#token #symbol #parse #parser #no-std

nightly macro no-std parze-declare

A clean, efficient parser combinator

2 unstable releases

0.2.0 Nov 28, 2019
0.1.0 Nov 27, 2019

#81 in #symbol


Used in parze

MIT license

12KB
279 lines

crates.io crates.io

Parze is now deprecated

Take a look at chumsky, a from-scratch reimplementation of parze with more features, better performance, and a cleaner API.

Parze

Parze is a clean, efficient parser combinator written in Rust.

Example

A parser capable of parsing all valid Brainfuck code into an AST.

use parze::prelude::*;

#[derive(Clone, Debug, PartialEq)]
enum Instr { Add, Sub, Left, Right, In, Out, Loop(Vec<Instr>) }

parsers! {
    bf = {
        ( '+' -> { Instr::Add }
        | '-' -> { Instr::Sub }
        | '<' -> { Instr::Left }
        | '>' -> { Instr::Right }
        | ',' -> { Instr::In }
        | '.' -> { Instr::Out }
        | '[' -& bf &- ']' => { |i| Instr::Loop(i) }
        ) *
    }
}

Features

  • All the usual parser combinator operations
  • Macro for simple rule and parser declaration
  • Support for recursive parser definitions
  • Custom error types - define your own!
  • Prioritised / merged failure for more useful errors
  • No dependencies - fast compilation!
  • no_std support

Why Parze?

Parze is fast and lightweight, acting as a bare-bones framework upon which more verbose and interesting parsers can be constructed (see the custom_error example).

Nightly

Parze's declaration macro currently requires a nightly Rust compiler to work. You may use the explicit declaration form (as shown below) with stable by disabling the nightly feature, however.

This can be done like so in your Cargo.toml:

[dependencies.parze]
version = "x.y.z"
default-features = false

Performance

Here are the results of a JSON parsing test when compared with pom. More performance metrics to come later.

test parze ... bench:   3,696,323 ns/iter (+/- 358,597)
test pom   ... bench:  18,538,775 ns/iter (+/- 1,149,589)

Explicit Form

While Parze encourages use of macros for much of its declarative notation, it is possible (and often useful) to make use of the more explicit rust-y notation.

Here is the Brainfuck parser given above, declared in explicit form.

let bf: Parser<_, _> = recursive(|bf| (
        sym('+').to(Instr::Add)
    .or(sym('-').to(Instr::Sub))
    .or(sym('<').to(Instr::Left))
    .or(sym('>').to(Instr::Right))
    .or(sym(',').to(Instr::In))
    .or(sym('.').to(Instr::Out))
    .or(sym('[').delimiter_for(bf).delimited_by(sym(']')).map(|i| Instr::Loop(i)))
).repeat(..));

License

Parze is distributed under either of:

at the discretion of the user.

No runtime deps