I'm currently working on an assignment to create a basic interpreter with 8 keywords (case insensitive) and the 4 arithmetic operators. A program in this language would look something like this (similar to BASIC's syntax really):
# (signals start of a comment line)
LET
INTEGER
STRING
PRINT
END
So anyway I'm currently trying to tokenize the lines of text to be parsed. I already parsed all the lines of text into an ArrayList and tokenized the Strings. My current problem now is that StringTokenizer tokenizes all the strings in advance (I'm using whitespace as a delimiter), when what I need is for it to find my keyword, which is always the first word at the beginning of the line of code, and certain issues make that undesirable; I don't think that using String.split() would be much help either.
The way I was planning on doing it was to have the interpreter find my first token, and go from there to the appropriate class via the HashMap (cf. my previous question regarding the use of switch statements for my interpreter here: Switch or if statements in writing an interpreter in java; it was suggested by other members that I use a Map) to remove the keyword token and execute. Would setting up a second temporary ArrayList or array specifically to hold variables be a good idea? I don't want or need it to be overly complicated.
Thanks in advance for the suggestions.
public static void main (String[]args)
{
try
{
ArrayList<String> demo= new ArrayList <String>();
FileReader fr= new FileReader("hi.tpl");
BufferedReader reader= new BufferedReader(fr);
String line;
while ((line=reader.readLine()) !=null)//read file line by line
{
//Add to ArrayList
demo.add(line);
}
reader.close();
boolean checkEnd= demo.contains("END");//check if arraylist contains END statement
if(line=null && checkEnd== false)
{
System.out.println(" Unexpected end of file: no END statement");
System.exit(0);
}
ListIterator<String>arrayListIt=demo.listIterator();
while (arrayListIt.hasNext())
for (String file: demo)// begin interpreting the program file here
{
StringTokenizer st=new StringTokenizer(file);
while(st.hasMoreTokens())
{
int firstWord=file.indexOf();
String command = file;
if (firstSpace > 0)
{
command= file.substring(0, firstSpace);
}
TokenHandler tokens= tokens.get(command.toUpperCase());
if(tokens != null)
{
tokens.execute(file);
}
}