| Title | Syntactic extension for languages with implicitly delimited and infix syntax |
| Publication Type | dissertation |
| School or College | College of Engineering |
| Department | Computing |
| Author | Rafkind, Jon |
| Date | 2013-05 |
| Description | I present the design of a parser that adds Scheme-style language extensibility to languages with implicitly delimited and infix syntax. A key element of my design is an enforestation parsing step, which converts a flat stream of tokens into an S-expression-like tree, in addition to the initial "read" phase of parsing and interleaved with the "macro-expand" phase. My parser uses standard lexical scoping rules to communicate syntactic extensions to the parser. In this way extensions naturally compose locally as well as through module boundaries. I argue that this style of communication is better suited towards a useful extension system than tools not directly integrated with the compiler. This dissertation explores the limits of this design in a new language called Honu. I use the extensiblity provided by Honu to develop useful language extensions such as LINQ and a parser generator. I also demonstrate the generality of the parsing techniques by applying them to Java and Python. |
| Type | Text |
| Publisher | University of Utah |
| Subject | extensible; macros; programming languages |
| Dissertation Institution | University of Utah |
| Dissertation Name | Doctor of Philosophy |
| Language | eng |
| Rights Management | Copyright © Jon Rafkind 2013 |
| Format | application/pdf |
| Format Medium | application/pdf |
| Format Extent | 1,018,757 bytes |
| ARK | ark:/87278/s6rr2d2j |
| Setname | ir_etd |
| ID | 195874 |
| Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6rr2d2j |