General product duplication functionality.
General product duplication functionality. This object is a function
that returns a product that applies the same constructor as the
product t
, but with the given children instead of t
's children.
The function fails if a constructor cannot be found, there are the
wrong number of new children, or if one of the new children is not
of the appropriate type.
Generic term deconstruction.
Generic term deconstruction.
Traversal to all children.
Traversal to all children. Construct a strategy that applies s
to all
term children of the subject term. If s
succeeds on all of the children,
then succeed, forming a new term from the constructor
of the original term and the result of s
for each child. If s
fails on any
child, fail. If there are no children, succeed. If s
succeeds on all
children producing the same terms (by eq
for references and by ==
for
other values), then the overall strategy returns the subject term.
This operation works on finite Rewritable
, Product
, Map
and Iterable
values, checked for in that order.
Children of a Rewritable
(resp. Product, collection) value are processed
in the order returned by the value's deconstruct (resp. productElement
,
foreach
) method.
s
is evaluated at most once.
Implementation of all
for Iterable
values.
Implementation of all
for Iterable
values.
Implementation of all
for Map
values.
Implementation of all
for Map
values.
Implementation of all
for Product
values.
Implementation of all
for Product
values.
Implementation of all
for Rewritable
values.
Implementation of all
for Rewritable
values.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a bottom-up fashion to all
subterms at each level, stopping at a frontier where s succeeds.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a bottom-up fashion to all
subterms at each level, stopping at a frontier where s succeeds.
Construct a strategy that applies s1
in a top-down, prefix fashion
stopping at a frontier where s1
succeeds.
Construct a strategy that applies s1
in a top-down, prefix fashion
stopping at a frontier where s1
succeeds. s2
is applied in a bottom-up,
postfix fashion to the result.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a top-down fashion, stopping
at a frontier where s succeeds.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a top-down fashion, stopping
at a frontier where s succeeds.
Construct a strategy that applies s1
in a top-down, prefix fashion
stopping at a frontier where s1
succeeds.
Construct a strategy that applies s1
in a top-down, prefix fashion
stopping at a frontier where s1
succeeds. s2
is applied in a bottom-up,
postfix fashion to the results of the recursive calls.
and(s1, s2)
applies s1
and s2
to the subject
term and succeeds if both succeed.
and(s1, s2)
applies s1
and s2
to the subject
term and succeeds if both succeed. s2
will always
be applied, i.e., and is not a short-circuit
operator.
Construct a strategy that applies s
, yielding the result of s
if it
succeeds, otherwise leave the original subject term unchanged.
Construct a strategy that applies s
, yielding the result of s
if it
succeeds, otherwise leave the original subject term unchanged. In
Stratego library this strategy is called try
.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a bottom-up, postfix fashion
to the subject term.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a bottom-up, postfix fashion
to the subject term.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a bottom-up, postfix fashion
to the subject term but stops when the strategy produced by stop
succeeds.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a bottom-up, postfix fashion
to the subject term but stops when the strategy produced by stop
succeeds. stop
is given the whole strategy itself as its argument.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in breadth first order.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in breadth first order. This
strategy does not apply s
to the root of the subject term.
It is called breadthfirst
to follow Stratego's library, but is not
really conducting a breadth-first traversal since all of the
descendants of the first child of a term are visited before any of
the descendants of the second child of a term.
Construct a strategy that always succeeds, changing the subject term to
the given term t
.
Construct a strategy that always succeeds, changing the subject term to
the given term t
. The term t
is evaluated at most once.
Traversal to a single child.
Traversal to a single child. Construct a strategy that applies s
to
the ith child of the subject term (counting from one). If s
succeeds on
the ith child producing t
, then succeed, forming a new term that is the
same as the original term except that the ith child is now t
. If s
fails
on the ith child or the subject term does not have an ith child, then fail.
child(i, s)
is equivalent to Stratego's i(s)
operator. If s
succeeds on
the ith child producing the same term (by eq
for references and by ==
for
other values), then the overall strategy returns the subject term.
This operation works for instances of Product
or finite Seq
values.
s
is evaluated at most once.
Implementation of child
for Product
values.
Implementation of child
for Product
values.
Implementation of child
for Seq
values.
Implementation of child
for Seq
values.
Collect query results in a Iterable collection.
Collect query results in a Iterable collection. Run the function
f
as a top-down left-to-right query on the subject term. Each
application of f
returns a single value. All of these values are
accumulated in the collection.
Collect query results in a Iterable collection.
Collect query results in a Iterable collection. Run the function
f
as a top-down left-to-right query on the subject term. Each
application of f
returns a collection of values. All of these values
are accumulated in the collection.
Collect query results in a list.
Collect query results in a list. Run the function f
as a top-down
left-to-right query on the subject term. Accumulate the values
produced by the function in a list and return the final value of
the list.
Collect query results in a set.
Collect query results in a set. Run the function f
as a top-down
left-to-right query on the subject term. Accumulate the values
produced by the function in a set and return the final value of
the set.
Make a strategy that applies the elements of ss pairwise to the children of the subject term, returning a new term if all of the strategies succeed, otherwise failing.
Make a strategy that applies the elements of ss pairwise to the
children of the subject term, returning a new term if all of the
strategies succeed, otherwise failing. The constructor of the new
term is the same as that of the original term and the children
are the results of the strategies. If the length of ss
is not
the same as the number of children, then congruence(ss)
fails.
If the argument strategies succeed on children producing the same
terms (by eq
for references and by ==
for other values), then the
overall strategy returns the subject term.
This operation works on instances of Product
values.
Implementation of congruence
for Product
values.
Implementation of congruence
for Product
values.
Copy a product node by creating a new node of the same class type using the same children.
Copy a product node by creating a new node of the same class type using the same children.
Count function results.
Count function results. Run the function f
as a top-down query on
the subject term. Sum the integer values returned by f
from all
applications.
A strategy that always succeeds with the subject term unchanged (i.e.,
this is the identity strategy) with the side-effect that the subject
term is printed to the given emitter, prefixed by the string s
.
A strategy that always succeeds with the subject term unchanged (i.e.,
this is the identity strategy) with the side-effect that the subject
term is printed to the given emitter, prefixed by the string s
. The
emitter defaults to one that writes to standard output.
Construct a strategy that applies s
at least once and then repeats s
while r
succeeds.
Construct a strategy that applies s
at least once and then repeats s
while r
succeeds. This operator is called do-while
in the Stratego
library.
A unit for topdownS
, bottomupS
and downupS
.
A unit for topdownS
, bottomupS
and downupS
. For example, topdown(s)
is equivalent to topdownS(s, dontstop)
.
Construct a strategy that applies s1
in a top-down, prefix fashion
and s2
in a bottom-up, postfix fashion to the subject term.
Construct a strategy that applies s1
in a top-down, prefix fashion
and s2
in a bottom-up, postfix fashion to the subject term.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a combined top-down and
bottom-up fashion (i.e., both prefix and postfix) to the subject
term.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a combined top-down and
bottom-up fashion (i.e., both prefix and postfix) to the subject
term.
Construct a strategy that applies s1
in a top-down, prefix fashion
and s2
in a bottom-up, postfix fashion to the subject term but stops
when the strategy produced by stop
succeeds.
Construct a strategy that applies s1
in a top-down, prefix fashion
and s2
in a bottom-up, postfix fashion to the subject term but stops
when the strategy produced by stop
succeeds. stop
is given the whole
strategy itself as its argument.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a combined top-down and
bottom-up fashion (i.e., both prefix and postfix) to the subject
but stops when the strategy produced by stop
succeeds.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a combined top-down and
bottom-up fashion (i.e., both prefix and postfix) to the subject
but stops when the strategy produced by stop
succeeds. stop
is
given the whole strategy itself as its argument.
The duplicator used by the generic traversals.
The duplicator used by the generic traversals. Needs to be defined as a method so we can override it in other rewriting modules.
A strategy that tests whether the two sub-terms of a pair of terms are equal.
A strategy that tests whether the two sub-terms of a pair of terms are equal.
Construct a strategy that tests whether the two sub-terms of a pair of terms are equal.
Construct a strategy that tests whether the two sub-terms of a
pair of terms are equal. Synonym for eq
.
Apply the function at every term in t
in a top-down, left-to-right order.
Apply the function at every term in t
in a top-down, left-to-right order.
Collect the resulting T
values by accumulating them using f
with initial
left value v
. Return the final value of the accumulation.
Same as everywheretd
.
Same as everywheretd
.
Construct a strategy that applies s
at all terms in a bottom-up fashion
regardless of failure.
Construct a strategy that applies s
at all terms in a bottom-up fashion
regardless of failure. Terms for which the strategy fails are left
unchanged.
Construct a strategy that applies s
at all terms in a top-down fashion
regardless of failure.
Construct a strategy that applies s
at all terms in a top-down fashion
regardless of failure. Terms for which the strategy fails are left
unchanged.
A strategy that always fails.
A strategy that always fails.
A strategy that always succeeds.
A strategy that always succeeds.
Construct a strategy that applies s
repeatedly to the innermost
(i.e., lowest and left-most) (sub-)term to which it applies.
Construct a strategy that applies s
repeatedly to the innermost
(i.e., lowest and left-most) (sub-)term to which it applies.
Stop with the subject term if s
doesn't apply anywhere.
An alternative version of innermost
.
An alternative version of innermost
.
ior(s1, s2)
implements inclusive OR, that is, the
inclusive choice of s1
and s2
.
ior(s1, s2)
implements inclusive OR, that is, the
inclusive choice of s1
and s2
. It first tries s1
. If
that fails it applies s2
(just like s1 <+ s2
). However,
when s1
succeeds it also tries to apply s2
.
Construct a strategy that succeeds if the current term has at least one direct subterm.
Construct a strategy that succeeds if the current term has at least one direct subterm.
Construct a strategy that succeeds if the current term has no direct subterms.
Construct a strategy that succeeds if the current term has no direct subterms.
Construct a strategy that succeeds when applied to a pair (x,y)
if x
is a sub-term of y
but is not equal to y
.
Construct a strategy that succeeds when applied to a pair (x,y)
if x
is a sub-term of y
but is not equal to y
.
Construct a strategy that succeeds when applied to a pair (x,y)
if x
is a super-term of y
but is not equal to y
.
Construct a strategy that succeeds when applied to a pair (x,y)
if x
is a super-term of y
but is not equal to y
.
Construct a strategy that succeeds when applied to a pair (x,y)
if x
is a sub-term of y
.
Construct a strategy that succeeds when applied to a pair (x,y)
if x
is a sub-term of y
.
Construct a strategy that succeeds when applied to a pair (x,y)
if x
is a superterm of y
.
Construct a strategy that succeeds when applied to a pair (x,y)
if x
is a superterm of y
.
Applies s
followed by f
whether s
failed or not.
Applies s
followed by f
whether s
failed or not.
This operator is called finally
in the Stratego library.
Construct a strategy that applies to all of the leaves of the
subject term, using isleaf
as the leaf predicate, skipping
subterms for which skip
when applied to the result succeeds.
Construct a strategy that applies to all of the leaves of the
subject term, using isleaf
as the leaf predicate, skipping
subterms for which skip
when applied to the result succeeds.
Construct a strategy that applies to all of the leaves of the
subject term, using isleaf
as the leaf predicate.
Construct a strategy that applies to all of the leaves of the
subject term, using isleaf
as the leaf predicate.
Create a logging strategy based on a strategy s
.
Create a logging strategy based on a strategy s
. The returned strategy
succeeds or fails exactly as s
does, but also prints the provided message,
the subject term, the success or failure status, and on success, the result
term, to the provided emitter. s
is evaluated at most once.
Create a logging strategy based on a strategy s
.
Create a logging strategy based on a strategy s
. The returned strategy
succeeds or fails exactly as s
does, but if s
fails, also prints the
provided message and the subject term to the provided emitter. s
is
evaluated at most once.
Construct a strategy that while r
succeeds applies s
.
Construct a strategy that while r
succeeds applies s
. This operator
is called while
in the Stratego library.
Construct a strategy that applies s(i)
for each integer i
from low
to
high
(inclusive).
Construct a strategy that applies s(i)
for each integer i
from low
to
high
(inclusive). This operator is called for
in the Stratego library.
Construct a strategy that repeats application of s
while r
fails, after
initialization with i
.
Construct a strategy that repeats application of s
while r
fails, after
initialization with i
. This operator is called for
in the Stratego
library.
Construct a strategy that while r
does not succeed applies s
.
Construct a strategy that while r
does not succeed applies s
. This
operator is called while-not
in the Stratego library.
Make an arbitrary value c
into a term child, checking that it worked
properly.
Make an arbitrary value c
into a term child, checking that it worked
properly. Object references will be returned unchanged; other values
will be boxed.
Construct a strategy that applies s
as many times as possible, but
at least once, in bottom up order.
Construct a strategy that applies s
as many times as possible, but
at least once, in bottom up order.
Construct a strategy that applies s
as many times as possible, but
at least once, in top down order.
Construct a strategy that applies s
as many times as possible, but
at least once, in top down order.
Construct a strategy that applies s
to each element of a finite
sequence (type Seq
) returning a new sequence of the results if
all of the applications succeed, otherwise fail.
Construct a strategy that applies s
to each element of a finite
sequence (type Seq
) returning a new sequence of the results if
all of the applications succeed, otherwise fail. If all of the
applications succeed without change, return the input sequence.
Return a strategy that behaves as s
does, but memoises its arguments and
results.
Return a strategy that behaves as s
does, but memoises its arguments and
results. In other words, if memo(s)
is called on a term t
twice, the
second time will return the same result as the first, without having to
invoke s
. For best results, it is important that s
should have no side
effects. s
is evaluated at most once.
Make a strategy with the body f
.
Make a strategy with the body f
. By default, make a basic strategy.
Construct a strategy that applies s
, then fails if s
succeeded or, if s
failed, succeeds with the subject term unchanged, I.e., it tests if
s
applies, but has no effect on the subject term.
Construct a strategy that applies s
, then fails if s
succeeded or, if s
failed, succeeds with the subject term unchanged, I.e., it tests if
s
applies, but has no effect on the subject term.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a bottom-up fashion to one
subterm at each level, stopping as soon as it succeeds once (at
any level).
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a bottom-up fashion to one
subterm at each level, stopping as soon as it succeeds once (at
any level).
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a top-down fashion to one
subterm at each level, stopping as soon as it succeeds once (at
any level).
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a top-down fashion to one
subterm at each level, stopping as soon as it succeeds once (at
any level).
Traversal to one child.
Traversal to one child. Construct a strategy that applies s
to the term
children of the subject term. Assume that c
is the
first child on which s succeeds. Then stop applying s
to the children and
succeed, forming a new term from the constructor of the original term and
the original children, except that c
is replaced by the result of applying
s
to c
. In the event that the strategy fails on all children, then fail.
If there are no children, fail. If s
succeeds on the one child producing
the same term (by eq
for references and by ==
for other values), then
the overall strategy returns the subject term.
This operation works on instances of finite Rewritable
, Product
, Map
and Iterable
values, checked for in that order.
Children of a Rewritable
(resp. Product
, collection) value are processed
in the order returned by the value's deconstruct
(resp. productElement
,
foreach
) method.
s
is evaluated at most once.
Implementation of one
for Iterable
values.
Implementation of one
for Iterable
values.
Implementation of one
for Map
values.
Implementation of one
for Map
values.
Implementation of one
for Product
values.
Implementation of one
for Product
values.
Implementation of one
for Rewritable
values.
Implementation of one
for Rewritable
values.
Construct a strategy from an option value o
.
Construct a strategy from an option value o
. The strategy succeeds
or fails depending on whether o
is a Some or None, respectively.
If o
is a Some
, then the subject term is changed to the term that
is wrapped by the Some
. o
is evaluated at most once.
or(s1, s2)
is similar to ior(s1, s2)
, but the application
of the strategies is only tested.
or(s1, s2)
is similar to ior(s1, s2)
, but the application
of the strategies is only tested.
Construct a strategy that applies s
repeatedly in a top-down fashion
stopping each time as soon as it succeeds once (at any level).
Construct a strategy that applies s
repeatedly in a top-down fashion
stopping each time as soon as it succeeds once (at any level). The
outermost fails when s
fails to apply to any (sub-)term.
Perform a paramorphism over a value.
Perform a paramorphism over a value. This is a fold in which the
recursive step may refer to the recursive component of the value
and the results of folding over the children. When the function f
is called, the first parameter is the value and the second is a
sequence of the values that f
has returned for the children. This
will work on any value, but will only decompose values that are
supported by the Term
generic term deconstruction. This operation
is similar to that used in the Uniplate library.
Define a term query by a partial function f
.
Define a term query by a partial function f
. The query always succeeds
with no effect on the subject term but applies the given partial function
f
to the subject term. In other words, the strategy runs f
for its
side-effects. If the subject term is not a T
or the function is not
defined at the subject term, the strategy fails.
Due to the type erasure performed on Scala programs the type test
will be imprecise for some types. E.g., it is not possible to tell
the difference between List[Int]
and List[String]
.
Define a term query by a function f
.
Define a term query by a function f
. The query always succeeds with
no effect on the subject term but applies the given (possibly partial)
function f
to the subject term. In other words, the strategy runs
f
for its side-effects.
Construct a strategy that applies s
repeatedly to subterms
until it fails on all of them.
Construct a strategy that applies s
repeatedly to subterms
until it fails on all of them.
Construct a strategy that applies s
repeatedly exactly n
times.
Construct a strategy that applies s
repeatedly exactly n
times. If
s
fails at some point during the n applications, the entire strategy
fails. The result of the strategy is that of the nth application of
s
.
Construct a strategy that repeatedly applies s
until it fails and
then terminates with application of r
.
Construct a strategy that repeatedly applies s
until it fails and
then terminates with application of r
.
Construct a strategy that applies s
repeatedly until it fails.
Construct a strategy that applies s
repeatedly until it fails.
Construct a strategy that repeatedly applies s
(at least once) and
terminates with application of c
.
Construct a strategy that repeatedly applies s
(at least once) and
terminates with application of c
.
Construct a strategy that repeatedly applies s
(at least once).
Construct a strategy that repeatedly applies s
(at least once).
Construct a strategy that repeatedly applies s
until c
succeeds.
Construct a strategy that repeatedly applies s
until c
succeeds.
Construct a strategy that applies s
, then applies the restoring action
rest
if s
fails (and then fail).
Construct a strategy that applies s
, then applies the restoring action
rest
if s
fails (and then fail). Otherwise, let the result of s
stand.
Typically useful if s
performs side effects that should be restored or
undone when s
fails.
Construct a strategy that applies s
, then applies the restoring action
rest
regardless of the success or failure of s
.
Construct a strategy that applies s
, then applies the restoring action
rest
regardless of the success or failure of s
. The whole strategy
preserves the success or failure of s
. Typically useful if s
performs
side effects that should be restored always, e.g., when maintaining scope
information.
Rewrite a term.
Rewrite a term. Apply the strategy s
to a term returning the result term
if s
succeeds, otherwise return the original term.
Rewrite a tree.
Rewrite a tree. Apply the strategy s
to the root of a tree returning the
a tree formed from the result term if s
succeeds, otherwise return the
original tree.
The shape
parameter specifies the tree shape that should be used
when creating the new tree. The default is EnsureTree
since it is
likely that rewrites will result in node sharing that should be removed.
Define a rewrite rule using a partial function f
defined on the type
T
.
Define a rewrite rule using a partial function f
defined on the type
T
. If the subject term is a T
and the function is defined at the
subject term, then the strategy succeeds with the return value of the
function applied to the subject term. Otherwise, the strategy fails.
Due to the type erasure performed on Scala programs the type test
will be imprecise for some types. E.g., it is not possible to tell
the difference between List[Int]
and List[String]
.
Define a rewrite rule using a function f
that returns a term.
Define a rewrite rule using a function f
that returns a term.
The rule always succeeds with the return value of the function.
Define a rewrite rule using a function f
defined on type T
that returns
a strategy.
Define a rewrite rule using a function f
defined on type T
that returns
a strategy. If the subject term is a T
and the function is defined at the
subject term, the rule applies the function to the subject term to get a
strategy which is then applied again to the subject term. In other words,
the function is only used for effects such as pattern matching. The whole
thing also fails if f
is not defined at the term in the first place.
Traversal to as many children as possible, but at least one.
Traversal to as many children as possible, but at least one. Construct a
strategy that applies s
to the term children of the subject term.
If s
succeeds on any of the children, then succeed,
forming a new term from the constructor of the original term and the result
of s
for each succeeding child, with other children unchanged. In the event
that s
fails on all children, then fail. If there are no
children, fail. If s
succeeds on children producing the same terms (by eq
for references and by ==
for other values), then the overall strategy
returns the subject term.
This operation works on instances of finite Rewritable
, Product
, Map
and
Iterable
values, checked for in that order.
Children of a Rewritable
(resp. Product
, collection) value are processed
in the order returned by the value's deconstruct
(resp. productElement
,
foreach
) method.
s
is evaluated at most once.
Implementation of some
for Iterable
values.
Implementation of some
for Iterable
values.
Implementation of some
for Map
values.
Implementation of some
for Map
values.
Implementation of some
for Product
values.
Implementation of some
for Product
values.
Implementation of some
for Rewritable
values.
Implementation of some
for Rewritable
values.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a bottom-up fashion to some
subterms at each level, stopping as soon as it succeeds once (at
any level).
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a bottom-up fashion to some
subterms at each level, stopping as soon as it succeeds once (at
any level).
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a top-down, prefix fashion
stopping at a frontier where s
succeeds on some children.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a top-down, prefix fashion
stopping at a frontier where s
succeeds on some children. s
is then
applied in a bottom-up, postfix fashion to the result.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a top-down fashion to some
subterms at each level, stopping as soon as it succeeds once (at
any level).
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a top-down fashion to some
subterms at each level, stopping as soon as it succeeds once (at
any level).
Make a strategy from a partial function f
defined on the type T
.
Make a strategy from a partial function f
defined on the type T
.
If the subject term is a T
and the function is defined at the
subject term, then the function return value when applied to the
subject term determines whether the strategy succeeds or fails.
If the subject term is not a T
or the function is not defined at
the subject term, the strategy fails.
Due to the type erasure performed on Scala programs the type test
will be imprecise for some types. E.g., it is not possible to tell
the difference between List[Int]
and List[String]
.
Make a strategy from a function f
.
Make a strategy from a function f
. The function return value
determines whether the strategy succeeds or fails.
Construct a strategy that succeeds only if the subject term matches
the given term t
.
Construct a strategy that succeeds only if the subject term matches
the given term t
.
Construct a strategy that tests whether strategy s
succeeds,
restoring the original term on success.
Construct a strategy that tests whether strategy s
succeeds,
restoring the original term on success. A synonym for where
.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a top-down, prefix fashion
to the subject term.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a top-down, prefix fashion
to the subject term.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a top-down, prefix fashion
to the subject term but stops when the strategy produced by stop
succeeds.
Construct a strategy that applies s
in a top-down, prefix fashion
to the subject term but stops when the strategy produced by stop
succeeds. stop
is given the whole strategy itself as its argument.
Construct a strategy that tests whether strategy s
succeeds,
restoring the original term on success.
Construct a strategy that tests whether strategy s
succeeds,
restoring the original term on success. This is similar
to Stratego's where
, except that in this version any effects on
bindings are not visible outside s
.
Strategy-based term rewriting for arbitrary terms.