gramatika
nom
gramatika | nom | |
---|---|---|
3 | 85 | |
4 | 9,054 | |
- | 1.2% | |
0.0 | 7.4 | |
over 2 years ago | 3 days ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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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.
gramatika
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Question about lexer and parser generators in Rust
I wrote a lexer generator. It's pretty limited and poorly architected tbh, but feel free to have a look: https://github.com/dannymcgee/gramatika
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Official /r/rust "Who's Hiring" thread for job-seekers and job-offerers [Rust 1.57]
I'm a huge nerd for programming languages and rendering, and to that end I've been putting together a general-purpose parsing library inspired by syn and using that to power a language server for WGSL.
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Question for experienced Rustaceans
I'm probably in the minority on this one, but I really hate writing verbose, repetitive code, so I freaking love macros. I will frequently use a one-off macro just to make something like a dispatcher function easier to read by cutting down on all the pomp and circumstance. I'm also working on a small crate that makes heavy use of proc macros, which I've already gotten a ton of mileage out of since it allows me to spin up a serviceable lexer with just a few lines of code. A lot of people really dislike macros because the source is hard to read and they're onerous to debug. They're not wrong on either of those points.
nom
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Planespotting with Rust: using nom to parse ADS-B messages
Just in case you are not familiar with nom, it is a parser combinator written in Rust. The most basic thing you can do with it is import one of its parsing functions, give it some byte or string input and then get a Result as output with the parsed value and the rest of the input or an error if the parser failed. tag for example is used to recognize literal character/byte sequences.
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Show HN: Rust nom parsing Starcraft2 Replays into Arrow for Polars data analysis
I may be the only one not familiar, but nom refers to https://github.com/rust-bakery/nom which looks like a pretty handy way to parse binary data in Rust.
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Is this a good way to free up some memory?
Lots of people use nom for their parsing needs, but that's not the only game in town and there other options.
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What is the state of the art for creating domain-specific languages (DSLs) with Rust?
As much as I love nom as well as other parser combinator libraries, regex-based parsers, BNF/EBNF-based parsers, etc. I always end up going back to plain old text-based char-by-char scanners.
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What's everyone working on this week (22/2023)?
I am using nom / nom_locate to build the parser side because I've done a handful of other projects with it, and I plan to use tower-lsp to hook up the language server side.
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Tokenizing
Look into a parsing library such as https://github.com/rust-bakery/nom
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Something like pydantic but for just strings?
If we were in /r/learnrust I'd have recommended the nom crate for this.
- Nom: Parser Combinators Library in Rust
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lua bytecode parser written in rust
Thanks to the flexibility of [nom](https://github.com/rust-bakery/nom), it is very easy to write your own parser in rust, read [this article](https://github.com/metaworm/luac-parser-rs/wiki/Write-custom-luac-parser) to learn how to write a luac parser
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Should I revisit my choice to use nom?
I've been working on an assembler and right now it uses nom. While nom isn't great for error messages, good error messages will be important for this particular assembler (current code), so I've been attempting to use the methods described by Eyal Kalderon in Error recovery with parser combinators (using nom).
What are some alternatives?
openvscode-server - Run upstream VS Code on a remote machine with access through a modern web browser from any device, anywhere.
pest - The Elegant Parser
ClippyCloud - Easy way to upload and share files quickly.
lalrpop - LR(1) parser generator for Rust
qdrant - Qdrant - High-performance, massive-scale Vector Database for the next generation of AI. Also available in the cloud https://cloud.qdrant.io/
combine - A parser combinator library for Rust
parsertl14 - C++14 version of parsertl
pom - PEG parser combinators using operator overloading without macros.
gram_grep - Search text using a grammar, lexer, or straight regex. Chain searches for greater refinement.
rust-peg - Parsing Expression Grammar (PEG) parser generator for Rust
lexertl14 - C++14 version of lexertl
chumsky - Write expressive, high-performance parsers with ease.