Say I have this in BNF:
a ::= b {c}
| d {e}
Is there any way to translate to Gold-Parser? Without breaking it up like this:
<a> ::= <b> <c>
<c> ::=
| <c> terminal
Side Note: If anybody has a better title/more tags, please edit it, thanks!
Is there any way to translate to Gold-Parser? Without breaking it up
No, it doesn't support the repetition operator ({x}) as part of rule definitions, so you must encode it with multiple rules.
See also Converting EBNF to BNF
Related
boolean algebra
I want to write those boolean expression in Backus-Naur-Form.
What I have got is:
< variable > ::= < signal > | < operator> | < bracket >< variable>
< signal> ::= <p> | <q> | <r>| <s>
< operator> ::= <AND> | <OR> | <implication>| <equivalence>| <NOT>
< bracket> ::= < ( > | < ) >
I made a rekursion with < bracket >< variable>, so that whenever there is a bracket it starts a new instance, but I still do not know when to close the brackets. With this you are able to set a closing bracket and make a new instance, but I only want that for opening brackets.
Can I seperate < bracket> in < open bracket> and < closing bracket>?
Is my Backus-Naur form even correct? There isn't much information about Backus-Naur form with boolean algebra on the internet. How does the parse tree of this look like?
I assume that you want to define a grammar for boolean expressions using the Backus-Naur form, and that your examples are concrete instances of such expressions. There are multiple problems with your grammar:
First of all, you want your grammar to only generate correct boolean expressions. With your grammar, you could generate a simple operator ∨ as valid expression using the path <variable> -> <operator> -> <OR>, which is clearly wrong since the operator is missing its operands. In other words, ∨ on its own cannot be a correct boolean expression. Various other incorrect expressions can be derived with your grammar. For the same reason, the opening and closing brackets should appear together somewhere within a production rule, since you want to ensure that every opening bracket has a closing bracket. Putting them in separate production rules might destroy that guarantee, depending on the overall structure of your grammar.
Secondly, you want to differentiate between non-terminal symbols (the ones that are refined by production rules, i.e. the ones written between < and >) and terminal symbols (atomic symbols like your variables p, q, r and s). Hence, your non-terminal symbols <p>, <q>, <r> and <s> should be terminal symbols p, q, r and s. Same goes for other symbols like brackets and operators.
Thirdly, in order to get an unambiguous parse tree, you want to get your precedence and associativity of your operators correct, i.e., you want to make sure that, for example, negation is evaluated before implication, since it has a higher precedence (similar to arithmetic expressions where multiplication must be evaluated before addition). In other words, we want operators with higher precedence to appear closer to the leaf nodes of the parse tree, and operators with lower precedence to appear closer to the root node of the tree, since the leaves of the tree are evaluated first. We can achieve that by defining our grammar in a way that reflects the precedences of the operators in a decreasing manner:
<expression> ::= <expression> ↔ <implication> | <implication>
<implication> ::= <implication> → <disjunction> | <disjunction>
<disjunction> ::= <disjunction> ∨ <conjunction> | <conjunction>
<conjunction> ::= <conjunction> ∧ <negation> | <negation>
<negation> ::= ¬ <negation> | <variable> | ( <expression> )
<variable> ::= p | q | r | s
Starting with <expression>, we can see that a valid boolean expression starts with chaining all the ↔ operators together, then all the → operators , then all the ∨ operators, and so on, according to their precedence. Hence, operators with lower precedence (e.g., ↔) are located near the root of the tree, where operators with higher precedence (e.g., ¬) are located near the leaves of the tree.
Note that the grammar above is left-recursive, which might cause some problems with software tools that cannot handle them (e.g., parser generators).
selectors-list ::=
selector[:pseudo-class] [::pseudo-element]
[, selectors-list]
properties-list ::=
[property : value] [; properties-list]
I'm trying to get familiar with CSS and I'd be happy to understand the rules of reading these (from https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/Reference).
This MDN page seems to use a pseudo-BNF notation to describe CSS syntax. The notation used is very confusing because [] :: : ; and , all mean something in CSS, yet they used [] to represent optional parts and ::= for grammar rule definition.
I can give you a rough English translation of what they meant:
style-rule ::=
selectors-list {
properties-list
}
A style-rule is made of a selectors-list followed by { followed by a properties-list followed by }.
selectors-list ::=
selector[:pseudo-class] [::pseudo-element]
[, selectors-list]
A selectors-list is made of a selector, optionally followed by : and a pseudo-class, optionally followed by :: and a pseudo-element, optionally followed by , and another selectors-list.
This definition is not only incorrect (you may use multiple pseudo-class in a row), but has a confusing name. If a pseudo-class and a pseudo-element are something separate from the selector, why would you call a list of all three a selectors-list?
Leaving that aside...
properties-list ::=
[property : value] [; properties-list]
A properties-list can be completely empty, or may contain a property followed by : followed by a value, optionally followed by ; and another properties-list.
And then, they don't even use their pseudo-BNF to define what is a selector, a pseudo-class, a pseudo-element, a property or a value. This whole notation is way more confusing than helpful. This MDN page should probably get rewritten.
I'd like to design a combinator to parse Propositional Logic. Here's a simple BNF:
<sentence> ::= <atomic-sentence> | <complex-sentence>
<atomic-sentence> ::= True | False | P | Q | R
<complex-sentence> ::= (<sentence>)
| <sentence> <connective> <sentence>
| ¬<sentence>
<connective> ::= ∧ | ∨ | ⇒ | ⇔
The problem is that the grammar is left-recursive, which leads to an infinite loop: a sentence can be a complex sentence, which can start with a sentence, which can be a complex sentence, ... forever. Here's an example sentence that causes this problem:
P∧Q
Is there a simple way to fix the grammar so that it is suitable for a parser combinator? Thanks.
FWIW, I'm using FParsec in F#, but I think any parser combinator library would have the same issue.
FParsec can handle infix operators using the OperatorPrecedenceParser class where you just need to specify which operators with which associativity and precedence you have, without having to actually write a grammar for your infix expressions. The rest of this answer will explain how to solve the problem without this class for cases where the class doesn't apply, for parser combinators that don't have an equivalent class or in case you just plain don't want to use it or are at least interested in how you'd solve the problem without it.
Parser combinators tend to not support left-recursion, but they do tend to support repetition. Luckily, a left-recursive rule of the form <a> ::= <a> <b> | <c> can be rewritten using the * repetition operator to <a> ::= <c> <b>*. If you then left-fold over the resulting list, you can construct a tree that looks just like the parse tree you'd have gotten from the original grammar.
So if we first inline <complex-sentence> into <sentence> and then apply the above pattern, we get <a> = <sentence>, <b> = <connective> <sentence> and <c> = <atomic-sentence> | '(' <sentence> ')' | ¬<sentence>, resulting in the following rule after the transformation:
<sentence> ::= ( <atomic-sentence>
| '(' <sentence> ')'
| ¬<sentence>
)* <connective> <sentence>
To improve readability, we'll put the parenthesized part into its own rule:
<operand> ::= <atomic-sentence>
| '(' <sentence ')'
| ¬<sentence>
<sentence> ::= <operand> (<connective> <sentence>)*
Now if you try this grammar, you'll notice something strange: the list created by the * will only ever contain a single element (or none). This because if there's more than two operands, the right-recursive call to <sentence> will eat up all the operands, creating a right-associative parse tree.
So really the above grammar is equivalent to this (or rather the grammar is ambiguous, but a parser combinator will treat it as if it were equivalent to this):
<sentence> ::= <operand> <connective> <sentence>
This happened because the original grammar was ambiguous. The ambiguous definition <s> ::= <s> <c> <s> | <o> can either be interpreted as the left-recursive <s> ::= <s> <c> <o> | <o> (which will create a left-associative parse tree) or the right-recursive <s> ::= <o> <c> <s> | <o> (right-associative parse tree). So we should first remove the ambiguity by choosing one of those forms and then apply the transformation if applicable.
So if we choose the left-recursive form, we end up with:
<sentence> ::= <operand> (<connective> <operand>)*
Which will indeed create lists with more than one element. Alternatively if we choose the right-recursive rule, we can just leave it as-is (no repetition operator necessary) as there is no left-recursion to eliminate.
As I said, we can now get a left-associative tree by taking the list from the left-recursive version and left-folding it or a right-associative one by taking the right-recursive version. However both of these options will leave us with a tree that treats all of the operators as having the same precedence.
To fix the precedence you can either apply something like the shunting yard algorithm to the list or you can first re-write the grammar to take precedence into account and then apply the transformation.
This is a Common Lisp data representation question.
What is a good way to represent grammars? By "good" I mean a representation that is simple, easy to understand, and I can operate on the representation without a lot of fuss. The representation doesn't have to be particularly efficient; the other properties (simple, understandable, process-able) are more important to me.
Here is a sample grammar:
Session → Facts Question
Session → ( Session ) Session
Facts → Fact Facts
Facts → ε
Fact → ! STRING
Question → ? STRING
The representation should allow the code that operates on the representation to readily distinguish between terminal symbols and non-terminal symbols.
Non-terminal symbols: Session, Facts, Fact, Question
Terminal symbols: (, ), ε, !, ?
This particular grammar uses parentheses symbols, which conflicts with Common Lisp's use of parentheses symbols. What's a good way to handle that?
I want my code to be able to be able to recognize the symbol for the empty string, ε. What's a good way to represent the symbol for the empty string, ε?
I want my code to be able to distinguish between the left-hand side and the right-hand side of a grammar rule.
Below are some common operations that I want to perform on the representation.
Consider this rule:
A → u1u2...un
Operations: I want to get the first symbol of a grammar rule's right-hand side. Then I want to know: is it a terminal symbol? Is it the ε-symbol? If it's a non-terminal symbol, then I want to get its grammar rule.
GRAIL (GRAmmar In Lisp)
Description of GRAIL
Slightly modified version of GRAIL with a function generator included
I'm including the BNF of GRAIL from the second link in case it expires:
<grail-list> ::= "'(" {<grail-rule>} ")"
<grail-rule> ::= <assignment> | <alternation>
<assignment> ::= "(" <type> " ::= " <s-exp> ")"
<alternation> ::= "(" <type> " ::= " <type> {<type>} ")"
<s-exp> ::= <symbol> | <nonterminal> | "(" {<s-exp>} ")"
<type> ::= "#(" <type-name> ")"
<nonterminal> ::= "#(" {<arg-name> " "} <type-name> ")"
<type-name> ::= <symbol>
<arg-name> ::= <symbol>
DCG Format (Definite Clause Grammar)
There is an implementation of a definite clause grammar in Paradigms of Artificial Intelligence Programming. Technically it's Prolog, but it's all implemented as Lisp in the book.
Grammar of English in DCG Format as used in PAIP
DCG Parser
Hope this helps!
I'm working on a parser for LiveScript language, and am having trouble with parsing both object property definition forms — key: value and (+|-)key — together. For example:
prop: "val"
+boolProp
-boolProp
prop2: val2
I have the key: value form working with this:
Expression ::= TestExpression
| ParenExpression
| OpExpression
| ObjDefExpression
| PropDefExpression
| LiteralExpression
| ReferenceExpression
PropDefExpression ::= Expression COLON Expression
ObjDefExpression ::= PropDefExpression (NEWLINE PropDefExpression)*
// ... other expressions
But however I try to add ("+"|"-") IDENTIFIER to PropDefExpression or ObjDefExpression, I get errors about using left recursion. What's the (right) way to do this?
The grammar fragment you posted is already left-recursive, i.e. without even adding (+|-)boolprop, the non-terminal 'Expression' derives a form in which 'Expression' reappears as the leftmost symbol:
Expression -> PropDefExpression -> Expression COLON Expression
And it's not just left-recursive, it's ambiguous. E.g.
Expression COLON Expression COLON Expression
can be derived in two different ways (roughly, left-associative vs right-associative).
You can eliminate both these problems by using something more restricted on the left of the colon, e.g.:
PropDefExpression ::= Identifier COLON Expression
Also, another ambiguity: Expression derives PropDefExpression in two different ways, directly and via ObjDefExpression. My guess is, you can drop the direct derivation.
Once you've taken care of those things, it seems to me you should be able to add (+|-)boolprop without errors (unless it conflicts with one of the other kinds of expression that you didn't show).
Mind you, looking at the examples at http://livescript.net, I'm doubtful how much of that you'll be able to capture in a conventional grammar. But if you're just going for a subset, you might be okay.
I don't know how much help this will be, because I know nothing about GrammarKit and not much more about the language you're trying to parse.
However, it seems to me that
PropDefExpression ::= Expression COLON Expression
is not quite accurate, and it is creating an ambiguity when you add the boolean property production because an Expression might start with a unary - operator. In the actual grammar, though, a property cannot start with an arbitrary Expression. There are two types of key-property definitions:
name : expression
parenthesized_expression : expression
(Which is to say, expressions need to start with a ().
That means that a boolean property definition, starting with + or - is recognizable from the first token, which is precisely the condition needed for successful recursive descent parsing. There are several other property definition syntaxes, including names and parenthesized_expressions not followed by a :
That's easy to parse with an LR(1) parser, like the one Jison produces, but to parse it with a recursive-descent parser you need to left-factor. (It's possible that GrammarKit can do this for you, by the way.) Basically, you'd need something like (this is not complete):
PropertyDefinition ::= PropertyPrefix PropertySuffix? | BooleanProperty
PropertyPrefix ::= NAME | ParenthesizedExpression
PropertySuffix ::= COLON Expression | DOT NAME