parsec-3.1.13.0: Monadic parser combinators
Copyright(c) Daan Leijen 1999-2001 (c) Paolo Martini 2007
LicenseBSD-style (see the file libraries/parsec/LICENSE)
Maintainerderek.a.elkins@gmail.com
Stabilityprovisional
Portabilitynon-portable (uses existentially quantified data constructors)
Safe HaskellSafe
LanguageHaskell2010

Text.Parsec.Perm

Description

This module implements permutation parsers. The algorithm used is fairly complex since we push the type system to its limits :-) The algorithm is described in:

Parsing Permutation Phrases, by Arthur Baars, Andres Loh and Doaitse Swierstra. Published as a functional pearl at the Haskell Workshop 2001.

Synopsis

Documentation

type PermParser tok st a = StreamPermParser String st a Source #

Provided for backwards compatibility. The tok type is ignored.

data StreamPermParser s st a Source #

The type StreamPermParser s st a denotes a permutation parser that, when converted by the permute function, parses s streams with user state st and returns a value of type a on success.

Normally, a permutation parser is first build with special operators like (<||>) and than transformed into a normal parser using permute.

permute :: Stream s Identity tok => StreamPermParser s st a -> Parsec s st a Source #

The parser permute perm parses a permutation of parser described by perm. For example, suppose we want to parse a permutation of: an optional string of a's, the character b and an optional c. This can be described by:

 test  = permute (tuple <$?> ("",many1 (char 'a'))
                        <||> char 'b'
                        <|?> ('_',char 'c'))
       where
         tuple a b c  = (a,b,c)

(<||>) :: Stream s Identity tok => StreamPermParser s st (a -> b) -> Parsec s st a -> StreamPermParser s st b infixl 1 Source #

The expression perm <||> p adds parser p to the permutation parser perm. The parser p is not allowed to accept empty input - use the optional combinator (<|?>) instead. Returns a new permutation parser that includes p.

(<$$>) :: Stream s Identity tok => (a -> b) -> Parsec s st a -> StreamPermParser s st b infixl 2 Source #

The expression f <$$> p creates a fresh permutation parser consisting of parser p. The the final result of the permutation parser is the function f applied to the return value of p. The parser p is not allowed to accept empty input - use the optional combinator (<$?>) instead.

If the function f takes more than one parameter, the type variable b is instantiated to a functional type which combines nicely with the adds parser p to the (<||>) combinator. This results in stylized code where a permutation parser starts with a combining function f followed by the parsers. The function f gets its parameters in the order in which the parsers are specified, but actual input can be in any order.

(<|?>) :: Stream s Identity tok => StreamPermParser s st (a -> b) -> (a, Parsec s st a) -> StreamPermParser s st b infixl 1 Source #

The expression perm <||> (x,p) adds parser p to the permutation parser perm. The parser p is optional - if it can not be applied, the default value x will be used instead. Returns a new permutation parser that includes the optional parser p.

(<$?>) :: Stream s Identity tok => (a -> b) -> (a, Parsec s st a) -> StreamPermParser s st b infixl 2 Source #

The expression f <$?> (x,p) creates a fresh permutation parser consisting of parser p. The the final result of the permutation parser is the function f applied to the return value of p. The parser p is optional - if it can not be applied, the default value x will be used instead.