Packages

  • package root

    This is the documentation for Parsley.

    This is the documentation for Parsley.

    Package structure

    The parsley package contains the Parsley class, as well as the Result, Success, and Failure types. In addition to these, it also contains the following packages and "modules" (a module is defined as being an object which mocks a package):

    • parsley.Parsley contains the bulk of the core "function-style" combinators.
    • parsley.combinator contains many helpful combinators that simplify some common parser patterns.
    • parsley.character contains the combinators needed to read characters and strings, as well as combinators to match specific sub-sets of characters.
    • parsley.debug contains debugging combinators, helpful for identifying faults in parsers.
    • parsley.expr contains the following sub modules:
      • parsley.expr.chain contains combinators used in expression parsing
      • parsley.expr.precedence is a builder for expression parsers built on a precedence table.
      • parsley.expr.infix contains combinators used in expression parsing, but with more permissive types than their equivalents in chain.
      • parsley.expr.mixed contains combinators that can be used for expression parsing, but where different fixities may be mixed on the same level: this is rare in practice.
    • parsley.syntax contains several implicits to add syntactic sugar to the combinators. These are sub-categorised into the following sub modules:
      • parsley.syntax.character contains implicits to allow you to use character and string literals as parsers.
      • parsley.syntax.lift enables postfix application of the lift combinator onto a function (or value).
      • parsley.syntax.zipped enables boths a reversed form of lift where the function appears on the right and is applied on a tuple (useful when type inference has failed) as well as a .zipped method for building tuples out of several combinators.
      • parsley.syntax.extension contains syntactic sugar combinators exposed as implicit classes.
    • parsley.errors contains modules to deal with error messages, their refinement and generation.
    • parsley.lift contains functions which lift functions that work on regular types to those which now combine the results of parsers returning those same types. these are ubiquitous.
    • parsley.ap contains functions which allow for the application of a parser returning a function to several parsers returning each of the argument types.
    • parsley.state contains combinators that interact with the context-sensitive functionality in the form of state.
    • parsley.token contains the Lexer class that provides a host of helpful lexing combinators when provided with the description of a language.
    • parsley.position contains parsers for extracting position information.
    • parsley.generic contains some basic implementations of the Parser Bridge pattern (see Design Patterns for Parser Combinators in Scala, or the parsley wiki): these can be used before more specialised generic bridge traits can be constructed.
    Definition Classes
    root
  • package parsley
    Definition Classes
    root
  • object state

    This module contains all the functionality and operations for using and manipulating references.

    This module contains all the functionality and operations for using and manipulating references.

    These often have a role in performing context-sensitive parsing tasks, where a Turing-powerful system is required. While flatMap is capable of such parsing, it is much less efficient than the use of references, though slightly more flexible. In particular, the persist combinator enabled by StateCombinators can serve as a drop-in replacement for flatMap in many scenarios.

    Definition Classes
    parsley
    Since

    4.5.0

  • Ref
  • RefMaker
  • StateCombinators
c

parsley.state

RefMaker

implicit final class RefMaker[A] extends AnyVal

This class, when in scope, enables a method to create and fill a reference with a given value.

Source
state.scala
Linear Supertypes
Ordering
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  2. By Inheritance
Inherited
  1. RefMaker
  2. AnyVal
  3. Any
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Visibility
  1. Public
  2. Protected

Instance Constructors

  1. new RefMaker(x: A)

    This constructor should not be called manually, it is designed to be used via Scala's implicit resolution.

    This constructor should not be called manually, it is designed to be used via Scala's implicit resolution.

    x

    the value to initialise a reference with.

Value Members

  1. final def !=(arg0: Any): Boolean
    Definition Classes
    Any
  2. final def ##: Int
    Definition Classes
    Any
  3. final def ==(arg0: Any): Boolean
    Definition Classes
    Any
  4. final def asInstanceOf[T0]: T0
    Definition Classes
    Any
  5. def getClass(): Class[_ <: AnyVal]
    Definition Classes
    AnyVal → Any
  6. final def isInstanceOf[T0]: Boolean
    Definition Classes
    Any
  7. def makeRef[B](body: (Ref[A]) => Parsley[B]): Parsley[B]

    This combinator fills a fresh reference with the this value.

    This combinator fills a fresh reference with the this value.

    This allows for a more controlled way of creating references during a parse, without explicitly creating them with Ref.make[A] and using set. These references are intended to be fresh every time they are "created", in other words, a recursive call with a makeRef call inside will modify a different reference.

    body

    a function to generate a parser that can interact with the freshly created reference.

    Since

    4.0.0

    See also

    fillRef for a version that uses the result of a parser to fill the reference instead.

  8. def toString(): String
    Definition Classes
    Any
  9. val x: A

Inherited from AnyVal

Inherited from Any

Ungrouped