polyparse-1.12: A variety of alternative parser combinator libraries.

Safe HaskellSafe
LanguageHaskell98

Text.Parse.ByteString

Contents

Synopsis

The Parse class is a replacement for the standard Read class.

The Parse class is a replacement for the standard Read class. It is a specialisation of the (poly) Parser monad for ByteString input. There are instances defined for all Prelude types. For user-defined types, you can write your own instance, or use DrIFT to generate them automatically, e.g. {-! derive : Parse !-}

type TextParser a = Parser a Source

A synonym for a ByteString Parser, i.e. bytestring input (no state)

class Parse a where Source

The class Parse is a replacement for Read, operating over String input. Essentially, it permits better error messages for why something failed to parse. It is rather important that parse can read back exactly what is generated by the corresponding instance of show. To apply a parser to some text, use runParser.

Minimal complete definition

Nothing

Methods

parse :: TextParser a Source

A straightforward parser for an item. (A minimal definition of a class instance requires either |parse| or |parsePrec|. In general, for a type that never needs parens, you should define |parse|, but for a type that _may_ need parens, you should define |parsePrec|.)

parsePrec :: Int -> TextParser a Source

A straightforward parser for an item, given the precedence of any surrounding expression. (Precedence determines whether parentheses are mandatory or optional.)

parseList :: TextParser [a] Source

Parsing a list of items by default accepts the [] and comma syntax, except when the list is really a character string using "".

parseByRead :: Read a => String -> TextParser a Source

If there already exists a Read instance for a type, then we can make a Parser for it, but with only poor error-reporting. The string argument is the expected type or value (for error-reporting only). Use of this wrapper function is NOT recommended with ByteString, because there is a lot of inefficiency in repeated conversions to/from String.

readByParse :: TextParser a -> ReadS a Source

If you have a TextParser for a type, you can easily make it into a Read instance, by throwing away any error messages. Use of this wrapper function is NOT recommended with ByteString, because there is a lot of inefficiency in conversions to/from String.

readsPrecByParsePrec :: (Int -> TextParser a) -> Int -> ReadS a Source

If you have a TextParser for a type, you can easily make it into a Read instance, by throwing away any error messages. Use of this wrapper function is NOT recommended with ByteString, because there is a lot of inefficiency in conversions to/from String.

Combinators specific to bytestring input, lexed haskell-style

word :: TextParser String Source

One lexical chunk (Haskell-style lexing).

isWord :: String -> TextParser String Source

Ensure that the next input word is the given string. (Note the input is lexed as haskell, so wordbreaks at spaces, symbols, etc.)

literal :: String -> TextParser String Source

Ensure that the next input word is the given string. (No lexing, so mixed spaces, symbols, are accepted.)

optionalParens :: TextParser a -> TextParser a Source

Allow optional nested string parens around an item.

parens :: Bool -> TextParser a -> TextParser a Source

Allow nested parens around an item (one set required when Bool is True).

field :: Parse a => String -> TextParser a Source

Deal with named field syntax. The string argument is the field name, and the parser returns the value of the field.

constructors :: [(String, TextParser a)] -> TextParser a Source

Parse one of a bunch of alternative constructors. In the list argument, the first element of the pair is the constructor name, and the second is the parser for the rest of the value. The first matching parse is returned.

enumeration :: Show a => String -> [a] -> TextParser a Source

Parse one of the given nullary constructors (an enumeration). The string argument is the name of the type, and the list argument should contain all of the possible enumeration values.

Parsers for literal numerics and characters

parseSigned :: Real a => TextParser a -> TextParser a Source

For any numeric parser, permit a negation sign in front of it.

parseInt :: Integral a => String -> a -> (Char -> Bool) -> (Char -> Int) -> TextParser a Source

Parse any (unsigned) Integral numeric literal. Needs a base, radix, isDigit predicate, and digitToInt converter, appropriate to the result type.

parseDec :: Integral a => TextParser a Source

Parse a decimal, octal, or hexadecimal (unsigned) Integral numeric literal.

parseOct :: Integral a => TextParser a Source

Parse a decimal, octal, or hexadecimal (unsigned) Integral numeric literal.

parseHex :: Integral a => TextParser a Source

Parse a decimal, octal, or hexadecimal (unsigned) Integral numeric literal.

parseUnsignedInteger :: TextParser Integer Source

parseUnsignedInteger uses the underlying ByteString readInteger, so will be a lot faster than the generic character-by-character parseInt.

parseFloat :: RealFrac a => TextParser a Source

Parse any (unsigned) Floating numeric literal, e.g. Float or Double.

parseLitChar :: TextParser Char Source

Parse a Haskell character literal, excluding surrounding single quotes.

parseLitChar' :: TextParser Char Source

Parse a Haskell character literal, including surrounding single quotes.

Re-export all the more general combinators from Poly too

ByteStrings and Strings as whole entities

allAsByteString :: TextParser ByteString Source

Simply return the remaining input ByteString.

allAsString :: TextParser String Source

Simply return the remaining input as a String.