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I can't seem to successfully parse from standard input stream with FParsec. I reduced my case to this very simple code :

match (runParserOnStream (pstring "test" .>> FParsec.CharParsers.newline) () "stdin" (Console.OpenStandardInput ()) Console.InputEncoding) with
    | Success(result, _, _)   -> printfn "Success: %A" result
    | Failure(errorMsg, perr, _) -> printfn "Failure: %s" errorMsg

But when i run the program, enter the string test, and then press Enter, it hangs there, and i can't seem to figure out why ..

What would be the solution ?

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  • I think you'll never reach the end of the input stream.
    – Daniel
    Oct 11, 2012 at 19:09
  • Yes, that's my guess too, but there ought to be a way to tell FParsec that once a correct form has been parsed and there is no ambiguity, it can stop, or else it means there is strictly no way to do a REPL with an FParsec parser. Oct 11, 2012 at 19:12
  • My guess is it doesn't parse until its buffer is full.
    – Daniel
    Oct 11, 2012 at 19:19
  • Are you using the latest version?
    – Daniel
    Oct 11, 2012 at 19:30
  • Yes i built it myself. I'm not even sure my reasoning is correct but there must be a way of doing what i want ! :) Oct 11, 2012 at 19:33

2 Answers 2

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For performance reasons and simplicity, FParsec reads input streams block-wise (or reads the complete stream into a string before starting to parse). See e.g. this answer for some more details: Chunked Parsing with FParsec

If you want to parse the input from a REPL with FParsec, you could implement a simple scanner that waits for a terminator in the input stream (e.g. a ";;" followed by a newline, like in the FSI console) and then, when it encounters such a terminator, copies the input up to the terminator into a string and hands it over to an FParsec parser for evaluation.

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  • Hey stephan, that's what i did on my own because i didn't want to spend too much time pulling hairs over it. Thanks ! Oct 12, 2012 at 9:59
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Since FParsec's source code is available it was easy enough to step through it and see that it reads the input stream until the buffer is full or end of stream is signaled.

Alternatively, you could read a line at a time:

let rec parseConsoleInput() =
  let parser = pstring "text" .>> eof
  Console.Write("> ")
  match Console.ReadLine() with
  | null | "" -> ()
  | input -> 
    match run parser input with
    | Success(result, _, _) -> printfn "Success: %A" result
    | Failure(msg, _, _) -> printfn "Failure: %s" msg
    parseConsoleInput()
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  • In a grammar defined by A -> "test", the only valid input is "test", so Fparsec could stop after it has parsed said string. If there are remaining characters in the stream, then input is incorrect according to the grammar. Oct 11, 2012 at 19:18
  • Moreover, what is a parseable chunk is defined by the grammar, and not in any other way. Run F# repl for an example of what i mean. Oct 11, 2012 at 19:19
  • 1
    In the F# REPL, you have have to terminate the input with ";;". If you wanted to parse the input from such a REPL with FParsec, you could simply scan the input for ";;", copy the chunks separated by ";;"s into strings and then individually parse these strings with FParsec. Oct 11, 2012 at 22:55
  • 1
    @raph.amiard - In F# there is no good way of knowing when a "parseable chunk" ends. In particular, I can separate lines by arbitrary amounts of blank lines without affecting the meaning of the code. This is why you need to add ;; to signify when your "parseable chunk" ends Oct 12, 2012 at 4:30

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