From 698b991e8173dd3dc595f5b750131eb472d6b735 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: David Thompson Date: Mon, 19 Oct 2015 08:34:37 -0400 Subject: README: Add "Implementation details" section. --- README | 39 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 39 insertions(+) (limited to 'README') diff --git a/README b/README index 83021a2..ea4c655 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -32,6 +32,45 @@ converted to HTML (via SXML) or any other format for rendering. (newline) #+END_SRC +* Implementation details + + Very simple monadic parser combinators (purposely lacking support + for recursive grammars currently) are used to tokenize the + characters within a string or port and return a list consisting of + two types of values: strings and two element tagged lists. A tagged + list consists of a symbol designating the type of the text (symbol, + keyword, string literal, etc.) and a string of the text fragment + itself. + + #+BEGIN_SRC scheme + ((open "(") + (special "define") + " " + (open "(") + (symbol "square") + " " + (symbol "x") + (close ")") + " " + (string "\"Return the square of X.\"") + " " + (open "(") + (symbol "*") + " " + (symbol "x") + " " + (symbol "x") + (close ")") + (close ")")) + #+END_SRC + + This means that the parsers are *not* intended to produce the + abstract syntax-tree for any given language. They are simply to + attempt to tokenize and tag fragments of the source. A "catch all" + rule in each language's parser is used to deal with text that + doesn't match any recognized syntax and simply produces an untagged + string. + * Requirements - GNU Guile >= 2.0.9 -- cgit v1.2.3