1834 copied verbatim to the parser implementation file.
1836 @node Rpcalc Compile
1837 @subsection Compiling the Parser Implementation File
1838 @cindex compiling the parser
1840 Here is how to compile and run the parser implementation file:
1844 # @r{List files in current directory.}
1846 rpcalc.tab.c rpcalc.y
1850 # @r{Compile the Bison parser.}
1851 # @r{@samp{-lm} tells compiler to search math library for @code{pow}.}
1852 $ @kbd{cc -lm -o rpcalc rpcalc.tab.c}
1856 # @r{List files again.}
1858 rpcalc rpcalc.tab.c rpcalc.y
1862 The file @file{rpcalc} now contains the executable code. Here is an
1863 example session using @code{rpcalc}.
1869 @kbd{3 7 + 3 4 5 *+-}
1871 @kbd{3 7 + 3 4 5 * + - n} @r{Note the unary minus, @samp{n}}
1875 @kbd{3 4 ^} @r{Exponentiation}
1877 @kbd{^D} @r{End-of-file indicator}
1882 @section Infix Notation Calculator: @code{calc}
1883 @cindex infix notation calculator
1885 @cindex calculator, infix notation
1887 We now modify rpcalc to handle infix operators instead of postfix. Infix
1888 notation involves the concept of operator precedence and the need for
1889 parentheses nested to arbitrary depth. Here is the Bison code for
1890 @file{calc.y}, an infix desk-top calculator.
1893 /* Infix notation calculator. */
1897 #define YYSTYPE double
1901 void yyerror (char const *);
1906 /* Bison declarations. */
1910 %left NEG /* negation--unary minus */
1911 %right '^' /* exponentiation */
1914 %% /* The grammar follows. */
1925 | exp '\n' @{ printf ("\t%.10g\n", $1); @}
1932 | exp '+' exp @{ $$ = $1 + $3; @}
1933 | exp '-' exp @{ $$ = $1 - $3; @}
1934 | exp '*' exp @{ $$ = $1 * $3; @}
1935 | exp '/' exp @{ $$ = $1 / $3; @}
1936 | '-' exp %prec NEG @{ $$ = -$2; @}
1937 | exp '^' exp @{ $$ = pow ($1, $3); @}
1938 | '(' exp ')' @{ $$ = $2; @}
1945 The functions @code{yylex}, @code{yyerror} and @code{main} can be the
1948 There are two important new features shown in this code.
1950 In the second section (Bison declarations), @code{%left} declares token
1951 types and says they are left-associative operators. The declarations
1952 @code{%left} and @code{%right} (right associativity) take the place of
1953 @code{%token} which is used to declare a token type name without
1954 associativity. (These tokens are single-character literals, which
1955 ordinarily don't need to be declared. We declare them here to specify
1958 Operator precedence is determined by the line ordering of the
1959 declarations; the higher the line number of the declaration (lower on
1960 the page or screen), the higher the precedence. Hence, exponentiation
1961 has the highest precedence, unary minus (@code{NEG}) is next, followed
1962 by @samp{*} and @samp{/}, and so on. @xref{Precedence, ,Operator
1965 The other important new feature is the @code{%prec} in the grammar
1966 section for the unary minus operator. The @code{%prec} simply instructs
1967 Bison that the rule @samp{| '-' exp} has the same precedence as
1968 @code{NEG}---in this case the next-to-highest. @xref{Contextual
1969 Precedence, ,Context-Dependent Precedence}.
1971 Here is a sample run of @file{calc.y}:
1976 @kbd{4 + 4.5 - (34/(8*3+-3))}
1984 @node Simple Error Recovery
1985 @section Simple Error Recovery
1986 @cindex error recovery, simple
1988 Up to this point, this manual has not addressed the issue of @dfn{error
1989 recovery}---how to continue parsing after the parser detects a syntax
1990 error. All we have handled is error reporting with @code{yyerror}.
1991 Recall that by default @code{yyparse} returns after calling
1992 @code{yyerror}. This means that an erroneous input line causes the
1993 calculator program to exit. Now we show how to rectify this deficiency.
1995 The Bison language itself includes the reserved word @code{error}, which
1996 may be included in the grammar rules. In the example below it has
1997 been added to one of the alternatives for @code{line}:
2003 | exp '\n' @{ printf ("\t%.10g\n", $1); @}
2004 | error '\n' @{ yyerrok; @}
2009 This addition to the grammar allows for simple error recovery in the
2010 event of a syntax error. If an expression that cannot be evaluated is
2011 read, the error will be recognized by the third rule for @code{line},
2012 and parsing will continue. (The @code{yyerror} function is still called
2013 upon to print its message as well.) The action executes the statement
2014 @code{yyerrok}, a macro defined automatically by Bison; its meaning is
2015 that error recovery is complete (@pxref{Error Recovery}). Note the
2016 difference between @code{yyerrok} and @code{yyerror}; neither one is a
2019 This form of error recovery deals with syntax errors. There are other
2020 kinds of errors; for example, division by zero, which raises an exception
2021 signal that is normally fatal. A real calculator program must handle this
2022 signal and use @code{longjmp} to return to @code{main} and resume parsing
2023 input lines; it would also have to discard the rest of the current line of
2024 input. We won't discuss this issue further because it is not specific to
2027 @node Location Tracking Calc
2028 @section Location Tracking Calculator: @code{ltcalc}
2029 @cindex location tracking calculator
2030 @cindex @code{ltcalc}
2031 @cindex calculator, location tracking
2033 This example extends the infix notation calculator with location
2034 tracking. This feature will be used to improve the error messages. For
2035 the sake of clarity, this example is a simple integer calculator, since
2036 most of the work needed to use locations will be done in the lexical
2040 * Ltcalc Declarations:: Bison and C declarations for ltcalc.
2041 * Ltcalc Rules:: Grammar rules for ltcalc, with explanations.
2042 * Ltcalc Lexer:: The lexical analyzer.
2045 @node Ltcalc Declarations
2046 @subsection Declarations for @code{ltcalc}
2048 The C and Bison declarations for the location tracking calculator are
2049 the same as the declarations for the infix notation calculator.
2052 /* Location tracking calculator. */
2058 void yyerror (char const *);
2061 /* Bison declarations. */
2069 %% /* The grammar follows. */
2073 Note there are no declarations specific to locations. Defining a data
2074 type for storing locations is not needed: we will use the type provided
2075 by default (@pxref{Location Type, ,Data Types of Locations}), which is a
2076 four member structure with the following integer fields:
2077 @code{first_line}, @code{first_column}, @code{last_line} and
2078 @code{last_column}. By conventions, and in accordance with the GNU
2079 Coding Standards and common practice, the line and column count both
2083 @subsection Grammar Rules for @code{ltcalc}
2085 Whether handling locations or not has no effect on the syntax of your
2086 language. Therefore, grammar rules for this example will be very close
2087 to those of the previous example: we will only modify them to benefit
2088 from the new information.
2090 Here, we will use locations to report divisions by zero, and locate the
2091 wrong expressions or subexpressions.
2104 | exp '\n' @{ printf ("%d\n", $1); @}
2111 | exp '+' exp @{ $$ = $1 + $3; @}
2112 | exp '-' exp @{ $$ = $1 - $3; @}
2113 | exp '*' exp @{ $$ = $1 * $3; @}
2123 fprintf (stderr, "%d.%d-%d.%d: division by zero",
2124 @@3.first_line, @@3.first_column,
2125 @@3.last_line, @@3.last_column);
2130 | '-' exp %prec NEG @{ $$ = -$2; @}
2131 | exp '^' exp @{ $$ = pow ($1, $3); @}
2132 | '(' exp ')' @{ $$ = $2; @}
2136 This code shows how to reach locations inside of semantic actions, by
2137 using the pseudo-variables @code{@@@var{n}} for rule components, and the
2138 pseudo-variable @code{@@$} for groupings.
2140 We don't need to assign a value to @code{@@$}: the output parser does it
2141 automatically. By default, before executing the C code of each action,
2142 @code{@@$} is set to range from the beginning of @code{@@1} to the end
2143 of @code{@@@var{n}}, for a rule with @var{n} components. This behavior
2144 can be redefined (@pxref{Location Default Action, , Default Action for
2145 Locations}), and for very specific rules, @code{@@$} can be computed by
2149 @subsection The @code{ltcalc} Lexical Analyzer.
2151 Until now, we relied on Bison's defaults to enable location
2152 tracking. The next step is to rewrite the lexical analyzer, and make it
2153 able to feed the parser with the token locations, as it already does for
2156 To this end, we must take into account every single character of the
2157 input text, to avoid the computed locations of being fuzzy or wrong:
2168 /* Skip white space. */
2169 while ((c = getchar ()) == ' ' || c == '\t')
2170 ++yylloc.last_column;
2175 yylloc.first_line = yylloc.last_line;
2176 yylloc.first_column = yylloc.last_column;
2180 /* Process numbers. */
2184 ++yylloc.last_column;
2185 while (isdigit (c = getchar ()))
2187 ++yylloc.last_column;
2188 yylval = yylval * 10 + c - '0';
2195 /* Return end-of-input. */
2200 /* Return a single char, and update location. */
2204 yylloc.last_column = 0;
2207 ++yylloc.last_column;
2213 Basically, the lexical analyzer performs the same processing as before:
2214 it skips blanks and tabs, and reads numbers or single-character tokens.
2215 In addition, it updates @code{yylloc}, the global variable (of type
2216 @code{YYLTYPE}) containing the token's location.
2218 Now, each time this function returns a token, the parser has its number
2219 as well as its semantic value, and its location in the text. The last
2220 needed change is to initialize @code{yylloc}, for example in the
2221 controlling function:
2228 yylloc.first_line = yylloc.last_line = 1;
2229 yylloc.first_column = yylloc.last_column = 0;
2235 Remember that computing locations is not a matter of syntax. Every
2236 character must be associated to a location update, whether it is in
2237 valid input, in comments, in literal strings, and so on.
2239 @node Multi-function Calc
2240 @section Multi-Function Calculator: @code{mfcalc}
2241 @cindex multi-function calculator
2242 @cindex @code{mfcalc}
2243 @cindex calculator, multi-function
2245 Now that the basics of Bison have been discussed, it is time to move on to
2246 a more advanced problem. The above calculators provided only five
2247 functions, @samp{+}, @samp{-}, @samp{*}, @samp{/} and @samp{^}. It would
2248 be nice to have a calculator that provides other mathematical functions such
2249 as @code{sin}, @code{cos}, etc.
2251 It is easy to add new operators to the infix calculator as long as they are
2252 only single-character literals. The lexical analyzer @code{yylex} passes
2253 back all nonnumeric characters as tokens, so new grammar rules suffice for
2254 adding a new operator. But we want something more flexible: built-in
2255 functions whose syntax has this form:
2258 @var{function_name} (@var{argument})
2262 At the same time, we will add memory to the calculator, by allowing you
2263 to create named variables, store values in them, and use them later.
2264 Here is a sample session with the multi-function calculator:
2268 @kbd{pi = 3.141592653589}
2272 @kbd{alpha = beta1 = 2.3}
2278 @kbd{exp(ln(beta1))}
2283 Note that multiple assignment and nested function calls are permitted.
2286 * Mfcalc Declarations:: Bison declarations for multi-function calculator.
2287 * Mfcalc Rules:: Grammar rules for the calculator.
2288 * Mfcalc Symbol Table:: Symbol table management subroutines.
2291 @node Mfcalc Declarations
2292 @subsection Declarations for @code{mfcalc}
2294 Here are the C and Bison declarations for the multi-function calculator.
2296 @comment file: mfcalc.y: 1
2300 #include <math.h> /* For math functions, cos(), sin(), etc. */
2301 #include "calc.h" /* Contains definition of `symrec'. */
2303 void yyerror (char const *);
2309 double val; /* For returning numbers. */
2310 symrec *tptr; /* For returning symbol-table pointers. */
2313 %token <val> NUM /* Simple double precision number. */
2314 %token <tptr> VAR FNCT /* Variable and function. */
2321 %left NEG /* negation--unary minus */
2322 %right '^' /* exponentiation */
2326 The above grammar introduces only two new features of the Bison language.
2327 These features allow semantic values to have various data types
2328 (@pxref{Multiple Types, ,More Than One Value Type}).
2330 The @code{%union} declaration specifies the entire list of possible types;
2331 this is instead of defining @code{YYSTYPE}. The allowable types are now
2332 double-floats (for @code{exp} and @code{NUM}) and pointers to entries in
2333 the symbol table. @xref{Union Decl, ,The Collection of Value Types}.
2335 Since values can now have various types, it is necessary to associate a
2336 type with each grammar symbol whose semantic value is used. These symbols
2337 are @code{NUM}, @code{VAR}, @code{FNCT}, and @code{exp}. Their
2338 declarations are augmented with information about their data type (placed
2339 between angle brackets).
2341 The Bison construct @code{%type} is used for declaring nonterminal
2342 symbols, just as @code{%token} is used for declaring token types. We
2343 have not used @code{%type} before because nonterminal symbols are
2344 normally declared implicitly by the rules that define them. But
2345 @code{exp} must be declared explicitly so we can specify its value type.
2346 @xref{Type Decl, ,Nonterminal Symbols}.
2349 @subsection Grammar Rules for @code{mfcalc}
2351 Here are the grammar rules for the multi-function calculator.
2352 Most of them are copied directly from @code{calc}; three rules,
2353 those which mention @code{VAR} or @code{FNCT}, are new.
2355 @comment file: mfcalc.y: 3
2357 %% /* The grammar follows. */
2368 | exp '\n' @{ printf ("%.10g\n", $1); @}
2369 | error '\n' @{ yyerrok; @}
2376 | VAR @{ $$ = $1->value.var; @}
2377 | VAR '=' exp @{ $$ = $3; $1->value.var = $3; @}
2378 | FNCT '(' exp ')' @{ $$ = (*($1->value.fnctptr))($3); @}
2379 | exp '+' exp @{ $$ = $1 + $3; @}
2380 | exp '-' exp @{ $$ = $1 - $3; @}
2381 | exp '*' exp @{ $$ = $1 * $3; @}
2382 | exp '/' exp @{ $$ = $1 / $3; @}
2383 | '-' exp %prec NEG @{ $$ = -$2; @}
2384 | exp '^' exp @{ $$ = pow ($1, $3); @}
2385 | '(' exp ')' @{ $$ = $2; @}
2388 /* End of grammar. */
2392 @node Mfcalc Symbol Table
2393 @subsection The @code{mfcalc} Symbol Table
2394 @cindex symbol table example
2396 The multi-function calculator requires a symbol table to keep track of the
2397 names and meanings of variables and functions. This doesn't affect the
2398 grammar rules (except for the actions) or the Bison declarations, but it
2399 requires some additional C functions for support.
2401 The symbol table itself consists of a linked list of records. Its
2402 definition, which is kept in the header @file{calc.h}, is as follows. It
2403 provides for either functions or variables to be placed in the table.
2405 @comment file: calc.h
2408 /* Function type. */
2409 typedef double (*func_t) (double);
2413 /* Data type for links in the chain of symbols. */
2416 char *name; /* name of symbol */
2417 int type; /* type of symbol: either VAR or FNCT */
2420 double var; /* value of a VAR */
2421 func_t fnctptr; /* value of a FNCT */
2423 struct symrec *next; /* link field */
2428 typedef struct symrec symrec;
2430 /* The symbol table: a chain of `struct symrec'. */
2431 extern symrec *sym_table;
2433 symrec *putsym (char const *, int);
2434 symrec *getsym (char const *);
2438 The new version of @code{main} includes a call to @code{init_table}, a
2439 function that initializes the symbol table. Here it is, and
2440 @code{init_table} as well:
2442 @comment file: mfcalc.y: 3
2447 /* Called by yyparse on error. */
2449 yyerror (char const *s)
2459 double (*fnct) (double);
2464 struct init const arith_fncts[] =
2477 /* The symbol table: a chain of `struct symrec'. */
2482 /* Put arithmetic functions in table. */
2487 for (i = 0; arith_fncts[i].fname != 0; i++)
2489 symrec *ptr = putsym (arith_fncts[i].fname, FNCT);
2490 ptr->value.fnctptr = arith_fncts[i].fnct;
2505 By simply editing the initialization list and adding the necessary include
2506 files, you can add additional functions to the calculator.
2508 Two important functions allow look-up and installation of symbols in the
2509 symbol table. The function @code{putsym} is passed a name and the type
2510 (@code{VAR} or @code{FNCT}) of the object to be installed. The object is
2511 linked to the front of the list, and a pointer to the object is returned.
2512 The function @code{getsym} is passed the name of the symbol to look up. If
2513 found, a pointer to that symbol is returned; otherwise zero is returned.
2515 @comment file: mfcalc.y: 3
2517 #include <stdlib.h> /* malloc. */
2518 #include <string.h> /* strlen. */
2522 putsym (char const *sym_name, int sym_type)
2524 symrec *ptr = (symrec *) malloc (sizeof (symrec));
2525 ptr->name = (char *) malloc (strlen (sym_name) + 1);
2526 strcpy (ptr->name,sym_name);
2527 ptr->type = sym_type;
2528 ptr->value.var = 0; /* Set value to 0 even if fctn. */
2529 ptr->next = (struct symrec *)sym_table;
2537 getsym (char const *sym_name)
2540 for (ptr = sym_table; ptr != (symrec *) 0;
2541 ptr = (symrec *)ptr->next)
2542 if (strcmp (ptr->name,sym_name) == 0)
2549 The function @code{yylex} must now recognize variables, numeric values, and
2550 the single-character arithmetic operators. Strings of alphanumeric
2551 characters with a leading letter are recognized as either variables or
2552 functions depending on what the symbol table says about them.
2554 The string is passed to @code{getsym} for look up in the symbol table. If
2555 the name appears in the table, a pointer to its location and its type
2556 (@code{VAR} or @code{FNCT}) is returned to @code{yyparse}. If it is not
2557 already in the table, then it is installed as a @code{VAR} using
2558 @code{putsym}. Again, a pointer and its type (which must be @code{VAR}) is
2559 returned to @code{yyparse}.
2561 No change is needed in the handling of numeric values and arithmetic
2562 operators in @code{yylex}.
2564 @comment file: mfcalc.y: 3
2576 /* Ignore white space, get first nonwhite character. */
2577 while ((c = getchar ()) == ' ' || c == '\t')
2585 /* Char starts a number => parse the number. */
2586 if (c == '.' || isdigit (c))
2589 scanf ("%lf", &yylval.val);
2595 /* Char starts an identifier => read the name. */
2598 /* Initially make the buffer long enough
2599 for a 40-character symbol name. */
2600 static size_t length = 40;
2601 static char *symbuf = 0;
2607 symbuf = (char *) malloc (length + 1);
2613 /* If buffer is full, make it bigger. */
2617 symbuf = (char *) realloc (symbuf, length + 1);
2619 /* Add this character to the buffer. */
2621 /* Get another character. */
2626 while (isalnum (c));
2633 s = getsym (symbuf);
2635 s = putsym (symbuf, VAR);
2640 /* Any other character is a token by itself. */
2646 The error reporting function is unchanged, and the new version of
2647 @code{main} includes a call to @code{init_table} and sets the @code{yydebug}
2648 on user demand (@xref{Tracing, , Tracing Your Parser}, for details):
2650 @comment file: mfcalc.y: 3
2653 /* Called by yyparse on error. */
2655 yyerror (char const *s)
2657 fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", s);
2663 main (int argc, char const* argv[])
2666 /* Enable parse traces on option -p. */
2667 for (i = 1; i < argc; ++i)
2668 if (!strcmp(argv[i], "-p"))
2676 This program is both powerful and flexible. You may easily add new
2677 functions, and it is a simple job to modify this code to install
2678 predefined variables such as @code{pi} or @code{e} as well.
2686 Add some new functions from @file{math.h} to the initialization list.
2689 Add another array that contains constants and their values. Then
2690 modify @code{init_table} to add these constants to the symbol table.
2691 It will be easiest to give the constants type @code{VAR}.
2694 Make the program report an error if the user refers to an
2695 uninitialized variable in any way except to store a value in it.
2699 @chapter Bison Grammar Files
2701 Bison takes as input a context-free grammar specification and produces a
2702 C-language function that recognizes correct instances of the grammar.
2704 The Bison grammar file conventionally has a name ending in @samp{.y}.
2705 @xref{Invocation, ,Invoking Bison}.
2708 * Grammar Outline:: Overall layout of the grammar file.
2709 * Symbols:: Terminal and nonterminal symbols.
2710 * Rules:: How to write grammar rules.
2711 * Recursion:: Writing recursive rules.
2712 * Semantics:: Semantic values and actions.
2713 * Tracking Locations:: Locations and actions.
2714 * Named References:: Using named references in actions.
2715 * Declarations:: All kinds of Bison declarations are described here.
2716 * Multiple Parsers:: Putting more than one Bison parser in one program.
2719 @node Grammar Outline
2720 @section Outline of a Bison Grammar
2722 A Bison grammar file has four main sections, shown here with the
2723 appropriate delimiters:
2730 @var{Bison declarations}
2739 Comments enclosed in @samp{/* @dots{} */} may appear in any of the sections.
2740 As a GNU extension, @samp{//} introduces a comment that
2741 continues until end of line.
2744 * Prologue:: Syntax and usage of the prologue.
2745 * Prologue Alternatives:: Syntax and usage of alternatives to the prologue.
2746 * Bison Declarations:: Syntax and usage of the Bison declarations section.
2747 * Grammar Rules:: Syntax and usage of the grammar rules section.
2748 * Epilogue:: Syntax and usage of the epilogue.
2752 @subsection The prologue
2753 @cindex declarations section
2755 @cindex declarations
2757 The @var{Prologue} section contains macro definitions and declarations
2758 of functions and variables that are used in the actions in the grammar
2759 rules. These are copied to the beginning of the parser implementation
2760 file so that they precede the definition of @code{yyparse}. You can
2761 use @samp{#include} to get the declarations from a header file. If
2762 you don't need any C declarations, you may omit the @samp{%@{} and
2763 @samp{%@}} delimiters that bracket this section.
2765 The @var{Prologue} section is terminated by the first occurrence
2766 of @samp{%@}} that is outside a comment, a string literal, or a
2769 You may have more than one @var{Prologue} section, intermixed with the
2770 @var{Bison declarations}. This allows you to have C and Bison
2771 declarations that refer to each other. For example, the @code{%union}
2772 declaration may use types defined in a header file, and you may wish to
2773 prototype functions that take arguments of type @code{YYSTYPE}. This
2774 can be done with two @var{Prologue} blocks, one before and one after the
2775 @code{%union} declaration.
2786 tree t; /* @r{@code{tree} is defined in @file{ptypes.h}.} */
2790 static void print_token_value (FILE *, int, YYSTYPE);
2791 #define YYPRINT(F, N, L) print_token_value (F, N, L)
2797 When in doubt, it is usually safer to put prologue code before all
2798 Bison declarations, rather than after. For example, any definitions
2799 of feature test macros like @code{_GNU_SOURCE} or
2800 @code{_POSIX_C_SOURCE} should appear before all Bison declarations, as
2801 feature test macros can affect the behavior of Bison-generated
2802 @code{#include} directives.
2804 @node Prologue Alternatives
2805 @subsection Prologue Alternatives
2806 @cindex Prologue Alternatives
2809 @findex %code requires
2810 @findex %code provides
2813 The functionality of @var{Prologue} sections can often be subtle and
2814 inflexible. As an alternative, Bison provides a @code{%code}
2815 directive with an explicit qualifier field, which identifies the
2816 purpose of the code and thus the location(s) where Bison should
2817 generate it. For C/C++, the qualifier can be omitted for the default
2818 location, or it can be one of @code{requires}, @code{provides},
2819 @code{top}. @xref{%code Summary}.
2821 Look again at the example of the previous section:
2832 tree t; /* @r{@code{tree} is defined in @file{ptypes.h}.} */
2836 static void print_token_value (FILE *, int, YYSTYPE);
2837 #define YYPRINT(F, N, L) print_token_value (F, N, L)
2844 Notice that there are two @var{Prologue} sections here, but there's a
2845 subtle distinction between their functionality. For example, if you
2846 decide to override Bison's default definition for @code{YYLTYPE}, in
2847 which @var{Prologue} section should you write your new definition?
2848 You should write it in the first since Bison will insert that code
2849 into the parser implementation file @emph{before} the default
2850 @code{YYLTYPE} definition. In which @var{Prologue} section should you
2851 prototype an internal function, @code{trace_token}, that accepts
2852 @code{YYLTYPE} and @code{yytokentype} as arguments? You should
2853 prototype it in the second since Bison will insert that code
2854 @emph{after} the @code{YYLTYPE} and @code{yytokentype} definitions.
2856 This distinction in functionality between the two @var{Prologue} sections is
2857 established by the appearance of the @code{%union} between them.
2858 This behavior raises a few questions.
2859 First, why should the position of a @code{%union} affect definitions related to
2860 @code{YYLTYPE} and @code{yytokentype}?
2861 Second, what if there is no @code{%union}?
2862 In that case, the second kind of @var{Prologue} section is not available.
2863 This behavior is not intuitive.
2865 To avoid this subtle @code{%union} dependency, rewrite the example using a
2866 @code{%code top} and an unqualified @code{%code}.
2867 Let's go ahead and add the new @code{YYLTYPE} definition and the
2868 @code{trace_token} prototype at the same time:
2875 /* WARNING: The following code really belongs
2876 * in a `%code requires'; see below. */
2879 #define YYLTYPE YYLTYPE
2880 typedef struct YYLTYPE
2892 tree t; /* @r{@code{tree} is defined in @file{ptypes.h}.} */
2896 static void print_token_value (FILE *, int, YYSTYPE);
2897 #define YYPRINT(F, N, L) print_token_value (F, N, L)
2898 static void trace_token (enum yytokentype token, YYLTYPE loc);
2905 In this way, @code{%code top} and the unqualified @code{%code} achieve the same
2906 functionality as the two kinds of @var{Prologue} sections, but it's always
2907 explicit which kind you intend.
2908 Moreover, both kinds are always available even in the absence of @code{%union}.
2910 The @code{%code top} block above logically contains two parts. The
2911 first two lines before the warning need to appear near the top of the
2912 parser implementation file. The first line after the warning is
2913 required by @code{YYSTYPE} and thus also needs to appear in the parser
2914 implementation file. However, if you've instructed Bison to generate
2915 a parser header file (@pxref{Decl Summary, ,%defines}), you probably
2916 want that line to appear before the @code{YYSTYPE} definition in that
2917 header file as well. The @code{YYLTYPE} definition should also appear
2918 in the parser header file to override the default @code{YYLTYPE}
2921 In other words, in the @code{%code top} block above, all but the first two
2922 lines are dependency code required by the @code{YYSTYPE} and @code{YYLTYPE}
2924 Thus, they belong in one or more @code{%code requires}:
2942 tree t; /* @r{@code{tree} is defined in @file{ptypes.h}.} */
2948 #define YYLTYPE YYLTYPE
2949 typedef struct YYLTYPE
2962 static void print_token_value (FILE *, int, YYSTYPE);
2963 #define YYPRINT(F, N, L) print_token_value (F, N, L)
2964 static void trace_token (enum yytokentype token, YYLTYPE loc);
2972 Now Bison will insert @code{#include "ptypes.h"} and the new
2973 @code{YYLTYPE} definition before the Bison-generated @code{YYSTYPE}
2974 and @code{YYLTYPE} definitions in both the parser implementation file
2975 and the parser header file. (By the same reasoning, @code{%code
2976 requires} would also be the appropriate place to write your own
2977 definition for @code{YYSTYPE}.)
2979 When you are writing dependency code for @code{YYSTYPE} and
2980 @code{YYLTYPE}, you should prefer @code{%code requires} over
2981 @code{%code top} regardless of whether you instruct Bison to generate
2982 a parser header file. When you are writing code that you need Bison
2983 to insert only into the parser implementation file and that has no
2984 special need to appear at the top of that file, you should prefer the
2985 unqualified @code{%code} over @code{%code top}. These practices will
2986 make the purpose of each block of your code explicit to Bison and to
2987 other developers reading your grammar file. Following these
2988 practices, we expect the unqualified @code{%code} and @code{%code
2989 requires} to be the most important of the four @var{Prologue}
2992 At some point while developing your parser, you might decide to
2993 provide @code{trace_token} to modules that are external to your
2994 parser. Thus, you might wish for Bison to insert the prototype into
2995 both the parser header file and the parser implementation file. Since
2996 this function is not a dependency required by @code{YYSTYPE} or
2997 @code{YYLTYPE}, it doesn't make sense to move its prototype to a
2998 @code{%code requires}. More importantly, since it depends upon
2999 @code{YYLTYPE} and @code{yytokentype}, @code{%code requires} is not
3000 sufficient. Instead, move its prototype from the unqualified
3001 @code{%code} to a @code{%code provides}:
3019 tree t; /* @r{@code{tree} is defined in @file{ptypes.h}.} */
3025 #define YYLTYPE YYLTYPE
3026 typedef struct YYLTYPE
3039 void trace_token (enum yytokentype token, YYLTYPE loc);
3045 static void print_token_value (FILE *, int, YYSTYPE);
3046 #define YYPRINT(F, N, L) print_token_value (F, N, L)
3054 Bison will insert the @code{trace_token} prototype into both the
3055 parser header file and the parser implementation file after the
3056 definitions for @code{yytokentype}, @code{YYLTYPE}, and
3059 The above examples are careful to write directives in an order that
3060 reflects the layout of the generated parser implementation and header
3061 files: @code{%code top}, @code{%code requires}, @code{%code provides},
3062 and then @code{%code}. While your grammar files may generally be
3063 easier to read if you also follow this order, Bison does not require
3064 it. Instead, Bison lets you choose an organization that makes sense
3067 You may declare any of these directives multiple times in the grammar file.
3068 In that case, Bison concatenates the contained code in declaration order.
3069 This is the only way in which the position of one of these directives within
3070 the grammar file affects its functionality.
3072 The result of the previous two properties is greater flexibility in how you may
3073 organize your grammar file.
3074 For example, you may organize semantic-type-related directives by semantic
3079 %code requires @{ #include "type1.h" @}
3080 %union @{ type1 field1; @}
3081 %destructor @{ type1_free ($$); @} <field1>
3082 %printer @{ type1_print (yyoutput, $$); @} <field1>
3086 %code requires @{ #include "type2.h" @}
3087 %union @{ type2 field2; @}
3088 %destructor @{ type2_free ($$); @} <field2>
3089 %printer @{ type2_print (yyoutput, $$); @} <field2>
3094 You could even place each of the above directive groups in the rules section of
3095 the grammar file next to the set of rules that uses the associated semantic
3097 (In the rules section, you must terminate each of those directives with a
3099 And you don't have to worry that some directive (like a @code{%union}) in the
3100 definitions section is going to adversely affect their functionality in some
3101 counter-intuitive manner just because it comes first.
3102 Such an organization is not possible using @var{Prologue} sections.
3104 This section has been concerned with explaining the advantages of the four
3105 @var{Prologue} alternatives over the original Yacc @var{Prologue}.
3106 However, in most cases when using these directives, you shouldn't need to
3107 think about all the low-level ordering issues discussed here.
3108 Instead, you should simply use these directives to label each block of your
3109 code according to its purpose and let Bison handle the ordering.
3110 @code{%code} is the most generic label.
3111 Move code to @code{%code requires}, @code{%code provides}, or @code{%code top}
3114 @node Bison Declarations
3115 @subsection The Bison Declarations Section
3116 @cindex Bison declarations (introduction)
3117 @cindex declarations, Bison (introduction)
3119 The @var{Bison declarations} section contains declarations that define
3120 terminal and nonterminal symbols, specify precedence, and so on.
3121 In some simple grammars you may not need any declarations.
3122 @xref{Declarations, ,Bison Declarations}.
3125 @subsection The Grammar Rules Section
3126 @cindex grammar rules section
3127 @cindex rules section for grammar
3129 The @dfn{grammar rules} section contains one or more Bison grammar
3130 rules, and nothing else. @xref{Rules, ,Syntax of Grammar Rules}.
3132 There must always be at least one grammar rule, and the first
3133 @samp{%%} (which precedes the grammar rules) may never be omitted even
3134 if it is the first thing in the file.
3137 @subsection The epilogue
3138 @cindex additional C code section
3140 @cindex C code, section for additional
3142 The @var{Epilogue} is copied verbatim to the end of the parser
3143 implementation file, just as the @var{Prologue} is copied to the
3144 beginning. This is the most convenient place to put anything that you
3145 want to have in the parser implementation file but which need not come
3146 before the definition of @code{yyparse}. For example, the definitions
3147 of @code{yylex} and @code{yyerror} often go here. Because C requires
3148 functions to be declared before being used, you often need to declare
3149 functions like @code{yylex} and @code{yyerror} in the Prologue, even
3150 if you define them in the Epilogue. @xref{Interface, ,Parser
3151 C-Language Interface}.
3153 If the last section is empty, you may omit the @samp{%%} that separates it
3154 from the grammar rules.
3156 The Bison parser itself contains many macros and identifiers whose names
3157 start with @samp{yy} or @samp{YY}, so it is a good idea to avoid using
3158 any such names (except those documented in this manual) in the epilogue
3159 of the grammar file.
3162 @section Symbols, Terminal and Nonterminal
3163 @cindex nonterminal symbol
3164 @cindex terminal symbol
3168 @dfn{Symbols} in Bison grammars represent the grammatical classifications
3171 A @dfn{terminal symbol} (also known as a @dfn{token type}) represents a
3172 class of syntactically equivalent tokens. You use the symbol in grammar
3173 rules to mean that a token in that class is allowed. The symbol is
3174 represented in the Bison parser by a numeric code, and the @code{yylex}
3175 function returns a token type code to indicate what kind of token has
3176 been read. You don't need to know what the code value is; you can use
3177 the symbol to stand for it.
3179 A @dfn{nonterminal symbol} stands for a class of syntactically
3180 equivalent groupings. The symbol name is used in writing grammar rules.
3181 By convention, it should be all lower case.
3183 Symbol names can contain letters, underscores, periods, and non-initial
3184 digits and dashes. Dashes in symbol names are a GNU extension, incompatible
3185 with POSIX Yacc. Periods and dashes make symbol names less convenient to
3186 use with named references, which require brackets around such names
3187 (@pxref{Named References}). Terminal symbols that contain periods or dashes
3188 make little sense: since they are not valid symbols (in most programming
3189 languages) they are not exported as token names.
3191 There are three ways of writing terminal symbols in the grammar:
3195 A @dfn{named token type} is written with an identifier, like an
3196 identifier in C@. By convention, it should be all upper case. Each
3197 such name must be defined with a Bison declaration such as
3198 @code{%token}. @xref{Token Decl, ,Token Type Names}.
3201 @cindex character token
3202 @cindex literal token
3203 @cindex single-character literal
3204 A @dfn{character token type} (or @dfn{literal character token}) is
3205 written in the grammar using the same syntax used in C for character
3206 constants; for example, @code{'+'} is a character token type. A
3207 character token type doesn't need to be declared unless you need to
3208 specify its semantic value data type (@pxref{Value Type, ,Data Types of
3209 Semantic Values}), associativity, or precedence (@pxref{Precedence,
3210 ,Operator Precedence}).
3212 By convention, a character token type is used only to represent a
3213 token that consists of that particular character. Thus, the token
3214 type @code{'+'} is used to represent the character @samp{+} as a
3215 token. Nothing enforces this convention, but if you depart from it,
3216 your program will confuse other readers.
3218 All the usual escape sequences used in character literals in C can be
3219 used in Bison as well, but you must not use the null character as a
3220 character literal because its numeric code, zero, signifies
3221 end-of-input (@pxref{Calling Convention, ,Calling Convention
3222 for @code{yylex}}). Also, unlike standard C, trigraphs have no
3223 special meaning in Bison character literals, nor is backslash-newline
3227 @cindex string token
3228 @cindex literal string token
3229 @cindex multicharacter literal
3230 A @dfn{literal string token} is written like a C string constant; for
3231 example, @code{"<="} is a literal string token. A literal string token
3232 doesn't need to be declared unless you need to specify its semantic
3233 value data type (@pxref{Value Type}), associativity, or precedence
3234 (@pxref{Precedence}).
3236 You can associate the literal string token with a symbolic name as an
3237 alias, using the @code{%token} declaration (@pxref{Token Decl, ,Token
3238 Declarations}). If you don't do that, the lexical analyzer has to
3239 retrieve the token number for the literal string token from the
3240 @code{yytname} table (@pxref{Calling Convention}).
3242 @strong{Warning}: literal string tokens do not work in Yacc.
3244 By convention, a literal string token is used only to represent a token
3245 that consists of that particular string. Thus, you should use the token
3246 type @code{"<="} to represent the string @samp{<=} as a token. Bison
3247 does not enforce this convention, but if you depart from it, people who
3248 read your program will be confused.
3250 All the escape sequences used in string literals in C can be used in
3251 Bison as well, except that you must not use a null character within a
3252 string literal. Also, unlike Standard C, trigraphs have no special
3253 meaning in Bison string literals, nor is backslash-newline allowed. A
3254 literal string token must contain two or more characters; for a token
3255 containing just one character, use a character token (see above).
3258 How you choose to write a terminal symbol has no effect on its
3259 grammatical meaning. That depends only on where it appears in rules and
3260 on when the parser function returns that symbol.
3262 The value returned by @code{yylex} is always one of the terminal
3263 symbols, except that a zero or negative value signifies end-of-input.
3264 Whichever way you write the token type in the grammar rules, you write
3265 it the same way in the definition of @code{yylex}. The numeric code
3266 for a character token type is simply the positive numeric code of the
3267 character, so @code{yylex} can use the identical value to generate the
3268 requisite code, though you may need to convert it to @code{unsigned
3269 char} to avoid sign-extension on hosts where @code{char} is signed.
3270 Each named token type becomes a C macro in the parser implementation
3271 file, so @code{yylex} can use the name to stand for the code. (This
3272 is why periods don't make sense in terminal symbols.) @xref{Calling
3273 Convention, ,Calling Convention for @code{yylex}}.
3275 If @code{yylex} is defined in a separate file, you need to arrange for the
3276 token-type macro definitions to be available there. Use the @samp{-d}
3277 option when you run Bison, so that it will write these macro definitions
3278 into a separate header file @file{@var{name}.tab.h} which you can include
3279 in the other source files that need it. @xref{Invocation, ,Invoking Bison}.
3281 If you want to write a grammar that is portable to any Standard C
3282 host, you must use only nonnull character tokens taken from the basic
3283 execution character set of Standard C@. This set consists of the ten
3284 digits, the 52 lower- and upper-case English letters, and the
3285 characters in the following C-language string:
3288 "\a\b\t\n\v\f\r !\"#%&'()*+,-./:;<=>?[\\]^_@{|@}~"
3291 The @code{yylex} function and Bison must use a consistent character set
3292 and encoding for character tokens. For example, if you run Bison in an
3293 ASCII environment, but then compile and run the resulting
3294 program in an environment that uses an incompatible character set like
3295 EBCDIC, the resulting program may not work because the tables
3296 generated by Bison will assume ASCII numeric values for
3297 character tokens. It is standard practice for software distributions to
3298 contain C source files that were generated by Bison in an
3299 ASCII environment, so installers on platforms that are
3300 incompatible with ASCII must rebuild those files before
3303 The symbol @code{error} is a terminal symbol reserved for error recovery
3304 (@pxref{Error Recovery}); you shouldn't use it for any other purpose.
3305 In particular, @code{yylex} should never return this value. The default
3306 value of the error token is 256, unless you explicitly assigned 256 to
3307 one of your tokens with a @code{%token} declaration.
3310 @section Syntax of Grammar Rules
3312 @cindex grammar rule syntax
3313 @cindex syntax of grammar rules
3315 A Bison grammar rule has the following general form:
3319 @var{result}: @var{components}@dots{};
3324 where @var{result} is the nonterminal symbol that this rule describes,
3325 and @var{components} are various terminal and nonterminal symbols that
3326 are put together by this rule (@pxref{Symbols}).
3337 says that two groupings of type @code{exp}, with a @samp{+} token in between,
3338 can be combined into a larger grouping of type @code{exp}.
3340 White space in rules is significant only to separate symbols. You can add
3341 extra white space as you wish.
3343 Scattered among the components can be @var{actions} that determine
3344 the semantics of the rule. An action looks like this:
3347 @{@var{C statements}@}
3352 This is an example of @dfn{braced code}, that is, C code surrounded by
3353 braces, much like a compound statement in C@. Braced code can contain
3354 any sequence of C tokens, so long as its braces are balanced. Bison
3355 does not check the braced code for correctness directly; it merely
3356 copies the code to the parser implementation file, where the C
3357 compiler can check it.
3359 Within braced code, the balanced-brace count is not affected by braces
3360 within comments, string literals, or character constants, but it is
3361 affected by the C digraphs @samp{<%} and @samp{%>} that represent
3362 braces. At the top level braced code must be terminated by @samp{@}}
3363 and not by a digraph. Bison does not look for trigraphs, so if braced
3364 code uses trigraphs you should ensure that they do not affect the
3365 nesting of braces or the boundaries of comments, string literals, or
3366 character constants.
3368 Usually there is only one action and it follows the components.
3372 Multiple rules for the same @var{result} can be written separately or can
3373 be joined with the vertical-bar character @samp{|} as follows:
3378 @var{rule1-components}@dots{}
3379 | @var{rule2-components}@dots{}
3386 They are still considered distinct rules even when joined in this way.
3388 If @var{components} in a rule is empty, it means that @var{result} can
3389 match the empty string. For example, here is how to define a
3390 comma-separated sequence of zero or more @code{exp} groupings:
3409 It is customary to write a comment @samp{/* empty */} in each rule
3413 @section Recursive Rules
3414 @cindex recursive rule
3416 A rule is called @dfn{recursive} when its @var{result} nonterminal
3417 appears also on its right hand side. Nearly all Bison grammars need to
3418 use recursion, because that is the only way to define a sequence of any
3419 number of a particular thing. Consider this recursive definition of a
3420 comma-separated sequence of one or more expressions:
3431 @cindex left recursion
3432 @cindex right recursion
3434 Since the recursive use of @code{expseq1} is the leftmost symbol in the
3435 right hand side, we call this @dfn{left recursion}. By contrast, here
3436 the same construct is defined using @dfn{right recursion}:
3448 Any kind of sequence can be defined using either left recursion or right
3449 recursion, but you should always use left recursion, because it can
3450 parse a sequence of any number of elements with bounded stack space.
3451 Right recursion uses up space on the Bison stack in proportion to the
3452 number of elements in the sequence, because all the elements must be
3453 shifted onto the stack before the rule can be applied even once.
3454 @xref{Algorithm, ,The Bison Parser Algorithm}, for further explanation
3457 @cindex mutual recursion
3458 @dfn{Indirect} or @dfn{mutual} recursion occurs when the result of the
3459 rule does not appear directly on its right hand side, but does appear
3460 in rules for other nonterminals which do appear on its right hand
3469 | primary '+' primary
3482 defines two mutually-recursive nonterminals, since each refers to the
3486 @section Defining Language Semantics
3487 @cindex defining language semantics
3488 @cindex language semantics, defining
3490 The grammar rules for a language determine only the syntax. The semantics
3491 are determined by the semantic values associated with various tokens and
3492 groupings, and by the actions taken when various groupings are recognized.
3494 For example, the calculator calculates properly because the value
3495 associated with each expression is the proper number; it adds properly
3496 because the action for the grouping @w{@samp{@var{x} + @var{y}}} is to add
3497 the numbers associated with @var{x} and @var{y}.
3500 * Value Type:: Specifying one data type for all semantic values.
3501 * Multiple Types:: Specifying several alternative data types.
3502 * Actions:: An action is the semantic definition of a grammar rule.
3503 * Action Types:: Specifying data types for actions to operate on.
3504 * Mid-Rule Actions:: Most actions go at the end of a rule.
3505 This says when, why and how to use the exceptional
3506 action in the middle of a rule.
3510 @subsection Data Types of Semantic Values
3511 @cindex semantic value type
3512 @cindex value type, semantic
3513 @cindex data types of semantic values
3514 @cindex default data type
3516 In a simple program it may be sufficient to use the same data type for
3517 the semantic values of all language constructs. This was true in the
3518 RPN and infix calculator examples (@pxref{RPN Calc, ,Reverse Polish
3519 Notation Calculator}).
3521 Bison normally uses the type @code{int} for semantic values if your
3522 program uses the same data type for all language constructs. To
3523 specify some other type, define @code{YYSTYPE} as a macro, like this:
3526 #define YYSTYPE double
3530 @code{YYSTYPE}'s replacement list should be a type name
3531 that does not contain parentheses or square brackets.
3532 This macro definition must go in the prologue of the grammar file
3533 (@pxref{Grammar Outline, ,Outline of a Bison Grammar}).
3535 @node Multiple Types
3536 @subsection More Than One Value Type
3538 In most programs, you will need different data types for different kinds
3539 of tokens and groupings. For example, a numeric constant may need type
3540 @code{int} or @code{long int}, while a string constant needs type
3541 @code{char *}, and an identifier might need a pointer to an entry in the
3544 To use more than one data type for semantic values in one parser, Bison
3545 requires you to do two things:
3549 Specify the entire collection of possible data types, either by using the
3550 @code{%union} Bison declaration (@pxref{Union Decl, ,The Collection of
3551 Value Types}), or by using a @code{typedef} or a @code{#define} to
3552 define @code{YYSTYPE} to be a union type whose member names are
3556 Choose one of those types for each symbol (terminal or nonterminal) for
3557 which semantic values are used. This is done for tokens with the
3558 @code{%token} Bison declaration (@pxref{Token Decl, ,Token Type Names})
3559 and for groupings with the @code{%type} Bison declaration (@pxref{Type
3560 Decl, ,Nonterminal Symbols}).
3569 @vindex $[@var{name}]
3571 An action accompanies a syntactic rule and contains C code to be executed
3572 each time an instance of that rule is recognized. The task of most actions
3573 is to compute a semantic value for the grouping built by the rule from the
3574 semantic values associated with tokens or smaller groupings.
3576 An action consists of braced code containing C statements, and can be
3577 placed at any position in the rule;
3578 it is executed at that position. Most rules have just one action at the
3579 end of the rule, following all the components. Actions in the middle of
3580 a rule are tricky and used only for special purposes (@pxref{Mid-Rule
3581 Actions, ,Actions in Mid-Rule}).
3583 The C code in an action can refer to the semantic values of the
3584 components matched by the rule with the construct @code{$@var{n}},
3585 which stands for the value of the @var{n}th component. The semantic
3586 value for the grouping being constructed is @code{$$}. In addition,
3587 the semantic values of symbols can be accessed with the named
3588 references construct @code{$@var{name}} or @code{$[@var{name}]}.
3589 Bison translates both of these constructs into expressions of the
3590 appropriate type when it copies the actions into the parser
3591 implementation file. @code{$$} (or @code{$@var{name}}, when it stands
3592 for the current grouping) is translated to a modifiable lvalue, so it
3595 Here is a typical example:
3601 | exp '+' exp @{ $$ = $1 + $3; @}
3605 Or, in terms of named references:
3611 | exp[left] '+' exp[right] @{ $result = $left + $right; @}
3616 This rule constructs an @code{exp} from two smaller @code{exp} groupings
3617 connected by a plus-sign token. In the action, @code{$1} and @code{$3}
3618 (@code{$left} and @code{$right})
3619 refer to the semantic values of the two component @code{exp} groupings,
3620 which are the first and third symbols on the right hand side of the rule.
3621 The sum is stored into @code{$$} (@code{$result}) so that it becomes the
3623 the addition-expression just recognized by the rule. If there were a
3624 useful semantic value associated with the @samp{+} token, it could be
3625 referred to as @code{$2}.
3627 @xref{Named References}, for more information about using the named
3628 references construct.
3630 Note that the vertical-bar character @samp{|} is really a rule
3631 separator, and actions are attached to a single rule. This is a
3632 difference with tools like Flex, for which @samp{|} stands for either
3633 ``or'', or ``the same action as that of the next rule''. In the
3634 following example, the action is triggered only when @samp{b} is found:
3638 a-or-b: 'a'|'b' @{ a_or_b_found = 1; @};
3642 @cindex default action
3643 If you don't specify an action for a rule, Bison supplies a default:
3644 @w{@code{$$ = $1}.} Thus, the value of the first symbol in the rule
3645 becomes the value of the whole rule. Of course, the default action is
3646 valid only if the two data types match. There is no meaningful default
3647 action for an empty rule; every empty rule must have an explicit action
3648 unless the rule's value does not matter.
3650 @code{$@var{n}} with @var{n} zero or negative is allowed for reference
3651 to tokens and groupings on the stack @emph{before} those that match the
3652 current rule. This is a very risky practice, and to use it reliably
3653 you must be certain of the context in which the rule is applied. Here
3654 is a case in which you can use this reliably:
3659 expr bar '+' expr @{ @dots{} @}
3660 | expr bar '-' expr @{ @dots{} @}
3666 /* empty */ @{ previous_expr = $0; @}
3671 As long as @code{bar} is used only in the fashion shown here, @code{$0}
3672 always refers to the @code{expr} which precedes @code{bar} in the
3673 definition of @code{foo}.
3676 It is also possible to access the semantic value of the lookahead token, if
3677 any, from a semantic action.
3678 This semantic value is stored in @code{yylval}.
3679 @xref{Action Features, ,Special Features for Use in Actions}.
3682 @subsection Data Types of Values in Actions
3683 @cindex action data types
3684 @cindex data types in actions
3686 If you have chosen a single data type for semantic values, the @code{$$}
3687 and @code{$@var{n}} constructs always have that data type.
3689 If you have used @code{%union} to specify a variety of data types, then you
3690 must declare a choice among these types for each terminal or nonterminal
3691 symbol that can have a semantic value. Then each time you use @code{$$} or
3692 @code{$@var{n}}, its data type is determined by which symbol it refers to
3693 in the rule. In this example,
3699 | exp '+' exp @{ $$ = $1 + $3; @}
3704 @code{$1} and @code{$3} refer to instances of @code{exp}, so they all
3705 have the data type declared for the nonterminal symbol @code{exp}. If
3706 @code{$2} were used, it would have the data type declared for the
3707 terminal symbol @code{'+'}, whatever that might be.
3709 Alternatively, you can specify the data type when you refer to the value,
3710 by inserting @samp{<@var{type}>} after the @samp{$} at the beginning of the
3711 reference. For example, if you have defined types as shown here:
3723 then you can write @code{$<itype>1} to refer to the first subunit of the
3724 rule as an integer, or @code{$<dtype>1} to refer to it as a double.
3726 @node Mid-Rule Actions
3727 @subsection Actions in Mid-Rule
3728 @cindex actions in mid-rule
3729 @cindex mid-rule actions
3731 Occasionally it is useful to put an action in the middle of a rule.
3732 These actions are written just like usual end-of-rule actions, but they
3733 are executed before the parser even recognizes the following components.
3735 A mid-rule action may refer to the components preceding it using
3736 @code{$@var{n}}, but it may not refer to subsequent components because
3737 it is run before they are parsed.
3739 The mid-rule action itself counts as one of the components of the rule.
3740 This makes a difference when there is another action later in the same rule
3741 (and usually there is another at the end): you have to count the actions
3742 along with the symbols when working out which number @var{n} to use in
3745 The mid-rule action can also have a semantic value. The action can set
3746 its value with an assignment to @code{$$}, and actions later in the rule
3747 can refer to the value using @code{$@var{n}}. Since there is no symbol
3748 to name the action, there is no way to declare a data type for the value
3749 in advance, so you must use the @samp{$<@dots{}>@var{n}} construct to
3750 specify a data type each time you refer to this value.
3752 There is no way to set the value of the entire rule with a mid-rule
3753 action, because assignments to @code{$$} do not have that effect. The
3754 only way to set the value for the entire rule is with an ordinary action
3755 at the end of the rule.
3757 Here is an example from a hypothetical compiler, handling a @code{let}
3758 statement that looks like @samp{let (@var{variable}) @var{statement}} and
3759 serves to create a variable named @var{variable} temporarily for the
3760 duration of @var{statement}. To parse this construct, we must put
3761 @var{variable} into the symbol table while @var{statement} is parsed, then
3762 remove it afterward. Here is how it is done:
3768 @{ $<context>$ = push_context (); declare_variable ($3); @}
3770 @{ $$ = $6; pop_context ($<context>5); @}
3775 As soon as @samp{let (@var{variable})} has been recognized, the first
3776 action is run. It saves a copy of the current semantic context (the
3777 list of accessible variables) as its semantic value, using alternative
3778 @code{context} in the data-type union. Then it calls
3779 @code{declare_variable} to add the new variable to that list. Once the
3780 first action is finished, the embedded statement @code{stmt} can be
3781 parsed. Note that the mid-rule action is component number 5, so the
3782 @samp{stmt} is component number 6.
3784 After the embedded statement is parsed, its semantic value becomes the
3785 value of the entire @code{let}-statement. Then the semantic value from the
3786 earlier action is used to restore the prior list of variables. This
3787 removes the temporary @code{let}-variable from the list so that it won't
3788 appear to exist while the rest of the program is parsed.
3791 @cindex discarded symbols, mid-rule actions
3792 @cindex error recovery, mid-rule actions
3793 In the above example, if the parser initiates error recovery (@pxref{Error
3794 Recovery}) while parsing the tokens in the embedded statement @code{stmt},
3795 it might discard the previous semantic context @code{$<context>5} without
3797 Thus, @code{$<context>5} needs a destructor (@pxref{Destructor Decl, , Freeing
3798 Discarded Symbols}).
3799 However, Bison currently provides no means to declare a destructor specific to
3800 a particular mid-rule action's semantic value.
3802 One solution is to bury the mid-rule action inside a nonterminal symbol and to
3803 declare a destructor for that symbol:
3808 %destructor @{ pop_context ($$); @} let
3822 $$ = push_context ();
3823 declare_variable ($3);
3830 Note that the action is now at the end of its rule.
3831 Any mid-rule action can be converted to an end-of-rule action in this way, and
3832 this is what Bison actually does to implement mid-rule actions.
3834 Taking action before a rule is completely recognized often leads to
3835 conflicts since the parser must commit to a parse in order to execute the
3836 action. For example, the following two rules, without mid-rule actions,
3837 can coexist in a working parser because the parser can shift the open-brace
3838 token and look at what follows before deciding whether there is a
3844 '@{' declarations statements '@}'
3845 | '@{' statements '@}'
3851 But when we add a mid-rule action as follows, the rules become nonfunctional:
3856 @{ prepare_for_local_variables (); @}
3857 '@{' declarations statements '@}'
3860 | '@{' statements '@}'
3866 Now the parser is forced to decide whether to run the mid-rule action
3867 when it has read no farther than the open-brace. In other words, it
3868 must commit to using one rule or the other, without sufficient
3869 information to do it correctly. (The open-brace token is what is called
3870 the @dfn{lookahead} token at this time, since the parser is still
3871 deciding what to do about it. @xref{Lookahead, ,Lookahead Tokens}.)
3873 You might think that you could correct the problem by putting identical
3874 actions into the two rules, like this:
3879 @{ prepare_for_local_variables (); @}
3880 '@{' declarations statements '@}'
3881 | @{ prepare_for_local_variables (); @}
3882 '@{' statements '@}'
3888 But this does not help, because Bison does not realize that the two actions
3889 are identical. (Bison never tries to understand the C code in an action.)
3891 If the grammar is such that a declaration can be distinguished from a
3892 statement by the first token (which is true in C), then one solution which
3893 does work is to put the action after the open-brace, like this:
3898 '@{' @{ prepare_for_local_variables (); @}
3899 declarations statements '@}'
3900 | '@{' statements '@}'
3906 Now the first token of the following declaration or statement,
3907 which would in any case tell Bison which rule to use, can still do so.
3909 Another solution is to bury the action inside a nonterminal symbol which
3910 serves as a subroutine:
3915 /* empty */ @{ prepare_for_local_variables (); @}
3921 subroutine '@{' declarations statements '@}'
3922 | subroutine '@{' statements '@}'
3928 Now Bison can execute the action in the rule for @code{subroutine} without
3929 deciding which rule for @code{compound} it will eventually use.
3931 @node Tracking Locations
3932 @section Tracking Locations
3934 @cindex textual location
3935 @cindex location, textual
3937 Though grammar rules and semantic actions are enough to write a fully
3938 functional parser, it can be useful to process some additional information,
3939 especially symbol locations.
3941 The way locations are handled is defined by providing a data type, and
3942 actions to take when rules are matched.
3945 * Location Type:: Specifying a data type for locations.
3946 * Actions and Locations:: Using locations in actions.
3947 * Location Default Action:: Defining a general way to compute locations.
3951 @subsection Data Type of Locations
3952 @cindex data type of locations
3953 @cindex default location type
3955 Defining a data type for locations is much simpler than for semantic values,
3956 since all tokens and groupings always use the same type.
3958 You can specify the type of locations by defining a macro called
3959 @code{YYLTYPE}, just as you can specify the semantic value type by
3960 defining a @code{YYSTYPE} macro (@pxref{Value Type}).
3961 When @code{YYLTYPE} is not defined, Bison uses a default structure type with
3965 typedef struct YYLTYPE
3974 When @code{YYLTYPE} is not defined, at the beginning of the parsing, Bison
3975 initializes all these fields to 1 for @code{yylloc}. To initialize
3976 @code{yylloc} with a custom location type (or to chose a different
3977 initialization), use the @code{%initial-action} directive. @xref{Initial
3978 Action Decl, , Performing Actions before Parsing}.
3980 @node Actions and Locations
3981 @subsection Actions and Locations
3982 @cindex location actions
3983 @cindex actions, location
3986 @vindex @@@var{name}
3987 @vindex @@[@var{name}]
3989 Actions are not only useful for defining language semantics, but also for
3990 describing the behavior of the output parser with locations.
3992 The most obvious way for building locations of syntactic groupings is very
3993 similar to the way semantic values are computed. In a given rule, several
3994 constructs can be used to access the locations of the elements being matched.
3995 The location of the @var{n}th component of the right hand side is
3996 @code{@@@var{n}}, while the location of the left hand side grouping is
3999 In addition, the named references construct @code{@@@var{name}} and
4000 @code{@@[@var{name}]} may also be used to address the symbol locations.
4001 @xref{Named References}, for more information about using the named
4002 references construct.
4004 Here is a basic example using the default data type for locations:
4012 @@$.first_column = @@1.first_column;
4013 @@$.first_line = @@1.first_line;
4014 @@$.last_column = @@3.last_column;
4015 @@$.last_line = @@3.last_line;
4022 "Division by zero, l%d,c%d-l%d,c%d",
4023 @@3.first_line, @@3.first_column,
4024 @@3.last_line, @@3.last_column);
4030 As for semantic values, there is a default action for locations that is
4031 run each time a rule is matched. It sets the beginning of @code{@@$} to the
4032 beginning of the first symbol, and the end of @code{@@$} to the end of the
4035 With this default action, the location tracking can be fully automatic. The
4036 example above simply rewrites this way:
4050 "Division by zero, l%d,c%d-l%d,c%d",
4051 @@3.first_line, @@3.first_column,
4052 @@3.last_line, @@3.last_column);
4059 It is also possible to access the location of the lookahead token, if any,
4060 from a semantic action.
4061 This location is stored in @code{yylloc}.
4062 @xref{Action Features, ,Special Features for Use in Actions}.
4064 @node Location Default Action
4065 @subsection Default Action for Locations
4066 @vindex YYLLOC_DEFAULT
4067 @cindex GLR parsers and @code{YYLLOC_DEFAULT}
4069 Actually, actions are not the best place to compute locations. Since
4070 locations are much more general than semantic values, there is room in
4071 the output parser to redefine the default action to take for each
4072 rule. The @code{YYLLOC_DEFAULT} macro is invoked each time a rule is
4073 matched, before the associated action is run. It is also invoked
4074 while processing a syntax error, to compute the error's location.
4075 Before reporting an unresolvable syntactic ambiguity, a GLR
4076 parser invokes @code{YYLLOC_DEFAULT} recursively to compute the location
4079 Most of the time, this macro is general enough to suppress location
4080 dedicated code from semantic actions.
4082 The @code{YYLLOC_DEFAULT} macro takes three parameters. The first one is
4083 the location of the grouping (the result of the computation). When a
4084 rule is matched, the second parameter identifies locations of
4085 all right hand side elements of the rule being matched, and the third
4086 parameter is the size of the rule's right hand side.
4087 When a GLR parser reports an ambiguity, which of multiple candidate
4088 right hand sides it passes to @code{YYLLOC_DEFAULT} is undefined.
4089 When processing a syntax error, the second parameter identifies locations
4090 of the symbols that were discarded during error processing, and the third
4091 parameter is the number of discarded symbols.
4093 By default, @code{YYLLOC_DEFAULT} is defined this way:
4097 # define YYLLOC_DEFAULT(Cur, Rhs, N) \
4101 (Cur).first_line = YYRHSLOC(Rhs, 1).first_line; \
4102 (Cur).first_column = YYRHSLOC(Rhs, 1).first_column; \
4103 (Cur).last_line = YYRHSLOC(Rhs, N).last_line; \
4104 (Cur).last_column = YYRHSLOC(Rhs, N).last_column; \
4108 (Cur).first_line = (Cur).last_line = \
4109 YYRHSLOC(Rhs, 0).last_line; \
4110 (Cur).first_column = (Cur).last_column = \
4111 YYRHSLOC(Rhs, 0).last_column; \
4118 where @code{YYRHSLOC (rhs, k)} is the location of the @var{k}th symbol
4119 in @var{rhs} when @var{k} is positive, and the location of the symbol
4120 just before the reduction when @var{k} and @var{n} are both zero.
4122 When defining @code{YYLLOC_DEFAULT}, you should consider that:
4126 All arguments are free of side-effects. However, only the first one (the
4127 result) should be modified by @code{YYLLOC_DEFAULT}.
4130 For consistency with semantic actions, valid indexes within the
4131 right hand side range from 1 to @var{n}. When @var{n} is zero, only 0 is a
4132 valid index, and it refers to the symbol just before the reduction.
4133 During error processing @var{n} is always positive.
4136 Your macro should parenthesize its arguments, if need be, since the
4137 actual arguments may not be surrounded by parentheses. Also, your
4138 macro should expand to something that can be used as a single
4139 statement when it is followed by a semicolon.
4142 @node Named References
4143 @section Named References
4144 @cindex named references
4146 As described in the preceding sections, the traditional way to refer to any
4147 semantic value or location is a @dfn{positional reference}, which takes the
4148 form @code{$@var{n}}, @code{$$}, @code{@@@var{n}}, and @code{@@$}. However,
4149 such a reference is not very descriptive. Moreover, if you later decide to
4150 insert or remove symbols in the right-hand side of a grammar rule, the need
4151 to renumber such references can be tedious and error-prone.
4153 To avoid these issues, you can also refer to a semantic value or location
4154 using a @dfn{named reference}. First of all, original symbol names may be
4155 used as named references. For example:
4159 invocation: op '(' args ')'
4160 @{ $invocation = new_invocation ($op, $args, @@invocation); @}
4165 Positional and named references can be mixed arbitrarily. For example:
4169 invocation: op '(' args ')'
4170 @{ $$ = new_invocation ($op, $args, @@$); @}
4175 However, sometimes regular symbol names are not sufficient due to
4181 @{ $exp = $exp / $exp; @} // $exp is ambiguous.
4184 @{ $$ = $1 / $exp; @} // One usage is ambiguous.
4187 @{ $$ = $1 / $3; @} // No error.
4192 When ambiguity occurs, explicitly declared names may be used for values and
4193 locations. Explicit names are declared as a bracketed name after a symbol
4194 appearance in rule definitions. For example:
4197 exp[result]: exp[left] '/' exp[right]
4198 @{ $result = $left / $right; @}
4203 In order to access a semantic value generated by a mid-rule action, an
4204 explicit name may also be declared by putting a bracketed name after the
4205 closing brace of the mid-rule action code:
4208 exp[res]: exp[x] '+' @{$left = $x;@}[left] exp[right]
4209 @{ $res = $left + $right; @}
4215 In references, in order to specify names containing dots and dashes, an explicit
4216 bracketed syntax @code{$[name]} and @code{@@[name]} must be used:
4219 if-stmt: "if" '(' expr ')' "then" then.stmt ';'
4220 @{ $[if-stmt] = new_if_stmt ($expr, $[then.stmt]); @}
4224 It often happens that named references are followed by a dot, dash or other
4225 C punctuation marks and operators. By default, Bison will read
4226 @samp{$name.suffix} as a reference to symbol value @code{$name} followed by
4227 @samp{.suffix}, i.e., an access to the @code{suffix} field of the semantic
4228 value. In order to force Bison to recognize @samp{name.suffix} in its
4229 entirety as the name of a semantic value, the bracketed syntax
4230 @samp{$[name.suffix]} must be used.
4232 The named references feature is experimental. More user feedback will help
4236 @section Bison Declarations
4237 @cindex declarations, Bison
4238 @cindex Bison declarations
4240 The @dfn{Bison declarations} section of a Bison grammar defines the symbols
4241 used in formulating the grammar and the data types of semantic values.
4244 All token type names (but not single-character literal tokens such as
4245 @code{'+'} and @code{'*'}) must be declared. Nonterminal symbols must be
4246 declared if you need to specify which data type to use for the semantic
4247 value (@pxref{Multiple Types, ,More Than One Value Type}).
4249 The first rule in the grammar file also specifies the start symbol, by
4250 default. If you want some other symbol to be the start symbol, you
4251 must declare it explicitly (@pxref{Language and Grammar, ,Languages
4252 and Context-Free Grammars}).
4255 * Require Decl:: Requiring a Bison version.
4256 * Token Decl:: Declaring terminal symbols.
4257 * Precedence Decl:: Declaring terminals with precedence and associativity.
4258 * Union Decl:: Declaring the set of all semantic value types.
4259 * Type Decl:: Declaring the choice of type for a nonterminal symbol.
4260 * Initial Action Decl:: Code run before parsing starts.
4261 * Destructor Decl:: Declaring how symbols are freed.
4262 * Printer Decl:: Declaring how symbol values are displayed.
4263 * Expect Decl:: Suppressing warnings about parsing conflicts.
4264 * Start Decl:: Specifying the start symbol.
4265 * Pure Decl:: Requesting a reentrant parser.
4266 * Push Decl:: Requesting a push parser.
4267 * Decl Summary:: Table of all Bison declarations.
4268 * %define Summary:: Defining variables to adjust Bison's behavior.
4269 * %code Summary:: Inserting code into the parser source.
4273 @subsection Require a Version of Bison
4274 @cindex version requirement
4275 @cindex requiring a version of Bison
4278 You may require the minimum version of Bison to process the grammar. If
4279 the requirement is not met, @command{bison} exits with an error (exit
4283 %require "@var{version}"
4287 @subsection Token Type Names
4288 @cindex declaring token type names
4289 @cindex token type names, declaring
4290 @cindex declaring literal string tokens
4293 The basic way to declare a token type name (terminal symbol) is as follows:
4299 Bison will convert this into a @code{#define} directive in
4300 the parser, so that the function @code{yylex} (if it is in this file)
4301 can use the name @var{name} to stand for this token type's code.
4303 Alternatively, you can use @code{%left}, @code{%right}, or
4304 @code{%nonassoc} instead of @code{%token}, if you wish to specify
4305 associativity and precedence. @xref{Precedence Decl, ,Operator
4308 You can explicitly specify the numeric code for a token type by appending
4309 a nonnegative decimal or hexadecimal integer value in the field immediately
4310 following the token name:
4314 %token XNUM 0x12d // a GNU extension
4318 It is generally best, however, to let Bison choose the numeric codes for
4319 all token types. Bison will automatically select codes that don't conflict
4320 with each other or with normal characters.
4322 In the event that the stack type is a union, you must augment the
4323 @code{%token} or other token declaration to include the data type
4324 alternative delimited by angle-brackets (@pxref{Multiple Types, ,More
4325 Than One Value Type}).
4331 %union @{ /* define stack type */
4335 %token <val> NUM /* define token NUM and its type */
4339 You can associate a literal string token with a token type name by
4340 writing the literal string at the end of a @code{%token}
4341 declaration which declares the name. For example:
4348 For example, a grammar for the C language might specify these names with
4349 equivalent literal string tokens:
4352 %token <operator> OR "||"
4353 %token <operator> LE 134 "<="
4358 Once you equate the literal string and the token name, you can use them
4359 interchangeably in further declarations or the grammar rules. The
4360 @code{yylex} function can use the token name or the literal string to
4361 obtain the token type code number (@pxref{Calling Convention}).
4362 Syntax error messages passed to @code{yyerror} from the parser will reference
4363 the literal string instead of the token name.
4365 The token numbered as 0 corresponds to end of file; the following line
4366 allows for nicer error messages referring to ``end of file'' instead
4370 %token END 0 "end of file"
4373 @node Precedence Decl
4374 @subsection Operator Precedence
4375 @cindex precedence declarations
4376 @cindex declaring operator precedence
4377 @cindex operator precedence, declaring
4379 Use the @code{%left}, @code{%right} or @code{%nonassoc} declaration to
4380 declare a token and specify its precedence and associativity, all at
4381 once. These are called @dfn{precedence declarations}.
4382 @xref{Precedence, ,Operator Precedence}, for general information on
4383 operator precedence.
4385 The syntax of a precedence declaration is nearly the same as that of
4386 @code{%token}: either
4389 %left @var{symbols}@dots{}
4396 %left <@var{type}> @var{symbols}@dots{}
4399 And indeed any of these declarations serves the purposes of @code{%token}.
4400 But in addition, they specify the associativity and relative precedence for
4401 all the @var{symbols}:
4405 The associativity of an operator @var{op} determines how repeated uses
4406 of the operator nest: whether @samp{@var{x} @var{op} @var{y} @var{op}
4407 @var{z}} is parsed by grouping @var{x} with @var{y} first or by
4408 grouping @var{y} with @var{z} first. @code{%left} specifies
4409 left-associativity (grouping @var{x} with @var{y} first) and
4410 @code{%right} specifies right-associativity (grouping @var{y} with
4411 @var{z} first). @code{%nonassoc} specifies no associativity, which
4412 means that @samp{@var{x} @var{op} @var{y} @var{op} @var{z}} is
4413 considered a syntax error.
4416 The precedence of an operator determines how it nests with other operators.
4417 All the tokens declared in a single precedence declaration have equal
4418 precedence and nest together according to their associativity.
4419 When two tokens declared in different precedence declarations associate,
4420 the one declared later has the higher precedence and is grouped first.
4423 For backward compatibility, there is a confusing difference between the
4424 argument lists of @code{%token} and precedence declarations.
4425 Only a @code{%token} can associate a literal string with a token type name.
4426 A precedence declaration always interprets a literal string as a reference to a
4431 %left OR "<=" // Does not declare an alias.
4432 %left OR 134 "<=" 135 // Declares 134 for OR and 135 for "<=".
4436 @subsection The Collection of Value Types
4437 @cindex declaring value types
4438 @cindex value types, declaring
4441 The @code{%union} declaration specifies the entire collection of
4442 possible data types for semantic values. The keyword @code{%union} is
4443 followed by braced code containing the same thing that goes inside a
4458 This says that the two alternative types are @code{double} and @code{symrec
4459 *}. They are given names @code{val} and @code{tptr}; these names are used
4460 in the @code{%token} and @code{%type} declarations to pick one of the types
4461 for a terminal or nonterminal symbol (@pxref{Type Decl, ,Nonterminal Symbols}).
4463 As an extension to POSIX, a tag is allowed after the
4464 @code{union}. For example:
4476 specifies the union tag @code{value}, so the corresponding C type is
4477 @code{union value}. If you do not specify a tag, it defaults to
4480 As another extension to POSIX, you may specify multiple
4481 @code{%union} declarations; their contents are concatenated. However,
4482 only the first @code{%union} declaration can specify a tag.
4484 Note that, unlike making a @code{union} declaration in C, you need not write
4485 a semicolon after the closing brace.
4487 Instead of @code{%union}, you can define and use your own union type
4488 @code{YYSTYPE} if your grammar contains at least one
4489 @samp{<@var{type}>} tag. For example, you can put the following into
4490 a header file @file{parser.h}:
4498 typedef union YYSTYPE YYSTYPE;
4503 and then your grammar can use the following
4504 instead of @code{%union}:
4517 @subsection Nonterminal Symbols
4518 @cindex declaring value types, nonterminals
4519 @cindex value types, nonterminals, declaring
4523 When you use @code{%union} to specify multiple value types, you must
4524 declare the value type of each nonterminal symbol for which values are
4525 used. This is done with a @code{%type} declaration, like this:
4528 %type <@var{type}> @var{nonterminal}@dots{}
4532 Here @var{nonterminal} is the name of a nonterminal symbol, and
4533 @var{type} is the name given in the @code{%union} to the alternative
4534 that you want (@pxref{Union Decl, ,The Collection of Value Types}). You
4535 can give any number of nonterminal symbols in the same @code{%type}
4536 declaration, if they have the same value type. Use spaces to separate
4539 You can also declare the value type of a terminal symbol. To do this,
4540 use the same @code{<@var{type}>} construction in a declaration for the
4541 terminal symbol. All kinds of token declarations allow
4542 @code{<@var{type}>}.
4544 @node Initial Action Decl
4545 @subsection Performing Actions before Parsing
4546 @findex %initial-action
4548 Sometimes your parser needs to perform some initializations before
4549 parsing. The @code{%initial-action} directive allows for such arbitrary
4552 @deffn {Directive} %initial-action @{ @var{code} @}
4553 @findex %initial-action
4554 Declare that the braced @var{code} must be invoked before parsing each time
4555 @code{yyparse} is called. The @var{code} may use @code{$$} and
4556 @code{@@$} --- initial value and location of the lookahead --- and the
4557 @code{%parse-param}.
4560 For instance, if your locations use a file name, you may use
4563 %parse-param @{ char const *file_name @};
4566 @@$.initialize (file_name);
4571 @node Destructor Decl
4572 @subsection Freeing Discarded Symbols
4573 @cindex freeing discarded symbols
4577 During error recovery (@pxref{Error Recovery}), symbols already pushed
4578 on the stack and tokens coming from the rest of the file are discarded
4579 until the parser falls on its feet. If the parser runs out of memory,
4580 or if it returns via @code{YYABORT} or @code{YYACCEPT}, all the
4581 symbols on the stack must be discarded. Even if the parser succeeds, it
4582 must discard the start symbol.
4584 When discarded symbols convey heap based information, this memory is
4585 lost. While this behavior can be tolerable for batch parsers, such as
4586 in traditional compilers, it is unacceptable for programs like shells or
4587 protocol implementations that may parse and execute indefinitely.
4589 The @code{%destructor} directive defines code that is called when a
4590 symbol is automatically discarded.
4592 @deffn {Directive} %destructor @{ @var{code} @} @var{symbols}
4594 Invoke the braced @var{code} whenever the parser discards one of the
4596 Within @var{code}, @code{$$} designates the semantic value associated
4597 with the discarded symbol, and @code{@@$} designates its location.
4598 The additional parser parameters are also available (@pxref{Parser Function, ,
4599 The Parser Function @code{yyparse}}).
4601 When a symbol is listed among @var{symbols}, its @code{%destructor} is called a
4602 per-symbol @code{%destructor}.
4603 You may also define a per-type @code{%destructor} by listing a semantic type
4604 tag among @var{symbols}.
4605 In that case, the parser will invoke this @var{code} whenever it discards any
4606 grammar symbol that has that semantic type tag unless that symbol has its own
4607 per-symbol @code{%destructor}.
4609 Finally, you can define two different kinds of default @code{%destructor}s.
4610 (These default forms are experimental.
4611 More user feedback will help to determine whether they should become permanent
4613 You can place each of @code{<*>} and @code{<>} in the @var{symbols} list of
4614 exactly one @code{%destructor} declaration in your grammar file.
4615 The parser will invoke the @var{code} associated with one of these whenever it
4616 discards any user-defined grammar symbol that has no per-symbol and no per-type
4618 The parser uses the @var{code} for @code{<*>} in the case of such a grammar
4619 symbol for which you have formally declared a semantic type tag (@code{%type}
4620 counts as such a declaration, but @code{$<tag>$} does not).
4621 The parser uses the @var{code} for @code{<>} in the case of such a grammar
4622 symbol that has no declared semantic type tag.
4629 %union @{ char *string; @}
4630 %token <string> STRING1
4631 %token <string> STRING2
4632 %type <string> string1
4633 %type <string> string2
4634 %union @{ char character; @}
4635 %token <character> CHR
4636 %type <character> chr
4639 %destructor @{ @} <character>
4640 %destructor @{ free ($$); @} <*>
4641 %destructor @{ free ($$); printf ("%d", @@$.first_line); @} STRING1 string1
4642 %destructor @{ printf ("Discarding tagless symbol.\n"); @} <>
4646 guarantees that, when the parser discards any user-defined symbol that has a
4647 semantic type tag other than @code{<character>}, it passes its semantic value
4648 to @code{free} by default.
4649 However, when the parser discards a @code{STRING1} or a @code{string1}, it also
4650 prints its line number to @code{stdout}.
4651 It performs only the second @code{%destructor} in this case, so it invokes
4652 @code{free} only once.
4653 Finally, the parser merely prints a message whenever it discards any symbol,
4654 such as @code{TAGLESS}, that has no semantic type tag.
4656 A Bison-generated parser invokes the default @code{%destructor}s only for
4657 user-defined as opposed to Bison-defined symbols.
4658 For example, the parser will not invoke either kind of default
4659 @code{%destructor} for the special Bison-defined symbols @code{$accept},
4660 @code{$undefined}, or @code{$end} (@pxref{Table of Symbols, ,Bison Symbols}),
4661 none of which you can reference in your grammar.
4662 It also will not invoke either for the @code{error} token (@pxref{Table of
4663 Symbols, ,error}), which is always defined by Bison regardless of whether you
4664 reference it in your grammar.
4665 However, it may invoke one of them for the end token (token 0) if you
4666 redefine it from @code{$end} to, for example, @code{END}:
4672 @cindex actions in mid-rule
4673 @cindex mid-rule actions
4674 Finally, Bison will never invoke a @code{%destructor} for an unreferenced
4675 mid-rule semantic value (@pxref{Mid-Rule Actions,,Actions in Mid-Rule}).
4676 That is, Bison does not consider a mid-rule to have a semantic value if you
4677 do not reference @code{$$} in the mid-rule's action or @code{$@var{n}}
4678 (where @var{n} is the right-hand side symbol position of the mid-rule) in
4679 any later action in that rule. However, if you do reference either, the
4680 Bison-generated parser will invoke the @code{<>} @code{%destructor} whenever
4681 it discards the mid-rule symbol.
4685 In the future, it may be possible to redefine the @code{error} token as a
4686 nonterminal that captures the discarded symbols.
4687 In that case, the parser will invoke the default destructor for it as well.
4692 @cindex discarded symbols
4693 @dfn{Discarded symbols} are the following:
4697 stacked symbols popped during the first phase of error recovery,
4699 incoming terminals during the second phase of error recovery,
4701 the current lookahead and the entire stack (except the current
4702 right-hand side symbols) when the parser returns immediately, and
4704 the start symbol, when the parser succeeds.
4707 The parser can @dfn{return immediately} because of an explicit call to
4708 @code{YYABORT} or @code{YYACCEPT}, or failed error recovery, or memory
4711 Right-hand side symbols of a rule that explicitly triggers a syntax
4712 error via @code{YYERROR} are not discarded automatically. As a rule
4713 of thumb, destructors are invoked only when user actions cannot manage
4717 @subsection Printing Semantic Values
4718 @cindex printing semantic values
4722 When run-time traces are enabled (@pxref{Tracing, ,Tracing Your Parser}),
4723 the parser reports its actions, such as reductions. When a symbol involved
4724 in an action is reported, only its kind is displayed, as the parser cannot
4725 know how semantic values should be formatted.
4727 The @code{%printer} directive defines code that is called when a symbol is
4728 reported. Its syntax is the same as @code{%destructor} (@pxref{Destructor
4729 Decl, , Freeing Discarded Symbols}).
4731 @deffn {Directive} %printer @{ @var{code} @} @var{symbols}
4734 @c This is the same text as for %destructor.
4735 Invoke the braced @var{code} whenever the parser displays one of the
4736 @var{symbols}. Within @var{code}, @code{yyoutput} denotes the output stream
4737 (a @code{FILE*} in C, and an @code{std::ostream&} in C++),
4738 @code{$$} designates the semantic value associated with the symbol, and
4739 @code{@@$} its location. The additional parser parameters are also
4740 available (@pxref{Parser Function, , The Parser Function @code{yyparse}}).
4742 The @var{symbols} are defined as for @code{%destructor} (@pxref{Destructor
4743 Decl, , Freeing Discarded Symbols}.): they can be per-type (e.g.,
4744 @samp{<ival>}), per-symbol (e.g., @samp{exp}, @samp{NUM}, @samp{"float"}),
4745 typed per-default (i.e., @samp{<*>}, or untyped per-default (i.e.,
4753 %union @{ char *string; @}
4754 %token <string> STRING1
4755 %token <string> STRING2
4756 %type <string> string1
4757 %type <string> string2
4758 %union @{ char character; @}
4759 %token <character> CHR
4760 %type <character> chr
4763 %printer @{ fprintf (yyoutput, "'%c'", $$); @} <character>
4764 %printer @{ fprintf (yyoutput, "&%p", $$); @} <*>
4765 %printer @{ fprintf (yyoutput, "\"%s\"", $$); @} STRING1 string1
4766 %printer @{ fprintf (yyoutput, "<>"); @} <>
4770 guarantees that, when the parser print any symbol that has a semantic type
4771 tag other than @code{<character>}, it display the address of the semantic
4772 value by default. However, when the parser displays a @code{STRING1} or a
4773 @code{string1}, it formats it as a string in double quotes. It performs
4774 only the second @code{%printer} in this case, so it prints only once.
4775 Finally, the parser print @samp{<>} for any symbol, such as @code{TAGLESS},
4776 that has no semantic type tag. See also
4780 @subsection Suppressing Conflict Warnings
4781 @cindex suppressing conflict warnings
4782 @cindex preventing warnings about conflicts
4783 @cindex warnings, preventing
4784 @cindex conflicts, suppressing warnings of
4788 Bison normally warns if there are any conflicts in the grammar
4789 (@pxref{Shift/Reduce, ,Shift/Reduce Conflicts}), but most real grammars
4790 have harmless shift/reduce conflicts which are resolved in a predictable
4791 way and would be difficult to eliminate. It is desirable to suppress
4792 the warning about these conflicts unless the number of conflicts
4793 changes. You can do this with the @code{%expect} declaration.
4795 The declaration looks like this:
4801 Here @var{n} is a decimal integer. The declaration says there should
4802 be @var{n} shift/reduce conflicts and no reduce/reduce conflicts.
4803 Bison reports an error if the number of shift/reduce conflicts differs
4804 from @var{n}, or if there are any reduce/reduce conflicts.
4806 For deterministic parsers, reduce/reduce conflicts are more
4807 serious, and should be eliminated entirely. Bison will always report
4808 reduce/reduce conflicts for these parsers. With GLR
4809 parsers, however, both kinds of conflicts are routine; otherwise,
4810 there would be no need to use GLR parsing. Therefore, it is
4811 also possible to specify an expected number of reduce/reduce conflicts
4812 in GLR parsers, using the declaration:
4818 In general, using @code{%expect} involves these steps:
4822 Compile your grammar without @code{%expect}. Use the @samp{-v} option
4823 to get a verbose list of where the conflicts occur. Bison will also
4824 print the number of conflicts.
4827 Check each of the conflicts to make sure that Bison's default
4828 resolution is what you really want. If not, rewrite the grammar and
4829 go back to the beginning.
4832 Add an @code{%expect} declaration, copying the number @var{n} from the
4833 number which Bison printed. With GLR parsers, add an
4834 @code{%expect-rr} declaration as well.
4837 Now Bison will report an error if you introduce an unexpected conflict,
4838 but will keep silent otherwise.
4841 @subsection The Start-Symbol
4842 @cindex declaring the start symbol
4843 @cindex start symbol, declaring
4844 @cindex default start symbol
4847 Bison assumes by default that the start symbol for the grammar is the first
4848 nonterminal specified in the grammar specification section. The programmer
4849 may override this restriction with the @code{%start} declaration as follows:
4856 @subsection A Pure (Reentrant) Parser
4857 @cindex reentrant parser
4859 @findex %define api.pure
4861 A @dfn{reentrant} program is one which does not alter in the course of
4862 execution; in other words, it consists entirely of @dfn{pure} (read-only)
4863 code. Reentrancy is important whenever asynchronous execution is possible;
4864 for example, a nonreentrant program may not be safe to call from a signal
4865 handler. In systems with multiple threads of control, a nonreentrant
4866 program must be called only within interlocks.
4868 Normally, Bison generates a parser which is not reentrant. This is
4869 suitable for most uses, and it permits compatibility with Yacc. (The
4870 standard Yacc interfaces are inherently nonreentrant, because they use
4871 statically allocated variables for communication with @code{yylex},
4872 including @code{yylval} and @code{yylloc}.)
4874 Alternatively, you can generate a pure, reentrant parser. The Bison
4875 declaration @code{%define api.pure} says that you want the parser to be
4876 reentrant. It looks like this:
4882 The result is that the communication variables @code{yylval} and
4883 @code{yylloc} become local variables in @code{yyparse}, and a different
4884 calling convention is used for the lexical analyzer function
4885 @code{yylex}. @xref{Pure Calling, ,Calling Conventions for Pure
4886 Parsers}, for the details of this. The variable @code{yynerrs}
4887 becomes local in @code{yyparse} in pull mode but it becomes a member
4888 of yypstate in push mode. (@pxref{Error Reporting, ,The Error
4889 Reporting Function @code{yyerror}}). The convention for calling
4890 @code{yyparse} itself is unchanged.
4892 Whether the parser is pure has nothing to do with the grammar rules.
4893 You can generate either a pure parser or a nonreentrant parser from any
4897 @subsection A Push Parser
4900 @findex %define api.push-pull
4902 (The current push parsing interface is experimental and may evolve.
4903 More user feedback will help to stabilize it.)
4905 A pull parser is called once and it takes control until all its input
4906 is completely parsed. A push parser, on the other hand, is called
4907 each time a new token is made available.
4909 A push parser is typically useful when the parser is part of a
4910 main event loop in the client's application. This is typically
4911 a requirement of a GUI, when the main event loop needs to be triggered
4912 within a certain time period.
4914 Normally, Bison generates a pull parser.
4915 The following Bison declaration says that you want the parser to be a push
4916 parser (@pxref{%define Summary,,api.push-pull}):
4919 %define api.push-pull push
4922 In almost all cases, you want to ensure that your push parser is also
4923 a pure parser (@pxref{Pure Decl, ,A Pure (Reentrant) Parser}). The only
4924 time you should create an impure push parser is to have backwards
4925 compatibility with the impure Yacc pull mode interface. Unless you know
4926 what you are doing, your declarations should look like this:
4930 %define api.push-pull push
4933 There is a major notable functional difference between the pure push parser
4934 and the impure push parser. It is acceptable for a pure push parser to have
4935 many parser instances, of the same type of parser, in memory at the same time.
4936 An impure push parser should only use one parser at a time.
4938 When a push parser is selected, Bison will generate some new symbols in
4939 the generated parser. @code{yypstate} is a structure that the generated
4940 parser uses to store the parser's state. @code{yypstate_new} is the
4941 function that will create a new parser instance. @code{yypstate_delete}
4942 will free the resources associated with the corresponding parser instance.
4943 Finally, @code{yypush_parse} is the function that should be called whenever a
4944 token is available to provide the parser. A trivial example
4945 of using a pure push parser would look like this:
4949 yypstate *ps = yypstate_new ();
4951 status = yypush_parse (ps, yylex (), NULL);
4952 @} while (status == YYPUSH_MORE);
4953 yypstate_delete (ps);
4956 If the user decided to use an impure push parser, a few things about
4957 the generated parser will change. The @code{yychar} variable becomes
4958 a global variable instead of a variable in the @code{yypush_parse} function.
4959 For this reason, the signature of the @code{yypush_parse} function is
4960 changed to remove the token as a parameter. A nonreentrant push parser
4961 example would thus look like this:
4966 yypstate *ps = yypstate_new ();
4969 status = yypush_parse (ps);
4970 @} while (status == YYPUSH_MORE);
4971 yypstate_delete (ps);
4974 That's it. Notice the next token is put into the global variable @code{yychar}
4975 for use by the next invocation of the @code{yypush_parse} function.
4977 Bison also supports both the push parser interface along with the pull parser
4978 interface in the same generated parser. In order to get this functionality,
4979 you should replace the @code{%define api.push-pull push} declaration with the
4980 @code{%define api.push-pull both} declaration. Doing this will create all of
4981 the symbols mentioned earlier along with the two extra symbols, @code{yyparse}
4982 and @code{yypull_parse}. @code{yyparse} can be used exactly as it normally
4983 would be used. However, the user should note that it is implemented in the
4984 generated parser by calling @code{yypull_parse}.
4985 This makes the @code{yyparse} function that is generated with the
4986 @code{%define api.push-pull both} declaration slower than the normal
4987 @code{yyparse} function. If the user
4988 calls the @code{yypull_parse} function it will parse the rest of the input
4989 stream. It is possible to @code{yypush_parse} tokens to select a subgrammar
4990 and then @code{yypull_parse} the rest of the input stream. If you would like
4991 to switch back and forth between between parsing styles, you would have to
4992 write your own @code{yypull_parse} function that knows when to quit looking
4993 for input. An example of using the @code{yypull_parse} function would look
4997 yypstate *ps = yypstate_new ();
4998 yypull_parse (ps); /* Will call the lexer */
4999 yypstate_delete (ps);
5002 Adding the @code{%define api.pure} declaration does exactly the same thing to
5003 the generated parser with @code{%define api.push-pull both} as it did for
5004 @code{%define api.push-pull push}.
5007 @subsection Bison Declaration Summary
5008 @cindex Bison declaration summary
5009 @cindex declaration summary
5010 @cindex summary, Bison declaration
5012 Here is a summary of the declarations used to define a grammar:
5014 @deffn {Directive} %union
5015 Declare the collection of data types that semantic values may have
5016 (@pxref{Union Decl, ,The Collection of Value Types}).
5019 @deffn {Directive} %token
5020 Declare a terminal symbol (token type name) with no precedence
5021 or associativity specified (@pxref{Token Decl, ,Token Type Names}).
5024 @deffn {Directive} %right
5025 Declare a terminal symbol (token type name) that is right-associative
5026 (@pxref{Precedence Decl, ,Operator Precedence}).
5029 @deffn {Directive} %left
5030 Declare a terminal symbol (token type name) that is left-associative
5031 (@pxref{Precedence Decl, ,Operator Precedence}).
5034 @deffn {Directive} %nonassoc
5035 Declare a terminal symbol (token type name) that is nonassociative
5036 (@pxref{Precedence Decl, ,Operator Precedence}).
5037 Using it in a way that would be associative is a syntax error.
5041 @deffn {Directive} %default-prec
5042 Assign a precedence to rules lacking an explicit @code{%prec} modifier
5043 (@pxref{Contextual Precedence, ,Context-Dependent Precedence}).
5047 @deffn {Directive} %type
5048 Declare the type of semantic values for a nonterminal symbol
5049 (@pxref{Type Decl, ,Nonterminal Symbols}).
5052 @deffn {Directive} %start
5053 Specify the grammar's start symbol (@pxref{Start Decl, ,The
5057 @deffn {Directive} %expect
5058 Declare the expected number of shift-reduce conflicts
5059 (@pxref{Expect Decl, ,Suppressing Conflict Warnings}).
5065 In order to change the behavior of @command{bison}, use the following
5068 @deffn {Directive} %code @{@var{code}@}
5069 @deffnx {Directive} %code @var{qualifier} @{@var{code}@}
5071 Insert @var{code} verbatim into the output parser source at the
5072 default location or at the location specified by @var{qualifier}.
5073 @xref{%code Summary}.
5076 @deffn {Directive} %debug
5077 In the parser implementation file, define the macro @code{YYDEBUG} to
5078 1 if it is not already defined, so that the debugging facilities are
5079 compiled. @xref{Tracing, ,Tracing Your Parser}.
5082 @deffn {Directive} %define @var{variable}
5083 @deffnx {Directive} %define @var{variable} @var{value}
5084 @deffnx {Directive} %define @var{variable} "@var{value}"
5085 Define a variable to adjust Bison's behavior. @xref{%define Summary}.
5088 @deffn {Directive} %defines
5089 Write a parser header file containing macro definitions for the token
5090 type names defined in the grammar as well as a few other declarations.
5091 If the parser implementation file is named @file{@var{name}.c} then
5092 the parser header file is named @file{@var{name}.h}.
5094 For C parsers, the parser header file declares @code{YYSTYPE} unless
5095 @code{YYSTYPE} is already defined as a macro or you have used a
5096 @code{<@var{type}>} tag without using @code{%union}. Therefore, if
5097 you are using a @code{%union} (@pxref{Multiple Types, ,More Than One
5098 Value Type}) with components that require other definitions, or if you
5099 have defined a @code{YYSTYPE} macro or type definition (@pxref{Value
5100 Type, ,Data Types of Semantic Values}), you need to arrange for these
5101 definitions to be propagated to all modules, e.g., by putting them in
5102 a prerequisite header that is included both by your parser and by any
5103 other module that needs @code{YYSTYPE}.
5105 Unless your parser is pure, the parser header file declares
5106 @code{yylval} as an external variable. @xref{Pure Decl, ,A Pure
5107 (Reentrant) Parser}.
5109 If you have also used locations, the parser header file declares
5110 @code{YYLTYPE} and @code{yylloc} using a protocol similar to that of the
5111 @code{YYSTYPE} macro and @code{yylval}. @xref{Tracking Locations}.
5113 This parser header file is normally essential if you wish to put the
5114 definition of @code{yylex} in a separate source file, because
5115 @code{yylex} typically needs to be able to refer to the
5116 above-mentioned declarations and to the token type codes. @xref{Token
5117 Values, ,Semantic Values of Tokens}.
5119 @findex %code requires
5120 @findex %code provides
5121 If you have declared @code{%code requires} or @code{%code provides}, the output
5122 header also contains their code.
5123 @xref{%code Summary}.
5126 @deffn {Directive} %defines @var{defines-file}
5127 Same as above, but save in the file @var{defines-file}.
5130 @deffn {Directive} %destructor
5131 Specify how the parser should reclaim the memory associated to
5132 discarded symbols. @xref{Destructor Decl, , Freeing Discarded Symbols}.
5135 @deffn {Directive} %file-prefix "@var{prefix}"
5136 Specify a prefix to use for all Bison output file names. The names
5137 are chosen as if the grammar file were named @file{@var{prefix}.y}.
5140 @deffn {Directive} %language "@var{language}"
5141 Specify the programming language for the generated parser. Currently
5142 supported languages include C, C++, and Java.
5143 @var{language} is case-insensitive.
5145 This directive is experimental and its effect may be modified in future
5149 @deffn {Directive} %locations
5150 Generate the code processing the locations (@pxref{Action Features,
5151 ,Special Features for Use in Actions}). This mode is enabled as soon as
5152 the grammar uses the special @samp{@@@var{n}} tokens, but if your
5153 grammar does not use it, using @samp{%locations} allows for more
5154 accurate syntax error messages.
5158 @deffn {Directive} %no-default-prec
5159 Do not assign a precedence to rules lacking an explicit @code{%prec}
5160 modifier (@pxref{Contextual Precedence, ,Context-Dependent
5165 @deffn {Directive} %no-lines
5166 Don't generate any @code{#line} preprocessor commands in the parser
5167 implementation file. Ordinarily Bison writes these commands in the
5168 parser implementation file so that the C compiler and debuggers will
5169 associate errors and object code with your source file (the grammar
5170 file). This directive causes them to associate errors with the parser
5171 implementation file, treating it as an independent source file in its
5175 @deffn {Directive} %output "@var{file}"
5176 Specify @var{file} for the parser implementation file.
5179 @deffn {Directive} %pure-parser
5180 Deprecated version of @code{%define api.pure} (@pxref{%define
5181 Summary,,api.pure}), for which Bison is more careful to warn about
5185 @deffn {Directive} %require "@var{version}"
5186 Require version @var{version} or higher of Bison. @xref{Require Decl, ,
5187 Require a Version of Bison}.
5190 @deffn {Directive} %skeleton "@var{file}"
5191 Specify the skeleton to use.
5193 @c You probably don't need this option unless you are developing Bison.
5194 @c You should use @code{%language} if you want to specify the skeleton for a
5195 @c different language, because it is clearer and because it will always choose the
5196 @c correct skeleton for non-deterministic or push parsers.
5198 If @var{file} does not contain a @code{/}, @var{file} is the name of a skeleton
5199 file in the Bison installation directory.
5200 If it does, @var{file} is an absolute file name or a file name relative to the
5201 directory of the grammar file.
5202 This is similar to how most shells resolve commands.
5205 @deffn {Directive} %token-table
5206 Generate an array of token names in the parser implementation file.
5207 The name of the array is @code{yytname}; @code{yytname[@var{i}]} is
5208 the name of the token whose internal Bison token code number is
5209 @var{i}. The first three elements of @code{yytname} correspond to the
5210 predefined tokens @code{"$end"}, @code{"error"}, and
5211 @code{"$undefined"}; after these come the symbols defined in the
5214 The name in the table includes all the characters needed to represent
5215 the token in Bison. For single-character literals and literal
5216 strings, this includes the surrounding quoting characters and any
5217 escape sequences. For example, the Bison single-character literal
5218 @code{'+'} corresponds to a three-character name, represented in C as
5219 @code{"'+'"}; and the Bison two-character literal string @code{"\\/"}
5220 corresponds to a five-character name, represented in C as
5223 When you specify @code{%token-table}, Bison also generates macro
5224 definitions for macros @code{YYNTOKENS}, @code{YYNNTS}, and
5225 @code{YYNRULES}, and @code{YYNSTATES}:
5229 The highest token number, plus one.
5231 The number of nonterminal symbols.
5233 The number of grammar rules,
5235 The number of parser states (@pxref{Parser States}).
5239 @deffn {Directive} %verbose
5240 Write an extra output file containing verbose descriptions of the
5241 parser states and what is done for each type of lookahead token in
5242 that state. @xref{Understanding, , Understanding Your Parser}, for more
5246 @deffn {Directive} %yacc
5247 Pretend the option @option{--yacc} was given, i.e., imitate Yacc,
5248 including its naming conventions. @xref{Bison Options}, for more.
5252 @node %define Summary
5253 @subsection %define Summary
5255 There are many features of Bison's behavior that can be controlled by
5256 assigning the feature a single value. For historical reasons, some
5257 such features are assigned values by dedicated directives, such as
5258 @code{%start}, which assigns the start symbol. However, newer such
5259 features are associated with variables, which are assigned by the
5260 @code{%define} directive:
5262 @deffn {Directive} %define @var{variable}
5263 @deffnx {Directive} %define @var{variable} @var{value}
5264 @deffnx {Directive} %define @var{variable} "@var{value}"
5265 Define @var{variable} to @var{value}.
5267 @var{value} must be placed in quotation marks if it contains any
5268 character other than a letter, underscore, period, or non-initial dash
5269 or digit. Omitting @code{"@var{value}"} entirely is always equivalent
5270 to specifying @code{""}.
5272 It is an error if a @var{variable} is defined by @code{%define}
5273 multiple times, but see @ref{Bison Options,,-D
5274 @var{name}[=@var{value}]}.
5277 The rest of this section summarizes variables and values that
5278 @code{%define} accepts.
5280 Some @var{variable}s take Boolean values. In this case, Bison will
5281 complain if the variable definition does not meet one of the following
5285 @item @code{@var{value}} is @code{true}
5287 @item @code{@var{value}} is omitted (or @code{""} is specified).
5288 This is equivalent to @code{true}.
5290 @item @code{@var{value}} is @code{false}.
5292 @item @var{variable} is never defined.
5293 In this case, Bison selects a default value.
5296 What @var{variable}s are accepted, as well as their meanings and default
5297 values, depend on the selected target language and/or the parser
5298 skeleton (@pxref{Decl Summary,,%language}, @pxref{Decl
5299 Summary,,%skeleton}).
5300 Unaccepted @var{variable}s produce an error.
5301 Some of the accepted @var{variable}s are:
5304 @c ================================================== api.prefix
5305 @item @code{api.prefix}
5306 @findex %define api.prefix
5309 @item Language(s): All
5311 @item Purpose: Rename exported symbols
5312 @xref{Multiple Parsers, ,Multiple Parsers in the Same Program}.
5314 @item Accepted Values: String
5316 @item Default Value: @code{yy}
5319 @c ================================================== api.pure
5320 @item @code{api.pure}
5321 @findex %define api.pure
5324 @item Language(s): C
5326 @item Purpose: Request a pure (reentrant) parser program.
5327 @xref{Pure Decl, ,A Pure (Reentrant) Parser}.
5329 @item Accepted Values: Boolean
5331 @item Default Value: @code{false}
5334 @c ================================================== api.push-pull
5336 @item @code{api.push-pull}
5337 @findex %define api.push-pull
5340 @item Language(s): C (deterministic parsers only)
5342 @item Purpose: Request a pull parser, a push parser, or both.
5343 @xref{Push Decl, ,A Push Parser}.
5344 (The current push parsing interface is experimental and may evolve.
5345 More user feedback will help to stabilize it.)
5347 @item Accepted Values: @code{pull}, @code{push}, @code{both}
5349 @item Default Value: @code{pull}
5352 @c ================================================== lr.default-reductions
5354 @item @code{lr.default-reductions}
5355 @findex %define lr.default-reductions
5358 @item Language(s): all
5360 @item Purpose: Specify the kind of states that are permitted to
5361 contain default reductions. @xref{Default Reductions}. (The ability to
5362 specify where default reductions should be used is experimental. More user
5363 feedback will help to stabilize it.)
5365 @item Accepted Values: @code{most}, @code{consistent}, @code{accepting}
5366 @item Default Value:
5368 @item @code{accepting} if @code{lr.type} is @code{canonical-lr}.
5369 @item @code{most} otherwise.
5373 @c ============================================ lr.keep-unreachable-states
5375 @item @code{lr.keep-unreachable-states}
5376 @findex %define lr.keep-unreachable-states
5379 @item Language(s): all
5380 @item Purpose: Request that Bison allow unreachable parser states to
5381 remain in the parser tables. @xref{Unreachable States}.
5382 @item Accepted Values: Boolean
5383 @item Default Value: @code{false}
5386 @c ================================================== lr.type
5388 @item @code{lr.type}
5389 @findex %define lr.type
5392 @item Language(s): all
5394 @item Purpose: Specify the type of parser tables within the
5395 LR(1) family. @xref{LR Table Construction}. (This feature is experimental.
5396 More user feedback will help to stabilize it.)
5398 @item Accepted Values: @code{lalr}, @code{ielr}, @code{canonical-lr}
5400 @item Default Value: @code{lalr}
5403 @c ================================================== namespace
5405 @item @code{namespace}
5406 @findex %define namespace
5409 @item Languages(s): C++
5411 @item Purpose: Specify the namespace for the parser class.
5412 For example, if you specify:
5415 %define namespace "foo::bar"
5418 Bison uses @code{foo::bar} verbatim in references such as:
5421 foo::bar::parser::semantic_type
5424 However, to open a namespace, Bison removes any leading @code{::} and then
5425 splits on any remaining occurrences:
5428 namespace foo @{ namespace bar @{
5434 @item Accepted Values: Any absolute or relative C++ namespace reference without
5435 a trailing @code{"::"}.
5436 For example, @code{"foo"} or @code{"::foo::bar"}.
5438 @item Default Value: The value specified by @code{%name-prefix}, which defaults
5440 This usage of @code{%name-prefix} is for backward compatibility and can be
5441 confusing since @code{%name-prefix} also specifies the textual prefix for the
5442 lexical analyzer function.
5443 Thus, if you specify @code{%name-prefix}, it is best to also specify
5444 @code{%define namespace} so that @code{%name-prefix} @emph{only} affects the
5445 lexical analyzer function.
5446 For example, if you specify:
5449 %define namespace "foo"
5450 %name-prefix "bar::"
5453 The parser namespace is @code{foo} and @code{yylex} is referenced as
5457 @c ================================================== parse.lac
5458 @item @code{parse.lac}
5459 @findex %define parse.lac
5462 @item Languages(s): C (deterministic parsers only)
5464 @item Purpose: Enable LAC (lookahead correction) to improve
5465 syntax error handling. @xref{LAC}.
5466 @item Accepted Values: @code{none}, @code{full}
5467 @item Default Value: @code{none}
5473 @subsection %code Summary
5477 The @code{%code} directive inserts code verbatim into the output
5478 parser source at any of a predefined set of locations. It thus serves
5479 as a flexible and user-friendly alternative to the traditional Yacc
5480 prologue, @code{%@{@var{code}%@}}. This section summarizes the
5481 functionality of @code{%code} for the various target languages
5482 supported by Bison. For a detailed discussion of how to use
5483 @code{%code} in place of @code{%@{@var{code}%@}} for C/C++ and why it
5484 is advantageous to do so, @pxref{Prologue Alternatives}.
5486 @deffn {Directive} %code @{@var{code}@}
5487 This is the unqualified form of the @code{%code} directive. It
5488 inserts @var{code} verbatim at a language-dependent default location
5489 in the parser implementation.
5491 For C/C++, the default location is the parser implementation file
5492 after the usual contents of the parser header file. Thus, the
5493 unqualified form replaces @code{%@{@var{code}%@}} for most purposes.
5495 For Java, the default location is inside the parser class.
5498 @deffn {Directive} %code @var{qualifier} @{@var{code}@}
5499 This is the qualified form of the @code{%code} directive.
5500 @var{qualifier} identifies the purpose of @var{code} and thus the
5501 location(s) where Bison should insert it. That is, if you need to
5502 specify location-sensitive @var{code} that does not belong at the
5503 default location selected by the unqualified @code{%code} form, use
5507 For any particular qualifier or for the unqualified form, if there are
5508 multiple occurrences of the @code{%code} directive, Bison concatenates
5509 the specified code in the order in which it appears in the grammar
5512 Not all qualifiers are accepted for all target languages. Unaccepted
5513 qualifiers produce an error. Some of the accepted qualifiers are:
5517 @findex %code requires
5520 @item Language(s): C, C++
5522 @item Purpose: This is the best place to write dependency code required for
5523 @code{YYSTYPE} and @code{YYLTYPE}.
5524 In other words, it's the best place to define types referenced in @code{%union}
5525 directives, and it's the best place to override Bison's default @code{YYSTYPE}
5526 and @code{YYLTYPE} definitions.
5528 @item Location(s): The parser header file and the parser implementation file
5529 before the Bison-generated @code{YYSTYPE} and @code{YYLTYPE}
5534 @findex %code provides
5537 @item Language(s): C, C++
5539 @item Purpose: This is the best place to write additional definitions and
5540 declarations that should be provided to other modules.
5542 @item Location(s): The parser header file and the parser implementation
5543 file after the Bison-generated @code{YYSTYPE}, @code{YYLTYPE}, and
5551 @item Language(s): C, C++
5553 @item Purpose: The unqualified @code{%code} or @code{%code requires}
5554 should usually be more appropriate than @code{%code top}. However,
5555 occasionally it is necessary to insert code much nearer the top of the
5556 parser implementation file. For example:
5565 @item Location(s): Near the top of the parser implementation file.
5569 @findex %code imports
5572 @item Language(s): Java
5574 @item Purpose: This is the best place to write Java import directives.
5576 @item Location(s): The parser Java file after any Java package directive and
5577 before any class definitions.
5581 Though we say the insertion locations are language-dependent, they are
5582 technically skeleton-dependent. Writers of non-standard skeletons
5583 however should choose their locations consistently with the behavior
5584 of the standard Bison skeletons.
5587 @node Multiple Parsers
5588 @section Multiple Parsers in the Same Program
5590 Most programs that use Bison parse only one language and therefore contain
5591 only one Bison parser. But what if you want to parse more than one language
5592 with the same program? Then you need to avoid name conflicts between
5593 different definitions of functions and variables such as @code{yyparse},
5594 @code{yylval}. To use different parsers from the same compilation unit, you
5595 also need to avoid conflicts on types and macros (e.g., @code{YYSTYPE})
5596 exported in the generated header.
5598 The easy way to do this is to define the @code{%define} variable
5599 @code{api.prefix} (possibly using the option
5600 @samp{-Dapi.prefix=@var{prefix}}, see @ref{Invocation, ,Invoking Bison}).
5601 This renames the interface functions and variables of the Bison parser to
5602 start with @var{prefix} instead of @samp{yy}, and all the macros to start by
5603 @var{PREFIX} (i.e., @var{prefix} upper cased) instead of @samp{YY}. You can
5604 use this to give each parser distinct names that do not conflict.
5606 The renamed symbols include @code{yyparse}, @code{yylex}, @code{yyerror},
5607 @code{yynerrs}, @code{yylval}, @code{yylloc}, @code{yychar} and
5608 @code{yydebug}. If you use a push parser, @code{yypush_parse},
5609 @code{yypull_parse}, @code{yypstate}, @code{yypstate_new} and
5610 @code{yypstate_delete} will also be renamed. The renamed macros include
5611 @code{YYSTYPE}, @code{YYSTYPE_IS_TRIVIAL}, @code{YYSTYPE_IS_DECLARED},
5612 @code{YYLTYPE}, @code{YYLTYPE_IS_TRIVIAL}, and @code{YYLTYPE_IS_DECLARED}.
5614 For example, if you use @samp{%define api.prefix c}, the names become
5615 @code{cparse}, @code{clex}, @dots{}, @code{CSTYPE}, @code{CLTYPE}, and so
5618 The @code{%define} variable @code{api.prefix} works in two different ways.
5619 In the implementation file, it works by adding macro definitions to the
5620 beginning of the parser implementation file, defining @code{yyparse} as
5621 @code{@var{prefix}parse}, and so on:
5624 #define YYSTYPE CTYPE
5625 #define yyparse cparse
5626 #define yylval clval
5632 This effectively substitutes one name for the other in the entire parser
5633 implementation file, thus the ``original'' names (@code{yylex},
5634 @code{YYSTYPE}, @dots{}) are also usable in the parser implementation file.
5636 However, in the parser header file, the symbols are defined renamed, for
5640 extern CSTYPE clval;
5644 Previously, a similar feature was provided by the obsoleted directive
5645 @code{%name-prefix} (@pxref{Table of Symbols, ,Bison Symbols}) and option
5646 @code{--name-prefix} (@pxref{Bison Options}).
5649 @chapter Parser C-Language Interface
5650 @cindex C-language interface
5653 The Bison parser is actually a C function named @code{yyparse}. Here we
5654 describe the interface conventions of @code{yyparse} and the other
5655 functions that it needs to use.
5657 Keep in mind that the parser uses many C identifiers starting with
5658 @samp{yy} and @samp{YY} for internal purposes. If you use such an
5659 identifier (aside from those in this manual) in an action or in epilogue
5660 in the grammar file, you are likely to run into trouble.
5663 * Parser Function:: How to call @code{yyparse} and what it returns.
5664 * Push Parser Function:: How to call @code{yypush_parse} and what it returns.
5665 * Pull Parser Function:: How to call @code{yypull_parse} and what it returns.
5666 * Parser Create Function:: How to call @code{yypstate_new} and what it returns.
5667 * Parser Delete Function:: How to call @code{yypstate_delete} and what it returns.
5668 * Lexical:: You must supply a function @code{yylex}
5670 * Error Reporting:: You must supply a function @code{yyerror}.
5671 * Action Features:: Special features for use in actions.
5672 * Internationalization:: How to let the parser speak in the user's
5676 @node Parser Function
5677 @section The Parser Function @code{yyparse}
5680 You call the function @code{yyparse} to cause parsing to occur. This
5681 function reads tokens, executes actions, and ultimately returns when it
5682 encounters end-of-input or an unrecoverable syntax error. You can also
5683 write an action which directs @code{yyparse} to return immediately
5684 without reading further.
5687 @deftypefun int yyparse (void)
5688 The value returned by @code{yyparse} is 0 if parsing was successful (return
5689 is due to end-of-input).
5691 The value is 1 if parsing failed because of invalid input, i.e., input
5692 that contains a syntax error or that causes @code{YYABORT} to be
5695 The value is 2 if parsing failed due to memory exhaustion.
5698 In an action, you can cause immediate return from @code{yyparse} by using
5703 Return immediately with value 0 (to report success).
5708 Return immediately with value 1 (to report failure).
5711 If you use a reentrant parser, you can optionally pass additional
5712 parameter information to it in a reentrant way. To do so, use the
5713 declaration @code{%parse-param}:
5715 @deffn {Directive} %parse-param @{@var{argument-declaration}@}
5716 @findex %parse-param
5717 Declare that an argument declared by the braced-code
5718 @var{argument-declaration} is an additional @code{yyparse} argument.
5719 The @var{argument-declaration} is used when declaring
5720 functions or prototypes. The last identifier in
5721 @var{argument-declaration} must be the argument name.
5724 Here's an example. Write this in the parser:
5727 %parse-param @{int *nastiness@}
5728 %parse-param @{int *randomness@}
5732 Then call the parser like this:
5736 int nastiness, randomness;
5737 @dots{} /* @r{Store proper data in @code{nastiness} and @code{randomness}.} */
5738 value = yyparse (&nastiness, &randomness);
5744 In the grammar actions, use expressions like this to refer to the data:
5747 exp: @dots{} @{ @dots{}; *randomness += 1; @dots{} @}
5750 @node Push Parser Function
5751 @section The Push Parser Function @code{yypush_parse}
5752 @findex yypush_parse
5754 (The current push parsing interface is experimental and may evolve.
5755 More user feedback will help to stabilize it.)
5757 You call the function @code{yypush_parse} to parse a single token. This
5758 function is available if either the @code{%define api.push-pull push} or
5759 @code{%define api.push-pull both} declaration is used.
5760 @xref{Push Decl, ,A Push Parser}.
5762 @deftypefun int yypush_parse (yypstate *yyps)
5763 The value returned by @code{yypush_parse} is the same as for yyparse with the
5764 following exception. @code{yypush_parse} will return YYPUSH_MORE if more input
5765 is required to finish parsing the grammar.
5768 @node Pull Parser Function
5769 @section The Pull Parser Function @code{yypull_parse}
5770 @findex yypull_parse
5772 (The current push parsing interface is experimental and may evolve.
5773 More user feedback will help to stabilize it.)
5775 You call the function @code{yypull_parse} to parse the rest of the input
5776 stream. This function is available if the @code{%define api.push-pull both}
5777 declaration is used.
5778 @xref{Push Decl, ,A Push Parser}.
5780 @deftypefun int yypull_parse (yypstate *yyps)
5781 The value returned by @code{yypull_parse} is the same as for @code{yyparse}.
5784 @node Parser Create Function
5785 @section The Parser Create Function @code{yystate_new}
5786 @findex yypstate_new
5788 (The current push parsing interface is experimental and may evolve.
5789 More user feedback will help to stabilize it.)
5791 You call the function @code{yypstate_new} to create a new parser instance.
5792 This function is available if either the @code{%define api.push-pull push} or
5793 @code{%define api.push-pull both} declaration is used.
5794 @xref{Push Decl, ,A Push Parser}.
5796 @deftypefun {yypstate*} yypstate_new (void)
5797 The function will return a valid parser instance if there was memory available
5798 or 0 if no memory was available.
5799 In impure mode, it will also return 0 if a parser instance is currently
5803 @node Parser Delete Function
5804 @section The Parser Delete Function @code{yystate_delete}
5805 @findex yypstate_delete
5807 (The current push parsing interface is experimental and may evolve.
5808 More user feedback will help to stabilize it.)
5810 You call the function @code{yypstate_delete} to delete a parser instance.
5811 function is available if either the @code{%define api.push-pull push} or
5812 @code{%define api.push-pull both} declaration is used.
5813 @xref{Push Decl, ,A Push Parser}.
5815 @deftypefun void yypstate_delete (yypstate *yyps)
5816 This function will reclaim the memory associated with a parser instance.
5817 After this call, you should no longer attempt to use the parser instance.
5821 @section The Lexical Analyzer Function @code{yylex}
5823 @cindex lexical analyzer
5825 The @dfn{lexical analyzer} function, @code{yylex}, recognizes tokens from
5826 the input stream and returns them to the parser. Bison does not create
5827 this function automatically; you must write it so that @code{yyparse} can
5828 call it. The function is sometimes referred to as a lexical scanner.
5830 In simple programs, @code{yylex} is often defined at the end of the
5831 Bison grammar file. If @code{yylex} is defined in a separate source
5832 file, you need to arrange for the token-type macro definitions to be
5833 available there. To do this, use the @samp{-d} option when you run
5834 Bison, so that it will write these macro definitions into the separate
5835 parser header file, @file{@var{name}.tab.h}, which you can include in
5836 the other source files that need it. @xref{Invocation, ,Invoking
5840 * Calling Convention:: How @code{yyparse} calls @code{yylex}.
5841 * Token Values:: How @code{yylex} must return the semantic value
5842 of the token it has read.
5843 * Token Locations:: How @code{yylex} must return the text location
5844 (line number, etc.) of the token, if the
5846 * Pure Calling:: How the calling convention differs in a pure parser
5847 (@pxref{Pure Decl, ,A Pure (Reentrant) Parser}).
5850 @node Calling Convention
5851 @subsection Calling Convention for @code{yylex}
5853 The value that @code{yylex} returns must be the positive numeric code
5854 for the type of token it has just found; a zero or negative value
5855 signifies end-of-input.
5857 When a token is referred to in the grammar rules by a name, that name
5858 in the parser implementation file becomes a C macro whose definition
5859 is the proper numeric code for that token type. So @code{yylex} can
5860 use the name to indicate that type. @xref{Symbols}.
5862 When a token is referred to in the grammar rules by a character literal,
5863 the numeric code for that character is also the code for the token type.
5864 So @code{yylex} can simply return that character code, possibly converted
5865 to @code{unsigned char} to avoid sign-extension. The null character
5866 must not be used this way, because its code is zero and that
5867 signifies end-of-input.
5869 Here is an example showing these things:
5876 if (c == EOF) /* Detect end-of-input. */
5879 if (c == '+' || c == '-')
5880 return c; /* Assume token type for `+' is '+'. */
5882 return INT; /* Return the type of the token. */
5888 This interface has been designed so that the output from the @code{lex}
5889 utility can be used without change as the definition of @code{yylex}.
5891 If the grammar uses literal string tokens, there are two ways that
5892 @code{yylex} can determine the token type codes for them:
5896 If the grammar defines symbolic token names as aliases for the
5897 literal string tokens, @code{yylex} can use these symbolic names like
5898 all others. In this case, the use of the literal string tokens in
5899 the grammar file has no effect on @code{yylex}.
5902 @code{yylex} can find the multicharacter token in the @code{yytname}
5903 table. The index of the token in the table is the token type's code.
5904 The name of a multicharacter token is recorded in @code{yytname} with a
5905 double-quote, the token's characters, and another double-quote. The
5906 token's characters are escaped as necessary to be suitable as input
5909 Here's code for looking up a multicharacter token in @code{yytname},
5910 assuming that the characters of the token are stored in
5911 @code{token_buffer}, and assuming that the token does not contain any
5912 characters like @samp{"} that require escaping.
5915 for (i = 0; i < YYNTOKENS; i++)
5918 && yytname[i][0] == '"'
5919 && ! strncmp (yytname[i] + 1, token_buffer,
5920 strlen (token_buffer))
5921 && yytname[i][strlen (token_buffer) + 1] == '"'
5922 && yytname[i][strlen (token_buffer) + 2] == 0)
5927 The @code{yytname} table is generated only if you use the
5928 @code{%token-table} declaration. @xref{Decl Summary}.
5932 @subsection Semantic Values of Tokens
5935 In an ordinary (nonreentrant) parser, the semantic value of the token must
5936 be stored into the global variable @code{yylval}. When you are using
5937 just one data type for semantic values, @code{yylval} has that type.
5938 Thus, if the type is @code{int} (the default), you might write this in
5944 yylval = value; /* Put value onto Bison stack. */
5945 return INT; /* Return the type of the token. */
5950 When you are using multiple data types, @code{yylval}'s type is a union
5951 made from the @code{%union} declaration (@pxref{Union Decl, ,The
5952 Collection of Value Types}). So when you store a token's value, you
5953 must use the proper member of the union. If the @code{%union}
5954 declaration looks like this:
5967 then the code in @code{yylex} might look like this:
5972 yylval.intval = value; /* Put value onto Bison stack. */
5973 return INT; /* Return the type of the token. */
5978 @node Token Locations
5979 @subsection Textual Locations of Tokens
5982 If you are using the @samp{@@@var{n}}-feature (@pxref{Tracking Locations})
5983 in actions to keep track of the textual locations of tokens and groupings,
5984 then you must provide this information in @code{yylex}. The function
5985 @code{yyparse} expects to find the textual location of a token just parsed
5986 in the global variable @code{yylloc}. So @code{yylex} must store the proper
5987 data in that variable.
5989 By default, the value of @code{yylloc} is a structure and you need only
5990 initialize the members that are going to be used by the actions. The
5991 four members are called @code{first_line}, @code{first_column},
5992 @code{last_line} and @code{last_column}. Note that the use of this
5993 feature makes the parser noticeably slower.
5996 The data type of @code{yylloc} has the name @code{YYLTYPE}.
5999 @subsection Calling Conventions for Pure Parsers
6001 When you use the Bison declaration @code{%define api.pure} to request a
6002 pure, reentrant parser, the global communication variables @code{yylval}
6003 and @code{yylloc} cannot be used. (@xref{Pure Decl, ,A Pure (Reentrant)
6004 Parser}.) In such parsers the two global variables are replaced by
6005 pointers passed as arguments to @code{yylex}. You must declare them as
6006 shown here, and pass the information back by storing it through those
6011 yylex (YYSTYPE *lvalp, YYLTYPE *llocp)
6014 *lvalp = value; /* Put value onto Bison stack. */
6015 return INT; /* Return the type of the token. */
6020 If the grammar file does not use the @samp{@@} constructs to refer to
6021 textual locations, then the type @code{YYLTYPE} will not be defined. In
6022 this case, omit the second argument; @code{yylex} will be called with
6026 If you wish to pass the additional parameter data to @code{yylex}, use
6027 @code{%lex-param} just like @code{%parse-param} (@pxref{Parser
6030 @deffn {Directive} lex-param @{@var{argument-declaration}@}
6032 Declare that the braced-code @var{argument-declaration} is an
6033 additional @code{yylex} argument declaration.
6039 %parse-param @{int *nastiness@}
6040 %lex-param @{int *nastiness@}
6041 %parse-param @{int *randomness@}
6045 results in the following signatures:
6048 int yylex (int *nastiness);
6049 int yyparse (int *nastiness, int *randomness);
6052 If @code{%define api.pure} is added:
6055 int yylex (YYSTYPE *lvalp, int *nastiness);
6056 int yyparse (int *nastiness, int *randomness);
6060 and finally, if both @code{%define api.pure} and @code{%locations} are used:
6063 int yylex (YYSTYPE *lvalp, YYLTYPE *llocp, int *nastiness);
6064 int yyparse (int *nastiness, int *randomness);
6067 @node Error Reporting
6068 @section The Error Reporting Function @code{yyerror}
6069 @cindex error reporting function
6072 @cindex syntax error
6074 The Bison parser detects a @dfn{syntax error} or @dfn{parse error}
6075 whenever it reads a token which cannot satisfy any syntax rule. An
6076 action in the grammar can also explicitly proclaim an error, using the
6077 macro @code{YYERROR} (@pxref{Action Features, ,Special Features for Use
6080 The Bison parser expects to report the error by calling an error
6081 reporting function named @code{yyerror}, which you must supply. It is
6082 called by @code{yyparse} whenever a syntax error is found, and it
6083 receives one argument. For a syntax error, the string is normally
6084 @w{@code{"syntax error"}}.
6086 @findex %error-verbose
6087 If you invoke the directive @code{%error-verbose} in the Bison declarations
6088 section (@pxref{Bison Declarations, ,The Bison Declarations Section}), then
6089 Bison provides a more verbose and specific error message string instead of
6090 just plain @w{@code{"syntax error"}}. However, that message sometimes
6091 contains incorrect information if LAC is not enabled (@pxref{LAC}).
6093 The parser can detect one other kind of error: memory exhaustion. This
6094 can happen when the input contains constructions that are very deeply
6095 nested. It isn't likely you will encounter this, since the Bison
6096 parser normally extends its stack automatically up to a very large limit. But
6097 if memory is exhausted, @code{yyparse} calls @code{yyerror} in the usual
6098 fashion, except that the argument string is @w{@code{"memory exhausted"}}.
6100 In some cases diagnostics like @w{@code{"syntax error"}} are
6101 translated automatically from English to some other language before
6102 they are passed to @code{yyerror}. @xref{Internationalization}.
6104 The following definition suffices in simple programs:
6109 yyerror (char const *s)
6113 fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", s);
6118 After @code{yyerror} returns to @code{yyparse}, the latter will attempt
6119 error recovery if you have written suitable error recovery grammar rules
6120 (@pxref{Error Recovery}). If recovery is impossible, @code{yyparse} will
6121 immediately return 1.
6123 Obviously, in location tracking pure parsers, @code{yyerror} should have
6124 an access to the current location.
6125 This is indeed the case for the GLR
6126 parsers, but not for the Yacc parser, for historical reasons. I.e., if
6127 @samp{%locations %define api.pure} is passed then the prototypes for
6131 void yyerror (char const *msg); /* Yacc parsers. */
6132 void yyerror (YYLTYPE *locp, char const *msg); /* GLR parsers. */
6135 If @samp{%parse-param @{int *nastiness@}} is used, then:
6138 void yyerror (int *nastiness, char const *msg); /* Yacc parsers. */
6139 void yyerror (int *nastiness, char const *msg); /* GLR parsers. */
6142 Finally, GLR and Yacc parsers share the same @code{yyerror} calling
6143 convention for absolutely pure parsers, i.e., when the calling
6144 convention of @code{yylex} @emph{and} the calling convention of
6145 @code{%define api.pure} are pure.
6149 /* Location tracking. */
6153 %lex-param @{int *nastiness@}
6155 %parse-param @{int *nastiness@}
6156 %parse-param @{int *randomness@}
6160 results in the following signatures for all the parser kinds:
6163 int yylex (YYSTYPE *lvalp, YYLTYPE *llocp, int *nastiness);
6164 int yyparse (int *nastiness, int *randomness);
6165 void yyerror (YYLTYPE *locp,
6166 int *nastiness, int *randomness,
6171 The prototypes are only indications of how the code produced by Bison
6172 uses @code{yyerror}. Bison-generated code always ignores the returned
6173 value, so @code{yyerror} can return any type, including @code{void}.
6174 Also, @code{yyerror} can be a variadic function; that is why the
6175 message is always passed last.
6177 Traditionally @code{yyerror} returns an @code{int} that is always
6178 ignored, but this is purely for historical reasons, and @code{void} is
6179 preferable since it more accurately describes the return type for
6183 The variable @code{yynerrs} contains the number of syntax errors
6184 reported so far. Normally this variable is global; but if you
6185 request a pure parser (@pxref{Pure Decl, ,A Pure (Reentrant) Parser})
6186 then it is a local variable which only the actions can access.
6188 @node Action Features
6189 @section Special Features for Use in Actions
6190 @cindex summary, action features
6191 @cindex action features summary
6193 Here is a table of Bison constructs, variables and macros that
6194 are useful in actions.
6196 @deffn {Variable} $$
6197 Acts like a variable that contains the semantic value for the
6198 grouping made by the current rule. @xref{Actions}.
6201 @deffn {Variable} $@var{n}
6202 Acts like a variable that contains the semantic value for the
6203 @var{n}th component of the current rule. @xref{Actions}.
6206 @deffn {Variable} $<@var{typealt}>$
6207 Like @code{$$} but specifies alternative @var{typealt} in the union
6208 specified by the @code{%union} declaration. @xref{Action Types, ,Data
6209 Types of Values in Actions}.
6212 @deffn {Variable} $<@var{typealt}>@var{n}
6213 Like @code{$@var{n}} but specifies alternative @var{typealt} in the
6214 union specified by the @code{%union} declaration.
6215 @xref{Action Types, ,Data Types of Values in Actions}.
6218 @deffn {Macro} YYABORT @code{;}
6219 Return immediately from @code{yyparse}, indicating failure.
6220 @xref{Parser Function, ,The Parser Function @code{yyparse}}.
6223 @deffn {Macro} YYACCEPT @code{;}
6224 Return immediately from @code{yyparse}, indicating success.
6225 @xref{Parser Function, ,The Parser Function @code{yyparse}}.
6228 @deffn {Macro} YYBACKUP (@var{token}, @var{value})@code{;}
6230 Unshift a token. This macro is allowed only for rules that reduce
6231 a single value, and only when there is no lookahead token.
6232 It is also disallowed in GLR parsers.
6233 It installs a lookahead token with token type @var{token} and
6234 semantic value @var{value}; then it discards the value that was
6235 going to be reduced by this rule.
6237 If the macro is used when it is not valid, such as when there is
6238 a lookahead token already, then it reports a syntax error with
6239 a message @samp{cannot back up} and performs ordinary error
6242 In either case, the rest of the action is not executed.
6245 @deffn {Macro} YYEMPTY
6246 Value stored in @code{yychar} when there is no lookahead token.
6249 @deffn {Macro} YYEOF
6250 Value stored in @code{yychar} when the lookahead is the end of the input
6254 @deffn {Macro} YYERROR @code{;}
6255 Cause an immediate syntax error. This statement initiates error
6256 recovery just as if the parser itself had detected an error; however, it
6257 does not call @code{yyerror}, and does not print any message. If you
6258 want to print an error message, call @code{yyerror} explicitly before
6259 the @samp{YYERROR;} statement. @xref{Error Recovery}.
6262 @deffn {Macro} YYRECOVERING
6263 @findex YYRECOVERING
6264 The expression @code{YYRECOVERING ()} yields 1 when the parser
6265 is recovering from a syntax error, and 0 otherwise.
6266 @xref{Error Recovery}.
6269 @deffn {Variable} yychar
6270 Variable containing either the lookahead token, or @code{YYEOF} when the
6271 lookahead is the end of the input stream, or @code{YYEMPTY} when no lookahead
6272 has been performed so the next token is not yet known.
6273 Do not modify @code{yychar} in a deferred semantic action (@pxref{GLR Semantic
6275 @xref{Lookahead, ,Lookahead Tokens}.
6278 @deffn {Macro} yyclearin @code{;}
6279 Discard the current lookahead token. This is useful primarily in
6281 Do not invoke @code{yyclearin} in a deferred semantic action (@pxref{GLR
6283 @xref{Error Recovery}.
6286 @deffn {Macro} yyerrok @code{;}
6287 Resume generating error messages immediately for subsequent syntax
6288 errors. This is useful primarily in error rules.
6289 @xref{Error Recovery}.
6292 @deffn {Variable} yylloc
6293 Variable containing the lookahead token location when @code{yychar} is not set
6294 to @code{YYEMPTY} or @code{YYEOF}.
6295 Do not modify @code{yylloc} in a deferred semantic action (@pxref{GLR Semantic
6297 @xref{Actions and Locations, ,Actions and Locations}.
6300 @deffn {Variable} yylval
6301 Variable containing the lookahead token semantic value when @code{yychar} is
6302 not set to @code{YYEMPTY} or @code{YYEOF}.
6303 Do not modify @code{yylval} in a deferred semantic action (@pxref{GLR Semantic
6305 @xref{Actions, ,Actions}.
6310 Acts like a structure variable containing information on the textual
6311 location of the grouping made by the current rule. @xref{Tracking
6314 @c Check if those paragraphs are still useful or not.
6318 @c int first_line, last_line;
6319 @c int first_column, last_column;
6323 @c Thus, to get the starting line number of the third component, you would
6324 @c use @samp{@@3.first_line}.
6326 @c In order for the members of this structure to contain valid information,
6327 @c you must make @code{yylex} supply this information about each token.
6328 @c If you need only certain members, then @code{yylex} need only fill in
6331 @c The use of this feature makes the parser noticeably slower.
6334 @deffn {Value} @@@var{n}
6336 Acts like a structure variable containing information on the textual
6337 location of the @var{n}th component of the current rule. @xref{Tracking
6341 @node Internationalization
6342 @section Parser Internationalization
6343 @cindex internationalization
6349 A Bison-generated parser can print diagnostics, including error and
6350 tracing messages. By default, they appear in English. However, Bison
6351 also supports outputting diagnostics in the user's native language. To
6352 make this work, the user should set the usual environment variables.
6353 @xref{Users, , The User's View, gettext, GNU @code{gettext} utilities}.
6354 For example, the shell command @samp{export LC_ALL=fr_CA.UTF-8} might
6355 set the user's locale to French Canadian using the UTF-8
6356 encoding. The exact set of available locales depends on the user's
6359 The maintainer of a package that uses a Bison-generated parser enables
6360 the internationalization of the parser's output through the following
6361 steps. Here we assume a package that uses GNU Autoconf and
6366 @cindex bison-i18n.m4
6367 Into the directory containing the GNU Autoconf macros used
6368 by the package---often called @file{m4}---copy the
6369 @file{bison-i18n.m4} file installed by Bison under
6370 @samp{share/aclocal/bison-i18n.m4} in Bison's installation directory.
6374 cp /usr/local/share/aclocal/bison-i18n.m4 m4/bison-i18n.m4
6379 @vindex BISON_LOCALEDIR
6380 @vindex YYENABLE_NLS
6381 In the top-level @file{configure.ac}, after the @code{AM_GNU_GETTEXT}
6382 invocation, add an invocation of @code{BISON_I18N}. This macro is
6383 defined in the file @file{bison-i18n.m4} that you copied earlier. It
6384 causes @samp{configure} to find the value of the
6385 @code{BISON_LOCALEDIR} variable, and it defines the source-language
6386 symbol @code{YYENABLE_NLS} to enable translations in the
6387 Bison-generated parser.
6390 In the @code{main} function of your program, designate the directory
6391 containing Bison's runtime message catalog, through a call to
6392 @samp{bindtextdomain} with domain name @samp{bison-runtime}.
6396 bindtextdomain ("bison-runtime", BISON_LOCALEDIR);
6399 Typically this appears after any other call @code{bindtextdomain
6400 (PACKAGE, LOCALEDIR)} that your package already has. Here we rely on
6401 @samp{BISON_LOCALEDIR} to be defined as a string through the
6405 In the @file{Makefile.am} that controls the compilation of the @code{main}
6406 function, make @samp{BISON_LOCALEDIR} available as a C preprocessor macro,
6407 either in @samp{DEFS} or in @samp{AM_CPPFLAGS}. For example:
6410 DEFS = @@DEFS@@ -DBISON_LOCALEDIR='"$(BISON_LOCALEDIR)"'
6416 AM_CPPFLAGS = -DBISON_LOCALEDIR='"$(BISON_LOCALEDIR)"'
6420 Finally, invoke the command @command{autoreconf} to generate the build
6426 @chapter The Bison Parser Algorithm
6427 @cindex Bison parser algorithm
6428 @cindex algorithm of parser
6431 @cindex parser stack
6432 @cindex stack, parser
6434 As Bison reads tokens, it pushes them onto a stack along with their
6435 semantic values. The stack is called the @dfn{parser stack}. Pushing a
6436 token is traditionally called @dfn{shifting}.
6438 For example, suppose the infix calculator has read @samp{1 + 5 *}, with a
6439 @samp{3} to come. The stack will have four elements, one for each token
6442 But the stack does not always have an element for each token read. When
6443 the last @var{n} tokens and groupings shifted match the components of a
6444 grammar rule, they can be combined according to that rule. This is called
6445 @dfn{reduction}. Those tokens and groupings are replaced on the stack by a
6446 single grouping whose symbol is the result (left hand side) of that rule.
6447 Running the rule's action is part of the process of reduction, because this
6448 is what computes the semantic value of the resulting grouping.
6450 For example, if the infix calculator's parser stack contains this:
6457 and the next input token is a newline character, then the last three
6458 elements can be reduced to 15 via the rule:
6461 expr: expr '*' expr;
6465 Then the stack contains just these three elements:
6472 At this point, another reduction can be made, resulting in the single value
6473 16. Then the newline token can be shifted.
6475 The parser tries, by shifts and reductions, to reduce the entire input down
6476 to a single grouping whose symbol is the grammar's start-symbol
6477 (@pxref{Language and Grammar, ,Languages and Context-Free Grammars}).
6479 This kind of parser is known in the literature as a bottom-up parser.
6482 * Lookahead:: Parser looks one token ahead when deciding what to do.
6483 * Shift/Reduce:: Conflicts: when either shifting or reduction is valid.
6484 * Precedence:: Operator precedence works by resolving conflicts.
6485 * Contextual Precedence:: When an operator's precedence depends on context.
6486 * Parser States:: The parser is a finite-state-machine with stack.
6487 * Reduce/Reduce:: When two rules are applicable in the same situation.
6488 * Mysterious Conflicts:: Conflicts that look unjustified.
6489 * Tuning LR:: How to tune fundamental aspects of LR-based parsing.
6490 * Generalized LR Parsing:: Parsing arbitrary context-free grammars.
6491 * Memory Management:: What happens when memory is exhausted. How to avoid it.
6495 @section Lookahead Tokens
6496 @cindex lookahead token
6498 The Bison parser does @emph{not} always reduce immediately as soon as the
6499 last @var{n} tokens and groupings match a rule. This is because such a
6500 simple strategy is inadequate to handle most languages. Instead, when a
6501 reduction is possible, the parser sometimes ``looks ahead'' at the next
6502 token in order to decide what to do.
6504 When a token is read, it is not immediately shifted; first it becomes the
6505 @dfn{lookahead token}, which is not on the stack. Now the parser can
6506 perform one or more reductions of tokens and groupings on the stack, while
6507 the lookahead token remains off to the side. When no more reductions
6508 should take place, the lookahead token is shifted onto the stack. This
6509 does not mean that all possible reductions have been done; depending on the
6510 token type of the lookahead token, some rules may choose to delay their
6513 Here is a simple case where lookahead is needed. These three rules define
6514 expressions which contain binary addition operators and postfix unary
6515 factorial operators (@samp{!}), and allow parentheses for grouping.
6534 Suppose that the tokens @w{@samp{1 + 2}} have been read and shifted; what
6535 should be done? If the following token is @samp{)}, then the first three
6536 tokens must be reduced to form an @code{expr}. This is the only valid
6537 course, because shifting the @samp{)} would produce a sequence of symbols
6538 @w{@code{term ')'}}, and no rule allows this.
6540 If the following token is @samp{!}, then it must be shifted immediately so
6541 that @w{@samp{2 !}} can be reduced to make a @code{term}. If instead the
6542 parser were to reduce before shifting, @w{@samp{1 + 2}} would become an
6543 @code{expr}. It would then be impossible to shift the @samp{!} because
6544 doing so would produce on the stack the sequence of symbols @code{expr
6545 '!'}. No rule allows that sequence.
6550 The lookahead token is stored in the variable @code{yychar}.
6551 Its semantic value and location, if any, are stored in the variables
6552 @code{yylval} and @code{yylloc}.
6553 @xref{Action Features, ,Special Features for Use in Actions}.
6556 @section Shift/Reduce Conflicts
6558 @cindex shift/reduce conflicts
6559 @cindex dangling @code{else}
6560 @cindex @code{else}, dangling
6562 Suppose we are parsing a language which has if-then and if-then-else
6563 statements, with a pair of rules like this:
6569 | IF expr THEN stmt ELSE stmt
6575 Here we assume that @code{IF}, @code{THEN} and @code{ELSE} are
6576 terminal symbols for specific keyword tokens.
6578 When the @code{ELSE} token is read and becomes the lookahead token, the
6579 contents of the stack (assuming the input is valid) are just right for
6580 reduction by the first rule. But it is also legitimate to shift the
6581 @code{ELSE}, because that would lead to eventual reduction by the second
6584 This situation, where either a shift or a reduction would be valid, is
6585 called a @dfn{shift/reduce conflict}. Bison is designed to resolve
6586 these conflicts by choosing to shift, unless otherwise directed by
6587 operator precedence declarations. To see the reason for this, let's
6588 contrast it with the other alternative.
6590 Since the parser prefers to shift the @code{ELSE}, the result is to attach
6591 the else-clause to the innermost if-statement, making these two inputs
6595 if x then if y then win (); else lose;
6597 if x then do; if y then win (); else lose; end;
6600 But if the parser chose to reduce when possible rather than shift, the
6601 result would be to attach the else-clause to the outermost if-statement,
6602 making these two inputs equivalent:
6605 if x then if y then win (); else lose;
6607 if x then do; if y then win (); end; else lose;
6610 The conflict exists because the grammar as written is ambiguous: either
6611 parsing of the simple nested if-statement is legitimate. The established
6612 convention is that these ambiguities are resolved by attaching the
6613 else-clause to the innermost if-statement; this is what Bison accomplishes
6614 by choosing to shift rather than reduce. (It would ideally be cleaner to
6615 write an unambiguous grammar, but that is very hard to do in this case.)
6616 This particular ambiguity was first encountered in the specifications of
6617 Algol 60 and is called the ``dangling @code{else}'' ambiguity.
6619 To avoid warnings from Bison about predictable, legitimate shift/reduce
6620 conflicts, use the @code{%expect @var{n}} declaration.
6621 There will be no warning as long as the number of shift/reduce conflicts
6622 is exactly @var{n}, and Bison will report an error if there is a
6624 @xref{Expect Decl, ,Suppressing Conflict Warnings}.
6626 The definition of @code{if_stmt} above is solely to blame for the
6627 conflict, but the conflict does not actually appear without additional
6628 rules. Here is a complete Bison grammar file that actually manifests
6633 %token IF THEN ELSE variable
6646 | IF expr THEN stmt ELSE stmt
6656 @section Operator Precedence
6657 @cindex operator precedence
6658 @cindex precedence of operators
6660 Another situation where shift/reduce conflicts appear is in arithmetic
6661 expressions. Here shifting is not always the preferred resolution; the
6662 Bison declarations for operator precedence allow you to specify when to
6663 shift and when to reduce.
6666 * Why Precedence:: An example showing why precedence is needed.
6667 * Using Precedence:: How to specify precedence in Bison grammars.
6668 * Precedence Examples:: How these features are used in the previous example.
6669 * How Precedence:: How they work.
6672 @node Why Precedence
6673 @subsection When Precedence is Needed
6675 Consider the following ambiguous grammar fragment (ambiguous because the
6676 input @w{@samp{1 - 2 * 3}} can be parsed in two different ways):
6691 Suppose the parser has seen the tokens @samp{1}, @samp{-} and @samp{2};
6692 should it reduce them via the rule for the subtraction operator? It
6693 depends on the next token. Of course, if the next token is @samp{)}, we
6694 must reduce; shifting is invalid because no single rule can reduce the
6695 token sequence @w{@samp{- 2 )}} or anything starting with that. But if
6696 the next token is @samp{*} or @samp{<}, we have a choice: either
6697 shifting or reduction would allow the parse to complete, but with
6700 To decide which one Bison should do, we must consider the results. If
6701 the next operator token @var{op} is shifted, then it must be reduced
6702 first in order to permit another opportunity to reduce the difference.
6703 The result is (in effect) @w{@samp{1 - (2 @var{op} 3)}}. On the other
6704 hand, if the subtraction is reduced before shifting @var{op}, the result
6705 is @w{@samp{(1 - 2) @var{op} 3}}. Clearly, then, the choice of shift or
6706 reduce should depend on the relative precedence of the operators
6707 @samp{-} and @var{op}: @samp{*} should be shifted first, but not
6710 @cindex associativity
6711 What about input such as @w{@samp{1 - 2 - 5}}; should this be
6712 @w{@samp{(1 - 2) - 5}} or should it be @w{@samp{1 - (2 - 5)}}? For most
6713 operators we prefer the former, which is called @dfn{left association}.
6714 The latter alternative, @dfn{right association}, is desirable for
6715 assignment operators. The choice of left or right association is a
6716 matter of whether the parser chooses to shift or reduce when the stack
6717 contains @w{@samp{1 - 2}} and the lookahead token is @samp{-}: shifting
6718 makes right-associativity.
6720 @node Using Precedence
6721 @subsection Specifying Operator Precedence
6726 Bison allows you to specify these choices with the operator precedence
6727 declarations @code{%left} and @code{%right}. Each such declaration
6728 contains a list of tokens, which are operators whose precedence and
6729 associativity is being declared. The @code{%left} declaration makes all
6730 those operators left-associative and the @code{%right} declaration makes
6731 them right-associative. A third alternative is @code{%nonassoc}, which
6732 declares that it is a syntax error to find the same operator twice ``in a
6735 The relative precedence of different operators is controlled by the
6736 order in which they are declared. The first @code{%left} or
6737 @code{%right} declaration in the file declares the operators whose
6738 precedence is lowest, the next such declaration declares the operators
6739 whose precedence is a little higher, and so on.
6741 @node Precedence Examples
6742 @subsection Precedence Examples
6744 In our example, we would want the following declarations:
6752 In a more complete example, which supports other operators as well, we
6753 would declare them in groups of equal precedence. For example, @code{'+'} is
6754 declared with @code{'-'}:
6757 %left '<' '>' '=' NE LE GE
6763 (Here @code{NE} and so on stand for the operators for ``not equal''
6764 and so on. We assume that these tokens are more than one character long
6765 and therefore are represented by names, not character literals.)
6767 @node How Precedence
6768 @subsection How Precedence Works
6770 The first effect of the precedence declarations is to assign precedence
6771 levels to the terminal symbols declared. The second effect is to assign
6772 precedence levels to certain rules: each rule gets its precedence from
6773 the last terminal symbol mentioned in the components. (You can also
6774 specify explicitly the precedence of a rule. @xref{Contextual
6775 Precedence, ,Context-Dependent Precedence}.)
6777 Finally, the resolution of conflicts works by comparing the precedence
6778 of the rule being considered with that of the lookahead token. If the
6779 token's precedence is higher, the choice is to shift. If the rule's
6780 precedence is higher, the choice is to reduce. If they have equal
6781 precedence, the choice is made based on the associativity of that
6782 precedence level. The verbose output file made by @samp{-v}
6783 (@pxref{Invocation, ,Invoking Bison}) says how each conflict was
6786 Not all rules and not all tokens have precedence. If either the rule or
6787 the lookahead token has no precedence, then the default is to shift.
6789 @node Contextual Precedence
6790 @section Context-Dependent Precedence
6791 @cindex context-dependent precedence
6792 @cindex unary operator precedence
6793 @cindex precedence, context-dependent
6794 @cindex precedence, unary operator
6797 Often the precedence of an operator depends on the context. This sounds
6798 outlandish at first, but it is really very common. For example, a minus
6799 sign typically has a very high precedence as a unary operator, and a
6800 somewhat lower precedence (lower than multiplication) as a binary operator.
6802 The Bison precedence declarations, @code{%left}, @code{%right} and
6803 @code{%nonassoc}, can only be used once for a given token; so a token has
6804 only one precedence declared in this way. For context-dependent
6805 precedence, you need to use an additional mechanism: the @code{%prec}
6808 The @code{%prec} modifier declares the precedence of a particular rule by
6809 specifying a terminal symbol whose precedence should be used for that rule.
6810 It's not necessary for that symbol to appear otherwise in the rule. The
6811 modifier's syntax is:
6814 %prec @var{terminal-symbol}
6818 and it is written after the components of the rule. Its effect is to
6819 assign the rule the precedence of @var{terminal-symbol}, overriding
6820 the precedence that would be deduced for it in the ordinary way. The
6821 altered rule precedence then affects how conflicts involving that rule
6822 are resolved (@pxref{Precedence, ,Operator Precedence}).
6824 Here is how @code{%prec} solves the problem of unary minus. First, declare
6825 a precedence for a fictitious terminal symbol named @code{UMINUS}. There
6826 are no tokens of this type, but the symbol serves to stand for its
6836 Now the precedence of @code{UMINUS} can be used in specific rules:
6844 | '-' exp %prec UMINUS
6849 If you forget to append @code{%prec UMINUS} to the rule for unary
6850 minus, Bison silently assumes that minus has its usual precedence.
6851 This kind of problem can be tricky to debug, since one typically
6852 discovers the mistake only by testing the code.
6854 The @code{%no-default-prec;} declaration makes it easier to discover
6855 this kind of problem systematically. It causes rules that lack a
6856 @code{%prec} modifier to have no precedence, even if the last terminal
6857 symbol mentioned in their components has a declared precedence.
6859 If @code{%no-default-prec;} is in effect, you must specify @code{%prec}
6860 for all rules that participate in precedence conflict resolution.
6861 Then you will see any shift/reduce conflict until you tell Bison how
6862 to resolve it, either by changing your grammar or by adding an
6863 explicit precedence. This will probably add declarations to the
6864 grammar, but it helps to protect against incorrect rule precedences.
6866 The effect of @code{%no-default-prec;} can be reversed by giving
6867 @code{%default-prec;}, which is the default.
6871 @section Parser States
6872 @cindex finite-state machine
6873 @cindex parser state
6874 @cindex state (of parser)
6876 The function @code{yyparse} is implemented using a finite-state machine.
6877 The values pushed on the parser stack are not simply token type codes; they
6878 represent the entire sequence of terminal and nonterminal symbols at or
6879 near the top of the stack. The current state collects all the information
6880 about previous input which is relevant to deciding what to do next.
6882 Each time a lookahead token is read, the current parser state together
6883 with the type of lookahead token are looked up in a table. This table
6884 entry can say, ``Shift the lookahead token.'' In this case, it also
6885 specifies the new parser state, which is pushed onto the top of the
6886 parser stack. Or it can say, ``Reduce using rule number @var{n}.''
6887 This means that a certain number of tokens or groupings are taken off
6888 the top of the stack, and replaced by one grouping. In other words,
6889 that number of states are popped from the stack, and one new state is
6892 There is one other alternative: the table can say that the lookahead token
6893 is erroneous in the current state. This causes error processing to begin
6894 (@pxref{Error Recovery}).
6897 @section Reduce/Reduce Conflicts
6898 @cindex reduce/reduce conflict
6899 @cindex conflicts, reduce/reduce
6901 A reduce/reduce conflict occurs if there are two or more rules that apply
6902 to the same sequence of input. This usually indicates a serious error
6905 For example, here is an erroneous attempt to define a sequence
6906 of zero or more @code{word} groupings.
6911 /* empty */ @{ printf ("empty sequence\n"); @}
6913 | sequence word @{ printf ("added word %s\n", $2); @}
6919 /* empty */ @{ printf ("empty maybeword\n"); @}
6920 | word @{ printf ("single word %s\n", $1); @}
6926 The error is an ambiguity: there is more than one way to parse a single
6927 @code{word} into a @code{sequence}. It could be reduced to a
6928 @code{maybeword} and then into a @code{sequence} via the second rule.
6929 Alternatively, nothing-at-all could be reduced into a @code{sequence}
6930 via the first rule, and this could be combined with the @code{word}
6931 using the third rule for @code{sequence}.
6933 There is also more than one way to reduce nothing-at-all into a
6934 @code{sequence}. This can be done directly via the first rule,
6935 or indirectly via @code{maybeword} and then the second rule.
6937 You might think that this is a distinction without a difference, because it
6938 does not change whether any particular input is valid or not. But it does
6939 affect which actions are run. One parsing order runs the second rule's
6940 action; the other runs the first rule's action and the third rule's action.
6941 In this example, the output of the program changes.
6943 Bison resolves a reduce/reduce conflict by choosing to use the rule that
6944 appears first in the grammar, but it is very risky to rely on this. Every
6945 reduce/reduce conflict must be studied and usually eliminated. Here is the
6946 proper way to define @code{sequence}:
6950 /* empty */ @{ printf ("empty sequence\n"); @}
6951 | sequence word @{ printf ("added word %s\n", $2); @}
6955 Here is another common error that yields a reduce/reduce conflict:
6961 | sequence redirects
6971 | redirects redirect
6976 The intention here is to define a sequence which can contain either
6977 @code{word} or @code{redirect} groupings. The individual definitions of
6978 @code{sequence}, @code{words} and @code{redirects} are error-free, but the
6979 three together make a subtle ambiguity: even an empty input can be parsed
6980 in infinitely many ways!
6982 Consider: nothing-at-all could be a @code{words}. Or it could be two
6983 @code{words} in a row, or three, or any number. It could equally well be a
6984 @code{redirects}, or two, or any number. Or it could be a @code{words}
6985 followed by three @code{redirects} and another @code{words}. And so on.
6987 Here are two ways to correct these rules. First, to make it a single level
6998 Second, to prevent either a @code{words} or a @code{redirects}
7006 | sequence redirects
7020 | redirects redirect
7025 @node Mysterious Conflicts
7026 @section Mysterious Conflicts
7027 @cindex Mysterious Conflicts
7029 Sometimes reduce/reduce conflicts can occur that don't look warranted.
7037 def: param_spec return_spec ',';
7040 | name_list ':' type
7056 | name ',' name_list
7061 It would seem that this grammar can be parsed with only a single token
7062 of lookahead: when a @code{param_spec} is being read, an @code{ID} is
7063 a @code{name} if a comma or colon follows, or a @code{type} if another
7064 @code{ID} follows. In other words, this grammar is LR(1).
7068 However, for historical reasons, Bison cannot by default handle all
7070 In this grammar, two contexts, that after an @code{ID} at the beginning
7071 of a @code{param_spec} and likewise at the beginning of a
7072 @code{return_spec}, are similar enough that Bison assumes they are the
7074 They appear similar because the same set of rules would be
7075 active---the rule for reducing to a @code{name} and that for reducing to
7076 a @code{type}. Bison is unable to determine at that stage of processing
7077 that the rules would require different lookahead tokens in the two
7078 contexts, so it makes a single parser state for them both. Combining
7079 the two contexts causes a conflict later. In parser terminology, this
7080 occurrence means that the grammar is not LALR(1).
7083 @cindex canonical LR
7084 For many practical grammars (specifically those that fall into the non-LR(1)
7085 class), the limitations of LALR(1) result in difficulties beyond just
7086 mysterious reduce/reduce conflicts. The best way to fix all these problems
7087 is to select a different parser table construction algorithm. Either
7088 IELR(1) or canonical LR(1) would suffice, but the former is more efficient
7089 and easier to debug during development. @xref{LR Table Construction}, for
7090 details. (Bison's IELR(1) and canonical LR(1) implementations are
7091 experimental. More user feedback will help to stabilize them.)
7093 If you instead wish to work around LALR(1)'s limitations, you
7094 can often fix a mysterious conflict by identifying the two parser states
7095 that are being confused, and adding something to make them look
7096 distinct. In the above example, adding one rule to
7097 @code{return_spec} as follows makes the problem go away:
7108 | ID BOGUS /* This rule is never used. */
7113 This corrects the problem because it introduces the possibility of an
7114 additional active rule in the context after the @code{ID} at the beginning of
7115 @code{return_spec}. This rule is not active in the corresponding context
7116 in a @code{param_spec}, so the two contexts receive distinct parser states.
7117 As long as the token @code{BOGUS} is never generated by @code{yylex},
7118 the added rule cannot alter the way actual input is parsed.
7120 In this particular example, there is another way to solve the problem:
7121 rewrite the rule for @code{return_spec} to use @code{ID} directly
7122 instead of via @code{name}. This also causes the two confusing
7123 contexts to have different sets of active rules, because the one for
7124 @code{return_spec} activates the altered rule for @code{return_spec}
7125 rather than the one for @code{name}.
7130 | name_list ':' type
7138 For a more detailed exposition of LALR(1) parsers and parser
7139 generators, @pxref{Bibliography,,DeRemer 1982}.
7144 The default behavior of Bison's LR-based parsers is chosen mostly for
7145 historical reasons, but that behavior is often not robust. For example, in
7146 the previous section, we discussed the mysterious conflicts that can be
7147 produced by LALR(1), Bison's default parser table construction algorithm.
7148 Another example is Bison's @code{%error-verbose} directive, which instructs
7149 the generated parser to produce verbose syntax error messages, which can
7150 sometimes contain incorrect information.
7152 In this section, we explore several modern features of Bison that allow you
7153 to tune fundamental aspects of the generated LR-based parsers. Some of
7154 these features easily eliminate shortcomings like those mentioned above.
7155 Others can be helpful purely for understanding your parser.
7157 Most of the features discussed in this section are still experimental. More
7158 user feedback will help to stabilize them.
7161 * LR Table Construction:: Choose a different construction algorithm.
7162 * Default Reductions:: Disable default reductions.
7163 * LAC:: Correct lookahead sets in the parser states.
7164 * Unreachable States:: Keep unreachable parser states for debugging.
7167 @node LR Table Construction
7168 @subsection LR Table Construction
7169 @cindex Mysterious Conflict
7172 @cindex canonical LR
7173 @findex %define lr.type
7175 For historical reasons, Bison constructs LALR(1) parser tables by default.
7176 However, LALR does not possess the full language-recognition power of LR.
7177 As a result, the behavior of parsers employing LALR parser tables is often
7178 mysterious. We presented a simple example of this effect in @ref{Mysterious
7181 As we also demonstrated in that example, the traditional approach to
7182 eliminating such mysterious behavior is to restructure the grammar.
7183 Unfortunately, doing so correctly is often difficult. Moreover, merely
7184 discovering that LALR causes mysterious behavior in your parser can be
7187 Fortunately, Bison provides an easy way to eliminate the possibility of such
7188 mysterious behavior altogether. You simply need to activate a more powerful
7189 parser table construction algorithm by using the @code{%define lr.type}
7192 @deffn {Directive} {%define lr.type @var{TYPE}}
7193 Specify the type of parser tables within the LR(1) family. The accepted
7194 values for @var{TYPE} are:
7197 @item @code{lalr} (default)
7199 @item @code{canonical-lr}
7202 (This feature is experimental. More user feedback will help to stabilize
7206 For example, to activate IELR, you might add the following directive to you
7210 %define lr.type ielr
7213 @noindent For the example in @ref{Mysterious Conflicts}, the mysterious
7214 conflict is then eliminated, so there is no need to invest time in
7215 comprehending the conflict or restructuring the grammar to fix it. If,
7216 during future development, the grammar evolves such that all mysterious
7217 behavior would have disappeared using just LALR, you need not fear that
7218 continuing to use IELR will result in unnecessarily large parser tables.
7219 That is, IELR generates LALR tables when LALR (using a deterministic parsing
7220 algorithm) is sufficient to support the full language-recognition power of
7221 LR. Thus, by enabling IELR at the start of grammar development, you can
7222 safely and completely eliminate the need to consider LALR's shortcomings.
7224 While IELR is almost always preferable, there are circumstances where LALR
7225 or the canonical LR parser tables described by Knuth
7226 (@pxref{Bibliography,,Knuth 1965}) can be useful. Here we summarize the
7227 relative advantages of each parser table construction algorithm within
7233 There are at least two scenarios where LALR can be worthwhile:
7236 @item GLR without static conflict resolution.
7238 @cindex GLR with LALR
7239 When employing GLR parsers (@pxref{GLR Parsers}), if you do not resolve any
7240 conflicts statically (for example, with @code{%left} or @code{%prec}), then
7241 the parser explores all potential parses of any given input. In this case,
7242 the choice of parser table construction algorithm is guaranteed not to alter
7243 the language accepted by the parser. LALR parser tables are the smallest
7244 parser tables Bison can currently construct, so they may then be preferable.
7245 Nevertheless, once you begin to resolve conflicts statically, GLR behaves
7246 more like a deterministic parser in the syntactic contexts where those
7247 conflicts appear, and so either IELR or canonical LR can then be helpful to
7248 avoid LALR's mysterious behavior.
7250 @item Malformed grammars.
7252 Occasionally during development, an especially malformed grammar with a
7253 major recurring flaw may severely impede the IELR or canonical LR parser
7254 table construction algorithm. LALR can be a quick way to construct parser
7255 tables in order to investigate such problems while ignoring the more subtle
7256 differences from IELR and canonical LR.
7261 IELR (Inadequacy Elimination LR) is a minimal LR algorithm. That is, given
7262 any grammar (LR or non-LR), parsers using IELR or canonical LR parser tables
7263 always accept exactly the same set of sentences. However, like LALR, IELR
7264 merges parser states during parser table construction so that the number of
7265 parser states is often an order of magnitude less than for canonical LR.
7266 More importantly, because canonical LR's extra parser states may contain
7267 duplicate conflicts in the case of non-LR grammars, the number of conflicts
7268 for IELR is often an order of magnitude less as well. This effect can
7269 significantly reduce the complexity of developing a grammar.
7273 @cindex delayed syntax error detection
7276 While inefficient, canonical LR parser tables can be an interesting means to
7277 explore a grammar because they possess a property that IELR and LALR tables
7278 do not. That is, if @code{%nonassoc} is not used and default reductions are
7279 left disabled (@pxref{Default Reductions}), then, for every left context of
7280 every canonical LR state, the set of tokens accepted by that state is
7281 guaranteed to be the exact set of tokens that is syntactically acceptable in
7282 that left context. It might then seem that an advantage of canonical LR
7283 parsers in production is that, under the above constraints, they are
7284 guaranteed to detect a syntax error as soon as possible without performing
7285 any unnecessary reductions. However, IELR parsers that use LAC are also
7286 able to achieve this behavior without sacrificing @code{%nonassoc} or
7287 default reductions. For details and a few caveats of LAC, @pxref{LAC}.
7290 For a more detailed exposition of the mysterious behavior in LALR parsers
7291 and the benefits of IELR, @pxref{Bibliography,,Denny 2008 March}, and
7292 @ref{Bibliography,,Denny 2010 November}.
7294 @node Default Reductions
7295 @subsection Default Reductions
7296 @cindex default reductions
7297 @findex %define lr.default-reductions
7300 After parser table construction, Bison identifies the reduction with the
7301 largest lookahead set in each parser state. To reduce the size of the
7302 parser state, traditional Bison behavior is to remove that lookahead set and
7303 to assign that reduction to be the default parser action. Such a reduction
7304 is known as a @dfn{default reduction}.
7306 Default reductions affect more than the size of the parser tables. They
7307 also affect the behavior of the parser:
7310 @item Delayed @code{yylex} invocations.
7312 @cindex delayed yylex invocations
7313 @cindex consistent states
7314 @cindex defaulted states
7315 A @dfn{consistent state} is a state that has only one possible parser
7316 action. If that action is a reduction and is encoded as a default
7317 reduction, then that consistent state is called a @dfn{defaulted state}.
7318 Upon reaching a defaulted state, a Bison-generated parser does not bother to
7319 invoke @code{yylex} to fetch the next token before performing the reduction.
7320 In other words, whether default reductions are enabled in consistent states
7321 determines how soon a Bison-generated parser invokes @code{yylex} for a
7322 token: immediately when it @emph{reaches} that token in the input or when it
7323 eventually @emph{needs} that token as a lookahead to determine the next
7324 parser action. Traditionally, default reductions are enabled, and so the
7325 parser exhibits the latter behavior.
7327 The presence of defaulted states is an important consideration when
7328 designing @code{yylex} and the grammar file. That is, if the behavior of
7329 @code{yylex} can influence or be influenced by the semantic actions
7330 associated with the reductions in defaulted states, then the delay of the
7331 next @code{yylex} invocation until after those reductions is significant.
7332 For example, the semantic actions might pop a scope stack that @code{yylex}
7333 uses to determine what token to return. Thus, the delay might be necessary
7334 to ensure that @code{yylex} does not look up the next token in a scope that
7335 should already be considered closed.
7337 @item Delayed syntax error detection.
7339 @cindex delayed syntax error detection
7340 When the parser fetches a new token by invoking @code{yylex}, it checks
7341 whether there is an action for that token in the current parser state. The
7342 parser detects a syntax error if and only if either (1) there is no action
7343 for that token or (2) the action for that token is the error action (due to
7344 the use of @code{%nonassoc}). However, if there is a default reduction in
7345 that state (which might or might not be a defaulted state), then it is
7346 impossible for condition 1 to exist. That is, all tokens have an action.
7347 Thus, the parser sometimes fails to detect the syntax error until it reaches
7351 @c If there's an infinite loop, default reductions can prevent an incorrect
7352 @c sentence from being rejected.
7353 While default reductions never cause the parser to accept syntactically
7354 incorrect sentences, the delay of syntax error detection can have unexpected
7355 effects on the behavior of the parser. However, the delay can be caused
7356 anyway by parser state merging and the use of @code{%nonassoc}, and it can
7357 be fixed by another Bison feature, LAC. We discuss the effects of delayed
7358 syntax error detection and LAC more in the next section (@pxref{LAC}).
7361 For canonical LR, the only default reduction that Bison enables by default
7362 is the accept action, which appears only in the accepting state, which has
7363 no other action and is thus a defaulted state. However, the default accept
7364 action does not delay any @code{yylex} invocation or syntax error detection
7365 because the accept action ends the parse.
7367 For LALR and IELR, Bison enables default reductions in nearly all states by
7368 default. There are only two exceptions. First, states that have a shift
7369 action on the @code{error} token do not have default reductions because
7370 delayed syntax error detection could then prevent the @code{error} token
7371 from ever being shifted in that state. However, parser state merging can
7372 cause the same effect anyway, and LAC fixes it in both cases, so future
7373 versions of Bison might drop this exception when LAC is activated. Second,
7374 GLR parsers do not record the default reduction as the action on a lookahead
7375 token for which there is a conflict. The correct action in this case is to
7376 split the parse instead.
7378 To adjust which states have default reductions enabled, use the
7379 @code{%define lr.default-reductions} directive.
7381 @deffn {Directive} {%define lr.default-reductions @var{WHERE}}
7382 Specify the kind of states that are permitted to contain default reductions.
7383 The accepted values of @var{WHERE} are:
7385 @item @code{most} (default for LALR and IELR)
7386 @item @code{consistent}
7387 @item @code{accepting} (default for canonical LR)
7390 (The ability to specify where default reductions are permitted is
7391 experimental. More user feedback will help to stabilize it.)
7396 @findex %define parse.lac
7398 @cindex lookahead correction
7400 Canonical LR, IELR, and LALR can suffer from a couple of problems upon
7401 encountering a syntax error. First, the parser might perform additional
7402 parser stack reductions before discovering the syntax error. Such
7403 reductions can perform user semantic actions that are unexpected because
7404 they are based on an invalid token, and they cause error recovery to begin
7405 in a different syntactic context than the one in which the invalid token was
7406 encountered. Second, when verbose error messages are enabled (@pxref{Error
7407 Reporting}), the expected token list in the syntax error message can both
7408 contain invalid tokens and omit valid tokens.
7410 The culprits for the above problems are @code{%nonassoc}, default reductions
7411 in inconsistent states (@pxref{Default Reductions}), and parser state
7412 merging. Because IELR and LALR merge parser states, they suffer the most.
7413 Canonical LR can suffer only if @code{%nonassoc} is used or if default
7414 reductions are enabled for inconsistent states.
7416 LAC (Lookahead Correction) is a new mechanism within the parsing algorithm
7417 that solves these problems for canonical LR, IELR, and LALR without
7418 sacrificing @code{%nonassoc}, default reductions, or state merging. You can
7419 enable LAC with the @code{%define parse.lac} directive.
7421 @deffn {Directive} {%define parse.lac @var{VALUE}}
7422 Enable LAC to improve syntax error handling.
7424 @item @code{none} (default)
7427 (This feature is experimental. More user feedback will help to stabilize
7428 it. Moreover, it is currently only available for deterministic parsers in
7432 Conceptually, the LAC mechanism is straight-forward. Whenever the parser
7433 fetches a new token from the scanner so that it can determine the next
7434 parser action, it immediately suspends normal parsing and performs an
7435 exploratory parse using a temporary copy of the normal parser state stack.
7436 During this exploratory parse, the parser does not perform user semantic
7437 actions. If the exploratory parse reaches a shift action, normal parsing
7438 then resumes on the normal parser stacks. If the exploratory parse reaches
7439 an error instead, the parser reports a syntax error. If verbose syntax
7440 error messages are enabled, the parser must then discover the list of
7441 expected tokens, so it performs a separate exploratory parse for each token
7444 There is one subtlety about the use of LAC. That is, when in a consistent
7445 parser state with a default reduction, the parser will not attempt to fetch
7446 a token from the scanner because no lookahead is needed to determine the
7447 next parser action. Thus, whether default reductions are enabled in
7448 consistent states (@pxref{Default Reductions}) affects how soon the parser
7449 detects a syntax error: immediately when it @emph{reaches} an erroneous
7450 token or when it eventually @emph{needs} that token as a lookahead to
7451 determine the next parser action. The latter behavior is probably more
7452 intuitive, so Bison currently provides no way to achieve the former behavior
7453 while default reductions are enabled in consistent states.
7455 Thus, when LAC is in use, for some fixed decision of whether to enable
7456 default reductions in consistent states, canonical LR and IELR behave almost
7457 exactly the same for both syntactically acceptable and syntactically
7458 unacceptable input. While LALR still does not support the full
7459 language-recognition power of canonical LR and IELR, LAC at least enables
7460 LALR's syntax error handling to correctly reflect LALR's
7461 language-recognition power.
7463 There are a few caveats to consider when using LAC:
7466 @item Infinite parsing loops.
7468 IELR plus LAC does have one shortcoming relative to canonical LR. Some
7469 parsers generated by Bison can loop infinitely. LAC does not fix infinite
7470 parsing loops that occur between encountering a syntax error and detecting
7471 it, but enabling canonical LR or disabling default reductions sometimes
7474 @item Verbose error message limitations.
7476 Because of internationalization considerations, Bison-generated parsers
7477 limit the size of the expected token list they are willing to report in a
7478 verbose syntax error message. If the number of expected tokens exceeds that
7479 limit, the list is simply dropped from the message. Enabling LAC can
7480 increase the size of the list and thus cause the parser to drop it. Of
7481 course, dropping the list is better than reporting an incorrect list.
7485 Because LAC requires many parse actions to be performed twice, it can have a
7486 performance penalty. However, not all parse actions must be performed
7487 twice. Specifically, during a series of default reductions in consistent
7488 states and shift actions, the parser never has to initiate an exploratory
7489 parse. Moreover, the most time-consuming tasks in a parse are often the
7490 file I/O, the lexical analysis performed by the scanner, and the user's
7491 semantic actions, but none of these are performed during the exploratory
7492 parse. Finally, the base of the temporary stack used during an exploratory
7493 parse is a pointer into the normal parser state stack so that the stack is
7494 never physically copied. In our experience, the performance penalty of LAC
7495 has proved insignificant for practical grammars.
7498 While the LAC algorithm shares techniques that have been recognized in the
7499 parser community for years, for the publication that introduces LAC,
7500 @pxref{Bibliography,,Denny 2010 May}.
7502 @node Unreachable States
7503 @subsection Unreachable States
7504 @findex %define lr.keep-unreachable-states
7505 @cindex unreachable states
7507 If there exists no sequence of transitions from the parser's start state to
7508 some state @var{s}, then Bison considers @var{s} to be an @dfn{unreachable
7509 state}. A state can become unreachable during conflict resolution if Bison
7510 disables a shift action leading to it from a predecessor state.
7512 By default, Bison removes unreachable states from the parser after conflict
7513 resolution because they are useless in the generated parser. However,
7514 keeping unreachable states is sometimes useful when trying to understand the
7515 relationship between the parser and the grammar.
7517 @deffn {Directive} {%define lr.keep-unreachable-states @var{VALUE}}
7518 Request that Bison allow unreachable states to remain in the parser tables.
7519 @var{VALUE} must be a Boolean. The default is @code{false}.
7522 There are a few caveats to consider:
7525 @item Missing or extraneous warnings.
7527 Unreachable states may contain conflicts and may use rules not used in any
7528 other state. Thus, keeping unreachable states may induce warnings that are
7529 irrelevant to your parser's behavior, and it may eliminate warnings that are
7530 relevant. Of course, the change in warnings may actually be relevant to a
7531 parser table analysis that wants to keep unreachable states, so this
7532 behavior will likely remain in future Bison releases.
7534 @item Other useless states.
7536 While Bison is able to remove unreachable states, it is not guaranteed to
7537 remove other kinds of useless states. Specifically, when Bison disables
7538 reduce actions during conflict resolution, some goto actions may become
7539 useless, and thus some additional states may become useless. If Bison were
7540 to compute which goto actions were useless and then disable those actions,
7541 it could identify such states as unreachable and then remove those states.
7542 However, Bison does not compute which goto actions are useless.
7545 @node Generalized LR Parsing
7546 @section Generalized LR (GLR) Parsing
7548 @cindex generalized LR (GLR) parsing
7549 @cindex ambiguous grammars
7550 @cindex nondeterministic parsing
7552 Bison produces @emph{deterministic} parsers that choose uniquely
7553 when to reduce and which reduction to apply
7554 based on a summary of the preceding input and on one extra token of lookahead.
7555 As a result, normal Bison handles a proper subset of the family of
7556 context-free languages.
7557 Ambiguous grammars, since they have strings with more than one possible
7558 sequence of reductions cannot have deterministic parsers in this sense.
7559 The same is true of languages that require more than one symbol of
7560 lookahead, since the parser lacks the information necessary to make a
7561 decision at the point it must be made in a shift-reduce parser.
7562 Finally, as previously mentioned (@pxref{Mysterious Conflicts}),
7563 there are languages where Bison's default choice of how to
7564 summarize the input seen so far loses necessary information.
7566 When you use the @samp{%glr-parser} declaration in your grammar file,
7567 Bison generates a parser that uses a different algorithm, called
7568 Generalized LR (or GLR). A Bison GLR
7569 parser uses the same basic
7570 algorithm for parsing as an ordinary Bison parser, but behaves
7571 differently in cases where there is a shift-reduce conflict that has not
7572 been resolved by precedence rules (@pxref{Precedence}) or a
7573 reduce-reduce conflict. When a GLR parser encounters such a
7575 effectively @emph{splits} into a several parsers, one for each possible
7576 shift or reduction. These parsers then proceed as usual, consuming
7577 tokens in lock-step. Some of the stacks may encounter other conflicts
7578 and split further, with the result that instead of a sequence of states,
7579 a Bison GLR parsing stack is what is in effect a tree of states.
7581 In effect, each stack represents a guess as to what the proper parse
7582 is. Additional input may indicate that a guess was wrong, in which case
7583 the appropriate stack silently disappears. Otherwise, the semantics
7584 actions generated in each stack are saved, rather than being executed
7585 immediately. When a stack disappears, its saved semantic actions never
7586 get executed. When a reduction causes two stacks to become equivalent,
7587 their sets of semantic actions are both saved with the state that
7588 results from the reduction. We say that two stacks are equivalent
7589 when they both represent the same sequence of states,
7590 and each pair of corresponding states represents a
7591 grammar symbol that produces the same segment of the input token
7594 Whenever the parser makes a transition from having multiple
7595 states to having one, it reverts to the normal deterministic parsing
7596 algorithm, after resolving and executing the saved-up actions.
7597 At this transition, some of the states on the stack will have semantic
7598 values that are sets (actually multisets) of possible actions. The
7599 parser tries to pick one of the actions by first finding one whose rule
7600 has the highest dynamic precedence, as set by the @samp{%dprec}
7601 declaration. Otherwise, if the alternative actions are not ordered by
7602 precedence, but there the same merging function is declared for both
7603 rules by the @samp{%merge} declaration,
7604 Bison resolves and evaluates both and then calls the merge function on
7605 the result. Otherwise, it reports an ambiguity.
7607 It is possible to use a data structure for the GLR parsing tree that
7608 permits the processing of any LR(1) grammar in linear time (in the
7609 size of the input), any unambiguous (not necessarily
7611 quadratic worst-case time, and any general (possibly ambiguous)
7612 context-free grammar in cubic worst-case time. However, Bison currently
7613 uses a simpler data structure that requires time proportional to the
7614 length of the input times the maximum number of stacks required for any
7615 prefix of the input. Thus, really ambiguous or nondeterministic
7616 grammars can require exponential time and space to process. Such badly
7617 behaving examples, however, are not generally of practical interest.
7618 Usually, nondeterminism in a grammar is local---the parser is ``in
7619 doubt'' only for a few tokens at a time. Therefore, the current data
7620 structure should generally be adequate. On LR(1) portions of a
7621 grammar, in particular, it is only slightly slower than with the
7622 deterministic LR(1) Bison parser.
7624 For a more detailed exposition of GLR parsers, @pxref{Bibliography,,Scott
7627 @node Memory Management
7628 @section Memory Management, and How to Avoid Memory Exhaustion
7629 @cindex memory exhaustion
7630 @cindex memory management
7631 @cindex stack overflow
7632 @cindex parser stack overflow
7633 @cindex overflow of parser stack
7635 The Bison parser stack can run out of memory if too many tokens are shifted and
7636 not reduced. When this happens, the parser function @code{yyparse}
7637 calls @code{yyerror} and then returns 2.
7639 Because Bison parsers have growing stacks, hitting the upper limit
7640 usually results from using a right recursion instead of a left
7641 recursion, see @ref{Recursion, ,Recursive Rules}.
7644 By defining the macro @code{YYMAXDEPTH}, you can control how deep the
7645 parser stack can become before memory is exhausted. Define the
7646 macro with a value that is an integer. This value is the maximum number
7647 of tokens that can be shifted (and not reduced) before overflow.
7649 The stack space allowed is not necessarily allocated. If you specify a
7650 large value for @code{YYMAXDEPTH}, the parser normally allocates a small
7651 stack at first, and then makes it bigger by stages as needed. This
7652 increasing allocation happens automatically and silently. Therefore,
7653 you do not need to make @code{YYMAXDEPTH} painfully small merely to save
7654 space for ordinary inputs that do not need much stack.
7656 However, do not allow @code{YYMAXDEPTH} to be a value so large that
7657 arithmetic overflow could occur when calculating the size of the stack
7658 space. Also, do not allow @code{YYMAXDEPTH} to be less than
7661 @cindex default stack limit
7662 The default value of @code{YYMAXDEPTH}, if you do not define it, is
7666 You can control how much stack is allocated initially by defining the
7667 macro @code{YYINITDEPTH} to a positive integer. For the deterministic
7668 parser in C, this value must be a compile-time constant
7669 unless you are assuming C99 or some other target language or compiler
7670 that allows variable-length arrays. The default is 200.
7672 Do not allow @code{YYINITDEPTH} to be greater than @code{YYMAXDEPTH}.
7674 @c FIXME: C++ output.
7675 Because of semantic differences between C and C++, the deterministic
7676 parsers in C produced by Bison cannot grow when compiled
7677 by C++ compilers. In this precise case (compiling a C parser as C++) you are
7678 suggested to grow @code{YYINITDEPTH}. The Bison maintainers hope to fix
7679 this deficiency in a future release.
7681 @node Error Recovery
7682 @chapter Error Recovery
7683 @cindex error recovery
7684 @cindex recovery from errors
7686 It is not usually acceptable to have a program terminate on a syntax
7687 error. For example, a compiler should recover sufficiently to parse the
7688 rest of the input file and check it for errors; a calculator should accept
7691 In a simple interactive command parser where each input is one line, it may
7692 be sufficient to allow @code{yyparse} to return 1 on error and have the
7693 caller ignore the rest of the input line when that happens (and then call
7694 @code{yyparse} again). But this is inadequate for a compiler, because it
7695 forgets all the syntactic context leading up to the error. A syntax error
7696 deep within a function in the compiler input should not cause the compiler
7697 to treat the following line like the beginning of a source file.
7700 You can define how to recover from a syntax error by writing rules to
7701 recognize the special token @code{error}. This is a terminal symbol that
7702 is always defined (you need not declare it) and reserved for error
7703 handling. The Bison parser generates an @code{error} token whenever a
7704 syntax error happens; if you have provided a rule to recognize this token
7705 in the current context, the parse can continue.
7717 The fourth rule in this example says that an error followed by a newline
7718 makes a valid addition to any @code{stmts}.
7720 What happens if a syntax error occurs in the middle of an @code{exp}? The
7721 error recovery rule, interpreted strictly, applies to the precise sequence
7722 of a @code{stmts}, an @code{error} and a newline. If an error occurs in
7723 the middle of an @code{exp}, there will probably be some additional tokens
7724 and subexpressions on the stack after the last @code{stmts}, and there
7725 will be tokens to read before the next newline. So the rule is not
7726 applicable in the ordinary way.
7728 But Bison can force the situation to fit the rule, by discarding part of
7729 the semantic context and part of the input. First it discards states
7730 and objects from the stack until it gets back to a state in which the
7731 @code{error} token is acceptable. (This means that the subexpressions
7732 already parsed are discarded, back to the last complete @code{stmts}.)
7733 At this point the @code{error} token can be shifted. Then, if the old
7734 lookahead token is not acceptable to be shifted next, the parser reads
7735 tokens and discards them until it finds a token which is acceptable. In
7736 this example, Bison reads and discards input until the next newline so
7737 that the fourth rule can apply. Note that discarded symbols are
7738 possible sources of memory leaks, see @ref{Destructor Decl, , Freeing
7739 Discarded Symbols}, for a means to reclaim this memory.
7741 The choice of error rules in the grammar is a choice of strategies for
7742 error recovery. A simple and useful strategy is simply to skip the rest of
7743 the current input line or current statement if an error is detected:
7746 stmt: error ';' /* On error, skip until ';' is read. */
7749 It is also useful to recover to the matching close-delimiter of an
7750 opening-delimiter that has already been parsed. Otherwise the
7751 close-delimiter will probably appear to be unmatched, and generate another,
7752 spurious error message:
7762 Error recovery strategies are necessarily guesses. When they guess wrong,
7763 one syntax error often leads to another. In the above example, the error
7764 recovery rule guesses that an error is due to bad input within one
7765 @code{stmt}. Suppose that instead a spurious semicolon is inserted in the
7766 middle of a valid @code{stmt}. After the error recovery rule recovers
7767 from the first error, another syntax error will be found straightaway,
7768 since the text following the spurious semicolon is also an invalid
7771 To prevent an outpouring of error messages, the parser will output no error
7772 message for another syntax error that happens shortly after the first; only
7773 after three consecutive input tokens have been successfully shifted will
7774 error messages resume.
7776 Note that rules which accept the @code{error} token may have actions, just
7777 as any other rules can.
7780 You can make error messages resume immediately by using the macro
7781 @code{yyerrok} in an action. If you do this in the error rule's action, no
7782 error messages will be suppressed. This macro requires no arguments;
7783 @samp{yyerrok;} is a valid C statement.
7786 The previous lookahead token is reanalyzed immediately after an error. If
7787 this is unacceptable, then the macro @code{yyclearin} may be used to clear
7788 this token. Write the statement @samp{yyclearin;} in the error rule's
7790 @xref{Action Features, ,Special Features for Use in Actions}.
7792 For example, suppose that on a syntax error, an error handling routine is
7793 called that advances the input stream to some point where parsing should
7794 once again commence. The next symbol returned by the lexical scanner is
7795 probably correct. The previous lookahead token ought to be discarded
7796 with @samp{yyclearin;}.
7798 @vindex YYRECOVERING
7799 The expression @code{YYRECOVERING ()} yields 1 when the parser
7800 is recovering from a syntax error, and 0 otherwise.
7801 Syntax error diagnostics are suppressed while recovering from a syntax
7804 @node Context Dependency
7805 @chapter Handling Context Dependencies
7807 The Bison paradigm is to parse tokens first, then group them into larger
7808 syntactic units. In many languages, the meaning of a token is affected by
7809 its context. Although this violates the Bison paradigm, certain techniques
7810 (known as @dfn{kludges}) may enable you to write Bison parsers for such
7814 * Semantic Tokens:: Token parsing can depend on the semantic context.
7815 * Lexical Tie-ins:: Token parsing can depend on the syntactic context.
7816 * Tie-in Recovery:: Lexical tie-ins have implications for how
7817 error recovery rules must be written.
7820 (Actually, ``kludge'' means any technique that gets its job done but is
7821 neither clean nor robust.)
7823 @node Semantic Tokens
7824 @section Semantic Info in Token Types
7826 The C language has a context dependency: the way an identifier is used
7827 depends on what its current meaning is. For example, consider this:
7833 This looks like a function call statement, but if @code{foo} is a typedef
7834 name, then this is actually a declaration of @code{x}. How can a Bison
7835 parser for C decide how to parse this input?
7837 The method used in GNU C is to have two different token types,
7838 @code{IDENTIFIER} and @code{TYPENAME}. When @code{yylex} finds an
7839 identifier, it looks up the current declaration of the identifier in order
7840 to decide which token type to return: @code{TYPENAME} if the identifier is
7841 declared as a typedef, @code{IDENTIFIER} otherwise.
7843 The grammar rules can then express the context dependency by the choice of
7844 token type to recognize. @code{IDENTIFIER} is accepted as an expression,
7845 but @code{TYPENAME} is not. @code{TYPENAME} can start a declaration, but
7846 @code{IDENTIFIER} cannot. In contexts where the meaning of the identifier
7847 is @emph{not} significant, such as in declarations that can shadow a
7848 typedef name, either @code{TYPENAME} or @code{IDENTIFIER} is
7849 accepted---there is one rule for each of the two token types.
7851 This technique is simple to use if the decision of which kinds of
7852 identifiers to allow is made at a place close to where the identifier is
7853 parsed. But in C this is not always so: C allows a declaration to
7854 redeclare a typedef name provided an explicit type has been specified
7858 typedef int foo, bar;
7862 static bar (bar); /* @r{redeclare @code{bar} as static variable} */
7863 extern foo foo (foo); /* @r{redeclare @code{foo} as function} */
7869 Unfortunately, the name being declared is separated from the declaration
7870 construct itself by a complicated syntactic structure---the ``declarator''.
7872 As a result, part of the Bison parser for C needs to be duplicated, with
7873 all the nonterminal names changed: once for parsing a declaration in
7874 which a typedef name can be redefined, and once for parsing a
7875 declaration in which that can't be done. Here is a part of the
7876 duplication, with actions omitted for brevity:
7881 declarator maybeasm '=' init
7882 | declarator maybeasm
7888 notype_declarator maybeasm '=' init
7889 | notype_declarator maybeasm
7895 Here @code{initdcl} can redeclare a typedef name, but @code{notype_initdcl}
7896 cannot. The distinction between @code{declarator} and
7897 @code{notype_declarator} is the same sort of thing.
7899 There is some similarity between this technique and a lexical tie-in
7900 (described next), in that information which alters the lexical analysis is
7901 changed during parsing by other parts of the program. The difference is
7902 here the information is global, and is used for other purposes in the
7903 program. A true lexical tie-in has a special-purpose flag controlled by
7904 the syntactic context.
7906 @node Lexical Tie-ins
7907 @section Lexical Tie-ins
7908 @cindex lexical tie-in
7910 One way to handle context-dependency is the @dfn{lexical tie-in}: a flag
7911 which is set by Bison actions, whose purpose is to alter the way tokens are
7914 For example, suppose we have a language vaguely like C, but with a special
7915 construct @samp{hex (@var{hex-expr})}. After the keyword @code{hex} comes
7916 an expression in parentheses in which all integers are hexadecimal. In
7917 particular, the token @samp{a1b} must be treated as an integer rather than
7918 as an identifier if it appears in that context. Here is how you can do it:
7925 void yyerror (char const *);
7934 | HEX '(' @{ hexflag = 1; @}
7935 expr ')' @{ hexflag = 0; $$ = $4; @}
7936 | expr '+' expr @{ $$ = make_sum ($1, $3); @}
7950 Here we assume that @code{yylex} looks at the value of @code{hexflag}; when
7951 it is nonzero, all integers are parsed in hexadecimal, and tokens starting
7952 with letters are parsed as integers if possible.
7954 The declaration of @code{hexflag} shown in the prologue of the grammar
7955 file is needed to make it accessible to the actions (@pxref{Prologue,
7956 ,The Prologue}). You must also write the code in @code{yylex} to obey
7959 @node Tie-in Recovery
7960 @section Lexical Tie-ins and Error Recovery
7962 Lexical tie-ins make strict demands on any error recovery rules you have.
7963 @xref{Error Recovery}.
7965 The reason for this is that the purpose of an error recovery rule is to
7966 abort the parsing of one construct and resume in some larger construct.
7967 For example, in C-like languages, a typical error recovery rule is to skip
7968 tokens until the next semicolon, and then start a new statement, like this:
7973 | IF '(' expr ')' stmt @{ @dots{} @}
7975 | error ';' @{ hexflag = 0; @}
7979 If there is a syntax error in the middle of a @samp{hex (@var{expr})}
7980 construct, this error rule will apply, and then the action for the
7981 completed @samp{hex (@var{expr})} will never run. So @code{hexflag} would
7982 remain set for the entire rest of the input, or until the next @code{hex}
7983 keyword, causing identifiers to be misinterpreted as integers.
7985 To avoid this problem the error recovery rule itself clears @code{hexflag}.
7987 There may also be an error recovery rule that works within expressions.
7988 For example, there could be a rule which applies within parentheses
7989 and skips to the close-parenthesis:
7995 | '(' expr ')' @{ $$ = $2; @}
8001 If this rule acts within the @code{hex} construct, it is not going to abort
8002 that construct (since it applies to an inner level of parentheses within
8003 the construct). Therefore, it should not clear the flag: the rest of
8004 the @code{hex} construct should be parsed with the flag still in effect.
8006 What if there is an error recovery rule which might abort out of the
8007 @code{hex} construct or might not, depending on circumstances? There is no
8008 way you can write the action to determine whether a @code{hex} construct is
8009 being aborted or not. So if you are using a lexical tie-in, you had better
8010 make sure your error recovery rules are not of this kind. Each rule must
8011 be such that you can be sure that it always will, or always won't, have to
8014 @c ================================================== Debugging Your Parser
8017 @chapter Debugging Your Parser
8019 Developing a parser can be a challenge, especially if you don't understand
8020 the algorithm (@pxref{Algorithm, ,The Bison Parser Algorithm}). This
8021 chapter explains how to generate and read the detailed description of the
8022 automaton, and how to enable and understand the parser run-time traces.
8025 * Understanding:: Understanding the structure of your parser.
8026 * Tracing:: Tracing the execution of your parser.
8030 @section Understanding Your Parser
8032 As documented elsewhere (@pxref{Algorithm, ,The Bison Parser Algorithm})
8033 Bison parsers are @dfn{shift/reduce automata}. In some cases (much more
8034 frequent than one would hope), looking at this automaton is required to
8035 tune or simply fix a parser. Bison provides two different
8036 representation of it, either textually or graphically (as a DOT file).
8038 The textual file is generated when the options @option{--report} or
8039 @option{--verbose} are specified, see @ref{Invocation, , Invoking
8040 Bison}. Its name is made by removing @samp{.tab.c} or @samp{.c} from
8041 the parser implementation file name, and adding @samp{.output}
8042 instead. Therefore, if the grammar file is @file{foo.y}, then the
8043 parser implementation file is called @file{foo.tab.c} by default. As
8044 a consequence, the verbose output file is called @file{foo.output}.
8046 The following grammar file, @file{calc.y}, will be used in the sequel:
8064 @command{bison} reports:
8067 calc.y: warning: 1 nonterminal useless in grammar
8068 calc.y: warning: 1 rule useless in grammar
8069 calc.y:11.1-7: warning: nonterminal useless in grammar: useless
8070 calc.y:11.10-12: warning: rule useless in grammar: useless: STR
8071 calc.y: conflicts: 7 shift/reduce
8074 When given @option{--report=state}, in addition to @file{calc.tab.c}, it
8075 creates a file @file{calc.output} with contents detailed below. The
8076 order of the output and the exact presentation might vary, but the
8077 interpretation is the same.
8080 @cindex token, useless
8081 @cindex useless token
8082 @cindex nonterminal, useless
8083 @cindex useless nonterminal
8084 @cindex rule, useless
8085 @cindex useless rule
8086 The first section reports useless tokens, nonterminals and rules. Useless
8087 nonterminals and rules are removed in order to produce a smaller parser, but
8088 useless tokens are preserved, since they might be used by the scanner (note
8089 the difference between ``useless'' and ``unused'' below):
8092 Nonterminals useless in grammar
8095 Terminals unused in grammar
8098 Rules useless in grammar
8103 The next section lists states that still have conflicts.
8106 State 8 conflicts: 1 shift/reduce
8107 State 9 conflicts: 1 shift/reduce
8108 State 10 conflicts: 1 shift/reduce
8109 State 11 conflicts: 4 shift/reduce
8113 Then Bison reproduces the exact grammar it used:
8128 and reports the uses of the symbols:
8132 Terminals, with rules where they appear
8145 Nonterminals, with rules where they appear
8150 on left: 1 2 3 4 5, on right: 0 1 2 3 4
8156 @cindex pointed rule
8157 @cindex rule, pointed
8158 Bison then proceeds onto the automaton itself, describing each state
8159 with its set of @dfn{items}, also known as @dfn{pointed rules}. Each
8160 item is a production rule together with a point (@samp{.}) marking
8161 the location of the input cursor.
8166 0 $accept: . exp $end
8168 NUM shift, and go to state 1
8173 This reads as follows: ``state 0 corresponds to being at the very
8174 beginning of the parsing, in the initial rule, right before the start
8175 symbol (here, @code{exp}). When the parser returns to this state right
8176 after having reduced a rule that produced an @code{exp}, the control
8177 flow jumps to state 2. If there is no such transition on a nonterminal
8178 symbol, and the lookahead is a @code{NUM}, then this token is shifted onto
8179 the parse stack, and the control flow jumps to state 1. Any other
8180 lookahead triggers a syntax error.''
8182 @cindex core, item set
8183 @cindex item set core
8184 @cindex kernel, item set
8185 @cindex item set core
8186 Even though the only active rule in state 0 seems to be rule 0, the
8187 report lists @code{NUM} as a lookahead token because @code{NUM} can be
8188 at the beginning of any rule deriving an @code{exp}. By default Bison
8189 reports the so-called @dfn{core} or @dfn{kernel} of the item set, but if
8190 you want to see more detail you can invoke @command{bison} with
8191 @option{--report=itemset} to list the derived items as well:
8196 0 $accept: . exp $end
8197 1 exp: . exp '+' exp
8203 NUM shift, and go to state 1
8209 In the state 1@dots{}
8216 $default reduce using rule 5 (exp)
8220 the rule 5, @samp{exp: NUM;}, is completed. Whatever the lookahead token
8221 (@samp{$default}), the parser will reduce it. If it was coming from
8222 state 0, then, after this reduction it will return to state 0, and will
8223 jump to state 2 (@samp{exp: go to state 2}).
8228 0 $accept: exp . $end
8229 1 exp: exp . '+' exp
8234 $end shift, and go to state 3
8235 '+' shift, and go to state 4
8236 '-' shift, and go to state 5
8237 '*' shift, and go to state 6
8238 '/' shift, and go to state 7
8242 In state 2, the automaton can only shift a symbol. For instance,
8243 because of the item @samp{exp: exp . '+' exp}, if the lookahead is
8244 @samp{+} it is shifted onto the parse stack, and the automaton
8245 jumps to state 4, corresponding to the item @samp{exp: exp '+' . exp}.
8246 Since there is no default action, any lookahead not listed triggers a syntax
8249 @cindex accepting state
8250 The state 3 is named the @dfn{final state}, or the @dfn{accepting
8256 0 $accept: exp $end .
8262 the initial rule is completed (the start symbol and the end-of-input were
8263 read), the parsing exits successfully.
8265 The interpretation of states 4 to 7 is straightforward, and is left to
8271 1 exp: exp '+' . exp
8273 NUM shift, and go to state 1
8280 2 exp: exp '-' . exp
8282 NUM shift, and go to state 1
8289 3 exp: exp '*' . exp
8291 NUM shift, and go to state 1
8298 4 exp: exp '/' . exp
8300 NUM shift, and go to state 1
8305 As was announced in beginning of the report, @samp{State 8 conflicts:
8311 1 exp: exp . '+' exp
8317 '*' shift, and go to state 6
8318 '/' shift, and go to state 7
8320 '/' [reduce using rule 1 (exp)]
8321 $default reduce using rule 1 (exp)
8324 Indeed, there are two actions associated to the lookahead @samp{/}:
8325 either shifting (and going to state 7), or reducing rule 1. The
8326 conflict means that either the grammar is ambiguous, or the parser lacks
8327 information to make the right decision. Indeed the grammar is
8328 ambiguous, as, since we did not specify the precedence of @samp{/}, the
8329 sentence @samp{NUM + NUM / NUM} can be parsed as @samp{NUM + (NUM /
8330 NUM)}, which corresponds to shifting @samp{/}, or as @samp{(NUM + NUM) /
8331 NUM}, which corresponds to reducing rule 1.
8333 Because in deterministic parsing a single decision can be made, Bison
8334 arbitrarily chose to disable the reduction, see @ref{Shift/Reduce, ,
8335 Shift/Reduce Conflicts}. Discarded actions are reported between
8338 Note that all the previous states had a single possible action: either
8339 shifting the next token and going to the corresponding state, or
8340 reducing a single rule. In the other cases, i.e., when shifting
8341 @emph{and} reducing is possible or when @emph{several} reductions are
8342 possible, the lookahead is required to select the action. State 8 is
8343 one such state: if the lookahead is @samp{*} or @samp{/} then the action
8344 is shifting, otherwise the action is reducing rule 1. In other words,
8345 the first two items, corresponding to rule 1, are not eligible when the
8346 lookahead token is @samp{*}, since we specified that @samp{*} has higher
8347 precedence than @samp{+}. More generally, some items are eligible only
8348 with some set of possible lookahead tokens. When run with
8349 @option{--report=lookahead}, Bison specifies these lookahead tokens:
8354 1 exp: exp . '+' exp
8355 1 | exp '+' exp . [$end, '+', '-', '/']
8360 '*' shift, and go to state 6
8361 '/' shift, and go to state 7
8363 '/' [reduce using rule 1 (exp)]
8364 $default reduce using rule 1 (exp)
8367 Note however that while @samp{NUM + NUM / NUM} is ambiguous (which results in
8368 the conflicts on @samp{/}), @samp{NUM + NUM * NUM} is not: the conflict was
8369 solved thanks to associativity and precedence directives. If invoked with
8370 @option{--report=solved}, Bison includes information about the solved
8371 conflicts in the report:
8374 Conflict between rule 1 and token '+' resolved as reduce (%left '+').
8375 Conflict between rule 1 and token '-' resolved as reduce (%left '-').
8376 Conflict between rule 1 and token '*' resolved as shift ('+' < '*').
8380 The remaining states are similar:
8386 1 exp: exp . '+' exp
8392 '*' shift, and go to state 6
8393 '/' shift, and go to state 7
8395 '/' [reduce using rule 2 (exp)]
8396 $default reduce using rule 2 (exp)
8402 1 exp: exp . '+' exp
8408 '/' shift, and go to state 7
8410 '/' [reduce using rule 3 (exp)]
8411 $default reduce using rule 3 (exp)
8417 1 exp: exp . '+' exp
8423 '+' shift, and go to state 4
8424 '-' shift, and go to state 5
8425 '*' shift, and go to state 6
8426 '/' shift, and go to state 7
8428 '+' [reduce using rule 4 (exp)]
8429 '-' [reduce using rule 4 (exp)]
8430 '*' [reduce using rule 4 (exp)]
8431 '/' [reduce using rule 4 (exp)]
8432 $default reduce using rule 4 (exp)
8437 Observe that state 11 contains conflicts not only due to the lack of
8438 precedence of @samp{/} with respect to @samp{+}, @samp{-}, and
8439 @samp{*}, but also because the
8440 associativity of @samp{/} is not specified.
8444 @section Tracing Your Parser
8447 @cindex tracing the parser
8449 When a Bison grammar compiles properly but parses ``incorrectly'', the
8450 @code{yydebug} parser-trace feature helps figuring out why.
8453 * Enabling Traces:: Activating run-time trace support
8454 * Mfcalc Traces:: Extending @code{mfcalc} to support traces
8455 * The YYPRINT Macro:: Obsolete interface for semantic value reports
8458 @node Enabling Traces
8459 @subsection Enabling Traces
8460 There are several means to enable compilation of trace facilities:
8463 @item the macro @code{YYDEBUG}
8465 Define the macro @code{YYDEBUG} to a nonzero value when you compile the
8466 parser. This is compliant with POSIX Yacc. You could use
8467 @samp{-DYYDEBUG=1} as a compiler option or you could put @samp{#define
8468 YYDEBUG 1} in the prologue of the grammar file (@pxref{Prologue, , The
8471 @item the option @option{-t}, @option{--debug}
8472 Use the @samp{-t} option when you run Bison (@pxref{Invocation,
8473 ,Invoking Bison}). This is POSIX compliant too.
8475 @item the directive @samp{%debug}
8477 Add the @code{%debug} directive (@pxref{Decl Summary, ,Bison
8478 Declaration Summary}). This is a Bison extension, which will prove
8479 useful when Bison will output parsers for languages that don't use a
8480 preprocessor. Unless POSIX and Yacc portability matter to
8482 the preferred solution.
8485 We suggest that you always enable the debug option so that debugging is
8489 The trace facility outputs messages with macro calls of the form
8490 @code{YYFPRINTF (stderr, @var{format}, @var{args})} where
8491 @var{format} and @var{args} are the usual @code{printf} format and variadic
8492 arguments. If you define @code{YYDEBUG} to a nonzero value but do not
8493 define @code{YYFPRINTF}, @code{<stdio.h>} is automatically included
8494 and @code{YYFPRINTF} is defined to @code{fprintf}.
8496 Once you have compiled the program with trace facilities, the way to
8497 request a trace is to store a nonzero value in the variable @code{yydebug}.
8498 You can do this by making the C code do it (in @code{main}, perhaps), or
8499 you can alter the value with a C debugger.
8501 Each step taken by the parser when @code{yydebug} is nonzero produces a
8502 line or two of trace information, written on @code{stderr}. The trace
8503 messages tell you these things:
8507 Each time the parser calls @code{yylex}, what kind of token was read.
8510 Each time a token is shifted, the depth and complete contents of the
8511 state stack (@pxref{Parser States}).
8514 Each time a rule is reduced, which rule it is, and the complete contents
8515 of the state stack afterward.
8518 To make sense of this information, it helps to refer to the automaton
8519 description file (@pxref{Understanding, ,Understanding Your Parser}).
8520 This file shows the meaning of each state in terms of
8521 positions in various rules, and also what each state will do with each
8522 possible input token. As you read the successive trace messages, you
8523 can see that the parser is functioning according to its specification in
8524 the listing file. Eventually you will arrive at the place where
8525 something undesirable happens, and you will see which parts of the
8526 grammar are to blame.
8528 The parser implementation file is a C/C++/Java program and you can use
8529 debuggers on it, but it's not easy to interpret what it is doing. The
8530 parser function is a finite-state machine interpreter, and aside from
8531 the actions it executes the same code over and over. Only the values
8532 of variables show where in the grammar it is working.
8535 @subsection Enabling Debug Traces for @code{mfcalc}
8537 The debugging information normally gives the token type of each token read,
8538 but not its semantic value. The @code{%printer} directive allows specify
8539 how semantic values are reported, see @ref{Printer Decl, , Printing
8540 Semantic Values}. For backward compatibility, Yacc like C parsers may also
8541 use the @code{YYPRINT} (@pxref{The YYPRINT Macro, , The @code{YYPRINT}
8542 Macro}), but its use is discouraged.
8544 As a demonstration of @code{%printer}, consider the multi-function
8545 calculator, @code{mfcalc} (@pxref{Multi-function Calc}). To enable run-time
8546 traces, and semantic value reports, insert the following directives in its
8549 @comment file: mfcalc.y: 2
8551 /* Generate the parser description file. */
8553 /* Enable run-time traces (yydebug). */
8556 /* Formatting semantic values. */
8557 %printer @{ fprintf (yyoutput, "%s", $$->name); @} VAR;
8558 %printer @{ fprintf (yyoutput, "%s()", $$->name); @} FNCT;
8559 %printer @{ fprintf (yyoutput, "%g", $$); @} <val>;
8562 The @code{%define} directive instructs Bison to generate run-time trace
8563 support. Then, activation of these traces is controlled at run-time by the
8564 @code{yydebug} variable, which is disabled by default. Because these traces
8565 will refer to the ``states'' of the parser, it is helpful to ask for the
8566 creation of a description of that parser; this is the purpose of (admittedly
8567 ill-named) @code{%verbose} directive.
8569 The set of @code{%printer} directives demonstrates how to format the
8570 semantic value in the traces. Note that the specification can be done
8571 either on the symbol type (e.g., @code{VAR} or @code{FNCT}), or on the type
8572 tag: since @code{<val>} is the type for both @code{NUM} and @code{exp}, this
8573 printer will be used for them.
8575 Here is a sample of the information provided by run-time traces. The traces
8576 are sent onto standard error.
8579 $ @kbd{echo 'sin(1-1)' | ./mfcalc -p}
8582 Reducing stack by rule 1 (line 34):
8583 -> $$ = nterm input ()
8589 This first batch shows a specific feature of this grammar: the first rule
8590 (which is in line 34 of @file{mfcalc.y} can be reduced without even having
8591 to look for the first token. The resulting left-hand symbol (@code{$$}) is
8592 a valueless (@samp{()}) @code{input} non terminal (@code{nterm}).
8594 Then the parser calls the scanner.
8596 Reading a token: Next token is token FNCT (sin())
8597 Shifting token FNCT (sin())
8602 That token (@code{token}) is a function (@code{FNCT}) whose value is
8603 @samp{sin} as formatted per our @code{%printer} specification: @samp{sin()}.
8604 The parser stores (@code{Shifting}) that token, and others, until it can do
8608 Reading a token: Next token is token '(' ()
8609 Shifting token '(' ()
8611 Reading a token: Next token is token NUM (1.000000)
8612 Shifting token NUM (1.000000)
8614 Reducing stack by rule 6 (line 44):
8615 $1 = token NUM (1.000000)
8616 -> $$ = nterm exp (1.000000)
8622 The previous reduction demonstrates the @code{%printer} directive for
8623 @code{<val>}: both the token @code{NUM} and the resulting non-terminal
8624 @code{exp} have @samp{1} as value.
8627 Reading a token: Next token is token '-' ()
8628 Shifting token '-' ()
8630 Reading a token: Next token is token NUM (1.000000)
8631 Shifting token NUM (1.000000)
8633 Reducing stack by rule 6 (line 44):
8634 $1 = token NUM (1.000000)
8635 -> $$ = nterm exp (1.000000)
8636 Stack now 0 1 6 14 24 17
8638 Reading a token: Next token is token ')' ()
8639 Reducing stack by rule 11 (line 49):
8640 $1 = nterm exp (1.000000)
8642 $3 = nterm exp (1.000000)
8643 -> $$ = nterm exp (0.000000)
8649 The rule for the subtraction was just reduced. The parser is about to
8650 discover the end of the call to @code{sin}.
8653 Next token is token ')' ()
8654 Shifting token ')' ()
8656 Reducing stack by rule 9 (line 47):
8657 $1 = token FNCT (sin())
8659 $3 = nterm exp (0.000000)
8661 -> $$ = nterm exp (0.000000)
8667 Finally, the end-of-line allow the parser to complete the computation, and
8671 Reading a token: Next token is token '\n' ()
8672 Shifting token '\n' ()
8674 Reducing stack by rule 4 (line 40):
8675 $1 = nterm exp (0.000000)
8678 -> $$ = nterm line ()
8681 Reducing stack by rule 2 (line 35):
8684 -> $$ = nterm input ()
8689 The parser has returned into state 1, in which it is waiting for the next
8690 expression to evaluate, or for the end-of-file token, which causes the
8691 completion of the parsing.
8694 Reading a token: Now at end of input.
8695 Shifting token $end ()
8698 Cleanup: popping token $end ()
8699 Cleanup: popping nterm input ()
8703 @node The YYPRINT Macro
8704 @subsection The @code{YYPRINT} Macro
8707 Before @code{%printer} support, semantic values could be displayed using the
8708 @code{YYPRINT} macro, which works only for terminal symbols and only with
8709 the @file{yacc.c} skeleton.
8711 @deffn {Macro} YYPRINT (@var{stream}, @var{token}, @var{value});
8713 If you define @code{YYPRINT}, it should take three arguments. The parser
8714 will pass a standard I/O stream, the numeric code for the token type, and
8715 the token value (from @code{yylval}).
8717 For @file{yacc.c} only. Obsoleted by @code{%printer}.
8720 Here is an example of @code{YYPRINT} suitable for the multi-function
8721 calculator (@pxref{Mfcalc Declarations, ,Declarations for @code{mfcalc}}):
8725 static void print_token_value (FILE *, int, YYSTYPE);
8726 #define YYPRINT(File, Type, Value) \
8727 print_token_value (File, Type, Value)
8730 @dots{} %% @dots{} %% @dots{}
8733 print_token_value (FILE *file, int type, YYSTYPE value)
8736 fprintf (file, "%s", value.tptr->name);
8737 else if (type == NUM)
8738 fprintf (file, "%d", value.val);
8742 @c ================================================= Invoking Bison
8745 @chapter Invoking Bison
8746 @cindex invoking Bison
8747 @cindex Bison invocation
8748 @cindex options for invoking Bison
8750 The usual way to invoke Bison is as follows:
8756 Here @var{infile} is the grammar file name, which usually ends in
8757 @samp{.y}. The parser implementation file's name is made by replacing
8758 the @samp{.y} with @samp{.tab.c} and removing any leading directory.
8759 Thus, the @samp{bison foo.y} file name yields @file{foo.tab.c}, and
8760 the @samp{bison hack/foo.y} file name yields @file{foo.tab.c}. It's
8761 also possible, in case you are writing C++ code instead of C in your
8762 grammar file, to name it @file{foo.ypp} or @file{foo.y++}. Then, the
8763 output files will take an extension like the given one as input
8764 (respectively @file{foo.tab.cpp} and @file{foo.tab.c++}). This
8765 feature takes effect with all options that manipulate file names like
8766 @samp{-o} or @samp{-d}.
8771 bison -d @var{infile.yxx}
8774 will produce @file{infile.tab.cxx} and @file{infile.tab.hxx}, and
8777 bison -d -o @var{output.c++} @var{infile.y}
8780 will produce @file{output.c++} and @file{outfile.h++}.
8782 For compatibility with POSIX, the standard Bison
8783 distribution also contains a shell script called @command{yacc} that
8784 invokes Bison with the @option{-y} option.
8787 * Bison Options:: All the options described in detail,
8788 in alphabetical order by short options.
8789 * Option Cross Key:: Alphabetical list of long options.
8790 * Yacc Library:: Yacc-compatible @code{yylex} and @code{main}.
8794 @section Bison Options
8796 Bison supports both traditional single-letter options and mnemonic long
8797 option names. Long option names are indicated with @samp{--} instead of
8798 @samp{-}. Abbreviations for option names are allowed as long as they
8799 are unique. When a long option takes an argument, like
8800 @samp{--file-prefix}, connect the option name and the argument with
8803 Here is a list of options that can be used with Bison, alphabetized by
8804 short option. It is followed by a cross key alphabetized by long
8807 @c Please, keep this ordered as in `bison --help'.
8813 Print a summary of the command-line options to Bison and exit.
8817 Print the version number of Bison and exit.
8819 @item --print-localedir
8820 Print the name of the directory containing locale-dependent data.
8822 @item --print-datadir
8823 Print the name of the directory containing skeletons and XSLT.
8827 Act more like the traditional Yacc command. This can cause different
8828 diagnostics to be generated, and may change behavior in other minor
8829 ways. Most importantly, imitate Yacc's output file name conventions,
8830 so that the parser implementation file is called @file{y.tab.c}, and
8831 the other outputs are called @file{y.output} and @file{y.tab.h}.
8832 Also, if generating a deterministic parser in C, generate
8833 @code{#define} statements in addition to an @code{enum} to associate
8834 token numbers with token names. Thus, the following shell script can
8835 substitute for Yacc, and the Bison distribution contains such a script
8836 for compatibility with POSIX:
8843 The @option{-y}/@option{--yacc} option is intended for use with
8844 traditional Yacc grammars. If your grammar uses a Bison extension
8845 like @samp{%glr-parser}, Bison might not be Yacc-compatible even if
8846 this option is specified.
8848 @item -W [@var{category}]
8849 @itemx --warnings[=@var{category}]
8850 Output warnings falling in @var{category}. @var{category} can be one
8853 @item midrule-values
8854 Warn about mid-rule values that are set but not used within any of the actions
8856 For example, warn about unused @code{$2} in:
8859 exp: '1' @{ $$ = 1; @} '+' exp @{ $$ = $1 + $4; @};
8862 Also warn about mid-rule values that are used but not set.
8863 For example, warn about unset @code{$$} in the mid-rule action in:
8866 exp: '1' @{ $1 = 1; @} '+' exp @{ $$ = $2 + $4; @};
8869 These warnings are not enabled by default since they sometimes prove to
8870 be false alarms in existing grammars employing the Yacc constructs
8871 @code{$0} or @code{$-@var{n}} (where @var{n} is some positive integer).
8874 Incompatibilities with POSIX Yacc.
8878 S/R and R/R conflicts. These warnings are enabled by default. However, if
8879 the @code{%expect} or @code{%expect-rr} directive is specified, an
8880 unexpected number of conflicts is an error, and an expected number of
8881 conflicts is not reported, so @option{-W} and @option{--warning} then have
8882 no effect on the conflict report.
8885 All warnings not categorized above. These warnings are enabled by default.
8887 This category is provided merely for the sake of completeness. Future
8888 releases of Bison may move warnings from this category to new, more specific
8894 Turn off all the warnings.
8896 Treat warnings as errors.
8899 A category can be turned off by prefixing its name with @samp{no-}. For
8900 instance, @option{-Wno-yacc} will hide the warnings about
8901 POSIX Yacc incompatibilities.
8910 In the parser implementation file, define the macro @code{YYDEBUG} to
8911 1 if it is not already defined, so that the debugging facilities are
8912 compiled. @xref{Tracing, ,Tracing Your Parser}.
8914 @item -D @var{name}[=@var{value}]
8915 @itemx --define=@var{name}[=@var{value}]
8916 @itemx -F @var{name}[=@var{value}]
8917 @itemx --force-define=@var{name}[=@var{value}]
8918 Each of these is equivalent to @samp{%define @var{name} "@var{value}"}
8919 (@pxref{%define Summary}) except that Bison processes multiple
8920 definitions for the same @var{name} as follows:
8924 Bison quietly ignores all command-line definitions for @var{name} except
8927 If that command-line definition is specified by a @code{-D} or
8928 @code{--define}, Bison reports an error for any @code{%define}
8929 definition for @var{name}.
8931 If that command-line definition is specified by a @code{-F} or
8932 @code{--force-define} instead, Bison quietly ignores all @code{%define}
8933 definitions for @var{name}.
8935 Otherwise, Bison reports an error if there are multiple @code{%define}
8936 definitions for @var{name}.
8939 You should avoid using @code{-F} and @code{--force-define} in your
8940 make files unless you are confident that it is safe to quietly ignore
8941 any conflicting @code{%define} that may be added to the grammar file.
8943 @item -L @var{language}
8944 @itemx --language=@var{language}
8945 Specify the programming language for the generated parser, as if
8946 @code{%language} was specified (@pxref{Decl Summary, , Bison Declaration
8947 Summary}). Currently supported languages include C, C++, and Java.
8948 @var{language} is case-insensitive.
8950 This option is experimental and its effect may be modified in future
8954 Pretend that @code{%locations} was specified. @xref{Decl Summary}.
8956 @item -p @var{prefix}
8957 @itemx --name-prefix=@var{prefix}
8958 Pretend that @code{%name-prefix "@var{prefix}"} was specified (@pxref{Decl
8959 Summary}). Obsoleted by @code{-Dapi.prefix=@var{prefix}}. @xref{Multiple
8960 Parsers, ,Multiple Parsers in the Same Program}.
8964 Don't put any @code{#line} preprocessor commands in the parser
8965 implementation file. Ordinarily Bison puts them in the parser
8966 implementation file so that the C compiler and debuggers will
8967 associate errors with your source file, the grammar file. This option
8968 causes them to associate errors with the parser implementation file,
8969 treating it as an independent source file in its own right.
8972 @itemx --skeleton=@var{file}
8973 Specify the skeleton to use, similar to @code{%skeleton}
8974 (@pxref{Decl Summary, , Bison Declaration Summary}).
8976 @c You probably don't need this option unless you are developing Bison.
8977 @c You should use @option{--language} if you want to specify the skeleton for a
8978 @c different language, because it is clearer and because it will always
8979 @c choose the correct skeleton for non-deterministic or push parsers.
8981 If @var{file} does not contain a @code{/}, @var{file} is the name of a skeleton
8982 file in the Bison installation directory.
8983 If it does, @var{file} is an absolute file name or a file name relative to the
8984 current working directory.
8985 This is similar to how most shells resolve commands.
8988 @itemx --token-table
8989 Pretend that @code{%token-table} was specified. @xref{Decl Summary}.
8996 @item --defines[=@var{file}]
8997 Pretend that @code{%defines} was specified, i.e., write an extra output
8998 file containing macro definitions for the token type names defined in
8999 the grammar, as well as a few other declarations. @xref{Decl Summary}.
9002 This is the same as @code{--defines} except @code{-d} does not accept a
9003 @var{file} argument since POSIX Yacc requires that @code{-d} can be bundled
9004 with other short options.
9006 @item -b @var{file-prefix}
9007 @itemx --file-prefix=@var{prefix}
9008 Pretend that @code{%file-prefix} was specified, i.e., specify prefix to use
9009 for all Bison output file names. @xref{Decl Summary}.
9011 @item -r @var{things}
9012 @itemx --report=@var{things}
9013 Write an extra output file containing verbose description of the comma
9014 separated list of @var{things} among:
9018 Description of the grammar, conflicts (resolved and unresolved), and
9022 Implies @code{state} and augments the description of the automaton with
9023 each rule's lookahead set.
9026 Implies @code{state} and augments the description of the automaton with
9027 the full set of items for each state, instead of its core only.
9030 @item --report-file=@var{file}
9031 Specify the @var{file} for the verbose description.
9035 Pretend that @code{%verbose} was specified, i.e., write an extra output
9036 file containing verbose descriptions of the grammar and
9037 parser. @xref{Decl Summary}.
9040 @itemx --output=@var{file}
9041 Specify the @var{file} for the parser implementation file.
9043 The other output files' names are constructed from @var{file} as
9044 described under the @samp{-v} and @samp{-d} options.
9046 @item -g [@var{file}]
9047 @itemx --graph[=@var{file}]
9048 Output a graphical representation of the parser's
9049 automaton computed by Bison, in @uref{http://www.graphviz.org/, Graphviz}
9050 @uref{http://www.graphviz.org/doc/info/lang.html, DOT} format.
9051 @code{@var{file}} is optional.
9052 If omitted and the grammar file is @file{foo.y}, the output file will be
9055 @item -x [@var{file}]
9056 @itemx --xml[=@var{file}]
9057 Output an XML report of the parser's automaton computed by Bison.
9058 @code{@var{file}} is optional.
9059 If omitted and the grammar file is @file{foo.y}, the output file will be
9061 (The current XML schema is experimental and may evolve.
9062 More user feedback will help to stabilize it.)
9065 @node Option Cross Key
9066 @section Option Cross Key
9068 Here is a list of options, alphabetized by long option, to help you find
9069 the corresponding short option and directive.
9071 @multitable {@option{--force-define=@var{name}[=@var{value}]}} {@option{-F @var{name}[=@var{value}]}} {@code{%nondeterministic-parser}}
9072 @headitem Long Option @tab Short Option @tab Bison Directive
9073 @include cross-options.texi
9077 @section Yacc Library
9079 The Yacc library contains default implementations of the
9080 @code{yyerror} and @code{main} functions. These default
9081 implementations are normally not useful, but POSIX requires
9082 them. To use the Yacc library, link your program with the
9083 @option{-ly} option. Note that Bison's implementation of the Yacc
9084 library is distributed under the terms of the GNU General
9085 Public License (@pxref{Copying}).
9087 If you use the Yacc library's @code{yyerror} function, you should
9088 declare @code{yyerror} as follows:
9091 int yyerror (char const *);
9094 Bison ignores the @code{int} value returned by this @code{yyerror}.
9095 If you use the Yacc library's @code{main} function, your
9096 @code{yyparse} function should have the following type signature:
9102 @c ================================================= C++ Bison
9104 @node Other Languages
9105 @chapter Parsers Written In Other Languages
9108 * C++ Parsers:: The interface to generate C++ parser classes
9109 * Java Parsers:: The interface to generate Java parser classes
9113 @section C++ Parsers
9116 * C++ Bison Interface:: Asking for C++ parser generation
9117 * C++ Semantic Values:: %union vs. C++
9118 * C++ Location Values:: The position and location classes
9119 * C++ Parser Interface:: Instantiating and running the parser
9120 * C++ Scanner Interface:: Exchanges between yylex and parse
9121 * A Complete C++ Example:: Demonstrating their use
9124 @node C++ Bison Interface
9125 @subsection C++ Bison Interface
9126 @c - %skeleton "lalr1.cc"
9130 The C++ deterministic parser is selected using the skeleton directive,
9131 @samp{%skeleton "lalr1.cc"}, or the synonymous command-line option
9132 @option{--skeleton=lalr1.cc}.
9133 @xref{Decl Summary}.
9135 When run, @command{bison} will create several entities in the @samp{yy}
9137 @findex %define namespace
9138 Use the @samp{%define namespace} directive to change the namespace
9139 name, see @ref{%define Summary,,namespace}. The various classes are
9140 generated in the following files:
9145 The definition of the classes @code{position} and @code{location},
9146 used for location tracking. @xref{C++ Location Values}.
9149 An auxiliary class @code{stack} used by the parser.
9152 @itemx @var{file}.cc
9153 (Assuming the extension of the grammar file was @samp{.yy}.) The
9154 declaration and implementation of the C++ parser class. The basename
9155 and extension of these two files follow the same rules as with regular C
9156 parsers (@pxref{Invocation}).
9158 The header is @emph{mandatory}; you must either pass
9159 @option{-d}/@option{--defines} to @command{bison}, or use the
9160 @samp{%defines} directive.
9163 All these files are documented using Doxygen; run @command{doxygen}
9164 for a complete and accurate documentation.
9166 @node C++ Semantic Values
9167 @subsection C++ Semantic Values
9168 @c - No objects in unions
9170 @c - Printer and destructor
9172 The @code{%union} directive works as for C, see @ref{Union Decl, ,The
9173 Collection of Value Types}. In particular it produces a genuine
9174 @code{union}@footnote{In the future techniques to allow complex types
9175 within pseudo-unions (similar to Boost variants) might be implemented to
9176 alleviate these issues.}, which have a few specific features in C++.
9179 The type @code{YYSTYPE} is defined but its use is discouraged: rather
9180 you should refer to the parser's encapsulated type
9181 @code{yy::parser::semantic_type}.
9183 Non POD (Plain Old Data) types cannot be used. C++ forbids any
9184 instance of classes with constructors in unions: only @emph{pointers}
9185 to such objects are allowed.
9188 Because objects have to be stored via pointers, memory is not
9189 reclaimed automatically: using the @code{%destructor} directive is the
9190 only means to avoid leaks. @xref{Destructor Decl, , Freeing Discarded
9194 @node C++ Location Values
9195 @subsection C++ Location Values
9199 @c - %define filename_type "const symbol::Symbol"
9201 When the directive @code{%locations} is used, the C++ parser supports
9202 location tracking, see @ref{Tracking Locations}. Two auxiliary classes
9203 define a @code{position}, a single point in a file, and a @code{location}, a
9204 range composed of a pair of @code{position}s (possibly spanning several
9208 In this section @code{uint} is an abbreviation for @code{unsigned int}: in
9209 genuine code only the latter is used.
9212 * C++ position:: One point in the source file
9213 * C++ location:: Two points in the source file
9217 @subsubsection C++ @code{position}
9219 @deftypeop {Constructor} {position} {} position (std::string* @var{file} = 0, uint @var{line} = 1, uint @var{col} = 1)
9220 Create a @code{position} denoting a given point. Note that @code{file} is
9221 not reclaimed when the @code{position} is destroyed: memory managed must be
9225 @deftypemethod {position} {void} initialize (std::string* @var{file} = 0, uint @var{line} = 1, uint @var{col} = 1)
9226 Reset the position to the given values.
9229 @deftypeivar {position} {std::string*} file
9230 The name of the file. It will always be handled as a pointer, the
9231 parser will never duplicate nor deallocate it. As an experimental
9232 feature you may change it to @samp{@var{type}*} using @samp{%define
9233 filename_type "@var{type}"}.
9236 @deftypeivar {position} {uint} line
9237 The line, starting at 1.
9240 @deftypemethod {position} {uint} lines (int @var{height} = 1)
9241 Advance by @var{height} lines, resetting the column number.
9244 @deftypeivar {position} {uint} column
9245 The column, starting at 1.
9248 @deftypemethod {position} {uint} columns (int @var{width} = 1)
9249 Advance by @var{width} columns, without changing the line number.
9252 @deftypemethod {position} {position&} operator+= (int @var{width})
9253 @deftypemethodx {position} {position} operator+ (int @var{width})
9254 @deftypemethodx {position} {position&} operator-= (int @var{width})
9255 @deftypemethodx {position} {position} operator- (int @var{width})
9256 Various forms of syntactic sugar for @code{columns}.
9259 @deftypemethod {position} {bool} operator== (const position& @var{that})
9260 @deftypemethodx {position} {bool} operator!= (const position& @var{that})
9261 Whether @code{*this} and @code{that} denote equal/different positions.
9264 @deftypefun {std::ostream&} operator<< (std::ostream& @var{o}, const position& @var{p})
9265 Report @var{p} on @var{o} like this:
9266 @samp{@var{file}:@var{line}.@var{column}}, or
9267 @samp{@var{line}.@var{column}} if @var{file} is null.
9271 @subsubsection C++ @code{location}
9273 @deftypeop {Constructor} {location} {} location (const position& @var{begin}, const position& @var{end})
9274 Create a @code{Location} from the endpoints of the range.
9277 @deftypeop {Constructor} {location} {} location (const position& @var{pos} = position())
9278 @deftypeopx {Constructor} {location} {} location (std::string* @var{file}, uint @var{line}, uint @var{col})
9279 Create a @code{Location} denoting an empty range located at a given point.
9282 @deftypemethod {location} {void} initialize (std::string* @var{file} = 0, uint @var{line} = 1, uint @var{col} = 1)
9283 Reset the location to an empty range at the given values.
9286 @deftypeivar {location} {position} begin
9287 @deftypeivarx {location} {position} end
9288 The first, inclusive, position of the range, and the first beyond.
9291 @deftypemethod {location} {uint} columns (int @var{width} = 1)
9292 @deftypemethodx {location} {uint} lines (int @var{height} = 1)
9293 Advance the @code{end} position.
9296 @deftypemethod {location} {location} operator+ (const location& @var{end})
9297 @deftypemethodx {location} {location} operator+ (int @var{width})
9298 @deftypemethodx {location} {location} operator+= (int @var{width})
9299 Various forms of syntactic sugar.
9302 @deftypemethod {location} {void} step ()
9303 Move @code{begin} onto @code{end}.
9306 @deftypemethod {location} {bool} operator== (const location& @var{that})
9307 @deftypemethodx {location} {bool} operator!= (const location& @var{that})
9308 Whether @code{*this} and @code{that} denote equal/different ranges of
9312 @deftypefun {std::ostream&} operator<< (std::ostream& @var{o}, const location& @var{p})
9313 Report @var{p} on @var{o}, taking care of special cases such as: no
9314 @code{filename} defined, or equal filename/line or column.
9317 @node C++ Parser Interface
9318 @subsection C++ Parser Interface
9319 @c - define parser_class_name
9321 @c - parse, error, set_debug_level, debug_level, set_debug_stream,
9323 @c - Reporting errors
9325 The output files @file{@var{output}.hh} and @file{@var{output}.cc}
9326 declare and define the parser class in the namespace @code{yy}. The
9327 class name defaults to @code{parser}, but may be changed using
9328 @samp{%define parser_class_name "@var{name}"}. The interface of
9329 this class is detailed below. It can be extended using the
9330 @code{%parse-param} feature: its semantics is slightly changed since
9331 it describes an additional member of the parser class, and an
9332 additional argument for its constructor.
9334 @defcv {Type} {parser} {semantic_type}
9335 @defcvx {Type} {parser} {location_type}
9336 The types for semantics value and locations.
9339 @defcv {Type} {parser} {token}
9340 A structure that contains (only) the @code{yytokentype} enumeration, which
9341 defines the tokens. To refer to the token @code{FOO},
9342 use @code{yy::parser::token::FOO}. The scanner can use
9343 @samp{typedef yy::parser::token token;} to ``import'' the token enumeration
9344 (@pxref{Calc++ Scanner}).
9347 @deftypemethod {parser} {} parser (@var{type1} @var{arg1}, ...)
9348 Build a new parser object. There are no arguments by default, unless
9349 @samp{%parse-param @{@var{type1} @var{arg1}@}} was used.
9352 @deftypemethod {parser} {int} parse ()
9353 Run the syntactic analysis, and return 0 on success, 1 otherwise.
9356 @deftypemethod {parser} {std::ostream&} debug_stream ()
9357 @deftypemethodx {parser} {void} set_debug_stream (std::ostream& @var{o})
9358 Get or set the stream used for tracing the parsing. It defaults to
9362 @deftypemethod {parser} {debug_level_type} debug_level ()
9363 @deftypemethodx {parser} {void} set_debug_level (debug_level @var{l})
9364 Get or set the tracing level. Currently its value is either 0, no trace,
9365 or nonzero, full tracing.
9368 @deftypemethod {parser} {void} error (const location_type& @var{l}, const std::string& @var{m})
9369 The definition for this member function must be supplied by the user:
9370 the parser uses it to report a parser error occurring at @var{l},
9371 described by @var{m}.
9375 @node C++ Scanner Interface
9376 @subsection C++ Scanner Interface
9377 @c - prefix for yylex.
9378 @c - Pure interface to yylex
9381 The parser invokes the scanner by calling @code{yylex}. Contrary to C
9382 parsers, C++ parsers are always pure: there is no point in using the
9383 @code{%define api.pure} directive. Therefore the interface is as follows.
9385 @deftypemethod {parser} {int} yylex (semantic_type* @var{yylval}, location_type* @var{yylloc}, @var{type1} @var{arg1}, ...)
9386 Return the next token. Its type is the return value, its semantic
9387 value and location being @var{yylval} and @var{yylloc}. Invocations of
9388 @samp{%lex-param @{@var{type1} @var{arg1}@}} yield additional arguments.
9392 @node A Complete C++ Example
9393 @subsection A Complete C++ Example
9395 This section demonstrates the use of a C++ parser with a simple but
9396 complete example. This example should be available on your system,
9397 ready to compile, in the directory @dfn{../bison/examples/calc++}. It
9398 focuses on the use of Bison, therefore the design of the various C++
9399 classes is very naive: no accessors, no encapsulation of members etc.
9400 We will use a Lex scanner, and more precisely, a Flex scanner, to
9401 demonstrate the various interaction. A hand written scanner is
9402 actually easier to interface with.
9405 * Calc++ --- C++ Calculator:: The specifications
9406 * Calc++ Parsing Driver:: An active parsing context
9407 * Calc++ Parser:: A parser class
9408 * Calc++ Scanner:: A pure C++ Flex scanner
9409 * Calc++ Top Level:: Conducting the band
9412 @node Calc++ --- C++ Calculator
9413 @subsubsection Calc++ --- C++ Calculator
9415 Of course the grammar is dedicated to arithmetics, a single
9416 expression, possibly preceded by variable assignments. An
9417 environment containing possibly predefined variables such as
9418 @code{one} and @code{two}, is exchanged with the parser. An example
9419 of valid input follows.
9423 seven := one + two * three
9427 @node Calc++ Parsing Driver
9428 @subsubsection Calc++ Parsing Driver
9430 @c - A place to store error messages
9431 @c - A place for the result
9433 To support a pure interface with the parser (and the scanner) the
9434 technique of the ``parsing context'' is convenient: a structure
9435 containing all the data to exchange. Since, in addition to simply
9436 launch the parsing, there are several auxiliary tasks to execute (open
9437 the file for parsing, instantiate the parser etc.), we recommend
9438 transforming the simple parsing context structure into a fully blown
9439 @dfn{parsing driver} class.
9441 The declaration of this driver class, @file{calc++-driver.hh}, is as
9442 follows. The first part includes the CPP guard and imports the
9443 required standard library components, and the declaration of the parser
9446 @comment file: calc++-driver.hh
9448 #ifndef CALCXX_DRIVER_HH
9449 # define CALCXX_DRIVER_HH
9452 # include "calc++-parser.hh"
9457 Then comes the declaration of the scanning function. Flex expects
9458 the signature of @code{yylex} to be defined in the macro
9459 @code{YY_DECL}, and the C++ parser expects it to be declared. We can
9460 factor both as follows.
9462 @comment file: calc++-driver.hh
9464 // Tell Flex the lexer's prototype ...
9466 yy::calcxx_parser::token_type \
9467 yylex (yy::calcxx_parser::semantic_type* yylval, \
9468 yy::calcxx_parser::location_type* yylloc, \
9469 calcxx_driver& driver)
9470 // ... and declare it for the parser's sake.
9475 The @code{calcxx_driver} class is then declared with its most obvious
9478 @comment file: calc++-driver.hh
9480 // Conducting the whole scanning and parsing of Calc++.
9485 virtual ~calcxx_driver ();
9487 std::map<std::string, int> variables;
9493 To encapsulate the coordination with the Flex scanner, it is useful to
9494 have two members function to open and close the scanning phase.
9496 @comment file: calc++-driver.hh
9498 // Handling the scanner.
9501 bool trace_scanning;
9505 Similarly for the parser itself.
9507 @comment file: calc++-driver.hh
9509 // Run the parser. Return 0 on success.
9510 int parse (const std::string& f);
9516 To demonstrate pure handling of parse errors, instead of simply
9517 dumping them on the standard error output, we will pass them to the
9518 compiler driver using the following two member functions. Finally, we
9519 close the class declaration and CPP guard.
9521 @comment file: calc++-driver.hh
9524 void error (const yy::location& l, const std::string& m);
9525 void error (const std::string& m);
9527 #endif // ! CALCXX_DRIVER_HH
9530 The implementation of the driver is straightforward. The @code{parse}
9531 member function deserves some attention. The @code{error} functions
9532 are simple stubs, they should actually register the located error
9533 messages and set error state.
9535 @comment file: calc++-driver.cc
9537 #include "calc++-driver.hh"
9538 #include "calc++-parser.hh"
9540 calcxx_driver::calcxx_driver ()
9541 : trace_scanning (false), trace_parsing (false)
9543 variables["one"] = 1;
9544 variables["two"] = 2;
9547 calcxx_driver::~calcxx_driver ()
9552 calcxx_driver::parse (const std::string &f)
9556 yy::calcxx_parser parser (*this);
9557 parser.set_debug_level (trace_parsing);
9558 int res = parser.parse ();
9564 calcxx_driver::error (const yy::location& l, const std::string& m)
9566 std::cerr << l << ": " << m << std::endl;
9570 calcxx_driver::error (const std::string& m)
9572 std::cerr << m << std::endl;
9577 @subsubsection Calc++ Parser
9579 The grammar file @file{calc++-parser.yy} starts by asking for the C++
9580 deterministic parser skeleton, the creation of the parser header file,
9581 and specifies the name of the parser class. Because the C++ skeleton
9582 changed several times, it is safer to require the version you designed
9585 @comment file: calc++-parser.yy
9587 %skeleton "lalr1.cc" /* -*- C++ -*- */
9588 %require "@value{VERSION}"
9590 %define parser_class_name "calcxx_parser"
9594 @findex %code requires
9595 Then come the declarations/inclusions needed to define the
9596 @code{%union}. Because the parser uses the parsing driver and
9597 reciprocally, both cannot include the header of the other. Because the
9598 driver's header needs detailed knowledge about the parser class (in
9599 particular its inner types), it is the parser's header which will simply
9600 use a forward declaration of the driver.
9601 @xref{%code Summary}.
9603 @comment file: calc++-parser.yy
9607 class calcxx_driver;
9612 The driver is passed by reference to the parser and to the scanner.
9613 This provides a simple but effective pure interface, not relying on
9616 @comment file: calc++-parser.yy
9618 // The parsing context.
9619 %parse-param @{ calcxx_driver& driver @}
9620 %lex-param @{ calcxx_driver& driver @}
9624 Then we request the location tracking feature, and initialize the
9625 first location's file name. Afterward new locations are computed
9626 relatively to the previous locations: the file name will be
9627 automatically propagated.
9629 @comment file: calc++-parser.yy
9634 // Initialize the initial location.
9635 @@$.begin.filename = @@$.end.filename = &driver.file;
9640 Use the two following directives to enable parser tracing and verbose error
9641 messages. However, verbose error messages can contain incorrect information
9644 @comment file: calc++-parser.yy
9651 Semantic values cannot use ``real'' objects, but only pointers to
9654 @comment file: calc++-parser.yy
9666 The code between @samp{%code @{} and @samp{@}} is output in the
9667 @file{*.cc} file; it needs detailed knowledge about the driver.
9669 @comment file: calc++-parser.yy
9672 # include "calc++-driver.hh"
9678 The token numbered as 0 corresponds to end of file; the following line
9679 allows for nicer error messages referring to ``end of file'' instead
9680 of ``$end''. Similarly user friendly named are provided for each
9681 symbol. Note that the tokens names are prefixed by @code{TOKEN_} to
9684 @comment file: calc++-parser.yy
9686 %token END 0 "end of file"
9688 %token <sval> IDENTIFIER "identifier"
9689 %token <ival> NUMBER "number"
9694 To enable memory deallocation during error recovery, use
9697 @c FIXME: Document %printer, and mention that it takes a braced-code operand.
9698 @comment file: calc++-parser.yy
9700 %printer @{ yyoutput << *$$; @} "identifier"
9701 %destructor @{ delete $$; @} "identifier"
9703 %printer @{ yyoutput << $$; @} <ival>
9707 The grammar itself is straightforward.
9709 @comment file: calc++-parser.yy
9713 unit: assignments exp @{ driver.result = $2; @};
9717 | assignments assignment @{@};
9720 "identifier" ":=" exp
9721 @{ driver.variables[*$1] = $3; delete $1; @};
9725 exp: exp '+' exp @{ $$ = $1 + $3; @}
9726 | exp '-' exp @{ $$ = $1 - $3; @}
9727 | exp '*' exp @{ $$ = $1 * $3; @}
9728 | exp '/' exp @{ $$ = $1 / $3; @}
9729 | "identifier" @{ $$ = driver.variables[*$1]; delete $1; @}
9730 | "number" @{ $$ = $1; @};
9735 Finally the @code{error} member function registers the errors to the
9738 @comment file: calc++-parser.yy
9741 yy::calcxx_parser::error (const yy::calcxx_parser::location_type& l,
9742 const std::string& m)
9744 driver.error (l, m);
9748 @node Calc++ Scanner
9749 @subsubsection Calc++ Scanner
9751 The Flex scanner first includes the driver declaration, then the
9752 parser's to get the set of defined tokens.
9754 @comment file: calc++-scanner.ll
9756 %@{ /* -*- C++ -*- */
9761 # include "calc++-driver.hh"
9762 # include "calc++-parser.hh"
9764 /* Work around an incompatibility in flex (at least versions
9765 2.5.31 through 2.5.33): it generates code that does
9766 not conform to C89. See Debian bug 333231
9767 <http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=333231>. */
9771 /* By default yylex returns int, we use token_type.
9772 Unfortunately yyterminate by default returns 0, which is
9773 not of token_type. */
9774 #define yyterminate() return token::END
9779 Because there is no @code{#include}-like feature we don't need
9780 @code{yywrap}, we don't need @code{unput} either, and we parse an
9781 actual file, this is not an interactive session with the user.
9782 Finally we enable the scanner tracing features.
9784 @comment file: calc++-scanner.ll
9786 %option noyywrap nounput batch debug
9790 Abbreviations allow for more readable rules.
9792 @comment file: calc++-scanner.ll
9794 id [a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z_0-9]*
9800 The following paragraph suffices to track locations accurately. Each
9801 time @code{yylex} is invoked, the begin position is moved onto the end
9802 position. Then when a pattern is matched, the end position is
9803 advanced of its width. In case it matched ends of lines, the end
9804 cursor is adjusted, and each time blanks are matched, the begin cursor
9805 is moved onto the end cursor to effectively ignore the blanks
9806 preceding tokens. Comments would be treated equally.
9808 @comment file: calc++-scanner.ll
9812 # define YY_USER_ACTION yylloc->columns (yyleng);
9819 @{blank@}+ yylloc->step ();
9820 [\n]+ yylloc->lines (yyleng); yylloc->step ();
9824 The rules are simple, just note the use of the driver to report errors.
9825 It is convenient to use a typedef to shorten
9826 @code{yy::calcxx_parser::token::identifier} into
9827 @code{token::identifier} for instance.
9829 @comment file: calc++-scanner.ll
9832 typedef yy::calcxx_parser::token token;
9834 /* Convert ints to the actual type of tokens. */
9835 [-+*/] return yy::calcxx_parser::token_type (yytext[0]);
9836 ":=" return token::ASSIGN;
9839 long n = strtol (yytext, NULL, 10);
9840 if (! (INT_MIN <= n && n <= INT_MAX && errno != ERANGE))
9841 driver.error (*yylloc, "integer is out of range");
9843 return token::NUMBER;
9845 @{id@} yylval->sval = new std::string (yytext); return token::IDENTIFIER;
9846 . driver.error (*yylloc, "invalid character");
9851 Finally, because the scanner related driver's member function depend
9852 on the scanner's data, it is simpler to implement them in this file.
9854 @comment file: calc++-scanner.ll
9858 calcxx_driver::scan_begin ()
9860 yy_flex_debug = trace_scanning;
9861 if (file.empty () || file == "-")
9863 else if (!(yyin = fopen (file.c_str (), "r")))
9865 error ("cannot open " + file + ": " + strerror(errno));
9866 exit (EXIT_FAILURE);
9873 calcxx_driver::scan_end ()
9880 @node Calc++ Top Level
9881 @subsubsection Calc++ Top Level
9883 The top level file, @file{calc++.cc}, poses no problem.
9885 @comment file: calc++.cc
9888 #include "calc++-driver.hh"
9892 main (int argc, char *argv[])
9894 calcxx_driver driver;
9895 for (int i = 1; i < argc; ++i)
9896 if (argv[i] == std::string ("-p"))
9897 driver.trace_parsing = true;
9898 else if (argv[i] == std::string ("-s"))
9899 driver.trace_scanning = true;
9900 else if (!driver.parse (argv[i]))
9901 std::cout << driver.result << std::endl;
9907 @section Java Parsers
9910 * Java Bison Interface:: Asking for Java parser generation
9911 * Java Semantic Values:: %type and %token vs. Java
9912 * Java Location Values:: The position and location classes
9913 * Java Parser Interface:: Instantiating and running the parser
9914 * Java Scanner Interface:: Specifying the scanner for the parser
9915 * Java Action Features:: Special features for use in actions
9916 * Java Differences:: Differences between C/C++ and Java Grammars
9917 * Java Declarations Summary:: List of Bison declarations used with Java
9920 @node Java Bison Interface
9921 @subsection Java Bison Interface
9922 @c - %language "Java"
9924 (The current Java interface is experimental and may evolve.
9925 More user feedback will help to stabilize it.)
9927 The Java parser skeletons are selected using the @code{%language "Java"}
9928 directive or the @option{-L java}/@option{--language=java} option.
9930 @c FIXME: Documented bug.
9931 When generating a Java parser, @code{bison @var{basename}.y} will
9932 create a single Java source file named @file{@var{basename}.java}
9933 containing the parser implementation. Using a grammar file without a
9934 @file{.y} suffix is currently broken. The basename of the parser
9935 implementation file can be changed by the @code{%file-prefix}
9936 directive or the @option{-p}/@option{--name-prefix} option. The
9937 entire parser implementation file name can be changed by the
9938 @code{%output} directive or the @option{-o}/@option{--output} option.
9939 The parser implementation file contains a single class for the parser.
9941 You can create documentation for generated parsers using Javadoc.
9943 Contrary to C parsers, Java parsers do not use global variables; the
9944 state of the parser is always local to an instance of the parser class.
9945 Therefore, all Java parsers are ``pure'', and the @code{%pure-parser}
9946 and @code{%define api.pure} directives does not do anything when used in
9949 Push parsers are currently unsupported in Java and @code{%define
9950 api.push-pull} have no effect.
9952 GLR parsers are currently unsupported in Java. Do not use the
9953 @code{glr-parser} directive.
9955 No header file can be generated for Java parsers. Do not use the
9956 @code{%defines} directive or the @option{-d}/@option{--defines} options.
9958 @c FIXME: Possible code change.
9959 Currently, support for debugging and verbose errors are always compiled
9960 in. Thus the @code{%debug} and @code{%token-table} directives and the
9961 @option{-t}/@option{--debug} and @option{-k}/@option{--token-table}
9962 options have no effect. This may change in the future to eliminate
9963 unused code in the generated parser, so use @code{%debug} and
9964 @code{%verbose-error} explicitly if needed. Also, in the future the
9965 @code{%token-table} directive might enable a public interface to
9966 access the token names and codes.
9968 @node Java Semantic Values
9969 @subsection Java Semantic Values
9970 @c - No %union, specify type in %type/%token.
9972 @c - Printer and destructor
9974 There is no @code{%union} directive in Java parsers. Instead, the
9975 semantic values' types (class names) should be specified in the
9976 @code{%type} or @code{%token} directive:
9979 %type <Expression> expr assignment_expr term factor
9980 %type <Integer> number
9983 By default, the semantic stack is declared to have @code{Object} members,
9984 which means that the class types you specify can be of any class.
9985 To improve the type safety of the parser, you can declare the common
9986 superclass of all the semantic values using the @code{%define stype}
9987 directive. For example, after the following declaration:
9990 %define stype "ASTNode"
9994 any @code{%type} or @code{%token} specifying a semantic type which
9995 is not a subclass of ASTNode, will cause a compile-time error.
9997 @c FIXME: Documented bug.
9998 Types used in the directives may be qualified with a package name.
9999 Primitive data types are accepted for Java version 1.5 or later. Note
10000 that in this case the autoboxing feature of Java 1.5 will be used.
10001 Generic types may not be used; this is due to a limitation in the
10002 implementation of Bison, and may change in future releases.
10004 Java parsers do not support @code{%destructor}, since the language
10005 adopts garbage collection. The parser will try to hold references
10006 to semantic values for as little time as needed.
10008 Java parsers do not support @code{%printer}, as @code{toString()}
10009 can be used to print the semantic values. This however may change
10010 (in a backwards-compatible way) in future versions of Bison.
10013 @node Java Location Values
10014 @subsection Java Location Values
10016 @c - class Position
10017 @c - class Location
10019 When the directive @code{%locations} is used, the Java parser supports
10020 location tracking, see @ref{Tracking Locations}. An auxiliary user-defined
10021 class defines a @dfn{position}, a single point in a file; Bison itself
10022 defines a class representing a @dfn{location}, a range composed of a pair of
10023 positions (possibly spanning several files). The location class is an inner
10024 class of the parser; the name is @code{Location} by default, and may also be
10025 renamed using @code{%define location_type "@var{class-name}"}.
10027 The location class treats the position as a completely opaque value.
10028 By default, the class name is @code{Position}, but this can be changed
10029 with @code{%define position_type "@var{class-name}"}. This class must
10030 be supplied by the user.
10033 @deftypeivar {Location} {Position} begin
10034 @deftypeivarx {Location} {Position} end
10035 The first, inclusive, position of the range, and the first beyond.
10038 @deftypeop {Constructor} {Location} {} Location (Position @var{loc})
10039 Create a @code{Location} denoting an empty range located at a given point.
10042 @deftypeop {Constructor} {Location} {} Location (Position @var{begin}, Position @var{end})
10043 Create a @code{Location} from the endpoints of the range.
10046 @deftypemethod {Location} {String} toString ()
10047 Prints the range represented by the location. For this to work
10048 properly, the position class should override the @code{equals} and
10049 @code{toString} methods appropriately.
10053 @node Java Parser Interface
10054 @subsection Java Parser Interface
10055 @c - define parser_class_name
10057 @c - parse, error, set_debug_level, debug_level, set_debug_stream,
10059 @c - Reporting errors
10061 The name of the generated parser class defaults to @code{YYParser}. The
10062 @code{YY} prefix may be changed using the @code{%name-prefix} directive
10063 or the @option{-p}/@option{--name-prefix} option. Alternatively, use
10064 @code{%define parser_class_name "@var{name}"} to give a custom name to
10065 the class. The interface of this class is detailed below.
10067 By default, the parser class has package visibility. A declaration
10068 @code{%define public} will change to public visibility. Remember that,
10069 according to the Java language specification, the name of the @file{.java}
10070 file should match the name of the class in this case. Similarly, you can
10071 use @code{abstract}, @code{final} and @code{strictfp} with the
10072 @code{%define} declaration to add other modifiers to the parser class.
10074 The Java package name of the parser class can be specified using the
10075 @code{%define package} directive. The superclass and the implemented
10076 interfaces of the parser class can be specified with the @code{%define
10077 extends} and @code{%define implements} directives.
10079 The parser class defines an inner class, @code{Location}, that is used
10080 for location tracking (see @ref{Java Location Values}), and a inner
10081 interface, @code{Lexer} (see @ref{Java Scanner Interface}). Other than
10082 these inner class/interface, and the members described in the interface
10083 below, all the other members and fields are preceded with a @code{yy} or
10084 @code{YY} prefix to avoid clashes with user code.
10086 @c FIXME: The following constants and variables are still undocumented:
10087 @c @code{bisonVersion}, @code{bisonSkeleton} and @code{errorVerbose}.
10089 The parser class can be extended using the @code{%parse-param}
10090 directive. Each occurrence of the directive will add a @code{protected
10091 final} field to the parser class, and an argument to its constructor,
10092 which initialize them automatically.
10094 Token names defined by @code{%token} and the predefined @code{EOF} token
10095 name are added as constant fields to the parser class.
10097 @deftypeop {Constructor} {YYParser} {} YYParser (@var{lex_param}, @dots{}, @var{parse_param}, @dots{})
10098 Build a new parser object with embedded @code{%code lexer}. There are
10099 no parameters, unless @code{%parse-param}s and/or @code{%lex-param}s are
10103 @deftypeop {Constructor} {YYParser} {} YYParser (Lexer @var{lexer}, @var{parse_param}, @dots{})
10104 Build a new parser object using the specified scanner. There are no
10105 additional parameters unless @code{%parse-param}s are used.
10107 If the scanner is defined by @code{%code lexer}, this constructor is
10108 declared @code{protected} and is called automatically with a scanner
10109 created with the correct @code{%lex-param}s.
10112 @deftypemethod {YYParser} {boolean} parse ()
10113 Run the syntactic analysis, and return @code{true} on success,
10114 @code{false} otherwise.
10117 @deftypemethod {YYParser} {boolean} recovering ()
10118 During the syntactic analysis, return @code{true} if recovering
10119 from a syntax error.
10120 @xref{Error Recovery}.
10123 @deftypemethod {YYParser} {java.io.PrintStream} getDebugStream ()
10124 @deftypemethodx {YYParser} {void} setDebugStream (java.io.printStream @var{o})
10125 Get or set the stream used for tracing the parsing. It defaults to
10129 @deftypemethod {YYParser} {int} getDebugLevel ()
10130 @deftypemethodx {YYParser} {void} setDebugLevel (int @var{l})
10131 Get or set the tracing level. Currently its value is either 0, no trace,
10132 or nonzero, full tracing.
10136 @node Java Scanner Interface
10137 @subsection Java Scanner Interface
10140 @c - Lexer interface
10142 There are two possible ways to interface a Bison-generated Java parser
10143 with a scanner: the scanner may be defined by @code{%code lexer}, or
10144 defined elsewhere. In either case, the scanner has to implement the
10145 @code{Lexer} inner interface of the parser class.
10147 In the first case, the body of the scanner class is placed in
10148 @code{%code lexer} blocks. If you want to pass parameters from the
10149 parser constructor to the scanner constructor, specify them with
10150 @code{%lex-param}; they are passed before @code{%parse-param}s to the
10153 In the second case, the scanner has to implement the @code{Lexer} interface,
10154 which is defined within the parser class (e.g., @code{YYParser.Lexer}).
10155 The constructor of the parser object will then accept an object
10156 implementing the interface; @code{%lex-param} is not used in this
10159 In both cases, the scanner has to implement the following methods.
10161 @deftypemethod {Lexer} {void} yyerror (Location @var{loc}, String @var{msg})
10162 This method is defined by the user to emit an error message. The first
10163 parameter is omitted if location tracking is not active. Its type can be
10164 changed using @code{%define location_type "@var{class-name}".}
10167 @deftypemethod {Lexer} {int} yylex ()
10168 Return the next token. Its type is the return value, its semantic
10169 value and location are saved and returned by the their methods in the
10172 Use @code{%define lex_throws} to specify any uncaught exceptions.
10173 Default is @code{java.io.IOException}.
10176 @deftypemethod {Lexer} {Position} getStartPos ()
10177 @deftypemethodx {Lexer} {Position} getEndPos ()
10178 Return respectively the first position of the last token that
10179 @code{yylex} returned, and the first position beyond it. These
10180 methods are not needed unless location tracking is active.
10182 The return type can be changed using @code{%define position_type
10183 "@var{class-name}".}
10186 @deftypemethod {Lexer} {Object} getLVal ()
10187 Return the semantic value of the last token that yylex returned.
10189 The return type can be changed using @code{%define stype
10190 "@var{class-name}".}
10194 @node Java Action Features
10195 @subsection Special Features for Use in Java Actions
10197 The following special constructs can be uses in Java actions.
10198 Other analogous C action features are currently unavailable for Java.
10200 Use @code{%define throws} to specify any uncaught exceptions from parser
10201 actions, and initial actions specified by @code{%initial-action}.
10204 The semantic value for the @var{n}th component of the current rule.
10205 This may not be assigned to.
10206 @xref{Java Semantic Values}.
10209 @defvar $<@var{typealt}>@var{n}
10210 Like @code{$@var{n}} but specifies a alternative type @var{typealt}.
10211 @xref{Java Semantic Values}.
10215 The semantic value for the grouping made by the current rule. As a
10216 value, this is in the base type (@code{Object} or as specified by
10217 @code{%define stype}) as in not cast to the declared subtype because
10218 casts are not allowed on the left-hand side of Java assignments.
10219 Use an explicit Java cast if the correct subtype is needed.
10220 @xref{Java Semantic Values}.
10223 @defvar $<@var{typealt}>$
10224 Same as @code{$$} since Java always allow assigning to the base type.
10225 Perhaps we should use this and @code{$<>$} for the value and @code{$$}
10226 for setting the value but there is currently no easy way to distinguish
10228 @xref{Java Semantic Values}.
10232 The location information of the @var{n}th component of the current rule.
10233 This may not be assigned to.
10234 @xref{Java Location Values}.
10238 The location information of the grouping made by the current rule.
10239 @xref{Java Location Values}.
10242 @deftypefn {Statement} return YYABORT @code{;}
10243 Return immediately from the parser, indicating failure.
10244 @xref{Java Parser Interface}.
10247 @deftypefn {Statement} return YYACCEPT @code{;}
10248 Return immediately from the parser, indicating success.
10249 @xref{Java Parser Interface}.
10252 @deftypefn {Statement} {return} YYERROR @code{;}
10253 Start error recovery (without printing an error message).
10254 @xref{Error Recovery}.
10257 @deftypefn {Function} {boolean} recovering ()
10258 Return whether error recovery is being done. In this state, the parser
10259 reads token until it reaches a known state, and then restarts normal
10261 @xref{Error Recovery}.
10264 @deftypefn {Function} {protected void} yyerror (String msg)
10265 @deftypefnx {Function} {protected void} yyerror (Position pos, String msg)
10266 @deftypefnx {Function} {protected void} yyerror (Location loc, String msg)
10267 Print an error message using the @code{yyerror} method of the scanner
10272 @node Java Differences
10273 @subsection Differences between C/C++ and Java Grammars
10275 The different structure of the Java language forces several differences
10276 between C/C++ grammars, and grammars designed for Java parsers. This
10277 section summarizes these differences.
10281 Java lacks a preprocessor, so the @code{YYERROR}, @code{YYACCEPT},
10282 @code{YYABORT} symbols (@pxref{Table of Symbols}) cannot obviously be
10283 macros. Instead, they should be preceded by @code{return} when they
10284 appear in an action. The actual definition of these symbols is
10285 opaque to the Bison grammar, and it might change in the future. The
10286 only meaningful operation that you can do, is to return them.
10287 @xref{Java Action Features}.
10289 Note that of these three symbols, only @code{YYACCEPT} and
10290 @code{YYABORT} will cause a return from the @code{yyparse}
10291 method@footnote{Java parsers include the actions in a separate
10292 method than @code{yyparse} in order to have an intuitive syntax that
10293 corresponds to these C macros.}.
10296 Java lacks unions, so @code{%union} has no effect. Instead, semantic
10297 values have a common base type: @code{Object} or as specified by
10298 @samp{%define stype}. Angle brackets on @code{%token}, @code{type},
10299 @code{$@var{n}} and @code{$$} specify subtypes rather than fields of
10300 an union. The type of @code{$$}, even with angle brackets, is the base
10301 type since Java casts are not allow on the left-hand side of assignments.
10302 Also, @code{$@var{n}} and @code{@@@var{n}} are not allowed on the
10303 left-hand side of assignments. @xref{Java Semantic Values}, and
10304 @ref{Java Action Features}.
10307 The prologue declarations have a different meaning than in C/C++ code.
10309 @item @code{%code imports}
10310 blocks are placed at the beginning of the Java source code. They may
10311 include copyright notices. For a @code{package} declarations, it is
10312 suggested to use @code{%define package} instead.
10314 @item unqualified @code{%code}
10315 blocks are placed inside the parser class.
10317 @item @code{%code lexer}
10318 blocks, if specified, should include the implementation of the
10319 scanner. If there is no such block, the scanner can be any class
10320 that implements the appropriate interface (@pxref{Java Scanner
10324 Other @code{%code} blocks are not supported in Java parsers.
10325 In particular, @code{%@{ @dots{} %@}} blocks should not be used
10326 and may give an error in future versions of Bison.
10328 The epilogue has the same meaning as in C/C++ code and it can
10329 be used to define other classes used by the parser @emph{outside}
10334 @node Java Declarations Summary
10335 @subsection Java Declarations Summary
10337 This summary only include declarations specific to Java or have special
10338 meaning when used in a Java parser.
10340 @deffn {Directive} {%language "Java"}
10341 Generate a Java class for the parser.
10344 @deffn {Directive} %lex-param @{@var{type} @var{name}@}
10345 A parameter for the lexer class defined by @code{%code lexer}
10346 @emph{only}, added as parameters to the lexer constructor and the parser
10347 constructor that @emph{creates} a lexer. Default is none.
10348 @xref{Java Scanner Interface}.
10351 @deffn {Directive} %name-prefix "@var{prefix}"
10352 The prefix of the parser class name @code{@var{prefix}Parser} if
10353 @code{%define parser_class_name} is not used. Default is @code{YY}.
10354 @xref{Java Bison Interface}.
10357 @deffn {Directive} %parse-param @{@var{type} @var{name}@}
10358 A parameter for the parser class added as parameters to constructor(s)
10359 and as fields initialized by the constructor(s). Default is none.
10360 @xref{Java Parser Interface}.
10363 @deffn {Directive} %token <@var{type}> @var{token} @dots{}
10364 Declare tokens. Note that the angle brackets enclose a Java @emph{type}.
10365 @xref{Java Semantic Values}.
10368 @deffn {Directive} %type <@var{type}> @var{nonterminal} @dots{}
10369 Declare the type of nonterminals. Note that the angle brackets enclose
10370 a Java @emph{type}.
10371 @xref{Java Semantic Values}.
10374 @deffn {Directive} %code @{ @var{code} @dots{} @}
10375 Code appended to the inside of the parser class.
10376 @xref{Java Differences}.
10379 @deffn {Directive} {%code imports} @{ @var{code} @dots{} @}
10380 Code inserted just after the @code{package} declaration.
10381 @xref{Java Differences}.
10384 @deffn {Directive} {%code lexer} @{ @var{code} @dots{} @}
10385 Code added to the body of a inner lexer class within the parser class.
10386 @xref{Java Scanner Interface}.
10389 @deffn {Directive} %% @var{code} @dots{}
10390 Code (after the second @code{%%}) appended to the end of the file,
10391 @emph{outside} the parser class.
10392 @xref{Java Differences}.
10395 @deffn {Directive} %@{ @var{code} @dots{} %@}
10396 Not supported. Use @code{%code import} instead.
10397 @xref{Java Differences}.
10400 @deffn {Directive} {%define abstract}
10401 Whether the parser class is declared @code{abstract}. Default is false.
10402 @xref{Java Bison Interface}.
10405 @deffn {Directive} {%define extends} "@var{superclass}"
10406 The superclass of the parser class. Default is none.
10407 @xref{Java Bison Interface}.
10410 @deffn {Directive} {%define final}
10411 Whether the parser class is declared @code{final}. Default is false.
10412 @xref{Java Bison Interface}.
10415 @deffn {Directive} {%define implements} "@var{interfaces}"
10416 The implemented interfaces of the parser class, a comma-separated list.
10418 @xref{Java Bison Interface}.
10421 @deffn {Directive} {%define lex_throws} "@var{exceptions}"
10422 The exceptions thrown by the @code{yylex} method of the lexer, a
10423 comma-separated list. Default is @code{java.io.IOException}.
10424 @xref{Java Scanner Interface}.
10427 @deffn {Directive} {%define location_type} "@var{class}"
10428 The name of the class used for locations (a range between two
10429 positions). This class is generated as an inner class of the parser
10430 class by @command{bison}. Default is @code{Location}.
10431 @xref{Java Location Values}.
10434 @deffn {Directive} {%define package} "@var{package}"
10435 The package to put the parser class in. Default is none.
10436 @xref{Java Bison Interface}.
10439 @deffn {Directive} {%define parser_class_name} "@var{name}"
10440 The name of the parser class. Default is @code{YYParser} or
10441 @code{@var{name-prefix}Parser}.
10442 @xref{Java Bison Interface}.
10445 @deffn {Directive} {%define position_type} "@var{class}"
10446 The name of the class used for positions. This class must be supplied by
10447 the user. Default is @code{Position}.
10448 @xref{Java Location Values}.
10451 @deffn {Directive} {%define public}
10452 Whether the parser class is declared @code{public}. Default is false.
10453 @xref{Java Bison Interface}.
10456 @deffn {Directive} {%define stype} "@var{class}"
10457 The base type of semantic values. Default is @code{Object}.
10458 @xref{Java Semantic Values}.
10461 @deffn {Directive} {%define strictfp}
10462 Whether the parser class is declared @code{strictfp}. Default is false.
10463 @xref{Java Bison Interface}.
10466 @deffn {Directive} {%define throws} "@var{exceptions}"
10467 The exceptions thrown by user-supplied parser actions and
10468 @code{%initial-action}, a comma-separated list. Default is none.
10469 @xref{Java Parser Interface}.
10473 @c ================================================= FAQ
10476 @chapter Frequently Asked Questions
10477 @cindex frequently asked questions
10480 Several questions about Bison come up occasionally. Here some of them
10484 * Memory Exhausted:: Breaking the Stack Limits
10485 * How Can I Reset the Parser:: @code{yyparse} Keeps some State
10486 * Strings are Destroyed:: @code{yylval} Loses Track of Strings
10487 * Implementing Gotos/Loops:: Control Flow in the Calculator
10488 * Multiple start-symbols:: Factoring closely related grammars
10489 * Secure? Conform?:: Is Bison POSIX safe?
10490 * I can't build Bison:: Troubleshooting
10491 * Where can I find help?:: Troubleshouting
10492 * Bug Reports:: Troublereporting
10493 * More Languages:: Parsers in C++, Java, and so on
10494 * Beta Testing:: Experimenting development versions
10495 * Mailing Lists:: Meeting other Bison users
10498 @node Memory Exhausted
10499 @section Memory Exhausted
10502 My parser returns with error with a @samp{memory exhausted}
10503 message. What can I do?
10506 This question is already addressed elsewhere, see @ref{Recursion, ,Recursive
10509 @node How Can I Reset the Parser
10510 @section How Can I Reset the Parser
10512 The following phenomenon has several symptoms, resulting in the
10513 following typical questions:
10516 I invoke @code{yyparse} several times, and on correct input it works
10517 properly; but when a parse error is found, all the other calls fail
10518 too. How can I reset the error flag of @code{yyparse}?
10525 My parser includes support for an @samp{#include}-like feature, in
10526 which case I run @code{yyparse} from @code{yyparse}. This fails
10527 although I did specify @samp{%define api.pure}.
10530 These problems typically come not from Bison itself, but from
10531 Lex-generated scanners. Because these scanners use large buffers for
10532 speed, they might not notice a change of input file. As a
10533 demonstration, consider the following source file,
10534 @file{first-line.l}:
10540 #include <stdlib.h>
10544 .*\n ECHO; return 1;
10548 yyparse (char const *file)
10550 yyin = fopen (file, "r");
10554 exit (EXIT_FAILURE);
10558 /* One token only. */
10560 if (fclose (yyin) != 0)
10563 exit (EXIT_FAILURE);
10581 If the file @file{input} contains
10589 then instead of getting the first line twice, you get:
10592 $ @kbd{flex -ofirst-line.c first-line.l}
10593 $ @kbd{gcc -ofirst-line first-line.c -ll}
10594 $ @kbd{./first-line}
10599 Therefore, whenever you change @code{yyin}, you must tell the
10600 Lex-generated scanner to discard its current buffer and switch to the
10601 new one. This depends upon your implementation of Lex; see its
10602 documentation for more. For Flex, it suffices to call
10603 @samp{YY_FLUSH_BUFFER} after each change to @code{yyin}. If your
10604 Flex-generated scanner needs to read from several input streams to
10605 handle features like include files, you might consider using Flex
10606 functions like @samp{yy_switch_to_buffer} that manipulate multiple
10609 If your Flex-generated scanner uses start conditions (@pxref{Start
10610 conditions, , Start conditions, flex, The Flex Manual}), you might
10611 also want to reset the scanner's state, i.e., go back to the initial
10612 start condition, through a call to @samp{BEGIN (0)}.
10614 @node Strings are Destroyed
10615 @section Strings are Destroyed
10618 My parser seems to destroy old strings, or maybe it loses track of
10619 them. Instead of reporting @samp{"foo", "bar"}, it reports
10620 @samp{"bar", "bar"}, or even @samp{"foo\nbar", "bar"}.
10623 This error is probably the single most frequent ``bug report'' sent to
10624 Bison lists, but is only concerned with a misunderstanding of the role
10625 of the scanner. Consider the following Lex code:
10631 char *yylval = NULL;
10636 .* yylval = yytext; return 1;
10644 /* Similar to using $1, $2 in a Bison action. */
10645 char *fst = (yylex (), yylval);
10646 char *snd = (yylex (), yylval);
10647 printf ("\"%s\", \"%s\"\n", fst, snd);
10653 If you compile and run this code, you get:
10656 $ @kbd{flex -osplit-lines.c split-lines.l}
10657 $ @kbd{gcc -osplit-lines split-lines.c -ll}
10658 $ @kbd{printf 'one\ntwo\n' | ./split-lines}
10664 this is because @code{yytext} is a buffer provided for @emph{reading}
10665 in the action, but if you want to keep it, you have to duplicate it
10666 (e.g., using @code{strdup}). Note that the output may depend on how
10667 your implementation of Lex handles @code{yytext}. For instance, when
10668 given the Lex compatibility option @option{-l} (which triggers the
10669 option @samp{%array}) Flex generates a different behavior:
10672 $ @kbd{flex -l -osplit-lines.c split-lines.l}
10673 $ @kbd{gcc -osplit-lines split-lines.c -ll}
10674 $ @kbd{printf 'one\ntwo\n' | ./split-lines}
10679 @node Implementing Gotos/Loops
10680 @section Implementing Gotos/Loops
10683 My simple calculator supports variables, assignments, and functions,
10684 but how can I implement gotos, or loops?
10687 Although very pedagogical, the examples included in the document blur
10688 the distinction to make between the parser---whose job is to recover
10689 the structure of a text and to transmit it to subsequent modules of
10690 the program---and the processing (such as the execution) of this
10691 structure. This works well with so called straight line programs,
10692 i.e., precisely those that have a straightforward execution model:
10693 execute simple instructions one after the others.
10695 @cindex abstract syntax tree
10697 If you want a richer model, you will probably need to use the parser
10698 to construct a tree that does represent the structure it has
10699 recovered; this tree is usually called the @dfn{abstract syntax tree},
10700 or @dfn{AST} for short. Then, walking through this tree,
10701 traversing it in various ways, will enable treatments such as its
10702 execution or its translation, which will result in an interpreter or a
10705 This topic is way beyond the scope of this manual, and the reader is
10706 invited to consult the dedicated literature.
10709 @node Multiple start-symbols
10710 @section Multiple start-symbols
10713 I have several closely related grammars, and I would like to share their
10714 implementations. In fact, I could use a single grammar but with
10715 multiple entry points.
10718 Bison does not support multiple start-symbols, but there is a very
10719 simple means to simulate them. If @code{foo} and @code{bar} are the two
10720 pseudo start-symbols, then introduce two new tokens, say
10721 @code{START_FOO} and @code{START_BAR}, and use them as switches from the
10725 %token START_FOO START_BAR;
10732 These tokens prevents the introduction of new conflicts. As far as the
10733 parser goes, that is all that is needed.
10735 Now the difficult part is ensuring that the scanner will send these
10736 tokens first. If your scanner is hand-written, that should be
10737 straightforward. If your scanner is generated by Lex, them there is
10738 simple means to do it: recall that anything between @samp{%@{ ... %@}}
10739 after the first @code{%%} is copied verbatim in the top of the generated
10740 @code{yylex} function. Make sure a variable @code{start_token} is
10741 available in the scanner (e.g., a global variable or using
10742 @code{%lex-param} etc.), and use the following:
10745 /* @r{Prologue.} */
10750 int t = start_token;
10755 /* @r{The rules.} */
10759 @node Secure? Conform?
10760 @section Secure? Conform?
10763 Is Bison secure? Does it conform to POSIX?
10766 If you're looking for a guarantee or certification, we don't provide it.
10767 However, Bison is intended to be a reliable program that conforms to the
10768 POSIX specification for Yacc. If you run into problems,
10769 please send us a bug report.
10771 @node I can't build Bison
10772 @section I can't build Bison
10775 I can't build Bison because @command{make} complains that
10776 @code{msgfmt} is not found.
10780 Like most GNU packages with internationalization support, that feature
10781 is turned on by default. If you have problems building in the @file{po}
10782 subdirectory, it indicates that your system's internationalization
10783 support is lacking. You can re-configure Bison with
10784 @option{--disable-nls} to turn off this support, or you can install GNU
10785 gettext from @url{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gettext/} and re-configure
10786 Bison. See the file @file{ABOUT-NLS} for more information.
10789 @node Where can I find help?
10790 @section Where can I find help?
10793 I'm having trouble using Bison. Where can I find help?
10796 First, read this fine manual. Beyond that, you can send mail to
10797 @email{help-bison@@gnu.org}. This mailing list is intended to be
10798 populated with people who are willing to answer questions about using
10799 and installing Bison. Please keep in mind that (most of) the people on
10800 the list have aspects of their lives which are not related to Bison (!),
10801 so you may not receive an answer to your question right away. This can
10802 be frustrating, but please try not to honk them off; remember that any
10803 help they provide is purely voluntary and out of the kindness of their
10807 @section Bug Reports
10810 I found a bug. What should I include in the bug report?
10813 Before you send a bug report, make sure you are using the latest
10814 version. Check @url{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/bison/} or one of its
10815 mirrors. Be sure to include the version number in your bug report. If
10816 the bug is present in the latest version but not in a previous version,
10817 try to determine the most recent version which did not contain the bug.
10819 If the bug is parser-related, you should include the smallest grammar
10820 you can which demonstrates the bug. The grammar file should also be
10821 complete (i.e., I should be able to run it through Bison without having
10822 to edit or add anything). The smaller and simpler the grammar, the
10823 easier it will be to fix the bug.
10825 Include information about your compilation environment, including your
10826 operating system's name and version and your compiler's name and
10827 version. If you have trouble compiling, you should also include a
10828 transcript of the build session, starting with the invocation of
10829 `configure'. Depending on the nature of the bug, you may be asked to
10830 send additional files as well (such as `config.h' or `config.cache').
10832 Patches are most welcome, but not required. That is, do not hesitate to
10833 send a bug report just because you cannot provide a fix.
10835 Send bug reports to @email{bug-bison@@gnu.org}.
10837 @node More Languages
10838 @section More Languages
10841 Will Bison ever have C++ and Java support? How about @var{insert your
10842 favorite language here}?
10845 C++ and Java support is there now, and is documented. We'd love to add other
10846 languages; contributions are welcome.
10849 @section Beta Testing
10852 What is involved in being a beta tester?
10855 It's not terribly involved. Basically, you would download a test
10856 release, compile it, and use it to build and run a parser or two. After
10857 that, you would submit either a bug report or a message saying that
10858 everything is okay. It is important to report successes as well as
10859 failures because test releases eventually become mainstream releases,
10860 but only if they are adequately tested. If no one tests, development is
10861 essentially halted.
10863 Beta testers are particularly needed for operating systems to which the
10864 developers do not have easy access. They currently have easy access to
10865 recent GNU/Linux and Solaris versions. Reports about other operating
10866 systems are especially welcome.
10868 @node Mailing Lists
10869 @section Mailing Lists
10872 How do I join the help-bison and bug-bison mailing lists?
10875 See @url{http://lists.gnu.org/}.
10877 @c ================================================= Table of Symbols
10879 @node Table of Symbols
10880 @appendix Bison Symbols
10881 @cindex Bison symbols, table of
10882 @cindex symbols in Bison, table of
10884 @deffn {Variable} @@$
10885 In an action, the location of the left-hand side of the rule.
10886 @xref{Tracking Locations}.
10889 @deffn {Variable} @@@var{n}
10890 In an action, the location of the @var{n}-th symbol of the right-hand side
10891 of the rule. @xref{Tracking Locations}.
10894 @deffn {Variable} @@@var{name}
10895 In an action, the location of a symbol addressed by name. @xref{Tracking
10899 @deffn {Variable} @@[@var{name}]
10900 In an action, the location of a symbol addressed by name. @xref{Tracking
10904 @deffn {Variable} $$
10905 In an action, the semantic value of the left-hand side of the rule.
10909 @deffn {Variable} $@var{n}
10910 In an action, the semantic value of the @var{n}-th symbol of the
10911 right-hand side of the rule. @xref{Actions}.
10914 @deffn {Variable} $@var{name}
10915 In an action, the semantic value of a symbol addressed by name.
10919 @deffn {Variable} $[@var{name}]
10920 In an action, the semantic value of a symbol addressed by name.
10924 @deffn {Delimiter} %%
10925 Delimiter used to separate the grammar rule section from the
10926 Bison declarations section or the epilogue.
10927 @xref{Grammar Layout, ,The Overall Layout of a Bison Grammar}.
10930 @c Don't insert spaces, or check the DVI output.
10931 @deffn {Delimiter} %@{@var{code}%@}
10932 All code listed between @samp{%@{} and @samp{%@}} is copied verbatim
10933 to the parser implementation file. Such code forms the prologue of
10934 the grammar file. @xref{Grammar Outline, ,Outline of a Bison
10938 @deffn {Construct} /*@dots{}*/
10939 Comment delimiters, as in C.
10942 @deffn {Delimiter} :
10943 Separates a rule's result from its components. @xref{Rules, ,Syntax of
10947 @deffn {Delimiter} ;
10948 Terminates a rule. @xref{Rules, ,Syntax of Grammar Rules}.
10951 @deffn {Delimiter} |
10952 Separates alternate rules for the same result nonterminal.
10953 @xref{Rules, ,Syntax of Grammar Rules}.
10956 @deffn {Directive} <*>
10957 Used to define a default tagged @code{%destructor} or default tagged
10960 This feature is experimental.
10961 More user feedback will help to determine whether it should become a permanent
10964 @xref{Destructor Decl, , Freeing Discarded Symbols}.
10967 @deffn {Directive} <>
10968 Used to define a default tagless @code{%destructor} or default tagless
10971 This feature is experimental.
10972 More user feedback will help to determine whether it should become a permanent
10975 @xref{Destructor Decl, , Freeing Discarded Symbols}.
10978 @deffn {Symbol} $accept
10979 The predefined nonterminal whose only rule is @samp{$accept: @var{start}
10980 $end}, where @var{start} is the start symbol. @xref{Start Decl, , The
10981 Start-Symbol}. It cannot be used in the grammar.
10984 @deffn {Directive} %code @{@var{code}@}
10985 @deffnx {Directive} %code @var{qualifier} @{@var{code}@}
10986 Insert @var{code} verbatim into the output parser source at the
10987 default location or at the location specified by @var{qualifier}.
10988 @xref{%code Summary}.
10991 @deffn {Directive} %debug
10992 Equip the parser for debugging. @xref{Decl Summary}.
10996 @deffn {Directive} %default-prec
10997 Assign a precedence to rules that lack an explicit @samp{%prec}
10998 modifier. @xref{Contextual Precedence, ,Context-Dependent
11003 @deffn {Directive} %define @var{variable}
11004 @deffnx {Directive} %define @var{variable} @var{value}
11005 @deffnx {Directive} %define @var{variable} "@var{value}"
11006 Define a variable to adjust Bison's behavior. @xref{%define Summary}.
11009 @deffn {Directive} %defines
11010 Bison declaration to create a parser header file, which is usually
11011 meant for the scanner. @xref{Decl Summary}.
11014 @deffn {Directive} %defines @var{defines-file}
11015 Same as above, but save in the file @var{defines-file}.
11016 @xref{Decl Summary}.
11019 @deffn {Directive} %destructor
11020 Specify how the parser should reclaim the memory associated to
11021 discarded symbols. @xref{Destructor Decl, , Freeing Discarded Symbols}.
11024 @deffn {Directive} %dprec
11025 Bison declaration to assign a precedence to a rule that is used at parse
11026 time to resolve reduce/reduce conflicts. @xref{GLR Parsers, ,Writing
11030 @deffn {Symbol} $end
11031 The predefined token marking the end of the token stream. It cannot be
11032 used in the grammar.
11035 @deffn {Symbol} error
11036 A token name reserved for error recovery. This token may be used in
11037 grammar rules so as to allow the Bison parser to recognize an error in
11038 the grammar without halting the process. In effect, a sentence
11039 containing an error may be recognized as valid. On a syntax error, the
11040 token @code{error} becomes the current lookahead token. Actions
11041 corresponding to @code{error} are then executed, and the lookahead
11042 token is reset to the token that originally caused the violation.
11043 @xref{Error Recovery}.
11046 @deffn {Directive} %error-verbose
11047 Bison declaration to request verbose, specific error message strings
11048 when @code{yyerror} is called. @xref{Error Reporting}.
11051 @deffn {Directive} %file-prefix "@var{prefix}"
11052 Bison declaration to set the prefix of the output files. @xref{Decl
11056 @deffn {Directive} %glr-parser
11057 Bison declaration to produce a GLR parser. @xref{GLR
11058 Parsers, ,Writing GLR Parsers}.
11061 @deffn {Directive} %initial-action
11062 Run user code before parsing. @xref{Initial Action Decl, , Performing Actions before Parsing}.
11065 @deffn {Directive} %language
11066 Specify the programming language for the generated parser.
11067 @xref{Decl Summary}.
11070 @deffn {Directive} %left
11071 Bison declaration to assign left associativity to token(s).
11072 @xref{Precedence Decl, ,Operator Precedence}.
11075 @deffn {Directive} %lex-param @{@var{argument-declaration}@}
11076 Bison declaration to specifying an additional parameter that
11077 @code{yylex} should accept. @xref{Pure Calling,, Calling Conventions
11081 @deffn {Directive} %merge
11082 Bison declaration to assign a merging function to a rule. If there is a
11083 reduce/reduce conflict with a rule having the same merging function, the
11084 function is applied to the two semantic values to get a single result.
11085 @xref{GLR Parsers, ,Writing GLR Parsers}.
11088 @deffn {Directive} %name-prefix "@var{prefix}"
11089 Obsoleted by the @code{%define} variable @code{api.prefix} (@pxref{Multiple
11090 Parsers, ,Multiple Parsers in the Same Program}).
11092 Rename the external symbols (variables and functions) used in the parser so
11093 that they start with @var{prefix} instead of @samp{yy}. Contrary to
11094 @code{api.prefix}, do no rename types and macros.
11096 The precise list of symbols renamed in C parsers is @code{yyparse},
11097 @code{yylex}, @code{yyerror}, @code{yynerrs}, @code{yylval}, @code{yychar},
11098 @code{yydebug}, and (if locations are used) @code{yylloc}. If you use a
11099 push parser, @code{yypush_parse}, @code{yypull_parse}, @code{yypstate},
11100 @code{yypstate_new} and @code{yypstate_delete} will also be renamed. For
11101 example, if you use @samp{%name-prefix "c_"}, the names become
11102 @code{c_parse}, @code{c_lex}, and so on. For C++ parsers, see the
11103 @code{%define namespace} documentation in this section.
11108 @deffn {Directive} %no-default-prec
11109 Do not assign a precedence to rules that lack an explicit @samp{%prec}
11110 modifier. @xref{Contextual Precedence, ,Context-Dependent
11115 @deffn {Directive} %no-lines
11116 Bison declaration to avoid generating @code{#line} directives in the
11117 parser implementation file. @xref{Decl Summary}.
11120 @deffn {Directive} %nonassoc
11121 Bison declaration to assign nonassociativity to token(s).
11122 @xref{Precedence Decl, ,Operator Precedence}.
11125 @deffn {Directive} %output "@var{file}"
11126 Bison declaration to set the name of the parser implementation file.
11127 @xref{Decl Summary}.
11130 @deffn {Directive} %parse-param @{@var{argument-declaration}@}
11131 Bison declaration to specifying an additional parameter that
11132 @code{yyparse} should accept. @xref{Parser Function,, The Parser
11133 Function @code{yyparse}}.
11136 @deffn {Directive} %prec
11137 Bison declaration to assign a precedence to a specific rule.
11138 @xref{Contextual Precedence, ,Context-Dependent Precedence}.
11141 @deffn {Directive} %pure-parser
11142 Deprecated version of @code{%define api.pure} (@pxref{%define
11143 Summary,,api.pure}), for which Bison is more careful to warn about
11144 unreasonable usage.
11147 @deffn {Directive} %require "@var{version}"
11148 Require version @var{version} or higher of Bison. @xref{Require Decl, ,
11149 Require a Version of Bison}.
11152 @deffn {Directive} %right
11153 Bison declaration to assign right associativity to token(s).
11154 @xref{Precedence Decl, ,Operator Precedence}.
11157 @deffn {Directive} %skeleton
11158 Specify the skeleton to use; usually for development.
11159 @xref{Decl Summary}.
11162 @deffn {Directive} %start
11163 Bison declaration to specify the start symbol. @xref{Start Decl, ,The
11167 @deffn {Directive} %token
11168 Bison declaration to declare token(s) without specifying precedence.
11169 @xref{Token Decl, ,Token Type Names}.
11172 @deffn {Directive} %token-table
11173 Bison declaration to include a token name table in the parser
11174 implementation file. @xref{Decl Summary}.
11177 @deffn {Directive} %type
11178 Bison declaration to declare nonterminals. @xref{Type Decl,
11179 ,Nonterminal Symbols}.
11182 @deffn {Symbol} $undefined
11183 The predefined token onto which all undefined values returned by
11184 @code{yylex} are mapped. It cannot be used in the grammar, rather, use
11188 @deffn {Directive} %union
11189 Bison declaration to specify several possible data types for semantic
11190 values. @xref{Union Decl, ,The Collection of Value Types}.
11193 @deffn {Macro} YYABORT
11194 Macro to pretend that an unrecoverable syntax error has occurred, by
11195 making @code{yyparse} return 1 immediately. The error reporting
11196 function @code{yyerror} is not called. @xref{Parser Function, ,The
11197 Parser Function @code{yyparse}}.
11199 For Java parsers, this functionality is invoked using @code{return YYABORT;}
11203 @deffn {Macro} YYACCEPT
11204 Macro to pretend that a complete utterance of the language has been
11205 read, by making @code{yyparse} return 0 immediately.
11206 @xref{Parser Function, ,The Parser Function @code{yyparse}}.
11208 For Java parsers, this functionality is invoked using @code{return YYACCEPT;}
11212 @deffn {Macro} YYBACKUP
11213 Macro to discard a value from the parser stack and fake a lookahead
11214 token. @xref{Action Features, ,Special Features for Use in Actions}.
11217 @deffn {Variable} yychar
11218 External integer variable that contains the integer value of the
11219 lookahead token. (In a pure parser, it is a local variable within
11220 @code{yyparse}.) Error-recovery rule actions may examine this variable.
11221 @xref{Action Features, ,Special Features for Use in Actions}.
11224 @deffn {Variable} yyclearin
11225 Macro used in error-recovery rule actions. It clears the previous
11226 lookahead token. @xref{Error Recovery}.
11229 @deffn {Macro} YYDEBUG
11230 Macro to define to equip the parser with tracing code. @xref{Tracing,
11231 ,Tracing Your Parser}.
11234 @deffn {Variable} yydebug
11235 External integer variable set to zero by default. If @code{yydebug}
11236 is given a nonzero value, the parser will output information on input
11237 symbols and parser action. @xref{Tracing, ,Tracing Your Parser}.
11240 @deffn {Macro} yyerrok
11241 Macro to cause parser to recover immediately to its normal mode
11242 after a syntax error. @xref{Error Recovery}.
11245 @deffn {Macro} YYERROR
11246 Cause an immediate syntax error. This statement initiates error
11247 recovery just as if the parser itself had detected an error; however, it
11248 does not call @code{yyerror}, and does not print any message. If you
11249 want to print an error message, call @code{yyerror} explicitly before
11250 the @samp{YYERROR;} statement. @xref{Error Recovery}.
11252 For Java parsers, this functionality is invoked using @code{return YYERROR;}
11256 @deffn {Function} yyerror
11257 User-supplied function to be called by @code{yyparse} on error.
11258 @xref{Error Reporting, ,The Error
11259 Reporting Function @code{yyerror}}.
11262 @deffn {Macro} YYERROR_VERBOSE
11263 An obsolete macro that you define with @code{#define} in the prologue
11264 to request verbose, specific error message strings
11265 when @code{yyerror} is called. It doesn't matter what definition you
11266 use for @code{YYERROR_VERBOSE}, just whether you define it.
11267 Supported by the C skeletons only; using
11268 @code{%error-verbose} is preferred. @xref{Error Reporting}.
11271 @deffn {Macro} YYFPRINTF
11272 Macro used to output run-time traces.
11273 @xref{Enabling Traces}.
11276 @deffn {Macro} YYINITDEPTH
11277 Macro for specifying the initial size of the parser stack.
11278 @xref{Memory Management}.
11281 @deffn {Function} yylex
11282 User-supplied lexical analyzer function, called with no arguments to get
11283 the next token. @xref{Lexical, ,The Lexical Analyzer Function
11287 @deffn {Macro} YYLEX_PARAM
11288 An obsolete macro for specifying an extra argument (or list of extra
11289 arguments) for @code{yyparse} to pass to @code{yylex}. The use of this
11290 macro is deprecated, and is supported only for Yacc like parsers.
11291 @xref{Pure Calling,, Calling Conventions for Pure Parsers}.
11294 @deffn {Variable} yylloc
11295 External variable in which @code{yylex} should place the line and column
11296 numbers associated with a token. (In a pure parser, it is a local
11297 variable within @code{yyparse}, and its address is passed to
11299 You can ignore this variable if you don't use the @samp{@@} feature in the
11301 @xref{Token Locations, ,Textual Locations of Tokens}.
11302 In semantic actions, it stores the location of the lookahead token.
11303 @xref{Actions and Locations, ,Actions and Locations}.
11306 @deffn {Type} YYLTYPE
11307 Data type of @code{yylloc}; by default, a structure with four
11308 members. @xref{Location Type, , Data Types of Locations}.
11311 @deffn {Variable} yylval
11312 External variable in which @code{yylex} should place the semantic
11313 value associated with a token. (In a pure parser, it is a local
11314 variable within @code{yyparse}, and its address is passed to
11316 @xref{Token Values, ,Semantic Values of Tokens}.
11317 In semantic actions, it stores the semantic value of the lookahead token.
11318 @xref{Actions, ,Actions}.
11321 @deffn {Macro} YYMAXDEPTH
11322 Macro for specifying the maximum size of the parser stack. @xref{Memory
11326 @deffn {Variable} yynerrs
11327 Global variable which Bison increments each time it reports a syntax error.
11328 (In a pure parser, it is a local variable within @code{yyparse}. In a
11329 pure push parser, it is a member of yypstate.)
11330 @xref{Error Reporting, ,The Error Reporting Function @code{yyerror}}.
11333 @deffn {Function} yyparse
11334 The parser function produced by Bison; call this function to start
11335 parsing. @xref{Parser Function, ,The Parser Function @code{yyparse}}.
11338 @deffn {Macro} YYPRINT
11339 Macro used to output token semantic values. For @file{yacc.c} only.
11340 Obsoleted by @code{%printer}.
11341 @xref{The YYPRINT Macro, , The @code{YYPRINT} Macro}.
11344 @deffn {Function} yypstate_delete
11345 The function to delete a parser instance, produced by Bison in push mode;
11346 call this function to delete the memory associated with a parser.
11347 @xref{Parser Delete Function, ,The Parser Delete Function
11348 @code{yypstate_delete}}.
11349 (The current push parsing interface is experimental and may evolve.
11350 More user feedback will help to stabilize it.)
11353 @deffn {Function} yypstate_new
11354 The function to create a parser instance, produced by Bison in push mode;
11355 call this function to create a new parser.
11356 @xref{Parser Create Function, ,The Parser Create Function
11357 @code{yypstate_new}}.
11358 (The current push parsing interface is experimental and may evolve.
11359 More user feedback will help to stabilize it.)
11362 @deffn {Function} yypull_parse
11363 The parser function produced by Bison in push mode; call this function to
11364 parse the rest of the input stream.
11365 @xref{Pull Parser Function, ,The Pull Parser Function
11366 @code{yypull_parse}}.
11367 (The current push parsing interface is experimental and may evolve.
11368 More user feedback will help to stabilize it.)
11371 @deffn {Function} yypush_parse
11372 The parser function produced by Bison in push mode; call this function to
11373 parse a single token. @xref{Push Parser Function, ,The Push Parser Function
11374 @code{yypush_parse}}.
11375 (The current push parsing interface is experimental and may evolve.
11376 More user feedback will help to stabilize it.)
11379 @deffn {Macro} YYPARSE_PARAM
11380 An obsolete macro for specifying the name of a parameter that
11381 @code{yyparse} should accept. The use of this macro is deprecated, and
11382 is supported only for Yacc like parsers. @xref{Pure Calling,, Calling
11383 Conventions for Pure Parsers}.
11386 @deffn {Macro} YYRECOVERING
11387 The expression @code{YYRECOVERING ()} yields 1 when the parser
11388 is recovering from a syntax error, and 0 otherwise.
11389 @xref{Action Features, ,Special Features for Use in Actions}.
11392 @deffn {Macro} YYSTACK_USE_ALLOCA
11393 Macro used to control the use of @code{alloca} when the
11394 deterministic parser in C needs to extend its stacks. If defined to 0,
11395 the parser will use @code{malloc} to extend its stacks. If defined to
11396 1, the parser will use @code{alloca}. Values other than 0 and 1 are
11397 reserved for future Bison extensions. If not defined,
11398 @code{YYSTACK_USE_ALLOCA} defaults to 0.
11400 In the all-too-common case where your code may run on a host with a
11401 limited stack and with unreliable stack-overflow checking, you should
11402 set @code{YYMAXDEPTH} to a value that cannot possibly result in
11403 unchecked stack overflow on any of your target hosts when
11404 @code{alloca} is called. You can inspect the code that Bison
11405 generates in order to determine the proper numeric values. This will
11406 require some expertise in low-level implementation details.
11409 @deffn {Type} YYSTYPE
11410 Data type of semantic values; @code{int} by default.
11411 @xref{Value Type, ,Data Types of Semantic Values}.
11419 @item Accepting state
11420 A state whose only action is the accept action.
11421 The accepting state is thus a consistent state.
11422 @xref{Understanding,,}.
11424 @item Backus-Naur Form (BNF; also called ``Backus Normal Form'')
11425 Formal method of specifying context-free grammars originally proposed
11426 by John Backus, and slightly improved by Peter Naur in his 1960-01-02
11427 committee document contributing to what became the Algol 60 report.
11428 @xref{Language and Grammar, ,Languages and Context-Free Grammars}.
11430 @item Consistent state
11431 A state containing only one possible action. @xref{Default Reductions}.
11433 @item Context-free grammars
11434 Grammars specified as rules that can be applied regardless of context.
11435 Thus, if there is a rule which says that an integer can be used as an
11436 expression, integers are allowed @emph{anywhere} an expression is
11437 permitted. @xref{Language and Grammar, ,Languages and Context-Free
11440 @item Default reduction
11441 The reduction that a parser should perform if the current parser state
11442 contains no other action for the lookahead token. In permitted parser
11443 states, Bison declares the reduction with the largest lookahead set to be
11444 the default reduction and removes that lookahead set. @xref{Default
11447 @item Defaulted state
11448 A consistent state with a default reduction. @xref{Default Reductions}.
11450 @item Dynamic allocation
11451 Allocation of memory that occurs during execution, rather than at
11452 compile time or on entry to a function.
11455 Analogous to the empty set in set theory, the empty string is a
11456 character string of length zero.
11458 @item Finite-state stack machine
11459 A ``machine'' that has discrete states in which it is said to exist at
11460 each instant in time. As input to the machine is processed, the
11461 machine moves from state to state as specified by the logic of the
11462 machine. In the case of the parser, the input is the language being
11463 parsed, and the states correspond to various stages in the grammar
11464 rules. @xref{Algorithm, ,The Bison Parser Algorithm}.
11466 @item Generalized LR (GLR)
11467 A parsing algorithm that can handle all context-free grammars, including those
11468 that are not LR(1). It resolves situations that Bison's
11469 deterministic parsing
11470 algorithm cannot by effectively splitting off multiple parsers, trying all
11471 possible parsers, and discarding those that fail in the light of additional
11472 right context. @xref{Generalized LR Parsing, ,Generalized
11476 A language construct that is (in general) grammatically divisible;
11477 for example, `expression' or `declaration' in C@.
11478 @xref{Language and Grammar, ,Languages and Context-Free Grammars}.
11480 @item IELR(1) (Inadequacy Elimination LR(1))
11481 A minimal LR(1) parser table construction algorithm. That is, given any
11482 context-free grammar, IELR(1) generates parser tables with the full
11483 language-recognition power of canonical LR(1) but with nearly the same
11484 number of parser states as LALR(1). This reduction in parser states is
11485 often an order of magnitude. More importantly, because canonical LR(1)'s
11486 extra parser states may contain duplicate conflicts in the case of non-LR(1)
11487 grammars, the number of conflicts for IELR(1) is often an order of magnitude
11488 less as well. This can significantly reduce the complexity of developing a
11489 grammar. @xref{LR Table Construction}.
11491 @item Infix operator
11492 An arithmetic operator that is placed between the operands on which it
11493 performs some operation.
11496 A continuous flow of data between devices or programs.
11498 @item LAC (Lookahead Correction)
11499 A parsing mechanism that fixes the problem of delayed syntax error
11500 detection, which is caused by LR state merging, default reductions, and the
11501 use of @code{%nonassoc}. Delayed syntax error detection results in
11502 unexpected semantic actions, initiation of error recovery in the wrong
11503 syntactic context, and an incorrect list of expected tokens in a verbose
11504 syntax error message. @xref{LAC}.
11506 @item Language construct
11507 One of the typical usage schemas of the language. For example, one of
11508 the constructs of the C language is the @code{if} statement.
11509 @xref{Language and Grammar, ,Languages and Context-Free Grammars}.
11511 @item Left associativity
11512 Operators having left associativity are analyzed from left to right:
11513 @samp{a+b+c} first computes @samp{a+b} and then combines with
11514 @samp{c}. @xref{Precedence, ,Operator Precedence}.
11516 @item Left recursion
11517 A rule whose result symbol is also its first component symbol; for
11518 example, @samp{expseq1 : expseq1 ',' exp;}. @xref{Recursion, ,Recursive
11521 @item Left-to-right parsing
11522 Parsing a sentence of a language by analyzing it token by token from
11523 left to right. @xref{Algorithm, ,The Bison Parser Algorithm}.
11525 @item Lexical analyzer (scanner)
11526 A function that reads an input stream and returns tokens one by one.
11527 @xref{Lexical, ,The Lexical Analyzer Function @code{yylex}}.
11529 @item Lexical tie-in
11530 A flag, set by actions in the grammar rules, which alters the way
11531 tokens are parsed. @xref{Lexical Tie-ins}.
11533 @item Literal string token
11534 A token which consists of two or more fixed characters. @xref{Symbols}.
11536 @item Lookahead token
11537 A token already read but not yet shifted. @xref{Lookahead, ,Lookahead
11541 The class of context-free grammars that Bison (like most other parser
11542 generators) can handle by default; a subset of LR(1).
11543 @xref{Mysterious Conflicts}.
11546 The class of context-free grammars in which at most one token of
11547 lookahead is needed to disambiguate the parsing of any piece of input.
11549 @item Nonterminal symbol
11550 A grammar symbol standing for a grammatical construct that can
11551 be expressed through rules in terms of smaller constructs; in other
11552 words, a construct that is not a token. @xref{Symbols}.
11555 A function that recognizes valid sentences of a language by analyzing
11556 the syntax structure of a set of tokens passed to it from a lexical
11559 @item Postfix operator
11560 An arithmetic operator that is placed after the operands upon which it
11561 performs some operation.
11564 Replacing a string of nonterminals and/or terminals with a single
11565 nonterminal, according to a grammar rule. @xref{Algorithm, ,The Bison
11569 A reentrant subprogram is a subprogram which can be in invoked any
11570 number of times in parallel, without interference between the various
11571 invocations. @xref{Pure Decl, ,A Pure (Reentrant) Parser}.
11573 @item Reverse polish notation
11574 A language in which all operators are postfix operators.
11576 @item Right recursion
11577 A rule whose result symbol is also its last component symbol; for
11578 example, @samp{expseq1: exp ',' expseq1;}. @xref{Recursion, ,Recursive
11582 In computer languages, the semantics are specified by the actions
11583 taken for each instance of the language, i.e., the meaning of
11584 each statement. @xref{Semantics, ,Defining Language Semantics}.
11587 A parser is said to shift when it makes the choice of analyzing
11588 further input from the stream rather than reducing immediately some
11589 already-recognized rule. @xref{Algorithm, ,The Bison Parser Algorithm}.
11591 @item Single-character literal
11592 A single character that is recognized and interpreted as is.
11593 @xref{Grammar in Bison, ,From Formal Rules to Bison Input}.
11596 The nonterminal symbol that stands for a complete valid utterance in
11597 the language being parsed. The start symbol is usually listed as the
11598 first nonterminal symbol in a language specification.
11599 @xref{Start Decl, ,The Start-Symbol}.
11602 A data structure where symbol names and associated data are stored
11603 during parsing to allow for recognition and use of existing
11604 information in repeated uses of a symbol. @xref{Multi-function Calc}.
11607 An error encountered during parsing of an input stream due to invalid
11608 syntax. @xref{Error Recovery}.
11611 A basic, grammatically indivisible unit of a language. The symbol
11612 that describes a token in the grammar is a terminal symbol.
11613 The input of the Bison parser is a stream of tokens which comes from
11614 the lexical analyzer. @xref{Symbols}.
11616 @item Terminal symbol
11617 A grammar symbol that has no rules in the grammar and therefore is
11618 grammatically indivisible. The piece of text it represents is a token.
11619 @xref{Language and Grammar, ,Languages and Context-Free Grammars}.
11621 @item Unreachable state
11622 A parser state to which there does not exist a sequence of transitions from
11623 the parser's start state. A state can become unreachable during conflict
11624 resolution. @xref{Unreachable States}.
11627 @node Copying This Manual
11628 @appendix Copying This Manual
11632 @unnumbered Bibliography
11636 Joel E. Denny and Brian A. Malloy, IELR(1): Practical LR(1) Parser Tables
11637 for Non-LR(1) Grammars with Conflict Resolution, in @cite{Proceedings of the
11638 2008 ACM Symposium on Applied Computing} (SAC'08), ACM, New York, NY, USA,
11639 pp.@: 240--245. @uref{http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1363686.1363747}
11641 @item [Denny 2010 May]
11642 Joel E. Denny, PSLR(1): Pseudo-Scannerless Minimal LR(1) for the
11643 Deterministic Parsing of Composite Languages, Ph.D. Dissertation, Clemson
11644 University, Clemson, SC, USA (May 2010).
11645 @uref{http://proquest.umi.com/pqdlink?did=2041473591&Fmt=7&clientId=79356&RQT=309&VName=PQD}
11647 @item [Denny 2010 November]
11648 Joel E. Denny and Brian A. Malloy, The IELR(1) Algorithm for Generating
11649 Minimal LR(1) Parser Tables for Non-LR(1) Grammars with Conflict Resolution,
11650 in @cite{Science of Computer Programming}, Vol.@: 75, Issue 11 (November
11651 2010), pp.@: 943--979. @uref{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scico.2009.08.001}
11653 @item [DeRemer 1982]
11654 Frank DeRemer and Thomas Pennello, Efficient Computation of LALR(1)
11655 Look-Ahead Sets, in @cite{ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and
11656 Systems}, Vol.@: 4, No.@: 4 (October 1982), pp.@:
11657 615--649. @uref{http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/69622.357187}
11660 Donald E. Knuth, On the Translation of Languages from Left to Right, in
11661 @cite{Information and Control}, Vol.@: 8, Issue 6 (December 1965), pp.@:
11662 607--639. @uref{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0019-9958(65)90426-2}
11665 Elizabeth Scott, Adrian Johnstone, and Shamsa Sadaf Hussain,
11666 @cite{Tomita-Style Generalised LR Parsers}, Royal Holloway, University of
11667 London, Department of Computer Science, TR-00-12 (December 2000).
11668 @uref{http://www.cs.rhul.ac.uk/research/languages/publications/tomita_style_1.ps}
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