Atoma
Lark
Our great sponsors
Atoma | Lark | |
---|---|---|
0 | 35 | |
103 | 4,424 | |
- | 2.7% | |
0.0 | 7.7 | |
over 1 year ago | 14 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Atoma
We haven't tracked posts mentioning Atoma yet.
Tracking mentions began in Dec 2020.
Lark
-
Show HN: I wrote a RDBMS (SQLite clone) from scratch in pure Python
Lark supports, and recommends, writing and storing the grammar in a .lark file. We have syntax highlighting support in all major IDEs, and even in github itself. For example, here is Lark's built-in grammar for Python: https://github.com/lark-parser/lark/blob/master/lark/grammar...
You can also test grammars "live" in our online IDE: https://www.lark-parser.org/ide/
The rationale is that it's more terse and has less visual clutter than a DSL over Python, which makes it easier to read and write.
-
Oops, I wrote yet another SQLAlchemy alternative (looking for contributors!)
First, let me introduce myself. My name is Erez. You may know some of the Python libraries I wrote in the past: Lark, Preql and Data-diff.
-
Hey guys, have any of you tried creating your own language using Python? I'm interested in giving it a shot and was wondering if anyone has any tips or resources to recommend. Thanks in advance!
It's not super maintained but you might enjoy building something with ppci, Pure Python Compiler Infrastructure. It has some front-ends and some back-ends. There's also PeachPy for an assembler. People like using Lark for parsing, I hear.
-
Is it possible to propagate higher level constructs (+, *) to the generated parse tree in an LR-style parser?
lark, a parsing library where I am somewhat involved has a really nice solution to this: Rules starting with _ are inlined in a post processing step.
- Creating a language with Python.
-
Not Your Grandfather’s Perl
A grammar provides the high level constructs you need to define the "shape" of your data, and it largely takes care of the rest. Grammar libraries exist in other language (eg. lark or Parsimonius in Python) and they weren't created just to make XML parsing easier.
-
Earley Parsing Explained
I made a solid attempt at an Earley parser framework of my own, but apparently to get the most reliable performance from Earley parsing you need to implement Joop Leo's improvement for right-recursive grammars, which nobody has been able to adequately explain to me. I've read Kegler's open letter to Vaillant, I've tried to read other implementations, I've even tried to beat my head against the original academic paper, but I don't have the background knowledge to make sense of it all.
-
Parser and Lexer bike-shedding
Have you looked at Lark recently?
-
Python toolkits
STDOUT: Lark or pyparsing
- How can I construct an abstract syntax tree without AST module?
What are some alternatives?
pyparsing - Python library for creating PEG parsers [Moved to: https://github.com/pyparsing/pyparsing]
PLY - Python Lex-Yacc
pydantic - Data validation using Python type hints
sqlparse - A non-validating SQL parser module for Python
Construct - Construct: Declarative data structures for python that allow symmetric parsing and building
汉字拼音转换工具(Python 版) - 汉字转拼音(pypinyin)
Pygments
textX - Domain-Specific Languages and parsers in Python made easy http://textx.github.io/textX/
Python Left-Right Parser - Python Parser