I have the following as part of my grammar (and here 'name'
and 'value'
are just static for simplicity, in practice they are not):
test4 : 'name' CMPOP 'value';
CMPOP : EQUALS | NOTEQUALS;
EQUALS : '=';
NOTEQUALS : '!=';
Now, what I want to do is handle different CMPOPs differently (possibly via a switch). Is there a way to get an int/enum version of the token underlying CMPOP (= or !=) while I am evaluating the expression in a FilterListener implementation? I know I can get the string with getText()
but comparing strings everywhere can be slow. e.g. if I have name=value
I can see that =
TerminalNodeImpl and it has a Symbol. The only thing that looks similar there is the type
property but that seems to give me CMPOP.
public void exitTest4(@NotNull testParser.Test4Context ctx) {
System.out.println(ctx.CMPOP().getSymbol().toString());
int type = ctx.CMPOP().getSymbol().getType();
System.out.println(type + "," + testParser.tokenNames[type]);
}
Gives me:
[@1,4:4='=',<6>,1:4]
6,CMPOP
What I want to do is something like:
switch ( ctx.CMPOP().something() ) {
EQUALS : //evaluate with = ; break
NOTEQUALS : //evaluate with != ; break
}
Or am I going about this the wrong way? Should I move that to the parser rules rather than lexer rules to something like: 'name' (EQUALS | NOTEQUALS) 'value'
?
I am using antlr4.