megaparsec
Monadic parser combinators
https://github.com/mrkkrp/megaparsec
Version on this page: | 4.4.0 |
LTS Haskell 22.40: | 9.5.0@rev:4 |
Stackage Nightly 2024-11-04: | 9.6.1 |
Latest on Hackage: | 9.6.1 |
megaparsec-4.4.0@sha256:aa17fa6f41e825466e085f5fcaa3ce7c2558b330a324f3638533d1a7fcd1210d,6603
Module documentation for 4.4.0
Megaparsec
- Features
- Documentation
- Tutorials
- Comparison with other solutions
- Related packages
- Authors
- Contribution
- License
This is an industrial-strength monadic parser combinator library. Megaparsec is a fork of Parsec library originally written by Daan Leijen.
Features
This project provides flexible solutions to satisfy common parsing needs. The section describes them shortly. If you’re looking for comprehensive documentation, see the section about documentation.
Core features
The package is built around MonadParsec
, a MTL-style monad
transformer. All tools and features work with any instance of
MonadParsec
. You can achieve various effects combining monad transformers,
i.e. building monad stack. Since most common monad transformers like
WriterT
, StateT
, ReaderT
and others are instances of MonadParsec
,
you can wrap ParsecT
in these monads, achieving, for example,
backtracking state.
On the other hand ParsecT
is instance of many type classes as well. The
most useful ones are Monad
, Applicative
, Alternative
, and
MonadParsec
.
The module
Text.Megaparsec.Combinator
(its functions are included in Text.Megaparsec
) contains traditional,
general combinators that work with any instance of Alternative
and some
even with instances of Applicative
.
Role of Monad
, Applicative
, and Alternative
should be obvious, so
let’s enumerate methods of MonadParsec
type class. The class represents
core, basic functions of Megaparsec parsing. The rest of library is built
via combination of these primitives:
-
failure
allows to fail with arbitrary collection of messages. -
label
allows to add a “label” to any parser, so when it fails the user will see the label in the error message where “expected” items are enumerated. -
hidden
hides any parser from error messages altogether, this is officially recommended way to hide things, prefer it to thelabel ""
approach. -
try
enables backtracking in parsing. -
lookAhead
allows to parse something without consuming input. -
notFollowedBy
succeeds when its argument fails, it does not consume input. -
withRecovery
allows to recover from parse errors “on-the-fly” and continue parsing. Once parsing is finished, several parse errors may be reported or ignored altogether. -
eof
only succeeds at the end of input. -
token
is used to parse single token. -
tokens
makes it easy to parse several tokens in a row. -
getParserState
returns full parser state. -
updateParserState
applies given function on parser state.
This list of core functions is longer than in some other libraries. Our goal was easy and readable implementation of functionality provided by every such primitive, not minimal number of them. You can read the comprehensive description of every primitive function in Megaparsec documentation.
Megaparsec can currently work with the following types of input stream:
-
String
=[Char]
-
ByteString
(strict and lazy) -
Text
(strict and lazy)
Character parsing
Megaparsec has decent support for Unicode-aware character parsing. Functions
for character parsing live in Text.Megaparsec.Char
(they all are
included in Text.Megaparsec
). The functions can be divided into several
categories:
-
Simple parsers — parsers that parse certain character or several characters of the same kind. This includes
newline
,crlf
,eol
,tab
, andspace
. -
Parsers corresponding to categories of characters parse single character that belongs to certain category of characters, for example:
controlChar
,spaceChar
,upperChar
,lowerChar
,printChar
,digitChar
, and others. -
General parsers that allow you to parse a single character you specify or one of given characters, or any character except for given ones, or character satisfying given predicate. Case-insensitive versions of the parsers are available.
-
Parsers for sequences of characters parse strings. These are more efficient and provide better error messages than other approaches most programmers can come up with. Case-sensitive
string
parser is available as well as case-insensitivestring'
.
Permutation parsing
For those who are interested in parsing of permutation phrases, there is
Text.Megaparsec.Perm
. You have to import the module explicitly, it’s not
included in the Text.Megaparsec
module.
Expression parsing
Megaparsec has a solution for parsing of expressions. Take a look at
Text.Megaparsec.Expr
. You have to import the module explicitly, it’s not
included in the Text.Megaparsec
.
Given a table of operators that describes their fixity and precedence, you can construct a parser that will parse any expression involving the operators. See documentation for comprehensive description of how it works.
Lexer
Text.Megaparsec.Lexer
is a module that should help you write your lexer. If you have used Parsec
in the past, this module “fixes” its particularly inflexible
Text.Parsec.Token
.
Text.Megaparsec.Lexer
is intended to be imported qualified, it’s not
included in Text.Megaparsec
. The module doesn’t impose how you should
write your parser, but certain approaches may be more elegant than
others. An especially important theme is parsing of white space, comments,
and indentation.
The design of the module allows you quickly solve simple tasks and doesn’t get in your way when you want to implement something less standard.
Documentation
Megaparsec is well-documented. All functions and data-types are thoroughly described. We pay attention to avoid outdated info or unclear phrases in our documentation. See the current version of Megaparsec documentation on Hackage for yourself.
Tutorials
You can visit site of the project which has several tutorials that should help you to start with your parsing tasks. The site also has instructions and tips for Parsec users who decide to switch.
Comparison with other solutions
There are quite a few libraries that can be used for parsing in Haskell, let’s compare Megaparsec with some of them.
Megaparsec and Attoparsec
Attoparsec is another prominent Haskell library for parsing. Although the both libraries deal with parsing, it’s usually easy to decide which you will need in particular project:
-
Attoparsec is much faster but not that feature-rich. It should be used when you want to process large amounts of data where performance matters more than quality of error messages.
-
Megaparsec is good for parsing of source code or other human-readable texts. It has better error messages and it’s implemented as monad transformer.
So, if you work with something human-readable where size of input data is usually not huge, just go with Megaparsec, otherwise Attoparsec may be a better choice.
Megaparsec and Parsec
Since Megaparsec is a fork of Parsec, it’s necessary to list main differences between the two libraries:
-
Better error messages. We test our error messages using dense QuickCheck tests. Good error messages are just as important for us as correct return values of our parsers. Megaparsec will be especially useful if you write compiler or interpreter for some language.
-
Some quirks and “buggy features” (as well as plain bugs) of original Parsec are fixed. There is no undocumented surprising stuff in Megaparsec.
-
Better support for Unicode parsing in
Text.Megaparsec.Char
. -
Megaparsec has more powerful combinators and can parse languages where indentation matters.
-
Comprehensive QuickCheck test suite covering nearly 100% of our code.
-
We have benchmarks to detect performance regressions.
-
Better documentation, with 100% of functions covered, without typos and obsolete information, with working examples. Megaparsec’s documentation is well-structured and doesn’t contain things useless to end users.
-
Megaparsec’s code is clearer and doesn’t contain “magic” found in original Parsec.
If you want to see a detailed change log, CHANGELOG.md
may be helpful.
To be honest Parsec’s development has seemingly stagnated. It has no test suite (only three per-bug tests), and all its releases beginning from version 3.1.2 (according or its change log) were about introducing and fixing regressions. Parsec is old and somewhat famous in Haskell community, so we understand there will be some kind of inertia, but we advise you use Megaparsec from now on because it solves many problems of original Parsec project. If you think you still have a reason to use original Parsec, open an issue.
Megaparsec and Parsers
There is Parsers package, which is great. You can use it with Megaparsec or Parsec, but consider the following:
-
It depends on both Attoparsec and Parsec, which means you always grab useless code installing it. This is ridiculous, by the way, because this package is supposed to be useful for parser builders, so they can write basic core functionality and get the rest “for free”. But with these useful functions you get two more parsers as dependencies.
-
It currently has a bug in definition of
lookAhead
for various monad transformers likeStateT
, etc. which is visible when you create backtracking state via monad stack, not via built-in features.
We intended to use Parsers library in Megaparsec at some point, but aside from already mentioned flaws the library has different conventions for naming of things, different set of “core” functions, etc., different approach to lexer. So it didn’t happen, Megaparsec has minimal dependencies, it is feature-rich and self-contained.
Related packages
The following packages are designed to be used with Megaparsec:
hspec-megaparsec
— utilities for testing Megaparsec parsers with with Hspec.
Authors
The project was started and is currently maintained by Mark Karpov. You can
find complete list of contributors in AUTHORS.md
file in official
repository of the project. Thanks to all the people who propose features and
ideas, although they are not in AUTHORS.md
, without them Megaparsec would
not be that good.
Contribution
Issues (bugs, feature requests or otherwise feedback) may be reported in the GitHub issue tracker for this project.
Pull requests are also welcome (and yes, they will get attention and will be merged quickly if they are good, we are progressive folks).
If you want to write a tutorial to be hosted on Megaparsec’s site, open an issue or pull request here.
License
Copyright © 2015–2016 Megaparsec contributors Copyright © 2007 Paolo Martini Copyright © 1999–2000 Daan Leijen
Distributed under FreeBSD license.
Changes
Megaparsec 4.4.0
-
Now state returned on failure is the exact state of parser at the moment when it failed, which makes incremental parsing feature much better and opens possibilities for features like “on-the-fly” recovering from parse errors.
-
The
count
combinator now works withApplicative
instances (previously it worked only with instances ofAlternative
). It’s now also faster. -
tokens
and parsers built upon it (such asstring
andstring'
) backtrack automatically on failure now, that is, when they fail, they never consume any input. This is done to make their consumption model match how error messages are reported (which becomes an important thing as user gets more control with primitives likewithRecovery
). This means, in particular, that it’s no longer necessary to usetry
withtokens
-based parsers. This new feature does not affect performance in any way. -
New primitive parser
withRecovery
added. The parser allows to recover from parse errors “on-the-fly” and continue parsing. Once parsing is finished, several parse errors may be reported or ignored altogether. -
eitherP
combinator added. -
Removed
Enum
instance ofMessage
type. This was Parsec’s legacy that we should eliminate now.Message
does not constitute enumeration,toEnum
was never properly defined for it. The idea to usefromEnum
to determine type ofMessage
is also ugly, for this purpose new functionsisUnexpected
,isExpected
, andisMessage
are defined inText.Megaparsec.Error
. -
Minor tweak in signature of
MonadParsec
type class. Collection of constraints changed fromAlternative m, Monad m, Stream s t
toAlternative m, MonadPlus m, Stream s t
. This is done to make it easier to write more abstract code with older GHC where such primitives asguard
are defined for instances ofMonadPlus
, notAlternative
.
Megaparsec 4.3.0
-
Canonicalized
Applicative
/Monad
instances. Thanks to Herbert Valerio Riedel. -
Custom messages in
ParseError
are printed each on its own line. -
Now accumulated hints are not used with
ParseError
records that have only custom messages in them (created withMessage
constructor, as opposed toUnexpected
orExpected
). This strips “expected” line from custom error messages where it’s unlikely to be relevant anyway. -
Added higher-level combinators for indentation-sensitive grammars:
indentLevel
,nonIndented
, andindentBlock
.
Megaparsec 4.2.0
-
Made
newPos
constructor and other functions inText.Megaparsec.Pos
smarter. Now it’s impossible to createSourcePos
with non-positive line number or column number. Unfortunately we cannot useNumeric.Natural
because we need to support older versions ofbase
. -
ParseError
is now a monoid.mergeError
is used asmappend
. -
Added functions
addErrorMessages
andnewErrorMessages
to add several messages to existing error and to construct error with several attached messages respectively. -
parseFromFile
now lives inText.Megaparsec.Prim
. Previously we had 5 nearly identical definitions of the function, varying only in type-specificreadFile
function. Now the problem is solved by introduction ofStorableStream
type class. All supported stream types are instances of the class out of box and thus we have polymorphic version ofparseFromFile
. -
ParseError
is now instance ofException
(andTypeable
). -
Introduced
runParser'
andrunParserT'
functions that take and return parser state. This makes it possible to partially parse input, resume parsing, specify non-standard initial textual position, etc. -
Introduced
failure
function that allows to fail with arbitrary collection of messages.unexpected
is now defined in terms offailure
. One consequence of this design decision is thatfailure
is now method ofMonadParsec
, whileunexpected
is not. -
Removed deprecated combinators from
Text.Megaparsec.Combinator
:chainl
chainl1
chainr
chainr1
-
number
parser inText.Megaparsec.Lexer
now can be used withsigned
combinator to parse either signedInteger
or signedDouble
.
Megaparsec 4.1.1
-
Fixed bug in implementation of
sepEndBy
andsepEndBy1
and removed deprecation notes for these functions. -
Added tests for
sepEndBy
andsepEndBy1
.
Megaparsec 4.1.0
-
Relaxed dependency on
base
, so that minimal required version ofbase
is now 4.6.0.0. This allows Megaparsec to compile with GHC 7.6.x. -
Text.Megaparsec
andText.Megaparsec.Prim
do not export data typesConsumed
andReply
anymore because they are rather low-level implementation details that should not be visible to end-user. -
Representation of file name and textual position in error messages was made conventional.
-
Fixed some typos is documentation and other materials.
Megaparsec 4.0.0
General changes
-
Renamed
many1
→some
as well as other parsers that hadmany1
part in their names. -
The following functions are now re-exported from
Control.Applicative
:(<|>)
,many
,some
,optional
. See #9. -
Introduced type class
MonadParsec
in the style of MTL monad transformers. Eliminated built-in user state since it was not flexible enough and can be emulated via stack of monads. Now all tools in Megaparsec work with any instance ofMonadParsec
, not only withParsecT
. -
Added new function
parseMaybe
for lightweight parsing where error messages (and thus file name) are not important and entire input should be parsed. For example it can be used when parsing of single number according to specification of its format is desired. -
Fixed bug with
notFollowedBy
always succeeded with parsers that don’t consume input, see #6. -
Flipped order of arguments in the primitive combinator
label
, see #21. -
Renamed
tokenPrim
→token
, removed oldtoken
, becausetokenPrim
is more general and originaltoken
is little used. -
Made
token
parser more powerful, now its second argument can returnEither [Message] a
instead ofMaybe a
, so it can influence error message when parsing of token fails. See #29. -
Added new primitive combinator
hidden p
which hides “expected” tokens in error message when parserp
fails. -
Tab width is not hard-coded anymore. It can be manipulated via
getTabWidth
andsetTabWidth
. Default tab-width isdefaultTabWidth
, which is 8.
Error messages
-
Introduced type class
ShowToken
and improved representation of characters and strings in error messages, see #12. -
Greatly improved quality of error messages. Fixed entire
Text.Megaparsec.Error
module, see #14 for more information. Made possible normal analysis of error messages without “render and re-parse” approach that previous maintainers had to practice to write even simplest tests, see moduleUtils.hs
inold-tests
for example. -
Reduced number of
Message
constructors (now there are onlyUnexpected
,Expected
, andMessage
). Empty “magic” message strings are ignored now, all the library now uses explicit error messages. -
Introduced hint system that greatly improves quality of error messages and made code of
Text.Megaparsec.Prim
a lot clearer.
Built-in combinators
-
All built-in combinators in
Text.Megaparsec.Combinator
now work with any instance ofAlternative
(some of them even withApplicaitve
). -
Added more powerful
count'
parser. This parser can be told to parse fromm
ton
occurrences of some thing.count
is defined in terms ofcount'
. -
Removed
optionMaybe
parser, becauseoptional
fromControl.Applicative
does the same thing. -
Added combinator
someTill
. -
These combinators are considered deprecated and will be removed in future:
chainl
chainl1
chainr
chainr1
sepEndBy
sepEndBy1
Character parsing
-
Renamed some parsers:
alphaNum
→alphaNumChar
digit
→digitChar
endOfLine
→eol
hexDigit
→hexDigitChar
letter
→letterChar
lower
→lowerChar
octDigit
→octDigitChar
space
→spaceChar
spaces
→space
upper
→upperChar
-
Added new character parsers in
Text.Megaparsec.Char
:asciiChar
charCategory
controlChar
latin1Char
markChar
numberChar
printChar
punctuationChar
separatorChar
symbolChar
-
Descriptions of old parsers have been updated to accent some Unicode-specific moments. For example, old description of
letter
stated that it parses letters from “a” to “z” and from “A” to “Z”. This is wrong, since it usedData.Char.isAlpha
predicate internally and thus parsed many more characters (letters of non-Latin languages, for example). -
Added combinators
char'
,oneOf'
,noneOf'
, andstring'
which are case-insensitive variants ofchar
,oneOf
,noneOf
, andstring
respectively.
Lexer
-
Rewritten parsing of numbers, fixed #2 and #3 (in old Parsec project these are number 35 and 39 respectively), added per bug tests.
-
Since Haskell report doesn’t say anything about sign,
integer
andfloat
now parse numbers without sign. -
Removed
natural
parser, it’s equal to newinteger
now. -
Renamed
naturalOrFloat
→number
— this doesn’t parse sign too. -
Added new combinator
signed
to parse all sorts of signed numbers.
-
-
Transformed
Text.Parsec.Token
intoText.Megaparsec.Lexer
. Little of Parsec’s code remains in the new lexer module. New module doesn’t impose any assumptions on user and should be vastly more useful and general. Hairy stuff from original Parsec didn’t get here, for example built-in Haskell functions are used to parse escape sequences and the like instead of trying to re-implement the whole thing.
Other
-
Renamed the following functions:
permute
→makePermParser
buildExpressionParser
→makeExprParser
-
Added comprehensive QuickCheck test suite.
-
Added benchmarks.
Parsec 3.1.9
-
Many and various updates to documentation and package description (including the homepage links).
-
Add an
Eq
instance forParseError
. -
Fixed a regression from 3.1.6:
runP
is again exported from moduleText.Parsec
.
Parsec 3.1.8
- Fix a regression from 3.1.6 related to exports from the main module.
Parsec 3.1.7
-
Fix a regression from 3.1.6 related to the reported position of error messages. See bug #9 for details.
-
Reset the current error position on success of
lookAhead
.
Parsec 3.1.6
-
Export
Text
instances fromText.Parsec
. -
Make
Text.Parsec
exports more visible. -
Re-arrange
Text.Parsec
exports. -
Add functions
crlf
andendOfLine
toText.Parsec.Char
for handling input streams that do not have normalized line terminators. -
Fix off-by-one error in
Token.charControl
.
Parsec 3.1.4 & 3.1.5
- Bump dependency on
text
.
Parsec 3.1.3
- Fix a regression introduced in 3.1.2 related to positions reported by error messages.