Thanks guys. I'll have a look at those later.
On 10/15/10, div0 <[email protected]> wrote: > On 14/10/2010 23:47, Andrej Mitrovic wrote: >> Hey, >> >> I've been looking for a D2 parser.. there seems to be a few D1 lexers, >> parsers, and even some minimal semantic analysis tools but I can't find >> much of anything for D2. Perhaps Goldie will be D2 compatible some day >> soon. :) >> >> There's a "CodeAnalyzer" lexer/parser with some minimal semantics, but >> it's D1 only and kind of dead for some years. The Poseidon author added >> some D2 support for it in his editor, so I have kept an eye on that. But >> interfacing with D1 code from D2 is kind of complicated, and I need to use >> it from D2. (I guess I could get away with writing a DLL with a simple >> interface for D2 or something..). >> >> I had a visit on the prowiki site and most of the parser projects there >> are either D1-only or dead. So is there anything usable for D2? >> Specifically I need these tools for use with an editor/IDE, which is >> something I'm working on for fun atm. But working on a parser is probably >> a ton of work, + the whole thing screams NIH to me. Luckily enough I don't >> have to reinvent a GUI and an editing control, there's DFL and Scintilla >> which are pretty awesome for my needs. >> >> Maybe I should take a look at how Descent/DDT and VisualD do their >> parsing.. :) > > If you just need a d2 parser library, then my port of boost::spirit > might fill you need: > > http://www.sstk.co.uk/spiritd.php > > (I pretty sure the bug that stopped it working got fixed in the last > release, but I've not tested it yet.) > > Though spirit generates LL parsers which aren't really suited for > parsing human generated input; as getting accurate error location > reporting is tricky, but it's handy for small inline parsers and other > simple grammars. > > If you are after a d2 parser written in d2, then I dunno. > You could write that using spirit in theory but it would be a job and a > half. > > -- > My enormous talent is exceeded only by my outrageous laziness. > http://www.ssTk.co.uk >
