@johanneslumpe/basic-lexer
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0.2.1 • Public • Published

basic-lexer

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This basic lexer class is meant to be used within a larger lexing project. It is a state container for valuable lexing information and token extraction.

Get it

npm i @johanneslumpe/basic-lexer

Use it

Below you can find a contrived example. It is purposefully kept basic to illustrate how to use the lexer. While the example below could have also easily been solved using a simple regular expression, they are in general hard to read and debug. Using a lexer gives you a lot more flexibility and your code remains readable and easily debuggable.

NOTE: This library makes use of ES7 array and string methods and Symbol. To use it within an environment that does not support these, you have to provide your own polyfills.

import { EOS, Lexer } from '@johanneslumpe/basic-lexer';

/**
 * The tokens of the grammer we want to lex. We are keeping it very basic here
 */
const enum IMyTokens {
  WORD = 'WORD',
  SPACE = 'SPACE',
  PERIOD = 'PERIOD',
  LEXING_ERROR = 'ERROR',
}

// We have to define some functions which are going to utilize the lexer to tokenize a string.
type MyTokenLexer = Lexer<IMyTokens>;
// This state function pattern is inspired by a talk on lexing in Go by Rob Pike.
type stateFn = (lexer: MyTokenLexer) => stateFn | undefined;

/**
 * This predicate function is going to be used to determine whether or not
 * a character is part of a word token
 */
const validWordChar = (char: string) => {
  const charKeycode = char.charCodeAt(0);
  // a-z.
  // This could also have been a regular expression, but that would
  // most likely be overkill.
  return charKeycode >= 97 && charKeycode <= 122;
};

/**
 * Our word lexing function
 */
const word = (lexer: MyTokenLexer): stateFn => {
  // `acceptRun` takes a predicate and will continue to advance the lexer's reading position
  // until the predicate returns `false`. This allows us to quickly
  lexer.acceptRun(validWordChar);
  lexer.emit(IMyTokens.WORD);
  return sentence;
};

/**
 * A generic error function which is used to push an error to the lexer's token array.
 * It specifically returns `undefined` to terminate the main lexing loop
 * @param error
 */
const error = (error: string) => (lexer: MyTokenLexer): undefined => {
  lexer.emitError(IMyTokens.LEXING_ERROR, error);
  return undefined;
};

/**
 * The main branching function of our lexer. It can lex a few basic tokens
 * like a period and a space, since those do not require any special treatment.
 * For lexing of a word it will defer to `lexWord`.
 * It will also terminate the lexing loop if the lexer reaches the end of
 * our string or when an invalid character is found.
 */
const sentence = (lexer: MyTokenLexer): stateFn | undefined => {
  const next = lexer.next();
  switch (next) {
    case '.':
      lexer.emit(IMyTokens.PERIOD);
      // it is important that we return `sentence` here to keep the loop running
      return sentence;
    case ' ':
      lexer.emit(IMyTokens.SPACE);
      return sentence;
    case EOS:
      return undefined;
  }

  if (validWordChar(next)) {
    return word;
  }

  return lexError(`Invalid character found: ${next}`);
};

/**
 * This is the basic lexing loop. It will keep going until
 * a state function returns `undefined`.
 */
export const lexMySentence = (lexer: MyTokenLexer) => {
  let state: stateFn | undefined = sentence;
  while (state !== undefined) {
    state = state(lexer);
  }
  return lexer;
};

const myLexer = lexMySentence(new Lexer<IMyTokens>('lexing is fun.'));
console.log(myLexer.emittedTokens);
// Logs:
// [ { type: 'WORD', value: 'lexing' },
//   { type: 'SPACE', value: ' ' },
//   { type: 'WORD', value: 'is' },
//   { type: 'SPACE', value: ' ' },
//   { type: 'WORD', value: 'fun' },
//   { type: 'PERIOD', value: '.' } ]

const myOtherLexer = lexMySentence(new Lexer<IMyTokens>('lexing is l337.'));
console.log(myOtherLexer.emittedTokens);
// Logs:
// [ { type: 'WORD', value: 'lexing' },
//   { type: 'SPACE', value: ' ' },
//   { type: 'WORD', value: 'is' },
//   { type: 'SPACE', value: ' ' },
//   { type: 'WORD', value: 'l' },
//   { type: 'ERROR', value: 'Invalid character found: 3' } ]

Documentation

Typedocs can be found in the docs folder

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npm i @johanneslumpe/basic-lexer

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Version

0.2.1

License

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