grammars-v4
Presto
grammars-v4 | Presto | |
---|---|---|
29 | 14 | |
9,803 | 15,603 | |
0.8% | 0.5% | |
9.6 | 9.9 | |
2 days ago | 2 days ago | |
ANTLR | Java | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
grammars-v4
- Operadores de adição e subtração
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Visual Basic for Applications Language Specification [pdf]
Perhaps the one from ANTLR's collection [0] is a good start (there are also others ANTLR VB6 grammars documented elsewhere). It does require knowing ANTLR, but that should be less effort for someone already familiar with language implementation, particularly, the visitor pattern (my favorite reference [1]).
[0] https://github.com/antlr/grammars-v4/tree/master/vb6
[1] https://craftinginterpreters.com/representing-code.html
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Postgres Language Server: Implementing the Parser
Where is the SQLite test suite, please? I'd be very interested.
There are already SQL grammars, check https://github.com/antlr/grammars-v4 specifically in here I think https://github.com/antlr/grammars-v4/tree/master/sql I contributed to one of them, and I wrote my own for some personal work. Be warned, it's very involved, very complex and MSSQL is rather ill-defined.
Names bracket identifiers) in SQL are bloody awful. Sometimes square brackets are even compulsory, and why you can usually replace [...] with the SQL standard "..." , not always! Trust me, it gets worse.
I don't find antlr grammars to be brittle, and while they can lose in performance (by how much I don't know, perhaps quite considerably) they are very easy to maintain and I am very fortunate to have antlr to work with.
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Llama: Add Grammar-Based Sampling
This grammar "library" was cited as an example of what the format could look like:.
https://github.com/antlr/grammars-v4
There is everything from assembly and C++ to glsl and scripting languages, arithmetic, games, and other weird formats.
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Structured Output from LLMs (Without Reprompting!)
> Which brings me to the other approach: steering the LLM's output __as it is generating tokens__
A relevant PR:
https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp/pull/1773
The plan is to support arbitrary grammar files to constrain tokens as they are generated, like the ones here:
https://github.com/antlr/grammars-v4
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SQL-Parsing
Have a look at jooq - I know this has been used to rewrite SQL from one dialect to another, so it MUST be capable of collating code activity metrics. Look here. Otherwise, you might want to look into writing your own parser. ANTLR has a T-SQL dialect parser script here.
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How should I prepare for AI-driven changes in the industry as a Software Engineering Manager
Find a Perl grammar file for ANTLR, like https://github.com/antlr/grammars-v4/tree/master/perl Save the grammar file as Perl.g4 in your project. Now, you can create the Kotlin program: import org.antlr.v4.runtime.* import org.antlr.v4.runtime.tree.ParseTree import java.io.File
- Can you create a cpp file in a program like you could a txt file?
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DELD: An experimental HTTP-Client
Antlr is another option. You could generate a parser using the JSON antlr grammar.
- Are there any resources available to convert a code from Basic to C++? need to do this for the sake of an assignment. anything will be helpful
Presto
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Multi-Database Support in DuckDB
We have some of this functionality in Presto (https://github.com/prestodb/presto), but it takes fair bit of work to implement it for all the different backends.
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Rust std:fs slower than Python
Note that glibc has a similar problem in multithreaded contexts. It strands unused memory in thread-local pools, which grows your memory usage over time like a memory leak. We got lower memory usage that didn't grow over time by switching to jemalloc.
Example of this: https://github.com/prestodb/presto/issues/8993
- Ask HN: What are some SQL transpilers?
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Cheat sheet for quotes usage?
I look at the grammar. Here is preto's grammar which is mostly similar to other sql engines: https://github.com/prestodb/presto/blob/master/presto-parser/src/main/antlr4/com/facebook/presto/sql/parser/SqlBase.g4
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After a few recent events, opening a Linux terminal in public places is a big no-no
export MVNW_VERBOSE=true git clone https://github.com/prestodb/presto.git cd presto bash ./mvnw clean install
- presto: The official home of the Presto distributed SQL query engine for big data
- Compile the Minecraft Server (Java Edition) to Native with GraalVM Native Image
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What are y'all learning right now?
more specifically, recently started learning about Presto [paper], and have been diving deeper into [source] code.
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DeWitt Clause, or Can You Benchmark %DATABASE% and Get Away With It
Presto
- Let's write a compiler, part 5: A code generator
What are some alternatives?
ANTLR - ANTLR (ANother Tool for Language Recognition) is a powerful parser generator for reading, processing, executing, or translating structured text or binary files.
Trino - Official repository of Trino, the distributed SQL query engine for big data, formerly known as PrestoSQL (https://trino.io)
tree-sitter-sql - SQL grammar for tree-sitter
Apache Phoenix - Apache Phoenix
lezer-snowsql
Apache Calcite - Apache Calcite
rewrite - Automated mass refactoring of source code.
HikariCP - 光 HikariCP・A solid, high-performance, JDBC connection pool at last.
tree-sitter-sql - SQL syntax highlighting for tree-sitter
jOOQ - jOOQ is the best way to write SQL in Java
go-mysql-server - A MySQL-compatible relational database with a storage agnostic query engine. Implemented in pure Go.
Spring Data JPA - Simplifies the development of creating a JPA-based data access layer.