I'm writing a parser, and I was previously having trouble when I try to parse identifiers (anything that's valid for a C++ variable name) and unclosed string literals (anything starting with "
, but missing the closing "
) at the end of my input. I think it's because the lexer (TokenStream
) uses std::noskipws
in these cases and builds the token character by character. Here is where I believe I have narrowed down the problem (shown only for one of the two cases, as the other is very similar logic):
std::string TokenStream::get()
{
char c;
(*input) >> c; // input is of type istream*
// other cases...
if (c == '"')
{
std::string s = stringFromChar(c); // just makes a string from the char.
char d;
while (true) // 1)
{
(*input) >> std::noskipws >> d;
std::cout << d; // 2)
if (d == '"')
{
s += d;
(*input) >> std::skipws;
break;
}
s += d;
}
return s;
}
// other cases...
}
Note that this function is supposed to just generate tokens from the input in a stream-like fashion. Now, if I input either a literal (like asdf
) or an unclosed string (like "asdf
), then the program will hang, and the line marked 2)
will just output the last character of the input (in my examples, f
) over and over again forever.
I've solved this problem by using a check for input->eof()
, but my question is this:
Why does the loop (marked 1)
in comments) keep executing when I hit the end of stream, and why does it just print that last character read every time through the loop?
std::string s(1, c);
?