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The ANTLR 4 grammar compiler.
The newest version!
/*
* [The "BSD license"]
* Copyright (c) 2012-2016 Terence Parr
* Copyright (c) 2012-2016 Sam Harwell
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
*
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* 3. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products
* derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
* OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
* IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
* INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
* NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
* DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
* THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
* (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
* THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
/** The definitive ANTLR v3 grammar to parse ANTLR v4 grammars.
* The grammar builds ASTs that are sniffed by subsequent stages.
*/
parser grammar ANTLRParser;
options {
// Target language is Java, which is the default but being specific
// here as this grammar is also meant as a good example grammar for
// for users.
language = Java;
// The output of this grammar is going to be an AST upon which
// we run a semantic checking phase, then the rest of the analysis
// including final code generation.
output = AST;
// The vocabulary (tokens and their int token types) we are using
// for the parser. This is generated by the lexer. The vocab will be extended
// to include the imaginary tokens below.
tokenVocab = ANTLRLexer;
ASTLabelType = GrammarAST;
}
// Imaginary Tokens
//
// Imaginary tokens do not exist as far as the lexer is concerned, and it cannot
// generate them. However we sometimes need additional 'tokens' to use as root
// nodes for the AST we are generating. The tokens section is where we
// specify any such tokens
tokens {
RULE;
RULES;
RULEMODIFIERS;
BLOCK;
OPTIONAL;
CLOSURE;
POSITIVE_CLOSURE;
RANGE;
SET;
EPSILON;
ALT;
ID;
COMBINED;
WILDCARD;
ELEMENT_OPTIONS; // TOKEN
// lexer action stuff
LEXER_ALT_ACTION;
LEXER_ACTION_CALL; // ID(foo)
}
// Include the copyright in this source and also the generated source
//
@header {
/*
[The "BSD licence"]
Copyright (c) 2005-20012 Terence Parr
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
are met:
1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
3. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products
derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
package org.antlr.v4.parse;
import org.antlr.v4.tool.*;
import org.antlr.v4.tool.ast.*;
import java.util.ArrayDeque;
import java.util.Deque;
}
@members {
Deque paraphrases = new ArrayDeque();
public void grammarError(ErrorType etype, org.antlr.runtime.Token token, Object... args) { }
}
// The main entry point for parsing a V3 grammar from top to toe. This is
// the method call from whence to obtain the AST for the parse.
//
grammarSpec
@after {
GrammarAST options = (GrammarAST)$tree.getFirstChildWithType(ANTLRParser.OPTIONS);
if ( options!=null ) {
Grammar.setNodeOptions($tree, options);
}
}
: // First we should see the type and name of the grammar file that
// we are about to parse.
//
grammarType id SEMI
// There now follows zero or more declaration sections that should
// be given to us before the rules are declared
//
// A number of things can be declared/stated before the grammar rules
// 'proper' are parsed. These include grammar imports (delegate), grammar
// options, imaginary token declarations, global scope declarations,
// and actions such as @header. In this rule we allow any number of
// these constructs in any order so that the grammar author is not
// constrained by some arbitrary order of declarations that nobody
// can remember. In the next phase of the parse, we verify that these
// constructs are valid, not repeated and so on.
sync ( prequelConstruct sync )*
// We should now see at least one ANTLR EBNF style rule
// declaration. If the rules are missing we will let the
// semantic verification phase tell the user about it.
//
rules
modeSpec*
// And we force ANTLR to process everything it finds in the input
// stream by specifying hte need to match End Of File before the
// parse is complete.
//
EOF
// Having parsed everything in the file and accumulated the relevant
// subtrees, we can now rewrite everything into the main AST form
// that our tree walkers are expecting.
//
-> ^(grammarType // The grammar type is our root AST node
id // We need to identify the grammar of course
prequelConstruct* // The set of declarations we accumulated
rules // And of course, we need the set of rules we discovered
modeSpec*
)
;
grammarType
@after {
if ( $t!=null ) ((GrammarRootAST)$tree).grammarType = $t.type;
else ((GrammarRootAST)$tree).grammarType=COMBINED;
}
: ( t=LEXER g=GRAMMAR -> GRAMMAR[$g, "LEXER_GRAMMAR", getTokenStream()]
| // A standalone parser specification
t=PARSER g=GRAMMAR -> GRAMMAR[$g, "PARSER_GRAMMAR", getTokenStream()]
// A combined lexer and parser specification
| g=GRAMMAR -> GRAMMAR[$g, "COMBINED_GRAMMAR", getTokenStream()]
)
;
// This is the list of all constructs that can be declared before
// the set of rules that compose the grammar, and is invoked 0..n
// times by the grammarPrequel rule.
prequelConstruct
: // A list of options that affect analysis and/or code generation
optionsSpec
| // A list of grammars to which this grammar will delegate certain
// parts of the parsing sequence - a set of imported grammars
delegateGrammars
| // The declaration of any token types we need that are not already
// specified by a preceding grammar, such as when a parser declares
// imaginary tokens with which to construct the AST, or a rewriting
// tree parser adds further imaginary tokens to ones defined in a prior
// {tree} parser.
tokensSpec
| // A list of custom channels used by the grammar
channelsSpec
| // A declaration of language target implemented constructs. All such
// action sections start with '@' and are given to the language target's
// StringTemplate group. For instance @parser::header and @lexer::header
// are gathered here.
action
;
// A list of options that affect analysis and/or code generation
optionsSpec
: OPTIONS (option SEMI)* RBRACE -> ^(OPTIONS[$OPTIONS, "OPTIONS"] option*)
;
option
: id ASSIGN^ optionValue
;
// ------------
// Option Value
//
// The actual value of an option - Doh!
//
optionValue
: // If the option value is a single word that conforms to the
// lexical rules of token or rule names, then the user may skip quotes
// and so on. Many option values meet this description
qid
| STRING_LITERAL
| ACTION
| INT
;
// A list of grammars to which this grammar will delegate certain
// parts of the parsing sequence - a set of imported grammars
delegateGrammars
: IMPORT delegateGrammar (COMMA delegateGrammar)* SEMI -> ^(IMPORT delegateGrammar+)
;
// A possibly named grammar file that should be imported to this grammar
// and delegated to for the rules it specifies
delegateGrammar
: id ASSIGN^ id
| id
;
tokensSpec
: TOKENS_SPEC id (COMMA id)* RBRACE -> ^(TOKENS_SPEC id+)
| TOKENS_SPEC RBRACE ->
;
channelsSpec
: CHANNELS^ id (COMMA! id)* RBRACE!
;
// A declaration of a language target specific section,
// such as @header, @includes and so on. We do not verify these
// sections, they are just passed on to the language target.
/** Match stuff like @parser::members {int i;} */
action
: AT (actionScopeName COLONCOLON)? id ACTION -> ^(AT actionScopeName? id ACTION)
;
/** Sometimes the scope names will collide with keywords; allow them as
* ids for action scopes.
*/
actionScopeName
: id
| LEXER -> ID[$LEXER]
| PARSER -> ID[$PARSER]
;
modeSpec
: MODE id SEMI sync (lexerRule sync)* -> ^(MODE id lexerRule*)
;
rules
: sync (rule sync)*
// Rewrite with an enclosing node as this is good for counting
// the number of rules and an easy marker for the walker to detect
// that there are no rules.
->^(RULES rule*)
;
sync
@init {
BitSet followSet = computeErrorRecoverySet();
if ( input.LA(1)!=Token.EOF && !followSet.member(input.LA(1)) ) {
reportError(new NoViableAltException("",0,0,input));
beginResync();
consumeUntil(input, followSet);
endResync();
}
} :
;
rule: parserRule
| lexerRule
;
// The specification of an EBNF rule in ANTLR style, with all the
// rule level parameters, declarations, actions, rewrite specs and so
// on.
//
// Note that here we allow any number of rule declaration sections (such
// as scope, returns, etc) in any order and we let the upcoming semantic
// verification of the AST determine if things are repeated or if a
// particular functional element is not valid in the context of the
// grammar type, such as using returns in lexer rules and so on.
parserRule
@init { paraphrases.push("matching a rule"); }
@after {
paraphrases.pop();
GrammarAST options = (GrammarAST)$tree.getFirstChildWithType(ANTLRParser.OPTIONS);
if ( options!=null ) {
Grammar.setNodeOptions($tree, options);
}
}
: // Start with the rule name. Here we do not distinguish between
// parser or lexer rules, the semantic verification phase will
// reject any rules that make no sense, such as lexer rules in
// a pure parser or tree parser.
RULE_REF
// Immediately following the rulename, there may be a specification
// of input parameters for the rule. We do not do anything with the
// parameters here except gather them for future phases such as
// semantic verification, type assignment etc. We require that
// the input parameters are the next syntactically significant element
// following the rule id.
ARG_ACTION?
ruleReturns?
throwsSpec?
localsSpec?
// Now, before the rule specification itself, which is introduced
// with a COLON, we may have zero or more configuration sections.
// As usual we just accept anything that is syntactically valid for
// one form of the rule or another and let the semantic verification
// phase throw out anything that is invalid.
// At the rule level, a programmer may specify a number of sections, such
// as scope declarations, rule return elements, @ sections (which may be
// language target specific) and so on. We allow any number of these in any
// order here and as usual rely on the semantic verification phase to reject
// anything invalid using its additional context information. Here we are
// context free and just accept anything that is a syntactically correct
// construct.
//
rulePrequels
COLON
// The rule is, at the top level, just a list of alts, with
// finer grained structure defined within the alts.
ruleBlock
SEMI
exceptionGroup
-> ^( RULE RULE_REF ARG_ACTION?
ruleReturns? throwsSpec? localsSpec? rulePrequels? ruleBlock exceptionGroup*
)
;
// Many language targets support exceptions and the rule will
// generally be able to throw the language target equivalent
// of a recognition exception. The grammar programmer can
// specify a list of exceptions to catch or a generic catch all
// and the target language code generation template is
// responsible for generating code that makes sense.
exceptionGroup
: exceptionHandler* finallyClause?
;
// Specifies a handler for a particular type of exception
// thrown by a rule
exceptionHandler
: CATCH ARG_ACTION ACTION -> ^(CATCH ARG_ACTION ACTION)
;
finallyClause
: FINALLY ACTION -> ^(FINALLY ACTION)
;
rulePrequels
@init { paraphrases.push("matching rule preamble"); }
@after { paraphrases.pop(); }
: sync (rulePrequel sync)* -> rulePrequel*
;
// An individual rule level configuration as referenced by the ruleActions
// rule above.
//
rulePrequel
: optionsSpec
| ruleAction
;
// A rule can return elements that it constructs as it executes.
// The return values are specified in a 'returns' prequel element,
// which contains COMMA separated declarations, where the declaration
// is target language specific. Here we see the returns declaration
// as a single lexical action element, to be processed later.
//
ruleReturns
: RETURNS^ ARG_ACTION
;
// --------------
// Exception spec
//
// Some target languages, such as Java and C# support exceptions
// and they are specified as a prequel element for each rule that
// wishes to throw its own exception type. Note that the name of the
// exception is just a single word, so the header section of the grammar
// must specify the correct import statements (or language equivalent).
// Target languages that do not support exceptions just safely ignore
// them.
//
throwsSpec
: THROWS qid (COMMA qid)* -> ^(THROWS qid+)
;
// locals [Cat x, float g]
localsSpec : LOCALS^ ARG_ACTION ;
// @ Sections are generally target language specific things
// such as local variable declarations, code to run before the
// rule starts and so on. Fir instance most targets support the
// @init {} section where declarations and code can be placed
// to run before the rule is entered. The C target also has
// an @declarations {} section, where local variables are declared
// in order that the generated code is C89 compliant.
//
/** Match stuff like @init {int i;} */
ruleAction
: AT id ACTION -> ^(AT id ACTION)
;
// A set of alts, rewritten as a BLOCK for generic processing
// in tree walkers. Used by the rule 'rule' so that the list of
// alts for a rule appears as a BLOCK containing the alts and
// can be processed by the generic BLOCK rule. Note that we
// use a separate rule so that the BLOCK node has start and stop
// boundaries set correctly by rule post processing of rewrites.
ruleBlock
@init {Token colon = input.LT(-1);}
: ruleAltList -> ^(BLOCK[colon,"BLOCK"] ruleAltList)
;
catch [ResyncToEndOfRuleBlock e] {
// just resyncing; ignore error
retval.tree = (GrammarAST)adaptor.errorNode(input, retval.start, input.LT(-1), null);
}
ruleAltList
: labeledAlt (OR labeledAlt)* -> labeledAlt+
;
labeledAlt
: alternative
( POUND! id! {((AltAST)$alternative.tree).altLabel=$id.tree;}
)?
;
lexerRule
@init { paraphrases.push("matching a lexer rule"); }
@after {
paraphrases.pop();
}
: FRAGMENT?
TOKEN_REF
optionsSpec?
COLON lexerRuleBlock SEMI
-> ^( RULE TOKEN_REF
^(RULEMODIFIERS FRAGMENT)? optionsSpec? lexerRuleBlock
)
;
lexerRuleBlock
@init {Token colon = input.LT(-1);}
: lexerAltList -> ^(BLOCK[colon,"BLOCK"] lexerAltList)
;
catch [ResyncToEndOfRuleBlock e] {
// just resyncing; ignore error
retval.tree = (GrammarAST)adaptor.errorNode(input, retval.start, input.LT(-1), null);
}
lexerAltList
: lexerAlt (OR lexerAlt)* -> lexerAlt+
;
lexerAlt
: lexerElements
( lexerCommands -> ^(LEXER_ALT_ACTION lexerElements lexerCommands)
| -> lexerElements
)
;
lexerElements
: lexerElement+ -> ^(ALT lexerElement+)
| -> ^(ALT EPSILON) // empty alt
;
lexerElement
@init {
paraphrases.push("looking for lexer rule element");
int m = input.mark();
}
@after { paraphrases.pop(); }
: lexerAtom
( ebnfSuffix -> ^( ebnfSuffix ^(BLOCK[$lexerAtom.start,"BLOCK"] ^(ALT lexerAtom) ) )
| -> lexerAtom
)
| lexerBlock
( ebnfSuffix -> ^(ebnfSuffix lexerBlock)
| -> lexerBlock
)
| actionElement // actions only allowed at end of outer alt actually,
// but preds can be anywhere
;
catch [RecognitionException re] {
retval.tree = (GrammarAST)adaptor.errorNode(input, retval.start, input.LT(-1), re);
int ttype = input.get(input.range()).getType(); // seems to be next token
// look for anything that really belongs at the start of the rule minus the initial ID
if ( ttype==COLON || ttype==RETURNS || ttype==CATCH || ttype==FINALLY || ttype==AT || ttype==EOF ) {
RecognitionException missingSemi =
new v4ParserException("unterminated rule (missing ';') detected at '"+
input.LT(1).getText()+" "+input.LT(2).getText()+"'", input);
reportError(missingSemi);
if ( ttype==EOF ) {
input.seek(input.index()+1);
}
else if ( ttype==CATCH || ttype==FINALLY ) {
input.seek(input.range()); // ignore what's before rule trailer stuff
}
else if ( ttype==RETURNS || ttype==AT ) { // scan back looking for ID of rule header
int p = input.index();
Token t = input.get(p);
while ( t.getType()!=RULE_REF && t.getType()!=TOKEN_REF ) {
p--;
t = input.get(p);
}
input.seek(p);
}
throw new ResyncToEndOfRuleBlock(); // make sure it goes back to rule block level to recover
}
reportError(re);
recover(input,re);
}
lexerBlock
@after {
GrammarAST options = (GrammarAST)$tree.getFirstChildWithType(ANTLRParser.OPTIONS);
if ( options!=null ) {
Grammar.setNodeOptions($tree, options);
}
}
: LPAREN
( optionsSpec COLON )?
lexerAltList
RPAREN
-> ^(BLOCK[$LPAREN,"BLOCK"] optionsSpec? lexerAltList )
;
// channel=HIDDEN, skip, more, mode(INSIDE), push(INSIDE), pop
lexerCommands
: RARROW lexerCommand (COMMA lexerCommand)* -> lexerCommand+
;
lexerCommand
: lexerCommandName LPAREN lexerCommandExpr RPAREN -> ^(LEXER_ACTION_CALL lexerCommandName lexerCommandExpr)
| lexerCommandName
;
lexerCommandExpr
: id
| INT
;
lexerCommandName
: id
| MODE ->ID[$MODE]
;
altList
: alternative (OR alternative)* -> alternative+
;
// An individual alt with an optional alt option like
alternative
@init { paraphrases.push("matching alternative"); }
@after {
paraphrases.pop();
Grammar.setNodeOptions($tree, $o.tree);
}
: o=elementOptions?
( e+=element+ -> ^(ALT elementOptions? $e+)
| -> ^(ALT elementOptions? EPSILON) // empty alt
)
;
element
@init {
paraphrases.push("looking for rule element");
int m = input.mark();
}
@after { paraphrases.pop(); }
: labeledElement
( ebnfSuffix -> ^( ebnfSuffix ^(BLOCK[$labeledElement.start,"BLOCK"] ^(ALT labeledElement ) ))
| -> labeledElement
)
| atom
( ebnfSuffix -> ^( ebnfSuffix ^(BLOCK[$atom.start,"BLOCK"] ^(ALT atom) ) )
| -> atom
)
| ebnf
| actionElement
;
catch [RecognitionException re] {
retval.tree = (GrammarAST)adaptor.errorNode(input, retval.start, input.LT(-1), re);
int ttype = input.get(input.range()).getType();
// look for anything that really belongs at the start of the rule minus the initial ID
if ( ttype==COLON || ttype==RETURNS || ttype==CATCH || ttype==FINALLY || ttype==AT ) {
RecognitionException missingSemi =
new v4ParserException("unterminated rule (missing ';') detected at '"+
input.LT(1).getText()+" "+input.LT(2).getText()+"'", input);
reportError(missingSemi);
if ( ttype==CATCH || ttype==FINALLY ) {
input.seek(input.range()); // ignore what's before rule trailer stuff
}
if ( ttype==RETURNS || ttype==AT ) { // scan back looking for ID of rule header
int p = input.index();
Token t = input.get(p);
while ( t.getType()!=RULE_REF && t.getType()!=TOKEN_REF ) {
p--;
t = input.get(p);
}
input.seek(p);
}
throw new ResyncToEndOfRuleBlock(); // make sure it goes back to rule block level to recover
}
reportError(re);
recover(input,re);
}
actionElement
@after {
GrammarAST options = (GrammarAST)$tree.getFirstChildWithType(ANTLRParser.ELEMENT_OPTIONS);
if ( options!=null ) {
Grammar.setNodeOptions($tree, options);
}
}
: ACTION
| ACTION elementOptions -> ^(ACTION elementOptions)
| SEMPRED
| SEMPRED elementOptions -> ^(SEMPRED elementOptions)
;
labeledElement
: id (ass=ASSIGN|ass=PLUS_ASSIGN)
( atom -> ^($ass id atom)
| block -> ^($ass id block)
)
;
// A block of grammar structure optionally followed by standard EBNF
// notation, or ANTLR specific notation. I.E. ? + ^ and so on
ebnf
: block
// And now we see if we have any of the optional suffixs and rewrite
// the AST for this rule accordingly
( blockSuffix -> ^(blockSuffix block)
| -> block
)
;
// The standard EBNF suffixes with additional components that make
// sense only to ANTLR, in the context of a grammar block.
blockSuffix
: ebnfSuffix // Standard EBNF
;
ebnfSuffix
: QUESTION nongreedy=QUESTION? -> OPTIONAL[$start, $nongreedy]
| STAR nongreedy=QUESTION? -> CLOSURE[$start, $nongreedy]
| PLUS nongreedy=QUESTION? -> POSITIVE_CLOSURE[$start, $nongreedy]
;
lexerAtom
: range
| terminal
| RULE_REF
| notSet
| wildcard
| LEXER_CHAR_SET
;
atom
: // Qualified reference delegate.rule. This must be
// lexically contiguous (no spaces either side of the DOT)
// otherwise it is two references with a wildcard in between
// and not a qualified reference.
/*
{
input.LT(1).getCharPositionInLine()+input.LT(1).getText().length()==
input.LT(2).getCharPositionInLine() &&
input.LT(2).getCharPositionInLine()+1==input.LT(3).getCharPositionInLine()
}?
id DOT ruleref -> ^(DOT id ruleref)
|
*/
range // Range x..y - only valid in lexers
| terminal
| ruleref
| notSet
| wildcard
;
catch [RecognitionException re] { throw re; } // pass upwards to element
wildcard
@after {
GrammarAST options = (GrammarAST)$tree.getFirstChildWithType(ANTLRParser.ELEMENT_OPTIONS);
if ( options!=null ) {
Grammar.setNodeOptions($tree, options);
}
}
: // Wildcard '.' means any character in a lexer, any
// token in parser and any node or subtree in a tree parser
// Because the terminal rule is allowed to be the node
// specification for the start of a tree rule, we must
// later check that wildcard was not used for that.
DOT elementOptions?
-> ^(WILDCARD[$DOT] elementOptions?)
;
// --------------------
// Inverted element set
//
// A set of characters (in a lexer) or terminal tokens, if a parser,
// that are then used to create the inverse set of them.
notSet
: NOT setElement -> ^(NOT[$NOT] ^(SET[$setElement.start,"SET"] setElement))
| NOT blockSet -> ^(NOT[$NOT] blockSet)
;
blockSet
@init {
Token t;
boolean ebnf = false;
}
: LPAREN setElement (OR setElement)* RPAREN
-> ^(SET[$LPAREN,"SET"] setElement+ )
;
setElement
: TOKEN_REF^ elementOptions?
| STRING_LITERAL^ elementOptions?
| range
| LEXER_CHAR_SET
;
// -------------
// Grammar Block
//
// Anywhere where an element is valid, the grammar may start a new block
// of alts by surrounding that block with ( ). A new block may also have a set
// of options, which apply only to that block.
//
block
@after {
GrammarAST options = (GrammarAST)$tree.getFirstChildWithType(ANTLRParser.OPTIONS);
if ( options!=null ) {
Grammar.setNodeOptions($tree, options);
}
}
: LPAREN
( optionsSpec? ra+=ruleAction* COLON )?
altList
RPAREN
-> ^(BLOCK[$LPAREN,"BLOCK"] optionsSpec? $ra* altList )
;
// ----------------
// Parser rule ref
//
// Reference to a parser rule with optional arguments and optional
// directive to become the root node or ignore the tree produced
//
ruleref
@after {
GrammarAST options = (GrammarAST)$tree.getFirstChildWithType(ANTLRParser.ELEMENT_OPTIONS);
if ( options!=null ) {
Grammar.setNodeOptions($tree, options);
}
}
: RULE_REF ARG_ACTION? elementOptions? -> ^(RULE_REF ARG_ACTION? elementOptions?)
;
catch [RecognitionException re] { throw re; } // pass upwards to element
// ---------------
// Character Range
//
// Specifies a range of characters. Valid for lexer rules only, but
// we do not check that here, the tree walkers shoudl do that.
// Note also that the parser also allows through more than just
// character literals so that we can produce a much nicer semantic
// error about any abuse of the .. operator.
//
range
: STRING_LITERAL RANGE^ STRING_LITERAL
;
terminal
@after {
GrammarAST options = (GrammarAST)$tree.getFirstChildWithType(ANTLRParser.ELEMENT_OPTIONS);
if ( options!=null ) {
Grammar.setNodeOptions($tree, options);
}
}
: TOKEN_REF elementOptions? -> ^(TOKEN_REF elementOptions?)
| STRING_LITERAL elementOptions? -> ^(STRING_LITERAL elementOptions?)
;
// Terminals may be adorned with certain options when
// reference in the grammar: TOK<,,,>
elementOptions
: LT (elementOption (COMMA elementOption)*)? GT
-> ^(ELEMENT_OPTIONS[$LT,"ELEMENT_OPTIONS"] elementOption*)
;
// When used with elements we can specify what the tree node type can
// be and also assign settings of various options (which we do not check here)
elementOption
: // This format indicates the default element option
qid
| id ASSIGN^ optionValue
;
// The name of the grammar, and indeed some other grammar elements may
// come through to the parser looking like a rule reference or a token
// reference, hence this rule is used to pick up whichever it is and rewrite
// it as a generic ID token.
id
@init { paraphrases.push("looking for an identifier"); }
@after { paraphrases.pop(); }
: RULE_REF ->ID[$RULE_REF]
| TOKEN_REF ->ID[$TOKEN_REF]
;
qid
@init { paraphrases.push("looking for a qualified identifier"); }
@after { paraphrases.pop(); }
: id (DOT id)* -> ID[$qid.start, $text]
;
alternativeEntry : alternative EOF ; // allow gunit to call alternative and see EOF afterwards
elementEntry : element EOF ;
ruleEntry : rule EOF ;
blockEntry : block EOF ;
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