A generic lexical analyzer.
This module implements a simple 'standard' lexical analyzer, presented
as a function from character streams to token streams. It implements
roughly the lexical conventions of OCaml, but is parameterized by the
set of keywords of your language.
Example: a lexer suitable for a desk calculator is obtained by
let lexer = make_lexer ["+";"-";"*";"/";"let";"="; "("; ")"]
The associated parser would be a function from
token stream
to, for instance,
int
, and would have rules such as:
let rec parse_expr = parser
| [< n1 = parse_atom; n2 = parse_remainder n1 >] -> n2
and parse_atom = parser
| [< 'Int n >] -> n
| [< 'Kwd "("; n = parse_expr; 'Kwd ")" >] -> n
and parse_remainder n1 = parser
| [< 'Kwd "+"; n2 = parse_expr >] -> n1+n2
| [< >] -> n1
One should notice that the use of the
parser
keyword and associated
notation for streams are only available through camlp4 extensions. This
means that one has to preprocess its sources
e. g. by using the
"-pp"
command-line switch of the compilers.
type token =
| |
Kwd of string |
| |
Ident of string |
| |
Int of int |
| |
Float of float |
| |
String of string |
| |
Char of char |
The type of tokens. The lexical classes are: Int
and Float
for integer and floating-point numbers; String
for
string literals, enclosed in double quotes; Char
for
character literals, enclosed in single quotes; Ident
for
identifiers (either sequences of letters, digits, underscores
and quotes, or sequences of 'operator characters' such as
+
, *
, etc); and Kwd
for keywords (either identifiers or
single 'special characters' such as (
, }
, etc).
val make_lexer : string list -> char Stream.t -> token Stream.t
Construct the lexer function. The first argument is the list of
keywords. An identifier s
is returned as Kwd s
if s
belongs to this list, and as Ident s
otherwise.
A special character s
is returned as Kwd s
if s
belongs to this list, and cause a lexical error (exception
Stream.Error
with the offending lexeme as its parameter) otherwise.
Blanks and newlines are skipped. Comments delimited by (*
and *)
are skipped as well, and can be nested. A Stream.Failure
exception
is raised if end of stream is unexpectedly reached.