= RedParse
* http://rubyforge.org/projects/redparse
* http://github.com/coatl/redparse

== DESCRIPTION:

RedParse is a ruby parser (and parser-compiler) written in pure ruby.
Instead of YACC or ANTLR, it's parse tool is a home-brewed language. (The
tool is (at least) LALR(1)-equivalent and the 'parse language' is
pretty nice, even in it's current form.)

My intent is to have a completely correct parser for ruby, in 100%
ruby. And I think I've more or less succeeded. Aside from some fairly
minor quibbles (see below), RedParse can parse all known ruby 1.8 and 1.9
constructions correctly. Input text may be encoded in ascii, binary,
utf-8, iso-8859-1, and the euc-* family of encodings. Sjis is not yet
supported.

== INSTALL:
* gem install redparse #(as root if necessary)

== LICENSE:

RedParse is available under the Library General Public License (LGPL).
Please see COPYING.LGPL for details.

== Benefits:

* Pure ruby, through and through. No part is written in C, YACC,
ANTLR, lisp, assembly, intercal, befunge or any other language
except ruby.
* Pretty AST trees (at least, I think so).
* AST trees closely mirror the actual structure of source code.
* unparser is built in
* ParseTree format output too, if you want that.
* Did I mention that there's no YACC at all? YACC grammars are
notoriously difficult to modify, (I've never successfully done it)
but I've found it easy, at times even pleasant to modify the parse
rules of this grammar as necessary.
* Relatively small parser: 70 rules in 240 lines
(vs (by my count) 320 rules in 2200 lines for MRI 1.8.7. This is
by no means a fair comparison, tho, since RubyLexer does a lot
more than MRI's lexer, and MRI's 2200 lines include its
actions (which occupy somewhere under 3100 lines in RedParse).
Also, what is a rule? I counted most things which required a
separate action in MRI's parser, I'm not sure if that's fair.
On the other hand, RedParse rules require no separate actions
anywhere.In the end, I still think RedParse is still much easier to
understand than MRI's parse.y.)
* "loosey-goosey" parser happily parses many expressions which normal
ruby considers errors.

== Drawbacks:

* Slow. Not as bad as it used to be, tho.
* Error coverage is sketchy at best
* No warnings at all.
* Unit test takes a fairly long time (much better now, tho! down to 15min).
* Lots of warnings printed during unit test.
* Debugging parse rules is not straightforward.
* "loosey-goosey" parser happily parses many expressions which normal
ruby considers errors.



== SYNOPSIS:

#simple example of usage:

require 'redparse'

parser=RedParse.new("some ruby code here")
tree=parser.parse

tree.walk{|parent,i,subi,node|
case node
when RedParse::CallNode: #... do something with method calls
when RedParse::AssignNode: #... maybe alter assignments somehow
#.... and so on
end
}

#presumably tree was altered somehow in the walk-"loop" above
#when done mucking with the tree, you can turn it into one
#of two other formats: ParseTree s-exps or ruby source code.

tree.to_parsetree #=> turns a tree into an ParseTree-style s-exp.

tree.unparse({}) #=> turns a tree back into ruby source code.

#to understand the tree format, you must understand the node classes,
#which are documented in the next section.

== NODE TYPES:

Syntax trees are represented by trees of nested Nodes. All Nodes descend from
Array, and their subnodes can be addressed by numeric index, just like normal
Arrays. However, many subnodes want to have names as well, thus most (but not
all) array slots within the various Node classes have names. The general rule
is that Node slots may contain a Node, a plain Array, a String, or nil.
However, many cases are more specific than that. Specific Node classes are
documented briefly below in this format:

NodeName #comments describing node
(slot1: Type, slot2: Type)
-OR-
(Array[Type*])

Here's an example of how to use this imaginary Node:

if NodeName===node
do_something_with node.slot1
do_something_else_with node.slot2
# -OR-
do_something_with node[0] #slot1
do_something_else_with node[1] #slot2
end

Types are specified in an psuedo-BNF syntax. | * + ? all have the same meaning
as in Regexp. Array[Spec] indicates a plain Array (not a Node). The Spec
describes the constraints on the Array's contents.
In the cases where node slots don't have names, there will be no colon-
terminated slot name(s) on the second line, just an Array[] specification.

This is a final depiction of the syntax tree. There may be additions to the
existing format in the future, but no incompatibility-creating changes.

Several abbreviations are used:
Expr means ValueNode
LValue means ConstantNode|VarNode|UnaryStarNode|CallNode|
BracketsGetNode|AssigneeList[LValue*]
UnAmpNode means UnOpNode with op == "&"

Node<Array #abstract ancestor of all nodes
+-RescueNode #a rescue clause in a def or begin statement
| (exceptions: Array[Expr*], varname: VarNode|nil, action: Expr)
+-WhenNode #a when clause in a case statement
| (when: Expr|Array[Expr+] then: Expr|nil )
+-ElsifNode #an elsif clause in an if statement
| (elsif: Expr, then: Expr|nil)
+-ValueNode #abstract, a node which has a value (an expression)
|+-VarNode #represents variables and constants
|| (ident: String)
|+-ListOpNode #abstract, ancestor for nodes which are lists of
||| #things separated by some op
||+-SequenceNode #a sequence of statements
||| (Array[Expr*])
||+-ConstantNode #a constant expression of the form A::B::C or the like
|| #first expression can be anything
|| (Array[String|Expr|nil,String+])
|+-RawOpNode #ancestor of all binary operators (except . :: ; , ?..:)
||| (left: Expr, op: String, right: Expr)
||+-RangeNode #a range literal node
||+-KeywordOpNode #abstract, ancestor of keyword operators
|||+-LogicalNode #and or && || expressions
|||+-WhileOpNode #while as an operator
|||+-UntilOpNode #until as an operator
|||+-IfOpNode #if as an operator
|||+-UnlessOpNode #unless as an operator
|||+-RescueOpNode #rescue as an operator
||| (body: Expr, rescues: Array[RescueNode*])
||+-OpNode #ancestor of some binary operators (those with methods hidden in them)
|||+-NotEqualNode #!= expressions
|||+-MatchNode #=~ expressions
|||+-NotMatchNode #!~ expressions
|+-LiteralNode #literal symbols, integers
|| (val: Numeric|Symbol|StringNode)
|+-StringNode #literal strings
||| (Array[(String|Expr)+])
||+-HereDocNode #here documents
|+-StringCatNode #adjacent strings are catenated ("foo" "bar" == "foobar")
|| (Array[StringNode+])
|+-NopNode #an expression with no tokens at all in it
|| (no attributes)
|+-VarLikeNode #nil,false,true,__FILE__,__LINE__,self
|| (name: String)
|+-UnOpNode #unary operators
|| (op: String, val: Expr)
||+-UnaryStarNode #unary star (splat)
|||+-DanglingStarNode #unary star with no argument
||||| (no attributes)
||||+-DanglingCommaNode #comma with no rhs
|| (no attributes)
|+-BeginNode #begin..end block
|| (body: Expr|nil, rescues: Array[RescueNode*],
|| else: Expr|nil, ensure: Expr|nil)
|+-ParenedNode #parenthesized expressions
|| (body: Expr)
|+-AssignNode #assignment (including eg +=)
|| (left:AssigneeList|LValue, op:String ,right:Array[Expr*]|Expr)
|+-AssigneeList #abstract, comma-delimited list of assignables
||| (Array[LValue*])
||+-NestedAssign #nested lhs, in parentheses
||+-MultiAssign #regular top-level lhs
||+-BlockParams #block formal parameter list
|+-CallSiteNode #abstract, method calls
||| (receiver: Expr|nil, name: String, params: nil|Array[Expr+,UnaryStarNode?,UnAmpNode?],
||| blockparams: BlockParams|nil, block: Expr|nil)
||+-CallNode #normal method calls
||+-KWCallNode #keywords that look (more or less) like methods (BEGIN END yield return break continue next)
|+-ArrayLiteralNode #[..]
|| (Array[Expr*])
|+-IfNode #if..end and unless..end
|| (if: Expr, then: Expr|nil, elsifs: Array[ElsifNode+]|nil, else: Expr|nil)
|+-LoopNode #while..end and until..end
|| (while: Expr, do: Expr:nil)
|+-CaseNode #case..end
|| (case: Expr|nil, whens: Array[WhenNode*], else: Expr|nil)
|+-ForNode #for..end
|| (for: LValue, in: Expr, do: Expr|nil)
|+-HashLiteralNode #..
|| (Array[Expr*]) (size must be even)
|+-TernaryNode # ? .. :
|| (if: Expr, then: Expr, else: Expr)
|+-MethodNode #def..end
|| (receiver:Expr|nil, name:String,
|| params:Array[VarNode*,AssignNode*,UnaryStarNode?,UnAmpNode?]|nil,
|| body: Expr|nil, rescues: Array[RescueNode+]|nil, else: Expr|nil, ensure: Expr|nil)
|+-AliasNode #alias foo bar
|| (to: String|VarNode|StringNode, from: String|VarNode|StringNode)
|+-UndefNode #undef foo
|| (Array[String|StringNode+])
|+-NamespaceNode #abstract
||+-ModuleNode #module..end
||| (name: VarNode|ConstantNode, body: Expr|nil
||| rescues: Array[RescueNode+]|nil, else: Expr|nil, ensure: Expr|nil)
||+-ClassNode #class..end
||| (name: VarNode|ConstantNode, parent: Expr|nil, body: Expr|nil,
||| rescues: Array[RescueNode+]|nil, else: Expr|nil, ensure: Expr|nil)
||+-MetaClassNode #class<<x..end
|| (val: Expr, body: Expr|nil,
|| rescues: Array[RescueNode+]|nil, else: Expr|nil, ensure: Expr|nil)
|+-BracketsGetNode #a[b]
| (receiver: Expr, params: Array[Expr+,UnaryStarNode?]|nil)
|
ErrorNode #mixed in to nodes with a syntax error
+-MisparsedNode #mismatched braces or begin..end or the like

== REQUIREMENTS:
* RedParse requires RubyLexer, my hand-coded lexer for ruby. It also
uses Reg, (a pattern-matcher). RubyLexer depends on Sequence,
(external iterators). Reg depends on Sequence as well. To summarize:
* RedParse 1.0.0 requires RubyLexer 0.8.0 and Reg>=0.4.8
* RubyLexer 0.8.0 requires Sequence>=0.2.4
* Reg 0.4.8 requires Sequence>=0.2.3
* All are available as gems. (Or tarballs on rubyforge, if you must.)

== Known problems with the parser:
* Encoding of the input is not stored anywhere in resulting parse tree.
* Ascii, binary, utf-8, and euc encodings are supported, but sjis is not.
* offsets of some nodes are incorrect
* multi-assign nested in multi-assign as receiver of an attribute lhs won't parse right
* these expressions won't parse:
<<x.
1111
x
a0 rescue b0()

?\
__END__
-?

__END__ #with a comment

* =f,g rescue b and c

== Known problems with the unparser:
* Major:
* unparsing of trees whose input was in a character set other than ascii may
not work.
* Minor:
* On unparse, here documents are converted into regular strings. For the
most part, these are exactly equivalent to the original. However,
whatever tokens appeared between the here document header and body will
now show up on a different line. If one of those tokens was __LINE__,
it will have a different value in the unparsed code than it had
originally.

== Known problems with ParseTree creator
* Major:
* converting non-ascii encoded parsetrees to ParseTree format doesn't work
* Minor:
* :begin is not always emitted in the same places as ParseTree does:
* return begin; f; end
* string nodes don't always come out the same way as in ParseTree...
but what I emit is equivalent.
* %W"is ##{2?"W":"S""}#xx."
* silly empty case nodes aren't always optimized to nop like in ParseTree.
* begin..end blocks nested in other begin..end blocks aren't combined
* literal strings,numbers,symbols,etc as their own stmts should be optimized away
* BEGIN expressions not in their own statement may not be treated right

== Bugs in ruby
* These expressions don't parse the same as in MRI because of bug(s) in MRI:
* p = p m %(1)
* p=556;p (e) /a
* c do p (110).m end #buggy in 1.8 only, fixed in 1.9
* module Array ([Array]).first::E; end #buggy in 1.8 only, fixed in 1.9

== Bugs in ParseTree
* Unit tests see failures in these cases, but due to bugs in ParseTree:
* doc_status, err_args = Documeh_status{fcgi_state = 3; docespond do doc_response =fcgi_state = 1; end }
* case F;when G; else;case; when j; end;end
* def foo(a=b=c={}) end
* $11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
* proc{|&b| }
* def sum(options = => weights = Hash.new(1)); opt; end
* def foo(a = 1) end; def foo(a=b=c={}) end; def bar(a=b=c=1,d=2) end
* yield [a_i, *p]

== Copyright
redparse - a ruby parser written in ruby
Copyright (C) 2008,2009, 2012, 2016 Caleb Clausen

This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.