vote up 0 vote down star

I'm trying to implement a expression handling grammar (that deals with nested parenthesis and stuff). I have the following so far, but they can't deal with some cases (successful/failure cases appear after the following code block). Anyone know what's going on?

Note: The varname += and varname = stuff are just some additional AST generation helper stuff in XText. Don't worry about them for now.

...

NilExpression returns Expression:
  'nil';

FalseExpression returns Expression:
  'false';

TrueExpression returns Expression:
  'true';

NumberExpression returns Expression:
  value=Number;

StringExpression returns Expression:
  value=STRING; //EllipsesExpression: '...';
//FunctionExpression: function=function; //don't allow random functions


UnaryExpression:
  op=unop ('(' expr=Expression ')')|expr=Expression;

BinaryExpression:
  'or'? AndOp; //or op

AndOp:
  'and'? ComparisonOp;

ComparisonOp:
  ('>'|'<'|'>='|'<='|'=='|'~=')? ConcatOp;

ConcatOp:
  '..'? AddSubOp;

AddSubOp:
  ('+' '-')? MultDivOp;

MultDivOp:
  ('*' '/')? ExpOp;

ExpOp:
  '^'? (('(' expr=Expression ')')|expr=Expression);

ExprSideOne : Variable|NilExpression|FalseExpression|TrueExpression|
  NumberExpression|StringExpression|UnaryExpression;

Expression:
  ( 
   '('
  expression1=ExprSideOne expression2+=BinaryExpression*
   ')' 
  )
  |
  ( expression1=ExprSideOne expression2+=BinaryExpression* )
;
...

And here's the list of parses/fails:

c = ((b)); //fails
c = ((a not b)); //fails
c = b; //parses
d = (b); //parses
flag

Need recursion. Just out of curiosity, why are your binary operator rules written as unary operators? Is nil >= .. + * (1) supposed to mean something? – Ellery Newcomer Oct 10 at 4:10

1 Answer

vote up 1 vote down check

What's going on is that your Expression/Expressions support single parentheses but not multiple parentheses (as you concluded). I don't have ANTLR specific experience but I've worked with Javacc which shares many similar concepts (I wrote a grammar for Prolog... don't ask).

To handle nested parentheses, you typically have something similar to:

ParenthesisExpression: '(' (ParenthesisExpression | Expression) ')';

This would mean that the expression is either wrapped in parentheses or it's just a raw expression. As for how the AST deals with this, a ParenthesisExpression 'is a' Expression, so it can be represented as a subclass or an implementation of (if Expression is an interface/abstract class of sorts).

link|flag
As an addition, you may have to deal with this case as well: ((a) not (b or (c))) so the fun is in ensuring that your Expression can also fall back to a ParenthesisExpression as well. – Malaxeur Sep 21 at 3:36
Wouldn't that force a outer ()? Around (ParenthesisExpression | Expression) you have a pair of (...)s. – jameszhao00 Sep 21 at 3:40
Sorry I meant the '(' ')' around your thing, not the ( ) :) – jameszhao00 Sep 21 at 3:54
Yes, but only for 'ParenthesisExpression'. So consider a standard expression, it's either wrapped in parentheses or not, right? In the case that it is. The above rule will match. Then consider the case where it isn't, then the 'Expression' rule should catch. – Malaxeur Sep 21 at 3:55
Example: (a) would get matched to 'ParenthesisExpression' once and then fall through to Expression. ((a)) would get matched to ParethesisExpression twice and then to Expression. 'a' would just get matched to Expression. – Malaxeur Sep 21 at 3:56
show 3 more comments

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.