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Marpa::PP::Advanced::Models(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Marpa::PP::Advanced::Models(3)

Marpa::PP::Advanced::Models - Other Input Models

The alternative input models described in this document are an advanced technique. If you are starting out with Marpa, you probably want to ignore this document. If you are an experienced Marpa user, it is still safe to ignore this document, but you might find the possibilities it discusses interesting.

An alternative input model is anything that is not the default, token-stream model. More helpfully, Marpa allows variable-length tokens and ambiguous tokens, and an alternative input model is any input model which
  • Allows a token whose length is not exactly 1, or
  • Allows locations which have more than one token.

To do either of these things, a user must use the recognizer's "alternative" method. In other words, if you are not using the recognizer's "alternative" method call, you are not using an alternative input method.

Many concepts, such as parsing location, parse exhaustion, and the end of parsing, are somewhat more complicated when alternative input models are involved. These concepts were explained in the main document for the recognizer on the assumption that the default input model was in use. This document revises those explanations as necessary to take into account the alternative input models.

Marpa's default input model is the traditional one -- a token stream. Token streams are very standard in parsing applications -- so much so that most texts do not take the trouble of defining the term. A token stream is input structured as a sequence of tokens, where each token occupies one location and every location has a token. In the token stream model, all tokens are of the same length.

Conventionally, all tokens are of length 1, and the token stream starts at location 0. Following this convention, the Nth token would start at location N-1 and end at location N. For example, the first token would start at location 0 and end at location 1. The second token would start at location 1 and end at location 2.

For most parsers, position is location in a token stream. To deal with variable-length and overlapping tokens, Marpa needs a more flexible idea of location.

Marpa's tracks position in terms of earlemes. Earlemes are named after Jay Earley, the inventor of the first algorithm in Marpa's lineage. Every token has a start earleme and an end earleme.

The token stream model may also be called the token-per-earleme model. In the token stream model, token location and earleme location are exactly identical an one-to-one basis. If a user's application uses the token stream model, he can ignore earlemes, and think entirely in terms of tokens and position in a token stream. Because of this, the main Marpa documents speak simply of the "location" in the parse.

The furthest earleme is the last earleme at which a token ends. In the default input model, the furthest earleme is not an important concept. In the default input model, the furthest earleme and the current earleme are always the same.

In alternative input models, tokens may be longer than 1 earleme, and the furthest earleme and the current earleme may be far apart. This becomes an issue when parsing is finished. Alternative input models use the recognizer's "end_input" method to ensure that processing of input catches up to the furthest earleme.

    defined $recce->alternative( 'a', 42, 1 )
        or return 'First alternative failed';

The "alternative" method is the most general method for reading input, and is used in alternative input models. It takes three arguments, only the first of which is required.

The first two arguments are similar to those of the recognizer's "read" method: the token type and the token value. As with the "read" method, the token value is optional and, if omitted, defaults to a Perl "undef".

The third argument to the "alternative" method is a token length. If omitted, token length defaults to 1, which is the correct value for the token stream model. Its value can be any integer greater than zero. Marpa does not allow zero length tokens in any input model.

Unlike the "read" method, the "alternative" method does not advance the current location (current earleme) on each call. This allows the application to read several tokens at the same earleme. This is how ambiguous input is created. To advance the current earleme when input is read using the "alternative" method, the "complete_earleme" method must be called.

On success, "alternative" returns the current earleme. On failures, other than the rejection of a token in interactive mode, "alternative" throws an exception. If the token is rejected, "alternative" returns a Perl "undef".

    $current_earleme = $recce->current_earleme();

Returns the current parse location, also known as the current earleme. Not often needed.

    $recce->earleme_complete();

Processes all tokens at the current earleme and advances the current earleme by 1. Returns the number of terminals acceptable at the new current earleme. Note that, in alternative input models, a return value of 0 does not necessarily indicate an exhausted parser.

When reading input using the "alternative" method, "earleme_complete" is used to move forward in the input stream. All tokens read using the "alternative" method are read at the same location -- the current earleme. A "earleme_complete" call causes the tokens read using the "alternative" method to be processed, and the current earleme to be advanced.

"earleme_complete" may be called even if the "alternative" method has been not called since the last call to "earleme_complete". This will create an earleme with no tokens, which is often useful.

        $recce->exhausted() and die 'Recognizer exhausted';

The "exhausted" method returns a Perl true if parsing in a recognizer is exhausted, and a Perl false otherwise. Parsing is exhausted when the recognizer will not accept any further input. This method is seldom used. For most applications, the return values of the other methods provide sufficient information about the parse status, and there is no need to specifically test for parse exhaustion.

In the default input model, a recognizer was exhausted if the "read" method returned 0, indicating that no tokens would be accepted at the new current earleme. In alternative input models, "earleme_complete" will always return 0 when the parser is exhausted, but the converse is not always true: "earleme_complete" may return 0 even in some cases when the parser is not exhausted.

When "earleme_complete" returns 0, no input will be accepted at the current earleme. But in input models which allow tokens longer than 1, it is possible for input to be accepted at earlemes after the current earleme, even if no input is accepted at the current earleme.

    $recce->end_input();

Indicates that input is finished. Calling "end_input" is not necessary or useful in the default input model, because in the default input model no token has a length greater than 1.

The "end_input" method takes no arguments. The "end_input" method returns a Perl true value on success. On failure, it throws an exception.

In alternative input models, calling the "earleme_complete" method once input is finished does not ensure that all input has been processed. The "earleme_complete" method completes the current earleme, but in alternative models, tokens may extend well past the current earleme. The "end_input" method ensures that all input is processed.

Calling "end_input" multiple times on the same recognizer object is harmless, but useless. The second and subsequent calls will return a Perl true, but will have no effect.

A recognizer can mix calls to its "read" method with calls to its "alternative" method. The "read" method has the same effect as a single call to the "alternative" method, followed immediately by a call of the "earleme_complete" method. More precisely, the "read" method is equivalent to

    sub Marpa::PP::Recognizer::read {
        my $recce = shift;
        return defined $recce->alternative(@_) ? $recce->earleme_complete() : undef;
    }

Marpa allows ambiguous tokens. Several Marpa tokens can start at a single parsing location. Ambiguous tokens can be of various lengths. Tokens can also overlap.

Potentially ambiguous lexing occurs when more than one token starts at a single earleme. When potentially ambiguous lexing occurs, it becomes possible for there to be more than one sequence of tokens.

An actual lexical ambiguity only occurs if more than one of the potential token sequences is consistent with the grammar. If there is no actual lexical ambiguity, Marpa will use the only token choice that is consistent with the grammar.

When lexing is actually ambiguous, Marpa will use all the alternatives consistent with the grammar. When the lexing in a parse is actually ambiguous, the parse will be ambiguous. From the point of view of Marpa's semantics, ambiguities caused by lexing look the same as ambiguities caused by an ambiguous grammar.

In the standard terminology, if a grammar produces more than one parse result, then that grammar must be ambiguous. In Marpa this is not strictly true. In Marpa, if the input is ambiguous, even an unambiguous grammar can produce than one parse.

A duplicate token is a token of the same type and the same length as another that was read at the same earleme. Duplicate tokens are impossible in the default, token-stream, model. This is because in the token-stream model only one token can be read at each earleme.

In alternative models, more than one token may be read at an earleme, and duplicates are possible. Marpa detects duplicate tokens and treats them as "hard errors" -- Marpa throws an exception when it sees a duplicate token. Marpa's assumption is that duplicate tokens indicate an error at the application level.

An application can retry input after a duplicate token, if it catches the exception. In the future, if recovery from duplicate tokens is found to be a useful technique, Marpa may provide an option to change its behavior, so that a soft failure is returned when there is a duplicate token.

While scanning, Marpa keeps track of the current earleme. Earlemes in a parse start at earleme 0 and increase numerically. The earleme immediately following earleme 0 is earleme 1, the earleme immediately following earleme 1 is earleme 2, and so on. The earleme immediately following earleme N is always earleme N+1.

Distance in the earleme stream is what you would intuitively expect it to be. The distance between earleme X and earleme Y is the absolute value of the difference between X and Y, |X-Y|. The distance from earleme 3 to earleme 6, for example, is 3 earlemes.

Whenever a token is given to Marpa to be scanned, it starts at the current earleme. In addition to the type and value of the token, Marpa must be told token's length in earlemes. The length of a Marpa token must be greater than zero.

This earleme length will become the distance from the start of the token to the end of the token. If the length of the token is L, and the number of the current earleme is C, the end of the token will be at the earleme whose number is C+L.

Many different models of the relationship between tokens and earlemes are possible, but two are particularly important. One is the one-token-per-earleme model, which is the default, and which has already been described. The other is the one-character-per-earleme model.

In the one-character-per-earleme model, every character will be treated as being exactly one earleme in length. If a token is more than one character in length, that token will span earlemes. When the lexing is ambiguous, tokens may overlap.

When a one-character-per-earleme model of input is used, there may be many earlemes at which no tokens start. For example, in a straightforward character-per-earleme implementation of a grammar for a language which allows comments, no tokens will start at any earlemes which corresponds to character locations inside a comment.

So far only the token-per-earleme and character-per-earleme models have seen any real use in Marpa programs. But other models are certainly possible. Using earlemes, you can structure your input in almost any way you like.

There are only three restrictions:

1.
Scanning always starts at earleme 0.
2.
All tokens starting at earleme N must be scanned before any tokens starting at earleme N+1. In other words, the tokens must be scanned in non-decreasing order by start earleme.
3.
Every token must have a length, in earlemes, which is greater than zero. In other words, token length can never be zero or negative.

  Copyright 2012 Jeffrey Kegler
  This file is part of Marpa::PP.  Marpa::PP is free software: you can
  redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser
  General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation,
  either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
  
  Marpa::PP 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
  Lesser General Public License for more details.
  
  You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser
  General Public License along with Marpa::PP.  If not, see
  http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
2022-04-08 perl v5.32.1

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