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Parc

Version 0.1 | See also: TandemVinegarFountain


Parser combinator libraries are easy to write. That's why GitHub is full of them.

I wanted to write a particularly simple one, both to expose its structure, and to have something to experiment with.

Parc

The basic library is Parc.hs, about 35 lines long (including type declarations and blank lines). Some code that uses it can be found in ParcDemo.hs.

But Parc.hs is so simple that you can only build a recognizer with it. Generally, you want to do more with the input string than say whether it is or is not in the language, yes? So, there are more extended versions here too.

(Before getting to the extended versions, I want to highlight one thing, which is that the choice operator in Parc is ordered choice, as used in e.g. PEG parsers. This is arguably less mathematically nice than the non-deterministic choice used in e.g. context-free grammars, but it is unarguably simpler to implement.)

ParcSt

An extension that adds state to the parser, making it a stateful parser, is ParcSt.hs. Some code that uses it can be found in ParcStDemo.hs.

This lets you write an actual parser, with an actual output value.

But even so, the facility it provides for state management is rather crude. The type of the state variable is polymorphic, so the programmer can choose any type they like for it. But every parser combinator assumes the state it will take as input is the same type as the state it will produce on output. In a strictly typed language, that can be a bit limiting. Ideally, we want to write parsers that parse different types of things, then tie them together into bigger, composite parsers.

(This isn't a problem in a dynamically typed language, but in such languages you have a different problem -- namely, the possibility of a type mismatch somewhere in the composite parser which will only become apparent at runtime.)

ParcSt2St

So we have a very small modification called ParcSt2St.hs. In this, the Parser type is polymorphic on two types, one for input and one for output.

Some code that uses this can be found in ParcSt2StDemo.hs. In fact, it is virtually a drop-in replacement for ParcSt.hs, as the type signature is simply more general.

It does illuminate the types of the combinators somewhat though; seq has a type that corresponds to transitivity, while many requires that the output type is the same as the input type, which makes sense if you think of it as a loop that may occur any number of times -- only an output that can be fed back into the input would make sense there.

ParcMerge

To allow finer manipulation of the parsing state, we extend ParcSt2St.hs with an extra combinator. We can't build this combinator out of existing combinators; it needs to access the parse state directly. Also, its definition turns out to be somewhat more complicated. So, this is where we start leaving "fits on a page" territory.

The ParcMerge.hs module extends ParcSt2St.hs with a combinator called merge. merge takes a parser P and a function F which takes two state values and returns a third state value as input; it produces a new parser as its output. This new parser applies P, then produces a new state by combining the state before P, and the state produced by P, using F.

ParcMergeDemo.hs demonstrates how this merge combinator can be used to apply arithmetic operators like + and * when parsing an arithmetic expression.

ParcAssert

With what we have so far, if we merely accumulate state as we parse, we can parse only context-free languages.

But if we enable the parser to succeed or fail based on some predicate applied to the parsing state, we can parse context-sensitive languages.

ParcAssertDemo.hs uses ParcSt2St and adds a combinator called assert that takes such a predicate on the parsing state, and produces a parser which succeeds only when that predicate is true on the current parsing state, failing otherwise.

The demo module gives an example of a parser for a classic context-free language: strings of the form a^n b^n c^n.

ParcConsume

This is where it starts getting markedly experimental. Feel free to stop reading now.

With ParcAssert, we can parse context-sensitive languages. But if we don't restrict ourselves to passing sufficiently simple predicates to assert, we can parse languages quite beyond the context-sensitive. For example, we could use a predicate that checks if the string passed to it is a valid sentence in Presburger arithmetic, or even a valid computation trace of a Turing machine.

Formulating a set of parser combinators which is provably capable of parsing only the context-sensitive languages seems like a hard problem. One could probably create combinators that can describe any context-sensitive grammar (CSG), or an equivalent formalism such as a noncontracting grammar. But these formalisms are actually extremely inefficient ways to parse most context-sensitive languages.

We can take some small steps though.

First, we can establish a proviso that we only ever expect the functions that are passed to our higher-order combinators to do a small amount of computation. For concreteness, say polynomial time. (We could in fact assemble a library of "state manipulation combinators" and ensure those are the only ones that can be used, to enforce this.)

But that by itself isn't enough. If we allow combinators that recurse or loop without consuming input, we can still perform arbitrarily large amounts of computation.

So we get rid of ok and many and update, and instead of assert, use require the use of pred, which always consumes a character before it checks if it should succeed (possibly modifying the state) or fail.

And the result is ParcConsume.hs, which is a lot like ParcSt2St, just with some things ripped out of it.

ParcConsumeDemo.hs shows that it can recognize a context-sensitive language, and that the means by which it does so relies on it consuming its input; and the lack of other means of manipulating the state should be persuasive that it is limited in its ability to make these calculations. Exactly how limited, though? I'm not quite prepared to make a claim on that yet.