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doc: minor fixes to "Understanding" section
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1 * Short term
2 ** Variable names.
3 What should we name `variant' and `lex_symbol'?
4
5 ** Use b4_symbol in all the skeleton
6 Move its definition in the more standard places and deploy it in other
7 skeletons. Then remove the older system, including the tables
8 generated by output.c
9
10 ** Update the documentation on gnu.org
11
12 ** Get rid of fake #lines [Bison: ...]
13 Possibly as simple as checking whether the column number is nonnegative.
14
15 I have seen messages like the following from GCC.
16
17 <built-in>:0: fatal error: opening dependency file .deps/libltdl/argz.Tpo: No such file or directory
18
19
20 ** Discuss about %printer/%destroy in the case of C++.
21 It would be very nice to provide the symbol classes with an operator<<
22 and a destructor. Unfortunately the syntax we have chosen for
23 %destroy and %printer make them hard to reuse. For instance, the user
24 is invited to write something like
25
26 %printer { debug_stream() << $$; } <my_type>;
27
28 which is hard to reuse elsewhere since it wants to use
29 "debug_stream()" to find the stream to use. The same applies to
30 %destroy: we told the user she could use the members of the Parser
31 class in the printers/destructors, which is not good for an operator<<
32 since it is no longer bound to a particular parser, it's just a
33 (standalone symbol).
34
35 ** Rename LR0.cc
36 as lr0.cc, why upper case?
37
38 ** bench several bisons.
39 Enhance bench.pl with %b to run different bisons.
40
41 * Various
42 ** Warnings
43 Warnings about type tags that are used in printer and dtors, but not
44 for symbols?
45
46 ** YYPRINT
47 glr.c inherits its symbol_print function from c.m4, which supports
48 YYPRINT. But to use YYPRINT yytoknum is needed, which not defined by
49 glr.c.
50
51 Anyway, IMHO YYPRINT is obsolete and should be restricted to yacc.c.
52
53 ** YYERRCODE
54 Defined to 256, but not used, not documented. Probably the token
55 number for the error token, which POSIX wants to be 256, but which
56 Bison might renumber if the user used number 256. Keep fix and doc?
57 Throw away?
58
59 Also, why don't we output the token name of the error token in the
60 output? It is explicitly skipped:
61
62 /* Skip error token and tokens without identifier. */
63 if (sym != errtoken && id)
64
65 Of course there are issues with name spaces, but if we disable we have
66 something which seems to be more simpler and more consistent instead
67 of the special case YYERRCODE.
68
69 enum yytokentype {
70 error = 256,
71 // ...
72 };
73
74
75 We could (should?) also treat the case of the undef_token, which is
76 numbered 257 for yylex, and 2 internal. Both appear for instance in
77 toknum:
78
79 const unsigned short int
80 parser::yytoken_number_[] =
81 {
82 0, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261, 262, 263, 264,
83
84 while here
85
86 enum yytokentype {
87 TOK_EOF = 0,
88 TOK_EQ = 258,
89
90 so both 256 and 257 are "mysterious".
91
92 const char*
93 const parser::yytname_[] =
94 {
95 "\"end of command\"", "error", "$undefined", "\"=\"", "\"break\"",
96
97
98 ** YYFAIL
99 It is seems to be *really* obsolete now, shall we remove it?
100
101 ** yychar == yyempty_
102 The code in yyerrlab reads:
103
104 if (yychar <= YYEOF)
105 {
106 /* Return failure if at end of input. */
107 if (yychar == YYEOF)
108 YYABORT;
109 }
110
111 There are only two yychar that can be <= YYEOF: YYEMPTY and YYEOF.
112 But I can't produce the situation where yychar is YYEMPTY here, is it
113 really possible? The test suite does not exercise this case.
114
115 This shows that it would be interesting to manage to install skeleton
116 coverage analysis to the test suite.
117
118 ** Table definitions
119 It should be very easy to factor the definition of the various tables,
120 including the separation bw declaration and definition. See for
121 instance b4_table_define in lalr1.cc. This way, we could even factor
122 C vs. C++ definitions.
123
124 * From lalr1.cc to yacc.c
125 ** Single stack
126 Merging the three stacks in lalr1.cc simplified the code, prompted for
127 other improvements and also made it faster (probably because memory
128 management is performed once instead of three times). I suggest that
129 we do the same in yacc.c.
130
131 ** yysyntax_error
132 The code bw glr.c and yacc.c is really alike, we can certainly factor
133 some parts.
134
135 * Header guards
136
137 From François: should we keep the directory part in the CPP guard?
138
139
140 * Yacc.c: CPP Macros
141
142 Do some people use YYPURE, YYLSP_NEEDED like we do in the test suite?
143 They should not: it is not documented. But if they need to, let's
144 find something clean (not like YYLSP_NEEDED...).
145
146
147 * Documentation
148 Before releasing, make sure the documentation ("Understanding your
149 parser") refers to the current `output' format.
150
151 * Report
152
153 ** Figures
154 Some statistics about the grammar and the parser would be useful,
155 especially when asking the user to send some information about the
156 grammars she is working on. We should probably also include some
157 information about the variables (I'm not sure for instance we even
158 specify what LR variant was used).
159
160 ** GLR
161 How would Paul like to display the conflicted actions? In particular,
162 what when two reductions are possible on a given lookahead token, but one is
163 part of $default. Should we make the two reductions explicit, or just
164 keep $default? See the following point.
165
166 ** Disabled Reductions
167 See `tests/conflicts.at (Defaulted Conflicted Reduction)', and decide
168 what we want to do.
169
170 ** Documentation
171 Extend with error productions. The hard part will probably be finding
172 the right rule so that a single state does not exhibit too many yet
173 undocumented ``features''. Maybe an empty action ought to be
174 presented too. Shall we try to make a single grammar with all these
175 features, or should we have several very small grammars?
176
177 ** --report=conflict-path
178 Provide better assistance for understanding the conflicts by providing
179 a sample text exhibiting the (LALR) ambiguity. See the paper from
180 DeRemer and Penello: they already provide the algorithm.
181
182 ** Statically check for potential ambiguities in GLR grammars. See
183 <http://www.i3s.unice.fr/~schmitz/papers.html#expamb> for an approach.
184
185
186 * Extensions
187
188 ** $-1
189 We should find a means to provide an access to values deep in the
190 stack. For instance, instead of
191
192 baz: qux { $$ = $<foo>-1 + $<bar>0 + $1; }
193
194 we should be able to have:
195
196 foo($foo) bar($bar) baz($bar): qux($qux) { $baz = $foo + $bar + $qux; }
197
198 Or something like this.
199
200 ** %if and the like
201 It should be possible to have %if/%else/%endif. The implementation is
202 not clear: should it be lexical or syntactic. Vadim Maslow thinks it
203 must be in the scanner: we must not parse what is in a switched off
204 part of %if. Akim Demaille thinks it should be in the parser, so as
205 to avoid falling into another CPP mistake.
206
207 ** XML Output
208 There are couple of available extensions of Bison targeting some XML
209 output. Some day we should consider including them. One issue is
210 that they seem to be quite orthogonal to the parsing technique, and
211 seem to depend mostly on the possibility to have some code triggered
212 for each reduction. As a matter of fact, such hooks could also be
213 used to generate the yydebug traces. Some generic scheme probably
214 exists in there.
215
216 XML output for GNU Bison and gcc
217 http://www.cs.may.ie/~jpower/Research/bisonXML/
218
219 XML output for GNU Bison
220 http://yaxx.sourceforge.net/
221
222 * Unit rules
223 Maybe we could expand unit rules, i.e., transform
224
225 exp: arith | bool;
226 arith: exp '+' exp;
227 bool: exp '&' exp;
228
229 into
230
231 exp: exp '+' exp | exp '&' exp;
232
233 when there are no actions. This can significantly speed up some
234 grammars. I can't find the papers. In particular the book `LR
235 parsing: Theory and Practice' is impossible to find, but according to
236 `Parsing Techniques: a Practical Guide', it includes information about
237 this issue. Does anybody have it?
238
239
240
241 * Documentation
242
243 ** History/Bibliography
244 Some history of Bison and some bibliography would be most welcome.
245 Are there any Texinfo standards for bibliography?
246
247 ** %printer
248 Wow, %printer is not documented. Clearly mark YYPRINT as obsolete.
249
250 * Java, Fortran, etc.
251
252
253 * Coding system independence
254 Paul notes:
255
256 Currently Bison assumes 8-bit bytes (i.e. that UCHAR_MAX is
257 255). It also assumes that the 8-bit character encoding is
258 the same for the invocation of 'bison' as it is for the
259 invocation of 'cc', but this is not necessarily true when
260 people run bison on an ASCII host and then use cc on an EBCDIC
261 host. I don't think these topics are worth our time
262 addressing (unless we find a gung-ho volunteer for EBCDIC or
263 PDP-10 ports :-) but they should probably be documented
264 somewhere.
265
266 More importantly, Bison does not currently allow NUL bytes in
267 tokens, either via escapes (e.g., "x\0y") or via a NUL byte in
268 the source code. This should get fixed.
269
270 * --graph
271 Show reductions.
272
273 * Broken options ?
274 ** %token-table
275 ** Skeleton strategy
276 Must we keep %token-table?
277
278 * BTYacc
279 See if we can integrate backtracking in Bison. Charles-Henri de
280 Boysson <de-boy_c@epita.fr> has been working on this, but never gave
281 the results.
282
283 Vadim Maslow, the maintainer of BTYacc was once contacted. Adjusting
284 the Bison grammar parser will be needed to support some extra BTYacc
285 features. This is less urgent.
286
287 ** Keeping the conflicted actions
288 First, analyze the differences between byacc and btyacc (I'm referring
289 to the executables). Find where the conflicts are preserved.
290
291 ** Compare with the GLR tables
292 See how isomorphic the way BTYacc and the way the GLR adjustments in
293 Bison are compatible. *As much as possible* one should try to use the
294 same implementation in the Bison executables. I insist: it should be
295 very feasible to use the very same conflict tables.
296
297 ** Adjust the skeletons
298 Import the skeletons for C and C++.
299
300
301 * Precedence
302
303 ** Partial order
304 It is unfortunate that there is a total order for precedence. It
305 makes it impossible to have modular precedence information. We should
306 move to partial orders (sounds like series/parallel orders to me).
307
308 ** RR conflicts
309 See if we can use precedence between rules to solve RR conflicts. See
310 what POSIX says.
311
312
313 * $undefined
314 From Hans:
315 - If the Bison generated parser experiences an undefined number in the
316 character range, that character is written out in diagnostic messages, an
317 addition to the $undefined value.
318
319 Suggest: Change the name $undefined to undefined; looks better in outputs.
320
321
322 * Default Action
323 From Hans:
324 - For use with my C++ parser, I transported the "switch (yyn)" statement
325 that Bison writes to the bison.simple skeleton file. This way, I can remove
326 the current default rule $$ = $1 implementation, which causes a double
327 assignment to $$ which may not be OK under C++, replacing it with a
328 "default:" part within the switch statement.
329
330 Note that the default rule $$ = $1, when typed, is perfectly OK under C,
331 but in the C++ implementation I made, this rule is different from
332 $<type_name>$ = $<type_name>1. I therefore think that one should implement
333 a Bison option where every typed default rule is explicitly written out
334 (same typed ruled can of course be grouped together).
335
336 * Pre and post actions.
337 From: Florian Krohm <florian@edamail.fishkill.ibm.com>
338 Subject: YYACT_EPILOGUE
339 To: bug-bison@gnu.org
340 X-Sent: 1 week, 4 days, 14 hours, 38 minutes, 11 seconds ago
341
342 The other day I had the need for explicitly building the parse tree. I
343 used %locations for that and defined YYLLOC_DEFAULT to call a function
344 that returns the tree node for the production. Easy. But I also needed
345 to assign the S-attribute to the tree node. That cannot be done in
346 YYLLOC_DEFAULT, because it is invoked before the action is executed.
347 The way I solved this was to define a macro YYACT_EPILOGUE that would
348 be invoked after the action. For reasons of symmetry I also added
349 YYACT_PROLOGUE. Although I had no use for that I can envision how it
350 might come in handy for debugging purposes.
351 All is needed is to add
352
353 #if YYLSP_NEEDED
354 YYACT_EPILOGUE (yyval, (yyvsp - yylen), yylen, yyloc, (yylsp - yylen));
355 #else
356 YYACT_EPILOGUE (yyval, (yyvsp - yylen), yylen);
357 #endif
358
359 at the proper place to bison.simple. Ditto for YYACT_PROLOGUE.
360
361 I was wondering what you think about adding YYACT_PROLOGUE/EPILOGUE
362 to bison. If you're interested, I'll work on a patch.
363
364 * Better graphics
365 Equip the parser with a means to create the (visual) parse tree.
366
367 * Complaint submessage indentation.
368 We already have an implementation that works fairly well for named
369 reference messages, but it would be nice to use it consistently for all
370 submessages from Bison. For example, the "previous definition"
371 submessage or the list of correct values for a %define variable might
372 look better with indentation.
373
374 However, the current implementation makes the assumption that the
375 location printed on the first line is not usually much shorter than the
376 locations printed on the submessage lines that follow. That assumption
377 may not hold true as often for some kinds of submessages especially if
378 we ever support multiple grammar files.
379
380 Here's a proposal for how a new implementation might look:
381
382 http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bison-patches/2009-09/msg00086.html
383
384
385 Local Variables:
386 mode: outline
387 coding: utf-8
388 End:
389
390 -----
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393
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395
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397 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
398 the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
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400
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403 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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405
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