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- Current State of Exceptions in Rakudo and Perl 6
- Meet DBIish, a Perl 6 Database Interface
- doc.perl6.org and p6doc
- Exceptions Grant Report for May 2012
- Exceptions Grant Report -- Final update
- Perl 6 Hackathon in Oslo: Be Prepared!
- Localization for Exception Messages
- News in the Rakudo 2012.05 release
- News in the Rakudo 2012.06 release
- Perl 6 Hackathon in Oslo: Report From The First Day
- Perl 6 Hackathon in Oslo: Report From The Second Day
- Quo Vadis Perl?
- Rakudo Hack: Dynamic Export Lists
- SQLite support for DBIish
- Stop The Rewrites!
- Upcoming Perl 6 Hackathon in Oslo, Norway
- A small regex optimization for NQP and Rakudo
- Pattern Matching and Unpacking
- Rakudo's Abstract Syntax Tree
- The REPL trick
- First day at YAPC::Europe 2013 in Kiev
- YAPC Europe 2013 Day 2
- YAPC Europe 2013 Day 3
- A new Perl 6 community server - call for funding
- New Perl 6 community server now live, accepting signups
- A new Perl 6 community server - update
- All Perl 6 modules in a box
- doc.perl6.org: some stats, future directions
- Profiling Perl 6 code on IRC
- Why is it hard to write a compiler for Perl 6?
- Writing docs helps you take the user's perspective
- Perl 6 Advent Calendar 2016 -- Call for Authors
- Perl 6 By Example: Running Rakudo
- Perl 6 By Example: Formatting a Sudoku Puzzle
- Perl 6 By Example: Testing the Say Function
- Perl 6 By Example: Testing the Timestamp Converter
- Perl 6 By Example: Datetime Conversion for the Command Line
- What is Perl 6?
- Perl 6 By Example, Another Perl 6 Book
- Perl 6 By Example: Silent Cron, a Cron Wrapper
- Perl 6 By Example: Testing Silent Cron
- Perl 6 By Example: Stateful Silent Cron
- Perl 6 By Example: Perl 6 Review
- Perl 6 By Example: Parsing INI files
- Perl 6 By Example: Improved INI Parsing with Grammars
- Perl 6 By Example: Generating Good Parse Errors from a Parser
- Perl 6 By Example: A File and Directory Usage Graph
- Perl 6 By Example: Functional Refactorings for Directory Visualization Code
- Perl 6 By Example: A Unicode Search Tool
- What's a Variable, Exactly?
- Perl 6 By Example: Plotting using Matplotlib and Inline::Python
- Perl 6 By Example: Stacked Plots with Matplotlib
- Perl 6 By Example: Idiomatic Use of Inline::Python
- Perl 6 By Example: Now "Perl 6 Fundamentals"
- Perl 6 Books Landscape in June 2017
- Living on the (b)leading edge
- The Loss of Name and Orientation
- Perl 6 Fundamentals Now Available for Purchase
- My Ten Years of Perl 6
- Perl 6 Coding Contest 2019: Seeking Task Makers
- A shiny perl6.org site
- Creating an entry point for newcomers
- An offer for software developers: free IRC logging
- Sprixel, a 6 compiler powered by JavaScript
- Announcing try.rakudo.org, an interactive Perl 6 shell in your browser
- Another perl6.org iteration
- Blackjack and Perl 6
- Why I commit Crud to the Perl 6 Test Suite
- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6 Week 5: Implement Str.trans
- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6
- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6 Week 8: Implement $*ARGFILES for Rakudo
- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6 Week 6: Improve Book markup
- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6 Week 2: Fix up a test
- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6 Week 9: Implement Hash.pick for Rakudo
- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6 Week 11: Improve an error message for Hyper Operators
- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6 - Lottery Intermission
- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6 Week 3: Write supporting code for the MAIN sub
- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6 Week 1: A website for proto
- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6 Week 4: Implement :samecase for .subst
- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6 Week 10: Implement samespace for Rakudo
- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6 Week 7: Implement try.rakudo.org
- What is the "Cool" class in Perl 6?
- Report from the Perl 6 Hackathon in Copenhagen
- Custom operators in Rakudo
- A Perl 6 Date Module
- Defined Behaviour with Undefined Values
- Dissecting the "Starry obfu"
- The case for distributed version control systems
- Perl 6: Failing Softly with Unthrown Exceptions
- Perl 6 Compiler Feature Matrix
- The first Perl 6 module on CPAN
- A Foray into Perl 5 land
- Gabor: Keep going
- First Grant Report: Structured Error Messages
- Second Grant Report: Structured Error Messages
- Third Grant Report: Structured Error Messages
- Fourth Grant Report: Structured Error Messages
- Google Summer of Code Mentor Recap
- How core is core?
- How fast is Rakudo's "nom" branch?
- Building a Huffman Tree With Rakudo
- Immutable Sigils and Context
- Is Perl 6 really Perl?
- Mini-Challenge: Write Your Prisoner's Dilemma Strategy
- List.classify
- Longest Palindrome by Regex
- Perl 6: Lost in Wonderland
- Lots of momentum in the Perl 6 community
- Monetize Perl 6?
- Musings on Rakudo's spectest chart
- My first executable from Perl 6
- My first YAPC - YAPC::EU 2010 in Pisa
- Trying to implement new operators - failed
- Programming Languages Are Not Zero Sum
- Perl 6 notes from February 2011
- Notes from the YAPC::EU 2010 Rakudo hackathon
- Let's build an object
- Perl 6 is optimized for fun
- How to get a parse tree for a Perl 6 Program
- Pascal's Triangle in Perl 6
- Perl 6 in 2009
- Perl 6 in 2010
- Perl 6 in 2011 - A Retrospection
- Perl 6 ticket life cycle
- The Perl Survey and Perl 6
- The Perl 6 Advent Calendar
- Perl 6 Questions on Perlmonks
- Physical modeling with Math::Model and Perl 6
- How to Plot a Segment of a Circle with SVG
- Results from the Prisoner's Dilemma Challenge
- Protected Attributes Make No Sense
- Publicity for Perl 6
- PVC - Perl 6 Vocabulary Coach
- Fixing Rakudo Memory Leaks
- Rakudo architectural overview
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- Rakudo "star" announced
- My personal "I want a PONIE" wish list for Rakudo Star
- Rakudo's rough edges
- Rats and other pets
- The Real World Strikes Back - or why you shouldn't forbid stuff just because you think it's wrong
- Releasing Rakudo made easy
- Set Phasers to Stun!
- Starry Perl 6 obfu
- Recent Perl 6 Developments August 2008
- The State of Regex Modifiers in Rakudo
- Strings and Buffers
- Subroutines vs. Methods - Differences and Commonalities
- A SVG plotting adventure
- A Syntax Highlighter for Perl 6
- Test Suite Reorganization: How to move tests
- The Happiness of Design Convergence
- Thoughts on masak's Perl 6 Coding Contest
- The Three-Fold Function of the Smart Match Operator
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- Timeline for a syntax change in Perl 6
- Visualizing match trees
- Want to write shiny SVG graphics with Perl 6? Port Scruffy!
- We write a Perl 6 book for you
- When we reach 100% we did something wrong
- Where Rakudo Lives Now
- Why Rakudo needs NQP
- Why was the Perl 6 Advent Calendar such a Success?
- What you can write in Perl 6 today
- Why you don't need the Y combinator in Perl 6
- You are good enough!
Fri, 02 Jan 2009
How to get a parse tree for a Perl 6 Program
Permanent link
Only Perl 6 can parse Perl 6, or so people say. This is mostly true, since
the only parsers that can handle all known Perl 6 code is the module
STD.pm
written in Perl 6.
To get access to that parser, all you have to do is get a checkout of a
directory of the pugs repository, linux with perl-5.10.0 or newer in the
location /usr/local/bin/perl
and some
modules, like for example Moose and YAML::Syck. When you have
that, type the following commands:
$ svn co http://svn.pugscode.org/pugs/src/perl6 $ cd perl6 $ make
Now the simplest way to check the syntax of a Perl 6 file is to use the
program tryfile
:
$ echo 'my ($x, $y) = 1..2;' > test.t $ ./tryfile test.t 00:02 85m
The output might be a bit confusing at first. Since no error message was
given, it means that no syntax error was found. The 00:02
is the
parsing time, and 85
is the memory usage.
Suppose we introduce a syntax error in our test file:
$ echo 'my ($x, $y) = 1..; 2' > wrong.pl $ ./tryfile wrong.pl ############# PARSE FAILED ############# Can't understand next input--giving up at wrong.pl line 1: ------> my ($x, $y) = 1..; 2 expecting any of: prefix or noun whitespace 00:02 85m
The green part of the output indicates the part where the syntax is still
correct, the red part is where the erroneous part begins. (The bold font
weight isn't part of the output, though). At this point, either an
prefix or noun
would have been expected, as in 1..+2
or as in 1..2
, or a whitespace, probably followed by another
term.
But if you want to known not only if an expression was parsed, but also
how, then there's another way: There's a syntax highlither based on
STD.pm
which generates HTML output that also encodes the parse
tree:
$ ./STD_syntax_highlight --full-html=test.html test.t
Open the generated file, test.html (click here
for an example) in your favourite browser, enable Javascript, and click on
the button labled Show Syntax Tree
. Then when you hoover with the
mouse over a piece of the code, on the right of the browser window a list is
displayed that shows the calling hirarchy of rules in STD.pm.
If you move the mouse to the test my
, you'll see that the top
most parsing statement was statementlist
, which then called
statement
, which in turn called statement_modexpr
and so on.
You might also notice that scope_declarator
calls
scope_declarator__S_905my
, which is slightly misleading. In fact
token scope_declarator
is a so called proto rule, which means
that multiple rules have the same name, and if you call that rule, it tries to
match all of them in parallel, and the longest match is picked. From these
proto rules the compiler constructs automatically subrules whose names all
contain the double underscore __
.
So you should actually read the two rules scope_declarator
and
scope_declarator__S_905my
as one, where the alternative that
contains the my
matched.
There are other possible ways to get a parse tree (for example modifying
tryfile
to emit a YAML parse tree, or using Rakudo's
--target=parse
option), but most of them produce somewhat verbose
output that's hard to use.