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Now that we have a proper type for internal symbol numbers, let's use
it. More code needs conversion, e.g., printers and destructors, but
they are shared with glr.c, which is not ready yet for this change.
It will also help us deal with warnings such as (GCC9 on GNU/Linux):
input.c: In function 'int yyparse()':
input.c:475:37: error: enumeral and non-enumeral type in conditional expression [-Werror=extra]
475 | (0 <= (YYX) && (YYX) <= YYMAXUTOK ? yytranslate[YYX] : YYSYMBOL_YYUNDEF)
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
input.c:1024:17: note: in expansion of macro 'YYTRANSLATE'
1024 | yytoken = YYTRANSLATE (yychar);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
* data/skeletons/yacc.c (yytranslate, yysymbol_name)
(yyparse_context_t, yyexpected_tokens, yypstate_expected_tokens)
(yysyntax_error_arguments):
Use yysymbol_type_t instead of int.
bistromathic - all the bells and whistles
This example demonstrates best practices when using Bison.
- Its hand-written scanner tracks locations.
- Its interface is pure.
- Its interface is "incremental", well suited for interaction: it uses the push-parser API to feed the parser with the incoming tokens.
- It features an interactive command line with completion based on the
parser state, based on
yyexpected_tokens. - It uses a custom syntax error with location, lookahead correction and token internationalization.
- It supports debug traces with semantic values.
- It uses named references instead of the traditional $1, $2, etc.