megaparsec-5.3.1: 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.Prim

Contents

Description

The primitive parser combinators.

Synopsis

Data types

data State s Source #

This is the Megaparsec's state, it's parametrized over stream type s.

Constructors

State 

Fields

Instances

Eq s => Eq (State s) Source # 

Methods

(==) :: State s -> State s -> Bool #

(/=) :: State s -> State s -> Bool #

Data s => Data (State s) Source # 

Methods

gfoldl :: (forall d b. Data d => c (d -> b) -> d -> c b) -> (forall g. g -> c g) -> State s -> c (State s) #

gunfold :: (forall b r. Data b => c (b -> r) -> c r) -> (forall r. r -> c r) -> Constr -> c (State s) #

toConstr :: State s -> Constr #

dataTypeOf :: State s -> DataType #

dataCast1 :: Typeable (* -> *) t => (forall d. Data d => c (t d)) -> Maybe (c (State s)) #

dataCast2 :: Typeable (* -> * -> *) t => (forall d e. (Data d, Data e) => c (t d e)) -> Maybe (c (State s)) #

gmapT :: (forall b. Data b => b -> b) -> State s -> State s #

gmapQl :: (r -> r' -> r) -> r -> (forall d. Data d => d -> r') -> State s -> r #

gmapQr :: (r' -> r -> r) -> r -> (forall d. Data d => d -> r') -> State s -> r #

gmapQ :: (forall d. Data d => d -> u) -> State s -> [u] #

gmapQi :: Int -> (forall d. Data d => d -> u) -> State s -> u #

gmapM :: Monad m => (forall d. Data d => d -> m d) -> State s -> m (State s) #

gmapMp :: MonadPlus m => (forall d. Data d => d -> m d) -> State s -> m (State s) #

gmapMo :: MonadPlus m => (forall d. Data d => d -> m d) -> State s -> m (State s) #

Show s => Show (State s) Source # 

Methods

showsPrec :: Int -> State s -> ShowS #

show :: State s -> String #

showList :: [State s] -> ShowS #

Generic (State s) Source # 

Associated Types

type Rep (State s) :: * -> * #

Methods

from :: State s -> Rep (State s) x #

to :: Rep (State s) x -> State s #

Arbitrary a => Arbitrary (State a) Source # 

Methods

arbitrary :: Gen (State a) #

shrink :: State a -> [State a] #

NFData s => NFData (State s) Source # 

Methods

rnf :: State s -> () #

type Rep (State s) Source # 
type Rep (State s) = D1 (MetaData "State" "Text.Megaparsec.Prim" "megaparsec-5.3.1-4PNWjfGTZk1HgUWwVLM9zx" False) (C1 (MetaCons "State" PrefixI True) ((:*:) ((:*:) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "stateInput") NoSourceUnpackedness NoSourceStrictness DecidedLazy) (Rec0 s)) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "statePos") NoSourceUnpackedness NoSourceStrictness DecidedLazy) (Rec0 (NonEmpty SourcePos)))) ((:*:) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "stateTokensProcessed") SourceUnpack SourceStrict DecidedUnpack) (Rec0 Word)) (S1 (MetaSel (Just Symbol "stateTabWidth") NoSourceUnpackedness NoSourceStrictness DecidedLazy) (Rec0 Pos)))))

class Ord (Token s) => Stream s where Source #

An instance of Stream s has stream type s. Token type is determined by the stream and can be found via Token type function.

Minimal complete definition

uncons, updatePos

Associated Types

type Token s :: * Source #

Type of token in stream.

Since: 5.0.0

Methods

uncons :: s -> Maybe (Token s, s) Source #

Get next token from the stream. If the stream is empty, return Nothing.

updatePos :: Proxy s -> Pos -> SourcePos -> Token s -> (SourcePos, SourcePos) Source #

Update position in stream given tab width, current position, and current token. The result is a tuple where the first element will be used to report parse errors for current token, while the second element is the incremented position that will be stored in the parser's state. The stored (incremented) position is used whenever position can't be/shouldn't be updated by consuming a token. For example, when using failure, we don't grab a new token (we need to fail right were we are now), so error position will be taken from parser's state.

When you work with streams where elements do not contain information about their position in input, the result is usually consists of the third argument unchanged and incremented position calculated with respect to current token. This is how default instances of Stream work (they use defaultUpdatePos, which may be a good starting point for your own position-advancing function).

When you wish to deal with a stream of tokens where every token “knows” its start and end position in input (for example, you have produced the stream with Happy/Alex), then the best strategy is to use the start position as the actual element position and provide the end position of the token as the incremented one.

Since: 5.0.0

type Parsec e s = ParsecT e s Identity Source #

Parsec is a non-transformer variant of the more general ParsecT monad transformer.

data ParsecT e s m a Source #

ParsecT e s m a is a parser with custom data component of error e, stream type s, underlying monad m and return type a.

Instances

(ErrorComponent e, Stream s) => MonadParsec e s (ParsecT e s m) Source # 

Methods

failure :: Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set e -> ParsecT e s m a Source #

label :: String -> ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a Source #

hidden :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a Source #

try :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a Source #

lookAhead :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a Source #

notFollowedBy :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m () Source #

withRecovery :: (ParseError (Token s) e -> ParsecT e s m a) -> ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a Source #

observing :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m (Either (ParseError (Token s) e) a) Source #

eof :: ParsecT e s m () Source #

token :: (Token s -> Either (Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set e) a) -> Maybe (Token s) -> ParsecT e s m a Source #

tokens :: (Token s -> Token s -> Bool) -> [Token s] -> ParsecT e s m [Token s] Source #

getParserState :: ParsecT e s m (State s) Source #

updateParserState :: (State s -> State s) -> ParsecT e s m () Source #

(ErrorComponent e, Stream s, MonadError e' m) => MonadError e' (ParsecT e s m) Source # 

Methods

throwError :: e' -> ParsecT e s m a #

catchError :: ParsecT e s m a -> (e' -> ParsecT e s m a) -> ParsecT e s m a #

(ErrorComponent e, Stream s, MonadReader r m) => MonadReader r (ParsecT e s m) Source # 

Methods

ask :: ParsecT e s m r #

local :: (r -> r) -> ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a #

reader :: (r -> a) -> ParsecT e s m a #

(ErrorComponent e, Stream s, MonadState st m) => MonadState st (ParsecT e s m) Source # 

Methods

get :: ParsecT e s m st #

put :: st -> ParsecT e s m () #

state :: (st -> (a, st)) -> ParsecT e s m a #

MonadTrans (ParsecT e s) Source # 

Methods

lift :: Monad m => m a -> ParsecT e s m a #

(ErrorComponent e, Stream s) => Monad (ParsecT e s m) Source # 

Methods

(>>=) :: ParsecT e s m a -> (a -> ParsecT e s m b) -> ParsecT e s m b #

(>>) :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m b -> ParsecT e s m b #

return :: a -> ParsecT e s m a #

fail :: String -> ParsecT e s m a #

Functor (ParsecT e s m) Source # 

Methods

fmap :: (a -> b) -> ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m b #

(<$) :: a -> ParsecT e s m b -> ParsecT e s m a #

(ErrorComponent e, Stream s) => MonadFail (ParsecT e s m) Source # 

Methods

fail :: String -> ParsecT e s m a #

(ErrorComponent e, Stream s) => Applicative (ParsecT e s m) Source # 

Methods

pure :: a -> ParsecT e s m a #

(<*>) :: ParsecT e s m (a -> b) -> ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m b #

(*>) :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m b -> ParsecT e s m b #

(<*) :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m b -> ParsecT e s m a #

(ErrorComponent e, Stream s, MonadIO m) => MonadIO (ParsecT e s m) Source # 

Methods

liftIO :: IO a -> ParsecT e s m a #

(ErrorComponent e, Stream s) => Alternative (ParsecT e s m) Source # 

Methods

empty :: ParsecT e s m a #

(<|>) :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a #

some :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m [a] #

many :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m [a] #

(ErrorComponent e, Stream s) => MonadPlus (ParsecT e s m) Source # 

Methods

mzero :: ParsecT e s m a #

mplus :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a #

(ErrorComponent e, Stream s, MonadCont m) => MonadCont (ParsecT e s m) Source # 

Methods

callCC :: ((a -> ParsecT e s m b) -> ParsecT e s m a) -> ParsecT e s m a #

(ErrorComponent e, Stream s, Semigroup a) => Semigroup (ParsecT e s m a) Source # 

Methods

(<>) :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a #

sconcat :: NonEmpty (ParsecT e s m a) -> ParsecT e s m a #

stimes :: Integral b => b -> ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a #

(ErrorComponent e, Stream s, Monoid a) => Monoid (ParsecT e s m a) Source # 

Methods

mempty :: ParsecT e s m a #

mappend :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a #

mconcat :: [ParsecT e s m a] -> ParsecT e s m a #

Primitive combinators

class (ErrorComponent e, Stream s, Alternative m, MonadPlus m) => MonadParsec e s m | m -> e s where Source #

Type class describing parsers independent of input type.

Methods

failure :: Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set e -> m a Source #

The most general way to stop parsing and report a ParseError.

unexpected is defined in terms of this function:

unexpected item = failure (Set.singleton item) Set.empty Set.empty

Since: 4.2.0

label :: String -> m a -> m a Source #

The parser label name p behaves as parser p, but whenever the parser p fails without consuming any input, it replaces names of “expected” tokens with the name name.

hidden :: m a -> m a Source #

hidden p behaves just like parser p, but it doesn't show any “expected” tokens in error message when p fails.

try :: m a -> m a Source #

The parser try p behaves like parser p, except that it backtracks the parser state when p fails (either consuming input or not).

This combinator is used whenever arbitrary look ahead is needed. Since it pretends that it hasn't consumed any input when p fails, the (<|>) combinator will try its second alternative even when the first parser failed while consuming input.

For example, here is a parser that is supposed to parse the word “let” or the word “lexical”:

>>> parseTest (string "let" <|> string "lexical") "lexical"
1:1:
unexpected "lex"
expecting "let"

What happens here? The first parser consumes “le” and fails (because it doesn't see a “t”). The second parser, however, isn't tried, since the first parser has already consumed some input! try fixes this behavior and allows backtracking to work:

>>> parseTest (try (string "let") <|> string "lexical") "lexical"
"lexical"

try also improves error messages in case of overlapping alternatives, because Megaparsec's hint system can be used:

>>> parseTest (try (string "let") <|> string "lexical") "le"
1:1:
unexpected "le"
expecting "let" or "lexical"

Please note that as of Megaparsec 4.4.0, string backtracks automatically (see tokens), so it does not need try. However, the examples above demonstrate the idea behind try so well that it was decided to keep them. You still need to use try when your alternatives are complex, composite parsers.

lookAhead :: m a -> m a Source #

If p in lookAhead p succeeds (either consuming input or not) the whole parser behaves like p succeeded without consuming anything (parser state is not updated as well). If p fails, lookAhead has no effect, i.e. it will fail consuming input if p fails consuming input. Combine with try if this is undesirable.

notFollowedBy :: m a -> m () Source #

notFollowedBy p only succeeds when the parser p fails. This parser never consumes any input and never modifies parser state. It can be used to implement the “longest match” rule.

withRecovery :: (ParseError (Token s) e -> m a) -> m a -> m a Source #

withRecovery r p allows continue parsing even if parser p fails. In this case r is called with the actual ParseError as its argument. Typical usage is to return a value signifying failure to parse this particular object and to consume some part of the input up to the point where the next object starts.

Note that if r fails, original error message is reported as if without withRecovery. In no way recovering parser r can influence error messages.

Since: 4.4.0

observing :: m a -> m (Either (ParseError (Token s) e) a) Source #

observing p allows to “observe” failure of the p parser, should it happen, without actually ending parsing, but instead getting the ParseError in Left. On success parsed value is returned in Right as usual. Note that this primitive just allows you to observe parse errors as they happen, it does not backtrack or change how the p parser works in any way.

Since: 5.1.0

eof :: m () Source #

This parser only succeeds at the end of the input.

token :: (Token s -> Either (Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set e) a) -> Maybe (Token s) -> m a Source #

The parser token test mrep accepts a token t with result x when the function test t returns Right x. mrep may provide representation of the token to report in error messages when input stream in empty.

This is the most primitive combinator for accepting tokens. For example, the satisfy parser is implemented as:

satisfy f = token testChar Nothing
  where
    testChar x =
      if f x
        then Right x
        else Left (Set.singleton (Tokens (x:|[])), Set.empty, Set.empty)

tokens :: (Token s -> Token s -> Bool) -> [Token s] -> m [Token s] Source #

The parser tokens test parses a list of tokens and returns it. Supplied predicate test is used to check equality of given and parsed tokens.

This can be used for example to write string:

string = tokens (==)

Note that beginning from Megaparsec 4.4.0, this is an auto-backtracking primitive, which means that if it fails, it never consumes any input. This is done to make its consumption model match how error messages for this primitive are reported (which becomes an important thing as user gets more control with primitives like withRecovery):

>>> parseTest (string "abc") "abd"
1:1:
unexpected "abd"
expecting "abc"

This means, in particular, that it's no longer necessary to use try with tokens-based parsers, such as string and string'. This feature does not affect performance in any way.

getParserState :: m (State s) Source #

Return the full parser state as a State record.

updateParserState :: (State s -> State s) -> m () Source #

updateParserState f applies the function f to the parser state.

Instances

MonadParsec e s m => MonadParsec e s (IdentityT * m) Source # 
(Monoid w, MonadParsec e s m) => MonadParsec e s (WriterT w m) Source # 

Methods

failure :: Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set e -> WriterT w m a Source #

label :: String -> WriterT w m a -> WriterT w m a Source #

hidden :: WriterT w m a -> WriterT w m a Source #

try :: WriterT w m a -> WriterT w m a Source #

lookAhead :: WriterT w m a -> WriterT w m a Source #

notFollowedBy :: WriterT w m a -> WriterT w m () Source #

withRecovery :: (ParseError (Token s) e -> WriterT w m a) -> WriterT w m a -> WriterT w m a Source #

observing :: WriterT w m a -> WriterT w m (Either (ParseError (Token s) e) a) Source #

eof :: WriterT w m () Source #

token :: (Token s -> Either (Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set e) a) -> Maybe (Token s) -> WriterT w m a Source #

tokens :: (Token s -> Token s -> Bool) -> [Token s] -> WriterT w m [Token s] Source #

getParserState :: WriterT w m (State s) Source #

updateParserState :: (State s -> State s) -> WriterT w m () Source #

(Monoid w, MonadParsec e s m) => MonadParsec e s (WriterT w m) Source # 

Methods

failure :: Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set e -> WriterT w m a Source #

label :: String -> WriterT w m a -> WriterT w m a Source #

hidden :: WriterT w m a -> WriterT w m a Source #

try :: WriterT w m a -> WriterT w m a Source #

lookAhead :: WriterT w m a -> WriterT w m a Source #

notFollowedBy :: WriterT w m a -> WriterT w m () Source #

withRecovery :: (ParseError (Token s) e -> WriterT w m a) -> WriterT w m a -> WriterT w m a Source #

observing :: WriterT w m a -> WriterT w m (Either (ParseError (Token s) e) a) Source #

eof :: WriterT w m () Source #

token :: (Token s -> Either (Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set e) a) -> Maybe (Token s) -> WriterT w m a Source #

tokens :: (Token s -> Token s -> Bool) -> [Token s] -> WriterT w m [Token s] Source #

getParserState :: WriterT w m (State s) Source #

updateParserState :: (State s -> State s) -> WriterT w m () Source #

MonadParsec e s m => MonadParsec e s (StateT st m) Source # 

Methods

failure :: Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set e -> StateT st m a Source #

label :: String -> StateT st m a -> StateT st m a Source #

hidden :: StateT st m a -> StateT st m a Source #

try :: StateT st m a -> StateT st m a Source #

lookAhead :: StateT st m a -> StateT st m a Source #

notFollowedBy :: StateT st m a -> StateT st m () Source #

withRecovery :: (ParseError (Token s) e -> StateT st m a) -> StateT st m a -> StateT st m a Source #

observing :: StateT st m a -> StateT st m (Either (ParseError (Token s) e) a) Source #

eof :: StateT st m () Source #

token :: (Token s -> Either (Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set e) a) -> Maybe (Token s) -> StateT st m a Source #

tokens :: (Token s -> Token s -> Bool) -> [Token s] -> StateT st m [Token s] Source #

getParserState :: StateT st m (State s) Source #

updateParserState :: (State s -> State s) -> StateT st m () Source #

MonadParsec e s m => MonadParsec e s (StateT st m) Source # 

Methods

failure :: Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set e -> StateT st m a Source #

label :: String -> StateT st m a -> StateT st m a Source #

hidden :: StateT st m a -> StateT st m a Source #

try :: StateT st m a -> StateT st m a Source #

lookAhead :: StateT st m a -> StateT st m a Source #

notFollowedBy :: StateT st m a -> StateT st m () Source #

withRecovery :: (ParseError (Token s) e -> StateT st m a) -> StateT st m a -> StateT st m a Source #

observing :: StateT st m a -> StateT st m (Either (ParseError (Token s) e) a) Source #

eof :: StateT st m () Source #

token :: (Token s -> Either (Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set e) a) -> Maybe (Token s) -> StateT st m a Source #

tokens :: (Token s -> Token s -> Bool) -> [Token s] -> StateT st m [Token s] Source #

getParserState :: StateT st m (State s) Source #

updateParserState :: (State s -> State s) -> StateT st m () Source #

MonadParsec e s m => MonadParsec e s (ReaderT * r m) Source # 

Methods

failure :: Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set e -> ReaderT * r m a Source #

label :: String -> ReaderT * r m a -> ReaderT * r m a Source #

hidden :: ReaderT * r m a -> ReaderT * r m a Source #

try :: ReaderT * r m a -> ReaderT * r m a Source #

lookAhead :: ReaderT * r m a -> ReaderT * r m a Source #

notFollowedBy :: ReaderT * r m a -> ReaderT * r m () Source #

withRecovery :: (ParseError (Token s) e -> ReaderT * r m a) -> ReaderT * r m a -> ReaderT * r m a Source #

observing :: ReaderT * r m a -> ReaderT * r m (Either (ParseError (Token s) e) a) Source #

eof :: ReaderT * r m () Source #

token :: (Token s -> Either (Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set e) a) -> Maybe (Token s) -> ReaderT * r m a Source #

tokens :: (Token s -> Token s -> Bool) -> [Token s] -> ReaderT * r m [Token s] Source #

getParserState :: ReaderT * r m (State s) Source #

updateParserState :: (State s -> State s) -> ReaderT * r m () Source #

(ErrorComponent e, Stream s) => MonadParsec e s (ParsecT e s m) Source # 

Methods

failure :: Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set e -> ParsecT e s m a Source #

label :: String -> ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a Source #

hidden :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a Source #

try :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a Source #

lookAhead :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a Source #

notFollowedBy :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m () Source #

withRecovery :: (ParseError (Token s) e -> ParsecT e s m a) -> ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m a Source #

observing :: ParsecT e s m a -> ParsecT e s m (Either (ParseError (Token s) e) a) Source #

eof :: ParsecT e s m () Source #

token :: (Token s -> Either (Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set e) a) -> Maybe (Token s) -> ParsecT e s m a Source #

tokens :: (Token s -> Token s -> Bool) -> [Token s] -> ParsecT e s m [Token s] Source #

getParserState :: ParsecT e s m (State s) Source #

updateParserState :: (State s -> State s) -> ParsecT e s m () Source #

(Monoid w, MonadParsec e s m) => MonadParsec e s (RWST r w st m) Source # 

Methods

failure :: Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set e -> RWST r w st m a Source #

label :: String -> RWST r w st m a -> RWST r w st m a Source #

hidden :: RWST r w st m a -> RWST r w st m a Source #

try :: RWST r w st m a -> RWST r w st m a Source #

lookAhead :: RWST r w st m a -> RWST r w st m a Source #

notFollowedBy :: RWST r w st m a -> RWST r w st m () Source #

withRecovery :: (ParseError (Token s) e -> RWST r w st m a) -> RWST r w st m a -> RWST r w st m a Source #

observing :: RWST r w st m a -> RWST r w st m (Either (ParseError (Token s) e) a) Source #

eof :: RWST r w st m () Source #

token :: (Token s -> Either (Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set e) a) -> Maybe (Token s) -> RWST r w st m a Source #

tokens :: (Token s -> Token s -> Bool) -> [Token s] -> RWST r w st m [Token s] Source #

getParserState :: RWST r w st m (State s) Source #

updateParserState :: (State s -> State s) -> RWST r w st m () Source #

(Monoid w, MonadParsec e s m) => MonadParsec e s (RWST r w st m) Source # 

Methods

failure :: Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set (ErrorItem (Token s)) -> Set e -> RWST r w st m a Source #

label :: String -> RWST r w st m a -> RWST r w st m a Source #

hidden :: RWST r w st m a -> RWST r w st m a Source #

try :: RWST r w st m a -> RWST r w st m a Source #

lookAhead :: RWST r w st m a -> RWST r w st m a Source #

notFollowedBy :: RWST r w st m a -> RWST r w st m () Source #

withRecovery :: (ParseError (Token s) e -> RWST r w st m a) -> RWST r w st m a -> RWST r w st m a Source #

observing :: RWST r w st m a -> RWST r w st m (Either (ParseError (Token s) e) a) Source #

eof :: RWST r w st m () Source #

token :: (Token s -> Either (Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set (ErrorItem (Token s)), Set e) a) -> Maybe (Token s) -> RWST r w st m a Source #

tokens :: (Token s -> Token s -> Bool) -> [Token s] -> RWST r w st m [Token s] Source #

getParserState :: RWST r w st m (State s) Source #

updateParserState :: (State s -> State s) -> RWST r w st m () Source #

(<?>) :: MonadParsec e s m => m a -> String -> m a infix 0 Source #

A synonym for label in the form of an operator.

unexpected :: MonadParsec e s m => ErrorItem (Token s) -> m a Source #

The parser unexpected item fails with an error message telling about unexpected item item without consuming any input.

match :: MonadParsec e s m => m a -> m ([Token s], a) Source #

Return both the result of a parse and the list of tokens that were consumed during parsing. This relies on the change of the stateTokensProcessed value to evaluate how many tokens were consumed.

Since: 5.3.0

region Source #

Arguments

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

How to process ParseErrors

-> m a

The “region” that processing applies to

-> m a 

Specify how to process ParseErrors that happen inside of this wrapper. As a side effect of the current implementation changing errorPos with this combinator will also change the final statePos in the parser state.

Since: 5.3.0

Parser state combinators

getInput :: MonadParsec e s m => m s Source #

Return the current input.

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

setInput input continues parsing with input. The getInput and setInput functions can for example be used to deal with include files.

getPosition :: MonadParsec e s m => m SourcePos Source #

Return the current source position.

See also: setPosition, pushPosition, popPosition, and SourcePos.

getNextTokenPosition :: forall e s m. MonadParsec e s m => m (Maybe SourcePos) Source #

Get the position where the next token in the stream begins. If the stream is empty, return Nothing.

Since: 5.3.0

setPosition :: MonadParsec e s m => SourcePos -> m () Source #

setPosition pos sets the current source position to pos.

See also: getPosition, pushPosition, popPosition, and SourcePos.

pushPosition :: MonadParsec e s m => SourcePos -> m () Source #

Push a position into stack of positions and continue parsing working with this position. Useful for working with include files and the like.

See also: getPosition, setPosition, popPosition, and SourcePos.

Since: 5.0.0

popPosition :: MonadParsec e s m => m () Source #

Pop a position from the stack of positions unless it only contains one element (in that case the stack of positions remains the same). This is how to return to previous source file after pushPosition.

See also: getPosition, setPosition, pushPosition, and SourcePos.

Since: 5.0.0

getTokensProcessed :: MonadParsec e s m => m Word Source #

Get the number of tokens processed so far.

Since: 5.2.0

setTokensProcessed :: MonadParsec e s m => Word -> m () Source #

Set the number of tokens processed so far.

Since: 5.2.0

getTabWidth :: MonadParsec e s m => m Pos Source #

Return the tab width. The default tab width is equal to defaultTabWidth. You can set a different tab width with the help of setTabWidth.

setTabWidth :: MonadParsec e s m => Pos -> m () Source #

Set tab width. If the argument of the function is not a positive number, defaultTabWidth will be used.

setParserState :: MonadParsec e s m => State s -> m () Source #

setParserState st sets the parser state to st.

Running parser

parse Source #

Arguments

:: Parsec e s a

Parser to run

-> String

Name of source file

-> s

Input for parser

-> Either (ParseError (Token s) e) a 

parse p file input runs parser p over Identity (see runParserT if you're using the ParsecT monad transformer; parse itself is just a synonym for runParser). It returns either a ParseError (Left) or a value of type a (Right). parseErrorPretty can be used to turn ParseError into the string representation of the error message. See Text.Megaparsec.Error if you need to do more advanced error analysis.

main = case (parse numbers "" "11,2,43") of
         Left err -> putStr (parseErrorPretty err)
         Right xs -> print (sum xs)

numbers = integer `sepBy` char ','

parseMaybe :: (ErrorComponent e, Stream s) => Parsec e s a -> s -> Maybe a Source #

parseMaybe p input runs the parser p on input and returns the result inside Just on success and Nothing on failure. This function also parses eof, so if the parser doesn't consume all of its input, it will fail.

The function is supposed to be useful for lightweight parsing, where error messages (and thus file name) are not important and entire input should be parsed. For example it can be used when parsing of a single number according to specification of its format is desired.

parseTest Source #

Arguments

:: (ShowErrorComponent e, Ord (Token s), ShowToken (Token s), Show a) 
=> Parsec e s a

Parser to run

-> s

Input for parser

-> IO () 

The expression parseTest p input applies the parser p against input input and prints the result to stdout. Useful for testing.

runParser Source #

Arguments

:: Parsec e s a

Parser to run

-> String

Name of source file

-> s

Input for parser

-> Either (ParseError (Token s) e) a 

runParser p file input runs parser p on the input stream of tokens input, obtained from source file. The file is only used in error messages and may be the empty string. Returns either a ParseError (Left) or a value of type a (Right).

parseFromFile p file = runParser p file <$> readFile file

runParser' Source #

Arguments

:: Parsec e s a

Parser to run

-> State s

Initial state

-> (State s, Either (ParseError (Token s) e) a) 

The function is similar to runParser with the difference that it accepts and returns parser state. This allows to specify arbitrary textual position at the beginning of parsing, for example. This is the most general way to run a parser over the Identity monad.

Since: 4.2.0

runParserT Source #

Arguments

:: Monad m 
=> ParsecT e s m a

Parser to run

-> String

Name of source file

-> s

Input for parser

-> m (Either (ParseError (Token s) e) a) 

runParserT p file input runs parser p on the input list of tokens input, obtained from source file. The file is only used in error messages and may be the empty string. Returns a computation in the underlying monad m that returns either a ParseError (Left) or a value of type a (Right).

runParserT' Source #

Arguments

:: Monad m 
=> ParsecT e s m a

Parser to run

-> State s

Initial state

-> m (State s, Either (ParseError (Token s) e) a) 

This function is similar to runParserT, but like runParser' it accepts and returns parser state. This is thus the most general way to run a parser.

Since: 4.2.0

Debugging

dbg Source #

Arguments

:: (Stream s, ShowToken (Token s), ShowErrorComponent e, Show a) 
=> String

Debugging label

-> ParsecT e s m a

Parser to debug

-> ParsecT e s m a

Parser that prints debugging messages

dbg label p parser works exactly like p, but when it's evaluated it also prints information useful for debugging. The label is only used to refer to this parser in the debugging output. This combinator uses the trace function from Debug.Trace under the hood.

Typical usage is to wrap every sub-parser in misbehaving parser with dbg assigning meaningful labels. Then give it a shot and go through the print-out. As of current version, this combinator prints all available information except for hints, which are probably only interesting to the maintainer of Megaparsec itself and may be quite verbose to output in general. Let me know if you would like to be able to see hints in the debugging output.

The output itself is pretty self-explanatory, although the following abbreviations should be clarified (they are derived from the low-level source code):

  • COK—“consumed OK”. The parser consumed input and succeeded.
  • CERR—“consumed error”. The parser consumed input and failed.
  • EOK—“empty OK”. The parser succeeded without consuming input.
  • EERR—“empty error”. The parser failed without consuming input.

Finally, it's not possible to lift this function into some monad transformers without introducing surprising behavior (e.g. unexpected state backtracking) or adding otherwise redundant constraints (e.g. Show instance for state), so this helper is only available for ParsecT monad, not MonadParsec in general.

Since: 5.1.0