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I want to write a parser-generator for educational purposes, and was wondering if there are some nice online resources or tutorials that explain how to write one. Something on the lines of "Let's Build a Compiler" by Jack Crenshaw.

I want to write the parser generator for LR(1) grammar.

I have a decent understanding of the theory behind generating the action and goto tables, but want some resource which will help me with implementing it.

Preferred languages are C/C++, Java though even other languages are OK.

Thanks.

4 Answers 4

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I agree with others, the Dragon book is good background for LR parsing.

If you are interested in recursive descent parsers, an enormously fun learning experience is this website, which walks you through building a completely self-contained compiler system that can compile itself and other languages:

MetaII Compiler Tutorial

This is all based on an amazing little 10-page technical paper by Val Schorre: META II: A Syntax-Oriented Compiler Writing Language from honest-to-god 1964. I learned how to build compilers from this back in 1970. There's a mind-blowing moment when you finally grok how the compiler can regenerate itself....

I know the website author from my college days, but have nothing to do with the website.

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If you wanted to go the python route I would recommend the following.

I have found both of these to be extremely helpful and Paul McGuire the author of pyparsing is super at helping you out when you run into problems. The book Text Processing in Python is just a handy reference to have at your finger tips and helps get you into the right frame of mind when attempting to build a parser.

I would also point out that an OO language is better suited as a language parsing engine because it's extensible and polymorphism is the right way to do it (IMHO). Looking at the problem in terms of a state machine rather than "Look for a semicolon at the end of xyz" will demonstrate that your parser becomes much more robust in the end.

Hope that Helps!

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Not really online, but the Dragon Book has fairly elaborate discussions of LR parsing.

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I found it easier to learn to write recursive-descent parsers before learning to write LR parsers. Well to be honest, after many years of writing parsers, I never found it necessary to write an LR parser.

I've recently written a tutorial at CodeProject called Implementing Programming Language Tools in C# 4.0 which describes recursive descent parsing techniques.

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