Chapter 2 Programming Language Syntax Programming Language Pragmatics

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Chapter 2 : : Programming Language Syntax Programming Language Pragmatics Michael L. Scott Copyright

Chapter 2 : : Programming Language Syntax Programming Language Pragmatics Michael L. Scott Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Parsing: recap • There are large classes of grammars for which we can build

Parsing: recap • There are large classes of grammars for which we can build parsers that run in linear time – The two most important classes are called LL and LR • LL stands for 'Left-to-right, Leftmost derivation'. • LR stands for 'Left-to-right, Rightmost derivation’ Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Parsing • LL parsers are also called 'top-down', or 'predictive' parsers & LR parsers

Parsing • LL parsers are also called 'top-down', or 'predictive' parsers & LR parsers are also called 'bottom-up', or 'shift-reduce' parsers • There are several important sub-classes of LR parsers – SLR – LALR • (We won't be going into detail on the differences between them. ) Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Parsing • You commonly see LL or LR (or whatever) written with a number

Parsing • You commonly see LL or LR (or whatever) written with a number in parentheses after it – This number indicates how many tokens of look-ahead are required in order to parse – Almost all real compilers use one token of look -ahead • The expression grammar (with precedence and associativity) you saw before is LR(1), but not LL(1) Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Parsing • Every LL(1) grammar is also LR(1), though right recursion in production tends

Parsing • Every LL(1) grammar is also LR(1), though right recursion in production tends to require very deep stacks and complicates semantic analysis • Every CFL that can be parsed deterministically has an SLR(1) grammar (which is LR(1)) • Every deterministic CFL with the prefix property (no valid string is a prefix of another valid string) has an LR(0) grammar Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing • Here is an LL(1) grammar that we saw late time in

LL Parsing • Here is an LL(1) grammar that we saw late time in class (based on Fig 2. 15 in book): 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. program stmt_list → stmt list $$$ → stmt_list | ε stmt → id : = expr | read id | write expr → term_tail → add op term_tail | ε Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing • 10. 11. • • LL(1) grammar (continued) term → factor fact_tailt

LL Parsing • 10. 11. • • LL(1) grammar (continued) term → factor fact_tailt fact_tail → mult_op fact_tail | ε factor → ( expr ) | id | number add_op → + | mult_op → * | / Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing • Like the bottom-up grammar, this one captures associativity and precedence, but

LL Parsing • Like the bottom-up grammar, this one captures associativity and precedence, but most people don't find it as pretty – for one thing, the operands of a given operator aren't in a RHS together! – however, the simplicity of the parsing algorithm makes up for this weakness • How do we parse a string with this grammar? – by building the parse tree incrementally Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing • Example (average program) read A read B sum : = A

LL Parsing • Example (average program) read A read B sum : = A + B write sum / 2 • We start at the top and predict needed productions on the basis of the current left-most non-terminal in the tree and the current input token Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing • Parse tree for the average program (Figure 2. 17) Copyright ©

LL Parsing • Parse tree for the average program (Figure 2. 17) Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing: actual implementation • Table-driven LL parsing: you have a big loop in

LL Parsing: actual implementation • Table-driven LL parsing: you have a big loop in which you repeatedly look up an action in a two-dimensional table based on current leftmost non-terminal and current input token. The actions are (1) match a terminal (2) predict a production (3) announce a syntax error Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing • LL(1) parse table for parsing for calculator language Copyright © 2009

LL Parsing • LL(1) parse table for parsing for calculator language Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing • To keep track of the left-most non-terminal, you push the as-yet-unseen

LL Parsing • To keep track of the left-most non-terminal, you push the as-yet-unseen portions of productions onto a stack – for details see Figure 2. 20 • The key thing to keep in mind is that the stack contains all the stuff you expect to see between now and the end of the program – what you predict you will see Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing: when it isn’t LL • Problems trying to make a grammar LL(1)

LL Parsing: when it isn’t LL • Problems trying to make a grammar LL(1) – left recursion • example: id_list → id | id_list , id equivalently id_list → id id_list_tail → , id id_list_tail | epsilon • we can get rid of all left recursion mechanically in any grammar Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing • Problems trying to make a grammar LL(1) – common prefixes: another

LL Parsing • Problems trying to make a grammar LL(1) – common prefixes: another thing that LL parsers can't handle • solved by "left-factoring” • example: stmt → id : = expr | id ( arg_list ) equivalently stmt → id id_stmt_tail → : = expr | ( arg_list) • we can eliminate left-factor mechanically Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing • Note that eliminating left recursion and common prefixes does NOT make

LL Parsing • Note that eliminating left recursion and common prefixes does NOT make a grammar LL – there are infinitely many non-LL LANGUAGES, and the mechanical transformations work on them just fine – the few that arise in practice, however, can generally be handled with kludges Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing • Problems trying to make a grammar LL(1) – the"dangling else" problem

LL Parsing • Problems trying to make a grammar LL(1) – the"dangling else" problem prevents grammars from being LL(1) (or in fact LL(k) for any k) – the following natural grammar fragment is inherently ambiguous (from Pascal) stmt → if cond then_clause else_clause | other_stuff then_clause → then stmt else_clause → else stmt | epsilon Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing • The less natural grammar fragment can be parsed bottom-up (so LR)

LL Parsing • The less natural grammar fragment can be parsed bottom-up (so LR) but not top-down (so not LL) stmt → balanced_stmt | unbalanced_stmt → if cond then balanced_stmt else balanced_stmt | other_stuff unbalanced_stmt → if cond then stmt | if cond then balanced_stmt else unbalanced_stmt Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing • The usual approach, whether top-down OR bottom-up, is to use the

LL Parsing • The usual approach, whether top-down OR bottom-up, is to use the ambiguous grammar together with a disambiguating rule that says – else goes with the closest then or – more generally, the first of two possible productions is the one to predict (or reduce) Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing • Better yet, languages (since Pascal) generally employ explicit end-markers, which eliminate

LL Parsing • Better yet, languages (since Pascal) generally employ explicit end-markers, which eliminate this problem • In Modula-2, for example, one says: if A = B then if C = D then E : = F end else G : = H end • Ada says 'end if'; other languages say 'fi' Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing • One problem with end markers is that they tend to bunch

LL Parsing • One problem with end markers is that they tend to bunch up. In Pascal you say if A else = B then if A = C if A = D if A = E. . . ; … then … • With end markers this becomes if A else end; Copyright © 2009 Elsevier = B then … if A = C then … if A = D then … if A = E then …. . . ; end;

LL Parsing • The algorithm to build predict sets is tedious (for a "real"

LL Parsing • The algorithm to build predict sets is tedious (for a "real" sized grammar), but relatively simple • It consists of three stages: – (1) compute FIRST sets for symbols – (2) compute FOLLOW sets for non-terminals (this requires computing FIRST sets for some strings) – (3) compute predict sets or table for all productions Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing • It is conventional in general discussions of grammars to use –

LL Parsing • It is conventional in general discussions of grammars to use – lower case letters near the beginning of the alphabet for terminals – lower case letters near the end of the alphabet for strings of terminals – upper case letters near the beginning of the alphabet for non-terminals – upper case letters near the end of the alphabet for arbitrary symbols – greek letters for arbitrary strings of symbols Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing • Algorithm First/Follow/Predict: – FIRST(α) == {a : α →* a β}

LL Parsing • Algorithm First/Follow/Predict: – FIRST(α) == {a : α →* a β} ∪ (if α =>* ε THEN {ε} ELSE NULL) – FOLLOW(A) == {a : S →+ α A a β} ∪ (if S →* α A THEN {ε} ELSE NULL) – Predict (A → X 1. . . Xm) == (FIRST (X 1. . . Xm) - {ε}) ∪ (if X 1, . . . , Xm →* ε then FOLLOW (A) ELSE NULL) • Details following… Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LL Parsing • If any token belongs to the predict set of more than

LL Parsing • If any token belongs to the predict set of more than one production with the same LHS, then the grammar is not LL(1) • A conflict can arise because – the same token can begin more than one RHS – it can begin one RHS and can also appear after the LHS in some valid program, and one possible RHS is ε Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LR Parsing • LR parsers are almost always table-driven: – like a table-driven LL

LR Parsing • LR parsers are almost always table-driven: – like a table-driven LL parser, an LR parser uses a big loop in which it repeatedly inspects a twodimensional table to find out what action to take – unlike the LL parser, however, the LR driver has non-trivial state (like a DFA), and the table is indexed by current input token and current state – the stack contains a record of what has been seen SO FAR (NOT what is expected) Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LR Parsing • A scanner is a DFA – it can be specified with

LR Parsing • A scanner is a DFA – it can be specified with a state diagram • An LL or LR parser is a Push Down Automata, or PDA – a PDA can be specified with a state diagram and a stack • the state diagram looks just like a DFA state diagram, except the arcs are labeled with <input symbol, top-ofstack symbol> pairs, and in addition to moving to a new state the PDA has the option of pushing or popping a finite number of symbols onto/off the stack Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LR Parsing • An LL(1) PDA has only one state! – well, actually two;

LR Parsing • An LL(1) PDA has only one state! – well, actually two; it needs a second one to accept with, but that's all – all the arcs are self loops; the only difference between them is the choice of whether to push or pop – the final state is reached by a transition that sees EOF on the input and the stack Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LR Parsing • An LR (or SLR/LALR) PDA has multiple states – it is

LR Parsing • An LR (or SLR/LALR) PDA has multiple states – it is a "recognizer, " not a "predictor" – it builds a parse tree from the bottom up – the states keep track of which productions we might be in the middle • The parsing of the Characteristic Finite State Machine (CFSM) is based on – Shift – Reduce Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LR Parsing • To illustrate LR parsing, consider the grammar (from Figure 2. 24):

LR Parsing • To illustrate LR parsing, consider the grammar (from Figure 2. 24): 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. program → stmt list $$$ stmt_list → stmt_list stmt | stmt → id : = expr | read id | write expr → term | expr add op term Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LR Parsing • LR grammar (continued): 9. term → factor 10. | term mult_op

LR Parsing • LR grammar (continued): 9. term → factor 10. | term mult_op factor 11. factor →( expr ) 12. | id 13. | number 14. add op → + 15. | 16. mult op → * 17. | / Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LR Parsing • This grammar is SLR(1), a particularly nice class of bottom-up grammar

LR Parsing • This grammar is SLR(1), a particularly nice class of bottom-up grammar – it isn't exactly what we saw originally – we've eliminated the epsilon production to simplify the presentation • When parsing, mark current position with a “. ”, and can have a similar sort of table to mark what state to go to Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LR Parsing Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LR Parsing Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LR Parsing Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LR Parsing Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LR Parsing Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

LR Parsing Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Syntax Errors • When parsing a program, the parser will often detect a syntax

Syntax Errors • When parsing a program, the parser will often detect a syntax error – Generally when the next token/input doesn’t form a valid possible transition. • What should we do? – Halt and find closest rule that does match. – Recover and continue parsing if possible. • Most compilers don’t just halt; this would mean ignoring all code past the error. – Instead, goal is to find and report as many errors as possible. Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Syntax Errors: approaches • Method 1: Panic mode: • Define a small set of

Syntax Errors: approaches • Method 1: Panic mode: • Define a small set of “safe symbols”. – In C++, start from just after next semicolon – In Python, jump to next newline and continue • When an error occurs, computer jumps back to last safe symbol, and tries to compile from the next safe symbol on. – (Ever notice that errors often point to the line before or after the actual error? ) Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Syntax Errors: approaches • Method 2: Phase-level recovery – Refine panic mode with different

Syntax Errors: approaches • Method 2: Phase-level recovery – Refine panic mode with different safe symbols for different states – Ex: expression -> ), statement -> ; • Method 3: Context specific look-ahead: – Improves on 2 by checking various contexts in which the production might appear in a parse tree – Improves error messages, but costs in terms of speed and complexity Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Beyond Parsing: Ch. 4 • We also need to define rules to connect the

Beyond Parsing: Ch. 4 • We also need to define rules to connect the productions to actual operations concepts. • Example grammar: E → E + T E → E – T E → T T → T * F T → T / F T → F F → - F • Question: Is it LL or LR? Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Attribute Grammars • We can turn this into an attribute grammar as follows (similar

Attribute Grammars • We can turn this into an attribute grammar as follows (similar to Figure 4. 1): E E E T T T F F F → → → → → E + T E – T T T * F T / F F - F (E) const Copyright © 2009 Elsevier E 1. val E. val T 1. val T. val F 1. val F. val = = = = = E 2. val + E 2. val T 2. val * T 2. val / F. val - F 2. val E. val C. val T. val F. val

Attribute Grammars • The attribute grammar serves to define the semantics of the input

Attribute Grammars • The attribute grammar serves to define the semantics of the input program • Attribute rules are best thought of as definitions, not assignments • They are not necessarily meant to be evaluated at any particular time, or in any particular order, though they do define their left-hand side in terms of the right-hand side Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Evaluating Attributes • The process of evaluating attributes is called annotation, or DECORATION, of

Evaluating Attributes • The process of evaluating attributes is called annotation, or DECORATION, of the parse tree [see next slide] – When a parse tree under this grammar is fully decorated, the value of the expression will be in the val attribute of the root • The code fragments for the rules are called SEMANTIC FUNCTIONS – Strictly speaking, they should be cast as functions, e. g. , E 1. val = sum (E 2. val, T. val), cf. , Figure 4. 1 Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Evaluating Attributes Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Evaluating Attributes Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Evaluating Attributes • This is a very simple attribute grammar: – Each symbol has

Evaluating Attributes • This is a very simple attribute grammar: – Each symbol has at most one attribute • the punctuation marks have no attributes • These attributes are all so-called SYNTHESIZED attributes: – They are calculated only from the attributes of things below them in the parse tree Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Evaluating Attributes • In general, we are allowed both synthesized and INHERITED attributes: –

Evaluating Attributes • In general, we are allowed both synthesized and INHERITED attributes: – Inherited attributes may depend on things above or to the side of them in the parse tree – Tokens have only synthesized attributes, initialized by the scanner (name of an identifier, value of a constant, etc. ). – Inherited attributes of the start symbol constitute run-time parameters of the compiler Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Evaluating Attributes • The grammar above is called SATTRIBUTED because it uses only synthesized

Evaluating Attributes • The grammar above is called SATTRIBUTED because it uses only synthesized attributes • Its ATTRIBUTE FLOW (attribute dependence graph) is purely bottom-up – It is SLR(1), but not LL(1) • An equivalent LL(1) grammar requires inherited attributes: Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Evaluating Attributes – Example • Attribute grammar in Figure 4. 3: E → T

Evaluating Attributes – Example • Attribute grammar in Figure 4. 3: E → T TT E. v =TT. v TT. st = T. v TT 1 → + T TT 2 TT 1. v = TT 2. v TT 2. st = TT 1. st + T. v TT 1 → - T TT 1. v = TT 2. v TT 2. st = TT 1. st - T. v TT → ε TT. v = TT. st T → F FT T. v =FT. v FT. st = F. v Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Evaluating Attributes– Example • Attribute grammar in Figure 4. 3 (continued): FT 1 →

Evaluating Attributes– Example • Attribute grammar in Figure 4. 3 (continued): FT 1 → * F FT 2 FT 1. v = FT 2. v FT 2. st = FT 1. st * F. v FT 1 → / F FT 2 FT 1. v = FT 2. v FT 2. st = FT 1. st / F. v FT → ε F 1 → - F 2 FT. v = FT. st F 1. v = - F 2. v F → ( E ) F. v = E. v F → const F. v = C. v • Figure 4. 4 – parse tree for (1+3)*2 Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Evaluating Attributes– Example Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Evaluating Attributes– Example Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Evaluating Attributes– Example • Attribute grammar in Figure 4. 3: – This attribute grammar

Evaluating Attributes– Example • Attribute grammar in Figure 4. 3: – This attribute grammar is a good bit messier than the first one, but it is still L-ATTRIBUTED, which means that the attributes can be evaluated in a single left-to-right pass over the input – In fact, they can be evaluated during an LL parse – Each synthetic attribute of a LHS symbol (by definition of synthetic) depends only on attributes of its RHS symbols Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Evaluating Attributes – Example • Attribute grammar in Figure 4. 3: – Each inherited

Evaluating Attributes – Example • Attribute grammar in Figure 4. 3: – Each inherited attribute of a RHS symbol (by definition of L-attributed) depends only on • inherited attributes of the LHS symbol, or • synthetic or inherited attributes of symbols to its left in the RHS – L-attributed grammars are the most general class of attribute grammars that can be evaluated during an LL parse Copyright © 2009 Elsevier

Evaluating Attributes • There are certain tasks, such as generation of code for short-circuit

Evaluating Attributes • There are certain tasks, such as generation of code for short-circuit Boolean expression evaluation, that are easiest to express with non-L-attributed attribute grammars • Because of the potential cost of complex traversal schemes, however, most real-world compilers insist that the grammar be Lattributed Copyright © 2009 Elsevier