Mini-languages in Python

这一生的挚爱 提交于 2019-11-27 17:15:08

Pyparsing is handy for writing "little languages". I gave a presentation at PyCon'06 on writing a simple adventure game engine, in which the language being parsed and interpreted was the game command set ("inventory", "take sword", "drop book", etc.). (Source code here.)

You can also find links to other pyparsing articles at the pyparsing wiki.

Stephan202

I have limited but positive experience with PLY (Python Lex-Yacc). It combines Lex and Yacc functionality in a single Python class. You may want to check it out.

Fellow Stackoverflow'er Ned Batchelder has a nice overview of available tools on his website. There's also an overview on the Python website itself.

Andrey Vlasovskikh

I would recommend funcparserlib. It was written especially for parsing little languages and DSLs and it is faster and smaller than pyparsing (see stats on its homepage). Minimalists and functional programmers should like funcparserlib.

Edit: By the way, I'm the author of this library, so my opinion may be biased.

Python is such a wonderfully simple and extensible language that I'd suggest merely creating a comprehensive python module, and coding against that.

I see that while I typed up the above, PLY has already been mentioned.

In order to be productive, I'd always use a parser generator like CocoPy (Tutorial) to have your grammar transformed into a (correct) parser (unless you want to implement the parser manually for the sake of learning).

The rest is writing the actual interpreter/compiler (Create stack-based byte code or memory AST to be interpreted and then evaluate it).

If you ask me this now, I would try the textx library for python. You can very easily create a dsl in that with python! Advantages are that it creates an AST for you, and lexing and parsing is combined.

http://igordejanovic.net/textX/

标签
易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!