Sexpistol

Sexpistol is a very fast and easy-to-use library for parsing S-Expressions in Ruby. Sexpistol takes an S-Expression in string form and turns it into a native Ruby data structure made up of nested sets of arrays.

Example

(define test (lambda () (
  (print "Hello world!\n")
  (print 1)
  (print 9.01)
  (print 2.0e10)
  (print (+ 10 12 13))
)))

would be parsed by Sexpistol like so:

[:define, :test, [:lambda, [], [
  [:print, "Hello world!\n"],
  [:print, 1],
  [:print, 9.01],
  [:print, 2.0e10],
  [:print, [:+, 10, 12, 13]]
]]]

Type mappings

Sexpistol supports all of the standard datatypes and converts them directly to their Ruby equivalents:

  • Lists (a b c)

  • Integers (1 2 3)

  • Floats (1.0 2.0 42.9 3e6 1.2e2)

  • Strings (“t"Hello world!"n”)

  • Symbols (symbol Symbol __symbol____ symbo_l symbol? symbol! + - / ++ a+ e$, etc…)

Sexpistol also supports mapping the Ruby keyword literals (nil, true, false) to their native Ruby types, although this is disabled by default for compatibility. To enable it use ‘@parser.ruby_keyword_literals = true`, eg:

@parser = Sexpistol.new
@parser.parse_string("nil false true")
#=> [:nil, :false, :true]

@parser.ruby_keyword_literals = true
@parser.parse_string("nil false true")
#=> [nil, false, true]

Scheme compatibility

Above all Sexpistol strives to be compatible with Scheme-style S-Expressions. This means that Sexpistol supports comma quoting, though quasi-quoting is not yet implemented. Sexpistol can also generate Scheme compatible external representations when the ‘scheme_compatability’ options is set to true:

@parser = Sexpistol.new
@parser.scheme_compatability = true
@parser.to_sexp([:test, false, true, nil])
#=> "(test #f #t ())"

Installation

For convenience Sexpistol is packaged as a RubyGem, to install it simply enter the following at your command line:

gem install sexpistol

Usage

# Create a new parser instance
@parser = Sexpistol.new

# Parse a string
ast = @parser.parse_string("(string (to (parse)))")
#=> [:string, [:to, [:parse]]]

# Change the representation
ast[1][0] = :is
ast[1][1][0] = :parsed
#=> [:string, [:is, [:parsed]]]

# Turn the array structure back into an S-Expression
@parser.to_sexp( ast )
#=> "( string ( is ( parsed ) ) )"

Performance

The core of Sexpistol was recently re-written using StringScanner and the new version is roughly twice as fast as the older ones.

Parsing throughput on my test machine (2Ghz Core 2 Duo, 4GB RAM, Ruby 1.9) is approximately 1 Megabytes/sec. This is fairly high given that Sexpistol is pure Ruby. Benchmarking Sexpistol against other popular S-Expression parser gems shows that it is roughly 8x faster than the nearest competitor.

Author & Credits

Author

Aaron Gough

Contributors

Shane Hanna

Copyright © 2010 Aaron Gough (thingsaaronmade.com), released under the MIT license