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  2. Top-down parsing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Top-down_parsing

    Top-down parsing in computer science is a parsing strategy where one first looks at the highest level of the parse tree and works down the parse tree by using the rewriting rules of a formal grammar. [1] LL parsers are a type of parser that uses a top-down parsing strategy.

  3. Bottom-up and top-down design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bottom-up_and_top-down_design

    Bottom-up parsing is parsing strategy that recognizes the text's lowest-level small details first, before its mid-level structures, and leaves the highest-level overall structure to last. [3] In top-down parsing, on the other hand, one first looks at the highest level of the parse tree and works down the parse tree by using the rewriting rules ...

  4. Earley parser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earley_parser

    Earley's algorithm is a top-down dynamic programming algorithm. In the following, we use Earley's dot notation: given a production X → αβ, the notation X → α • β represents a condition in which α has already been parsed and β is expected. Input position 0 is the position prior to input.

  5. Recursive descent parser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recursive_descent_parser

    In computer science, a recursive descent parser is a kind of top-down parser built from a set of mutually recursive procedures (or a non-recursive equivalent) where each such procedure implements one of the nonterminals of the grammar. Thus the structure of the resulting program closely mirrors that of the grammar it recognizes. [1] [2]

  6. Packrat parser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Packrat_parser

    Birman's work was later refined by Aho and Ullman; and renamed as Top-Down Parsing Language (TDPL), and Generalized TDPL (GTDPL), respectively. These algorithms were the first of their kind to employ deterministic top-down parsing with backtracking. [2] [3] Bryan Ford developed PEGs as an expansion of GTDPL and TS.

  7. Parsing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parsing

    A parser is a software component that takes input data (typically text) and builds a data structure – often some kind of parse tree, abstract syntax tree or other hierarchical structure, giving a structural representation of the input while checking for correct syntax. The parsing may be preceded or followed by other steps, or these may be ...

  8. CYK algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CYK_algorithm

    The above algorithm is a recognizer that will only determine if a sentence is in the language. It is simple to extend it into a parser that also constructs a parse tree, by storing parse tree nodes as elements of the array, instead of the boolean 1. The node is linked to the array elements that were used to produce it, so as to build the tree ...

  9. Parse tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parse_tree

    A simple parse tree. A parse tree is made up of nodes and branches. [4] In the picture the parse tree is the entire structure, starting from S and ending in each of the leaf nodes (John, ball, the, hit). In a parse tree, each node is either a root node, a branch node, or a leaf node. In the above example, S is a root node, NP and VP are branch ...