erl_parse
The Erlang Parser
This module is the basic Erlang parser which converts tokens into the abstract form of either forms (i.e., top-level constructs), expressions, or terms. The Abstract Format is described in the ERTS User's Guide. Note that a token list must end with the dot token in order to be acceptable to the parse functions (see erl_scan(3)).
Parse tree for Erlang clause.
Parse tree for Erlang expression.
Parse tree for Erlang form.
Functions
parse_form(Tokens) -> {ok, AbsForm} | {error, ErrorInfo}
This function parses
as if it were
a form. It returns:
{ok, AbsForm }
The parsing was successful.
is the
abstract form of the parsed form.
{error, ErrorInfo }
An error occurred.
parse_exprs(Tokens) -> {ok, ExprList} | {error, ErrorInfo}
This function parses
as if it were
a list of expressions. It returns:
{ok, ExprList }
The parsing was successful.
is a
list of the abstract forms of the parsed expressions.
{error, ErrorInfo }
An error occurred.
parse_term(Tokens) -> {ok, Term} | {error, ErrorInfo}
This function parses
as if it were
a term. It returns:
{ok, Term }
The parsing was successful.
is
the Erlang term corresponding to the token list.
{error, ErrorInfo}
An error occurred.
format_error(ErrorDescriptor) -> Chars
ErrorDescriptor = error_description()
Chars = [char() | Chars]
Uses an ErrorDescriptor
and returns a string
which describes the error. This function is usually called
implicitly when an ErrorInfo
structure is processed
(see below).
tokens(AbsTerm) -> Tokens
tokens(AbsTerm, MoreTokens) -> Tokens
This function generates a list of tokens representing the abstract
form
of an expression. Optionally, it
appends
.
normalise(AbsTerm) -> Data
Converts the abstract form
of a
term into a
conventional Erlang data structure (i.e., the term itself).
This is the inverse of abstract/1
.
abstract(Data) -> AbsTerm
Converts the Erlang data structure
into an
abstract form of type
.
This is the inverse of normalise/1
.
Error Information
The ErrorInfo
mentioned above is the standard
ErrorInfo
structure which is returned from all IO
modules. It has the format:
{ErrorLine, Module, ErrorDescriptor}
A string which describes the error is obtained with the following call:
Module:format_error(ErrorDescriptor)
See Also
io(3), erl_scan(3), ERTS User's Guide