[TUHS] What would early alternatives to C have been?
Rob Pike
robpike at gmail.com
Mon Mar 10 14:10:15 AEST 2025
A rare case where I disagree with you, Doug. If the language is reasonably
regular (I do not mean in the strict Kleene sense), a recursive descent
parser is not much harder to write than a yacc grammar, and much smoother
at providing good error messages. Having done many yaccs and many RD
parsers, I no longer go to yacc.
To put it another way, there are few programming tasks I enjoy more than
writing a recursive descent parser for a sane language.
Now if the language is not so regular, my position might shift. I do recall
Bjarne dynamically editing the generated tables mid-parse to get yacc to
handle at least one stage of C++'s development.
Another way to think of it is that if you are designing the language and it
is undergoing frequent changes in grammar, yacc could certainly be move you
along faster. But even then once things had settled I'd still redo it as
RD, for the quality of the result.
You can credit Stephen R. "Software" Steve for this change in my thinking.
-rob
On Mon, Mar 10, 2025 at 1:12 PM Douglas McIlroy <
douglas.mcilroy at dartmouth.edu> wrote:
> > everyone should write for their first compiler in Pascal for a
> > simple language and no cheating using YACC. You need to write the whole
> > thing if you want to understand how parsing really works.
>
> Yacc certainly makes it easier to write parsers for big grammars, but
> it's far from cheating. You need to know a lot more about parsing to use
> Yacc than you need to roll your own.
>
> Hand parsing of a tiny grammar is almost a necessary step on the way to
> understanding Yacc. But I think hand-building the whole parser for a
> compiler is unnecessary torture--like doing trigonometry with log tables.
>
> Doug
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://www.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/attachments/20250310/661b948a/attachment.htm>
More information about the TUHS
mailing list