| =========================================== |
| Kaleidoscope: Implementing a Parser and AST |
| =========================================== |
| |
| .. contents:: |
| :local: |
| |
| Chapter 2 Introduction |
| ====================== |
| |
| Welcome to Chapter 2 of the "`Implementing a language with |
| LLVM <index.html>`_" tutorial. This chapter shows you how to use the |
| lexer, built in `Chapter 1 <LangImpl01.html>`_, to build a full |
| `parser <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parsing>`_ for our Kaleidoscope |
| language. Once we have a parser, we'll define and build an `Abstract |
| Syntax Tree <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abstract_syntax_tree>`_ (AST). |
| |
| The parser we will build uses a combination of `Recursive Descent |
| Parsing <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recursive_descent_parser>`_ and |
| `Operator-Precedence |
| Parsing <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operator-precedence_parser>`_ to |
| parse the Kaleidoscope language (the latter for binary expressions and |
| the former for everything else). Before we get to parsing though, let's |
| talk about the output of the parser: the Abstract Syntax Tree. |
| |
| The Abstract Syntax Tree (AST) |
| ============================== |
| |
| The AST for a program captures its behavior in such a way that it is |
| easy for later stages of the compiler (e.g. code generation) to |
| interpret. We basically want one object for each construct in the |
| language, and the AST should closely model the language. In |
| Kaleidoscope, we have expressions, a prototype, and a function object. |
| We'll start with expressions first: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /// ExprAST - Base class for all expression nodes. |
| class ExprAST { |
| public: |
| virtual ~ExprAST() {} |
| }; |
| |
| /// NumberExprAST - Expression class for numeric literals like "1.0". |
| class NumberExprAST : public ExprAST { |
| double Val; |
| |
| public: |
| NumberExprAST(double Val) : Val(Val) {} |
| }; |
| |
| The code above shows the definition of the base ExprAST class and one |
| subclass which we use for numeric literals. The important thing to note |
| about this code is that the NumberExprAST class captures the numeric |
| value of the literal as an instance variable. This allows later phases |
| of the compiler to know what the stored numeric value is. |
| |
| Right now we only create the AST, so there are no useful accessor |
| methods on them. It would be very easy to add a virtual method to pretty |
| print the code, for example. Here are the other expression AST node |
| definitions that we'll use in the basic form of the Kaleidoscope |
| language: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /// VariableExprAST - Expression class for referencing a variable, like "a". |
| class VariableExprAST : public ExprAST { |
| std::string Name; |
| |
| public: |
| VariableExprAST(const std::string &Name) : Name(Name) {} |
| }; |
| |
| /// BinaryExprAST - Expression class for a binary operator. |
| class BinaryExprAST : public ExprAST { |
| char Op; |
| std::unique_ptr<ExprAST> LHS, RHS; |
| |
| public: |
| BinaryExprAST(char op, std::unique_ptr<ExprAST> LHS, |
| std::unique_ptr<ExprAST> RHS) |
| : Op(op), LHS(std::move(LHS)), RHS(std::move(RHS)) {} |
| }; |
| |
| /// CallExprAST - Expression class for function calls. |
| class CallExprAST : public ExprAST { |
| std::string Callee; |
| std::vector<std::unique_ptr<ExprAST>> Args; |
| |
| public: |
| CallExprAST(const std::string &Callee, |
| std::vector<std::unique_ptr<ExprAST>> Args) |
| : Callee(Callee), Args(std::move(Args)) {} |
| }; |
| |
| This is all (intentionally) rather straight-forward: variables capture |
| the variable name, binary operators capture their opcode (e.g. '+'), and |
| calls capture a function name as well as a list of any argument |
| expressions. One thing that is nice about our AST is that it captures |
| the language features without talking about the syntax of the language. |
| Note that there is no discussion about precedence of binary operators, |
| lexical structure, etc. |
| |
| For our basic language, these are all of the expression nodes we'll |
| define. Because it doesn't have conditional control flow, it isn't |
| Turing-complete; we'll fix that in a later installment. The two things |
| we need next are a way to talk about the interface to a function, and a |
| way to talk about functions themselves: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /// PrototypeAST - This class represents the "prototype" for a function, |
| /// which captures its name, and its argument names (thus implicitly the number |
| /// of arguments the function takes). |
| class PrototypeAST { |
| std::string Name; |
| std::vector<std::string> Args; |
| |
| public: |
| PrototypeAST(const std::string &name, std::vector<std::string> Args) |
| : Name(name), Args(std::move(Args)) {} |
| |
| const std::string &getName() const { return Name; } |
| }; |
| |
| /// FunctionAST - This class represents a function definition itself. |
| class FunctionAST { |
| std::unique_ptr<PrototypeAST> Proto; |
| std::unique_ptr<ExprAST> Body; |
| |
| public: |
| FunctionAST(std::unique_ptr<PrototypeAST> Proto, |
| std::unique_ptr<ExprAST> Body) |
| : Proto(std::move(Proto)), Body(std::move(Body)) {} |
| }; |
| |
| In Kaleidoscope, functions are typed with just a count of their |
| arguments. Since all values are double precision floating point, the |
| type of each argument doesn't need to be stored anywhere. In a more |
| aggressive and realistic language, the "ExprAST" class would probably |
| have a type field. |
| |
| With this scaffolding, we can now talk about parsing expressions and |
| function bodies in Kaleidoscope. |
| |
| Parser Basics |
| ============= |
| |
| Now that we have an AST to build, we need to define the parser code to |
| build it. The idea here is that we want to parse something like "x+y" |
| (which is returned as three tokens by the lexer) into an AST that could |
| be generated with calls like this: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| auto LHS = llvm::make_unique<VariableExprAST>("x"); |
| auto RHS = llvm::make_unique<VariableExprAST>("y"); |
| auto Result = std::make_unique<BinaryExprAST>('+', std::move(LHS), |
| std::move(RHS)); |
| |
| In order to do this, we'll start by defining some basic helper routines: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /// CurTok/getNextToken - Provide a simple token buffer. CurTok is the current |
| /// token the parser is looking at. getNextToken reads another token from the |
| /// lexer and updates CurTok with its results. |
| static int CurTok; |
| static int getNextToken() { |
| return CurTok = gettok(); |
| } |
| |
| This implements a simple token buffer around the lexer. This allows us |
| to look one token ahead at what the lexer is returning. Every function |
| in our parser will assume that CurTok is the current token that needs to |
| be parsed. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| |
| /// LogError* - These are little helper functions for error handling. |
| std::unique_ptr<ExprAST> LogError(const char *Str) { |
| fprintf(stderr, "LogError: %s\n", Str); |
| return nullptr; |
| } |
| std::unique_ptr<PrototypeAST> LogErrorP(const char *Str) { |
| LogError(Str); |
| return nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| The ``LogError`` routines are simple helper routines that our parser will |
| use to handle errors. The error recovery in our parser will not be the |
| best and is not particular user-friendly, but it will be enough for our |
| tutorial. These routines make it easier to handle errors in routines |
| that have various return types: they always return null. |
| |
| With these basic helper functions, we can implement the first piece of |
| our grammar: numeric literals. |
| |
| Basic Expression Parsing |
| ======================== |
| |
| We start with numeric literals, because they are the simplest to |
| process. For each production in our grammar, we'll define a function |
| which parses that production. For numeric literals, we have: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /// numberexpr ::= number |
| static std::unique_ptr<ExprAST> ParseNumberExpr() { |
| auto Result = llvm::make_unique<NumberExprAST>(NumVal); |
| getNextToken(); // consume the number |
| return std::move(Result); |
| } |
| |
| This routine is very simple: it expects to be called when the current |
| token is a ``tok_number`` token. It takes the current number value, |
| creates a ``NumberExprAST`` node, advances the lexer to the next token, |
| and finally returns. |
| |
| There are some interesting aspects to this. The most important one is |
| that this routine eats all of the tokens that correspond to the |
| production and returns the lexer buffer with the next token (which is |
| not part of the grammar production) ready to go. This is a fairly |
| standard way to go for recursive descent parsers. For a better example, |
| the parenthesis operator is defined like this: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /// parenexpr ::= '(' expression ')' |
| static std::unique_ptr<ExprAST> ParseParenExpr() { |
| getNextToken(); // eat (. |
| auto V = ParseExpression(); |
| if (!V) |
| return nullptr; |
| |
| if (CurTok != ')') |
| return LogError("expected ')'"); |
| getNextToken(); // eat ). |
| return V; |
| } |
| |
| This function illustrates a number of interesting things about the |
| parser: |
| |
| 1) It shows how we use the LogError routines. When called, this function |
| expects that the current token is a '(' token, but after parsing the |
| subexpression, it is possible that there is no ')' waiting. For example, |
| if the user types in "(4 x" instead of "(4)", the parser should emit an |
| error. Because errors can occur, the parser needs a way to indicate that |
| they happened: in our parser, we return null on an error. |
| |
| 2) Another interesting aspect of this function is that it uses recursion |
| by calling ``ParseExpression`` (we will soon see that |
| ``ParseExpression`` can call ``ParseParenExpr``). This is powerful |
| because it allows us to handle recursive grammars, and keeps each |
| production very simple. Note that parentheses do not cause construction |
| of AST nodes themselves. While we could do it this way, the most |
| important role of parentheses are to guide the parser and provide |
| grouping. Once the parser constructs the AST, parentheses are not |
| needed. |
| |
| The next simple production is for handling variable references and |
| function calls: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /// identifierexpr |
| /// ::= identifier |
| /// ::= identifier '(' expression* ')' |
| static std::unique_ptr<ExprAST> ParseIdentifierExpr() { |
| std::string IdName = IdentifierStr; |
| |
| getNextToken(); // eat identifier. |
| |
| if (CurTok != '(') // Simple variable ref. |
| return llvm::make_unique<VariableExprAST>(IdName); |
| |
| // Call. |
| getNextToken(); // eat ( |
| std::vector<std::unique_ptr<ExprAST>> Args; |
| if (CurTok != ')') { |
| while (1) { |
| if (auto Arg = ParseExpression()) |
| Args.push_back(std::move(Arg)); |
| else |
| return nullptr; |
| |
| if (CurTok == ')') |
| break; |
| |
| if (CurTok != ',') |
| return LogError("Expected ')' or ',' in argument list"); |
| getNextToken(); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // Eat the ')'. |
| getNextToken(); |
| |
| return llvm::make_unique<CallExprAST>(IdName, std::move(Args)); |
| } |
| |
| This routine follows the same style as the other routines. (It expects |
| to be called if the current token is a ``tok_identifier`` token). It |
| also has recursion and error handling. One interesting aspect of this is |
| that it uses *look-ahead* to determine if the current identifier is a |
| stand alone variable reference or if it is a function call expression. |
| It handles this by checking to see if the token after the identifier is |
| a '(' token, constructing either a ``VariableExprAST`` or |
| ``CallExprAST`` node as appropriate. |
| |
| Now that we have all of our simple expression-parsing logic in place, we |
| can define a helper function to wrap it together into one entry point. |
| We call this class of expressions "primary" expressions, for reasons |
| that will become more clear `later in the |
| tutorial <LangImpl6.html#user-defined-unary-operators>`_. In order to parse an arbitrary |
| primary expression, we need to determine what sort of expression it is: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /// primary |
| /// ::= identifierexpr |
| /// ::= numberexpr |
| /// ::= parenexpr |
| static std::unique_ptr<ExprAST> ParsePrimary() { |
| switch (CurTok) { |
| default: |
| return LogError("unknown token when expecting an expression"); |
| case tok_identifier: |
| return ParseIdentifierExpr(); |
| case tok_number: |
| return ParseNumberExpr(); |
| case '(': |
| return ParseParenExpr(); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| Now that you see the definition of this function, it is more obvious why |
| we can assume the state of CurTok in the various functions. This uses |
| look-ahead to determine which sort of expression is being inspected, and |
| then parses it with a function call. |
| |
| Now that basic expressions are handled, we need to handle binary |
| expressions. They are a bit more complex. |
| |
| Binary Expression Parsing |
| ========================= |
| |
| Binary expressions are significantly harder to parse because they are |
| often ambiguous. For example, when given the string "x+y\*z", the parser |
| can choose to parse it as either "(x+y)\*z" or "x+(y\*z)". With common |
| definitions from mathematics, we expect the later parse, because "\*" |
| (multiplication) has higher *precedence* than "+" (addition). |
| |
| There are many ways to handle this, but an elegant and efficient way is |
| to use `Operator-Precedence |
| Parsing <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operator-precedence_parser>`_. |
| This parsing technique uses the precedence of binary operators to guide |
| recursion. To start with, we need a table of precedences: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /// BinopPrecedence - This holds the precedence for each binary operator that is |
| /// defined. |
| static std::map<char, int> BinopPrecedence; |
| |
| /// GetTokPrecedence - Get the precedence of the pending binary operator token. |
| static int GetTokPrecedence() { |
| if (!isascii(CurTok)) |
| return -1; |
| |
| // Make sure it's a declared binop. |
| int TokPrec = BinopPrecedence[CurTok]; |
| if (TokPrec <= 0) return -1; |
| return TokPrec; |
| } |
| |
| int main() { |
| // Install standard binary operators. |
| // 1 is lowest precedence. |
| BinopPrecedence['<'] = 10; |
| BinopPrecedence['+'] = 20; |
| BinopPrecedence['-'] = 20; |
| BinopPrecedence['*'] = 40; // highest. |
| ... |
| } |
| |
| For the basic form of Kaleidoscope, we will only support 4 binary |
| operators (this can obviously be extended by you, our brave and intrepid |
| reader). The ``GetTokPrecedence`` function returns the precedence for |
| the current token, or -1 if the token is not a binary operator. Having a |
| map makes it easy to add new operators and makes it clear that the |
| algorithm doesn't depend on the specific operators involved, but it |
| would be easy enough to eliminate the map and do the comparisons in the |
| ``GetTokPrecedence`` function. (Or just use a fixed-size array). |
| |
| With the helper above defined, we can now start parsing binary |
| expressions. The basic idea of operator precedence parsing is to break |
| down an expression with potentially ambiguous binary operators into |
| pieces. Consider, for example, the expression "a+b+(c+d)\*e\*f+g". |
| Operator precedence parsing considers this as a stream of primary |
| expressions separated by binary operators. As such, it will first parse |
| the leading primary expression "a", then it will see the pairs [+, b] |
| [+, (c+d)] [\*, e] [\*, f] and [+, g]. Note that because parentheses are |
| primary expressions, the binary expression parser doesn't need to worry |
| about nested subexpressions like (c+d) at all. |
| |
| To start, an expression is a primary expression potentially followed by |
| a sequence of [binop,primaryexpr] pairs: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /// expression |
| /// ::= primary binoprhs |
| /// |
| static std::unique_ptr<ExprAST> ParseExpression() { |
| auto LHS = ParsePrimary(); |
| if (!LHS) |
| return nullptr; |
| |
| return ParseBinOpRHS(0, std::move(LHS)); |
| } |
| |
| ``ParseBinOpRHS`` is the function that parses the sequence of pairs for |
| us. It takes a precedence and a pointer to an expression for the part |
| that has been parsed so far. Note that "x" is a perfectly valid |
| expression: As such, "binoprhs" is allowed to be empty, in which case it |
| returns the expression that is passed into it. In our example above, the |
| code passes the expression for "a" into ``ParseBinOpRHS`` and the |
| current token is "+". |
| |
| The precedence value passed into ``ParseBinOpRHS`` indicates the |
| *minimal operator precedence* that the function is allowed to eat. For |
| example, if the current pair stream is [+, x] and ``ParseBinOpRHS`` is |
| passed in a precedence of 40, it will not consume any tokens (because |
| the precedence of '+' is only 20). With this in mind, ``ParseBinOpRHS`` |
| starts with: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /// binoprhs |
| /// ::= ('+' primary)* |
| static std::unique_ptr<ExprAST> ParseBinOpRHS(int ExprPrec, |
| std::unique_ptr<ExprAST> LHS) { |
| // If this is a binop, find its precedence. |
| while (1) { |
| int TokPrec = GetTokPrecedence(); |
| |
| // If this is a binop that binds at least as tightly as the current binop, |
| // consume it, otherwise we are done. |
| if (TokPrec < ExprPrec) |
| return LHS; |
| |
| This code gets the precedence of the current token and checks to see if |
| if is too low. Because we defined invalid tokens to have a precedence of |
| -1, this check implicitly knows that the pair-stream ends when the token |
| stream runs out of binary operators. If this check succeeds, we know |
| that the token is a binary operator and that it will be included in this |
| expression: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| // Okay, we know this is a binop. |
| int BinOp = CurTok; |
| getNextToken(); // eat binop |
| |
| // Parse the primary expression after the binary operator. |
| auto RHS = ParsePrimary(); |
| if (!RHS) |
| return nullptr; |
| |
| As such, this code eats (and remembers) the binary operator and then |
| parses the primary expression that follows. This builds up the whole |
| pair, the first of which is [+, b] for the running example. |
| |
| Now that we parsed the left-hand side of an expression and one pair of |
| the RHS sequence, we have to decide which way the expression associates. |
| In particular, we could have "(a+b) binop unparsed" or "a + (b binop |
| unparsed)". To determine this, we look ahead at "binop" to determine its |
| precedence and compare it to BinOp's precedence (which is '+' in this |
| case): |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| // If BinOp binds less tightly with RHS than the operator after RHS, let |
| // the pending operator take RHS as its LHS. |
| int NextPrec = GetTokPrecedence(); |
| if (TokPrec < NextPrec) { |
| |
| If the precedence of the binop to the right of "RHS" is lower or equal |
| to the precedence of our current operator, then we know that the |
| parentheses associate as "(a+b) binop ...". In our example, the current |
| operator is "+" and the next operator is "+", we know that they have the |
| same precedence. In this case we'll create the AST node for "a+b", and |
| then continue parsing: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| ... if body omitted ... |
| } |
| |
| // Merge LHS/RHS. |
| LHS = llvm::make_unique<BinaryExprAST>(BinOp, std::move(LHS), |
| std::move(RHS)); |
| } // loop around to the top of the while loop. |
| } |
| |
| In our example above, this will turn "a+b+" into "(a+b)" and execute the |
| next iteration of the loop, with "+" as the current token. The code |
| above will eat, remember, and parse "(c+d)" as the primary expression, |
| which makes the current pair equal to [+, (c+d)]. It will then evaluate |
| the 'if' conditional above with "\*" as the binop to the right of the |
| primary. In this case, the precedence of "\*" is higher than the |
| precedence of "+" so the if condition will be entered. |
| |
| The critical question left here is "how can the if condition parse the |
| right hand side in full"? In particular, to build the AST correctly for |
| our example, it needs to get all of "(c+d)\*e\*f" as the RHS expression |
| variable. The code to do this is surprisingly simple (code from the |
| above two blocks duplicated for context): |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| // If BinOp binds less tightly with RHS than the operator after RHS, let |
| // the pending operator take RHS as its LHS. |
| int NextPrec = GetTokPrecedence(); |
| if (TokPrec < NextPrec) { |
| RHS = ParseBinOpRHS(TokPrec+1, std::move(RHS)); |
| if (!RHS) |
| return nullptr; |
| } |
| // Merge LHS/RHS. |
| LHS = llvm::make_unique<BinaryExprAST>(BinOp, std::move(LHS), |
| std::move(RHS)); |
| } // loop around to the top of the while loop. |
| } |
| |
| At this point, we know that the binary operator to the RHS of our |
| primary has higher precedence than the binop we are currently parsing. |
| As such, we know that any sequence of pairs whose operators are all |
| higher precedence than "+" should be parsed together and returned as |
| "RHS". To do this, we recursively invoke the ``ParseBinOpRHS`` function |
| specifying "TokPrec+1" as the minimum precedence required for it to |
| continue. In our example above, this will cause it to return the AST |
| node for "(c+d)\*e\*f" as RHS, which is then set as the RHS of the '+' |
| expression. |
| |
| Finally, on the next iteration of the while loop, the "+g" piece is |
| parsed and added to the AST. With this little bit of code (14 |
| non-trivial lines), we correctly handle fully general binary expression |
| parsing in a very elegant way. This was a whirlwind tour of this code, |
| and it is somewhat subtle. I recommend running through it with a few |
| tough examples to see how it works. |
| |
| This wraps up handling of expressions. At this point, we can point the |
| parser at an arbitrary token stream and build an expression from it, |
| stopping at the first token that is not part of the expression. Next up |
| we need to handle function definitions, etc. |
| |
| Parsing the Rest |
| ================ |
| |
| The next thing missing is handling of function prototypes. In |
| Kaleidoscope, these are used both for 'extern' function declarations as |
| well as function body definitions. The code to do this is |
| straight-forward and not very interesting (once you've survived |
| expressions): |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /// prototype |
| /// ::= id '(' id* ')' |
| static std::unique_ptr<PrototypeAST> ParsePrototype() { |
| if (CurTok != tok_identifier) |
| return LogErrorP("Expected function name in prototype"); |
| |
| std::string FnName = IdentifierStr; |
| getNextToken(); |
| |
| if (CurTok != '(') |
| return LogErrorP("Expected '(' in prototype"); |
| |
| // Read the list of argument names. |
| std::vector<std::string> ArgNames; |
| while (getNextToken() == tok_identifier) |
| ArgNames.push_back(IdentifierStr); |
| if (CurTok != ')') |
| return LogErrorP("Expected ')' in prototype"); |
| |
| // success. |
| getNextToken(); // eat ')'. |
| |
| return llvm::make_unique<PrototypeAST>(FnName, std::move(ArgNames)); |
| } |
| |
| Given this, a function definition is very simple, just a prototype plus |
| an expression to implement the body: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /// definition ::= 'def' prototype expression |
| static std::unique_ptr<FunctionAST> ParseDefinition() { |
| getNextToken(); // eat def. |
| auto Proto = ParsePrototype(); |
| if (!Proto) return nullptr; |
| |
| if (auto E = ParseExpression()) |
| return llvm::make_unique<FunctionAST>(std::move(Proto), std::move(E)); |
| return nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| In addition, we support 'extern' to declare functions like 'sin' and |
| 'cos' as well as to support forward declaration of user functions. These |
| 'extern's are just prototypes with no body: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /// external ::= 'extern' prototype |
| static std::unique_ptr<PrototypeAST> ParseExtern() { |
| getNextToken(); // eat extern. |
| return ParsePrototype(); |
| } |
| |
| Finally, we'll also let the user type in arbitrary top-level expressions |
| and evaluate them on the fly. We will handle this by defining anonymous |
| nullary (zero argument) functions for them: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /// toplevelexpr ::= expression |
| static std::unique_ptr<FunctionAST> ParseTopLevelExpr() { |
| if (auto E = ParseExpression()) { |
| // Make an anonymous proto. |
| auto Proto = llvm::make_unique<PrototypeAST>("", std::vector<std::string>()); |
| return llvm::make_unique<FunctionAST>(std::move(Proto), std::move(E)); |
| } |
| return nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| Now that we have all the pieces, let's build a little driver that will |
| let us actually *execute* this code we've built! |
| |
| The Driver |
| ========== |
| |
| The driver for this simply invokes all of the parsing pieces with a |
| top-level dispatch loop. There isn't much interesting here, so I'll just |
| include the top-level loop. See `below <#full-code-listing>`_ for full code in the |
| "Top-Level Parsing" section. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| /// top ::= definition | external | expression | ';' |
| static void MainLoop() { |
| while (1) { |
| fprintf(stderr, "ready> "); |
| switch (CurTok) { |
| case tok_eof: |
| return; |
| case ';': // ignore top-level semicolons. |
| getNextToken(); |
| break; |
| case tok_def: |
| HandleDefinition(); |
| break; |
| case tok_extern: |
| HandleExtern(); |
| break; |
| default: |
| HandleTopLevelExpression(); |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| The most interesting part of this is that we ignore top-level |
| semicolons. Why is this, you ask? The basic reason is that if you type |
| "4 + 5" at the command line, the parser doesn't know whether that is the |
| end of what you will type or not. For example, on the next line you |
| could type "def foo..." in which case 4+5 is the end of a top-level |
| expression. Alternatively you could type "\* 6", which would continue |
| the expression. Having top-level semicolons allows you to type "4+5;", |
| and the parser will know you are done. |
| |
| Conclusions |
| =========== |
| |
| With just under 400 lines of commented code (240 lines of non-comment, |
| non-blank code), we fully defined our minimal language, including a |
| lexer, parser, and AST builder. With this done, the executable will |
| validate Kaleidoscope code and tell us if it is grammatically invalid. |
| For example, here is a sample interaction: |
| |
| .. code-block:: bash |
| |
| $ ./a.out |
| ready> def foo(x y) x+foo(y, 4.0); |
| Parsed a function definition. |
| ready> def foo(x y) x+y y; |
| Parsed a function definition. |
| Parsed a top-level expr |
| ready> def foo(x y) x+y ); |
| Parsed a function definition. |
| Error: unknown token when expecting an expression |
| ready> extern sin(a); |
| ready> Parsed an extern |
| ready> ^D |
| $ |
| |
| There is a lot of room for extension here. You can define new AST nodes, |
| extend the language in many ways, etc. In the `next |
| installment <LangImpl03.html>`_, we will describe how to generate LLVM |
| Intermediate Representation (IR) from the AST. |
| |
| Full Code Listing |
| ================= |
| |
| Here is the complete code listing for our running example. Because this |
| uses the LLVM libraries, we need to link them in. To do this, we use the |
| `llvm-config <http://llvm.org/cmds/llvm-config.html>`_ tool to inform |
| our makefile/command line about which options to use: |
| |
| .. code-block:: bash |
| |
| # Compile |
| clang++ -g -O3 toy.cpp `llvm-config --cxxflags` |
| # Run |
| ./a.out |
| |
| Here is the code: |
| |
| .. literalinclude:: ../../examples/Kaleidoscope/Chapter2/toy.cpp |
| :language: c++ |
| |
| `Next: Implementing Code Generation to LLVM IR <LangImpl03.html>`_ |
| |