Fortran::Grammar
NAME
Fortran::Grammar - Grammar to parse FORTRAN source code
SYNOPSIS
use Fortran::Grammar;
DESCRIPTION
Note: This module is still in very early development.
MOTIVATION
Working on large Fortran projects with lots of code that you haven't written yourself and try to understand/debug, I found it to be very handy to have a text filter that scans the source code and automatically wraps write(*,*) ...
statements around specific codelines, e.g. specific MPI subroutine calls. To get information on this code and fill the write (*,*) ...
statements with useful information, it has to be parsed.
I initially wrote a Perl script to do this by parsing the source code line-by-line. Parsing became more and more ugly the stranger the code became ( a lot of nested arguments, Fortran-style line continuation with & \n &
, the code of interest enclosed in IF
-oneliners, etc...).
When I discovered Raku Grammars, I immediately wanted to implement this :-)
The main goal of this module is not to provide a Fortran syntax-checker (although with a lot of work it could become one...) but to give painless access to the structural components of Fortran statements - e.g. the subroutine name of a subroutine call, its arguments (which may contain function calls or calculations), etc...
Usage
Use it like any grammar in Raku
use Fortran::Grammar; # use the module
# some simple Fortran code
my Str $fortran = q:to/EOT/;
call sub( array(1:2), sin(1.234_prec), & ! Fortran-style linebreak / comment
& (/ 1.23, 3.45, 6.78 /), "Hello World!" )
EOT
# parse the Fortran code
my $parsed = Fortran::Grammar::FortranBasic.parse: $fortran.chomp,
rule => "subroutine-call";
say "### input ###";
say $fortran;
say "### parsed ###";
say $parsed;
Output:
### input ###
call sub( array(1:2), sin(1.234_prec), & ! Fortran-style linebreak / comment
& (/ 1.23, 3.45, 6.78 /), "Hello World!" )
### parsed ###
「call sub( array(1:2), sin(1.234_prec), & ! Fortran-style linebreak / comment
& (/ 1.23, 3.45, 6.78 /), "Hello World!" )」
name => 「sub」
arguments => 「array(1:2), sin(1.234_prec), & ! Fortran-style linebreak / comment
& (/ 1.23, 3.45, 6.78 /), "Hello World!" 」
argument => 「array(1:2)」
value-returning-code => 「array(1:2)」
accessed-variable => 「array(1:2)」
indexed-array => 「array(1:2)」
name => 「array」
array-indices => 「1:2」
array-index => 「1:2」
array-index-region => 「1:2」
value-returning-code => 「1」
in-place => 「1」
atomic => 「1」
number => 「1」
integer => 「1」
digits => 「1」
value-returning-code => 「2」
in-place => 「2」
atomic => 「2」
number => 「2」
integer => 「2」
digits => 「2」
argument => 「sin(1.234_prec)」
value-returning-code => 「sin(1.234_prec)」
function-call => 「sin(1.234_prec)」
name => 「sin」
arguments => 「1.234_prec」
argument => 「1.234_prec」
value-returning-code => 「1.234_prec」
in-place => 「1.234_prec」
atomic => 「1.234_prec」
number => 「1.234_prec」
float => 「1.234_prec」
digits => 「1」
digits => 「234」
precision-spec => 「_prec」
name => 「prec」
argument => 「(/ 1.23, 3.45, 6.78 /)」
value-returning-code => 「(/ 1.23, 3.45, 6.78 /)」
in-place => 「(/ 1.23, 3.45, 6.78 /)」
in-place-array => 「(/ 1.23, 3.45, 6.78 /)」
numbers => 「1.23, 3.45, 6.78 」
number => 「1.23」
float => 「1.23」
digits => 「1」
digits => 「23」
number => 「3.45」
float => 「3.45」
digits => 「3」
digits => 「45」
number => 「6.78」
float => 「6.78」
digits => 「6」
digits => 「78」
argument => 「"Hello World!" 」
value-returning-code => 「"Hello World!" 」
in-place => 「"Hello World!" 」
atomic => 「"Hello World!" 」
string => 「"Hello World!" 」
Special thanks
smls
on StackOverflow.com for an Action object FALLBACK
method that converts a Match
object to a JSON-serializable Hash
.
AUTHORS
Yann Büchau
Raku Community
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2017 Yann Büchau
Copyright 2024 Raku Community
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE, Version 3