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Pratt Parser

Top-Down Operator Precedence Parsing

Face complex precedence and associativity rules without fear using elm/parser.

elm install elm/parser
elm install dmy/elm-pratt-parser

Table of Contents

Overview

Writing parsers using elm/parser is usually simple and fun, but handling complex operators precedence and associativity rules in an expression parser can be tricky, or even hard and frustrating for more complex cases.

This library goal is to fix this by adding a single expression parser to elm/parser:

expression :
    { oneOf : List (Config expr -> Parser expr)
    , andThenOneOf : List (Config expr -> ( Int, expr -> Parser expr ))
    , spaces : Parser ()
    }
    -> Parser expr

This functions is configured with smaller standard parsers, precedence values and associativity rules, thanks to a minimalist flexible API, and handles the whole expression parsing complexity using a simple but powerful algorithm inherited from the one described by Vaughan Pratt in his 1973 paper "Top Down Operator Precedence" [1].

Helpers are provided for literals, constants, prefix, infix and postfix expressions but custom ones can be defined when needed.

The library is small, has a test suite, benefits from tail-call elimination for left-associative operations, never uses backtrackable by itself and allows to produce helpful error messages using Parser.Advanced if wanted.

Getting Started

Calculator Example

Here is a quite complete calculator.

It evaluates the result during parsing, without generating an explicit intermediate abstract syntax tree (AST), so it directly uses Float as the expr type.

import Parser exposing ((|.), (|=), Parser)
import Pratt


mathExpression : Parser Float
mathExpression =
    Pratt.expression
        { oneOf =
            [ Pratt.literal Parser.float
            , Pratt.constant (Parser.keyword "pi") pi
            , Pratt.prefix 3 (Parser.symbol "-") negate
            , Pratt.prefix 5 (Parser.keyword "cos") cos
            , parenthesizedExpression
            ]
        , andThenOneOf =
            [ Pratt.infixLeft 1 (Parser.symbol "+") (+)
            , Pratt.infixLeft 1 (Parser.symbol "-") (-)
            , Pratt.infixLeft 2 (Parser.symbol "*") (*)
            , Pratt.infixLeft 2 (Parser.symbol "/") (/)
            , Pratt.infixRight 4 (Parser.symbol "^") (^)
            , Pratt.postfix 6 (Parser.symbol "°") degrees
            ]
        , spaces = Parser.spaces
        }


parenthesizedExpression : Pratt.Config Float -> Parser Float
parenthesizedExpression config =
    Parser.succeed identity
        |. Parser.symbol "("
        |= Pratt.subExpression 0 config
        |. Parser.symbol ")"


math : Parser Float
math =
    Parser.succeed identity
        |= mathExpression
        -- string must end after an expression:
        |. Parser.end


Parser.run math "-2^2^3" --> Ok -(2^(2^3))
Parser.run math "-2^2^3" --> Ok -256

Parser.run math "3--4" --> Ok (3-(-4))
Parser.run math "3--4" --> Ok 7

Parser.run math "cos (2*pi)" --> Ok 1
Parser.run math "cos (2*180°)" --> Ok 1
Parser.run math "1 - cos 360°" --> Ok 0

Step by Step

Let's describe step by step each part of the example.

1. First we configure the parsers used at the start of an expression or after an operator. The expression parser cannot work without at least one of these parsers succeeding as it would not be able to parse an expr value. These parsers include among others: literals, constants, prefix expressions or sub-expressions parsers.

mathExpression : Parser Float
mathExpression =
    Pratt.expression
        { oneOf =
            [ Pratt.literal Parser.float
            , Pratt.constant (Parser.keyword "pi") pi
            , Pratt.prefix 3 (Parser.symbol "-") negate
            , Pratt.prefix 5 (Parser.keyword "cos") cos
            , parenthesizedExpression
            ]

Note that literal, constant and prefix helpers all use a Parser argument, like float, keyword pi or symbol "-" here, so you have full control on parsing and produced error messages.

The prefix helper first needs an Int argument, the precedence. The higher it is, the higher the operator precedence is.

All parsers last parameter is a Config expr, passed automatically by the expression parser, that allows to call recursively subExpression with a custom precedence.
This is used here in the parser for sub-expressions between parentheses and also inside prefix and infix helpers.
This is why the type of each oneOf parser is Config expr -> Parser expr.

parenthesizedExpression : Pratt.Config Float -> Parser Float
parenthesizedExpression config =
    Parser.succeed identity
        |. Parser.symbol "("
        |= Pratt.subExpression 0 config
        |. Parser.symbol ")"

Note that expression is equivalent to subExpression 0, so the expression parser starts parsing the expression with the lowest precedence.

2. Then we configure the parsers that use the result of the previous parser. As they use the previously parsed expression, they have an expr parameter. They typically include infix and postfix expressions parsers:

        , andThenOneOf =
            [ Pratt.infixLeft 1 (Parser.symbol "+") (+)
            , Pratt.infixLeft 1 (Parser.symbol "-") (-)
            , Pratt.infixLeft 2 (Parser.symbol "*") (*)
            , Pratt.infixLeft 2 (Parser.symbol "/") (/)
            , Pratt.infixRight 4 (Parser.symbol "^") (^)
            , postfix 6 (Parser.symbol "°") degrees
            ]

Like configuration oneOf parsers, they receive a Config expr, but return instead a tuple (Int, expr -> Parser expr) because they need to provide their precedence to the algorithm, and a expr -> Parser expr parser that will be called with the preceding expression (the left expression).

See subExpression documentation to better understand the algorithm.

3. We can then complete the configuration by adding a spaces : Parser () parser that will be used between each previously configured parser.
Parser.spaces is used here, but succeed () could have been used if a general parser was not wanted.

        , spaces = Parser.spaces
        }

4. At last we require the end of string after our expression by including our parser into a top-level elm/parser one:

math : Parser Float
math =
    Parser.succeed identity
        |= mathExpression
        -- string must end after an expression:
        |. Parser.end

That's it!
And we have used all the functions exposed by the Pratt module.

A more complete example is included in the package source code, see examples/Calc.elm.

For a similar example but with an AST using a custom type, see examples/Math.elm instead.

Of course, you can define parsers for any expression, not only mathematical ones. For example have a look at examples/Boole.elm for a start with Boole's Algebra and an example of if then else expressions.

About Pratt Parsers

The parsers configured by this library use a variant of the algorithm described by Vaughan Pratt in his 1973 paper "Top Down Operator Precedence" [1]. Such parsers are usuall called "Pratt parsers", "Top-Down Operator Precedence parsers", or "TDOP" parsers.

This algorithm is used in this library because my experience comparing alternatives confirmed for the most part what Vaughan Pratt claimed:

"The approach described [...] is very simple to understand, trivial to implement, easy to use, extremely efficient in practice if not in theory, yet flexible enough to meet most reasonable syntactic needs of users [...]. Moreover, it deals nicely with error detection."

Note that the later "precedence climbing" algorithm is now often considered as a special case of the earlier Pratt parsing algorithm.

See [2] to read more about them.

At last, Douglas Crockford, who implemented a Javascript parser using a Pratt parser for JSLint [4], said:

"Another explanation is that his technique is most effective when used in a dynamic, functional programming language."

I believe that the dynamic part has already been proven wrong [5][6][7], and I hope that this implementation will contribute confirming it.

Terminology

The terminology used in Vaughan R. Pratt's paper is not really intuitive nor mainstream so it has been changed in this library:

  • Configuration oneOf parsers are called in the paper nud, for "Null Denotation". Here is how they are defined in the original paper:

"We will call the code denoted by a token without a preceding expression its null denotation or nud"

  • Configuration andThenOneOf parsers are called led, for "Left Denotation". Here is how they are defined in the original paper:

"We will call the code denoted by a token with a preceding expression its left denotation or led"

  • The precedence is called binding power in the paper. It is used for operators precedence, and also allows to achieve right-associative operations.

See [3] and the algorithm described in subExpression documentation for more details.

Design and Implementation Considerations

The main differences with Pratt's design and implementation, that reflects on this library API, are:

  1. Tokens are reduced to their minimal form:

    • just a parser for nud tokens
    • a precedence (alias binding power) and a parser (with an expression parameter) for led tokens

    There is therefore no actual token anymore and it is not necessary to tokenize the expression before parsing it.

  2. nuds and leds are not stored in a Dict using the operator as the key, instead they are just two lists of parsers used with Parser.oneOf.

References

  1. Vaughan R. Pratt, "Top Down Operator Precedence", 1973.
  2. Andy Chu, Pratt Parsing Index and Updates, 2017 (updated regularly)
  3. Eli Bendersky, Top-Down operator precedence parsing, 2010
  4. Douglas Crockford, Top Down Operator Precedence Douglas Crockford, 2007
  5. Andy Chu, Pratt Parsers Can Be Statically Typed, 2016
  6. Matthew Manela, A Monadic Pratt Parser, 2011
  7. Julian Hall, Pratt Parsing in Parsec. Perfect., parsec-pratt, 2016

License

BSD-3-Clause