All Downloads are FREE. Search and download functionalities are using the official Maven repository.

processing.mode.java.preproc.pde.g Maven / Gradle / Ivy

Go to download

Processing is a programming language, development environment, and online community. This Java Mode package contains the Java mode for Processing IDE.

There is a newer version: 3.3.7
Show newest version
/* -*- mode: antlr; c-basic-offset: 4; indent-tabs-mode: nil -*- */
header {
package processing.mode.java.preproc;
}

class PdeRecognizer extends JavaRecognizer;

options {
    importVocab = Java;
    exportVocab = PdePartial;

    //codeGenMakeSwitchThreshold=10; // this is set high for debugging
    //codeGenBitsetTestThreshold=10; // this is set high for debugging

    // developers may to want to set this to true for better
    // debugging messages, however, doing so disables highlighting errors
    // in the editor.
    defaultErrorHandler = false; //true;
}

tokens {
    CONSTRUCTOR_CAST; EMPTY_FIELD;
}

{
	// this clause copied from java15.g! ANTLR does not copy this
	// section from the super grammar.
	/**
	 * Counts the number of LT seen in the typeArguments production.
	 * It is used in semantic predicates to ensure we have seen
	 * enough closing '>' characters; which actually may have been
	 * either GT, SR or BSR tokens.
	 */
	private int ltCounter = 0;

	private PdePreprocessor pp;
	public PdeRecognizer(final PdePreprocessor pp, final TokenStream ts) {
	    this(ts);
		this.pp = pp;
	}
	
	private void mixed() throws RecognitionException, TokenStreamException {
		throw new RecognitionException("It looks like you're mixing \"active\" and \"static\" modes.",
	    	                                     getFilename(), LT(1).getLine(), LT(1).getColumn());
	}
}

pdeProgram
    :  
		// Some programs can be equally well interpreted as STATIC or ACTIVE;
		// this forces the parser to prefer the STATIC interpretation.
        (staticProgram) => staticProgram
        { pp.setMode(PdePreprocessor.Mode.STATIC); }
        
    |   (activeProgram) => activeProgram
        { pp.setMode(PdePreprocessor.Mode.ACTIVE); }
        
    |   staticProgram
        { pp.setMode(PdePreprocessor.Mode.STATIC); }
    ;

// advanced mode is really just a normal java file
javaProgram
    :   compilationUnit
    ;

activeProgram
    :  (
    		(IDENT LPAREN) => IDENT LPAREN { mixed(); }
    	|	possiblyEmptyField
       )+ EOF!
    ;

staticProgram
    :  (
    		statement
 	   )* EOF!
    ; 

// copy of the java.g rule with WEBCOLOR_LITERAL added
constant
    :   NUM_INT
    |   CHAR_LITERAL
    |   STRING_LITERAL
    |   NUM_FLOAT
    |   NUM_LONG
    |   NUM_DOUBLE
    |   webcolor_literal
    ; 

// fix bug http://dev.processing.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=1519
// by altering a syntactic predicate whose sole purpose is to
// emit a useless error with no line numbers.
// These are from Java15.g, with a few lines edited to make nice errors.

// Type arguments to a class or interface type
typeArguments
{int currentLtLevel = 0;}
	:
		{currentLtLevel = ltCounter;}
		LT! {ltCounter++;}
		typeArgument
		(options{greedy=true;}: // match as many as possible
			{if (! (inputState.guessing !=0 || ltCounter == currentLtLevel + 1)) {
				throw new RecognitionException("Maybe too many > characters?",
	    	                                     getFilename(), LT(1).getLine(), LT(1).getColumn());
			}}
			COMMA! typeArgument
		)*

		(	// turn warning off since Antlr generates the right code,
			// plus we have our semantic predicate below
			options{generateAmbigWarnings=false;}:
			typeArgumentsOrParametersEnd
		)?

		// make sure we have gobbled up enough '>' characters
		// if we are at the "top level" of nested typeArgument productions
		{if (! ((currentLtLevel != 0) || ltCounter == currentLtLevel)) {
			throw new RecognitionException("Maybe too many > characters?",
    	                                     getFilename(), LT(1).getLine(), LT(1).getColumn());
		}}

		{#typeArguments = #(#[TYPE_ARGUMENTS, "TYPE_ARGUMENTS"], #typeArguments);}
	;

typeParameters
{int currentLtLevel = 0;}
	:
		{currentLtLevel = ltCounter;}
		LT! {ltCounter++;}
		typeParameter (COMMA! typeParameter)*
		(typeArgumentsOrParametersEnd)?

		// make sure we have gobbled up enough '>' characters
		// if we are at the "top level" of nested typeArgument productions
		{if (! ((currentLtLevel != 0) || ltCounter == currentLtLevel)) {
			throw new RecognitionException("Maybe too many > characters?",
    	                                     getFilename(), LT(1).getLine(), LT(1).getColumn());
		}}

		{#typeParameters = #(#[TYPE_PARAMETERS, "TYPE_PARAMETERS"], #typeParameters);}
	;
	

// this gobbles up *some* amount of '>' characters, and counts how many
// it gobbled.
protected typeArgumentsOrParametersEnd
	:	GT! {ltCounter-=1;}
	|	SR! {ltCounter-=2;}
	|	BSR! {ltCounter-=3;}
	;

// of the form #cc008f in PDE
webcolor_literal
    :   w:WEBCOLOR_LITERAL 
    { if (! (processing.app.Preferences.getBoolean("preproc.web_colors") 
    		 && 
        	 w.getText().length() == 6)) {
		throw new RecognitionException("Web colors must be exactly 6 hex digits. This looks like " + w.getText().length() + ".",
	                                     getFilename(), LT(1).getLine(), LT(1).getColumn());
     }}  // must be exactly 6 hex digits
    ;

// copy of the java.g builtInType rule
builtInConsCastType
    :   "void"
    |   "boolean"
    |   "byte"
    |   "char"
    |   "short"
    |   "int"
    |   "float"
    |   "long"
    |   "double"
    ;

// our types include the java types and "color".  this is separated into two
// rules so that constructor casts can just use the original typelist, since
// we don't want to support the color type as a constructor cast.
//
builtInType
    :   builtInConsCastType
    |   "color"              // aliased to an int in PDE
        { processing.app.Preferences.getBoolean("preproc.color_datatype") }? 
    ;

// constructor style casts.
constructorCast!
    :   t:consCastTypeSpec[true]
        LPAREN!
        e:expression
        RPAREN!
        // if this is a string literal, make sure the type we're trying to cast
        // to is one of the supported ones
        //
        { (#e == null) ||
          ( (#e.getType() != STRING_LITERAL) ||
            ( #t.getType() == LITERAL_boolean ||
              #t.getType() == LITERAL_double ||
              #t.getType() == LITERAL_float ||
              #t.getType() == LITERAL_int ||
              #t.getType() == LITERAL_long ||
              #t.getType() == LITERAL_short )) }?
        // create the node
        //
        {#constructorCast = #(#[CONSTRUCTOR_CAST,"CONSTRUCTOR_CAST"], t, e);}
    ;

// A list of types that be used as the destination type in a constructor-style
// cast.  Ideally, this would include all class types, not just "String".  
// Unfortunately, it's not possible to tell whether Foo(5) is supposed to be
// a method call or a constructor cast without have a table of all valid
// types or methods, which requires semantic analysis (eg processing of import
// statements).  So we accept the set of built-in types plus "String".
//
consCastTypeSpec[boolean addImagNode]
//	: stringTypeSpec[addImagNode]
//	| builtInConsCastTypeSpec[addImagNode]
        : builtInConsCastTypeSpec[addImagNode]
// trying to remove String() cast [fry]
	;

//stringTypeSpec[boolean addImagNode]
//    : id:IDENT { #id.getText().equals("String") }?
//        {
//            if ( addImagNode ) {
//                #stringTypeSpec = #(#[TYPE,"TYPE"], 
//                                   #stringTypeSpec);
//            }
//        }
//    ;

builtInConsCastTypeSpec[boolean addImagNode]
    :    builtInConsCastType
             {
                 if ( addImagNode ) {
                     #builtInConsCastTypeSpec = #(#[TYPE,"TYPE"],
                                                  #builtInConsCastTypeSpec);
                 }
             }
    ;

// Since "color" tokens are lexed as LITERAL_color now, we need to have a rule
// that can generate a method call from an expression that starts with this
// token
//
colorMethodCall
    : c:"color" {#c.setType(IDENT);} // this would default to LITERAL_color
      lp:LPAREN^ {#lp.setType(METHOD_CALL);}
      argList
      RPAREN!
    ;  

// copy of the java.g rule with added constructorCast and colorMethodCall 
// alternatives
primaryExpression
    :   (consCastTypeSpec[false] LPAREN) => constructorCast   
            { processing.app.Preferences.getBoolean("preproc.enhanced_casting") }?
    |   identPrimary ( options {greedy=true;} : DOT^ "class" )?
    |   constant
    |   "true"
    |   "false"
    |   "null"
    |   newExpression
    |   "this"
    |   "super"
    |   LPAREN! assignmentExpression RPAREN!
    |   colorMethodCall
        // look for int.class and int[].class
    |   builtInType
        ( lbt:LBRACK^ {#lbt.setType(ARRAY_DECLARATOR);} RBRACK! )*
        DOT^ "class"
    ;

// the below variable rule hacks are needed so that it's possible for the
// emitter to correctly output variable declarations of the form "float a, b"
// from the AST.  This means that our AST has a somewhat different form in
// these rules than the java one does, and this new form may have its own 
// semantic issues.  But it seems to fix the comma declaration issues.
//
variableDefinitions![AST mods, AST t]
    :	vd:variableDeclarator[getASTFactory().dupTree(mods),
                              getASTFactory().dupTree(t)]
        {#variableDefinitions = #(#[VARIABLE_DEF,"VARIABLE_DEF"], mods, 
                                  t, vd);}
    ;
variableDeclarator[AST mods, AST t]
    :	( id:IDENT 	(lb:LBRACK^ {#lb.setType(ARRAY_DECLARATOR);} RBRACK!)*
        v:varInitializer (COMMA!)? )+
    ; 

// java.g builds syntax trees with an inconsistent structure.  override one of
// the rules there to fix this.
//
explicitConstructorInvocation!
    :   (typeArguments)?
        t:"this" LPAREN a1:argList RPAREN SEMI
        {#explicitConstructorInvocation = #(#[CTOR_CALL, "CTOR_CALL"], 
                                            #t, #a1);}
    |   s:"super" LPAREN a2:argList RPAREN SEMI
        {#explicitConstructorInvocation = #(#[SUPER_CTOR_CALL, 
                                              "SUPER_CTOR_CALL"], 
                                            #s, #a2);}
    ;

// quick-n-dirty hack to the get the advanced class name.  we should 
// really be getting it from the AST and not forking this rule from
// the java.g copy at all.  Since this is a recursive descent parser, we get
// the last class name in the file so that we don't end up with the classname
// of an inner class.  If there is more than one "outer" class in a file,
// this heuristic will fail.
//
classDefinition![AST modifiers]
    :   "class" i:IDENT
        // it _might_ have type paramaters
		(tp:typeParameters)?
		// it _might_ have a superclass...
        sc:superClassClause
        // it might implement some interfaces...
        ic:implementsClause
        // now parse the body of the class
        cb:classBlock
        {#classDefinition = #(#[CLASS_DEF,"CLASS_DEF"],
                              modifiers,i,tp,sc,ic,cb);
         pp.setAdvClassName(i.getText());}
    ;

possiblyEmptyField
    : classField
    | s:SEMI {#s.setType(EMPTY_FIELD);}
    ;

class PdeLexer extends JavaLexer;

options {
    importVocab=PdePartial;
    exportVocab=Pde;
}

// We need to preserve whitespace and commentary instead of ignoring
// like the supergrammar does.  Otherwise Jikes won't be able to give
// us error messages that point to the equivalent PDE code.

// WS, SL_COMMENT, ML_COMMENT are copies of the original productions,
// but with the SKIP assigment removed.

WS  :   (   ' '
        |   '\t'
        |   '\f'
            // handle newlines
        |   (   options {generateAmbigWarnings=false;}
            :   "\r\n"  // Evil DOS
            |   '\r'    // Macintosh
            |   '\n'    // Unix (the right way)
            )
            { newline(); }
        )+
    ;

// Single-line comments
SL_COMMENT
    :   "//"
        (~('\n'|'\r'))* ('\n'|'\r'('\n')?)
        {newline();}
    ;

// multiple-line comments
ML_COMMENT
    :   "/*"
        (   /*  '\r' '\n' can be matched in one alternative or by matching
                '\r' in one iteration and '\n' in another.  I am trying to
                handle any flavor of newline that comes in, but the language
                that allows both "\r\n" and "\r" and "\n" to all be valid
                newline is ambiguous.  Consequently, the resulting grammar
                must be ambiguous.  I'm shutting this warning off.
             */
            options {
                generateAmbigWarnings=false;
            }
        :
            { LA(2)!='/' }? '*'
        |   '\r' '\n'       {newline();}
        |   '\r'            {newline();}
        |   '\n'            {newline();}
        |   ~('*'|'\n'|'\r')
        )*
        "*/"
    ;

WEBCOLOR_LITERAL
    : '#'! (HEX_DIGIT)+
    ;





© 2015 - 2024 Weber Informatics LLC | Privacy Policy