I was speaking in jest... But the (official) awk grammar has been an
eye-opener for years.
-rob
On Thu, Jan 17, 2019 at 5:22 AM <arnold(a)skeeve.com> wrote:
You can't lay the blame for that on Steve.
The GNU Awk grammar has only 36 shift-reduce conflicts and no
reduce-reduce conflicts.
The mawk 1.3.4 grammar has an amazing count of only *four* shift-reduce
conflicts. (But then, Mike Brennan is an amazing programmer.)
I have no idea what happens if you run the POSIX awk grammar through
yacc / bison, but it'd be an interesting experiment.
Arnold
Rob Pike <robpike(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> So you're the reason (Plan 9) awk has 83 reduce-reduce conflicts (and
> 42 shift-reduce).
>
> -rob
>
> On Wed, Jan 16, 2019 at 9:39 AM Steve Johnson <scj(a)yaccman.com> wrote:
> >
> > I remember reading Knuth's paper, and certainly heard DeRemer's name,
but it didn't affect much of what I did. There was a paper out of Stanford about
that time that influenced me greatly -- it was about pattern matching languages, and
proposed separating two ideas: 1. "Here are the patterns that match this tree".
And 2. "If more than one pattern matches, here's how to decide which one to
use." Given the constraints of size on the PDP 11, anything but LR(1) was
infeasable. But using ambiguous grammars and broadening the shift/reduce test to trest
operator precedence fit right into that pattern. Another thing that I think was unique
to Yacc at the time was introducing symbols that matched the empty string whose reduction
caused program actions. Many similar parser systems at the time could not deal with these
"empty" symbols.
> >
> > Steve
> >
> >
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: "Bakul Shah" <bakul(a)bitblocks.com>
> > To:"Steve Johnson" <scj(a)yaccman.com>
> > Cc:<arnold@skeeve.com>, <ecashin(a)noserose.net>,
<dave(a)horsfall.org>, <tuhs(a)tuhs.org>
> > Sent:Sat, 12 Jan 2019 20:40:11 -0800
> > Subject:Re: [TUHS] Knuth and Unix
> >
> >
> > On Sat, 12 Jan 2019 19:41:26 -0800 "Steve Johnson"
<scj(a)yaccman.com> wrote:
> > > One connection Knuth had to Unix was inventing LALR parsing, the basic
> > > algorithm used in Yacc. I added some things (notably, the precedence
> > > mechanism) and had to do a lot of engineering to be able to handle large
> > > grammars (e.g. F77) on a PDP-11. But the underlying algorithm (taught to
> > > my be Al Aho) was all Knuth.
> >
> > Knuth invented LR parsing but IIRC it was DeRemer who came up
> > with LALR parsing. In 78-79 I was implementing a LALR(1)
> > parser generator in Pascal on strength of which I got my first
> > real job. At that job I used DeRemer and Pennello's 1979
> > paper to reimplement the parser generator.
> >