/* Prepare the LALR and GLR parser tables.
- Copyright (C) 2002, 2004, 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+
+ Copyright (C) 2002, 2004, 2009-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of Bison, the GNU Compiler Compiler.
YYFINAL = the state number of the termination state.
YYTABLE = a vector filled with portions for different uses, found
- via YYPACT and YYPGOTO.
+ via YYPACT and YYPGOTO, described below.
YYLAST ( = high) the number of the last element of YYTABLE, i.e.,
sizeof (YYTABLE) - 1.
If the value is negative, it is minus a rule number to reduce by.
- If the value is zero or YYTABLE_NINF, it's a syntax error.
+ If the value is YYTABLE_NINF, it's a syntax error.
YYPGOTO[I] = the index in YYTABLE of the portion describing what to
do after reducing a rule that derives variable I + NTOKENS. This
YYCHECK[YYPGOTO[I] + S] != S), then the default state (that is,
YYDEFGOTO[I]) should be used instead of YYTABLE. Otherwise,
YYTABLE[YYPGOTO[I] + S] is the state to go to even if YYPGOTO[I] < 0.
+
+ When the above YYPACT, YYPGOTO, and YYCHECK tests determine that a
+ value from YYTABLE should be used, that value is never zero, so it is
+ useless to check for zero. When those tests indicate that the value
+ from YYDEFACT or YYDEFGOTO should be used instead, the value from
+ YYTABLE *might* be zero, which, as a consequence of the way in which
+ the tables are constructed, also happens to indicate that YYDEFACT or
+ YYDEFGOTO should be used. However, the YYTABLE value cannot be
+ trusted when the YYDEFACT or YYDEFGOTO value should be used. In
+ summary, forget about zero values in YYTABLE.
*/
extern int nvectors;