DHParser ======== A parser-combinator-based parsing and compiling infrastructure for domain specific languages (DSL) in Digital Humanities projects. Author: Eckhart Arnold, Bavarian Academy of Sciences Email: arnold@badw.de License ------- DHParser is open source software under the [Apache 2.0 License](https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0) Copyright 2016-2017 Eckhart Arnold, Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. **Exception**: The module ``DHParser/foreign_typing.py`` was directly taken from the Python 3.5 source code in order for DHParser to be backwards compatible with Python 3.4. The module ``DHParser/foreign_typing.py`` is licensed under the [Python Software Foundation License Version 2](https://docs.python.org/3.5/license.html) Sources ------- Find the sources on [gitlab.lrz.de/badw-it/DHParser](https://gitlab.lrz.de/badw-it/DHParser) . Get them with: git clone https://gitlab.lrz.de/badw-it/DHParser Please contact me, if you are intested in contributing to the development or just using DHParser. Disclaimer ---------- DHParser is still in an early development stage. While it is definitaly usable, features may be dropped or added without notice and class or function names changed in future versions. The API is NOT YET STABLE! Use it for testing an evaluation, but not in an production environment or contact me first, if you intend to do so. Purpose ------- DHParser leverages the power of Domain specific languages for the Digital Humanities. Domain specific languages are widespread in computer sciences, but seem to be underused in the Digital Humanities. While DSLs are sometimes introduced to Digital-Humanities-projects as [practical adhoc-solution][Müller_2016], these solutions are often somewhat "quick and dirty". In other words they are more of a hack than a technology. The purpose of DHParser is to introduce [DSLs as a technology][Arnold_2016] to the Digital Humanities. It is based on the well known technology of [EBNF][ISO_IEC_14977]-based parser generators, but employs the more modern form called "[parsing expression grammar][Ford_2004]" and [parser combinators][Ford_20XX] as a variant of the classical recursive descent parser. Why another parser generator? There are plenty of good parser generators out there, e.g. [Añez's grako parser generator][Añez_2017], [Eclipse XText][XText_Website]. However, DHParser is intended as a tool that is specifically geared towards digital humanities applications, while most existing parser generators come from compiler construction toolkits for programming languages. While I expect DSLs in computer science and DSLs in the Digital Humanities to be quite similar as far as the technological realization is concerned, the use cases, requirements and challenges are somewhat different. For example, in the humanities annotating text is a central use case, which is mostly absent in computer science treatments. These differences might sooner or later require to develop the DSL-construction toolkits in a different direction. Also, DHParser shall (in the future) serve as a teaching tool, which influences some of its design decisions such as, for example, clearly separating the parsing, syntax-tree-transformation and compilation stages. Finally, DHParser is intended as a tool to experiment with. One possible research area is, how non [context-free grammars](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Context-free_grammar) such as the grammars of [TeX][tex_stackexchange_no_bnf] or [CommonMark][MacFarlane_et_al_2017] can be described with declarative langauges in the spirit of but beyond EBNF, and what extensions of the parsing technology are necessary to capture such languages. Primary use case at the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities (for the time being): A DSL for the "[Mittellateinische Wörterbuch](http://www.mlw.badw.de/)"! Further (intended) use cases are: * LaTeX -> XML/HTML conversion. See this [discussion on why an EBNF-parser for the complete TeX/LaTeX-grammar][tex_stackexchange_no_bnf] is not possible. * [CommonMark][MacFarlane_et_al_2017] and other DSLs for cross media publishing of scientific literature, e.g. journal articles. (Common Mark and Markdown also go beyond what is feasible with pure EBNF-based-parsers.) * EBNF itself. DHParser is already self-hosting ;-) * Digital and cross-media editions * Digital dictionaries For a simple self-test run `dhparser.py` from the command line. This compiles the EBNF-Grammer in `examples/EBNF/EBNF.ebnf` and outputs the Python-based parser class representing that grammar. The concrete and abstract syntax tree as well as a full and abbreviated log of the parsing process will be stored in a sub-directory named "LOG". Introduction ------------ see [Introduction.md](https://gitlab.lrz.de/badw-it/DHParser/blob/master/Introduction.md) References ---------- Juancarlo Añez: grako, a PEG parser generator in Python, 2017. URL: [bitbucket.org/apalala/grako][Añez_2017] [Añez_2017]: https://bitbucket.org/apalala/grako Eckhart Arnold: Domänenspezifische Notationen. Eine (noch) unterschätzte Technologie in den Digitalen Geisteswissenschaften, Präsentation auf dem [dhmuc-Workshop: Digitale Editionen und Auszeichnungssprachen](https://dhmuc.hypotheses.org/workshop-digitale-editionen-und-auszeichnungssprachen), München 2016. Short-URL: [tiny.badw.de/2JVT][Arnold_2016] [Arnold_2016]: https://f.hypotheses.org/wp-content/blogs.dir/1856/files/2016/12/EA_Pr%C3%A4sentation_Auszeichnungssprachen.pdf Brian Ford: Parsing Expression Grammars: A Recognition-Based Syntactic Foundation, Cambridge Massachusetts, 2004. Short-URL:[http://t1p.de/jihs][Ford_2004] [Ford_2004]: https://pdos.csail.mit.edu/~baford/packrat/popl04/peg-popl04.pdf [Ford_20XX]: http://bford.info/packrat/ Richard A. Frost, Rahmatullah Hafiz and Paul Callaghan: Parser Combinators for Ambiguous Left-Recursive Grammars, in: P. Hudak and D.S. Warren (Eds.): PADL 2008, LNCS 4902, pp. 167–181, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2008. Dominikus Herzberg: Objekt-orientierte Parser-Kombinatoren in Python, Blog-Post, September, 18th 2008 on denkspuren. gedanken, ideen, anregungen und links rund um informatik-themen, short-URL: [http://t1p.de/bm3k][Herzberg_2008a] [Herzberg_2008a]: http://denkspuren.blogspot.de/2008/09/objekt-orientierte-parser-kombinatoren.html Dominikus Herzberg: Eine einfache Grammatik für LaTeX, Blog-Post, September, 18th 2008 on denkspuren. gedanken, ideen, anregungen und links rund um informatik-themen, short-URL: [http://t1p.de/7jzh][Herzberg_2008b] [Herzberg_2008b]: http://denkspuren.blogspot.de/2008/09/eine-einfache-grammatik-fr-latex.html Dominikus Herzberg: Uniform Syntax, Blog-Post, February, 27th 2007 on denkspuren. gedanken, ideen, anregungen und links rund um informatik-themen, short-URL: [http://t1p.de/s0zk][Herzberg_2007] [Herzberg_2007]: http://denkspuren.blogspot.de/2007/02/uniform-syntax.html [ISO_IEC_14977]: http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/iso-14977.pdf John MacFarlane, David Greenspan, Vicent Marti, Neil Williams, Benjamin Dumke-von der Ehe, Jeff Atwood: CommonMark. A strongly defined, highly compatible specification of Markdown, 2017. [commonmark.org][MacFarlane_et_al_2017] [MacFarlane_et_al_2017]: http://commonmark.org/ Stefan Müller: DSLs in den digitalen Geisteswissenschaften, Präsentation auf dem [dhmuc-Workshop: Digitale Editionen und Auszeichnungssprachen](https://dhmuc.hypotheses.org/workshop-digitale-editionen-und-auszeichnungssprachen), München 2016. Short-URL: [tiny.badw.de/2JVy][Müller_2016] [Müller_2016]: https://f.hypotheses.org/wp-content/blogs.dir/1856/files/2016/12/Mueller_Anzeichnung_10_Vortrag_M%C3%BCnchen.pdf Markus Voelter, Sbastian Benz, Christian Dietrich, Birgit Engelmann, Mats Helander, Lennart Kats, Eelco Visser, Guido Wachsmuth: DSL Engineering. Designing, Implementing and Using Domain-Specific Languages, 2013. [http://dslbook.org/][Voelter_2013] [voelter_2013]: http://dslbook.org/ [tex_stackexchange_no_bnf]: http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/4201/is-there-a-bnf-grammar-of-the-tex-language [tex_stackexchange_latex_parsers]: http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/4223/what-parsers-for-latex-mathematics-exist-outside-of-the-tex-engines [XText_website]: https://www.eclipse.org/Xtext/