Next: Lexical Tie-ins, Up: Context Dependency [Contents][Index]
The C language has a context dependency: the way an identifier is used depends on what its current meaning is. For example, consider this:
foo (x);
This looks like a function call statement, but if foo
is a typedef
name, then this is actually a declaration of x
. How can a Bison
parser for C decide how to parse this input?
The method used in GNU C is to have two different token types,
IDENTIFIER
and TYPENAME
. When yylex
finds an
identifier, it looks up the current declaration of the identifier in order
to decide which token type to return: TYPENAME
if the identifier is
declared as a typedef, IDENTIFIER
otherwise.
The grammar rules can then express the context dependency by the choice of
token type to recognize. IDENTIFIER
is accepted as an expression,
but TYPENAME
is not. TYPENAME
can start a declaration, but
IDENTIFIER
cannot. In contexts where the meaning of the identifier
is not significant, such as in declarations that can shadow a
typedef name, either TYPENAME
or IDENTIFIER
is
accepted—there is one rule for each of the two token types.
This technique is simple to use if the decision of which kinds of identifiers to allow is made at a place close to where the identifier is parsed. But in C this is not always so: C allows a declaration to redeclare a typedef name provided an explicit type has been specified earlier:
typedef int foo, bar; int baz (void)
{ static bar (bar); /* redeclarebar
as static variable */ extern foo foo (foo); /* redeclarefoo
as function */ return foo (bar); }
Unfortunately, the name being declared is separated from the declaration construct itself by a complicated syntactic structure—the “declarator”.
As a result, part of the Bison parser for C needs to be duplicated, with all the nonterminal names changed: once for parsing a declaration in which a typedef name can be redefined, and once for parsing a declaration in which that can’t be done. Here is a part of the duplication, with actions omitted for brevity:
initdcl: declarator maybeasm '=' init | declarator maybeasm ;
notype_initdcl: notype_declarator maybeasm '=' init | notype_declarator maybeasm ;
Here initdcl
can redeclare a typedef name, but notype_initdcl
cannot. The distinction between declarator
and
notype_declarator
is the same sort of thing.
There is some similarity between this technique and a lexical tie-in (described next), in that information which alters the lexical analysis is changed during parsing by other parts of the program. The difference is here the information is global, and is used for other purposes in the program. A true lexical tie-in has a special-purpose flag controlled by the syntactic context.
Next: Lexical Tie-ins, Up: Context Dependency [Contents][Index]