1

I have the following script and want turn some parts of it to Perl script. The parts that I'm interested in are very similar to perl and easy to convert (FYI: COND and FORMULA mean if and return in Perl, respectively). However, I'm struggling to extract these sections properly.

... #OTHER STUFFS
K K1 {
... #MORE OTHER STUFFS
    LOL {
        COND { d < 0.01 }
        FORMULA { -0.2 + 3.3*sqrt(d) }
        COND { d >= 0.01 }
        FORMULA { -0.2 + 3.3*sqrt(d+0.4) }
    }
... #MORE OTHER STUFFS
}
... #OTHER STUFFS
K K2 {
... #MORE OTHER STUFFS
    LOL {
        COND { d < 0.03 }
        FORMULA { -2.2 + 1.3*sqrt(d) }
        COND { d >= 0.03 }
        FORMULA { -2.2 + 1.3*sqrt(d+0.8) }
    }
... #MORE OTHER STUFFS
}
... #OTHER STUFFS
K K3 {
... #MORE OTHER STUFFS
    LOL {
        COND { d < 0.02 }
        FORMULA { -4.3 + 0.3*sqrt(d) }
        COND { d >= 0.02 }
        FORMULA { -4.3 + 0.3*sqrt(d+0.3) }
    }
... #MORE OTHER STUFFS
}
... #OTHER STUFF

I've tried the following perl-liner,

perl -ne 'print $1 if /K\sK2\s\{/ .. /\}/ and /LOL\s\{/ .. /\}/ and /COND*(.*)/' filename

to extract, for instance, { d < 0.03 } from

K K2 {
... #MORE OTHER STUFFS
    LOL {
        COND { d < 0.03 }
        FORMULA { -2.2 + 1.3*sqrt(d) }
        COND { d >= 0.03 }
        FORMULA { -2.2 + 1.3*sqrt(d+0.8) }
    }
... #MORE OTHER STUFFS
}

But

  1. It failed and I don't know how to fix it
  2. How I can fix it in a way to be able to catch the second COND statement in the same section (i.e. COND { w >= 0.03 }). In other word, how I can skip the first, second,... occurrence of a string.

PS If I can get this extraction part done, I know how to convert it to Perl-looking code

1

2 Answers 2

2

Parse the conditions, and translate them into anonymous subroutines that can be eval'd and then assigned to a hash.

You will want to test the below thoroughly before using, as I don't know your full data set.

use strict;
use warnings;

our %formula_per_k;
INIT {
    # List all functions that you want to allow in formulas.  All other words will be interpretted as variables.
    my @FORMULA_FUNCS = qw(sqrt exp log);

    # Load the data via a file.
    my $data = do {local $/; <DATA>};

    # Parse K blocks
    while ($data =~ m{
        ^K \s+ (\w+) \s* \{
            ( (?: [^{}]+ | \{(?2)\} )* )         # Matched braces only.
        \}
    }mgx) {
        my ($name, $params) = ($1, $2);

        # Parse LOL block
        next if $params !~ m{
            LOL \s* \{ 
                ( (?: [^{}]+ | \{(?1)\} )*? )    # Matched braces only.
            \}
        }mx;
        my $lol = $1;

        # Start building anonymous subroutine
        my $conditions = '';

        # Parse Conditions and Formulas
        while ($lol =~ m{
            COND \s* \{ (.*?) \} \s* 
            FORMULA \s* \{ (.*?) \}
        }gx) {
            my ($cond, $formula) = ($1, $2);

            # Remove Excess spacing and translate variable into perl scalar.
            for ($cond, $formula) {
                s/^\s+|\s+$//g;
                s{([a-zA-Z]+)}{
                    my $var = $1;
                    $var = "\$hashref->{$var}" if ! grep {$var eq $_} @FORMULA_FUNCS;
                    $var
                }eg;
            }

            $conditions .= "return $formula if $cond; ";
        }

        my $code = "sub {my \$hashref = shift; ${conditions} return; }";

        my $sub = eval $code;
        if ($@) {
            die "Invalid formulas in $name: $@";
        }

        $formula_per_k{$name} = $sub;
    }
}

sub formula_per_k {
    my ($k, $vars) = @_;

    die "Unrecognized K value '$k'" if ! exists $formula_per_k{$k};

    return $formula_per_k{$k}($vars);
}

print "'K1', {d => .1}   = " . formula_per_k('K1', {d => .1}) . "\n";
print "'K1', {d => .05}  = " . formula_per_k('K1', {d => .05}) . "\n";
print "'K3', {d => .02}  = " . formula_per_k('K3', {d => .02}) . "\n";
print "'K3', {d => .021} = " . formula_per_k('K3', {d => .021}) . "\n";


__DATA__
... #OTHER STUFFS
K K1 {
    LOL {
        COND { d < 0.01 }
        FORMULA { -0.2 + 3.3*sqrt(d) }
        COND { d >= 0.01 }
        FORMULA { -0.2 + 3.3*sqrt(d+0.4) }
    }
}
... #OTHER STUFFS
K K2 {
    LOL {
        COND { d < 0.03 }
        FORMULA { -2.2 + 1.3*sqrt(d) }
        COND { d >= 0.03 }
        FORMULA { -2.2 + 1.3*sqrt(d+0.8) }
    }
}
... #OTHER STUFFS
K K3 {
    LOL {
        COND { d < 0.02 }
        FORMULA { -4.3 + 0.3*sqrt(d) }
        COND { d >= 0.02 }
        FORMULA { -4.3 + 0.3*sqrt(d+0.3) }
    }
}
... #OTHER STUFF

Outputs:

'K1', {d => .1}   = 2.13345237791561
'K1', {d => .05}  = 2.01370729772479
'K3', {d => .02}  = -4.13029437251523
'K3', {d => .021} = -4.13002941430942
27
  • Thanks a lot @Miller. While I'm trying to understand your code myself, a little comment or explanation on complicated parts (of course in your spare time) will be greatly appreciated. Thanks again. Jun 27, 2014 at 22:56
  • Wonderful @Miller! I'm gradually perceiving the greatness of your code. Is there an easy way (to add a piece of code) to print the perl code for conditions and returns instead of evaluating them? It seems simply "print $code" doesn't work. Sorry for bugging you way too much. I'm killing myself to do it in perl so that I can finally learn Perl. (I only know Python, C and Bash). Jun 27, 2014 at 23:38
  • 1
    I've updated the code to treat variable translation in a more global sense. This changed the style of the function call as well, as there is no longer just a static d variable.
    – Miller
    Jul 2, 2014 at 1:49
  • 1
    To you use an or | like that, you need to put them in a non-capturing group: while( $lol =~ m{ (?:COND|STATE) \s* \{ (.*?) \} \s* FORMULA \s* \{ (.*?) \} }gx )
    – Miller
    Jul 2, 2014 at 22:48
  • 1
    Yep, SO takes a little while to figure out. I'm still working at it. At minimum, I'd recommend you coming up with an actual Handle to be referred as. Something so that it easier to connect with you as a person and be more likely to be invested in helping you become a better programmer. And choose wisely. Something like LazyNinja obviously discourages people from wanting to invest their time.
    – Miller
    Jul 9, 2014 at 0:26
1

First at all, sorry for the one-liner, but I use a readable way.

To extract the information you want (in general):

my $data = <<EOD;
... #OTHER STUFFS
K K1 {
    LOL {
        COND { d < 0.01 }
        FORMULA { -0.2 + 3.3*sqrt(d) }
        COND { d >= 0.01 }
        FORMULA { -0.2 + 3.3*sqrt(d+0.4) }
    }
}
... #OTHER STUFFS
K K2 {
    LOL {
        COND { d < 0.03 }
        FORMULA { -2.2 + 1.3*sqrt(d) }
        COND { d >= 0.03 }
        FORMULA { -2.2 + 1.3*sqrt(d+0.8) }
    }
}
... #OTHER STUFFS
K K3 {
    LOL {
        COND { d < 0.02 }
        FORMULA { -4.3 + 0.3*sqrt(d) }
        COND { d >= 0.02 }
        FORMULA { -4.3 + 0.3*sqrt(d+0.3) }
    }
}
EOD

while( $data =~ /COND    \s* { \s* (?<cond>    [^}]*? ) \s* } \s* 
                 FORMULA \s* { \s* (?<formula> [^}]*? ) \s* }
                /xg ) {
    print "Condition: $+{cond}\nFormula: $+{formula}\n";
}

for a particular item, you can use:

if ($data =~ /K2 \s* { \s* LOL \s* { \s*
              COND    \s* { \s* (?<cond>    [^}]*? ) \s* } \s* 
              FORMULA \s* { \s* (?<formula> [^}]*? ) \s* }
             /x) {
    print "Condition: $+{cond}\nFormula: $+{formula}\n";
}

Note: I have build the patterns to automatically trim spaces that wraps "condition" and "formula", but if you want to preserve these spaces you can change \s* (?<cond> [^}]*? ) \s* to (?<cond> [^}]* ) (the same for "formula"). Note that this change makes your pattern more performant.


If the item you contains several "LOL" parts, you can use the \G feature in a global research to obtain all the items:

my $data = <<EOD;
K K2 {
    LOL {
        COND { d < 0.02 }
        FORMULA { -2.1 + 1.2*sqrt(d) }
        COND { d >= 0.02 }
        FORMULA { -2.1 + 1.2*sqrt(d+0.7) }
    }
    LOL2 {
        COND { d < 0.03 }
        FORMULA { -2.2 + 1.3*sqrt(d) }
        COND { d >= 0.03 }
        FORMULA { -2.2 + 1.3*sqrt(d+0.8) }
    }
    LOL3 {
        COND { d < 0.04 }
        FORMULA { -2.3 + 1.4*sqrt(d) }
        COND { d >= 0.04 }
        FORMULA { -2.3 + 1.4*sqrt(d+0.9) }
    }
}
EOD

while($data =~ /(?:K2 \s* { | \G(?!\A) )\s* (?:LOL\d* \s* { \s* )? 
                COND    \s* { \s* (?<cond>    [^}]*? ) \s* } \s* 
                FORMULA \s* { \s* (?<formula> [^}]*? ) \s* } (?: \s* } )?
               /x) {
    print "Condition: $+{cond}\nFormula: $+{formula}\n";
}

Note: obviously, you must replace LOL\d* with a subpattern that matches all possible names.

7
  • It's important to know which conditions belong to which KX? I want to get for example the second condition of K2 (COND { d >= 0.03 }). @Ccasimir-et-hippolyte Jun 28, 2014 at 0:00
  • In addition to "K Kx" you also ignored LOL, there might be different strings there that I'm not interested in. Very readable code tho! @Ccasimir-et-hippolyte It'd be great if you can change your code in a way that I described. Thanks a lot. Jun 28, 2014 at 0:05
  • @user3761870: The last pattern gives you the first condition in the string for K2. If you have several K2 in the string and you want to find the formula for a specific condition, you can replace (?<cond> [^}]*? ) with, for example, d\s*>=\s*0\.03 Jun 28, 2014 at 0:05
  • @user3761870: LOL is in the last pattern too. I gaves you a general way to extract datas with the first pattern (that you can adapt to your specific case), the last pattern is for the specific case you show in your question. Jun 28, 2014 at 0:06
  • Shoot, Sorry I totally missed that part. You're right. What if there are LOL2 and LOL3 aside LOL in the same subsections? @Ccasimir-et-hippolyte How do u generalize your code to embrace multiple LOLx as well. Thanks Jun 28, 2014 at 0:34

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