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  2. Recursive descent parser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recursive_descent_parser

    A predictive parser is a recursive descent parser that does not require backtracking. [3] Predictive parsing is possible only for the class of LL( k ) grammars, which are the context-free grammars for which there exists some positive integer k that allows a recursive descent parser to decide which production to use by examining only the next k ...

  3. Dancing Links - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dancing_Links

    It is particularly useful for efficiently implementing backtracking algorithms, such as Knuth's Algorithm X for the exact cover problem. [1] Algorithm X is a recursive , nondeterministic , depth-first , backtracking algorithm that finds all solutions to the exact cover problem.

  4. Memoization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memoization

    Memoization was explored as a parsing strategy in 1991 by Peter Norvig, who demonstrated that an algorithm similar to the use of dynamic programming and state-sets in Earley's algorithm (1970), and tables in the CYK algorithm of Cocke, Younger and Kasami, could be generated by introducing automatic memoization to a simple backtracking recursive ...

  5. Backtracking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backtracking

    The classic textbook example of the use of backtracking is the eight queens puzzle, that asks for all arrangements of eight chess queens on a standard chessboard so that no queen attacks any other. In the common backtracking approach, the partial candidates are arrangements of k queens in the first k rows of the board, all in different rows and ...

  6. Parser combinator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parser_combinator

    In computer programming, a parser combinator is a higher-order function that accepts several parsers as input and returns a new parser as its output. In this context, a parser is a function accepting strings as input and returning some structure as output, typically a parse tree or a set of indices representing locations in the string where parsing stopped successfully.

  7. Talk:Recursive descent parser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Recursive_descent_parser

    The example uses no token look ahead at all and thus is not really helpful to understand the strength of recursive descent parsers. There should at least be a bit of ambiguity in the grammar, otherwise the example is too trivial and - even worse - points the reader into wrong directions.

  8. Backjumping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backjumping

    When further backtracking or backjumping from the node, the variable of the node is removed from this set, and the set is sent to the node that is the destination of backtracking or backjumping. This algorithm works because the set maintained in a node collects all variables that are relevant to prove unsatisfiability in the leaves that are ...

  9. Look-ahead (backtracking) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Look-ahead_(backtracking)

    In backtracking algorithms, look ahead is the generic term for a subprocedure that attempts to foresee the effects of choosing a branching variable to evaluate one of its values. The two main aims of look-ahead are to choose a variable to evaluate next and to choose the order of values to assign to it.

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