Bison 2.3

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Bison

This manual is for GNU Bison (version 2.3, 30 May 2006), the GNU parser generator.

Copyright © 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts being “A GNU Manual,” and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled “GNU Free Documentation License.”

(a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: “You have freedom to copy and modify this GNU Manual, like GNU software. Copies published by the Free Software Foundation raise funds for GNU development.”

Tutorial sections:

Reference sections:

--- The Detailed Node Listing ---

The Concepts of Bison

Writing GLR Parsers

Examples

Reverse Polish Notation Calculator

Grammar Rules for rpcalc

Location Tracking Calculator: ltcalc

Multi-Function Calculator: mfcalc

Bison Grammar Files

Outline of a Bison Grammar

Defining Language Semantics

Tracking Locations

Bison Declarations

Parser C-Language Interface

The Lexical Analyzer Function yylex

The Bison Parser Algorithm

Operator Precedence

Handling Context Dependencies

Debugging Your Parser

Invoking Bison

C++ Language Interface

C++ Parsers

A Complete C++ Example

Frequently Asked Questions

Copying This Manual


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Introduction

Bison is a general-purpose parser generator that converts an annotated context-free grammar into an LALR(1) or GLR parser for that grammar. Once you are proficient with Bison, you can use it to develop a wide range of language parsers, from those used in simple desk calculators to complex programming languages.

Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all properly-written Yacc grammars ought to work with Bison with no change. Anyone familiar with Yacc should be able to use Bison with little trouble. You need to be fluent in C or C++ programming in order to use Bison or to understand this manual.

We begin with tutorial chapters that explain the basic concepts of using Bison and show three explained examples, each building on the last. If you don't know Bison or Yacc, start by reading these chapters. Reference chapters follow which describe specific aspects of Bison in detail.

Bison was written primarily by Robert Corbett; Richard Stallman made it Yacc-compatible. Wilfred Hansen of Carnegie Mellon University added multi-character string literals and other features.

This edition corresponds to version 2.3 of Bison.


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Conditions for Using Bison

The distribution terms for Bison-generated parsers permit using the parsers in nonfree programs. Before Bison version 2.2, these extra permissions applied only when Bison was generating LALR(1) parsers in C. And before Bison version 1.24, Bison-generated parsers could be used only in programs that were free software.

The other GNU programming tools, such as the GNU C compiler, have never had such a requirement. They could always be used for nonfree software. The reason Bison was different was not due to a special policy decision; it resulted from applying the usual General Public License to all of the Bison source code.

The output of the Bison utility—the Bison parser file—contains a verbatim copy of a sizable piece of Bison, which is the code for the parser's implementation. (The actions from your grammar are inserted into this implementation at one point, but most of the rest of the implementation is not changed.) When we applied the GPL terms to the skeleton code for the parser's implementation, the effect was to restrict the use of Bison output to free software.

We didn't change the terms because of sympathy for people who want to make software proprietary. Software should be free. But we concluded that limiting Bison's use to free software was doing little to encourage people to make other software free. So we decided to make the practical conditions for using Bison match the practical conditions for using the other GNU tools.

This exception applies when Bison is generating code for a parser. You can tell whether the exception applies to a Bison output file by inspecting the file for text beginning with “As a special exception...”. The text spells out the exact terms of the exception.


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GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE

Version 2, June 1991
     Copyright © 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
     51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA  02110-1301, USA
     
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Preamble

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Appendix: How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs

If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.

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     one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.
     Copyright (C) yyyy  name of author
     
     This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
     it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
     the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
     (at your option) any later version.
     
     This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
     but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
     MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
     GNU General Public License for more details.
     
     You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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     Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA  02110-1301, USA.

Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.

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     Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) 19yy name of author
     Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
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     under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.

The hypothetical commands ‘show w’ and ‘show c’ should show the appropriate parts of the General Public License. Of course, the commands you use may be called something other than ‘show w’ and ‘show c’; they could even be mouse-clicks or menu items—whatever suits your program.

You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your school, if any, to sign a “copyright disclaimer” for the program, if necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:

     Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program
     `Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.
     
     signature of Ty Coon, 1 April 1989
     Ty Coon, President of Vice

This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General Public License instead of this License.


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1 The Concepts of Bison

This chapter introduces many of the basic concepts without which the details of Bison will not make sense. If you do not already know how to use Bison or Yacc, we suggest you start by reading this chapter carefully.


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1.1 Languages and Context-Free Grammars

In order for Bison to parse a language, it must be described by a context-free grammar. This means that you specify one or more syntactic groupings and give rules for constructing them from their parts. For example, in the C language, one kind of grouping is called an `expression'. One rule for making an expression might be, “An expression can be made of a minus sign and another expression”. Another would be, “An expression can be an integer”. As you can see, rules are often recursive, but there must be at least one rule which leads out of the recursion.

The most common formal system for presenting such rules for humans to read is Backus-Naur Form or “BNF”, which was developed in order to specify the language Algol 60. Any grammar expressed in BNF is a context-free grammar. The input to Bison is essentially machine-readable BNF.

There are various important subclasses of context-free grammar. Although it can handle almost all context-free grammars, Bison is optimized for what are called LALR(1) grammars. In brief, in these grammars, it must be possible to tell how to parse any portion of an input string with just a single token of look-ahead. Strictly speaking, that is a description of an LR(1) grammar, and LALR(1) involves additional restrictions that are hard to explain simply; but it is rare in actual practice to find an LR(1) grammar that fails to be LALR(1). See Mysterious Reduce/Reduce Conflicts, for more information on this.

Parsers for LALR(1) grammars are deterministic, meaning roughly that the next grammar rule to apply at any point in the input is uniquely determined by the preceding input and a fixed, finite portion (called a look-ahead) of the remaining input. A context-free grammar can be ambiguous, meaning that there are multiple ways to apply the grammar rules to get the same inputs. Even unambiguous grammars can be nondeterministic, meaning that no fixed look-ahead always suffices to determine the next grammar rule to apply. With the proper declarations, Bison is also able to parse these more general context-free grammars, using a technique known as GLR parsing (for Generalized LR). Bison's GLR parsers are able to handle any context-free grammar for which the number of possible parses of any given string is finite.

In the formal grammatical rules for a language, each kind of syntactic unit or grouping is named by a symbol. Those which are built by grouping smaller constructs according to grammatical rules are called nonterminal symbols; those which can't be subdivided are called terminal symbols or token types. We call a piece of input corresponding to a single terminal symbol a token, and a piece corresponding to a single nonterminal symbol a grouping.

We can use the C language as an example of what symbols, terminal and nonterminal, mean. The tokens of C are identifiers, constants (numeric and string), and the various keywords, arithmetic operators and punctuation marks. So the terminal symbols of a grammar for C include `identifier', `number', `string', plus one symbol for each keyword, operator or punctuation mark: `if', `return', `const', `static', `int', `char', `plus-sign', `open-brace', `close-brace', `comma' and many more. (These tokens can be subdivided into characters, but that is a matter of lexicography, not grammar.)

Here is a simple C function subdivided into tokens:

     int             /* keyword `int' */
     square (int x)  /* identifier, open-paren, keyword `int', identifier, close-paren */
     {               /* open-brace */
       return x * x; /* keyword `return', identifier, asterisk, identifier, semicolon */
     }               /* close-brace */

The syntactic groupings of C include the expression, the statement, the declaration, and the function definition. These are represented in the grammar of C by nonterminal symbols `expression', `statement', `declaration' and `function definition'. The full grammar uses dozens of additional language constructs, each with its own nonterminal symbol, in order to express the meanings of these four. The example above is a function definition; it contains one declaration, and one statement. In the statement, each ‘x’ is an expression and so is ‘x * x’.

Each nonterminal symbol must have grammatical rules showing how it is made out of simpler constructs. For example, one kind of C statement is the return statement; this would be described with a grammar rule which reads informally as follows:

A `statement' can be made of a `return' keyword, an `expression' and a `semicolon'.

There would be many other rules for `statement', one for each kind of statement in C.

One nonterminal symbol must be distinguished as the special one which defines a complete utterance in the language. It is called the start symbol. In a compiler, this means a complete input program. In the C language, the nonterminal symbol `sequence of definitions and declarations' plays this role.

For example, ‘1 + 2’ is a valid C expression—a valid part of a C program—but it is not valid as an entire C program. In the context-free grammar of C, this follows from the fact that `expression' is not the start symbol.

The Bison parser reads a sequence of tokens as its input, and groups the tokens using the grammar rules. If the input is valid, the end result is that the entire token sequence reduces to a single grouping whose symbol is the grammar's start symbol. If we use a grammar for C, the entire input must be a `sequence of definitions and declarations'. If not, the parser reports a syntax error.


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1.2 From Formal Rules to Bison Input

A formal grammar is a mathematical construct. To define the language for Bison, you must write a file expressing the grammar in Bison syntax: a Bison grammar file. See Bison Grammar Files.

A nonterminal symbol in the formal grammar is represented in Bison input as an identifier, like an identifier in C. By convention, it should be in lower case, such as expr, stmt or declaration.

The Bison representation for a terminal symbol is also called a token type. Token types as well can be represented as C-like identifiers. By convention, these identifiers should be upper case to distinguish them from nonterminals: for example, INTEGER, IDENTIFIER, IF or RETURN. A terminal symbol that stands for a particular keyword in the language should be named after that keyword converted to upper case. The terminal symbol error is reserved for error recovery. See Symbols.

A terminal symbol can also be represented as a character literal, just like a C character constant. You should do this whenever a token is just a single character (parenthesis, plus-sign, etc.): use that same character in a literal as the terminal symbol for that token.

A third way to represent a terminal symbol is with a C string constant containing several characters. See Symbols, for more information.

The grammar rules also have an expression in Bison syntax. For example, here is the Bison rule for a C return statement. The semicolon in quotes is a literal character token, representing part of the C syntax for the statement; the naked semicolon, and the colon, are Bison punctuation used in every rule.

     stmt:   RETURN expr ';'
             ;

See Syntax of Grammar Rules.


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1.3 Semantic Values

A formal grammar selects tokens only by their classifications: for example, if a rule mentions the terminal symbol `integer constant', it means that any integer constant is grammatically valid in that position. The precise value of the constant is irrelevant to how to parse the input: if ‘x+4’ is grammatical then ‘x+1’ or ‘x+3989’ is equally grammatical.

But the precise value is very important for what the input means once it is parsed. A compiler is useless if it fails to distinguish between 4, 1 and 3989 as constants in the program! Therefore, each token in a Bison grammar has both a token type and a semantic value. See Defining Language Semantics, for details.

The token type is a terminal symbol defined in the grammar, such as INTEGER, IDENTIFIER or ','. It tells everything you need to know to decide where the token may validly appear and how to group it with other tokens. The grammar rules know nothing about tokens except their types.

The semantic value has all the rest of the information about the meaning of the token, such as the value of an integer, or the name of an identifier. (A token such as ',' which is just punctuation doesn't need to have any semantic value.)

For example, an input token might be classified as token type INTEGER and have the semantic value 4. Another input token might have the same token type INTEGER but value 3989. When a grammar rule says that INTEGER is allowed, either of these tokens is acceptable because each is an INTEGER. When the parser accepts the token, it keeps track of the token's semantic value.

Each grouping can also have a semantic value as well as its nonterminal symbol. For example, in a calculator, an expression typically has a semantic value that is a number. In a compiler for a programming language, an expression typically has a semantic value that is a tree structure describing the meaning of the expression.


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1.4 Semantic Actions

In order to be useful, a program must do more than parse input; it must also produce some output based on the input. In a Bison grammar, a grammar rule can have an action made up of C statements. Each time the parser recognizes a match for that rule, the action is executed. See Actions.

Most of the time, the purpose of an action is to compute the semantic value of the whole construct from the semantic values of its parts. For example, suppose we have a rule which says an expression can be the sum of two expressions. When the parser recognizes such a sum, each of the subexpressions has a semantic value which describes how it was built up. The action for this rule should create a similar sort of value for the newly recognized larger expression.

For example, here is a rule that says an expression can be the sum of two subexpressions:

     expr: expr '+' expr   { $$ = $1 + $3; }
             ;

The action says how to produce the semantic value of the sum expression from the values of the two subexpressions.


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1.5 Writing GLR Parsers

In some grammars, Bison's standard LALR(1) parsing algorithm cannot decide whether to apply a certain grammar rule at a given point. That is, it may not be able to decide (on the basis of the input read so far) which of two possible reductions (applications of a grammar rule) applies, or whether to apply a reduction or read more of the input and apply a reduction later in the input. These are known respectively as reduce/reduce conflicts (see Reduce/Reduce), and shift/reduce conflicts (see Shift/Reduce).

To use a grammar that is not easily modified to be LALR(1), a more general parsing algorithm is sometimes necessary. If you include %glr-parser among the Bison declarations in your file (see Grammar Outline), the result is a Generalized LR (GLR) parser. These parsers handle Bison grammars that contain no unresolved conflicts (i.e., after applying precedence declarations) identically to LALR(1) parsers. However, when faced with unresolved shift/reduce and reduce/reduce conflicts, GLR parsers use the simple expedient of doing both, effectively cloning the parser to follow both possibilities. Each of the resulting parsers can again split, so that at any given time, there can be any number of possible parses being explored. The parsers proceed in lockstep; that is, all of them consume (shift) a given input symbol before any of them proceed to the next. Each of the cloned parsers eventually meets one of two possible fates: either it runs into a parsing error, in which case it simply vanishes, or it merges with another parser, because the two of them have reduced the input to an identical set of symbols.

During the time that there are multiple parsers, semantic actions are recorded, but not performed. When a parser disappears, its recorded semantic actions disappear as well, and are never performed. When a reduction makes two parsers identical, causing them to merge, Bison records both sets of semantic actions. Whenever the last two parsers merge, reverting to the single-parser case, Bison resolves all the outstanding actions either by precedences given to the grammar rules involved, or by performing both actions, and then calling a designated user-defined function on the resulting values to produce an arbitrary merged result.


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1.5.1 Using GLR on Unambiguous Grammars

In the simplest cases, you can use the GLR algorithm to parse grammars that are unambiguous, but fail to be LALR(1). Such grammars typically require more than one symbol of look-ahead, or (in rare cases) fall into the category of grammars in which the LALR(1) algorithm throws away too much information (they are in LR(1), but not LALR(1), Mystery Conflicts).

Consider a problem that arises in the declaration of enumerated and subrange types in the programming language Pascal. Here are some examples:

     type subrange = lo .. hi;
     type enum = (a, b, c);

The original language standard allows only numeric literals and constant identifiers for the subrange bounds (‘lo’ and ‘hi’), but Extended Pascal (ISO/IEC 10206) and many other Pascal implementations allow arbitrary expressions there. This gives rise to the following situation, containing a superfluous pair of parentheses:

     type subrange = (a) .. b;

Compare this to the following declaration of an enumerated type with only one value:

     type enum = (a);

(These declarations are contrived, but they are syntactically valid, and more-complicated cases can come up in practical programs.)

These two declarations look identical until the ‘..’ token. With normal LALR(1) one-token look-ahead it is not possible to decide between the two forms when the identifier ‘a’ is parsed. It is, however, desirable for a parser to decide this, since in the latter case ‘a’ must become a new identifier to represent the enumeration value, while in the former case ‘a’ must be evaluated with its current meaning, which may be a constant or even a function call.

You could parse ‘(a)’ as an “unspecified identifier in parentheses”, to be resolved later, but this typically requires substantial contortions in both semantic actions and large parts of the grammar, where the parentheses are nested in the recursive rules for expressions.

You might think of using the lexer to distinguish between the two forms by returning different tokens for currently defined and undefined identifiers. But if these declarations occur in a local scope, and ‘a’ is defined in an outer scope, then both forms are possible—either locally redefining ‘a’, or using the value of ‘a’ from the outer scope. So this approach cannot work.

A simple solution to this problem is to declare the parser to use the GLR algorithm. When the GLR parser reaches the critical state, it merely splits into two branches and pursues both syntax rules simultaneously. Sooner or later, one of them runs into a parsing error. If there is a ‘..’ token before the next ‘;’, the rule for enumerated types fails since it cannot accept ‘..’ anywhere; otherwise, the subrange type rule fails since it requires a ‘..’ token. So one of the branches fails silently, and the other one continues normally, performing all the intermediate actions that were postponed during the split.

If the input is syntactically incorrect, both branches fail and the parser reports a syntax error as usual.

The effect of all this is that the parser seems to “guess” the correct branch to take, or in other words, it seems to use more look-ahead than the underlying LALR(1) algorithm actually allows for. In this example, LALR(2) would suffice, but also some cases that are not LALR(k) for any k can be handled this way.

In general, a GLR parser can take quadratic or cubic worst-case time, and the current Bison parser even takes exponential time and space for some grammars. In practice, this rarely happens, and for many grammars it is possible to prove that it cannot happen. The present example contains only one conflict between two rules, and the type-declaration context containing the conflict cannot be nested. So the number of branches that can exist at any time is limited by the constant 2, and the parsing time is still linear.

Here is a Bison grammar corresponding to the example above. It parses a vastly simplified form of Pascal type declarations.

     %token TYPE DOTDOT ID
     
     %left '+' '-'
     %left '*' '/'
     
     %%
     
     type_decl : TYPE ID '=' type ';'
          ;
     
     type : '(' id_list ')'
          | expr DOTDOT expr
          ;
     
     id_list : ID
          | id_list ',' ID
          ;
     
     expr : '(' expr ')'
          | expr '+' expr
          | expr '-' expr
          | expr '*' expr
          | expr '/' expr
          | ID
          ;

When used as a normal LALR(1) grammar, Bison correctly complains about one reduce/reduce conflict. In the conflicting situation the parser chooses one of the alternatives, arbitrarily the one declared first. Therefore the following correct input is not recognized:

     type t = (a) .. b;

The parser can be turned into a GLR parser, while also telling Bison to be silent about the one known reduce/reduce conflict, by adding these two declarations to the Bison input file (before the first ‘%%’):

     %glr-parser
     %expect-rr 1

No change in the grammar itself is required. Now the parser recognizes all valid declarations, according to the limited syntax above, transparently. In fact, the user does not even notice when the parser splits.

So here we have a case where we can use the benefits of GLR, almost without disadvantages. Even in simple cases like this, however, there are at least two potential problems to beware. First, always analyze the conflicts reported by Bison to make sure that GLR splitting is only done where it is intended. A GLR parser splitting inadvertently may cause problems less obvious than an LALR parser statically choosing the wrong alternative in a conflict. Second, consider interactions with the lexer (see Semantic Tokens) with great care. Since a split parser consumes tokens without performing any actions during the split, the lexer cannot obtain information via parser actions. Some cases of lexer interactions can be eliminated by using GLR to shift the complications from the lexer to the parser. You must check the remaining cases for correctness.

In our example, it would be safe for the lexer to return tokens based on their current meanings in some symbol table, because no new symbols are defined in the middle of a type declaration. Though it is possible for a parser to define the enumeration constants as they are parsed, before the type declaration is completed, it actually makes no difference since they cannot be used within the same enumerated type declaration.


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1.5.2 Using GLR to Resolve Ambiguities

Let's consider an example, vastly simplified from a C++ grammar.

     %{
       #include <stdio.h>
       #define YYSTYPE char const *
       int yylex (void);
       void yyerror (char const *);
     %}
     
     %token TYPENAME ID
     
     %right '='
     %left '+'
     
     %glr-parser
     
     %%
     
     prog :
          | prog stmt   { printf ("\n"); }
          ;
     
     stmt : expr ';'  %dprec 1
          | decl      %dprec 2
          ;
     
     expr : ID               { printf ("%s ", $$); }
          | TYPENAME '(' expr ')'
                             { printf ("%s <cast> ", $1); }
          | expr '+' expr    { printf ("+ "); }
          | expr '=' expr    { printf ("= "); }
          ;
     
     decl : TYPENAME declarator ';'
                             { printf ("%s <declare> ", $1); }
          | TYPENAME declarator '=' expr ';'
                             { printf ("%s <init-declare> ", $1); }
          ;
     
     declarator : ID         { printf ("\"%s\" ", $1); }
          | '(' declarator ')'
          ;

This models a problematic part of the C++ grammar—the ambiguity between certain declarations and statements. For example,

     T (x) = y+z;

parses as either an expr or a stmt (assuming that ‘T’ is recognized as a TYPENAME and ‘x’ as an ID). Bison detects this as a reduce/reduce conflict between the rules expr : ID and declarator : ID, which it cannot resolve at the time it encounters x in the example above. Since this is a GLR parser, it therefore splits the problem into two parses, one for each choice of resolving the reduce/reduce conflict. Unlike the example from the previous section (see Simple GLR Parsers), however, neither of these parses “dies,” because the grammar as it stands is ambiguous. One of the parsers eventually reduces stmt : expr ';' and the other reduces stmt : decl, after which both parsers are in an identical state: they've seen ‘prog stmt’ and have the same unprocessed input remaining. We say that these parses have merged.

At this point, the GLR parser requires a specification in the grammar of how to choose between the competing parses. In the example above, the two %dprec declarations specify that Bison is to give precedence to the parse that interprets the example as a decl, which implies that x is a declarator. The parser therefore prints

     "x" y z + T <init-declare>

The %dprec declarations only come into play when more than one parse survives. Consider a different input string for this parser:

     T (x) + y;

This is another example of using GLR to parse an unambiguous construct, as shown in the previous section (see Simple GLR Parsers). Here, there is no ambiguity (this cannot be parsed as a declaration). However, at the time the Bison parser encounters x, it does not have enough information to resolve the reduce/reduce conflict (again, between x as an expr or a declarator). In this case, no precedence declaration is used. Again, the parser splits into two, one assuming that x is an expr, and the other assuming x is a declarator. The second of these parsers then vanishes when it sees +, and the parser prints

     x T <cast> y +

Suppose that instead of resolving the ambiguity, you wanted to see all the possibilities. For this purpose, you must merge the semantic actions of the two possible parsers, rather than choosing one over the other. To do so, you could change the declaration of stmt as follows:

     stmt : expr ';'  %merge <stmtMerge>
          | decl      %merge <stmtMerge>
          ;

and define the stmtMerge function as:

     static YYSTYPE
     stmtMerge (YYSTYPE x0, YYSTYPE x1)
     {
       printf ("<OR> ");
       return "";
     }

with an accompanying forward declaration in the C declarations at the beginning of the file:

     %{
       #define YYSTYPE char const *
       static YYSTYPE stmtMerge (YYSTYPE x0, YYSTYPE x1);
     %}

With these declarations, the resulting parser parses the first example as both an expr and a decl, and prints

     "x" y z + T <init-declare> x T <cast> y z + = <OR>

Bison requires that all of the productions that participate in any particular merge have identical ‘%merge’ clauses. Otherwise, the ambiguity would be unresolvable, and the parser will report an error during any parse that results in the offending merge.


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1.5.3 GLR Semantic Actions

By definition, a deferred semantic action is not performed at the same time as the associated reduction. This raises caveats for several Bison features you might use in a semantic action in a GLR parser.

In any semantic action, you can examine yychar to determine the type of the look-ahead token present at the time of the associated reduction. After checking that yychar is not set to YYEMPTY or YYEOF, you can then examine yylval and yylloc to determine the look-ahead token's semantic value and location, if any. In a nondeferred semantic action, you can also modify any of these variables to influence syntax analysis. See Look-Ahead Tokens.

In a deferred semantic action, it's too late to influence syntax analysis. In this case, yychar, yylval, and yylloc are set to shallow copies of the values they had at the time of the associated reduction. For this reason alone, modifying them is dangerous. Moreover, the result of modifying them is undefined and subject to change with future versions of Bison. For example, if a semantic action might be deferred, you should never write it to invoke yyclearin (see Action Features) or to attempt to free memory referenced by yylval.

Another Bison feature requiring special consideration is YYERROR (see Action Features), which you can invoke in a semantic action to initiate error recovery. During deterministic GLR operation, the effect of YYERROR is the same as its effect in an LALR(1) parser. In a deferred semantic action, its effect is undefined.

Also, see Default Action for Locations, which describes a special usage of YYLLOC_DEFAULT in GLR parsers.


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1.5.4 Considerations when Compiling GLR Parsers

The GLR parsers require a compiler for ISO C89 or later. In addition, they use the inline keyword, which is not C89, but is C99 and is a common extension in pre-C99 compilers. It is up to the user of these parsers to handle portability issues. For instance, if using Autoconf and the Autoconf macro AC_C_INLINE, a mere

     %{
       #include <config.h>
     %}

will suffice. Otherwise, we suggest

     %{
       #if __STDC_VERSION__ < 199901 && ! defined __GNUC__ && ! defined inline
        #define inline
       #endif
     %}


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1.6 Locations

Many applications, like interpreters or compilers, have to produce verbose and useful error messages. To achieve this, one must be able to keep track of the textual location, or location, of each syntactic construct. Bison provides a mechanism for handling these locations.

Each token has a semantic value. In a similar fashion, each token has an associated location, but the type of locations is the same for all tokens and groupings. Moreover, the output parser is equipped with a default data structure for storing locations (see Locations, for more details).

Like semantic values, locations can be reached in actions using a dedicated set of constructs. In the example above, the location of the whole grouping is @$, while the locations of the subexpressions are @1 and @3.

When a rule is matched, a default action is used to compute the semantic value of its left hand side (see Actions). In the same way, another default action is used for locations. However, the action for locations is general enough for most cases, meaning there is usually no need to describe for each rule how @$ should be formed. When building a new location for a given grouping, the default behavior of the output parser is to take the beginning of the first symbol, and the end of the last symbol.


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1.7 Bison Output: the Parser File

When you run Bison, you give it a Bison grammar file as input. The output is a C source file that parses the language described by the grammar. This file is called a Bison parser. Keep in mind that the Bison utility and the Bison parser are two distinct programs: the Bison utility is a program whose output is the Bison parser that becomes part of your program.

The job of the Bison parser is to group tokens into groupings according to the grammar rules—for example, to build identifiers and operators into expressions. As it does this, it runs the actions for the grammar rules it uses.

The tokens come from a function called the lexical analyzer that you must supply in some fashion (such as by writing it in C). The Bison parser calls the lexical analyzer each time it wants a new token. It doesn't know what is “inside” the tokens (though their semantic values may reflect this). Typically the lexical analyzer makes the tokens by parsing characters of text, but Bison does not depend on this. See The Lexical Analyzer Function yylex.

The Bison parser file is C code which defines a function named yyparse which implements that grammar. This function does not make a complete C program: you must supply some additional functions. One is the lexical analyzer. Another is an error-reporting function which the parser calls to report an error. In addition, a complete C program must start with a function called main; you have to provide this, and arrange for it to call yyparse or the parser will never run. See Parser C-Language Interface.

Aside from the token type names and the symbols in the actions you write, all symbols defined in the Bison parser file itself begin with ‘yy’ or ‘YY’. This includes interface functions such as the lexical analyzer function yylex, the error reporting function yyerror and the parser function yyparse itself. This also includes numerous identifiers used for internal purposes. Therefore, you should avoid using C identifiers starting with ‘yy’ or ‘YY’ in the Bison grammar file except for the ones defined in this manual. Also, you should avoid using the C identifiers ‘malloc’ and ‘free’ for anything other than their usual meanings.

In some cases the Bison parser file includes system headers, and in those cases your code should respect the identifiers reserved by those headers. On some non-GNU hosts, <alloca.h>, <malloc.h>, <stddef.h>, and <stdlib.h> are included as needed to declare memory allocators and related types. <libintl.h> is included if message translation is in use (see Internationalization). Other system headers may be included if you define YYDEBUG to a nonzero value (see Tracing Your Parser).


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1.8 Stages in Using Bison

The actual language-design process using Bison, from grammar specification to a working compiler or interpreter, has these parts:

  1. Formally specify the grammar in a form recognized by Bison (see Bison Grammar Files). For each grammatical rule in the language, describe the action that is to be taken when an instance of that rule is recognized. The action is described by a sequence of C statements.
  2. Write a lexical analyzer to process input and pass tokens to the parser. The lexical analyzer may be written by hand in C (see The Lexical Analyzer Function yylex). It could also be produced using Lex, but the use of Lex is not discussed in this manual.
  3. Write a controlling function that calls the Bison-produced parser.
  4. Write error-reporting routines.

To turn this source code as written into a runnable program, you must follow these steps:

  1. Run Bison on the grammar to produce the parser.
  2. Compile the code output by Bison, as well as any other source files.
  3. Link the object files to produce the finished product.


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1.9 The Overall Layout of a Bison Grammar

The input file for the Bison utility is a Bison grammar file. The general form of a Bison grammar file is as follows:

     %{
     Prologue
     %}
     
     Bison declarations
     
     %%
     Grammar rules
     %%
     Epilogue

The ‘%%’, ‘%{’ and ‘%}’ are punctuation that appears in every Bison grammar file to separate the sections.

The prologue may define types and variables used in the actions. You can also use preprocessor commands to define macros used there, and use #include to include header files that do any of these things. You need to declare the lexical analyzer yylex and the error printer yyerror here, along with any other global identifiers used by the actions in the grammar rules.

The Bison declarations declare the names of the terminal and nonterminal symbols, and may also describe operator precedence and the data types of semantic values of various symbols.

The grammar rules define how to construct each nonterminal symbol from its parts.

The epilogue can contain any code you want to use. Often the definitions of functions declared in the prologue go here. In a simple program, all the rest of the program can go here.


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2 Examples

Now we show and explain three sample programs written using Bison: a reverse polish notation calculator, an algebraic (infix) notation calculator, and a multi-function calculator. All three have been tested under BSD Unix 4.3; each produces a usable, though limited, interactive desk-top calculator.

These examples are simple, but Bison grammars for real programming languages are written the same way. You can copy these examples into a source file to try them.


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2.1 Reverse Polish Notation Calculator

The first example is that of a simple double-precision reverse polish notation calculator (a calculator using postfix operators). This example provides a good starting point, since operator precedence is not an issue. The second example will illustrate how operator precedence is handled.

The source code for this calculator is named rpcalc.y. The ‘.y’ extension is a convention used for Bison input files.


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2.1.1 Declarations for rpcalc

Here are the C and Bison declarations for the reverse polish notation calculator. As in C, comments are placed between ‘/*...*/’.

     /* Reverse polish notation calculator.  */
     
     %{
       #define YYSTYPE double
       #include <math.h>
       int yylex (void);
       void yyerror (char const *);
     %}
     
     %token NUM
     
     %% /* Grammar rules and actions follow.  */

The declarations section (see The prologue) contains two preprocessor directives and two forward declarations.

The #define directive defines the macro YYSTYPE, thus specifying the C data type for semantic values of both tokens and groupings (see Data Types of Semantic Values). The Bison parser will use whatever type YYSTYPE is defined as; if you don't define it, int is the default. Because we specify double, each token and each expression has an associated value, which is a floating point number.

The #include directive is used to declare the exponentiation function pow.

The forward declarations for yylex and yyerror are needed because the C language requires that functions be declared before they are used. These functions will be defined in the epilogue, but the parser calls them so they must be declared in the prologue.

The second section, Bison declarations, provides information to Bison about the token types (see The Bison Declarations Section). Each terminal symbol that is not a single-character literal must be declared here. (Single-character literals normally don't need to be declared.) In this example, all the arithmetic operators are designated by single-character literals, so the only terminal symbol that needs to be declared is NUM, the token type for numeric constants.


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2.1.2 Grammar Rules for rpcalc

Here are the grammar rules for the reverse polish notation calculator.

     input:    /* empty */
             | input line
     ;
     
     line:     '\n'
             | exp '\n'      { printf ("\t%.10g\n", $1); }
     ;
     
     exp:      NUM           { $$ = $1;           }
             | exp exp '+'   { $$ = $1 + $2;      }
             | exp exp '-'   { $$ = $1 - $2;      }
             | exp exp '*'   { $$ = $1 * $2;      }
             | exp exp '/'   { $$ = $1 / $2;      }
              /* Exponentiation */
             | exp exp '^'   { $$ = pow ($1, $2); }
              /* Unary minus    */
             | exp 'n'       { $$ = -$1;          }
     ;
     %%

The groupings of the rpcalc “language” defined here are the expression (given the name exp), the line of input (line), and the complete input transcript (input). Each of these nonterminal symbols has several alternate rules, joined by the vertical bar ‘|’ which is read as “or”. The following sections explain what these rules mean.

The semantics of the language is determined by the actions taken when a grouping is recognized. The actions are the C code that appears inside braces. See Actions.

You must specify these actions in C, but Bison provides the means for passing semantic values between the rules. In each action, the pseudo-variable $$ stands for the semantic value for the grouping that the rule is going to construct. Assigning a value to $$ is the main job of most actions. The semantic values of the components of the rule are referred to as $1, $2, and so on.


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2.1.2.1 Explanation of input

Consider the definition of input:

     input:    /* empty */
             | input line
     ;

This definition reads as follows: “A complete input is either an empty string, or a complete input followed by an input line”. Notice that “complete input” is defined in terms of itself. This definition is said to be left recursive since input appears always as the leftmost symbol in the sequence. See Recursive Rules.

The first alternative is empty because there are no symbols between the colon and the first ‘|’; this means that input can match an empty string of input (no tokens). We write the rules this way because it is legitimate to type Ctrl-d right after you start the calculator. It's conventional to put an empty alternative first and write the comment ‘/* empty */’ in it.

The second alternate rule (input line) handles all nontrivial input. It means, “After reading any number of lines, read one more line if possible.” The left recursion makes this rule into a loop. Since the first alternative matches empty input, the loop can be executed zero or more times.

The parser function yyparse continues to process input until a grammatical error is seen or the lexical analyzer says there are no more input tokens; we will arrange for the latter to happen at end-of-input.


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2.1.2.2 Explanation of line

Now consider the definition of line:

     line:     '\n'
             | exp '\n'  { printf ("\t%.10g\n", $1); }
     ;

The first alternative is a token which is a newline character; this means that rpcalc accepts a blank line (and ignores it, since there is no action). The second alternative is an expression followed by a newline. This is the alternative that makes rpcalc useful. The semantic value of the exp grouping is the value of $1 because the exp in question is the first symbol in the alternative. The action prints this value, which is the result of the computation the user asked for.

This action is unusual because it does not assign a value to $$. As a consequence, the semantic value associated with the line is uninitialized (its value will be unpredictable). This would be a bug if that value were ever used, but we don't use it: once rpcalc has printed the value of the user's input line, that value is no longer needed.


Previous: Rpcalc Line, Up: Rpcalc Rules
2.1.2.3 Explanation of expr

The exp grouping has several rules, one for each kind of expression. The first rule handles the simplest expressions: those that are just numbers. The second handles an addition-expression, which looks like two expressions followed by a plus-sign. The third handles subtraction, and so on.

     exp:      NUM
             | exp exp '+'     { $$ = $1 + $2;    }
             | exp exp '-'     { $$ = $1 - $2;    }
             ...
             ;

We have used ‘|’ to join all the rules for exp, but we could equally well have written them separately:

     exp:      NUM ;
     exp:      exp exp '+'     { $$ = $1 + $2;    } ;
     exp:      exp exp '-'     { $$ = $1 - $2;    } ;
             ...

Most of the rules have actions that compute the value of the expression in terms of the value of its parts. For example, in the rule for addition, $1 refers to the first component exp and $2 refers to the second one. The third component, '+', has no meaningful associated semantic value, but if it had one you could refer to it as $3. When yyparse recognizes a sum expression using this rule, the sum of the two subexpressions' values is produced as the value of the entire expression. See Actions.

You don't have to give an action for every rule. When a rule has no action, Bison by default copies the value of $1 into $$. This is what happens in the first rule (the one that uses NUM).

The formatting shown here is the recommended convention, but Bison does not require it. You can add or change white space as much as you wish. For example, this:

     exp   : NUM | exp exp '+' {$$ = $1 + $2; } | ... ;

means the same thing as this:

     exp:      NUM
             | exp exp '+'    { $$ = $1 + $2; }
             | ...
     ;

The latter, however, is much more readable.


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2.1.3 The rpcalc Lexical Analyzer

The lexical analyzer's job is low-level parsing: converting characters or sequences of characters into tokens. The Bison parser gets its tokens by calling the lexical analyzer. See The Lexical Analyzer Function yylex.

Only a simple lexical analyzer is needed for the RPN calculator. This lexical analyzer skips blanks and tabs, then reads in numbers as double and returns them as NUM tokens. Any other character that isn't part of a number is a separate token. Note that the token-code for such a single-character token is the character itself.

The return value of the lexical analyzer function is a numeric code which represents a token type. The same text used in Bison rules to stand for this token type is also a C expression for the numeric code for the type. This works in two ways. If the token type is a character literal, then its numeric code is that of the character; you can use the same character literal in the lexical analyzer to express the number. If the token type is an identifier, that identifier is defined by Bison as a C macro whose definition is the appropriate number. In this example, therefore, NUM becomes a macro for yylex to use.

The semantic value of the token (if it has one) is stored into the global variable yylval, which is where the Bison parser will look for it. (The C data type of yylval is YYSTYPE, which was defined at the beginning of the grammar; see Declarations for rpcalc.)

A token type code of zero is returned if the end-of-input is encountered. (Bison recognizes any nonpositive value as indicating end-of-input.)

Here is the code for the lexical analyzer:

     /* The lexical analyzer returns a double floating point
        number on the stack and the token NUM, or the numeric code
        of the character read if not a number.  It skips all blanks
        and tabs, and returns 0 for end-of-input.  */
     
     #include <ctype.h>
     
     int
     yylex (void)
     {
       int c;
     
       /* Skip white space.  */
       while ((c = getchar ()) == ' ' || c == '\t')
         ;
       /* Process numbers.  */
       if (c == '.' || isdigit (c))
         {
           ungetc (c, stdin);
           scanf ("%lf", &yylval);
           return NUM;
         }
       /* Return end-of-input.  */
       if (c == EOF)
         return 0;
       /* Return a single char.  */
       return c;
     }


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2.1.4 The Controlling Function

In keeping with the spirit of this example, the controlling function is kept to the bare minimum. The only requirement is that it call yyparse to start the process of parsing.

     int
     main (void)
     {
       return yyparse ();
     }


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2.1.5 The Error Reporting Routine

When yyparse detects a syntax error, it calls the error reporting function yyerror to print an error message (usually but not always "syntax error"). It is up to the programmer to supply yyerror (see Parser C-Language Interface), so here is the definition we will use:

     #include <stdio.h>
     
     /* Called by yyparse on error.  */
     void
     yyerror (char const *s)
     {
       fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", s);
     }

After yyerror returns, the Bison parser may recover from the error and continue parsing if the grammar contains a suitable error rule (see Error Recovery). Otherwise, yyparse returns nonzero. We have not written any error rules in this example, so any invalid input will cause the calculator program to exit. This is not clean behavior for a real calculator, but it is adequate for the first example.


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2.1.6 Running Bison to Make the Parser

Before running Bison to produce a parser, we need to decide how to arrange all the source code in one or more source files. For such a simple example, the easiest thing is to put everything in one file. The definitions of yylex, yyerror and main go at the end, in the epilogue of the file (see The Overall Layout of a Bison Grammar).

For a large project, you would probably have several source files, and use make to arrange to recompile them.

With all the source in a single file, you use the following command to convert it into a parser file:

     bison file.y

In this example the file was called rpcalc.y (for “Reverse Polish calculator”). Bison produces a file named file.tab.c, removing the ‘.y’ from the original file name. The file output by Bison contains the source code for yyparse. The additional functions in the input file (yylex, yyerror and main) are copied verbatim to the output.


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2.1.7 Compiling the Parser File

Here is how to compile and run the parser file:

     # List files in current directory.
     $ ls
     rpcalc.tab.c  rpcalc.y
     
     # Compile the Bison parser.
     # -lm’ tells compiler to search math library for pow.
     $ cc -lm -o rpcalc rpcalc.tab.c
     
     # List files again.
     $ ls
     rpcalc  rpcalc.tab.c  rpcalc.y

The file rpcalc now contains the executable code. Here is an example session using rpcalc.

     $ rpcalc
     4 9 +
     13
     3 7 + 3 4 5 *+-
     -13
     3 7 + 3 4 5 * + - n              Note the unary minus, ‘n
     13
     5 6 / 4 n +
     -3.166666667
     3 4 ^                            Exponentiation
     81
     ^D                               End-of-file indicator
     $


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2.2 Infix Notation Calculator: calc

We now modify rpcalc to handle infix operators instead of postfix. Infix notation involves the concept of operator precedence and the need for parentheses nested to arbitrary depth. Here is the Bison code for calc.y, an infix desk-top calculator.

     /* Infix notation calculator.  */
     
     %{
       #define YYSTYPE double
       #include <math.h>
       #include <stdio.h>
       int yylex (void);
       void yyerror (char const *);
     %}
     
     /* Bison declarations.  */
     %token NUM
     %left '-' '+'
     %left '*' '/'
     %left NEG     /* negation--unary minus */
     %right '^'    /* exponentiation */
     
     %% /* The grammar follows.  */
     input:    /* empty */
             | input line
     ;
     
     line:     '\n'
             | exp '\n'  { printf ("\t%.10g\n", $1); }
     ;
     
     exp:      NUM                { $$ = $1;         }
             | exp '+' exp        { $$ = $1 + $3;    }
             | exp '-' exp        { $$ = $1 - $3;    }
             | exp '*' exp        { $$ = $1 * $3;    }
             | exp '/' exp        { $$ = $1 / $3;    }
             | '-' exp  %prec NEG { $$ = -$2;        }
             | exp '^' exp        { $$ = pow ($1, $3); }
             | '(' exp ')'        { $$ = $2;         }
     ;
     %%

The functions yylex, yyerror and main can be the same as before.

There are two important new features shown in this code.

In the second section (Bison declarations), %left declares token types and says they are left-associative operators. The declarations %left and %right (right associativity) take the place of %token which is used to declare a token type name without associativity. (These tokens are single-character literals, which ordinarily don't need to be declared. We declare them here to specify the associativity.)

Operator precedence is determined by the line ordering of the declarations; the higher the line number of the declaration (lower on the page or screen), the higher the precedence. Hence, exponentiation has the highest precedence, unary minus (NEG) is next, followed by ‘*’ and ‘/’, and so on. See Operator Precedence.

The other important new feature is the %prec in the grammar section for the unary minus operator. The %prec simply instructs Bison that the rule ‘| '-' exp’ has the same precedence as NEG—in this case the next-to-highest. See Context-Dependent Precedence.

Here is a sample run of calc.y:

     $ calc
     4 + 4.5 - (34/(8*3+-3))
     6.880952381
     -56 + 2
     -54
     3 ^ 2
     9


Next: , Previous: Infix Calc, Up: Examples

2.3 Simple Error Recovery

Up to this point, this manual has not addressed the issue of error recovery—how to continue parsing after the parser detects a syntax error. All we have handled is error reporting with yyerror. Recall that by default yyparse returns after calling yyerror. This means that an erroneous input line causes the calculator program to exit. Now we show how to rectify this deficiency.

The Bison language itself includes the reserved word error, which may be included in the grammar rules. In the example below it has been added to one of the alternatives for line:

     line:     '\n'
             | exp '\n'   { printf ("\t%.10g\n", $1); }
             | error '\n' { yyerrok;                  }
     ;

This addition to the grammar allows for simple error recovery in the event of a syntax error. If an expression that cannot be evaluated is read, the error will be recognized by the third rule for line, and parsing will continue. (The yyerror function is still called upon to print its message as well.) The action executes the statement yyerrok, a macro defined automatically by Bison; its meaning is that error recovery is complete (see Error Recovery). Note the difference between yyerrok and yyerror; neither one is a misprint.

This form of error recovery deals with syntax errors. There are other kinds of errors; for example, division by zero, which raises an exception signal that is normally fatal. A real calculator program must handle this signal and use longjmp to return to main and resume parsing input lines; it would also have to discard the rest of the current line of input. We won't discuss this issue further because it is not specific to Bison programs.


Next: , Previous: Simple Error Recovery, Up: Examples

2.4 Location Tracking Calculator: ltcalc

This example extends the infix notation calculator with location tracking. This feature will be used to improve the error messages. For the sake of clarity, this example is a simple integer calculator, since most of the work needed to use locations will be done in the lexical analyzer.


Next: , Up: Location Tracking Calc

2.4.1 Declarations for ltcalc

The C and Bison declarations for the location tracking calculator are the same as the declarations for the infix notation calculator.

     /* Location tracking calculator.  */
     
     %{
       #define YYSTYPE int
       #include <math.h>
       int yylex (void);
       void yyerror (char const *);
     %}
     
     /* Bison declarations.  */
     %token NUM
     
     %left '-' '+'
     %left '*' '/'
     %left NEG
     %right '^'
     
     %% /* The grammar follows.  */

Note there are no declarations specific to locations. Defining a data type for storing locations is not needed: we will use the type provided by default (see Data Types of Locations), which is a four member structure with the following integer fields: first_line, first_column, last_line and last_column.


Next: , Previous: Ltcalc Decls, Up: Location Tracking Calc

2.4.2 Grammar Rules for ltcalc

Whether handling locations or not has no effect on the syntax of your language. Therefore, grammar rules for this example will be very close to those of the previous example: we will only modify them to benefit from the new information.

Here, we will use locations to report divisions by zero, and locate the wrong expressions or subexpressions.

     input   : /* empty */
             | input line
     ;
     
     line    : '\n'
             | exp '\n' { printf ("%d\n", $1); }
     ;
     
     exp     : NUM           { $$ = $1; }
             | exp '+' exp   { $$ = $1 + $3; }
             | exp '-' exp   { $$ = $1 - $3; }
             | exp '*' exp   { $$ = $1 * $3; }
             | exp '/' exp
                 {
                   if ($3)
                     $$ = $1 / $3;
                   else
                     {
                       $$ = 1;
                       fprintf (stderr, "%d.%d-%d.%d: division by zero",
                                @3.first_line, @3.first_column,
                                @3.last_line, @3.last_column);
                     }
                 }
             | '-' exp %preg NEG     { $$ = -$2; }
             | exp '^' exp           { $$ = pow ($1, $3); }
             | '(' exp ')'           { $$ = $2; }

This code shows how to reach locations inside of semantic actions, by using the pseudo-variables @n for rule components, and the pseudo-variable @$ for groupings.

We don't need to assign a value to @$: the output parser does it automatically. By default, before executing the C code of each action, @$ is set to range from the beginning of @1 to the end of @n, for a rule with n components. This behavior can be redefined (see Default Action for Locations), and for very specific rules, @$ can be computed by hand.


Previous: Ltcalc Rules, Up: Location Tracking Calc

2.4.3 The ltcalc Lexical Analyzer.

Until now, we relied on Bison's defaults to enable location tracking. The next step is to rewrite the lexical analyzer, and make it able to feed the parser with the token locations, as it already does for semantic values.

To this end, we must take into account every single character of the input text, to avoid the computed locations of being fuzzy or wrong:

     int
     yylex (void)
     {
       int c;
     
       /* Skip white space.  */
       while ((c = getchar ()) == ' ' || c == '\t')
         ++yylloc.last_column;
     
       /* Step.  */
       yylloc.first_line = yylloc.last_line;
       yylloc.first_column = yylloc.last_column;
     
       /* Process numbers.  */
       if (isdigit (c))
         {
           yylval = c - '0';
           ++yylloc.last_column;
           while (isdigit (c = getchar ()))
             {
               ++yylloc.last_column;
               yylval = yylval * 10 + c - '0';
             }
           ungetc (c, stdin);
           return NUM;
         }
     
       /* Return end-of-input.  */
       if (c == EOF)
         return 0;
     
       /* Return a single char, and update location.  */
       if (c == '\n')
         {
           ++yylloc.last_line;
           yylloc.last_column = 0;
         }
       else
         ++yylloc.last_column;
       return c;
     }

Basically, the lexical analyzer performs the same processing as before: it skips blanks and tabs, and reads numbers or single-character tokens. In addition, it updates yylloc, the global variable (of type YYLTYPE) containing the token's location.

Now, each time this function returns a token, the parser has its number as well as its semantic value, and its location in the text. The last needed change is to initialize yylloc, for example in the controlling function:

     int
     main (void)
     {
       yylloc.first_line = yylloc.last_line = 1;
       yylloc.first_column = yylloc.last_column = 0;
       return yyparse ();
     }

Remember that computing locations is not a matter of syntax. Every character must be associated to a location update, whether it is in valid input, in comments, in literal strings, and so on.


Next: , Previous: Location Tracking Calc, Up: Examples

2.5 Multi-Function Calculator: mfcalc

Now that the basics of Bison have been discussed, it is time to move on to a more advanced problem. The above calculators provided only five functions, ‘+’, ‘-’, ‘*’, ‘/’ and ‘^’. It would be nice to have a calculator that provides other mathematical functions such as sin, cos, etc.

It is easy to add new operators to the infix calculator as long as they are only single-character literals. The lexical analyzer yylex passes back all nonnumeric characters as tokens, so new grammar rules suffice for adding a new operator. But we want something more flexible: built-in functions whose syntax has this form:

     function_name (argument)

At the same time, we will add memory to the calculator, by allowing you to create named variables, store values in them, and use them later. Here is a sample session with the multi-function calculator:

     $ mfcalc
     pi = 3.141592653589
     3.1415926536
     sin(pi)
     0.0000000000
     alpha = beta1 = 2.3
     2.3000000000
     alpha
     2.3000000000
     ln(alpha)
     0.8329091229
     exp(ln(beta1))
     2.3000000000
     $

Note that multiple assignment and nested function calls are permitted.


Next: , Up: Multi-function Calc

2.5.1 Declarations for mfcalc

Here are the C and Bison declarations for the multi-function calculator.

     %{
       #include <math.h>  /* For math functions, cos(), sin(), etc.  */
       #include "calc.h"  /* Contains definition of `symrec'.  */
       int yylex (void);
       void yyerror (char const *);
     %}
     %union {
       double    val;   /* For returning numbers.  */
       symrec  *tptr;   /* For returning symbol-table pointers.  */
     }
     %token <val>  NUM        /* Simple double precision number.  */
     %token <tptr> VAR FNCT   /* Variable and Function.  */
     %type  <val>  exp
     
     %right '='
     %left '-' '+'
     %left '*' '/'
     %left NEG     /* negation--unary minus */
     %right '^'    /* exponentiation */
     %% /* The grammar follows.  */

The above grammar introduces only two new features of the Bison language. These features allow semantic values to have various data types (see More Than One Value Type).

The %union declaration specifies the entire list of possible types; this is instead of defining YYSTYPE. The allowable types are now double-floats (for exp and NUM) and pointers to entries in the symbol table. See The Collection of Value Types.

Since values can now have various types, it is necessary to associate a type with each grammar symbol whose semantic value is used. These symbols are NUM, VAR, FNCT, and exp. Their declarations are augmented with information about their data type (placed between angle brackets).

The Bison construct %type is used for declaring nonterminal symbols, just as %token is used for declaring token types. We have not used %type before because nonterminal symbols are normally declared implicitly by the rules that define them. But exp must be declared explicitly so we can specify its value type. See Nonterminal Symbols.


Next: , Previous: Mfcalc Decl, Up: Multi-function Calc

2.5.2 Grammar Rules for mfcalc

Here are the grammar rules for the multi-function calculator. Most of them are copied directly from calc; three rules, those which mention VAR or FNCT, are new.

     input:   /* empty */
             | input line
     ;
     
     line:
               '\n'
             | exp '\n'   { printf ("\t%.10g\n", $1); }
             | error '\n' { yyerrok;                  }
     ;
     
     exp:      NUM                { $$ = $1;                         }
             | VAR                { $$ = $1->value.var;              }
             | VAR '=' exp        { $$ = $3; $1->value.var = $3;     }
             | FNCT '(' exp ')'   { $$ = (*($1->value.fnctptr))($3); }
             | exp '+' exp        { $$ = $1 + $3;                    }
             | exp '-' exp        { $$ = $1 - $3;                    }
             | exp '*' exp        { $$ = $1 * $3;                    }
             | exp '/' exp        { $$ = $1 / $3;                    }
             | '-' exp  %prec NEG { $$ = -$2;                        }
             | exp '^' exp        { $$ = pow ($1, $3);               }
             | '(' exp ')'        { $$ = $2;                         }
     ;
     /* End of grammar.  */
     %%


Previous: Mfcalc Rules, Up: Multi-function Calc

2.5.3 The mfcalc Symbol Table

The multi-function calculator requires a symbol table to keep track of the names and meanings of variables and functions. This doesn't affect the grammar rules (except for the actions) or the Bison declarations, but it requires some additional C functions for support.

The symbol table itself consists of a linked list of records. Its definition, which is kept in the header calc.h, is as follows. It provides for either functions or variables to be placed in the table.

     /* Function type.  */
     typedef double (*func_t) (double);
     
     /* Data type for links in the chain of symbols.  */
     struct symrec
     {
       char *name;  /* name of symbol */
       int type;    /* type of symbol: either VAR or FNCT */
       union
       {
         double var;      /* value of a VAR */
         func_t fnctptr;  /* value of a FNCT */
       } value;
       struct symrec *next;  /* link field */
     };
     
     typedef struct symrec symrec;
     
     /* The symbol table: a chain of `struct symrec'.  */
     extern symrec *sym_table;
     
     symrec *putsym (char const *, int);
     symrec *getsym (char const *);

The new version of main includes a call to init_table, a function that initializes the symbol table. Here it is, and init_table as well:

     #include <stdio.h>
     
     /* Called by yyparse on error.  */
     void
     yyerror (char const *s)
     {
       printf ("%s\n", s);
     }
     
     struct init
     {
       char const *fname;
       double (*fnct) (double);
     };
     
     struct init const arith_fncts[] =
     {
       "sin",  sin,
       "cos",  cos,
       "atan", atan,
       "ln",   log,
       "exp",  exp,
       "sqrt", sqrt,
       0, 0
     };
     
     /* The symbol table: a chain of `struct symrec'.  */
     symrec *sym_table;
     
     /* Put arithmetic functions in table.  */
     void
     init_table (void)
     {
       int i;
       symrec *ptr;
       for (i = 0; arith_fncts[i].fname != 0; i++)
         {
           ptr = putsym (arith_fncts[i].fname, FNCT);
           ptr->value.fnctptr = arith_fncts[i].fnct;
         }
     }
     
     int
     main (void)
     {
       init_table ();
       return yyparse ();
     }

By simply editing the initialization list and adding the necessary include files, you can add additional functions to the calculator.

Two important functions allow look-up and installation of symbols in the symbol table. The function putsym is passed a name and the type (VAR or FNCT) of the object to be installed. The object is linked to the front of the list, and a pointer to the object is returned. The function getsym is passed the name of the symbol to look up. If found, a pointer to that symbol is returned; otherwise zero is returned.

     symrec *
     putsym (char const *sym_name, int sym_type)
     {
       symrec *ptr;
       ptr = (symrec *) malloc (sizeof (symrec));
       ptr->name = (char *) malloc (strlen (sym_name) + 1);
       strcpy (ptr->name,sym_name);
       ptr->type = sym_type;
       ptr->value.var = 0; /* Set value to 0 even if fctn.  */
       ptr->next = (struct symrec *)sym_table;
       sym_table = ptr;
       return ptr;
     }
     
     symrec *
     getsym (char const *sym_name)
     {
       symrec *ptr;
       for (ptr = sym_table; ptr != (symrec *) 0;
            ptr = (symrec *)ptr->next)
         if (strcmp (ptr->name,sym_name) == 0)
           return ptr;
       return 0;
     }

The function yylex must now recognize variables, numeric values, and the single-character arithmetic operators. Strings of alphanumeric characters with a leading letter are recognized as either variables or functions depending on what the symbol table says about them.

The string is passed to getsym for look up in the symbol table. If the name appears in the table, a pointer to its location and its type (VAR or FNCT) is returned to yyparse. If it is not already in the table, then it is installed as a VAR using putsym. Again, a pointer and its type (which must be VAR) is returned to yyparse.

No change is needed in the handling of numeric values and arithmetic operators in yylex.

     #include <ctype.h>
     
     int
     yylex (void)
     {
       int c;
     
       /* Ignore white space, get first nonwhite character.  */
       while ((c = getchar ()) == ' ' || c == '\t');
     
       if (c == EOF)
         return 0;
     
       /* Char starts a number => parse the number.         */
       if (c == '.' || isdigit (c))
         {
           ungetc (c, stdin);
           scanf ("%lf", &yylval.val);
           return NUM;
         }
     
       /* Char starts an identifier => read the name.       */
       if (isalpha (c))
         {
           symrec *s;
           static char *symbuf = 0;
           static int length = 0;
           int i;
     
           /* Initially make the buffer long enough
              for a 40-character symbol name.  */
           if (length == 0)
             length = 40, symbuf = (char *)malloc (length + 1);
     
           i = 0;
           do
             {
               /* If buffer is full, make it bigger.        */
               if (i == length)
                 {
                   length *= 2;
                   symbuf = (char *) realloc (symbuf, length + 1);
                 }
               /* Add this character to the buffer.         */
               symbuf[i++] = c;
               /* Get another character.                    */
               c = getchar ();
             }
           while (isalnum (c));
     
           ungetc (c, stdin);
           symbuf[i] = '\0';
     
           s = getsym (symbuf);
           if (s == 0)
             s = putsym (symbuf, VAR);
           yylval.tptr = s;
           return s->type;
         }
     
       /* Any other character is a token by itself.        */
       return c;
     }

This program is both powerful and flexible. You may easily add new functions, and it is a simple job to modify this code to install predefined variables such as pi or e as well.


Previous: Multi-function Calc, Up: Examples

2.6 Exercises

  1. Add some new functions from math.h to the initialization list.
  2. Add another array that contains constants and their values. Then modify init_table to add these constants to the symbol table. It will be easiest to give the constants type VAR.
  3. Make the program report an error if the user refers to an uninitialized variable in any way except to store a value in it.


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3 Bison Grammar Files

Bison takes as input a context-free grammar specification and produces a C-language function that recognizes correct instances of the grammar.

The Bison grammar input file conventionally has a name ending in ‘.y’. See Invoking Bison.


Next: , Up: Grammar File

3.1 Outline of a Bison Grammar

A Bison grammar file has four main sections, shown here with the appropriate delimiters:

     %{
       Prologue
     %}
     
     Bison declarations
     
     %%
     Grammar rules
     %%
     
     Epilogue

Comments enclosed in ‘/* ... */’ may appear in any of the sections. As a GNU extension, ‘//’ introduces a comment that continues until end of line.


Next: , Up: Grammar Outline

3.1.1 The prologue

The Prologue section contains macro definitions and declarations of functions and variables that are used in the actions in the grammar rules. These are copied to the beginning of the parser file so that they precede the definition of yyparse. You can use ‘#include’ to get the declarations from a header file. If you don't need any C declarations, you may omit the ‘%{’ and ‘%}’ delimiters that bracket this section.

The Prologue section is terminated by the the first occurrence of ‘%}’ that is outside a comment, a string literal, or a character constant.

You may have more than one Prologue section, intermixed with the Bison declarations. This allows you to have C and Bison declarations that refer to each other. For example, the %union declaration may use types defined in a header file, and you may wish to prototype functions that take arguments of type YYSTYPE. This can be done with two Prologue blocks, one before and one after the %union declaration.

     %{
       #include <stdio.h>
       #include "ptypes.h"
     %}
     
     %union {
       long int n;
       tree t;  /* tree is defined in ptypes.h. */
     }
     
     %{
       static void print_token_value (FILE *, int, YYSTYPE);
       #define YYPRINT(F, N, L) print_token_value (F, N, L)
     %}
     
     ...


Next: , Previous: Prologue, Up: Grammar Outline

3.1.2 The Bison Declarations Section

The Bison declarations section contains declarations that define terminal and nonterminal symbols, specify precedence, and so on. In some simple grammars you may not need any declarations. See Bison Declarations.


Next: , Previous: Bison Declarations, Up: Grammar Outline

3.1.3 The Grammar Rules Section

The grammar rules section contains one or more Bison grammar rules, and nothing else. See Syntax of Grammar Rules.

There must always be at least one grammar rule, and the first ‘%%’ (which precedes the grammar rules) may never be omitted even if it is the first thing in the file.


Previous: Grammar Rules, Up: Grammar Outline

3.1.4 The epilogue

The Epilogue is copied verbatim to the end of the parser file, just as the Prologue is copied to the beginning. This is the most convenient place to put anything that you want to have in the parser file but which need not come before the definition of yyparse. For example, the definitions of yylex and yyerror often go here. Because C requires functions to be declared before being used, you often need to declare functions like yylex and yyerror in the Prologue, even if you define them in the Epilogue. See Parser C-Language Interface.

If the last section is empty, you may omit the ‘%%’ that separates it from the grammar rules.

The Bison parser itself contains many macros and identifiers whose names start with ‘yy’ or ‘YY’, so it is a good idea to avoid using any such names (except those documented in this manual) in the epilogue of the grammar file.


Next: , Previous: Grammar Outline, Up: Grammar File

3.2 Symbols, Terminal and Nonterminal

Symbols in Bison grammars represent the grammatical classifications of the language.

A terminal symbol (also known as a token type) represents a class of syntactically equivalent tokens. You use the symbol in grammar rules to mean that a token in that class is allowed. The symbol is represented in the Bison parser by a numeric code, and the yylex function returns a token type code to indicate what kind of token has been read. You don't need to know what the code value is; you can use the symbol to stand for it.

A nonterminal symbol stands for a class of syntactically equivalent groupings. The symbol name is used in writing grammar rules. By convention, it should be all lower case.

Symbol names can contain letters, digits (not at the beginning), underscores and periods. Periods make sense only in nonterminals.

There are three ways of writing terminal symbols in the grammar:

How you choose to write a terminal symbol has no effect on its grammatical meaning. That depends only on where it appears in rules and on when the parser function returns that symbol.

The value returned by yylex is always one of the terminal symbols, except that a zero or negative value signifies end-of-input. Whichever way you write the token type in the grammar rules, you write it the same way in the definition of yylex. The numeric code for a character token type is simply the positive numeric code of the character, so yylex can use the identical value to generate the requisite code, though you may need to convert it to unsigned char to avoid sign-extension on hosts where char is signed. Each named token type becomes a C macro in the parser file, so yylex can use the name to stand for the code. (This is why periods don't make sense in terminal symbols.) See Calling Convention for yylex.

If yylex is defined in a separate file, you need to arrange for the token-type macro definitions to be available there. Use the ‘-d’ option when you run Bison, so that it will write these macro definitions into a separate header file name.tab.h which you can include in the other source files that need it. See Invoking Bison.

If you want to write a grammar that is portable to any Standard C host, you must use only nonnull character tokens taken from the basic execution character set of Standard C. This set consists of the ten digits, the 52 lower- and upper-case English letters, and the characters in the following C-language string:

     "\a\b\t\n\v\f\r !\"#%&'()*+,-./:;<=>?[\\]^_{|}~"

The yylex function and Bison must use a consistent character set and encoding for character tokens. For example, if you run Bison in an ASCII environment, but then compile and run the resulting program in an environment that uses an incompatible character set like EBCDIC, the resulting program may not work because the tables generated by Bison will assume ASCII numeric values for character tokens. It is standard practice for software distributions to contain C source files that were generated by Bison in an ASCII environment, so installers on platforms that are incompatible with ASCII must rebuild those files before compiling them.

The symbol error is a terminal symbol reserved for error recovery (see Error Recovery); you shouldn't use it for any other purpose. In particular, yylex should never return this value. The default value of the error token is 256, unless you explicitly assigned 256 to one of your tokens with a %token declaration.


Next: , Previous: Symbols, Up: Grammar File

3.3 Syntax of Grammar Rules

A Bison grammar rule has the following general form:

     result: components...
             ;

where result is the nonterminal symbol that this rule describes, and components are various terminal and nonterminal symbols that are put together by this rule (see Symbols).

For example,

     exp:      exp '+' exp
             ;

says that two groupings of type exp, with a ‘+’ token in between, can be combined into a larger grouping of type exp.

White space in rules is significant only to separate symbols. You can add extra white space as you wish.

Scattered among the components can be actions that determine the semantics of the rule. An action looks like this:

     {C statements}

This is an example of braced code, that is, C code surrounded by braces, much like a compound statement in C. Braced code can contain any sequence of C tokens, so long as its braces are balanced. Bison does not check the braced code for correctness directly; it merely copies the code to the output file, where the C compiler can check it.

Within braced code, the balanced-brace count is not affected by braces within comments, string literals, or character constants, but it is affected by the C digraphs ‘<%’ and ‘%>’ that represent braces. At the top level braced code must be terminated by ‘}’ and not by a digraph. Bison does not look for trigraphs, so if braced code uses trigraphs you should ensure that they do not affect the nesting of braces or the boundaries of comments, string literals, or character constants.

Usually there is only one action and it follows the components. See Actions.

Multiple rules for the same result can be written separately or can be joined with the vertical-bar character ‘|’ as follows:

     result:    rule1-components...
             | rule2-components...
             ...
             ;

They are still considered distinct rules even when joined in this way.

If components in a rule is empty, it means that result can match the empty string. For example, here is how to define a comma-separated sequence of zero or more exp groupings:

     expseq:   /* empty */
             | expseq1
             ;
     
     expseq1:  exp
             | expseq1 ',' exp
             ;

It is customary to write a comment ‘/* empty */’ in each rule with no components.


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3.4 Recursive Rules

A rule is called recursive when its result nonterminal appears also on its right hand side. Nearly all Bison grammars need to use recursion, because that is the only way to define a sequence of any number of a particular thing. Consider this recursive definition of a comma-separated sequence of one or more expressions:

     expseq1:  exp
             | expseq1 ',' exp
             ;

Since the recursive use of expseq1 is the leftmost symbol in the right hand side, we call this left recursion. By contrast, here the same construct is defined using right recursion:

     expseq1:  exp
             | exp ',' expseq1
             ;

Any kind of sequence can be defined using either left recursion or right recursion, but you should always use left recursion, because it can parse a sequence of any number of elements with bounded stack space. Right recursion uses up space on the Bison stack in proportion to the number of elements in the sequence, because all the elements must be shifted onto the stack before the rule can be applied even once. See The Bison Parser Algorithm, for further explanation of this.

Indirect or mutual recursion occurs when the result of the rule does not appear directly on its right hand side, but does appear in rules for other nonterminals which do appear on its right hand side.

For example:

     expr:     primary
             | primary '+' primary
             ;
     
     primary:  constant
             | '(' expr ')'
             ;

defines two mutually-recursive nonterminals, since each refers to the other.


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3.5 Defining Language Semantics

The grammar rules for a language determine only the syntax. The semantics are determined by the semantic values associated with various tokens and groupings, and by the actions taken when various groupings are recognized.

For example, the calculator calculates properly because the value associated with each expression is the proper number; it adds properly because the action for the grouping ‘x + y is to add the numbers associated with x and y.


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3.5.1 Data Types of Semantic Values

In a simple program it may be sufficient to use the same data type for the semantic values of all language constructs. This was true in the RPN and infix calculator examples (see Reverse Polish Notation Calculator).

Bison's default is to use type int for all semantic values. To specify some other type, define YYSTYPE as a macro, like this:

     #define YYSTYPE double

YYSTYPE's replacement list should be a type name that does not contain parentheses or square brackets. This macro definition must go in the prologue of the grammar file (see Outline of a Bison Grammar).


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3.5.2 More Than One Value Type

In most programs, you will need different data types for different kinds of tokens and groupings. For example, a numeric constant may need type int or long int, while a string constant needs type char *, and an identifier might need a pointer to an entry in the symbol table.

To use more than one data type for semantic values in one parser, Bison requires you to do two things:


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3.5.3 Actions

An action accompanies a syntactic rule and contains C code to be executed each time an instance of that rule is recognized. The task of most actions is to compute a semantic value for the grouping built by the rule from the semantic values associated with tokens or smaller groupings.

An action consists of braced code containing C statements, and can be placed at any position in the rule; it is executed at that position. Most rules have just one action at the end of the rule, following all the components. Actions in the middle of a rule are tricky and used only for special purposes (see Actions in Mid-Rule).

The C code in an action can refer to the semantic values of the components matched by the rule with the construct $n, which stands for the value of the nth component. The semantic value for the grouping being constructed is $$. Bison translates both of these constructs into expressions of the appropriate type when it copies the actions into the parser file. $$ is translated to a modifiable lvalue, so it can be assigned to.

Here is a typical example:

     exp:    ...
             | exp '+' exp
                 { $$ = $1 + $3; }

This rule constructs an exp from two smaller exp groupings connected by a plus-sign token. In the action, $1 and $3 refer to the semantic values of the two component exp groupings, which are the first and third symbols on the right hand side of the rule. The sum is stored into $$ so that it becomes the semantic value of the addition-expression just recognized by the rule. If there were a useful semantic value associated with the ‘+’ token, it could be referred to as $2.

Note that the vertical-bar character ‘|’ is really a rule separator, and actions are attached to a single rule. This is a difference with tools like Flex, for which ‘|’ stands for either “or”, or “the same action as that of the next rule”. In the following example, the action is triggered only when ‘b’ is found:

     a-or-b: 'a'|'b'   { a_or_b_found = 1; };

If you don't specify an action for a rule, Bison supplies a default: $$ = $1. Thus, the value of the first symbol in the rule becomes the value of the whole rule. Of course, the default action is valid only if the two data types match. There is no meaningful default action for an empty rule; every empty rule must have an explicit action unless the rule's value does not matter.

$n with n zero or negative is allowed for reference to tokens and groupings on the stack before those that match the current rule. This is a very risky practice, and to use it reliably you must be certain of the context in which the rule is applied. Here is a case in which you can use this reliably:

     foo:      expr bar '+' expr  { ... }
             | expr bar '-' expr  { ... }
             ;
     
     bar:      /* empty */
             { previous_expr = $0; }
             ;

As long as bar is used only in the fashion shown here, $0 always refers to the expr which precedes bar in the definition of foo.

It is also possible to access the semantic value of the look-ahead token, if any, from a semantic action. This semantic value is stored in yylval. See Special Features for Use in Actions.


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3.5.4 Data Types of Values in Actions

If you have chosen a single data type for semantic values, the $$ and $n constructs always have that data type.

If you have used %union to specify a variety of data types, then you must declare a choice among these types for each terminal or nonterminal symbol that can have a semantic value. Then each time you use $$ or $n, its data type is determined by which symbol it refers to in the rule. In this example,

     exp:    ...
             | exp '+' exp
                 { $$ = $1 + $3; }

$1 and $3 refer to instances of exp, so they all have the data type declared for the nonterminal symbol exp. If $2 were used, it would have the data type declared for the terminal symbol '+', whatever that might be.

Alternatively, you can specify the data type when you refer to the value, by inserting ‘<type>’ after the ‘$’ at the beginning of the reference. For example, if you have defined types as shown here:

     %union {
       int itype;
       double dtype;
     }

then you can write $<itype>1 to refer to the first subunit of the rule as an integer, or $<dtype>1 to refer to it as a double.


Previous: Action Types, Up: Semantics

3.5.5 Actions in Mid-Rule

Occasionally it is useful to put an action in the middle of a rule. These actions are written just like usual end-of-rule actions, but they are executed before the parser even recognizes the following components.

A mid-rule action may refer to the components preceding it using $n, but it may not refer to subsequent components because it is run before they are parsed.

The mid-rule action itself counts as one of the components of the rule. This makes a difference when there is another action later in the same rule (and usually there is another at the end): you have to count the actions along with the symbols when working out which number n to use in $n.

The mid-rule action can also have a semantic value. The action can set its value with an assignment to $$, and actions later in the rule can refer to the value using $n. Since there is no symbol to name the action, there is no way to declare a data type for the value in advance, so you must use the ‘$<...>n’ construct to specify a data type each time you refer to this value.

There is no way to set the value of the entire rule with a mid-rule action, because assignments to $$ do not have that effect. The only way to set the value for the entire rule is with an ordinary action at the end of the rule.

Here is an example from a hypothetical compiler, handling a let statement that looks like ‘let (variable) statement’ and serves to create a variable named variable temporarily for the duration of statement. To parse this construct, we must put variable into the symbol table while statement is parsed, then remove it afterward. Here is how it is done:

     stmt:   LET '(' var ')'
                     { $<context>$ = push_context ();
                       declare_variable ($3); }
             stmt    { $$ = $6;
                       pop_context ($<context>5); }

As soon as ‘let (variable)’ has been recognized, the first action is run. It saves a copy of the current semantic context (the list of accessible variables) as its semantic value, using alternative context in the data-type union. Then it calls declare_variable to add the new variable to that list. Once the first action is finished, the embedded statement stmt can be parsed. Note that the mid-rule action is component number 5, so the ‘stmt’ is component number 6.

After the embedded statement is parsed, its semantic value becomes the value of the entire let-statement. Then the semantic value from the earlier action is used to restore the prior list of variables. This removes the temporary let-variable from the list so that it won't appear to exist while the rest of the program is parsed.

In the above example, if the parser initiates error recovery (see Error Recovery) while parsing the tokens in the embedded statement stmt, it might discard the previous semantic context $<context>5 without restoring it. Thus, $<context>5 needs a destructor (see Freeing Discarded Symbols). However, Bison currently provides no means to declare a destructor for a mid-rule action's semantic value.

One solution is to bury the mid-rule action inside a nonterminal symbol and to declare a destructor for that symbol:

     %type <context> let
     %destructor { pop_context ($$); } let
     
     %%
     
     stmt:  let stmt
                    { $$ = $2;
                      pop_context ($1); }
            ;
     
     let:   LET '(' var ')'
                    { $$ = push_context ();
                      declare_variable ($3); }
            ;

Note that the action is now at the end of its rule. Any mid-rule action can be converted to an end-of-rule action in this way, and this is what Bison actually does to implement mid-rule actions.

Taking action before a rule is completely recognized often leads to conflicts since the parser must commit to a parse in order to execute the action. For example, the following two rules, without mid-rule actions, can coexist in a working parser because the parser can shift the open-brace token and look at what follows before deciding whether there is a declaration or not:

     compound: '{' declarations statements '}'
             | '{' statements '}'
             ;

But when we add a mid-rule action as follows, the rules become nonfunctional:

     compound: { prepare_for_local_variables (); }
               '{' declarations statements '}'
             | '{' statements '}'
             ;

Now the parser is forced to decide whether to run the mid-rule action when it has read no farther than the open-brace. In other words, it must commit to using one rule or the other, without sufficient information to do it correctly. (The open-brace token is what is called the look-ahead token at this time, since the parser is still deciding what to do about it. See Look-Ahead Tokens.)

You might think that you could correct the problem by putting identical actions into the two rules, like this:

     compound: { prepare_for_local_variables (); }
               '{' declarations statements '}'
             | { prepare_for_local_variables (); }
               '{' statements '}'
             ;

But this does not help, because Bison does not realize that the two actions are identical. (Bison never tries to understand the C code in an action.)

If the grammar is such that a declaration can be distinguished from a statement by the first token (which is true in C), then one solution which does work is to put the action after the open-brace, like this:

     compound: '{' { prepare_for_local_variables (); }
               declarations statements '}'
             | '{' statements '}'
             ;

Now the first token of the following declaration or statement, which would in any case tell Bison which rule to use, can still do so.

Another solution is to bury the action inside a nonterminal symbol which serves as a subroutine:

     subroutine: /* empty */
               { prepare_for_local_variables (); }
             ;
     
     compound: subroutine
               '{' declarations statements '}'
             | subroutine
               '{' statements '}'
             ;

Now Bison can execute the action in the rule for subroutine without deciding which rule for compound it will eventually use.


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3.6 Tracking Locations

Though grammar rules and semantic actions are enough to write a fully functional parser, it can be useful to process some additional information, especially symbol locations.

The way locations are handled is defined by providing a data type, and actions to take when rules are matched.


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3.6.1 Data Type of Locations

Defining a data type for locations is much simpler than for semantic values, since all tokens and groupings always use the same type.

You can specify the type of locations by defining a macro called YYLTYPE, just as you can specify the semantic value type by defining YYSTYPE (see Value Type). When YYLTYPE is not defined, Bison uses a default structure type with four members:

     typedef struct YYLTYPE
     {
       int first_line;
       int first_column;
       int last_line;
       int last_column;
     } YYLTYPE;


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3.6.2 Actions and Locations

Actions are not only useful for defining language semantics, but also for describing the behavior of the output parser with locations.

The most obvious way for building locations of syntactic groupings is very similar to the way semantic values are computed. In a given rule, several constructs can be used to access the locations of the elements being matched. The location of the nth component of the right hand side is @n, while the location of the left hand side grouping is @$.

Here is a basic example using the default data type for locations:

     exp:    ...
             | exp '/' exp
                 {
                   @$.first_column = @1.first_column;
                   @$.first_line = @1.first_line;
                   @$.last_column = @3.last_column;
                   @$.last_line = @3.last_line;
                   if ($3)
                     $$ = $1 / $3;
                   else
                     {
                       $$ = 1;
                       fprintf (stderr,
                                "Division by zero, l%d,c%d-l%d,c%d",
                                @3.first_line, @3.first_column,
                                @3.last_line, @3.last_column);
                     }
                 }

As for semantic values, there is a default action for locations that is run each time a rule is matched. It sets the beginning of @$ to the beginning of the first symbol, and the end of @$ to the end of the last symbol.

With this default action, the location tracking can be fully automatic. The example above simply rewrites this way:

     exp:    ...
             | exp '/' exp
                 {
                   if ($3)
                     $$ = $1 / $3;
                   else
                     {
                       $$ = 1;
                       fprintf (stderr,
                                "Division by zero, l%d,c%d-l%d,c%d",
                                @3.first_line, @3.first_column,
                                @3.last_line, @3.last_column);
                     }
                 }

It is also possible to access the location of the look-ahead token, if any, from a semantic action. This location is stored in yylloc. See Special Features for Use in Actions.


Previous: Actions and Locations, Up: Locations

3.6.3 Default Action for Locations

Actually, actions are not the best place to compute locations. Since locations are much more general than semantic values, there is room in the output parser to redefine the default action to take for each rule. The YYLLOC_DEFAULT macro is invoked each time a rule is matched, before the associated action is run. It is also invoked while processing a syntax error, to compute the error's location. Before reporting an unresolvable syntactic ambiguity, a GLR parser invokes YYLLOC_DEFAULT recursively to compute the location of that ambiguity.

Most of the time, this macro is general enough to suppress location dedicated code from semantic actions.

The YYLLOC_DEFAULT macro takes three parameters. The first one is the location of the grouping (the result of the computation). When a rule is matched, the second parameter identifies locations of all right hand side elements of the rule being matched, and the third parameter is the size of the rule's right hand side. When a GLR parser reports an ambiguity, which of multiple candidate right hand sides it passes to YYLLOC_DEFAULT is undefined. When processing a syntax error, the second parameter identifies locations of the symbols that were discarded during error processing, and the third parameter is the number of discarded symbols.

By default, YYLLOC_DEFAULT is defined this way:

     # define YYLLOC_DEFAULT(Current, Rhs, N)                                \
         do                                                                  \
           if (N)                                                            \
             {                                                               \
               (Current).first_line   = YYRHSLOC(Rhs, 1).first_line;         \
               (Current).first_column = YYRHSLOC(Rhs, 1).first_column;       \
               (Current).last_line    = YYRHSLOC(Rhs, N).last_line;          \
               (Current).last_column  = YYRHSLOC(Rhs, N).last_column;        \
             }                                                               \
           else                                                              \
             {                                                               \
               (Current).first_line   = (Current).last_line   =              \
                 YYRHSLOC(Rhs, 0).last_line;                                 \
               (Current).first_column = (Current).last_column =              \
                 YYRHSLOC(Rhs, 0).last_column;                               \
             }                                                               \
         while (0)

where YYRHSLOC (rhs, k) is the location of the kth symbol in rhs when k is positive, and the location of the symbol just before the reduction when k and n are both zero.

When defining YYLLOC_DEFAULT, you should consider that:


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3.7 Bison Declarations

The Bison declarations section of a Bison grammar defines the symbols used in formulating the grammar and the data types of semantic values. See Symbols.

All token type names (but not single-character literal tokens such as '+' and '*') must be declared. Nonterminal symbols must be declared if you need to specify which data type to use for the semantic value (see More Than One Value Type).

The first rule in the file also specifies the start symbol, by default. If you want some other symbol to be the start symbol, you must declare it explicitly (see Languages and Context-Free Grammars).


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3.7.1 Require a Version of Bison

You may require the minimum version of Bison to process the grammar. If the requirement is not met, bison exits with an error (exit status 63).

     %require "version"


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3.7.2 Token Type Names

The basic way to declare a token type name (terminal symbol) is as follows:

     %token name

Bison will convert this into a #define directive in the parser, so that the function yylex (if it is in this file) can use the name name to stand for this token type's code.

Alternatively, you can use %left, %right, or %nonassoc instead of %token, if you wish to specify associativity and precedence. See Operator Precedence.

You can explicitly specify the numeric code for a token type by appending a decimal or hexadecimal integer value in the field immediately following the token name:

     %token NUM 300
     %token XNUM 0x12d // a GNU extension

It is generally best, however, to let Bison choose the numeric codes for all token types. Bison will automatically select codes that don't conflict with each other or with normal characters.

In the event that the stack type is a union, you must augment the %token or other token declaration to include the data type alternative delimited by angle-brackets (see More Than One Value Type).

For example:

     %union {              /* define stack type */
       double val;
       symrec *tptr;
     }
     %token <val> NUM      /* define token NUM and its type */

You can associate a literal string token with a token type name by writing the literal string at the end of a %token declaration which declares the name. For example:

     %token arrow "=>"

For example, a grammar for the C language might specify these names with equivalent literal string tokens:

     %token  <operator>  OR      "||"
     %token  <operator>  LE 134  "<="
     %left  OR  "<="

Once you equate the literal string and the token name, you can use them interchangeably in further declarations or the grammar rules. The yylex function can use the token name or the literal string to obtain the token type code number (see Calling Convention).


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3.7.3 Operator Precedence

Use the %left, %right or %nonassoc declaration to declare a token and specify its precedence and associativity, all at once. These are called precedence declarations. See Operator Precedence, for general information on operator precedence.

The syntax of a precedence declaration is the same as that of %token: either

     %left symbols...

or

     %left <type> symbols...

And indeed any of these declarations serves the purposes of %token. But in addition, they specify the associativity and relative precedence for all the symbols:


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3.7.4 The Collection of Value Types

The %union declaration specifies the entire collection of possible data types for semantic values. The keyword %union is followed by braced code containing the same thing that goes inside a union in C.

For example:

     %union {
       double val;
       symrec *tptr;
     }

This says that the two alternative types are double and symrec *. They are given names val and tptr; these names are used in the %token and %type declarations to pick one of the types for a terminal or nonterminal symbol (see Nonterminal Symbols).

As an extension to POSIX, a tag is allowed after the union. For example:

     %union value {
       double val;
       symrec *tptr;
     }

specifies the union tag value, so the corresponding C type is union value. If you do not specify a tag, it defaults to YYSTYPE.

As another extension to POSIX, you may specify multiple %union declarations; their contents are concatenated. However, only the first %union declaration can specify a tag.

Note that, unlike making a union declaration in C, you need not write a semicolon after the closing brace.


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3.7.5 Nonterminal Symbols

When you use %union to specify multiple value types, you must declare the value type of each nonterminal symbol for which values are used. This is done with a %type declaration, like this:

     %type <type> nonterminal...

Here nonterminal is the name of a nonterminal symbol, and type is the name given in the %union to the alternative that you want (see The Collection of Value Types). You can give any number of nonterminal symbols in the same %type declaration, if they have the same value type. Use spaces to separate the symbol names.

You can also declare the value type of a terminal symbol. To do this, use the same <type> construction in a declaration for the terminal symbol. All kinds of token declarations allow <type>.


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3.7.6 Performing Actions before Parsing

Sometimes your parser needs to perform some initializations before parsing. The %initial-action directive allows for such arbitrary code.

— Directive: %initial-action { code }

Declare that the braced code must be invoked before parsing each time yyparse is called. The code may use $$ and @$ — initial value and location of the look-ahead — and the %parse-param.

For instance, if your locations use a file name, you may use

     %parse-param { char const *file_name };
     %initial-action
     {
       @$.initialize (file_name);
     };


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3.7.7 Freeing Discarded Symbols

During error recovery (see Error Recovery), symbols already pushed on the stack and tokens coming from the rest of the file are discarded until the parser falls on its feet. If the parser runs out of memory, or if it returns via YYABORT or YYACCEPT, all the symbols on the stack must be discarded. Even if the parser succeeds, it must discard the start symbol.

When discarded symbols convey heap based information, this memory is lost. While this behavior can be tolerable for batch parsers, such as in traditional compilers, it is unacceptable for programs like shells or protocol implementations that may parse and execute indefinitely.

The %destructor directive defines code that is called when a symbol is automatically discarded.

— Directive: %destructor { code } symbols

Invoke the braced code whenever the parser discards one of the symbols. Within code, $$ designates the semantic value associated with the discarded symbol. The additional parser parameters are also available (see The Parser Function yyparse).

For instance:

     %union
     {
       char *string;
     }
     %token <string> STRING
     %type  <string> string
     %destructor { free ($$); } STRING string

guarantees that when a STRING or a string is discarded, its associated memory will be freed.


Discarded symbols are the following:

The parser can return immediately because of an explicit call to YYABORT or YYACCEPT, or failed error recovery, or memory exhaustion.

Right-hand size symbols of a rule that explicitly triggers a syntax error via YYERROR are not discarded automatically. As a rule of thumb, destructors are invoked only when user actions cannot manage the memory.


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3.7.8 Suppressing Conflict Warnings

Bison normally warns if there are any conflicts in the grammar (see Shift/Reduce Conflicts), but most real grammars have harmless shift/reduce conflicts which are resolved in a predictable way and would be difficult to eliminate. It is desirable to suppress the warning about these conflicts unless the number of conflicts changes. You can do this with the %expect declaration.

The declaration looks like this:

     %expect n

Here n is a decimal integer. The declaration says there should be n shift/reduce conflicts and no reduce/reduce conflicts. Bison reports an error if the number of shift/reduce conflicts differs from n, or if there are any reduce/reduce conflicts.

For normal LALR(1) parsers, reduce/reduce conflicts are more serious, and should be eliminated entirely. Bison will always report reduce/reduce conflicts for these parsers. With GLR parsers, however, both kinds of conflicts are routine; otherwise, there would be no need to use GLR parsing. Therefore, it is also possible to specify an expected number of reduce/reduce conflicts in GLR parsers, using the declaration:

     %expect-rr n

In general, using %expect involves these steps:

Now Bison will warn you if you introduce an unexpected conflict, but will keep silent otherwise.


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3.7.9 The Start-Symbol

Bison assumes by default that the start symbol for the grammar is the first nonterminal specified in the grammar specification section. The programmer may override this restriction with the %start declaration as follows:

     %start symbol


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3.7.10 A Pure (Reentrant) Parser

A reentrant program is one which does not alter in the course of execution; in other words, it consists entirely of pure (read-only) code. Reentrancy is important whenever asynchronous execution is possible; for example, a nonreentrant program may not be safe to call from a signal handler. In systems with multiple threads of control, a nonreentrant program must be called only within interlocks.

Normally, Bison generates a parser which is not reentrant. This is suitable for most uses, and it permits compatibility with Yacc. (The standard Yacc interfaces are inherently nonreentrant, because they use statically allocated variables for communication with yylex, including yylval and yylloc.)

Alternatively, you can generate a pure, reentrant parser. The Bison declaration %pure-parser says that you want the parser to be reentrant. It looks like this:

     %pure-parser

The result is that the communication variables yylval and yylloc become local variables in yyparse, and a different calling convention is used for the lexical analyzer function yylex. See Calling Conventions for Pure Parsers, for the details of this. The variable yynerrs also becomes local in yyparse (see The Error Reporting Function yyerror). The convention for calling yyparse itself is unchanged.

Whether the parser is pure has nothing to do with the grammar rules. You can generate either a pure parser or a nonreentrant parser from any valid grammar.


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3.7.11 Bison Declaration Summary

Here is a summary of the declarations used to define a grammar:

— Directive: %union

Declare the collection of data types that semantic values may have (see The Collection of Value Types).

— Directive: %token

Declare a terminal symbol (token type name) with no precedence or associativity specified (see Token Type Names).

— Directive: %right

Declare a terminal symbol (token type name) that is right-associative (see Operator Precedence).

— Directive: %left

Declare a terminal symbol (token type name) that is left-associative (see Operator Precedence).

— Directive: %nonassoc

Declare a terminal symbol (token type name) that is nonassociative (see Operator Precedence). Using it in a way that would be associative is a syntax error.

— Directive: %type

Declare the type of semantic values for a nonterminal symbol (see Nonterminal Symbols).

— Directive: %start

Specify the grammar's start symbol (see The Start-Symbol).

— Directive: %expect

Declare the expected number of shift-reduce conflicts (see Suppressing Conflict Warnings).


In order to change the behavior of bison, use the following directives:
— Directive: %debug

In the parser file, define the macro YYDEBUG to 1 if it is not already defined, so that the debugging facilities are compiled.

See Tracing Your Parser.
— Directive: %defines

Write a header file containing macro definitions for the token type names defined in the grammar as well as a few other declarations. If the parser output file is named name.c then this file is named name.h.

Unless YYSTYPE is already defined as a macro, the output header declares YYSTYPE. Therefore, if you are using a %union (see More Than One Value Type) with components that require other definitions, or if you have defined a YYSTYPE macro (see Data Types of Semantic Values), you need to arrange for these definitions to be propagated to all modules, e.g., by putting them in a prerequisite header that is included both by your parser and by any other module that needs YYSTYPE.

Unless your parser is pure, the output header declares yylval as an external variable. See A Pure (Reentrant) Parser.

If you have also used locations, the output header declares YYLTYPE and yylloc using a protocol similar to that of YYSTYPE and yylval. See Tracking Locations.

This output file is normally essential if you wish to put the definition of yylex in a separate source file, because yylex typically needs to be able to refer to the above-mentioned declarations and to the token type codes. See Semantic Values of Tokens.

— Directive: %destructor

Specify how the parser should reclaim the memory associated to discarded symbols. See Freeing Discarded Symbols.

— Directive: %file-prefix="prefix"

Specify a prefix to use for all Bison output file names. The names are chosen as if the input file were named prefix.y.

— Directive: %locations

Generate the code processing the locations (see Special Features for Use in Actions). This mode is enabled as soon as the grammar uses the special ‘@n’ tokens, but if your grammar does not use it, using ‘%locations’ allows for more accurate syntax error messages.

— Directive: %name-prefix="prefix"

Rename the external symbols used in the parser so that they start with prefix instead of ‘yy’. The precise list of symbols renamed in C parsers is yyparse, yylex, yyerror, yynerrs, yylval, yychar, yydebug, and (if locations are used) yylloc. For example, if you use ‘%name-prefix="c_"’, the names become c_parse, c_lex, and so on. In C++ parsers, it is only the surrounding namespace which is named prefix instead of ‘yy’. See Multiple Parsers in the Same Program.

— Directive: %no-parser

Do not include any C code in the parser file; generate tables only. The parser file contains just #define directives and static variable declarations.

This option also tells Bison to write the C code for the grammar actions into a file named file.act, in the form of a brace-surrounded body fit for a switch statement.

— Directive: %no-lines

Don't generate any #line preprocessor commands in the parser file. Ordinarily Bison writes these commands in the parser file so that the C compiler and debuggers will associate errors and object code with your source file (the grammar file). This directive causes them to associate errors with the parser file, treating it an independent source file in its own right.

— Directive: %output="file"

Specify file for the parser file.

— Directive: %pure-parser

Request a pure (reentrant) parser program (see A Pure (Reentrant) Parser).

— Directive: %require "version"

Require version version or higher of Bison. See Require a Version of Bison.

— Directive: %token-table

Generate an array of token names in the parser file. The name of the array is yytname; yytname[i] is the name of the token whose internal Bison token code number is i. The first three elements of yytname correspond to the predefined tokens "$end", "error", and "$undefined"; after these come the symbols defined in the grammar file.

The name in the table includes all the characters needed to represent the token in Bison. For single-character literals and literal strings, this includes the surrounding quoting characters and any escape sequences. For example, the Bison single-character literal '+' corresponds to a three-character name, represented in C as "'+'"; and the Bison two-character literal string "\\/" corresponds to a five-character name, represented in C as "\"\\\\/\"".

When you specify %token-table, Bison also generates macro definitions for macros YYNTOKENS, YYNNTS, and YYNRULES, and YYNSTATES:

YYNTOKENS
The highest token number, plus one.
YYNNTS
The number of nonterminal symbols.
YYNRULES
The number of grammar rules,
YYNSTATES
The number of parser states (see Parser States).

— Directive: %verbose

Write an extra output file containing verbose descriptions of the parser states and what is done for each type of look-ahead token in that state. See Understanding Your Parser, for more information.

— Directive: %yacc

Pretend the option --yacc was given, i.e., imitate Yacc, including its naming conventions. See Bison Options, for more.


Previous: Declarations, Up: Grammar File

3.8 Multiple Parsers in the Same Program

Most programs that use Bison parse only one language and therefore contain only one Bison parser. But what if you want to parse more than one language with the same program? Then you need to avoid a name conflict between different definitions of yyparse, yylval, and so on.

The easy way to do this is to use the option ‘-p prefix’ (see Invoking Bison). This renames the interface functions and variables of the Bison parser to start with prefix instead of ‘yy’. You can use this to give each parser distinct names that do not conflict.

The precise list of symbols renamed is yyparse, yylex, yyerror, yynerrs, yylval, yylloc, yychar and yydebug. For example, if you use ‘-p c’, the names become cparse, clex, and so on.

All the other variables and macros associated with Bison are not renamed. These others are not global; there is no conflict if the same name is used in different parsers. For example, YYSTYPE is not renamed, but defining this in different ways in different parsers causes no trouble (see Data Types of Semantic Values).

The ‘-p’ option works by adding macro definitions to the beginning of the parser source file, defining yyparse as prefixparse, and so on. This effectively substitutes one name for the other in the entire parser file.


Next: , Previous: Grammar File, Up: Top

4 Parser C-Language Interface

The Bison parser is actually a C function named yyparse. Here we describe the interface conventions of yyparse and the other functions that it needs to use.

Keep in mind that the parser uses many C identifiers starting with ‘yy’ and ‘YY’ for internal purposes. If you use such an identifier (aside from those in this manual) in an action or in epilogue in the grammar file, you are likely to run into trouble.


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4.1 The Parser Function yyparse

You call the function yyparse to cause parsing to occur. This function reads tokens, executes actions, and ultimately returns when it encounters end-of-input or an unrecoverable syntax error. You can also write an action which directs yyparse to return immediately without reading further.

— Function: int yyparse (void)

The value returned by yyparse is 0 if parsing was successful (return is due to end-of-input).

The value is 1 if parsing failed because of invalid input, i.e., input that contains a syntax error or that causes YYABORT to be invoked.

The value is 2 if parsing failed due to memory exhaustion.

In an action, you can cause immediate return from yyparse by using these macros:

— Macro: YYACCEPT

Return immediately with value 0 (to report success).

— Macro: YYABORT

Return immediately with value 1 (to report failure).

If you use a reentrant parser, you can optionally pass additional parameter information to it in a reentrant way. To do so, use the declaration %parse-param:

— Directive: %parse-param {argument-declaration}

Declare that an argument declared by the braced-code argument-declaration is an additional yyparse argument. The argument-declaration is used when declaring functions or prototypes. The last identifier in argument-declaration must be the argument name.

Here's an example. Write this in the parser:

     %parse-param {int *nastiness}
     %parse-param {int *randomness}

Then call the parser like this:

     {
       int nastiness, randomness;
       ...  /* Store proper data in nastiness and randomness.  */
       value = yyparse (&nastiness, &randomness);
       ...
     }

In the grammar actions, use expressions like this to refer to the data:

     exp: ...    { ...; *randomness += 1; ... }


Next: , Previous: Parser Function, Up: Interface

4.2 The Lexical Analyzer Function yylex

The lexical analyzer function, yylex, recognizes tokens from the input stream and returns them to the parser. Bison does not create this function automatically; you must write it so that yyparse can call it. The function is sometimes referred to as a lexical scanner.

In simple programs, yylex is often defined at the end of the Bison grammar file. If yylex is defined in a separate source file, you need to arrange for the token-type macro definitions to be available there. To do this, use the ‘-d’ option when you run Bison, so that it will write these macro definitions into a separate header file name.tab.h which you can include in the other source files that need it. See Invoking Bison.


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4.2.1 Calling Convention for yylex

The value that yylex returns must be the positive numeric code for the type of token it has just found; a zero or negative value signifies end-of-input.

When a token is referred to in the grammar rules by a name, that name in the parser file becomes a C macro whose definition is the proper numeric code for that token type. So yylex can use the name to indicate that type. See Symbols.

When a token is referred to in the grammar rules by a character literal, the numeric code for that character is also the code for the token type. So yylex can simply return that character code, possibly converted to unsigned char to avoid sign-extension. The null character must not be used this way, because its code is zero and that signifies end-of-input.

Here is an example showing these things:

     int
     yylex (void)
     {
       ...
       if (c == EOF)    /* Detect end-of-input.  */
         return 0;
       ...
       if (c == '+' || c == '-')
         return c;      /* Assume token type for `+' is '+'.  */
       ...
       return INT;      /* Return the type of the token.  */
       ...
     }

This interface has been designed so that the output from the lex utility can be used without change as the definition of yylex.

If the grammar uses literal string tokens, there are two ways that yylex can determine the token type codes for them:


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4.2.2 Semantic Values of Tokens

In an ordinary (nonreentrant) parser, the semantic value of the token must be stored into the global variable yylval. When you are using just one data type for semantic values, yylval has that type. Thus, if the type is int (the default), you might write this in yylex:

       ...
       yylval = value;  /* Put value onto Bison stack.  */
       return INT;      /* Return the type of the token.  */
       ...

When you are using multiple data types, yylval's type is a union made from the %union declaration (see The Collection of Value Types). So when you store a token's value, you must use the proper member of the union. If the %union declaration looks like this:

     %union {
       int intval;
       double val;
       symrec *tptr;
     }

then the code in yylex might look like this:

       ...
       yylval.intval = value; /* Put value onto Bison stack.  */
       return INT;            /* Return the type of the token.  */
       ...


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4.2.3 Textual Locations of Tokens

If you are using the ‘@n’-feature (see Tracking Locations) in actions to keep track of the textual locations of tokens and groupings, then you must provide this information in yylex. The function yyparse expects to find the textual location of a token just parsed in the global variable yylloc. So yylex must store the proper data in that variable.

By default, the value of yylloc is a structure and you need only initialize the members that are going to be used by the actions. The four members are called first_line, first_column, last_line and last_column. Note that the use of this feature makes the parser noticeably slower.

The data type of yylloc has the name YYLTYPE.


Previous: Token Locations, Up: Lexical

4.2.4 Calling Conventions for Pure Parsers

When you use the Bison declaration %pure-parser to request a pure, reentrant parser, the global communication variables yylval and yylloc cannot be used. (See A Pure (Reentrant) Parser.) In such parsers the two global variables are replaced by pointers passed as arguments to yylex. You must declare them as shown here, and pass the information back by storing it through those pointers.

     int
     yylex (YYSTYPE *lvalp, YYLTYPE *llocp)
     {
       ...
       *lvalp = value;  /* Put value onto Bison stack.  */
       return INT;      /* Return the type of the token.  */
       ...
     }

If the grammar file does not use the ‘@’ constructs to refer to textual locations, then the type YYLTYPE will not be defined. In this case, omit the second argument; yylex will be called with only one argument.

If you wish to pass the additional parameter data to yylex, use %lex-param just like %parse-param (see Parser Function).

— Directive: lex-param {argument-declaration}

Declare that the braced-code argument-declaration is an additional yylex argument declaration.

For instance:

     %parse-param {int *nastiness}
     %lex-param   {int *nastiness}
     %parse-param {int *randomness}

results in the following signature:

     int yylex   (int *nastiness);
     int yyparse (int *nastiness, int *randomness);

If %pure-parser is added:

     int yylex   (YYSTYPE *lvalp, int *nastiness);
     int yyparse (int *nastiness, int *randomness);

and finally, if both %pure-parser and %locations are used:

     int yylex   (YYSTYPE *lvalp, YYLTYPE *llocp, int *nastiness);
     int yyparse (int *nastiness, int *randomness);


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4.3 The Error Reporting Function yyerror

The Bison parser detects a syntax error or parse error whenever it reads a token which cannot satisfy any syntax rule. An action in the grammar can also explicitly proclaim an error, using the macro YYERROR (see Special Features for Use in Actions).

The Bison parser expects to report the error by calling an error reporting function named yyerror, which you must supply. It is called by yyparse whenever a syntax error is found, and it receives one argument. For a syntax error, the string is normally "syntax error".

If you invoke the directive %error-verbose in the Bison declarations section (see The Bison Declarations Section), then Bison provides a more verbose and specific error message string instead of just plain "syntax error".

The parser can detect one other kind of error: memory exhaustion. This can happen when the input contains constructions that are very deeply nested. It isn't likely you will encounter this, since the Bison parser normally extends its stack automatically up to a very large limit. But if memory is exhausted, yyparse calls yyerror in the usual fashion, except that the argument string is "memory exhausted".

In some cases diagnostics like "syntax error" are translated automatically from English to some other language before they are passed to yyerror. See Internationalization.

The following definition suffices in simple programs:

     void
     yyerror (char const *s)
     {
       fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", s);
     }

After yyerror returns to yyparse, the latter will attempt error recovery if you have written suitable error recovery grammar rules (see Error Recovery). If recovery is impossible, yyparse will immediately return 1.

Obviously, in location tracking pure parsers, yyerror should have an access to the current location. This is indeed the case for the GLR parsers, but not for the Yacc parser, for historical reasons. I.e., if ‘%locations %pure-parser’ is passed then the prototypes for yyerror are:

     void yyerror (char const *msg);                 /* Yacc parsers.  */
     void yyerror (YYLTYPE *locp, char const *msg);  /* GLR parsers.   */

If ‘%parse-param {int *nastiness}’ is used, then:

     void yyerror (int *nastiness, char const *msg);  /* Yacc parsers.  */
     void yyerror (int *nastiness, char const *msg);  /* GLR parsers.   */

Finally, GLR and Yacc parsers share the same yyerror calling convention for absolutely pure parsers, i.e., when the calling convention of yylex and the calling convention of %pure-parser are pure. I.e.:

     /* Location tracking.  */
     %locations
     /* Pure yylex.  */
     %pure-parser
     %lex-param   {int *nastiness}
     /* Pure yyparse.  */
     %parse-param {int *nastiness}
     %parse-param {int *randomness}

results in the following signatures for all the parser kinds:

     int yylex (YYSTYPE *lvalp, YYLTYPE *llocp, int *nastiness);
     int yyparse (int *nastiness, int *randomness);
     void yyerror (YYLTYPE *locp,
                   int *nastiness, int *randomness,
                   char const *msg);

The prototypes are only indications of how the code produced by Bison uses yyerror. Bison-generated code always ignores the returned value, so yyerror can return any type, including void. Also, yyerror can be a variadic function; that is why the message is always passed last.

Traditionally yyerror returns an int that is always ignored, but this is purely for historical reasons, and void is preferable since it more accurately describes the return type for yyerror.

The variable yynerrs contains the number of syntax errors reported so far. Normally this variable is global; but if you request a pure parser (see A Pure (Reentrant) Parser) then it is a local variable which only the actions can access.


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4.4 Special Features for Use in Actions

Here is a table of Bison constructs, variables and macros that are useful in actions.

— Variable: $$

Acts like a variable that contains the semantic value for the grouping made by the current rule. See Actions.

— Variable: $n

Acts like a variable that contains the semantic value for the nth component of the current rule. See Actions.

— Variable: $<typealt>$

Like $$ but specifies alternative typealt in the union specified by the %union declaration. See Data Types of Values in Actions.

— Variable: $<typealt>n

Like $n but specifies alternative typealt in the union specified by the %union declaration. See Data Types of Values in Actions.

— Macro: YYABORT;

Return immediately from yyparse, indicating failure. See The Parser Function yyparse.

— Macro: YYACCEPT;

Return immediately from yyparse, indicating success. See The Parser Function yyparse.

— Macro: YYBACKUP (token, value);

Unshift a token. This macro is allowed only for rules that reduce a single value, and only when there is no look-ahead token. It is also disallowed in GLR parsers. It installs a look-ahead token with token type token and semantic value value; then it discards the value that was going to be reduced by this rule.

If the macro is used when it is not valid, such as when there is a look-ahead token already, then it reports a syntax error with a message ‘cannot back up’ and performs ordinary error recovery.

In either case, the rest of the action is not executed.

— Macro: YYEMPTY

Value stored in yychar when there is no look-ahead token.

— Macro: YYEOF

Value stored in yychar when the look-ahead is the end of the input stream.

— Macro: YYERROR;

Cause an immediate syntax error. This statement initiates error recovery just as if the parser itself had detected an error; however, it does not call yyerror, and does not print any message. If you want to print an error message, call yyerror explicitly before the ‘YYERROR;’ statement. See Error Recovery.

— Macro: YYRECOVERING

The expression YYRECOVERING () yields 1 when the parser is recovering from a syntax error, and 0 otherwise. See Error Recovery.

— Variable: yychar

Variable containing either the look-ahead token, or YYEOF when the look-ahead is the end of the input stream, or YYEMPTY when no look-ahead has been performed so the next token is not yet known. Do not modify yychar in a deferred semantic action (see GLR Semantic Actions). See Look-Ahead Tokens.

— Macro: yyclearin;

Discard the current look-ahead token. This is useful primarily in error rules. Do not invoke yyclearin in a deferred semantic action (see GLR Semantic Actions). See Error Recovery.

— Macro: yyerrok;

Resume generating error messages immediately for subsequent syntax errors. This is useful primarily in error rules. See Error Recovery.

— Variable: yylloc

Variable containing the look-ahead token location when yychar is not set to YYEMPTY or YYEOF. Do not modify yylloc in a deferred semantic action (see GLR Semantic Actions). See Actions and Locations.

— Variable: yylval

Variable containing the look-ahead token semantic value when yychar is not set to YYEMPTY or YYEOF. Do not modify yylval in a deferred semantic action (see GLR Semantic Actions). See Actions.

— Value: @$

Acts like a structure variable containing information on the textual location of the grouping made by the current rule. See Tracking Locations.

— Value: @n

Acts like a structure variable containing information on the textual location of the nth component of the current rule. See Tracking Locations.


Previous: Action Features, Up: Interface

4.5 Parser Internationalization

A Bison-generated parser can print diagnostics, including error and tracing messages. By default, they appear in English. However, Bison also supports outputting diagnostics in the user's native language. To make this work, the user should set the usual environment variables. See The User's View. For example, the shell command ‘export LC_ALL=fr_CA.UTF-8’ might set the user's locale to French Canadian using the UTF-8 encoding. The exact set of available locales depends on the user's installation.

The maintainer of a package that uses a Bison-generated parser enables the internationalization of the parser's output through the following steps. Here we assume a package that uses GNU Autoconf and GNU Automake.

  1. Into the directory containing the GNU Autoconf macros used by the package—often called m4—copy the bison-i18n.m4 file installed by Bison under ‘share/aclocal/bison-i18n.m4’ in Bison's installation directory. For example:
              cp /usr/local/share/aclocal/bison-i18n.m4 m4/bison-i18n.m4
    
  2. In the top-level configure.ac, after the AM_GNU_GETTEXT invocation, add an invocation of BISON_I18N. This macro is defined in the file bison-i18n.m4 that you copied earlier. It causes ‘configure’ to find the value of the BISON_LOCALEDIR variable, and it defines the source-language symbol YYENABLE_NLS to enable translations in the Bison-generated parser.
  3. In the main function of your program, designate the directory containing Bison's runtime message catalog, through a call to ‘bindtextdomain’ with domain name ‘bison-runtime’. For example:
              bindtextdomain ("bison-runtime", BISON_LOCALEDIR);
    

    Typically this appears after any other call bindtextdomain (PACKAGE, LOCALEDIR) that your package already has. Here we rely on ‘BISON_LOCALEDIR’ to be defined as a string through the Makefile.

  4. In the Makefile.am that controls the compilation of the main function, make ‘BISON_LOCALEDIR’ available as a C preprocessor macro, either in ‘DEFS’ or in ‘AM_CPPFLAGS’. For example:
              DEFS = @DEFS@ -DBISON_LOCALEDIR='"$(BISON_LOCALEDIR)"'
    

    or:

              AM_CPPFLAGS = -DBISON_LOCALEDIR='"$(BISON_LOCALEDIR)"'
    
  5. Finally, invoke the command autoreconf to generate the build infrastructure.


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5 The Bison Parser Algorithm

As Bison reads tokens, it pushes them onto a stack along with their semantic values. The stack is called the parser stack. Pushing a token is traditionally called shifting.

For example, suppose the infix calculator has read ‘1 + 5 *’, with a ‘3’ to come. The stack will have four elements, one for each token that was shifted.

But the stack does not always have an element for each token read. When the last n tokens and groupings shifted match the components of a grammar rule, they can be combined according to that rule. This is called reduction. Those tokens and groupings are replaced on the stack by a single grouping whose symbol is the result (left hand side) of that rule. Running the rule's action is part of the process of reduction, because this is what computes the semantic value of the resulting grouping.

For example, if the infix calculator's parser stack contains this:

     1 + 5 * 3

and the next input token is a newline character, then the last three elements can be reduced to 15 via the rule:

     expr: expr '*' expr;

Then the stack contains just these three elements:

     1 + 15

At this point, another reduction can be made, resulting in the single value 16. Then the newline token can be shifted.

The parser tries, by shifts and reductions, to reduce the entire input down to a single grouping whose symbol is the grammar's start-symbol (see Languages and Context-Free Grammars).

This kind of parser is known in the literature as a bottom-up parser.


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5.1 Look-Ahead Tokens

The Bison parser does not always reduce immediately as soon as the last n tokens and groupings match a rule. This is because such a simple strategy is inadequate to handle most languages. Instead, when a reduction is possible, the parser sometimes “looks ahead” at the next token in order to decide what to do.

When a token is read, it is not immediately shifted; first it becomes the look-ahead token, which is not on the stack. Now the parser can perform one or more reductions of tokens and groupings on the stack, while the look-ahead token remains off to the side. When no more reductions should take place, the look-ahead token is shifted onto the stack. This does not mean that all possible reductions have been done; depending on the token type of the look-ahead token, some rules may choose to delay their application.

Here is a simple case where look-ahead is needed. These three rules define expressions which contain binary addition operators and postfix unary factorial operators (‘!’), and allow parentheses for grouping.

     expr:     term '+' expr
             | term
             ;
     
     term:     '(' expr ')'
             | term '!'
             | NUMBER
             ;

Suppose that the tokens ‘1 + 2 have been read and shifted; what should be done? If the following token is ‘)’, then the first three tokens must be reduced to form an expr. This is the only valid course, because shifting the ‘)’ would produce a sequence of symbols term ')', and no rule allows this.

If the following token is ‘!’, then it must be shifted immediately so that ‘2 ! can be reduced to make a term. If instead the parser were to reduce before shifting, ‘1 + 2 would become an expr. It would then be impossible to shift the ‘!’ because doing so would produce on the stack the sequence of symbols expr '!'. No rule allows that sequence.

The look-ahead token is stored in the variable yychar. Its semantic value and location, if any, are stored in the variables yylval and yylloc. See Special Features for Use in Actions.


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5.2 Shift/Reduce Conflicts

Suppose we are parsing a language which has if-then and if-then-else statements, with a pair of rules like this:

     if_stmt:
               IF expr THEN stmt
             | IF expr THEN stmt ELSE stmt
             ;

Here we assume that IF, THEN and ELSE are terminal symbols for specific keyword tokens.

When the ELSE token is read and becomes the look-ahead token, the contents of the stack (assuming the input is valid) are just right for reduction by the first rule. But it is also legitimate to shift the ELSE, because that would lead to eventual reduction by the second rule.

This situation, where either a shift or a reduction would be valid, is called a shift/reduce conflict. Bison is designed to resolve these conflicts by choosing to shift, unless otherwise directed by operator precedence declarations. To see the reason for this, let's contrast it with the other alternative.

Since the parser prefers to shift the ELSE, the result is to attach the else-clause to the innermost if-statement, making these two inputs equivalent:

     if x then if y then win (); else lose;
     
     if x then do; if y then win (); else lose; end;

But if the parser chose to reduce when possible rather than shift, the result would be to attach the else-clause to the outermost if-statement, making these two inputs equivalent:

     if x then if y then win (); else lose;
     
     if x then do; if y then win (); end; else lose;

The conflict exists because the grammar as written is ambiguous: either parsing of the simple nested if-statement is legitimate. The established convention is that these ambiguities are resolved by attaching the else-clause to the innermost if-statement; this is what Bison accomplishes by choosing to shift rather than reduce. (It would ideally be cleaner to write an unambiguous grammar, but that is very hard to do in this case.) This particular ambiguity was first encountered in the specifications of Algol 60 and is called the “dangling else” ambiguity.

To avoid warnings from Bison about predictable, legitimate shift/reduce conflicts, use the %expect n declaration. There will be no warning as long as the number of shift/reduce conflicts is exactly n. See Suppressing Conflict Warnings.

The definition of if_stmt above is solely to blame for the conflict, but the conflict does not actually appear without additional rules. Here is a complete Bison input file that actually manifests the conflict:

     %token IF THEN ELSE variable
     %%
     stmt:     expr
             | if_stmt
             ;
     
     if_stmt:
               IF expr THEN stmt
             | IF expr THEN stmt ELSE stmt
             ;
     
     expr:     variable
             ;


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5.3 Operator Precedence

Another situation where shift/reduce conflicts appear is in arithmetic expressions. Here shifting is not always the preferred resolution; the Bison declarations for operator precedence allow you to specify when to shift and when to reduce.


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5.3.1 When Precedence is Needed

Consider the following ambiguous grammar fragment (ambiguous because the input ‘1 - 2 * 3 can be parsed in two different ways):

     expr:     expr '-' expr
             | expr '*' expr
             | expr '<' expr
             | '(' expr ')'
             ...
             ;

Suppose the parser has seen the tokens ‘1’, ‘-’ and ‘2’; should it reduce them via the rule for the subtraction operator? It depends on the next token. Of course, if the next token is ‘)’, we must reduce; shifting is invalid because no single rule can reduce the token sequence ‘- 2 ) or anything starting with that. But if the next token is ‘*’ or ‘<’, we have a choice: either shifting or reduction would allow the parse to complete, but with different results.

To decide which one Bison should do, we must consider the results. If the next operator token op is shifted, then it must be reduced first in order to permit another opportunity to reduce the difference. The result is (in effect) ‘1 - (2 op 3). On the other hand, if the subtraction is reduced before shifting op, the result is ‘(1 - 2) op 3. Clearly, then, the choice of shift or reduce should depend on the relative precedence of the operators ‘-’ and op: ‘*’ should be shifted first, but not ‘<’.

What about input such as ‘1 - 2 - 5; should this be ‘(1 - 2) - 5 or should it be ‘1 - (2 - 5)? For most operators we prefer the former, which is called left association. The latter alternative, right association, is desirable for assignment operators. The choice of left or right association is a matter of whether the parser chooses to shift or reduce when the stack contains ‘1 - 2 and the look-ahead token is ‘-’: shifting makes right-associativity.


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5.3.2 Specifying Operator Precedence

Bison allows you to specify these choices with the operator precedence declarations %left and %right. Each such declaration contains a list of tokens, which are operators whose precedence and associativity is being declared. The %left declaration makes all those operators left-associative and the %right declaration makes them right-associative. A third alternative is %nonassoc, which declares that it is a syntax error to find the same operator twice “in a row”.

The relative precedence of different operators is controlled by the order in which they are declared. The first %left or %right declaration in the file declares the operators whose precedence is lowest, the next such declaration declares the operators whose precedence is a little higher, and so on.


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5.3.3 Precedence Examples

In our example, we would want the following declarations:

     %left '<'
     %left '-'
     %left '*'

In a more complete example, which supports other operators as well, we would declare them in groups of equal precedence. For example, '+' is declared with '-':

     %left '<' '>' '=' NE LE GE
     %left '+' '-'
     %left '*' '/'

(Here NE and so on stand for the operators for “not equal” and so on. We assume that these tokens are more than one character long and therefore are represented by names, not character literals.)


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5.3.4 How Precedence Works

The first effect of the precedence declarations is to assign precedence levels to the terminal symbols declared. The second effect is to assign precedence levels to certain rules: each rule gets its precedence from the last terminal symbol mentioned in the components. (You can also specify explicitly the precedence of a rule. See Context-Dependent Precedence.)

Finally, the resolution of conflicts works by comparing the precedence of the rule being considered with that of the look-ahead token. If the token's precedence is higher, the choice is to shift. If the rule's precedence is higher, the choice is to reduce. If they have equal precedence, the choice is made based on the associativity of that precedence level. The verbose output file made by ‘-v’ (see Invoking Bison) says how each conflict was resolved.

Not all rules and not all tokens have precedence. If either the rule or the look-ahead token has no precedence, then the default is to shift.


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5.4 Context-Dependent Precedence

Often the precedence of an operator depends on the context. This sounds outlandish at first, but it is really very common. For example, a minus sign typically has a very high precedence as a unary operator, and a somewhat lower precedence (lower than multiplication) as a binary operator.

The Bison precedence declarations, %left, %right and %nonassoc, can only be used once for a given token; so a token has only one precedence declared in this way. For context-dependent precedence, you need to use an additional mechanism: the %prec modifier for rules.

The %prec modifier declares the precedence of a particular rule by specifying a terminal symbol whose precedence should be used for that rule. It's not necessary for that symbol to appear otherwise in the rule. The modifier's syntax is:

     %prec terminal-symbol

and it is written after the components of the rule. Its effect is to assign the rule the precedence of terminal-symbol, overriding the precedence that would be deduced for it in the ordinary way. The altered rule precedence then affects how conflicts involving that rule are resolved (see Operator Precedence).

Here is how %prec solves the problem of unary minus. First, declare a precedence for a fictitious terminal symbol named UMINUS. There are no tokens of this type, but the symbol serves to stand for its precedence:

     ...
     %left '+' '-'
     %left '*'
     %left UMINUS

Now the precedence of UMINUS can be used in specific rules:

     exp:    ...
             | exp '-' exp
             ...
             | '-' exp %prec UMINUS


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5.5 Parser States

The function yyparse is implemented using a finite-state machine. The values pushed on the parser stack are not simply token type codes; they represent the entire sequence of terminal and nonterminal symbols at or near the top of the stack. The current state collects all the information about previous input which is relevant to deciding what to do next.

Each time a look-ahead token is read, the current parser state together with the type of look-ahead token are looked up in a table. This table entry can say, “Shift the look-ahead token.” In this case, it also specifies the new parser state, which is pushed onto the top of the parser stack. Or it can say, “Reduce using rule number n.” This means that a certain number of tokens or groupings are taken off the top of the stack, and replaced by one grouping. In other words, that number of states are popped from the stack, and one new state is pushed.

There is one other alternative: the table can say that the look-ahead token is erroneous in the current state. This causes error processing to begin (see Error Recovery).


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5.6 Reduce/Reduce Conflicts

A reduce/reduce conflict occurs if there are two or more rules that apply to the same sequence of input. This usually indicates a serious error in the grammar.

For example, here is an erroneous attempt to define a sequence of zero or more word groupings.

     sequence: /* empty */
                     { printf ("empty sequence\n"); }
             | maybeword
             | sequence word
                     { printf ("added word %s\n", $2); }
             ;
     
     maybeword: /* empty */
                     { printf ("empty maybeword\n"); }
             | word
                     { printf ("single word %s\n", $1); }
             ;

The error is an ambiguity: there is more than one way to parse a single word into a sequence. It could be reduced to a maybeword and then into a sequence via the second rule. Alternatively, nothing-at-all could be reduced into a sequence via the first rule, and this could be combined with the word using the third rule for sequence.

There is also more than one way to reduce nothing-at-all into a sequence. This can be done directly via the first rule, or indirectly via maybeword and then the second rule.

You might think that this is a distinction without a difference, because it does not change whether any particular input is valid or not. But it does affect which actions are run. One parsing order runs the second rule's action; the other runs the first rule's action and the third rule's action. In this example, the output of the program changes.

Bison resolves a reduce/reduce conflict by choosing to use the rule that appears first in the grammar, but it is very risky to rely on this. Every reduce/reduce conflict must be studied and usually eliminated. Here is the proper way to define sequence:

     sequence: /* empty */
                     { printf ("empty sequence\n"); }
             | sequence word
                     { printf ("added word %s\n", $2); }
             ;

Here is another common error that yields a reduce/reduce conflict:

     sequence: /* empty */
             | sequence words
             | sequence redirects
             ;
     
     words:    /* empty */
             | words word
             ;
     
     redirects:/* empty */
             | redirects redirect
             ;

The intention here is to define a sequence which can contain either word or redirect groupings. The individual definitions of sequence, words and redirects are error-free, but the three together make a subtle ambiguity: even an empty input can be parsed in infinitely many ways!

Consider: nothing-at-all could be a words. Or it could be two words in a row, or three, or any number. It could equally well be a redirects, or two, or any number. Or it could be a words followed by three redirects and another words. And so on.

Here are two ways to correct these rules. First, to make it a single level of sequence:

     sequence: /* empty */
             | sequence word
             | sequence redirect
             ;

Second, to prevent either a words or a redirects from being empty:

     sequence: /* empty */
             | sequence words
             | sequence redirects
             ;
     
     words:    word
             | words word
             ;
     
     redirects:redirect
             | redirects redirect
             ;


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5.7 Mysterious Reduce/Reduce Conflicts

Sometimes reduce/reduce conflicts can occur that don't look warranted. Here is an example:

     %token ID
     
     %%
     def:    param_spec return_spec ','
             ;
     param_spec:
                  type
             |    name_list ':' type
             ;
     return_spec:
                  type
             |    name ':' type
             ;
     type:        ID
             ;
     name:        ID
             ;
     name_list:
                  name
             |    name ',' name_list
             ;

It would seem that this grammar can be parsed with only a single token of look-ahead: when a param_spec is being read, an ID is a name if a comma or colon follows, or a type if another ID follows. In other words, this grammar is LR(1).

However, Bison, like most parser generators, cannot actually handle all LR(1) grammars. In this grammar, two contexts, that after an ID at the beginning of a param_spec and likewise at the beginning of a return_spec, are similar enough that Bison assumes they are the same. They appear similar because the same set of rules would be active—the rule for reducing to a name and that for reducing to a type. Bison is unable to determine at that stage of processing that the rules would require different look-ahead tokens in the two contexts, so it makes a single parser state for them both. Combining the two contexts causes a conflict later. In parser terminology, this occurrence means that the grammar is not LALR(1).

In general, it is better to fix deficiencies than to document them. But this particular deficiency is intrinsically hard to fix; parser generators that can handle LR(1) grammars are hard to write and tend to produce parsers that are very large. In practice, Bison is more useful as it is now.

When the problem arises, you can often fix it by identifying the two parser states that are being confused, and adding something to make them look distinct. In the above example, adding one rule to return_spec as follows makes the problem go away:

     %token BOGUS
     ...
     %%
     ...
     return_spec:
                  type
             |    name ':' type
             /* This rule is never used.  */
             |    ID BOGUS
             ;

This corrects the problem because it introduces the possibility of an additional active rule in the context after the ID at the beginning of return_spec. This rule is not active in the corresponding context in a param_spec, so the two contexts receive distinct parser states. As long as the token BOGUS is never generated by yylex, the added rule cannot alter the way actual input is parsed.

In this particular example, there is another way to solve the problem: rewrite the rule for return_spec to use ID directly instead of via name. This also causes the two confusing contexts to have different sets of active rules, because the one for return_spec activates the altered rule for return_spec rather than the one for name.

     param_spec:
                  type
             |    name_list ':' type
             ;
     return_spec:
                  type
             |    ID ':' type
             ;

For a more detailed exposition of LALR(1) parsers and parser generators, please see: Frank DeRemer and Thomas Pennello, Efficient Computation of LALR(1) Look-Ahead Sets, ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems, Vol. 4, No. 4 (October 1982), pp. 615–649 http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/69622.357187.


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5.8 Generalized LR (GLR) Parsing

Bison produces deterministic parsers that choose uniquely when to reduce and which reduction to apply based on a summary of the preceding input and on one extra token of look-ahead. As a result, normal Bison handles a proper subset of the family of context-free languages. Ambiguous grammars, since they have strings with more than one possible sequence of reductions cannot have deterministic parsers in this sense. The same is true of languages that require more than one symbol of look-ahead, since the parser lacks the information necessary to make a decision at the point it must be made in a shift-reduce parser. Finally, as previously mentioned (see Mystery Conflicts), there are languages where Bison's particular choice of how to summarize the input seen so far loses necessary information.

When you use the ‘%glr-parser’ declaration in your grammar file, Bison generates a parser that uses a different algorithm, called Generalized LR (or GLR). A Bison GLR parser uses the same basic algorithm for parsing as an ordinary Bison parser, but behaves differently in cases where there is a shift-reduce conflict that has not been resolved by precedence rules (see Precedence) or a reduce-reduce conflict. When a GLR parser encounters such a situation, it effectively splits into a several parsers, one for each possible shift or reduction. These parsers then proceed as usual, consuming tokens in lock-step. Some of the stacks may encounter other conflicts and split further, with the result that instead of a sequence of states, a Bison GLR parsing stack is what is in effect a tree of states.

In effect, each stack represents a guess as to what the proper parse is. Additional input may indicate that a guess was wrong, in which case the appropriate stack silently disappears. Otherwise, the semantics actions generated in each stack are saved, rather than being executed immediately. When a stack disappears, its saved semantic actions never get executed. When a reduction causes two stacks to become equivalent, their sets of semantic actions are both saved with the state that results from the reduction. We say that two stacks are equivalent when they both represent the same sequence of states, and each pair of corresponding states represents a grammar symbol that produces the same segment of the input token stream.

Whenever the parser makes a transition from having multiple states to having one, it reverts to the normal LALR(1) parsing algorithm, after resolving and executing the saved-up actions. At this transition, some of the states on the stack will have semantic values that are sets (actually multisets) of possible actions. The parser tries to pick one of the actions by first finding one whose rule has the highest dynamic precedence, as set by the ‘%dprec’ declaration. Otherwise, if the alternative actions are not ordered by precedence, but there the same merging function is declared for both rules by the ‘%merge’ declaration, Bison resolves and evaluates both and then calls the merge function on the result. Otherwise, it reports an ambiguity.

It is possible to use a data structure for the GLR parsing tree that permits the processing of any LALR(1) grammar in linear time (in the size of the input), any unambiguous (not necessarily LALR(1)) grammar in quadratic worst-case time, and any general (possibly ambiguous) context-free grammar in cubic worst-case time. However, Bison currently uses a simpler data structure that requires time proportional to the length of the input times the maximum number of stacks required for any prefix of the input. Thus, really ambiguous or nondeterministic grammars can require exponential time and space to process. Such badly behaving examples, however, are not generally of practical interest. Usually, nondeterminism in a grammar is local—the parser is “in doubt” only for a few tokens at a time. Therefore, the current data structure should generally be adequate. On LALR(1) portions of a grammar, in particular, it is only slightly slower than with the default Bison parser.

For a more detailed exposition of GLR parsers, please see: Elizabeth Scott, Adrian Johnstone and Shamsa Sadaf Hussain, Tomita-Style Generalised LR Parsers, Royal Holloway, University of London, Department of Computer Science, TR-00-12, http://www.cs.rhul.ac.uk/research/languages/publications/tomita_style_1.ps, (2000-12-24).


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5.9 Memory Management, and How to Avoid Memory Exhaustion

The Bison parser stack can run out of memory if too many tokens are shifted and not reduced. When this happens, the parser function yyparse calls yyerror and then returns 2.

Because Bison parsers have growing stacks, hitting the upper limit usually results from using a right recursion instead of a left recursion, See Recursive Rules.

By defining the macro YYMAXDEPTH, you can control how deep the parser stack can become before memory is exhausted. Define the macro with a value that is an integer. This value is the maximum number of tokens that can be shifted (and not reduced) before overflow.

The stack space allowed is not necessarily allocated. If you specify a large value for YYMAXDEPTH, the parser normally allocates a small stack at first, and then makes it bigger by stages as needed. This increasing allocation happens automatically and silently. Therefore, you do not need to make YYMAXDEPTH painfully small merely to save space for ordinary inputs that do not need much stack.

However, do not allow YYMAXDEPTH to be a value so large that arithmetic overflow could occur when calculating the size of the stack space. Also, do not allow YYMAXDEPTH to be less than YYINITDEPTH.

The default value of YYMAXDEPTH, if you do not define it, is 10000.

You can control how much stack is allocated initially by defining the macro YYINITDEPTH to a positive integer. For the C LALR(1) parser, this value must be a compile-time constant unless you are assuming C99 or some other target language or compiler that allows variable-length arrays. The default is 200.

Do not allow YYINITDEPTH to be greater than YYMAXDEPTH.

Because of semantical differences between C and C++, the LALR(1) parsers in C produced by Bison cannot grow when compiled by C++ compilers. In this precise case (compiling a C parser as C++) you are suggested to grow YYINITDEPTH. The Bison maintainers hope to fix this deficiency in a future release.


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6 Error Recovery

It is not usually acceptable to have a program terminate on a syntax error. For example, a compiler should recover sufficiently to parse the rest of the input file and check it for errors; a calculator should accept another expression.

In a simple interactive command parser where each input is one line, it may be sufficient to allow yyparse to return 1 on error and have the caller ignore the rest of the input line when that happens (and then call yyparse again). But this is inadequate for a compiler, because it forgets all the syntactic context leading up to the error. A syntax error deep within a function in the compiler input should not cause the compiler to treat the following line like the beginning of a source file.

You can define how to recover from a syntax error by writing rules to recognize the special token error. This is a terminal symbol that is always defined (you need not declare it) and reserved for error handling. The Bison parser generates an error token whenever a syntax error happens; if you have provided a rule to recognize this token in the current context, the parse can continue.

For example:

     stmnts:  /* empty string */
             | stmnts '\n'
             | stmnts exp '\n'
             | stmnts error '\n'

The fourth rule in this example says that an error followed by a newline makes a valid addition to any stmnts.

What happens if a syntax error occurs in the middle of an exp? The error recovery rule, interpreted strictly, applies to the precise sequence of a stmnts, an error and a newline. If an error occurs in the middle of an exp, there will probably be some additional tokens and subexpressions on the stack after the last stmnts, and there will be tokens to read before the next newline. So the rule is not applicable in the ordinary way.

But Bison can force the situation to fit the rule, by discarding part of the semantic context and part of the input. First it discards states and objects from the stack until it gets back to a state in which the error token is acceptable. (This means that the subexpressions already parsed are discarded, back to the last complete stmnts.) At this point the error token can be shifted. Then, if the old look-ahead token is not acceptable to be shifted next, the parser reads tokens and discards them until it finds a token which is acceptable. In this example, Bison reads and discards input until the next newline so that the fourth rule can apply. Note that discarded symbols are possible sources of memory leaks, see Freeing Discarded Symbols, for a means to reclaim this memory.

The choice of error rules in the grammar is a choice of strategies for error recovery. A simple and useful strategy is simply to skip the rest of the current input line or current statement if an error is detected:

     stmnt: error ';'  /* On error, skip until ';' is read.  */

It is also useful to recover to the matching close-delimiter of an opening-delimiter that has already been parsed. Otherwise the close-delimiter will probably appear to be unmatched, and generate another, spurious error message:

     primary:  '(' expr ')'
             | '(' error ')'
             ...
             ;

Error recovery strategies are necessarily guesses. When they guess wrong, one syntax error often leads to another. In the above example, the error recovery rule guesses that an error is due to bad input within one stmnt. Suppose that instead a spurious semicolon is inserted in the middle of a valid stmnt. After the error recovery rule recovers from the first error, another syntax error will be found straightaway, since the text following the spurious semicolon is also an invalid stmnt.

To prevent an outpouring of error messages, the parser will output no error message for another syntax error that happens shortly after the first; only after three consecutive input tokens have been successfully shifted will error messages resume.

Note that rules which accept the error token may have actions, just as any other rules can.

You can make error messages resume immediately by using the macro yyerrok in an action. If you do this in the error rule's action, no error messages will be suppressed. This macro requires no arguments; ‘yyerrok;’ is a valid C statement.

The previous look-ahead token is reanalyzed immediately after an error. If this is unacceptable, then the macro yyclearin may be used to clear this token. Write the statement ‘yyclearin;’ in the error rule's action. See Special Features for Use in Actions.

For example, suppose that on a syntax error, an error handling routine is called that advances the input stream to some point where parsing should once again commence. The next symbol returned by the lexical scanner is probably correct. The previous look-ahead token ought to be discarded with ‘yyclearin;’.

The expression YYRECOVERING () yields 1 when the parser is recovering from a syntax error, and 0 otherwise. Syntax error diagnostics are suppressed while recovering from a syntax error.


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7 Handling Context Dependencies

The Bison paradigm is to parse tokens first, then group them into larger syntactic units. In many languages, the meaning of a token is affected by its context. Although this violates the Bison paradigm, certain techniques (known as kludges) may enable you to write Bison parsers for such languages.

(Actually, “kludge” means any technique that gets its job done but is neither clean nor robust.)


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7.1 Semantic Info in Token Types

The C language has a context dependency: the way an identifier is used depends on what its current meaning is. For example, consider this:

     foo (x);

This looks like a function call statement, but if foo is a typedef name, then this is actually a declaration of x. How can a Bison parser for C decide how to parse this input?

The method used in GNU C is to have two different token types, IDENTIFIER and TYPENAME. When yylex finds an identifier, it looks up the current declaration of the identifier in order to decide which token type to return: TYPENAME if the identifier is declared as a typedef, IDENTIFIER otherwise.

The grammar rules can then express the context dependency by the choice of token type to recognize. IDENTIFIER is accepted as an expression, but TYPENAME is not. TYPENAME can start a declaration, but IDENTIFIER cannot. In contexts where the meaning of the identifier is not significant, such as in declarations that can shadow a typedef name, either TYPENAME or IDENTIFIER is accepted—there is one rule for each of the two token types.

This technique is simple to use if the decision of which kinds of identifiers to allow is made at a place close to where the identifier is parsed. But in C this is not always so: C allows a declaration to redeclare a typedef name provided an explicit type has been specified earlier:

     typedef int foo, bar;
     int baz (void)
     {
       static bar (bar);      /* redeclare bar as static variable */
       extern foo foo (foo);  /* redeclare foo as function */
       return foo (bar);
     }

Unfortunately, the name being declared is separated from the declaration construct itself by a complicated syntactic structure—the “declarator”.

As a result, part of the Bison parser for C needs to be duplicated, with all the nonterminal names changed: once for parsing a declaration in which a typedef name can be redefined, and once for parsing a declaration in which that can't be done. Here is a part of the duplication, with actions omitted for brevity:

     initdcl:
               declarator maybeasm '='
               init
             | declarator maybeasm
             ;
     
     notype_initdcl:
               notype_declarator maybeasm '='
               init
             | notype_declarator maybeasm
             ;

Here initdcl can redeclare a typedef name, but notype_initdcl cannot. The distinction between declarator and notype_declarator is the same sort of thing.

There is some similarity between this technique and a lexical tie-in (described next), in that information which alters the lexical analysis is changed during parsing by other parts of the program. The difference is here the information is global, and is used for other purposes in the program. A true lexical tie-in has a special-purpose flag controlled by the syntactic context.


Next: , Previous: Semantic Tokens, Up: Context Dependency

7.2 Lexical Tie-ins

One way to handle context-dependency is the lexical tie-in: a flag which is set by Bison actions, whose purpose is to alter the way tokens are parsed.

For example, suppose we have a language vaguely like C, but with a special construct ‘hex (hex-expr)’. After the keyword hex comes an expression in parentheses in which all integers are hexadecimal. In particular, the token ‘a1b’ must be treated as an integer rather than as an identifier if it appears in that context. Here is how you can do it:

     %{
       int hexflag;
       int yylex (void);
       void yyerror (char const *);
     %}
     %%
     ...
     expr:   IDENTIFIER
             | constant
             | HEX '('
                     { hexflag = 1; }
               expr ')'
                     { hexflag = 0;
                        $$ = $4; }
             | expr '+' expr
                     { $$ = make_sum ($1, $3); }
             ...
             ;
     
     constant:
               INTEGER
             | STRING
             ;

Here we assume that yylex looks at the value of hexflag; when it is nonzero, all integers are parsed in hexadecimal, and tokens starting with letters are parsed as integers if possible.

The declaration of hexflag shown in the prologue of the parser file is needed to make it accessible to the actions (see The Prologue). You must also write the code in yylex to obey the flag.


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7.3 Lexical Tie-ins and Error Recovery

Lexical tie-ins make strict demands on any error recovery rules you have. See Error Recovery.

The reason for this is that the purpose of an error recovery rule is to abort the parsing of one construct and resume in some larger construct. For example, in C-like languages, a typical error recovery rule is to skip tokens until the next semicolon, and then start a new statement, like this:

     stmt:   expr ';'
             | IF '(' expr ')' stmt { ... }
             ...
             error ';'
                     { hexflag = 0; }
             ;

If there is a syntax error in the middle of a ‘hex (expr)’ construct, this error rule will apply, and then the action for the completed ‘hex (expr)’ will never run. So hexflag would remain set for the entire rest of the input, or until the next hex keyword, causing identifiers to be misinterpreted as integers.

To avoid this problem the error recovery rule itself clears hexflag.

There may also be an error recovery rule that works within expressions. For example, there could be a rule which applies within parentheses and skips to the close-parenthesis:

     expr:   ...
             | '(' expr ')'
                     { $$ = $2; }
             | '(' error ')'
             ...

If this rule acts within the hex construct, it is not going to abort that construct (since it applies to an inner level of parentheses within the construct). Therefore, it should not clear the flag: the rest of the hex construct should be parsed with the flag still in effect.

What if there is an error recovery rule which might abort out of the hex construct or might not, depending on circumstances? There is no way you can write the action to determine whether a hex construct is being aborted or not. So if you are using a lexical tie-in, you had better make sure your error recovery rules are not of this kind. Each rule must be such that you can be sure that it always will, or always won't, have to clear the flag.


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8 Debugging Your Parser

Developing a parser can be a challenge, especially if you don't understand the algorithm (see The Bison Parser Algorithm). Even so, sometimes a detailed description of the automaton can help (see Understanding Your Parser), or tracing the execution of the parser can give some insight on why it behaves improperly (see Tracing Your Parser).


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8.1 Understanding Your Parser

As documented elsewhere (see The Bison Parser Algorithm) Bison parsers are shift/reduce automata. In some cases (much more frequent than one would hope), looking at this automaton is required to tune or simply fix a parser. Bison provides two different representation of it, either textually or graphically (as a VCG file).

The textual file is generated when the options --report or --verbose are specified, see See Invoking Bison. Its name is made by removing ‘.tab.c’ or ‘.c’ from the parser output file name, and adding ‘.output’ instead. Therefore, if the input file is foo.y, then the parser file is called foo.tab.c by default. As a consequence, the verbose output file is called foo.output.

The following grammar file, calc.y, will be used in the sequel:

     %token NUM STR
     %left '+' '-'
     %left '*'
     %%
     exp: exp '+' exp
        | exp '-' exp
        | exp '*' exp
        | exp '/' exp
        | NUM
        ;
     useless: STR;
     %%

bison reports:

     calc.y: warning: 1 useless nonterminal and 1 useless rule
     calc.y:11.1-7: warning: useless nonterminal: useless
     calc.y:11.10-12: warning: useless rule: useless: STR
     calc.y: conflicts: 7 shift/reduce

When given --report=state, in addition to calc.tab.c, it creates a file calc.output with contents detailed below. The order of the output and the exact presentation might vary, but the interpretation is the same.

The first section includes details on conflicts that were solved thanks to precedence and/or associativity:

     Conflict in state 8 between rule 2 and token '+' resolved as reduce.
     Conflict in state 8 between rule 2 and token '-' resolved as reduce.
     Conflict in state 8 between rule 2 and token '*' resolved as shift.

...

The next section lists states that still have conflicts.

     State 8 conflicts: 1 shift/reduce
     State 9 conflicts: 1 shift/reduce
     State 10 conflicts: 1 shift/reduce
     State 11 conflicts: 4 shift/reduce

The next section reports useless tokens, nonterminal and rules. Useless nonterminals and rules are removed in order to produce a smaller parser, but useless tokens are preserved, since they might be used by the scanner (note the difference between “useless” and “not used” below):

     Useless nonterminals:
        useless
     
     Terminals which are not used:
        STR
     
     Useless rules:
     #6     useless: STR;

The next section reproduces the exact grammar that Bison used:

     Grammar
     
       Number, Line, Rule
         0   5 $accept -> exp $end
         1   5 exp -> exp '+' exp
         2   6 exp -> exp '-' exp
         3   7 exp -> exp '*' exp
         4   8 exp -> exp '/' exp
         5   9 exp -> NUM

and reports the uses of the symbols:

     Terminals, with rules where they appear
     
     $end (0) 0
     '*' (42) 3
     '+' (43) 1
     '-' (45) 2
     '/' (47) 4
     error (256)
     NUM (258) 5
     
     Nonterminals, with rules where they appear
     
     $accept (8)
         on left: 0
     exp (9)
         on left: 1 2 3 4 5, on right: 0 1 2 3 4

Bison then proceeds onto the automaton itself, describing each state with it set of items, also known as pointed rules. Each item is a production rule together with a point (marked by ‘.’) that the input cursor.

     state 0
     
         $accept  ->  . exp $   (rule 0)
     
         NUM         shift, and go to state 1
     
         exp         go to state 2

This reads as follows: “state 0 corresponds to being at the very beginning of the parsing, in the initial rule, right before the start symbol (here, exp). When the parser returns to this state right after having reduced a rule that produced an exp, the control flow jumps to state 2. If there is no such transition on a nonterminal symbol, and the look-ahead is a NUM, then this token is shifted on the parse stack, and the control flow jumps to state 1. Any other look-ahead triggers a syntax error.”

Even though the only active rule in state 0 seems to be rule 0, the report lists NUM as a look-ahead token because NUM can be at the beginning of any rule deriving an exp. By default Bison reports the so-called core or kernel of the item set, but if you want to see more detail you can invoke bison with --report=itemset to list all the items, include those that can be derived:

     state 0
     
         $accept  ->  . exp $   (rule 0)
         exp  ->  . exp '+' exp   (rule 1)
         exp  ->  . exp '-' exp   (rule 2)
         exp  ->  . exp '*' exp   (rule 3)
         exp  ->  . exp '/' exp   (rule 4)
         exp  ->  . NUM   (rule 5)
     
         NUM         shift, and go to state 1
     
         exp         go to state 2

In the state 1...

     state 1
     
         exp  ->  NUM .   (rule 5)
     
         $default    reduce using rule 5 (exp)

the rule 5, ‘exp: NUM;’, is completed. Whatever the look-ahead token (‘$default’), the parser will reduce it. If it was coming from state 0, then, after this reduction it will return to state 0, and will jump to state 2 (‘exp: go to state 2’).

     state 2
     
         $accept  ->  exp . $   (rule 0)
         exp  ->  exp . '+' exp   (rule 1)
         exp  ->  exp . '-' exp   (rule 2)
         exp  ->  exp . '*' exp   (rule 3)
         exp  ->  exp . '/' exp   (rule 4)
     
         $           shift, and go to state 3
         '+'         shift, and go to state 4
         '-'         shift, and go to state 5
         '*'         shift, and go to state 6
         '/'         shift, and go to state 7

In state 2, the automaton can only shift a symbol. For instance, because of the item ‘exp -> exp . '+' exp’, if the look-ahead if ‘+’, it will be shifted on the parse stack, and the automaton control will jump to state 4, corresponding to the item ‘exp -> exp '+' . exp’. Since there is no default action, any other token than those listed above will trigger a syntax error.

The state 3 is named the final state, or the accepting state:

     state 3
     
         $accept  ->  exp $ .   (rule 0)
     
         $default    accept

the initial rule is completed (the start symbol and the end of input were read), the parsing exits successfully.

The interpretation of states 4 to 7 is straightforward, and is left to the reader.

     state 4
     
         exp  ->  exp '+' . exp   (rule 1)
     
         NUM         shift, and go to state 1
     
         exp         go to state 8
     
     state 5
     
         exp  ->  exp '-' . exp   (rule 2)
     
         NUM         shift, and go to state 1
     
         exp         go to state 9
     
     state 6
     
         exp  ->  exp '*' . exp   (rule 3)
     
         NUM         shift, and go to state 1
     
         exp         go to state 10
     
     state 7
     
         exp  ->  exp '/' . exp   (rule 4)
     
         NUM         shift, and go to state 1
     
         exp         go to state 11

As was announced in beginning of the report, ‘State 8 conflicts: 1 shift/reduce’:

     state 8
     
         exp  ->  exp . '+' exp   (rule 1)
         exp  ->  exp '+' exp .   (rule 1)
         exp  ->  exp . '-' exp   (rule 2)
         exp  ->  exp . '*' exp   (rule 3)
         exp  ->  exp . '/' exp   (rule 4)
     
         '*'         shift, and go to state 6
         '/'         shift, and go to state 7
     
         '/'         [reduce using rule 1 (exp)]
         $default    reduce using rule 1 (exp)

Indeed, there are two actions associated to the look-ahead ‘/’: either shifting (and going to state 7), or reducing rule 1. The conflict means that either the grammar is ambiguous, or the parser lacks information to make the right decision. Indeed the grammar is ambiguous, as, since we did not specify the precedence of ‘/’, the sentence ‘NUM + NUM / NUM’ can be parsed as ‘NUM + (NUM / NUM)’, which corresponds to shifting ‘/’, or as ‘(NUM + NUM) / NUM’, which corresponds to reducing rule 1.

Because in LALR(1) parsing a single decision can be made, Bison arbitrarily chose to disable the reduction, see Shift/Reduce Conflicts. Discarded actions are reported in between square brackets.

Note that all the previous states had a single possible action: either shifting the next token and going to the corresponding state, or reducing a single rule. In the other cases, i.e., when shifting and reducing is possible or when several reductions are possible, the look-ahead is required to select the action. State 8 is one such state: if the look-ahead is ‘*’ or ‘/’ then the action is shifting, otherwise the action is reducing rule 1. In other words, the first two items, corresponding to rule 1, are not eligible when the look-ahead token is ‘*’, since we specified that ‘*’ has higher precedence than ‘+’. More generally, some items are eligible only with some set of possible look-ahead tokens. When run with --report=look-ahead, Bison specifies these look-ahead tokens:

     state 8
     
         exp  ->  exp . '+' exp  [$, '+', '-', '/']   (rule 1)
         exp  ->  exp '+' exp .  [$, '+', '-', '/']   (rule 1)
         exp  ->  exp . '-' exp   (rule 2)
         exp  ->  exp . '*' exp   (rule 3)
         exp  ->  exp . '/' exp   (rule 4)
     
         '*'         shift, and go to state 6
         '/'         shift, and go to state 7
     
         '/'         [reduce using rule 1 (exp)]
         $default    reduce using rule 1 (exp)

The remaining states are similar:

     state 9
     
         exp  ->  exp . '+' exp   (rule 1)
         exp  ->  exp . '-' exp   (rule 2)
         exp  ->  exp '-' exp .   (rule 2)
         exp  ->  exp . '*' exp   (rule 3)
         exp  ->  exp . '/' exp   (rule 4)
     
         '*'         shift, and go to state 6
         '/'         shift, and go to state 7
     
         '/'         [reduce using rule 2 (exp)]
         $default    reduce using rule 2 (exp)
     
     state 10
     
         exp  ->  exp . '+' exp   (rule 1)
         exp  ->  exp . '-' exp   (rule 2)
         exp  ->  exp . '*' exp   (rule 3)
         exp  ->  exp '*' exp .   (rule 3)
         exp  ->  exp . '/' exp   (rule 4)
     
         '/'         shift, and go to state 7
     
         '/'         [reduce using rule 3 (exp)]
         $default    reduce using rule 3 (exp)
     
     state 11
     
         exp  ->  exp . '+' exp   (rule 1)
         exp  ->  exp . '-' exp   (rule 2)
         exp  ->  exp . '*' exp   (rule 3)
         exp  ->  exp . '/' exp   (rule 4)
         exp  ->  exp '/' exp .   (rule 4)
     
         '+'         shift, and go to state 4
         '-'         shift, and go to state 5
         '*'         shift, and go to state 6
         '/'         shift, and go to state 7
     
         '+'         [reduce using rule 4 (exp)]
         '-'         [reduce using rule 4 (exp)]
         '*'         [reduce using rule 4 (exp)]
         '/'         [reduce using rule 4 (exp)]
         $default    reduce using rule 4 (exp)

Observe that state 11 contains conflicts not only due to the lack of precedence of ‘/’ with respect to ‘+’, ‘-’, and ‘*’, but also because the associativity of ‘/’ is not specified.


Previous: Understanding, Up: Debugging

8.2 Tracing Your Parser

If a Bison grammar compiles properly but doesn't do what you want when it runs, the yydebug parser-trace feature can help you figure out why.

There are several means to enable compilation of trace facilities:

the macro YYDEBUG
Define the macro YYDEBUG to a nonzero value when you compile the parser. This is compliant with POSIX Yacc. You could use ‘-DYYDEBUG=1’ as a compiler option or you could put ‘#define YYDEBUG 1’ in the prologue of the grammar file (see The Prologue).
the option -t, --debug
Use the ‘-t’ option when you run Bison (see Invoking Bison). This is POSIX compliant too.
the directive ‘%debug
Add the %debug directive (see Bison Declaration Summary). This is a Bison extension, which will prove useful when Bison will output parsers for languages that don't use a preprocessor. Unless POSIX and Yacc portability matter to you, this is the preferred solution.

We suggest that you always enable the debug option so that debugging is always possible.

The trace facility outputs messages with macro calls of the form YYFPRINTF (stderr, format, args) where format and args are the usual printf format and arguments. If you define YYDEBUG to a nonzero value but do not define YYFPRINTF, <stdio.h> is automatically included and YYPRINTF is defined to fprintf.

Once you have compiled the program with trace facilities, the way to request a trace is to store a nonzero value in the variable yydebug. You can do this by making the C code do it (in main, perhaps), or you can alter the value with a C debugger.

Each step taken by the parser when yydebug is nonzero produces a line or two of trace information, written on stderr. The trace messages tell you these things:

To make sense of this information, it helps to refer to the listing file produced by the Bison ‘-v’ option (see Invoking Bison). This file shows the meaning of each state in terms of positions in various rules, and also what each state will do with each possible input token. As you read the successive trace messages, you can see that the parser is functioning according to its specification in the listing file. Eventually you will arrive at the place where something undesirable happens, and you will see which parts of the grammar are to blame.

The parser file is a C program and you can use C debuggers on it, but it's not easy to interpret what it is doing. The parser function is a finite-state machine interpreter, and aside from the actions it executes the same code over and over. Only the values of variables show where in the grammar it is working.

The debugging information normally gives the token type of each token read, but not its semantic value. You can optionally define a macro named YYPRINT to provide a way to print the value. If you define YYPRINT, it should take three arguments. The parser will pass a standard I/O stream, the numeric code for the token type, and the token value (from yylval).

Here is an example of YYPRINT suitable for the multi-function calculator (see Declarations for mfcalc):

     %{
       static void print_token_value (FILE *, int, YYSTYPE);
       #define YYPRINT(file, type, value) print_token_value (file, type, value)
     %}
     
     ... %% ... %% ...
     
     static void
     print_token_value (FILE *file, int type, YYSTYPE value)
     {
       if (type == VAR)
         fprintf (file, "%s", value.tptr->name);
       else if (type == NUM)
         fprintf (file, "%d", value.val);
     }


Next: , Previous: Debugging, Up: Top

9 Invoking Bison

The usual way to invoke Bison is as follows:

     bison infile

Here infile is the grammar file name, which usually ends in ‘.y’. The parser file's name is made by replacing the ‘.y’ with ‘.tab.c’ and removing any leading directory. Thus, the ‘bison foo.y’ file name yields foo.tab.c, and the ‘bison hack/foo.y’ file name yields foo.tab.c. It's also possible, in case you are writing C++ code instead of C in your grammar file, to name it foo.ypp or foo.y++. Then, the output files will take an extension like the given one as input (respectively foo.tab.cpp and foo.tab.c++). This feature takes effect with all options that manipulate file names like ‘-o’ or ‘-d’.

For example :

     bison -d infile.yxx

will produce infile.tab.cxx and infile.tab.hxx, and

     bison -d -o output.c++ infile.y

will produce output.c++ and outfile.h++.

For compatibility with POSIX, the standard Bison distribution also contains a shell script called yacc that invokes Bison with the -y option.


Next: , Up: Invocation

9.1 Bison Options

Bison supports both traditional single-letter options and mnemonic long option names. Long option names are indicated with ‘--’ instead of ‘-’. Abbreviations for option names are allowed as long as they are unique. When a long option takes an argument, like ‘--file-prefix’, connect the option name and the argument with ‘=’.

Here is a list of options that can be used with Bison, alphabetized by short option. It is followed by a cross key alphabetized by long option.

Operations modes:

-h
--help
Print a summary of the command-line options to Bison and exit.
-V
--version
Print the version number of Bison and exit.
--print-localedir
Print the name of the directory containing locale-dependent data.
-y
--yacc
Act more like the traditional Yacc command. This can cause different diagnostics to be generated, and may change behavior in other minor ways. Most importantly, imitate Yacc's output file name conventions, so that the parser output file is called y.tab.c, and the other outputs are called y.output and y.tab.h. Thus, the following shell script can substitute for Yacc, and the Bison distribution contains such a script for compatibility with POSIX:
          #! /bin/sh
          bison -y "$@"

The -y/--yacc option is intended for use with traditional Yacc grammars. If your grammar uses a Bison extension like ‘%glr-parser’, Bison might not be Yacc-compatible even if this option is specified.

Tuning the parser:

-S file
--skeleton=file
Specify the skeleton to use. You probably don't need this option unless you are developing Bison.
-t
--debug
In the parser file, define the macro YYDEBUG to 1 if it is not already defined, so that the debugging facilities are compiled. See Tracing Your Parser.
--locations
Pretend that %locations was specified. See Decl Summary.
-p prefix
--name-prefix=prefix
Pretend that %name-prefix="prefix" was specified. See Decl Summary.
-l
--no-lines
Don't put any #line preprocessor commands in the parser file. Ordinarily Bison puts them in the parser file so that the C compiler and debuggers will associate errors with your source file, the grammar file. This option causes them to associate errors with the parser file, treating it as an independent source file in its own right.
-n
--no-parser
Pretend that %no-parser was specified. See Decl Summary.
-k
--token-table
Pretend that %token-table was specified. See Decl Summary.

Adjust the output:

-d
--defines
Pretend that %defines was specified, i.e., write an extra output file containing macro definitions for the token type names defined in the grammar, as well as a few other declarations. See Decl Summary.
--defines=defines-file
Same as above, but save in the file defines-file.
-b file-prefix
--file-prefix=prefix
Pretend that %file-prefix was specified, i.e, specify prefix to use for all Bison output file names. See Decl Summary.
-r things
--report=things
Write an extra output file containing verbose description of the comma separated list of things among:
state
Description of the grammar, conflicts (resolved and unresolved), and LALR automaton.
look-ahead
Implies state and augments the description of the automaton with each rule's look-ahead set.
itemset
Implies state and augments the description of the automaton with the full set of items for each state, instead of its core only.

-v
--verbose
Pretend that %verbose was specified, i.e, write an extra output file containing verbose descriptions of the grammar and parser. See Decl Summary.
-o file
--output=file
Specify the file for the parser file.

The other output files' names are constructed from file as described under the ‘-v’ and ‘-d’ options.

-g
Output a VCG definition of the LALR(1) grammar automaton computed by Bison. If the grammar file is foo.y, the VCG output file will be foo.vcg.
--graph=graph-file
The behavior of –graph is the same than ‘-g’. The only difference is that it has an optional argument which is the name of the output graph file.


Next: , Previous: Bison Options, Up: Invocation

9.2 Option Cross Key

Here is a list of options, alphabetized by long option, to help you find the corresponding short option.

Long Option Short Option
--debug -t
--defines=defines-file -d
--file-prefix=prefix -b file-prefix
--graph=graph-file -d
--help -h
--name-prefix=prefix -p name-prefix
--no-lines -l
--no-parser -n
--output=outfile -o outfile
--print-localedir
--token-table -k
--verbose -v
--version -V
--yacc -y


Previous: Option Cross Key, Up: Invocation

9.3 Yacc Library

The Yacc library contains default implementations of the yyerror and main functions. These default implementations are normally not useful, but POSIX requires them. To use the Yacc library, link your program with the -ly option. Note that Bison's implementation of the Yacc library is distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License (see Copying).

If you use the Yacc library's yyerror function, you should declare yyerror as follows:

     int yyerror (char const *);

Bison ignores the int value returned by this yyerror. If you use the Yacc library's main function, your yyparse function should have the following type signature:

     int yyparse (void);


Next: , Previous: Invocation, Up: Top

10 C++ Language Interface


Next: , Up: C++ Language Interface

10.1 C++ Parsers


Next: , Up: C++ Parsers

10.1.1 C++ Bison Interface

The C++ parser LALR(1) skeleton is named lalr1.cc. To select it, you may either pass the option --skeleton=lalr1.cc to Bison, or include the directive ‘%skeleton "lalr1.cc"’ in the grammar preamble. When run, bison will create several entities in the ‘yy’ namespace. Use the ‘%name-prefix’ directive to change the namespace name, see Decl Summary. The various classes are generated in the following files:

position.hh
location.hh
The definition of the classes position and location, used for location tracking. See C++ Location Values.
stack.hh
An auxiliary class stack used by the parser.
file.hh
file.cc
(Assuming the extension of the input file was ‘.yy’.) The declaration and implementation of the C++ parser class. The basename and extension of these two files follow the same rules as with regular C parsers (see Invocation).

The header is mandatory; you must either pass -d/--defines to bison, or use the ‘%defines’ directive.

All these files are documented using Doxygen; run doxygen for a complete and accurate documentation.


Next: , Previous: C++ Bison Interface, Up: C++ Parsers

10.1.2 C++ Semantic Values

The %union directive works as for C, see The Collection of Value Types. In particular it produces a genuine union1, which have a few specific features in C++.

Because objects have to be stored via pointers, memory is not reclaimed automatically: using the %destructor directive is the only means to avoid leaks. See Freeing Discarded Symbols.


Next: , Previous: C++ Semantic Values, Up: C++ Parsers

10.1.3 C++ Location Values

When the directive %locations is used, the C++ parser supports location tracking, see Locations Overview. Two auxiliary classes define a position, a single point in a file, and a location, a range composed of a pair of positions (possibly spanning several files).

— Method on position: std::string* file

The name of the file. It will always be handled as a pointer, the parser will never duplicate nor deallocate it. As an experimental feature you may change it to ‘type*’ using ‘%define "filename_type" "type"’.

— Method on position: unsigned int line

The line, starting at 1.

— Method on position: unsigned int lines (int height = 1)

Advance by height lines, resetting the column number.

— Method on position: unsigned int column

The column, starting at 0.

— Method on position: unsigned int columns (int width = 1)

Advance by width columns, without changing the line number.

— Method on position: position& operator+= (position& pos, int width)
— Method on position: position operator+ (const position& pos, int width)
— Method on position: position& operator-= (const position& pos, int width)
— Method on position: position operator- (position& pos, int width)

Various forms of syntactic sugar for columns.

— Method on position: position operator<< (std::ostream o, const position& p)

Report p on o like this: ‘file:line.column’, or ‘line.column’ if file is null.

— Method on location: position begin
— Method on location: position end

The first, inclusive, position of the range, and the first beyond.

— Method on location: unsigned int columns (int width = 1)
— Method on location: unsigned int lines (int height = 1)

Advance the end position.

— Method on location: location operator+ (const location& begin, const location& end)
— Method on location: location operator+ (const location& begin, int width)
— Method on location: location operator+= (const location& loc, int width)

Various forms of syntactic sugar.

— Method on location: void step ()

Move begin onto end.


Next: , Previous: C++ Location Values, Up: C++ Parsers

10.1.4 C++ Parser Interface

The output files output.hh and output.cc declare and define the parser class in the namespace yy. The class name defaults to parser, but may be changed using ‘%define "parser_class_name" "name"’. The interface of this class is detailed below. It can be extended using the %parse-param feature: its semantics is slightly changed since it describes an additional member of the parser class, and an additional argument for its constructor.

— Type of parser: semantic_value_type
— Type of parser: location_value_type

The types for semantics value and locations.

— Method on parser: parser (type1 arg1, ...)

Build a new parser object. There are no arguments by default, unless ‘%parse-param {type1 arg1}’ was used.

— Method on parser: int parse ()

Run the syntactic analysis, and return 0 on success, 1 otherwise.

— Method on parser: std::ostream& debug_stream ()
— Method on parser: void set_debug_stream (std::ostream& o)

Get or set the stream used for tracing the parsing. It defaults to std::cerr.

— Method on parser: debug_level_type debug_level ()
— Method on parser: void set_debug_level (debug_level l)

Get or set the tracing level. Currently its value is either 0, no trace, or nonzero, full tracing.

— Method on parser: void error (const location_type& l, const std::string& m)

The definition for this member function must be supplied by the user: the parser uses it to report a parser error occurring at l, described by m.


Previous: C++ Parser Interface, Up: C++ Parsers

10.1.5 C++ Scanner Interface

The parser invokes the scanner by calling yylex. Contrary to C parsers, C++ parsers are always pure: there is no point in using the %pure-parser directive. Therefore the interface is as follows.

— Method on parser: int yylex (semantic_value_type& yylval, location_type& yylloc, type1 arg1, ...)

Return the next token. Its type is the return value, its semantic value and location being yylval and yylloc. Invocations of ‘%lex-param {type1 arg1}’ yield additional arguments.


Previous: C++ Parsers, Up: C++ Language Interface

10.2 A Complete C++ Example

This section demonstrates the use of a C++ parser with a simple but complete example. This example should be available on your system, ready to compile, in the directory ../bison/examples/calc++. It focuses on the use of Bison, therefore the design of the various C++ classes is very naive: no accessors, no encapsulation of members etc. We will use a Lex scanner, and more precisely, a Flex scanner, to demonstrate the various interaction. A hand written scanner is actually easier to interface with.


Next: , Up: A Complete C++ Example

10.2.1 Calc++ — C++ Calculator

Of course the grammar is dedicated to arithmetics, a single expression, possibly preceded by variable assignments. An environment containing possibly predefined variables such as one and two, is exchanged with the parser. An example of valid input follows.

     three := 3
     seven := one + two * three
     seven * seven


Next: , Previous: Calc++ --- C++ Calculator, Up: A Complete C++ Example

10.2.2 Calc++ Parsing Driver

To support a pure interface with the parser (and the scanner) the technique of the “parsing context” is convenient: a structure containing all the data to exchange. Since, in addition to simply launch the parsing, there are several auxiliary tasks to execute (open the file for parsing, instantiate the parser etc.), we recommend transforming the simple parsing context structure into a fully blown parsing driver class.

The declaration of this driver class, calc++-driver.hh, is as follows. The first part includes the CPP guard and imports the required standard library components, and the declaration of the parser class.

     #ifndef CALCXX_DRIVER_HH
     # define CALCXX_DRIVER_HH
     # include <string>
     # include <map>
     # include "calc++-parser.hh"

Then comes the declaration of the scanning function. Flex expects the signature of yylex to be defined in the macro YY_DECL, and the C++ parser expects it to be declared. We can factor both as follows.

     // Announce to Flex the prototype we want for lexing function, ...
     # define YY_DECL					\
       yy::calcxx_parser::token_type                         \
       yylex (yy::calcxx_parser::semantic_type* yylval,      \
              yy::calcxx_parser::location_type* yylloc,      \
              calcxx_driver& driver)
     // ... and declare it for the parser's sake.
     YY_DECL;

The calcxx_driver class is then declared with its most obvious members.

     // Conducting the whole scanning and parsing of Calc++.
     class calcxx_driver
     {
     public:
       calcxx_driver ();
       virtual ~calcxx_driver ();
     
       std::map<std::string, int> variables;
     
       int result;

To encapsulate the coordination with the Flex scanner, it is useful to have two members function to open and close the scanning phase. members.

       // Handling the scanner.
       void scan_begin ();
       void scan_end ();
       bool trace_scanning;

Similarly for the parser itself.

       // Handling the parser.
       void parse (const std::string& f);
       std::string file;
       bool trace_parsing;

To demonstrate pure handling of parse errors, instead of simply dumping them on the standard error output, we will pass them to the compiler driver using the following two member functions. Finally, we close the class declaration and CPP guard.

       // Error handling.
       void error (const yy::location& l, const std::string& m);
       void error (const std::string& m);
     };
     #endif // ! CALCXX_DRIVER_HH

The implementation of the driver is straightforward. The parse member function deserves some attention. The error functions are simple stubs, they should actually register the located error messages and set error state.

     #include "calc++-driver.hh"
     #include "calc++-parser.hh"
     
     calcxx_driver::calcxx_driver ()
       : trace_scanning (false), trace_parsing (false)
     {
       variables["one"] = 1;
       variables["two"] = 2;
     }
     
     calcxx_driver::~calcxx_driver ()
     {
     }
     
     void
     calcxx_driver::parse (const std::string &f)
     {
       file = f;
       scan_begin ();
       yy::calcxx_parser parser (*this);
       parser.set_debug_level (trace_parsing);
       parser.parse ();
       scan_end ();
     }
     
     void
     calcxx_driver::error (const yy::location& l, const std::string& m)
     {
       std::cerr << l << ": " << m << std::endl;
     }
     
     void
     calcxx_driver::error (const std::string& m)
     {
       std::cerr << m << std::endl;
     }


Next: , Previous: Calc++ Parsing Driver, Up: A Complete C++ Example

10.2.3 Calc++ Parser

The parser definition file calc++-parser.yy starts by asking for the C++ LALR(1) skeleton, the creation of the parser header file, and specifies the name of the parser class. Because the C++ skeleton changed several times, it is safer to require the version you designed the grammar for.

     %skeleton "lalr1.cc"                          /*  -*- C++ -*- */
     %require "2.1a"
     %defines
     %define "parser_class_name" "calcxx_parser"

Then come the declarations/inclusions needed to define the %union. Because the parser uses the parsing driver and reciprocally, both cannot include the header of the other. Because the driver's header needs detailed knowledge about the parser class (in particular its inner types), it is the parser's header which will simply use a forward declaration of the driver.

     %{
     # include <string>
     class calcxx_driver;
     %}

The driver is passed by reference to the parser and to the scanner. This provides a simple but effective pure interface, not relying on global variables.

     // The parsing context.
     %parse-param { calcxx_driver& driver }
     %lex-param   { calcxx_driver& driver }

Then we request the location tracking feature, and initialize the first location's file name. Afterwards new locations are computed relatively to the previous locations: the file name will be automatically propagated.

     %locations
     %initial-action
     {
       // Initialize the initial location.
       @$.begin.filename = @$.end.filename = &driver.file;
     };

Use the two following directives to enable parser tracing and verbose error messages.

     %debug
     %error-verbose

Semantic values cannot use “real” objects, but only pointers to them.

     // Symbols.
     %union
     {
       int          ival;
       std::string *sval;
     };

The code between ‘%{’ and ‘%}’ after the introduction of the ‘%union’ is output in the *.cc file; it needs detailed knowledge about the driver.

     %{
     # include "calc++-driver.hh"
     %}

The token numbered as 0 corresponds to end of file; the following line allows for nicer error messages referring to “end of file” instead of “$end”. Similarly user friendly named are provided for each symbol. Note that the tokens names are prefixed by TOKEN_ to avoid name clashes.

     %token        END      0 "end of file"
     %token        ASSIGN     ":="
     %token <sval> IDENTIFIER "identifier"
     %token <ival> NUMBER     "number"
     %type  <ival> exp        "expression"

To enable memory deallocation during error recovery, use %destructor.

     %printer    { debug_stream () << *$$; } "identifier"
     %destructor { delete $$; } "identifier"
     
     %printer    { debug_stream () << $$; } "number" "expression"

The grammar itself is straightforward.

     %%
     %start unit;
     unit: assignments exp  { driver.result = $2; };
     
     assignments: assignments assignment {}
                | /* Nothing.  */        {};
     
     assignment: "identifier" ":=" exp { driver.variables[*$1] = $3; };
     
     %left '+' '-';
     %left '*' '/';
     exp: exp '+' exp   { $$ = $1 + $3; }
        | exp '-' exp   { $$ = $1 - $3; }
        | exp '*' exp   { $$ = $1 * $3; }
        | exp '/' exp   { $$ = $1 / $3; }
        | "identifier"  { $$ = driver.variables[*$1]; }
        | "number"      { $$ = $1; };
     %%

Finally the error member function registers the errors to the driver.

     void
     yy::calcxx_parser::error (const yy::calcxx_parser::location_type& l,
                               const std::string& m)
     {
       driver.error (l, m);
     }


Next: , Previous: Calc++ Parser, Up: A Complete C++ Example

10.2.4 Calc++ Scanner

The Flex scanner first includes the driver declaration, then the parser's to get the set of defined tokens.

     %{                                            /* -*- C++ -*- */
     # include <cstdlib>
     # include <errno.h>
     # include <limits.h>
     # include <string>
     # include "calc++-driver.hh"
     # include "calc++-parser.hh"
     
     /* Work around an incompatibility in flex (at least versions
        2.5.31 through 2.5.33): it generates code that does
        not conform to C89.  See Debian bug 333231
        <http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=333231>.  */
     # undef yywrap
     # define yywrap() 1
     
     /* By default yylex returns int, we use token_type.
        Unfortunately yyterminate by default returns 0, which is
        not of token_type.  */
     #define yyterminate() return token::END
     %}

Because there is no #include-like feature we don't need yywrap, we don't need unput either, and we parse an actual file, this is not an interactive session with the user. Finally we enable the scanner tracing features.

     %option noyywrap nounput batch debug

Abbreviations allow for more readable rules.

     id    [a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z_0-9]*
     int   [0-9]+
     blank [ \t]

The following paragraph suffices to track locations accurately. Each time yylex is invoked, the begin position is moved onto the end position. Then when a pattern is matched, the end position is advanced of its width. In case it matched ends of lines, the end cursor is adjusted, and each time blanks are matched, the begin cursor is moved onto the end cursor to effectively ignore the blanks preceding tokens. Comments would be treated equally.

     %{
     # define YY_USER_ACTION  yylloc->columns (yyleng);
     %}
     %%
     %{
       yylloc->step ();
     %}
     {blank}+   yylloc->step ();
     [\n]+      yylloc->lines (yyleng); yylloc->step ();

The rules are simple, just note the use of the driver to report errors. It is convenient to use a typedef to shorten yy::calcxx_parser::token::identifier into token::identifier for instance.

     %{
       typedef yy::calcxx_parser::token token;
     %}
                /* Convert ints to the actual type of tokens.  */
     [-+*/]     return yy::calcxx_parser::token_type (yytext[0]);
     ":="       return token::ASSIGN;
     {int}      {
       errno = 0;
       long n = strtol (yytext, NULL, 10);
       if (! (INT_MIN <= n && n <= INT_MAX && errno != ERANGE))
         driver.error (*yylloc, "integer is out of range");
       yylval->ival = n;
       return token::NUMBER;
     }
     {id}       yylval->sval = new std::string (yytext); return token::IDENTIFIER;
     .          driver.error (*yylloc, "invalid character");
     %%

Finally, because the scanner related driver's member function depend on the scanner's data, it is simpler to implement them in this file.

     void
     calcxx_driver::scan_begin ()
     {
       yy_flex_debug = trace_scanning;
       if (!(yyin = fopen (file.c_str (), "r")))
         error (std::string ("cannot open ") + file);
     }
     
     void
     calcxx_driver::scan_end ()
     {
       fclose (yyin);
     }


Previous: Calc++ Scanner, Up: A Complete C++ Example

10.2.5 Calc++ Top Level

The top level file, calc++.cc, poses no problem.

     #include <iostream>
     #include "calc++-driver.hh"
     
     int
     main (int argc, char *argv[])
     {
       calcxx_driver driver;
       for (++argv; argv[0]; ++argv)
         if (*argv == std::string ("-p"))
           driver.trace_parsing = true;
         else if (*argv == std::string ("-s"))
           driver.trace_scanning = true;
         else
           {
     	driver.parse (*argv);
     	std::cout << driver.result << std::endl;
           }
     }


Next: , Previous: C++ Language Interface, Up: Top

11 Frequently Asked Questions

Several questions about Bison come up occasionally. Here some of them are addressed.


Next: , Up: FAQ

11.1 Memory Exhausted

     My parser returns with error with a ‘memory exhausted’
     message.  What can I do?

This question is already addressed elsewhere, See Recursive Rules.


Next: , Previous: Memory Exhausted, Up: FAQ

11.2 How Can I Reset the Parser

The following phenomenon has several symptoms, resulting in the following typical questions:

     I invoke yyparse several times, and on correct input it works
     properly; but when a parse error is found, all the other calls fail
     too.  How can I reset the error flag of yyparse?

or

     My parser includes support for an ‘#include’-like feature, in
     which case I run yyparse from yyparse.  This fails
     although I did specify I needed a %pure-parser.

These problems typically come not from Bison itself, but from Lex-generated scanners. Because these scanners use large buffers for speed, they might not notice a change of input file. As a demonstration, consider the following source file, first-line.l:

%{
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
%}
%%
.*\n    ECHO; return 1;
%%
int
yyparse (char const *file)
{
  yyin = fopen (file, "r");
  if (!yyin)
    exit (2);
  /* One token only.  */
  yylex ();
  if (fclose (yyin) != 0)
    exit (3);
  return 0;
}

int
main (void)
{
  yyparse ("input");
  yyparse ("input");
  return 0;
}

If the file input contains

input:1: Hello,
input:2: World!

then instead of getting the first line twice, you get:

     $ flex -ofirst-line.c first-line.l
     $ gcc  -ofirst-line   first-line.c -ll
     $ ./first-line
     input:1: Hello,
     input:2: World!

Therefore, whenever you change yyin, you must tell the Lex-generated scanner to discard its current buffer and switch to the new one. This depends upon your implementation of Lex; see its documentation for more. For Flex, it suffices to call ‘YY_FLUSH_BUFFER’ after each change to yyin. If your Flex-generated scanner needs to read from several input streams to handle features like include files, you might consider using Flex functions like ‘yy_switch_to_buffer’ that manipulate multiple input buffers.

If your Flex-generated scanner uses start conditions (see Start conditions), you might also want to reset the scanner's state, i.e., go back to the initial start condition, through a call to ‘BEGIN (0)’.


Next: , Previous: How Can I Reset the Parser, Up: FAQ

11.3 Strings are Destroyed

     My parser seems to destroy old strings, or maybe it loses track of
     them.  Instead of reporting ‘"foo", "bar"’, it reports
     ‘"bar", "bar"’, or even ‘"foo\nbar", "bar"’.

This error is probably the single most frequent “bug report” sent to Bison lists, but is only concerned with a misunderstanding of the role of the scanner. Consider the following Lex code:

%{
#include <stdio.h>
char *yylval = NULL;
%}
%%
.*    yylval = yytext; return 1;
\n    /* IGNORE */
%%
int
main ()
{
  /* Similar to using $1, $2 in a Bison action.  */
  char *fst = (yylex (), yylval);
  char *snd = (yylex (), yylval);
  printf ("\"%s\", \"%s\"\n", fst, snd);
  return 0;
}

If you compile and run this code, you get:

     $ flex -osplit-lines.c split-lines.l
     $ gcc  -osplit-lines   split-lines.c -ll
     $ printf 'one\ntwo\n' | ./split-lines
     "one
     two", "two"

this is because yytext is a buffer provided for reading in the action, but if you want to keep it, you have to duplicate it (e.g., using strdup). Note that the output may depend on how your implementation of Lex handles yytext. For instance, when given the Lex compatibility option -l (which triggers the option ‘%array’) Flex generates a different behavior:

     $ flex -l -osplit-lines.c split-lines.l
     $ gcc     -osplit-lines   split-lines.c -ll
     $ printf 'one\ntwo\n' | ./split-lines
     "two", "two"


Next: , Previous: Strings are Destroyed, Up: FAQ

11.4 Implementing Gotos/Loops

     My simple calculator supports variables, assignments, and functions,
     but how can I implement gotos, or loops?

Although very pedagogical, the examples included in the document blur the distinction to make between the parser—whose job is to recover the structure of a text and to transmit it to subsequent modules of the program—and the processing (such as the execution) of this structure. This works well with so called straight line programs, i.e., precisely those that have a straightforward execution model: execute simple instructions one after the others.

If you want a richer model, you will probably need to use the parser to construct a tree that does represent the structure it has recovered; this tree is usually called the abstract syntax tree, or AST for short. Then, walking through this tree, traversing it in various ways, will enable treatments such as its execution or its translation, which will result in an interpreter or a compiler.

This topic is way beyond the scope of this manual, and the reader is invited to consult the dedicated literature.


Next: , Previous: Implementing Gotos/Loops, Up: FAQ

11.5 Multiple start-symbols

     I have several closely related grammars, and I would like to share their
     implementations.  In fact, I could use a single grammar but with
     multiple entry points.

Bison does not support multiple start-symbols, but there is a very simple means to simulate them. If foo and bar are the two pseudo start-symbols, then introduce two new tokens, say START_FOO and START_BAR, and use them as switches from the real start-symbol:

     %token START_FOO START_BAR;
     %start start;
     start: START_FOO foo
          | START_BAR bar;

These tokens prevents the introduction of new conflicts. As far as the parser goes, that is all that is needed.

Now the difficult part is ensuring that the scanner will send these tokens first. If your scanner is hand-written, that should be straightforward. If your scanner is generated by Lex, them there is simple means to do it: recall that anything between ‘%{ ... %}’ after the first %% is copied verbatim in the top of the generated yylex function. Make sure a variable start_token is available in the scanner (e.g., a global variable or using %lex-param etc.), and use the following:

       /* Prologue.  */
     %%
     %{
       if (start_token)
         {
           int t = start_token;
           start_token = 0;
           return t;
         }
     %}
       /* The rules.  */


Next: , Previous: Multiple start-symbols, Up: FAQ

11.6 Secure? Conform?

     Is Bison secure?  Does it conform to POSIX?

If you're looking for a guarantee or certification, we don't provide it. However, Bison is intended to be a reliable program that conforms to the POSIX specification for Yacc. If you run into problems, please send us a bug report.


Next: , Previous: Secure? Conform?, Up: FAQ

11.7 I can't build Bison

     I can't build Bison because make complains that
     msgfmt is not found.
     What should I do?

Like most GNU packages with internationalization support, that feature is turned on by default. If you have problems building in the po subdirectory, it indicates that your system's internationalization support is lacking. You can re-configure Bison with --disable-nls to turn off this support, or you can install GNU gettext from ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gettext/ and re-configure Bison. See the file ABOUT-NLS for more information.


Next: , Previous: I can't build Bison, Up: FAQ

11.8 Where can I find help?

     I'm having trouble using Bison.  Where can I find help?

First, read this fine manual. Beyond that, you can send mail to help-bison@gnu.org. This mailing list is intended to be populated with people who are willing to answer questions about using and installing Bison. Please keep in mind that (most of) the people on the list have aspects of their lives which are not related to Bison (!), so you may not receive an answer to your question right away. This can be frustrating, but please try not to honk them off; remember that any help they provide is purely voluntary and out of the kindness of their hearts.


Next: , Previous: Where can I find help?, Up: FAQ

11.9 Bug Reports

     I found a bug.  What should I include in the bug report?

Before you send a bug report, make sure you are using the latest version. Check ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/bison/ or one of its mirrors. Be sure to include the version number in your bug report. If the bug is present in the latest version but not in a previous version, try to determine the most recent version which did not contain the bug.

If the bug is parser-related, you should include the smallest grammar you can which demonstrates the bug. The grammar file should also be complete (i.e., I should be able to run it through Bison without having to edit or add anything). The smaller and simpler the grammar, the easier it will be to fix the bug.

Include information about your compilation environment, including your operating system's name and version and your compiler's name and version. If you have trouble compiling, you should also include a transcript of the build session, starting with the invocation of `configure'. Depending on the nature of the bug, you may be asked to send additional files as well (such as `config.h' or `config.cache').

Patches are most welcome, but not required. That is, do not hesitate to send a bug report just because you can not provide a fix.

Send bug reports to bug-bison@gnu.org.


Next: , Previous: Bug Reports, Up: FAQ

11.10 Other Languages

     Will Bison ever have C++ support?  How about Java or insert your
     favorite language here?

C++ support is there now, and is documented. We'd love to add other languages; contributions are welcome.


Next: , Previous: Other Languages, Up: FAQ

11.11 Beta Testing

     What is involved in being a beta tester?

It's not terribly involved. Basically, you would download a test release, compile it, and use it to build and run a parser or two. After that, you would submit either a bug report or a message saying that everything is okay. It is important to report successes as well as failures because test releases eventually become mainstream releases, but only if they are adequately tested. If no one tests, development is essentially halted.

Beta testers are particularly needed for operating systems to which the developers do not have easy access. They currently have easy access to recent GNU/Linux and Solaris versions. Reports about other operating systems are especially welcome.


Previous: Beta Testing, Up: FAQ

11.12 Mailing Lists

     How do I join the help-bison and bug-bison mailing lists?

See http://lists.gnu.org/.


Next: , Previous: FAQ, Up: Top

Appendix A Bison Symbols

— Variable: @$

In an action, the location of the left-hand side of the rule. See Locations Overview.

— Variable: @n

In an action, the location of the n-th symbol of the right-hand side of the rule. See Locations Overview.

— Variable: $$

In an action, the semantic value of the left-hand side of the rule. See Actions.

— Variable: $n

In an action, the semantic value of the n-th symbol of the right-hand side of the rule. See Actions.

— Delimiter: %%

Delimiter used to separate the grammar rule section from the Bison declarations section or the epilogue. See The Overall Layout of a Bison Grammar.

— Delimiter: %{code%}

All code listed between ‘%{’ and ‘%}’ is copied directly to the output file uninterpreted. Such code forms the prologue of the input file. See Outline of a Bison Grammar.

— Construct: /*...*/

Comment delimiters, as in C.

— Delimiter: :

Separates a rule's result from its components. See Syntax of Grammar Rules.

— Delimiter: ;

Terminates a rule. See Syntax of Grammar Rules.

— Delimiter: |

Separates alternate rules for the same result nonterminal. See Syntax of Grammar Rules.

— Symbol: $accept

The predefined nonterminal whose only rule is ‘$accept: start $end’, where start is the start symbol. See The Start-Symbol. It cannot be used in the grammar.

— Directive: %debug

Equip the parser for debugging. See Decl Summary.

— Directive: %defines

Bison declaration to create a header file meant for the scanner. See Decl Summary.

— Directive: %destructor

Specify how the parser should reclaim the memory associated to discarded symbols. See Freeing Discarded Symbols.

— Directive: %dprec

Bison declaration to assign a precedence to a rule that is used at parse time to resolve reduce/reduce conflicts. See Writing GLR Parsers.

— Symbol: $end

The predefined token marking the end of the token stream. It cannot be used in the grammar.

— Symbol: error

A token name reserved for error recovery. This token may be used in grammar rules so as to allow the Bison parser to recognize an error in the grammar without halting the process. In effect, a sentence containing an error may be recognized as valid. On a syntax error, the token error becomes the current look-ahead token. Actions corresponding to error are then executed, and the look-ahead token is reset to the token that originally caused the violation. See Error Recovery.

— Directive: %error-verbose

Bison declaration to request verbose, specific error message strings when yyerror is called.

— Directive: %file-prefix="prefix"

Bison declaration to set the prefix of the output files. See Decl Summary.

— Directive: %glr-parser

Bison declaration to produce a GLR parser. See Writing GLR Parsers.

— Directive: %initial-action

Run user code before parsing. See Performing Actions before Parsing.

— Directive: %left

Bison declaration to assign left associativity to token(s). See Operator Precedence.

— Directive: %lex-param {argument-declaration}

Bison declaration to specifying an additional parameter that yylex should accept. See Calling Conventions for Pure Parsers.

— Directive: %merge

Bison declaration to assign a merging function to a rule. If there is a reduce/reduce conflict with a rule having the same merging function, the function is applied to the two semantic values to get a single result. See Writing GLR Parsers.

— Directive: %name-prefix="prefix"

Bison declaration to rename the external symbols. See Decl Summary.

— Directive: %no-lines

Bison declaration to avoid generating #line directives in the parser file. See Decl Summary.

— Directive: %nonassoc

Bison declaration to assign nonassociativity to token(s). See Operator Precedence.

— Directive: %output="file"

Bison declaration to set the name of the parser file. See Decl Summary.

— Directive: %parse-param {argument-declaration}

Bison declaration to specifying an additional parameter that yyparse should accept. See The Parser Function yyparse.

— Directive: %prec

Bison declaration to assign a precedence to a specific rule. See Context-Dependent Precedence.

— Directive: %pure-parser

Bison declaration to request a pure (reentrant) parser. See A Pure (Reentrant) Parser.

— Directive: %require "version"

Require version version or higher of Bison. See Require a Version of Bison.

— Directive: %right

Bison declaration to assign right associativity to token(s). See Operator Precedence.

— Directive: %start

Bison declaration to specify the start symbol. See The Start-Symbol.

— Directive: %token

Bison declaration to declare token(s) without specifying precedence. See Token Type Names.

— Directive: %token-table

Bison declaration to include a token name table in the parser file. See Decl Summary.

— Directive: %type

Bison declaration to declare nonterminals. See Nonterminal Symbols.

— Symbol: $undefined

The predefined token onto which all undefined values returned by yylex are mapped. It cannot be used in the grammar, rather, use error.

— Directive: %union

Bison declaration to specify several possible data types for semantic values. See The Collection of Value Types.

— Macro: YYABORT

Macro to pretend that an unrecoverable syntax error has occurred, by making yyparse return 1 immediately. The error reporting function yyerror is not called. See The Parser Function yyparse.

— Macro: YYACCEPT

Macro to pretend that a complete utterance of the language has been read, by making yyparse return 0 immediately. See The Parser Function yyparse.

— Macro: YYBACKUP

Macro to discard a value from the parser stack and fake a look-ahead token. See Special Features for Use in Actions.

— Variable: yychar

External integer variable that contains the integer value of the look-ahead token. (In a pure parser, it is a local variable within yyparse.) Error-recovery rule actions may examine this variable. See Special Features for Use in Actions.

— Variable: yyclearin

Macro used in error-recovery rule actions. It clears the previous look-ahead token. See Error Recovery.

— Macro: YYDEBUG

Macro to define to equip the parser with tracing code. See Tracing Your Parser.

— Variable: yydebug

External integer variable set to zero by default. If yydebug is given a nonzero value, the parser will output information on input symbols and parser action. See Tracing Your Parser.

— Macro: yyerrok

Macro to cause parser to recover immediately to its normal mode after a syntax error. See Error Recovery.

— Macro: YYERROR

Macro to pretend that a syntax error has just been detected: call yyerror and then perform normal error recovery if possible (see Error Recovery), or (if recovery is impossible) make yyparse return 1. See Error Recovery.

— Function: yyerror

User-supplied function to be called by yyparse on error. See The Error Reporting Function yyerror.

— Macro: YYERROR_VERBOSE

An obsolete macro that you define with #define in the prologue to request verbose, specific error message strings when yyerror is called. It doesn't matter what definition you use for YYERROR_VERBOSE, just whether you define it. Using %error-verbose is preferred.

— Macro: YYINITDEPTH

Macro for specifying the initial size of the parser stack. See Memory Management.

— Function: yylex

User-supplied lexical analyzer function, called with no arguments to get the next token. See The Lexical Analyzer Function yylex.

— Macro: YYLEX_PARAM

An obsolete macro for specifying an extra argument (or list of extra arguments) for yyparse to pass to yylex. The use of this macro is deprecated, and is supported only for Yacc like parsers. See Calling Conventions for Pure Parsers.

— Variable: yylloc

External variable in which yylex should place the line and column numbers associated with a token. (In a pure parser, it is a local variable within yyparse, and its address is passed to yylex.) You can ignore this variable if you don't use the ‘@’ feature in the grammar actions. See Textual Locations of Tokens. In semantic actions, it stores the location of the look-ahead token. See Actions and Locations.

— Type: YYLTYPE

Data type of yylloc; by default, a structure with four members. See Data Types of Locations.

— Variable: yylval

External variable in which yylex should place the semantic value associated with a token. (In a pure parser, it is a local variable within yyparse, and its address is passed to yylex.) See Semantic Values of Tokens. In semantic actions, it stores the semantic value of the look-ahead token. See Actions.

— Macro: YYMAXDEPTH

Macro for specifying the maximum size of the parser stack. See Memory Management.

— Variable: yynerrs

Global variable which Bison increments each time it reports a syntax error. (In a pure parser, it is a local variable within yyparse.) See The Error Reporting Function yyerror.

— Function: yyparse

The parser function produced by Bison; call this function to start parsing. See The Parser Function yyparse.

— Macro: YYPARSE_PARAM

An obsolete macro for specifying the name of a parameter that yyparse should accept. The use of this macro is deprecated, and is supported only for Yacc like parsers. See Calling Conventions for Pure Parsers.

— Macro: YYRECOVERING

The expression YYRECOVERING () yields 1 when the parser is recovering from a syntax error, and 0 otherwise. See Special Features for Use in Actions.

— Macro: YYSTACK_USE_ALLOCA

Macro used to control the use of alloca when the C LALR(1) parser needs to extend its stacks. If defined to 0, the parser will use malloc to extend its stacks. If defined to 1, the parser will use alloca. Values other than 0 and 1 are reserved for future Bison extensions. If not defined, YYSTACK_USE_ALLOCA defaults to 0.

In the all-too-common case where your code may run on a host with a limited stack and with unreliable stack-overflow checking, you should set YYMAXDEPTH to a value that cannot possibly result in unchecked stack overflow on any of your target hosts when alloca is called. You can inspect the code that Bison generates in order to determine the proper numeric values. This will require some expertise in low-level implementation details.

— Type: YYSTYPE

Data type of semantic values; int by default. See Data Types of Semantic Values.


Next: , Previous: Table of Symbols, Up: Top

Appendix B Glossary

Backus-Naur Form (BNF; also called “Backus Normal Form”)
Formal method of specifying context-free grammars originally proposed by John Backus, and slightly improved by Peter Naur in his 1960-01-02 committee document contributing to what became the Algol 60 report. See Languages and Context-Free Grammars.
Context-free grammars
Grammars specified as rules that can be applied regardless of context. Thus, if there is a rule which says that an integer can be used as an expression, integers are allowed anywhere an expression is permitted. See Languages and Context-Free Grammars.
Dynamic allocation
Allocation of memory that occurs during execution, rather than at compile time or on entry to a function.
Empty string
Analogous to the empty set in set theory, the empty string is a character string of length zero.
Finite-state stack machine
A “machine” that has discrete states in which it is said to exist at each instant in time. As input to the machine is processed, the machine moves from state to state as specified by the logic of the machine. In the case of the parser, the input is the language being parsed, and the states correspond to various stages in the grammar rules. See The Bison Parser Algorithm.
Generalized LR (GLR)
A parsing algorithm that can handle all context-free grammars, including those that are not LALR(1). It resolves situations that Bison's usual LALR(1) algorithm cannot by effectively splitting off multiple parsers, trying all possible parsers, and discarding those that fail in the light of additional right context. See Generalized LR Parsing.
Grouping
A language construct that is (in general) grammatically divisible; for example, `expression' or `declaration' in C. See Languages and Context-Free Grammars.
Infix operator
An arithmetic operator that is placed between the operands on which it performs some operation.
Input stream
A continuous flow of data between devices or programs.
Language construct
One of the typical usage schemas of the language. For example, one of the constructs of the C language is the if statement. See Languages and Context-Free Grammars.
Left associativity
Operators having left associativity are analyzed from left to right: ‘a+b+c’ first computes ‘a+b’ and then combines with ‘c’. See Operator Precedence.
Left recursion
A rule whose result symbol is also its first component symbol; for example, ‘expseq1 : expseq1 ',' exp;’. See Recursive Rules.
Left-to-right parsing
Parsing a sentence of a language by analyzing it token by token from left to right. See The Bison Parser Algorithm.
Lexical analyzer (scanner)
A function that reads an input stream and returns tokens one by one. See The Lexical Analyzer Function yylex.
Lexical tie-in
A flag, set by actions in the grammar rules, which alters the way tokens are parsed. See Lexical Tie-ins.
Literal string token
A token which consists of two or more fixed characters. See Symbols.
Look-ahead token
A token already read but not yet shifted. See Look-Ahead Tokens.
LALR(1)
The class of context-free grammars that Bison (like most other parser generators) can handle; a subset of LR(1). See Mysterious Reduce/Reduce Conflicts.
LR(1)
The class of context-free grammars in which at most one token of look-ahead is needed to disambiguate the parsing of any piece of input.
Nonterminal symbol
A grammar symbol standing for a grammatical construct that can be expressed through rules in terms of smaller constructs; in other words, a construct that is not a token. See Symbols.
Parser
A function that recognizes valid sentences of a language by analyzing the syntax structure of a set of tokens passed to it from a lexical analyzer.
Postfix operator
An arithmetic operator that is placed after the operands upon which it performs some operation.
Reduction
Replacing a string of nonterminals and/or terminals with a single nonterminal, according to a grammar rule. See The Bison Parser Algorithm.
Reentrant
A reentrant subprogram is a subprogram which can be in invoked any number of times in parallel, without interference between the various invocations. See A Pure (Reentrant) Parser.
Reverse polish notation
A language in which all operators are postfix operators.
Right recursion
A rule whose result symbol is also its last component symbol; for example, ‘expseq1: exp ',' expseq1;’. See Recursive Rules.
Semantics
In computer languages, the semantics are specified by the actions taken for each instance of the language, i.e., the meaning of each statement. See Defining Language Semantics.
Shift
A parser is said to shift when it makes the choice of analyzing further input from the stream rather than reducing immediately some already-recognized rule. See The Bison Parser Algorithm.
Single-character literal
A single character that is recognized and interpreted as is. See From Formal Rules to Bison Input.
Start symbol
The nonterminal symbol that stands for a complete valid utterance in the language being parsed. The start symbol is usually listed as the first nonterminal symbol in a language specification. See The Start-Symbol.
Symbol table
A data structure where symbol names and associated data are stored during parsing to allow for recognition and use of existing information in repeated uses of a symbol. See Multi-function Calc.
Syntax error
An error encountered during parsing of an input stream due to invalid syntax. See Error Recovery.
Token
A basic, grammatically indivisible unit of a language. The symbol that describes a token in the grammar is a terminal symbol. The input of the Bison parser is a stream of tokens which comes from the lexical analyzer. See Symbols.
Terminal symbol
A grammar symbol that has no rules in the grammar and therefore is grammatically indivisible. The piece of text it represents is a token. See Languages and Context-Free Grammars.


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Appendix C Copying This Manual


Up: Copying This Manual

C.1 GNU Free Documentation License

Version 1.2, November 2002
     Copyright © 2000,2001,2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
     51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA  02110-1301, USA
     
     Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
     of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
  1. PREAMBLE

    The purpose of this License is to make a manual, textbook, or other functional and useful document free in the sense of freedom: to assure everyone the effective freedom to copy and redistribute it, with or without modifying it, either commercially or noncommercially. Secondarily, this License preserves for the author and publisher a way to get credit for their work, while not being considered responsible for modifications made by others.

    This License is a kind of “copyleft”, which means that derivative works of the document must themselves be free in the same sense. It complements the GNU General Public License, which is a copyleft license designed for free software.

    We have designed this License in order to use it for manuals for free software, because free software needs free documentation: a free program should come with manuals providing the same freedoms that the software does. But this License is not limited to software manuals; it can be used for any textual work, regardless of subject matter or whether it is published as a printed book. We recommend this License principally for works whose purpose is instruction or reference.

  2. APPLICABILITY AND DEFINITIONS

    This License applies to any manual or other work, in any medium, that contains a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it can be distributed under the terms of this License. Such a notice grants a world-wide, royalty-free license, unlimited in duration, to use that work under the conditions stated herein. The “Document”, below, refers to any such manual or work. Any member of the public is a licensee, and is addressed as “you”. You accept the license if you copy, modify or distribute the work in a way requiring permission under copyright law.

    A “Modified Version” of the Document means any work containing the Document or a portion of it, either copied verbatim, or with modifications and/or translated into another language.

    A “Secondary Section” is a named appendix or a front-matter section of the Document that deals exclusively with the relationship of the publishers or authors of the Document to the Document's overall subject (or to related matters) and contains nothing that could fall directly within that overall subject. (Thus, if the Document is in part a textbook of mathematics, a Secondary Section may not explain any mathematics.) The relationship could be a matter of historical connection with the subject or with related matters, or of legal, commercial, philosophical, ethical or political position regarding them.

    The “Invariant Sections” are certain Secondary Sections whose titles are designated, as being those of Invariant Sections, in the notice that says that the Document is released under this License. If a section does not fit the above definition of Secondary then it is not allowed to be designated as Invariant. The Document may contain zero Invariant Sections. If the Document does not identify any Invariant Sections then there are none.

    The “Cover Texts” are certain short passages of text that are listed, as Front-Cover Texts or Back-Cover Texts, in the notice that says that the Document is released under this License. A Front-Cover Text may be at most 5 words, and a Back-Cover Text may be at most 25 words.

    A “Transparent” copy of the Document means a machine-readable copy, represented in a format whose specification is available to the general public, that is suitable for revising the document straightforwardly with generic text editors or (for images composed of pixels) generic paint programs or (for drawings) some widely available drawing editor, and that is suitable for input to text formatters or for automatic translation to a variety of formats suitable for input to text formatters. A copy made in an otherwise Transparent file format whose markup, or absence of markup, has been arranged to thwart or discourage subsequent modification by readers is not Transparent. An image format is not Transparent if used for any substantial amount of text. A copy that is not “Transparent” is called “Opaque”.

    Examples of suitable formats for Transparent copies include plain ascii without markup, Texinfo input format, LaTeX input format, SGML or XML using a publicly available DTD, and standard-conforming simple HTML, PostScript or PDF designed for human modification. Examples of transparent image formats include PNG, XCF and JPG. Opaque formats include proprietary formats that can be read and edited only by proprietary word processors, SGML or XML for which the DTD and/or processing tools are not generally available, and the machine-generated HTML, PostScript or PDF produced by some word processors for output purposes only.

    The “Title Page” means, for a printed book, the title page itself, plus such following pages as are needed to hold, legibly, the material this License requires to appear in the title page. For works in formats which do not have any title page as such, “Title Page” means the text near the most prominent appearance of the work's title, preceding the beginning of the body of the text.

    A section “Entitled XYZ” means a named subunit of the Document whose title either is precisely XYZ or contains XYZ in parentheses following text that translates XYZ in another language. (Here XYZ stands for a specific section name mentioned below, such as “Acknowledgements”, “Dedications”, “Endorsements”, or “History”.) To “Preserve the Title” of such a section when you modify the Document means that it remains a section “Entitled XYZ” according to this definition.

    The Document may include Warranty Disclaimers next to the notice which states that this License applies to the Document. These Warranty Disclaimers are considered to be included by reference in this License, but only as regards disclaiming warranties: any other implication that these Warranty Disclaimers may have is void and has no effect on the meaning of this License.

  3. VERBATIM COPYING

    You may copy and distribute the Document in any medium, either commercially or noncommercially, provided that this License, the copyright notices, and the license notice saying this License applies to the Document are reproduced in all copies, and that you add no other conditions whatsoever to those of this License. You may not use technical measures to obstruct or control the reading or further copying of the copies you make or distribute. However, you may accept compensation in exchange for copies. If you distribute a large enough number of copies you must also follow the conditions in section 3.

    You may also lend copies, under the same conditions stated above, and you may publicly display copies.

  4. COPYING IN QUANTITY

    If you publish printed copies (or copies in media that commonly have printed covers) of the Document, numbering more than 100, and the Document's license notice requires Cover Texts, you must enclose the copies in covers that carry, clearly and legibly, all these Cover Texts: Front-Cover Texts on the front cover, and Back-Cover Texts on the back cover. Both covers must also clearly and legibly identify you as the publisher of these copies. The front cover must present the full title with all words of the title equally prominent and visible. You may add other material on the covers in addition. Copying with changes limited to the covers, as long as they preserve the title of the Document and satisfy these conditions, can be treated as verbatim copying in other respects.

    If the required texts for either cover are too voluminous to fit legibly, you should put the first ones listed (as many as fit reasonably) on the actual cover, and continue the rest onto adjacent pages.

    If you publish or distribute Opaque copies of the Document numbering more than 100, you must either include a machine-readable Transparent copy along with each Opaque copy, or state in or with each Opaque copy a computer-network location from which the general network-using public has access to download using public-standard network protocols a complete Transparent copy of the Document, free of added material. If you use the latter option, you must take reasonably prudent steps, when you begin distribution of Opaque copies in quantity, to ensure that this Transparent copy will remain thus accessible at the stated location until at least one year after the last time you distribute an Opaque copy (directly or through your agents or retailers) of that edition to the public.

    It is requested, but not required, that you contact the authors of the Document well before redistributing any large number of copies, to give them a chance to provide you with an updated version of the Document.

  5. MODIFICATIONS

    You may copy and distribute a Modified Version of the Document under the conditions of sections 2 and 3 above, provided that you release the Modified Version under precisely this License, with the Modified Version filling the role of the Document, thus licensing distribution and modification of the Modified Version to whoever possesses a copy of it. In addition, you must do these things in the Modified Version:

    1. Use in the Title Page (and on the covers, if any) a title distinct from that of the Document, and from those of previous versions (which should, if there were any, be listed in the History section of the Document). You may use the same title as a previous version if the original publisher of that version gives permission.
    2. List on the Title Page, as authors, one or more persons or entities responsible for authorship of the modifications in the Modified Version, together with at least five of the principal authors of the Document (all of its principal authors, if it has fewer than five), unless they release you from this requirement.
    3. State on the Title page the name of the publisher of the Modified Version, as the publisher.
    4. Preserve all the copyright notices of the Document.
    5. Add an appropriate copyright notice for your modifications adjacent to the other copyright notices.
    6. Include, immediately after the copyright notices, a license notice giving the public permission to use the Modified Version under the terms of this License, in the form shown in the Addendum below.
    7. Preserve in that license notice the full lists of Invariant Sections and required Cover Texts given in the Document's license notice.
    8. Include an unaltered copy of this License.
    9. Preserve the section Entitled “History”, Preserve its Title, and add to it an item stating at least the title, year, new authors, and publisher of the Modified Version as given on the Title Page. If there is no section Entitled “History” in the Document, create one stating the title, year, authors, and publisher of the Document as given on its Title Page, then add an item describing the Modified Version as stated in the previous sentence.
    10. Preserve the network location, if any, given in the Document for public access to a Transparent copy of the Document, and likewise the network locations given in the Document for previous versions it was based on. These may be placed in the “History” section. You may omit a network location for a work that was published at least four years before the Document itself, or if the original publisher of the version it refers to gives permission.
    11. For any section Entitled “Acknowledgements” or “Dedications”, Preserve the Title of the section, and preserve in the section all the substance and tone of each of the contributor acknowledgements and/or dedications given therein.
    12. Preserve all the Invariant Sections of the Document, unaltered in their text and in their titles. Section numbers or the equivalent are not considered part of the section titles.
    13. Delete any section Entitled “Endorsements”. Such a section may not be included in the Modified Version.
    14. Do not retitle any existing section to be Entitled “Endorsements” or to conflict in title with any Invariant Section.
    15. Preserve any Warranty Disclaimers.

    If the Modified Version includes new front-matter sections or appendices that qualify as Secondary Sections and contain no material copied from the Document, you may at your option designate some or all of these sections as invariant. To do this, add their titles to the list of Invariant Sections in the Modified Version's license notice. These titles must be distinct from any other section titles.

    You may add a section Entitled “Endorsements”, provided it contains nothing but endorsements of your Modified Version by various parties—for example, statements of peer review or that the text has been approved by an organization as the authoritative definition of a standard.

    You may add a passage of up to five words as a Front-Cover Text, and a passage of up to 25 words as a Back-Cover Text, to the end of the list of Cover Texts in the Modified Version. Only one passage of Front-Cover Text and one of Back-Cover Text may be added by (or through arrangements made by) any one entity. If the Document already includes a cover text for the same cover, previously added by you or by arrangement made by the same entity you are acting on behalf of, you may not add another; but you may replace the old one, on explicit permission from the previous publisher that added the old one.

    The author(s) and publisher(s) of the Document do not by this License give permission to use their names for publicity for or to assert or imply endorsement of any Modified Version.

  6. COMBINING DOCUMENTS

    You may combine the Document with other documents released under this License, under the terms defined in section 4 above for modified versions, provided that you include in the combination all of the Invariant Sections of all of the original documents, unmodified, and list them all as Invariant Sections of your combined work in its license notice, and that you preserve all their Warranty Disclaimers.

    The combined work need only contain one copy of this License, and multiple identical Invariant Sections may be replaced with a single copy. If there are multiple Invariant Sections with the same name but different contents, make the title of each such section unique by adding at the end of it, in parentheses, the name of the original author or publisher of that section if known, or else a unique number. Make the same adjustment to the section titles in the list of Invariant Sections in the license notice of the combined work.

    In the combination, you must combine any sections Entitled “History” in the various original documents, forming one section Entitled “History”; likewise combine any sections Entitled “Acknowledgements”, and any sections Entitled “Dedications”. You must delete all sections Entitled “Endorsements.”

  7. COLLECTIONS OF DOCUMENTS

    You may make a collection consisting of the Document and other documents released under this License, and replace the individual copies of this License in the various documents with a single copy that is included in the collection, provided that you follow the rules of this License for verbatim copying of each of the documents in all other respects.

    You may extract a single document from such a collection, and distribute it individually under this License, provided you insert a copy of this License into the extracted document, and follow this License in all other respects regarding verbatim copying of that document.

  8. AGGREGATION WITH INDEPENDENT WORKS

    A compilation of the Document or its derivatives with other separate and independent documents or works, in or on a volume of a storage or distribution medium, is called an “aggregate” if the copyright resulting from the compilation is not used to limit the legal rights of the compilation's users beyond what the individual works permit. When the Document is included in an aggregate, this License does not apply to the other works in the aggregate which are not themselves derivative works of the Document.

    If the Cover Text requirement of section 3 is applicable to these copies of the Document, then if the Document is less than one half of the entire aggregate, the Document's Cover Texts may be placed on covers that bracket the Document within the aggregate, or the electronic equivalent of covers if the Document is in electronic form. Otherwise they must appear on printed covers that bracket the whole aggregate.

  9. TRANSLATION

    Translation is considered a kind of modification, so you may distribute translations of the Document under the terms of section 4. Replacing Invariant Sections with translations requires special permission from their copyright holders, but you may include translations of some or all Invariant Sections in addition to the original versions of these Invariant Sections. You may include a translation of this License, and all the license notices in the Document, and any Warranty Disclaimers, provided that you also include the original English version of this License and the original versions of those notices and disclaimers. In case of a disagreement between the translation and the original version of this License or a notice or disclaimer, the original version will prevail.

    If a section in the Document is Entitled “Acknowledgements”, “Dedications”, or “History”, the requirement (section 4) to Preserve its Title (section 1) will typically require changing the actual title.

  10. TERMINATION

    You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Document except as expressly provided for under this License. Any other attempt to copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the Document is void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this License. However, parties who have received copies, or rights, from you under this License will not have their licenses terminated so long as such parties remain in full compliance.

  11. FUTURE REVISIONS OF THIS LICENSE

    The Free Software Foundation may publish new, revised versions of the GNU Free Documentation License from time to time. Such new versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to address new problems or concerns. See http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/.

    Each version of the License is given a distinguishing version number. If the Document specifies that a particular numbered version of this License “or any later version” applies to it, you have the option of following the terms and conditions either of that specified version or of any later version that has been published (not as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation. If the Document does not specify a version number of this License, you may choose any version ever published (not as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation.

C.1.1 ADDENDUM: How to use this License for your documents

To use this License in a document you have written, include a copy of the License in the document and put the following copyright and license notices just after the title page:

       Copyright (C)  year  your name.
       Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
       under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2
       or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation;
       with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover
       Texts.  A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU
       Free Documentation License''.

If you have Invariant Sections, Front-Cover Texts and Back-Cover Texts, replace the “with...Texts.” line with this:

         with the Invariant Sections being list their titles, with
         the Front-Cover Texts being list, and with the Back-Cover Texts
         being list.

If you have Invariant Sections without Cover Texts, or some other combination of the three, merge those two alternatives to suit the situation.

If your document contains nontrivial examples of program code, we recommend releasing these examples in parallel under your choice of free software license, such as the GNU General Public License, to permit their use in free software.


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Index


Footnotes

[1] In the future techniques to allow complex types within pseudo-unions (similar to Boost variants) might be implemented to alleviate these issues.