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  2. Tree-sitter (parser generator) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree-sitter_(parser_generator)

    It is used to parse source code into concrete syntax trees usable in compilers, interpreters, text editors, and static analyzers. [1] [2] It is specialized for use in text editors, as it supports incremental parsing for updating parse trees while code is edited in real time, [3] and provides a built-in S-expression query system for analyzing ...

  3. Dangling else - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dangling_else

    The dangling else is a problem in programming of parser generators in which an optional else clause in an if–then(–else) statement can make nested conditional statements ambiguous. Formally, the reference context-free grammar of the language is ambiguous, meaning there is more than one correct parse tree.

  4. 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 ...

  5. Shift-reduce parser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shift-Reduce_Parser

    These four root nodes are temporarily held in a parse stack. The remaining unparsed portion of the input stream is "C * 2". A shift-reduce parser works by doing some combination of Shift steps and Reduce steps, hence the name. A Shift step advances in the input stream by one symbol. That shifted symbol becomes a new single-node parse tree.

  6. Abstract syntax tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abstract_syntax_tree

    An abstract syntax tree (AST) is a data structure used in computer science to represent the structure of a program or code snippet. It is a tree representation of the abstract syntactic structure of text (often source code ) written in a formal language .

  7. Bottom-up parsing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bottom-up_parsing

    Left corner parsing is a hybrid method that works bottom-up along the left edges of each subtree, and top-down on the rest of the parse tree. If a language grammar has multiple rules that may start with the same leftmost symbols but have different endings, then that grammar can be efficiently handled by a deterministic bottom-up parse but ...

  8. Parboiled (Java) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parboiled_(Java)

    parboiled is an open-source Java library released under an Apache License. It provides support for defining PEG parsers directly in Java source code. [2] [3] parboiled is commonly used as an alternative for regular expressions or parser generators (like ANTLR or JavaCC), especially for smaller and medium-size applications.

  9. Yacc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yacc

    Yacc (Yet Another Compiler-Compiler) is a computer program for the Unix operating system developed by Stephen C. Johnson.It is a lookahead left-to-right rightmost derivation (LALR) parser generator, generating a LALR parser (the part of a compiler that tries to make syntactic sense of the source code) based on a formal grammar, written in a notation similar to Backus–Naur form (BNF). [1]