Difference between revisions of "Lexers Parsers"
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* [https://github.com/dawgfoto/lexer Martin Nowak's lexer] | * [https://github.com/dawgfoto/lexer Martin Nowak's lexer] | ||
− | * [https://github.com/Hackerpilot/ | + | * [https://github.com/Hackerpilot/libdparse/blob/master/src/std/d/lexer.d (Possibly) the future std.d.lexer] |
== Standalone Parsers == | == Standalone Parsers == |
Revision as of 11:48, 29 July 2014
Here are a few lexers and parsers for the D programming languages:
Contents
Standalone Lexers
Standalone Parsers
- (Possibly) the future std.d.parser. VERY INCOMPLETE
- Alexander Bothe's DParser 2. Written in C# and used in Mono-D
- DTool/DDT parser . Part of the DTool project (which has semantic functionality as well). Written in Java and powers DDT. Fairly complete.
Parser Generators
- Hisayuki Mima's CTPG is a compile-time parser generator.
- Nick Sabalausky's Goldie.
- Pegged, a parsing expression grammar (PEG) generator by Philippe Sigaud. Parses at runtime and compile-time.
- Dunnart, a parser generator with built in lexical analysis.
Parsers and Lexers Inside Compilers
- Aziz Koeksal's DIL, another D compiler based on Tango. You can find the lexer in src/dil/lexer, the parser in src/dil/parser and the abstract syntax tree code in src/dil/ast.