megaparsec-6.1.1: Monadic parser combinators

Copyright© 2015–2017 Megaparsec contributors
© 2007 Paolo Martini
© 1999–2001 Daan Leijen
LicenseFreeBSD
MaintainerMark Karpov <markkarpov92@gmail.com>
Stabilityexperimental
Portabilitynon-portable
Safe HaskellNone
LanguageHaskell2010

Text.Megaparsec.Char

Contents

Description

Commonly used character parsers.

Synopsis

Simple parsers

newline :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse a newline character.

crlf :: forall e s m. (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Tokens s) Source #

Parse a carriage return character followed by a newline character. Return the sequence of characters parsed.

eol :: forall e s m. (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Tokens s) Source #

Parse a CRLF (see crlf) or LF (see newline) end of line. Return the sequence of characters parsed.

tab :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse a tab character.

space :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m () Source #

Skip zero or more white space characters.

See also: skipMany and spaceChar.

space1 :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m () Source #

Skip one or more white space characters.

See also: skipSome and spaceChar.

Since: 6.0.0

Categories of characters

controlChar :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse a control character (a non-printing character of the Latin-1 subset of Unicode).

spaceChar :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse a Unicode space character, and the control characters: tab, newline, carriage return, form feed, and vertical tab.

upperChar :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse an upper-case or title-case alphabetic Unicode character. Title case is used by a small number of letter ligatures like the single-character form of Lj.

lowerChar :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse a lower-case alphabetic Unicode character.

letterChar :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse an alphabetic Unicode character: lower-case, upper-case, or title-case letter, or a letter of case-less scripts/modifier letter.

alphaNumChar :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse an alphabetic or numeric digit Unicode characters.

Note that the numeric digits outside the ASCII range are parsed by this parser but not by digitChar. Such digits may be part of identifiers but are not used by the printer and reader to represent numbers.

printChar :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse a printable Unicode character: letter, number, mark, punctuation, symbol or space.

digitChar :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse an ASCII digit, i.e between “0” and “9”.

octDigitChar :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse an octal digit, i.e. between “0” and “7”.

hexDigitChar :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse a hexadecimal digit, i.e. between “0” and “9”, or “a” and “f”, or “A” and “F”.

markChar :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse a Unicode mark character (accents and the like), which combines with preceding characters.

numberChar :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse a Unicode numeric character, including digits from various scripts, Roman numerals, etc.

punctuationChar :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse a Unicode punctuation character, including various kinds of connectors, brackets and quotes.

symbolChar :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse a Unicode symbol characters, including mathematical and currency symbols.

separatorChar :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse a Unicode space and separator characters.

asciiChar :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse a character from the first 128 characters of the Unicode character set, corresponding to the ASCII character set.

latin1Char :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => m (Token s) Source #

Parse a character from the first 256 characters of the Unicode character set, corresponding to the ISO 8859-1 (Latin-1) character set.

charCategory :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => GeneralCategory -> m (Token s) Source #

charCategory cat parses character in Unicode General Category cat, see GeneralCategory.

categoryName :: GeneralCategory -> String Source #

Return the human-readable name of Unicode General Category.

More general parsers

char :: MonadParsec e s m => Token s -> m (Token s) Source #

char c parses a single character c.

semicolon = char ';'

char' :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Char) => Token s -> m (Token s) Source #

The same as char but case-insensitive. This parser returns the actually parsed character preserving its case.

>>> parseTest (char' 'e') "E"
'E'
>>> parseTest (char' 'e') "G"
1:1:
unexpected 'G'
expecting 'E' or 'e'

anyChar :: MonadParsec e s m => m (Token s) Source #

This parser succeeds for any character. Returns the parsed character.

notChar :: MonadParsec e s m => Token s -> m (Token s) Source #

Match any character but the given one. It's a good idea to attach a label to this parser manually.

Since: 6.0.0

oneOf :: (Foldable f, MonadParsec e s m) => f (Token s) -> m (Token s) Source #

oneOf cs succeeds if the current character is in the supplied collection of characters cs. Returns the parsed character. Note that this parser cannot automatically generate the “expected” component of error message, so usually you should label it manually with label or (<?>).

See also: satisfy.

digit = oneOf ['0'..'9'] <?> "digit"

Performance note: prefer satisfy when you can because it's faster when you have only a couple of tokens to compare to:

quoteFast = satisfy (\x -> x == '\'' || x == '\"')
quoteSlow = oneOf "'\""

noneOf :: (Foldable f, MonadParsec e s m) => f (Token s) -> m (Token s) Source #

As the dual of oneOf, noneOf cs succeeds if the current character not in the supplied list of characters cs. Returns the parsed character. Note that this parser cannot automatically generate the “expected” component of error message, so usually you should label it manually with label or (<?>).

See also: satisfy.

Performance note: prefer satisfy and notChar when you can because it's faster.

satisfy Source #

Arguments

:: MonadParsec e s m 
=> (Token s -> Bool)

Predicate to apply

-> m (Token s) 

The parser satisfy f succeeds for any character for which the supplied function f returns True. Returns the character that is actually parsed.

digitChar = satisfy isDigit <?> "digit"
oneOf cs  = satisfy (`elem` cs)

Sequence of characters

string :: MonadParsec e s m => Tokens s -> m (Tokens s) Source #

string s parses a sequence of characters given by s. Returns the parsed string (i.e. s).

divOrMod = string "div" <|> string "mod"

string' :: (MonadParsec e s m, FoldCase (Tokens s)) => Tokens s -> m (Tokens s) Source #

The same as string, but case-insensitive. On success returns string cased as actually parsed input.

>>> parseTest (string' "foobar") "foObAr"
"foObAr"