Wirth-Weber precedence relationship
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The introduction to this article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject. Please help improve the article with a good introductory style. |
The Wirth-Weber relationship between a pair of symbols is necessary to determine if a formal grammar is a Simple precedence grammar, and in such case the Simple precedence parser can be used.
The goal is to identify the when the viable prefixes have the pivot and must be reduced. A means that the pivot is found, a means that a potential pivot is starting, and a means that we are still in the same pivot.
Contents |
[edit] Formal definition
G = < Vn,Vt,S,P >
[edit] Precedence Relations Computing Algorithm
We will define three Sets for a symbol:
Note that Head*(X) is X if X is a terminal, and if X is a non-terminal, Head*(X) is the set with only the terminals belonging to Head+(X). This set is equivalent to First-set or Fi(X) described in LL parser
The pseudocode for computing relations is:
- RelationTable :=
- For each production
- For each two adjacent symbols X Y in α
- add(RelationTable,)
- add(RelationTable,)
- add(RelationTable,)
- For each two adjacent symbols X Y in α
- add(RelationTable,) where S is the initial non terminal of the grammar, and $ is a limit marker
- add(RelationTable,) where S is the initial non terminal of the grammar, and $ is a limit marker
Note that and are used with sets instead of elements as they were defined, in this case you must add all the cartesian product between the sets/elements
[edit] Examples
precedence table:
S | a | b | c | $ | |
S | |||||
a | |||||
b | |||||
c | |||||
$ |