From: "Nicolas Pouillard" <nicolas.pouillard@gmail.com>
To: Hendrik Tews <tews@cs.ru.nl>
Cc: Caml_mailing list <caml-list@yquem.inria.fr>
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] Camlp4: example/parse_files.ml
Date: Fri, 04 Apr 2008 15:40:36 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <1207316266-sup-9155@ausone.inria.fr> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <wwuve2yvdha.fsf@tandem.cs.ru.nl>
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Excerpts from Hendrik Tews's message of Thu Apr 03 23:24:17 +0200 2008:
> "Nicolas Pouillard" <nicolas.pouillard@gmail.com> writes:
>
> > Do I miss
> > something if I simplify further to
> >
> > module Caml =
> > Camlp4OCamlParser.Make
> > (Camlp4OCamlRevisedParser.Make(Camlp4.PreCast.Syntax))
>
> You are applying original and revised parser, so if the
> current parser is empty that's ok. Otherwise the extension can
> fail.
>
> Right, I missed that: With this simplification I am not starting
> with a fresh and empty grammar but with whatever has accumulated
> in PreCast.Syntax.
Yes.
>
> I have a followup question. With the functorial interface I can
> build and use several grammars at the same time. For instance
Yes.
> module FreshGrammar(Unit : sig end) =
> Camlp4.OCamlInitSyntax.Make
> (Camlp4.PreCast.Ast)(Camlp4.PreCast.Gram)(Camlp4.PreCast.Quotation)
>
> module G1 = FreshGrammar(struct end)
> module M1 = Camlp4OCamlRevisedParser.Make(G1)
> module M2 = Camlp4OCamlParser.Make(G1)
>
> module G2 = FreshGrammar(struct end)
> module M3 = Camlp4OCamlRevisedParser.Make(G2)
> module M4 = Camlp4MacroParser.Make(G2)
>
> Now G1.parse_implem parses Ocaml syntax, while G2.parse_implem
> parses revised syntax with macros.
Yes.
> Can I do the same with a syntax extention that is only loaded at
> runtime via Dynlink? Assume a syntax extention X that is only
> available at runtime and not at compiletime. After loading X with
> Dynlink, all I can do is invoke the callback of X, but this will
> add the grammar extension of X to Camlp4.PreCast.Syntax.
You can do it but you will to resort to some kind of registering of your
extensions, as it's done in camlp4 for the default grammar.
> Is there a way to obtain two functions parse_implem (as above)
> that mix X with different syntaxes (eg Ocaml + X and
> Revised + X)? For that, I believe, it would be necessary to
> extract parse_implem from a syntax module such that it survives
> clearing that Syntax.
Yes but your extension X has to be a functor, then you can get
X(OCamlOriginal), X(OCamlRevised).
--
Nicolas Pouillard aka Ertai
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2008-04-04 13:42 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 10+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2008-04-02 23:13 Hendrik Tews
2008-04-03 15:32 ` [Caml-list] " Nicolas Pouillard
2008-04-03 21:24 ` Hendrik Tews
2008-04-04 13:40 ` Nicolas Pouillard [this message]
2008-04-04 14:01 ` Hendrik Tews
2008-04-04 14:19 ` Nicolas Pouillard
2008-04-04 21:30 ` Hendrik Tews
2008-04-05 10:00 ` Nicolas Pouillard
2008-04-07 7:31 ` Hendrik Tews
2008-04-07 8:10 ` Nicolas Pouillard
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