Keeping track of state in JFlex - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com2009-12-05T03:14:16Zhttp://stackoverflow.com/feeds/question/887485http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdfhttp://stackoverflow.com/questions/887485/keeping-track-of-state-in-jflex0Keeping track of state in JFlexTom Martin2009-05-20T11:53:04Z2009-06-30T08:40:55Z
<p>I'm writing a custom flex file to generate a lexer for use with JSyntaxpane.</p>
<p>The custom language I need to lex has different states that can be embedded into each other in a kind of stack.</p>
<p>I.E you could be writing an expression that has a single quoted string in it and then embed another expression within the string using a special token eval(). But you can also embed the expression within a double quoted string.</p>
<p>eg:</p>
<pre><code>someExpressionFunction('a single-quoted string with an eval(expression) embedded in it', "a double-quoted string with an eval(expression) embedded in it")
</code></pre>
<p>This is a simplification, there are more states than this, but assuming I need to have different states for DOUBLE_STRING and SINGLE_STRING it adequately describes my situation.</p>
<p>What's the best way to ensure I return to the correct state upon closing the eval expression (i.e return to DOUBLE_STRING if I was in double quotes, SINGLE_STRING if I was in single quotes)</p>
<p>The solution I've come up with, which works, is to keep track of state using a Stack and some custom methods to use in lieu of using yybegin to start a different state.</p>
<pre><code>private Stack<Integer> stack = new Stack<Integer>();
public void yypushState(int newState) {
stack.push(yystate());
yybegin(newState);
}
public void yypopState() {
yybegin(stack.pop());
}
</code></pre>
<p>Is this the best way to achieve this? Is there a simpler built-in function of JFlex I can leverage or a best practice I should know about?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/887485/keeping-track-of-state-in-jflex/1062473#10624731Answer by Ayman for Keeping track of state in JFlexAyman2009-06-30T08:40:55Z2009-06-30T08:40:55Z<p>I think that's one very good way of doing it. I actually needed some similar feature to add Groovy GString, Python like String and some HTML to JavaDocs.</p>
<p>What I would also like to add is a Lexer calling a Lexer to parse sub sections. Something like JavaScript embedded in HTML. But I could not get the time to do it.</p>
<p>I like StackOverflow, but just wondering why didn't you post this on JSyntaxPane's issues?</p>