Package: tcllib, Version: CVS HEAD

NAME

grammar::me_ast -
Various representations of ASTs

DESCRIPTION

This document specifies various representations for the abstract syntax trees (short AST) generated by instances of ME virtual machines, independent of variant. Please go and read the document grammar::me_intro first if you do not know what a ME virtual machine is.

ASTs and all the representations we specify distinguish between two types of nodes, namely:

Terminal
Terminal nodes refer to the terminal symbols found in the token stream. They are always leaf nodes. I.e. terminal nodes never have children.
Nonterminal
Nonterminal nodes represent a nonterminal symbol of the grammar used during parsing. They can occur as leaf and inner nodes of the tree.

Both types of nodes carry basic range information telling a user which parts of the input are covered by the node by providing the location of the first and last tokens found within the range. Locations are provided as non-negative integer offsets from the beginning of the token stream, with the first token found in the stream located at offset 0 (zero).

The root of an AS tree can be either a terminal or nonterminal node.

AST VALUES

This representation of ASTs is a Tcl list. The main list represents the root node of the tree, with the representations of the children nested within.

Each node is represented by a single Tcl list containing three or more elements. The first element is either the empty string or the name of a nonterminal symbol (which is never the empty string). The second and third elements are then the locations of the first and last tokens. Any additional elements after the third are then the representations of the children, with the leftmost child first, i.e. as the fourth element of the list representing the node.

AST OBJECTS

In this representation an AST is represented by a Tcl object command whose API is compatible to the tree objects provided by the package struct::tree. I.e it has to support at least all of the methods described by that package, and may support more.

Because of this the remainder of the specifications is written using the terms of struct::tree.

Each node of the AST directly maps to a node in the tree object. All data beyond the child nodes, i.e. node type and input locations, are stored in attributes of the node in the tree object. They are:

type
The type of the AST node. The recognized values are terminal and nonterminal.
range
The locations of the first and last token of the terminal data in the input covered by the node. This is a list containing two locations.
detail
This attribute is present only for nonterminal nodes. It contains the name of the nonterminal symbol stored in the node.

EXTENDED AST OBJECTS

Extended AST objects are like AST objects, with additional information.
detail
This attribute is now present at all nodes. Its contents are unchanged for nonterminal nodes. For terminal nodes it contains a list describing all tokens from the input which are covered by the node.
Each element of the list contains the token name, the associated lexeme attribute, line number, and column index, in this order.
range_lc
This new attribute is defined for all nodes, and contains the locations from attribute range translated into line number and column index. Lines are counted from 1, columns are counted from 0.

BUGS, IDEAS, FEEDBACK

This document, and the package it describes, will undoubtedly contain bugs and other problems. Please report such in the category grammar_me of the http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=12883. Please also report any ideas for enhancements you may have for either package and/or documentation.

KEYWORDS

AST, abstract syntax tree