Copyright | © 2017 Mark Karpov |
---|---|
License | BSD 3 clause |
Maintainer | Mark Karpov <markkarpov92@gmail.com> |
Stability | experimental |
Portability | portable |
Safe Haskell | Safe |
Language | Haskell2010 |
This module is a generalization of the package parsec-permutation
authored by Samuel Hoffstaetter:
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/parsec-permutation
This module also takes inspiration from the algorithm is described in: Parsing Permutation Phrases, by Arthur Baars, Andres Loh and Doaitse Swierstra. Published as a functional pearl at the Haskell Workshop 2001.
From these two works we derive a flexible and general method for parsing
permutations over an Applicative
structure. Quite useful in conjunction
with "Free" constructions of Applicatives, Monads, etc.
Other permutation parsing libraries tend towards using special "almost
applicative" combinators for construction which denies the library user
the ability to lift and unlift permutation parsing into any Applicative
computational context. We redefine these combinators as convenience
operators here alongside the equivalent Applicative
instance.
For example, suppose we want to parse a permutation of: an optional
string of a
's, the character b
and an optional c
. Using a standard
parsing library combinator char
, this can be described using the
Applicative
instance by:
test = runPermutation $ (,,) <$> toPermutationWithDefault "" (some (char 'a')) <*> toPermutation (char 'b') <*> toPermutationWithDefault '_' (char 'c')
Equivalently, this can also be describe using the convenience operators reminiscent of other parsing libraries:
test = runPermutation $ (,,) <$?> ("", some (char 'a')) <||> char 'b' <|?> ('_', char 'c')
Since: 0.2.0
- data Permutation m a
- runPermutation :: (Alternative m, Monad m) => Permutation m a -> m a
- intercalateEffect :: (Alternative m, Monad m) => m b -> Permutation m a -> m a
- toPermutation :: Alternative m => m a -> Permutation m a
- toPermutationWithDefault :: Alternative m => a -> m a -> Permutation m a
- (<$$>) :: Alternative m => (a -> b) -> m a -> Permutation m b
- (<$?>) :: Alternative m => (a -> b) -> (a, m a) -> Permutation m b
- (<||>) :: Alternative m => Permutation m (a -> b) -> m a -> Permutation m b
- (<|?>) :: Alternative m => Permutation m (a -> b) -> (a, m a) -> Permutation m b
Permutation type
data Permutation m a Source #
An Applicative
wrapper-type for constructing permutation parsers.
Functor m => Functor (Permutation m) Source # | |
Alternative m => Applicative (Permutation m) Source # | |
Permutation evaluators
:: (Alternative m, Monad m) | |
=> Permutation m a | Permutation specification |
-> m a | Resulting base monad capable of handling the permutation |
"Unlifts" a permutation parser into a parser to be evaluated.
:: (Alternative m, Monad m) | |
=> m b | Effect to be intercalated between permutation components |
-> Permutation m a | Permutation specification |
-> m a | Resulting base monad capable of handling the permutation |
"Unlifts" a permutation parser into a parser to be evaluated with an intercalated effect. Useful for separators between permutation elements.
For example, suppose that similar to above we want to parse a permutation of:
an optional string of a
's, the character b
and an optional c
. However,
we also want each element of the permutation to be separated by a colon.
Using a standard parsing library combinator char
, this can be described
using the Applicative
instance by:
test = intercalateEffect (char ':') $ (,,) <$?> ("", some (char 'a')) <||> char 'b' <|?> ('_', char 'c')
This will accept strings such as: "a:b:c", "b:c:a", "b:aa", "b", etc.
Note that the effect is intercalated between permutation components and that:
- There is never an effect parsed preceeding the first component of the permutation
- There is never an effect parsed following the last component of the permutation
- No effects are intercalated between missing components with a default value.
Permutation constructors
:: Alternative m | |
=> m a | Permutation component |
-> Permutation m a |
"Lifts" a parser to a permutation parser.
toPermutationWithDefault Source #
:: Alternative m | |
=> a | Default Value |
-> m a | Permutation component |
-> Permutation m a |
"Lifts" a parser with a default value to a permutation parser.
If no permutation containing the supplied parser can be parsed from the input, then the supplied default value is returned in lieu of a parse result.
Convenience operators
:: Alternative m | |
=> (a -> b) | Function to use on result of parsing |
-> m a | Normal parser |
-> Permutation m b | Permutation parser build from it |
The expression f <$$> p
creates a fresh permutation parser
consisting of parser p
. The the final result of the permutation parser
is the function f
applied to the return value of p
. The parser p
is
not allowed to accept empty input—use the optional combinator (<$?>
)
instead.
If the function f
takes more than one parameter, the type variable b
is instantiated to a functional type which combines nicely with the adds
parser p
to the (<||>
) combinator. This results in stylized code
where a permutation parser starts with a combining function f
followed
by the parsers. The function f
gets its parameters in the order in
which the parsers are specified, but actual input can be in any order.
:: Alternative m | |
=> (a -> b) | Function to use on result of parsing |
-> (a, m a) | Default value and parser |
-> Permutation m b | Permutation parser |
The expression f <$?> (x, p)
creates a fresh permutation parser
consisting of parser p
. The final result of the permutation parser is
the function f
applied to the return value of p
. The parser p
is
optional—if it cannot be applied, the default value x
will be used
instead.
:: Alternative m | |
=> Permutation m (a -> b) | Given permutation parser |
-> m a | Parser to add (should not accept empty input) |
-> Permutation m b | Resulting parser |
The expression perm <||> p
adds parser p
to the permutation parser
perm
. The parser p
is not allowed to accept empty input—use the
optional combinator (<|?>
) instead. Returns a new permutation parser
that includes p
.
:: Alternative m | |
=> Permutation m (a -> b) | Given permutation parser |
-> (a, m a) | Default value and parser |
-> Permutation m b | Resulting parser |
The expression perm <||> (x, p)
adds parser p
to the permutation
parser perm
. The parser p
is optional—if it cannot be applied, the
default value x
will be used instead. Returns a new permutation parser
that includes the optional parser p
.