Crates.io | sbnf |
lib.rs | sbnf |
version | 0.6.4 |
source | src |
created_at | 2020-03-03 12:30:50.230814 |
updated_at | 2023-10-09 13:35:09.321769 |
description | A BNF-style language for writing sublime-syntax files |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/BenjaminSchaaf/sbnf |
max_upload_size | |
id | 214893 |
size | 308,868 |
A BNF-style language for writing sublime-syntax files.
Try it out now on the Live Playground!
SBNF is currently used for SWI-Prolog.
Writing syntax definitions is error prone and the result is hard to maintain.
The addition of branch_point
, while a great feature, dramatically increases
complexity and duplication when used.
SBNF attempts do the following:
With rust installed you can download, build and install the latest released version of SBNF using:
$ cargo install sbnfc
Or if you want the latest features, clone this repository, then build and install using:
$ cargo install --path cli
Note that in order to use the generated syntax you'll need at minimum Sublime Text build 4077 with support for version 2 of Sublime Syntax.
The syntax definition for SBNF is found in sbnf/sbnf.sbnf
. To compile it
simply run sbnf sbnf/sbnf.sbnf
, you can then symlink or copy the sbnf/
directory to your user packages.
The following is a sbnf grammar for a cut-down version of C. It only allows
global/local variable declarations, function definitions and simple function
calls. Even this cut down version is extremely difficult to parse correctly with
the required meta.function
and meta.function-call
scopes, as both function
definitions and function calls require branch points.
NAME = `simplec`
prototype : ( ~comment )* ;
comment : '(//+).*\n?'{comment.line, 1: punctuation.definition.comment} ;
main : ( variable-declaration | function-definition )* ;
IDENTIFIER = '\b[A-Za-z_]+\b'
function-definition{meta.function}
: type
IDENTIFIER{entity.name.function}
`(`
`)`
block
;
block{meta.block} : '{' statement* '}' ;
statement : variable-declaration
| value ';'
| block
;
variable-declaration : type IDENTIFIER{variable} ( '=' value )? ';' ;
type : IDENTIFIER{storage.type} ;
value : '[0-9]+'{constant.numeric}
| function-call
;
# Function calls don't have arguments :)
function-call{meta.function-call}
: IDENTIFIER{variable.function meta.path} `(` `)` ;
The above grammar compiles to the following:
%YAML 1.2
---
# http://www.sublimetext.com/docs/syntax.html
version: 2
name: simplec
scope: source.simplec
contexts:
# Rule: block
block|0:
- meta_content_scope: meta.block.simplec
- match: '{'
scope: meta.block.simplec
set: block|1
- match: '\S'
scope: invalid.illegal.simplec
pop: true
# Rule: block
block|1:
- meta_content_scope: meta.block.simplec
- include: include!block@1
- match: '[0-9]+'
scope: meta.block.simplec constant.numeric.simplec
push: [block|meta, statement|0]
- match: '{'
scope: meta.block.simplec meta.block.simplec
push: [block|meta, block|1]
- match: '}'
scope: meta.block.simplec
pop: true
- match: '\S'
scope: invalid.illegal.simplec
pop: true
# Rule: block
# For branch point 'block@1'
block|2|block@1:
- match: '\b[A-Za-z_]+\b'
scope: meta.block.simplec variable.simplec
set: [block|meta, variable-declaration|2]
- match: '\S'
fail: block@1
# Rule: block
# For branch point 'block@1'
block|3|block@1:
- match: '\('
scope: meta.block.simplec meta.function-call.simplec
set: [block|meta, statement|0, function-call|1]
- match: '\S'
scope: invalid.illegal.simplec
pop: true
# Meta scope context for block
block|meta:
- meta_content_scope: meta.block.simplec
- match: ''
pop: true
# Rule: function-call
function-call|0:
- meta_content_scope: meta.function-call.simplec
- match: '\('
scope: meta.function-call.simplec
set: function-call|1
- match: '\S'
scope: invalid.illegal.simplec
pop: true
# Rule: function-call
function-call|1:
- meta_content_scope: meta.function-call.simplec
- match: '\)'
scope: meta.function-call.simplec
pop: true
- match: '\S'
scope: invalid.illegal.simplec
pop: true
function-call|2|block@1:
- meta_include_prototype: false
- match: '\b[A-Za-z_]+\b'
scope: meta.function-call.simplec variable.function.simplec meta.path.simplec
push: block|3|block@1
pop: true
# Rule: function-definition
function-definition|0:
- meta_content_scope: meta.function.simplec
- match: '\)'
scope: meta.function.simplec
set: [function-definition|meta, block|0]
- match: '\S'
scope: invalid.illegal.simplec
pop: true
# Meta scope context for function-definition
function-definition|meta:
- meta_content_scope: meta.function.simplec
- match: ''
pop: true
# Include context for branch point block@1
include!block@1:
- match: '(?=\b[A-Za-z_]+\b)'
branch_point: block@1
branch:
- type|2|block@1
- function-call|2|block@1
# Include context for branch point main@1
include!main@1:
- match: '(?=\b[A-Za-z_]+\b)'
branch_point: main@1
branch:
- type|0|main@1
- type|1|main@1
# Rule: main
main:
- include: include!main@1
- match: '\S'
scope: invalid.illegal.simplec
# Rule: main
# For branch point 'main@1'
main|0|main@1:
- match: '\b[A-Za-z_]+\b'
scope: variable.simplec
push: main|2|main@1
pop: true
- match: '\S'
fail: main@1
# Rule: main
# For branch point 'main@1'
main|1|main@1:
- match: '\b[A-Za-z_]+\b'
scope: meta.function.simplec entity.name.function.simplec
push: main|3|main@1
pop: true
- match: '\S'
scope: invalid.illegal.simplec
pop: true
# Rule: main
# For branch point 'main@1'
main|2|main@1:
- match: '='
set: variable-declaration|0
- match: ';'
pop: true
- match: '\S'
fail: main@1
# Rule: main
# For branch point 'main@1'
main|3|main@1:
- match: '\('
scope: meta.function.simplec
set: function-definition|0
- match: '\S'
scope: invalid.illegal.simplec
pop: true
# Rule: prototype
prototype:
- match: '(//+).*\n?'
scope: comment.line.simplec
captures:
1: punctuation.definition.comment.simplec
# Rule: statement
statement|0:
- match: ';'
pop: true
- match: '\S'
scope: invalid.illegal.simplec
pop: true
type|0|main@1:
- meta_include_prototype: false
- match: '\b[A-Za-z_]+\b'
scope: storage.type.simplec
push: main|0|main@1
pop: true
type|1|main@1:
- meta_include_prototype: false
- match: '\b[A-Za-z_]+\b'
scope: meta.function.simplec storage.type.simplec
push: main|1|main@1
pop: true
type|2|block@1:
- meta_include_prototype: false
- match: '\b[A-Za-z_]+\b'
scope: storage.type.simplec
push: block|2|block@1
pop: true
# Rule: variable-declaration
variable-declaration|0:
- match: '[0-9]+'
scope: constant.numeric.simplec
set: variable-declaration|1
- match: '\b[A-Za-z_]+\b'
scope: meta.function-call.simplec variable.function.simplec meta.path.simplec
set: [variable-declaration|1, function-call|0]
- match: '\S'
scope: invalid.illegal.simplec
pop: true
# Rule: variable-declaration
variable-declaration|1:
- match: ';'
pop: true
- match: '\S'
scope: invalid.illegal.simplec
pop: true
# Rule: variable-declaration
variable-declaration|2:
- match: '='
set: variable-declaration|0
- match: ';'
pop: true
- match: '\S'
scope: invalid.illegal.simplec
pop: true
A SBNF file contains two types of elements: clauses and rules. Clauses provide meta-data for the syntax such as the file extensions, as well as some meta-programming. Rules are the bnf-style rules that define the parsing and scoping of the grammar.
Comments in SBNF start with a #
and end at the next newline.
See sbnf.sbnf
for a full example grammar.
Clauses are in the form <name> <parameters> = <value>
. The name
must follow
SCREAMING_SNAKE_CASE. The
following names are reserved for meta-data:
NAME
: The name of the syntax. This defaults to the base-name of the sbnf
file.EXTENSIONS
: A space-separated list of file extensions. Equivalent to
file_extensions
in sublime-syntax.FIRST_LINE
: A regex for matching the first line of a file. Equivalent to
first_line_match
in sublime-syntax.SCOPE
: The default scope for the grammar. This defaults to source.
followed by the lowercased name of the syntax.SCOPE_POSTFIX
: A postfix appended to all scopes in the grammar (excluding
the SCOPE
clause). This defaults to the name lowercased. Can be left empty
to leave out the postfix.HIDDEN
: Whether the syntax will be shown in the menu in Sublime Text.Example:
NAME = `SBNF`
EXTENSIONS = `sbnf`
# Don't need this, as this is already the default
# SCOPE = `source.sbnf`
Rules are in the form <name> <parameters> <options> : <expression> ;
. The
name
must follow kebab-case.
Like sublime-syntax files, SBNF grammars have two entry points: main
,
prototype
. They behave identically to those in sublime-syntax files. Only
rules used directly or indirectly from an entry point are compiled.
Rules can optionally have parameters and options. Parameters are used for meta-programming and options are used for sublime-syntax specific options.
Examples:
a : 'a' ;
b{source.b} : 'b' ;
c[S] : 'c'{#[S]} ;
d[S]{text.d} : a b c[S] ;
Expressions may take any of the following forms:
`<literal>` <options>
: A terminal matching text literally.'<regex>' <options>
: A terminal matching text according to a regex.<identifier> <arguments>
: A non-terminal matching another rule.<expr> | <expr>
: An alternation of expressions. The grammar matches either
the left or right expression. This can be used as a list, eg:
'a' | 'b' | 'c'
.<expr> <expr>
: A concatenation of expressions. The grammar matches the left
expression followed by the right expression. This can be used as a list, eg:
'a' 'b' 'c'
.(<expr>)
: A grouping.<expr>?
: An optional expression. The grammar matches nothing or the
expression.<expr>*
: A repeating expression. The grammar matches the expression any
number of times, including 0.~<expr>
: A passive expression. The grammar matches any text until the
expression matches.Options come in the following form: {<param>, <key>: <value>}
. <param>
,
<key>
or <value>
may contain any text except ,
, :
or }
. There may be
any number of options given, as allowed by whatever the options are for.
When there are no options the {}
are optional.
The following options are allowed for rules:
<meta-scope>
: The meta-scope of the rule. Equivalent to meta_scope
or
meta_content_scope
in sublime-syntax.Literal and regex terminals are allowed the following arguments:
<scope>
: The scope of the terminal.<capture>: <scope>
: The scope for a regex capture group. <capture>
must be
an integer.Parameters for rules and clauses take the form: [<value>, <value>]
. <value>
may be either a regex terminal, a literal terminal or an identifier. The same
name may be used for rules/clauses with different sets of parameters.
A rule with parameters is instantiated when it is used. Matching is based on the type and value of each parameter. Terminal arguments are matched based on regex equivalence, while rule arguments are matched by name.
An identifier that does not reference a rule is a free variable unique to the rule's scope. It matches any argument and may be passed in and or interpolated.
A variable may be interpolated using the following syntax: #[]
. This can be
done inside any terminal or inside options.
Examples:
main
: a['a'] # instantiates rule 1
| a[a] # instantiates rule 2
| a['b'] # instantiates rule 3
| b['b'] # error: Ambiguous instantiation
;
# Rule 1.
a['a'] : 'a' ;
# Rule 2.
a[a] : 'a' ;
# Rule 3.
a[A] : 'a' ;
b[A] : 'a' ;
b[B] : 'b' ;
There also exists a set of global arguments which are passed in from the command line. These arguments are in the same form as other arguments and should be put at the top of the file. They may only consist of variables and are available globally, including for clauses.
Examples:
# Declares a single global parameter
[TYPE]
# Can be used in clauses
NAME = 'd-#[TYPE]'
# As well as rules
main : '#[TYPE]' ;
# 'dmd' is passed to TYPE when compiled
$ sbnf syntax.sbnf dmd
SBNF also has support for including/embedding other sublime syntaxes. This can
only be done on a literal or regex terminal expression with a postfix of
%include[<with_prototype>]{<syntax>}
for including a syntax or
%embed[<regex>]{<syntax>}
for an embed.
Note that these translate directly to the sublime syntax include/embed functionality and thus have the same limitations.
Examples:
# This is a basic implementation of the html script tag embedding the javascript
# syntax.
script
: '<script>'{tag.begin.script}
%embed['</script>']{scope:source.js, embedded.js, 0: tag.end.script}
;
# The above translates to the following context
script:
- match: '<script>'
scope: tag.begin.script.example
embed: scope:source.js
embed_scope: embedded.js.example
escape: '</script>'
escape_captures:
0: tag.end.script.example
pop: true
- match: '\S'
scope: invalid.illegal.example
# This is a basic implementation of a regex string. It has a prototype rule that
# extends the regex syntax with an escape sequence for the string.
regex-prototype{include-prototype: false}
: ( ~`\'`{constant.character.escape} )*
# A lookahead is required here, as otherwise we would only pop one context
# The same is required in a sublime-syntax file
~'(?=\')'
;
regex-string{string.quoted}
: `'`{punctuation.definition.string.begin}
%include[regex-prototype]{scope:source.regexp}
`'`{punctuation.definition.string.end}
;
# The above translates to the following contexts
regex-string:
- meta_content_scope: string.quoted.example
- match: ''''
scope: string.quoted.example punctuation.definition.string.begin.example
set: [regex-string|0, regex-string|1]
- match: '\S'
scope: invalid.illegal.example
regex-string|0:
- meta_content_scope: string.quoted.example
- match: ''''
scope: string.quoted.example punctuation.definition.string.end.example
pop: true
- match: '\S'
scope: invalid.illegal.example
pop: true
regex-string|1:
- meta_include_prototype: false
- match: ''
set: scope:source.regexp
with_prototype:
- include: regex-prototype|0
regex-prototype|0:
- meta_include_prototype: false
- match: '\\'''
scope: constant.character.escape.example
- match: '(?='')'
pop: true
$ sbnf --help
SBNF compiler 0.4.0
USAGE:
sbnf [FLAGS] [OPTIONS] <INPUT> [ARGS]...
FLAGS:
-g Compile with debug scopes
-h, --help Prints help information
-q Do not display warnings
-V, --version Prints version information
OPTIONS:
-o <output> The file to write the compiled sublime-syntax to. Defaults to $INPUT.sublime-syntax if left out. Use a single dash `-` to write to stdout instead.
ARGS:
<INPUT> The SBNF file to compile
<ARGS>... Arguments to pass to the main and prototype rules
When determining whether to create a branch point in the sublime-syntax, SBNF has to consider whether regexes overlap. Take the following example:
main : 'aa?'{scope1} 'b'
| 'a'{scope2} 'c'
;
The regexes 'aa?'
and 'a'
both match a
, meaning a branch point would be
required to correctly parse this syntax. SBNF does not create a branch point
here. Due to the complexities of regex, a branch point is only created with
equivalent regexes. Rewriting the example to work as expected with SBNF yields
the following:
main : 'aa'{scope1} 'b'
| 'a'{scope1} 'b'
| 'a'{scope2} 'c'
;
This is unlikely to change in the future, as SBNF does not make any attempt to understand any regexes.