freebsd-dev/contrib/bc/include/lex.h

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/*
* *****************************************************************************
*
* SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause
*
* Copyright (c) 2018-2023 Gavin D. Howard and contributors.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
*
* * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this
* list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
*
* * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
* this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
* and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
* AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
* LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
* CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
* SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
* INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
* CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
* ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
* POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*
* *****************************************************************************
*
* Definitions for bc's lexer.
*
*/
#ifndef BC_LEX_H
#define BC_LEX_H
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <stddef.h>
#include <status.h>
#include <vector.h>
#include <lang.h>
/**
* A convenience macro for throwing errors in lex code. This takes care of
* plumbing like passing in the current line the lexer is on.
* @param l The lexer.
* @param e The error.
*/
#if BC_DEBUG
#define bc_lex_err(l, e) (bc_vm_handleError((e), __FILE__, __LINE__, (l)->line))
#else // BC_DEBUG
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#define bc_lex_err(l, e) (bc_vm_handleError((e), (l)->line))
#endif // BC_DEBUG
/**
* A convenience macro for throwing errors in lex code. This takes care of
* plumbing like passing in the current line the lexer is on.
* @param l The lexer.
* @param e The error.
*/
#if BC_DEBUG
#define bc_lex_verr(l, e, ...) \
(bc_vm_handleError((e), __FILE__, __LINE__, (l)->line, __VA_ARGS__))
#else // BC_DEBUG
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#define bc_lex_verr(l, e, ...) (bc_vm_handleError((e), (l)->line, __VA_ARGS__))
#endif // BC_DEBUG
// BC_LEX_NEG_CHAR returns the char that corresponds to negative for the
// current calculator.
//
// BC_LEX_LAST_NUM_CHAR returns the char that corresponds to the last valid
// char for numbers. In bc and dc, capital letters are part of numbers, to a
// point. (dc only goes up to hex, so its last valid char is 'F'.)
#if BC_ENABLED
#if DC_ENABLED
#define BC_LEX_NEG_CHAR (BC_IS_BC ? '-' : '_')
#define BC_LEX_LAST_NUM_CHAR (BC_IS_BC ? 'Z' : 'F')
#else // DC_ENABLED
#define BC_LEX_NEG_CHAR ('-')
#define BC_LEX_LAST_NUM_CHAR ('Z')
#endif // DC_ENABLED
#else // BC_ENABLED
#define BC_LEX_NEG_CHAR ('_')
#define BC_LEX_LAST_NUM_CHAR ('F')
#endif // BC_ENABLED
/**
* Returns true if c is a valid number character.
* @param c The char to check.
* @param pt If a decimal point has already been seen.
* @param int_only True if the number is expected to be an int only, false if
* non-integers are allowed.
* @return True if @a c is a valid number character.
*/
#define BC_LEX_NUM_CHAR(c, pt, int_only) \
(isdigit(c) != 0 || ((c) >= 'A' && (c) <= BC_LEX_LAST_NUM_CHAR) || \
((c) == '.' && !(pt) && !(int_only)))
/// An enum of lex token types.
typedef enum BcLexType
{
/// End of file.
BC_LEX_EOF,
/// Marker for invalid tokens, used by bc and dc for const data.
BC_LEX_INVALID,
#if BC_ENABLED
/// Increment operator.
BC_LEX_OP_INC,
/// Decrement operator.
BC_LEX_OP_DEC,
#endif // BC_ENABLED
/// BC_LEX_NEG is not used in lexing; it is only for parsing. The lexer
/// marks all '-' characters as BC_LEX_OP_MINUS, but the parser needs to be
/// able to distinguish them.
BC_LEX_NEG,
/// Boolean not.
BC_LEX_OP_BOOL_NOT,
#if BC_ENABLE_EXTRA_MATH
/// Truncation operator.
BC_LEX_OP_TRUNC,
#endif // BC_ENABLE_EXTRA_MATH
/// Power operator.
BC_LEX_OP_POWER,
/// Multiplication operator.
BC_LEX_OP_MULTIPLY,
/// Division operator.
BC_LEX_OP_DIVIDE,
/// Modulus operator.
BC_LEX_OP_MODULUS,
/// Addition operator.
BC_LEX_OP_PLUS,
/// Subtraction operator.
BC_LEX_OP_MINUS,
#if BC_ENABLE_EXTRA_MATH
/// Places (truncate or extend) operator.
BC_LEX_OP_PLACES,
/// Left (decimal) shift operator.
BC_LEX_OP_LSHIFT,
/// Right (decimal) shift operator.
BC_LEX_OP_RSHIFT,
#endif // BC_ENABLE_EXTRA_MATH
/// Equal operator.
BC_LEX_OP_REL_EQ,
/// Less than or equal operator.
BC_LEX_OP_REL_LE,
/// Greater than or equal operator.
BC_LEX_OP_REL_GE,
/// Not equal operator.
BC_LEX_OP_REL_NE,
/// Less than operator.
BC_LEX_OP_REL_LT,
/// Greater than operator.
BC_LEX_OP_REL_GT,
/// Boolean or operator.
BC_LEX_OP_BOOL_OR,
/// Boolean and operator.
BC_LEX_OP_BOOL_AND,
#if BC_ENABLED
/// Power assignment operator.
BC_LEX_OP_ASSIGN_POWER,
/// Multiplication assignment operator.
BC_LEX_OP_ASSIGN_MULTIPLY,
/// Division assignment operator.
BC_LEX_OP_ASSIGN_DIVIDE,
/// Modulus assignment operator.
BC_LEX_OP_ASSIGN_MODULUS,
/// Addition assignment operator.
BC_LEX_OP_ASSIGN_PLUS,
/// Subtraction assignment operator.
BC_LEX_OP_ASSIGN_MINUS,
#if BC_ENABLE_EXTRA_MATH
/// Places (truncate or extend) assignment operator.
BC_LEX_OP_ASSIGN_PLACES,
/// Left (decimal) shift assignment operator.
BC_LEX_OP_ASSIGN_LSHIFT,
/// Right (decimal) shift assignment operator.
BC_LEX_OP_ASSIGN_RSHIFT,
#endif // BC_ENABLE_EXTRA_MATH
#endif // BC_ENABLED
/// Assignment operator.
BC_LEX_OP_ASSIGN,
/// Newline.
BC_LEX_NLINE,
/// Whitespace.
BC_LEX_WHITESPACE,
/// Left parenthesis.
BC_LEX_LPAREN,
/// Right parenthesis.
BC_LEX_RPAREN,
/// Left bracket.
BC_LEX_LBRACKET,
/// Comma.
BC_LEX_COMMA,
/// Right bracket.
BC_LEX_RBRACKET,
/// Left brace.
BC_LEX_LBRACE,
/// Semicolon.
BC_LEX_SCOLON,
/// Right brace.
BC_LEX_RBRACE,
/// String.
BC_LEX_STR,
/// Identifier/name.
BC_LEX_NAME,
/// Constant number.
BC_LEX_NUMBER,
// These keywords are in the order they are in for a reason. Don't change
// the order unless you want a bunch of weird failures in the test suite.
// In fact, almost all of these tokens are in a specific order for a reason.
#if BC_ENABLED
/// bc auto keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_AUTO,
/// bc break keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_BREAK,
/// bc continue keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_CONTINUE,
/// bc define keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_DEFINE,
/// bc for keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_FOR,
/// bc if keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_IF,
/// bc limits keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_LIMITS,
/// bc return keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_RETURN,
/// bc while keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_WHILE,
/// bc halt keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_HALT,
/// bc last keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_LAST,
#endif // BC_ENABLED
/// bc ibase keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_IBASE,
/// bc obase keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_OBASE,
/// bc scale keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_SCALE,
#if BC_ENABLE_EXTRA_MATH
/// bc seed keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_SEED,
#endif // BC_ENABLE_EXTRA_MATH
/// bc length keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_LENGTH,
/// bc print keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_PRINT,
/// bc sqrt keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_SQRT,
/// bc abs keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_ABS,
vendor/bc: import version 6.1.0 This is a production release that fixes a discrepancy from the bc standard, a couple of memory bugs, and adds new features. The discrepancy from the bc standard was with regards to the behavior of the quit command. This bc used to quit whenever it encountered quit during parsing, even if it was parsing a full file. Now, bc only quits when encountering quit after it has executed all executable statements up to that point. This behavior is slightly different from GNU bc, but users will only notice the difference if they put quit on the same line as other statements. The first memory bug could be reproduced by assigning a string to a non-local variable in a function, then redefining the function with use of the same non-local variable, which would still refer to a string in the previous version of the function. The second memory bug was caused by passing an array argument to the asciify() built-in function. In certain cases, that was wrongly allowed, and the interpreter just assumed everything was correct and accessed memory. Now that arrays are allowed as arguments (see below), this is not an issue. The first feature was the addition of the is_number() built-in function (u in dc) that returns 1 if the runtime argument is a number and 0 otherwise. The second feature was the addition of the is_string() built-in function (t in dc) that returns 1 if the runtime argument is a string and 0 otherwise. These features were added because I realized that type-checking is necessary now that strings can be assigned to variables in bc and because they've always been assignable to variables in dc. The last added feature is the ability of the asciify() built-in function in bc to convert a full array of numbers into a string. This means that character-by-character printing will not be necessary, and more strings than just single-character ones will be able to be created.
2023-01-28 19:59:18 +00:00
/// bc is_number keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_IS_NUMBER,
/// bc is_string keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_IS_STRING,
#if BC_ENABLE_EXTRA_MATH
/// bc irand keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_IRAND,
#endif // BC_ENABLE_EXTRA_MATH
/// bc asciffy keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_ASCIIFY,
/// bc modexp keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_MODEXP,
/// bc divmod keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_DIVMOD,
/// bc quit keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_QUIT,
/// bc read keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_READ,
#if BC_ENABLE_EXTRA_MATH
/// bc rand keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_RAND,
#endif // BC_ENABLE_EXTRA_MATH
/// bc maxibase keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_MAXIBASE,
/// bc maxobase keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_MAXOBASE,
/// bc maxscale keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_MAXSCALE,
#if BC_ENABLE_EXTRA_MATH
/// bc maxrand keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_MAXRAND,
#endif // BC_ENABLE_EXTRA_MATH
/// bc line_length keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_LINE_LENGTH,
#if BC_ENABLED
/// bc global_stacks keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_GLOBAL_STACKS,
#endif // BC_ENABLED
/// bc leading_zero keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_LEADING_ZERO,
/// bc stream keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_STREAM,
/// bc else keyword.
BC_LEX_KW_ELSE,
#if DC_ENABLED
/// dc extended registers keyword.
BC_LEX_EXTENDED_REGISTERS,
/// A special token for dc to calculate equal without a register.
BC_LEX_EQ_NO_REG,
/// Colon (array) operator.
BC_LEX_COLON,
/// Execute command.
BC_LEX_EXECUTE,
/// Print stack command.
BC_LEX_PRINT_STACK,
/// Clear stack command.
BC_LEX_CLEAR_STACK,
/// Register stack level command.
BC_LEX_REG_STACK_LEVEL,
/// Main stack level command.
BC_LEX_STACK_LEVEL,
/// Duplicate command.
BC_LEX_DUPLICATE,
/// Swap (reverse) command.
BC_LEX_SWAP,
/// Pop (remove) command.
BC_LEX_POP,
/// Store ibase command.
BC_LEX_STORE_IBASE,
/// Store obase command.
BC_LEX_STORE_OBASE,
/// Store scale command.
BC_LEX_STORE_SCALE,
#if BC_ENABLE_EXTRA_MATH
/// Store seed command.
BC_LEX_STORE_SEED,
#endif // BC_ENABLE_EXTRA_MATH
/// Load variable onto stack command.
BC_LEX_LOAD,
/// Pop off of variable stack onto results stack command.
BC_LEX_LOAD_POP,
/// Push onto variable stack command.
BC_LEX_STORE_PUSH,
/// Print with pop command.
BC_LEX_PRINT_POP,
/// Parameterized quit command.
BC_LEX_NQUIT,
/// Execution stack depth command.
BC_LEX_EXEC_STACK_LENGTH,
/// Scale of number command. This is needed specifically for dc because bc
/// parses the scale function in parts.
BC_LEX_SCALE_FACTOR,
/// Array length command. This is needed specifically for dc because bc
/// just reuses its length keyword.
BC_LEX_ARRAY_LENGTH,
#endif // DC_ENABLED
} BcLexType;
struct BcLex;
/**
* A function pointer to call when another token is needed. Mostly called by the
* parser.
* @param l The lexer.
*/
typedef void (*BcLexNext)(struct BcLex* l);
/// The lexer.
typedef struct BcLex
{
/// A pointer to the text to lex.
const char* buf;
/// The current index into buf.
size_t i;
/// The current line.
size_t line;
/// The length of buf.
size_t len;
/// The current token.
BcLexType t;
/// The previous token.
BcLexType last;
/// A string to store extra data for tokens. For example, the @a BC_LEX_STR
/// token really needs to store the actual string, and numbers also need the
/// string.
BcVec str;
vendor/bc: import version 6.1.0 This is a production release that fixes a discrepancy from the bc standard, a couple of memory bugs, and adds new features. The discrepancy from the bc standard was with regards to the behavior of the quit command. This bc used to quit whenever it encountered quit during parsing, even if it was parsing a full file. Now, bc only quits when encountering quit after it has executed all executable statements up to that point. This behavior is slightly different from GNU bc, but users will only notice the difference if they put quit on the same line as other statements. The first memory bug could be reproduced by assigning a string to a non-local variable in a function, then redefining the function with use of the same non-local variable, which would still refer to a string in the previous version of the function. The second memory bug was caused by passing an array argument to the asciify() built-in function. In certain cases, that was wrongly allowed, and the interpreter just assumed everything was correct and accessed memory. Now that arrays are allowed as arguments (see below), this is not an issue. The first feature was the addition of the is_number() built-in function (u in dc) that returns 1 if the runtime argument is a number and 0 otherwise. The second feature was the addition of the is_string() built-in function (t in dc) that returns 1 if the runtime argument is a string and 0 otherwise. These features were added because I realized that type-checking is necessary now that strings can be assigned to variables in bc and because they've always been assignable to variables in dc. The last added feature is the ability of the asciify() built-in function in bc to convert a full array of numbers into a string. This means that character-by-character printing will not be necessary, and more strings than just single-character ones will be able to be created.
2023-01-28 19:59:18 +00:00
/// The mode the lexer is in.
BcMode mode;
} BcLex;
/**
* Initializes a lexer.
* @param l The lexer to initialize.
*/
void
bc_lex_init(BcLex* l);
/**
* Frees a lexer. This is not guarded by #if BC_DEBUG because a separate
* parser is created at runtime to parse read() expressions and dc strings, and
* that parser needs a lexer.
* @param l The lexer to free.
*/
void
bc_lex_free(BcLex* l);
/**
* Sets the filename that the lexer will be lexing.
* @param l The lexer.
* @param file The filename that the lexer will lex.
*/
void
bc_lex_file(BcLex* l, const char* file);
/**
* Sets the text the lexer will lex.
vendor/bc: import version 6.1.0 This is a production release that fixes a discrepancy from the bc standard, a couple of memory bugs, and adds new features. The discrepancy from the bc standard was with regards to the behavior of the quit command. This bc used to quit whenever it encountered quit during parsing, even if it was parsing a full file. Now, bc only quits when encountering quit after it has executed all executable statements up to that point. This behavior is slightly different from GNU bc, but users will only notice the difference if they put quit on the same line as other statements. The first memory bug could be reproduced by assigning a string to a non-local variable in a function, then redefining the function with use of the same non-local variable, which would still refer to a string in the previous version of the function. The second memory bug was caused by passing an array argument to the asciify() built-in function. In certain cases, that was wrongly allowed, and the interpreter just assumed everything was correct and accessed memory. Now that arrays are allowed as arguments (see below), this is not an issue. The first feature was the addition of the is_number() built-in function (u in dc) that returns 1 if the runtime argument is a number and 0 otherwise. The second feature was the addition of the is_string() built-in function (t in dc) that returns 1 if the runtime argument is a string and 0 otherwise. These features were added because I realized that type-checking is necessary now that strings can be assigned to variables in bc and because they've always been assignable to variables in dc. The last added feature is the ability of the asciify() built-in function in bc to convert a full array of numbers into a string. This means that character-by-character printing will not be necessary, and more strings than just single-character ones will be able to be created.
2023-01-28 19:59:18 +00:00
* @param l The lexer.
* @param text The text to lex.
* @param mode The mode to lex in.
*/
void
vendor/bc: import version 6.1.0 This is a production release that fixes a discrepancy from the bc standard, a couple of memory bugs, and adds new features. The discrepancy from the bc standard was with regards to the behavior of the quit command. This bc used to quit whenever it encountered quit during parsing, even if it was parsing a full file. Now, bc only quits when encountering quit after it has executed all executable statements up to that point. This behavior is slightly different from GNU bc, but users will only notice the difference if they put quit on the same line as other statements. The first memory bug could be reproduced by assigning a string to a non-local variable in a function, then redefining the function with use of the same non-local variable, which would still refer to a string in the previous version of the function. The second memory bug was caused by passing an array argument to the asciify() built-in function. In certain cases, that was wrongly allowed, and the interpreter just assumed everything was correct and accessed memory. Now that arrays are allowed as arguments (see below), this is not an issue. The first feature was the addition of the is_number() built-in function (u in dc) that returns 1 if the runtime argument is a number and 0 otherwise. The second feature was the addition of the is_string() built-in function (t in dc) that returns 1 if the runtime argument is a string and 0 otherwise. These features were added because I realized that type-checking is necessary now that strings can be assigned to variables in bc and because they've always been assignable to variables in dc. The last added feature is the ability of the asciify() built-in function in bc to convert a full array of numbers into a string. This means that character-by-character printing will not be necessary, and more strings than just single-character ones will be able to be created.
2023-01-28 19:59:18 +00:00
bc_lex_text(BcLex* l, const char* text, BcMode mode);
/**
* Generic next function for the parser to call. It takes care of calling the
* correct @a BcLexNext function and consuming whitespace.
* @param l The lexer.
*/
void
bc_lex_next(BcLex* l);
/**
* Lexes a line comment (one beginning with '#' and going to a newline).
* @param l The lexer.
*/
void
bc_lex_lineComment(BcLex* l);
/**
* Lexes a general comment (C-style comment).
* @param l The lexer.
*/
void
bc_lex_comment(BcLex* l);
/**
* Lexes whitespace, finding as much as possible.
* @param l The lexer.
*/
void
bc_lex_whitespace(BcLex* l);
/**
* Lexes a number that begins with char @a start. This takes care of parsing
* numbers in scientific and engineering notations.
* @param l The lexer.
* @param start The starting char of the number. To detect a number and call
* this function, the lexer had to eat the first char. It fixes
* that by passing it in.
*/
void
bc_lex_number(BcLex* l, char start);
/**
* Lexes a name/identifier.
* @param l The lexer.
*/
void
bc_lex_name(BcLex* l);
/**
* Lexes common whitespace characters.
* @param l The lexer.
* @param c The character to lex.
*/
void
bc_lex_commonTokens(BcLex* l, char c);
/**
* Throws a parse error because char @a c was invalid.
* @param l The lexer.
* @param c The problem character.
*/
void
bc_lex_invalidChar(BcLex* l, char c);
/**
* Reads a line from stdin and puts it into the lexer's buffer.
* @param l The lexer.
*/
bool
bc_lex_readLine(BcLex* l);
#endif // BC_LEX_H