Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: rply-ulang
Version: 0.8.0
Summary: RPly 木兰编程语言定制版
Home-page: UNKNOWN
Author: Xuan Wu
Author-email: mulanrevive@gmail.com
License: BSD 3-Clause License
Project-URL: Source, https://github.com/nobodxbodon/rply
Platform: UNKNOWN
Requires-Dist: appdirs

RPLY 木兰定制版
===============

.. image:: https://api.travis-ci.com/nobodxbodon/rply.svg
    :target: https://travis-ci.com/nobodxbodon/rply

在 rply 0.7.8 的基础上，作了如下修改：

- 为减小工作量，暂时放弃对 pypy、Python 2 等版本的支持，仅支持 Python 3.7。
- 各方面中文化：异常信息与标识符命名等；添加中文 API，同时仍然支持原英文 API。
- 改进：
    - 添加 shift/reduce 歧义的调试信息，`详见此文 <https://zhuanlan.zhihu.com/p/369268306>`_。
    - `修复: 分词错误时列号定位有误 <https://github.com/alex/rply/pull/95#issuecomment-729513800>`_
- 【试验】通过根据语法规则分词，支持中文无空格语法，`演示在此 <https://zhuanlan.zhihu.com/p/412465957>`_。

### 测试

`pytest` 运行所有测试用例，或运行单个用例，如 `pytest tests/test_both.py`

以下为 rply 原始文档。

---------------

Welcome to RPLY! A pure Python parser generator, that also works with RPython.
It is a more-or-less direct port of David Beazley's awesome PLY, with a new
public API, and RPython support.

You can find the documentation `online`_.

Basic API:

.. code:: python

    from rply import ParserGenerator, LexerGenerator
    from rply.token import BaseBox

    lg = LexerGenerator()
    # Add takes a rule name, and a regular expression that defines the rule.
    lg.add("PLUS", r"\+")
    lg.add("MINUS", r"-")
    lg.add("NUMBER", r"\d+")

    lg.ignore(r"\s+")

    # This is a list of the token names. precedence is an optional list of
    # tuples which specifies order of operation for avoiding ambiguity.
    # precedence must be one of "left", "right", "nonassoc".
    # cache_id is an optional string which specifies an ID to use for
    # caching. It should *always* be safe to use caching,
    # RPly will automatically detect when your grammar is
    # changed and refresh the cache for you.
    pg = ParserGenerator(["NUMBER", "PLUS", "MINUS"],
            precedence=[("left", ['PLUS', 'MINUS'])], cache_id="myparser")

    @pg.production("main : expr")
    def main(p):
        # p is a list, of each of the pieces on the right hand side of the
        # grammar rule
        return p[0]

    @pg.production("expr : expr PLUS expr")
    @pg.production("expr : expr MINUS expr")
    def expr_op(p):
        lhs = p[0].getint()
        rhs = p[2].getint()
        if p[1].gettokentype() == "PLUS":
            return BoxInt(lhs + rhs)
        elif p[1].gettokentype() == "MINUS":
            return BoxInt(lhs - rhs)
        else:
            raise AssertionError("This is impossible, abort the time machine!")

    @pg.production("expr : NUMBER")
    def expr_num(p):
        return BoxInt(int(p[0].getstr()))

    lexer = lg.build()
    parser = pg.build()

    class BoxInt(BaseBox):
        def __init__(self, value):
            self.value = value

        def getint(self):
            return self.value

Then you can do:

.. code:: python

    parser.parse(lexer.lex("1 + 3 - 2+12-32"))

You can also substitute your own lexer. A lexer is an object with a ``next()``
method that returns either the next token in sequence, or ``None`` if the token
stream has been exhausted.

Why do we have the boxes?
-------------------------

In RPython, like other statically typed languages, a variable must have a
specific type, we take advantage of polymorphism to keep values in a box so
that everything is statically typed. You can write whatever boxes you need for
your project.

If you don't intend to use your parser from RPython, and just want a cool pure
Python parser you can ignore all the box stuff and just return whatever you
like from each production method.

Error handling
--------------

By default, when a parsing error is encountered, an ``rply.ParsingError`` is
raised, it has a method ``getsourcepos()``, which returns an
``rply.token.SourcePosition`` object.

You may also provide an error handler, which, at the moment, must raise an
exception. It receives the ``Token`` object that the parser errored on.

.. code:: python

    pg = ParserGenerator(...)

    @pg.error
    def error_handler(token):
        raise ValueError("Ran into a %s where it wasn't expected" % token.gettokentype())

Python compatibility
--------------------

RPly is tested and known to work under Python 2.7, 3.4+, and PyPy. It is
also valid RPython for PyPy checkouts from ``6c642ae7a0ea`` onwards.

Links
-----

* `Source code and issue tracker <https://github.com/alex/rply/>`_
* `PyPI releases <https://pypi.python.org/pypi/rply>`_
* `Talk at PyCon US 2013: So you want to write an interpreter? <http://pyvideo.org/video/1694/so-you-want-to-write-an-interpreter>`_

.. _`online`: https://rply.readthedocs.io/


