How to comment a grammar rule in yacc and a regex matching rule in lex? - flex-lexer

I want to comment this matching rule in lex. I don't want to delete it. I just want it commented so anyone sees the lex file later be informed that this part has been commented
<tickPragma_name_1>. {
myyyless(0);
BEGIN (0);
}
how I can do that? I know that I can comment the C code inside the {} .but I want to comment the whole rule.

You can surround the rule with /* and */, just as in C, but with two major caveats:
Everything needs to be indented by at least one space, including the /* (and, I believe, the contents).
There cannot be any nested comments in the action.

Related

Explanation of JFlex Block Comment rule

I was looking on how to implement block comments in JFlex for custom language support in intellij and found that it can be described as
"/*" !([^]* "*/" [^]*) ("*/")?
I don't quite understand how to read this and would like it if it were explained in plain English.
At the moment I'm reading this as
first expect a /* then
expect not
any character? (Not sure why they used [^]) zero or more times
followed */
Any character zero or more
An optional */
You've basically deciphered it correctly. Here's a few explanatory notes:
[^]* matches an arbitrary sequence of characters. It's similar to .* except that . doesn't match newlines or unpaired surrogates; [^] matches absolutely anything.
So ([^]* "*/" [^]*) matches any sequence which includes */. And therefore !([^]* "*/" [^]*) matches anything except a sequence containing */. In other words, it matches anything up to but not including */, which is the rest of the comment.
Now what happens if the user makes a mistake and forgets to close the last comment? In that case, there is no */ and will match up to the end of input. Since there's no way to know where the comment should have ended (without being able to read the programmer's mind), the best we can do is to stop trying to parse. Thus, we accept the unterminated comment as a comment. That's why the final "*/"? is optional. It will match the comment terminator if there is one, and otherwise it will match an empty sequence at the end of the input.

Extracting from .bib file with Raku (previously aka Perl 6)

I have this .bib file for reference management while writing my thesis in LaTeX:
#article{garg2017patch,
title={Patch testing in patients with suspected cosmetic dermatitis: A retrospective study},
author={Garg, Taru and Agarwal, Soumya and Chander, Ram and Singh, Aashim and Yadav, Pravesh},
journal={Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology},
year={2017},
publisher={Wiley Online Library}
}
#article{hauso2008neuroendocrine,
title={Neuroendocrine tumor epidemiology},
author={Hauso, Oyvind and Gustafsson, Bjorn I and Kidd, Mark and Waldum, Helge L and Drozdov, Ignat and Chan, Anthony KC and Modlin, Irvin M},
journal={Cancer},
volume={113},
number={10},
pages={2655--2664},
year={2008},
publisher={Wiley Online Library}
}
#article{siperstein1997laparoscopic,
title={Laparoscopic thermal ablation of hepatic neuroendocrine tumor metastases},
author={Siperstein, Allan E and Rogers, Stanley J and Hansen, Paul D and Gitomirsky, Alexis},
journal={Surgery},
volume={122},
number={6},
pages={1147--1155},
year={1997},
publisher={Elsevier}
}
If anyone wants to know what bib file is, you can find it detailed here.
I'd like to parse this with Perl 6 to extract the key along with the title like this:
garg2017patch: Patch testing in patients with suspected cosmetic dermatitis: A retrospective study
hauso2008neuroendocrine: Neuroendocrine tumor epidemiology
siperstein1997laparoscopic: Laparoscopic thermal ablation of hepatic neuroendocrine tumor metastases
Can you please help me to do this, maybe in two ways:
Using basic Perl 6
Using a Perl 6 Grammar
TL;DR
A complete and detailed answer that does just exactly as #Suman asks.
An introductory general answer to "I want to parse X. Can anyone help?"
A one-liner in a shell
I'll start with terse code that's perfect for some scenarios[1], and which someone might write if they're familiar with shell and Raku basics and in a hurry:
> raku -e 'for slurp() ~~ m:g / "#article\{" (<-[,]>+) \, \s+
"title=\{" (<-[}]>+) \} / -> $/ { put "$0: $1\n" }' < derm.bib
This produces precisely the output you specified:
garg2017patch: Patch testing in patients with suspected cosmetic dermatitis: A retrospective study
hauso2008neuroendocrine: Neuroendocrine tumor epidemiology
siperstein1997laparoscopic: Laparoscopic thermal ablation of hepatic neuroendocrine tumor metastases
Same single statement, but in a script
Skipping shell escapes and adding:
Whitespace.
Comments.
► use tio.run to run the code below
for slurp() # "slurp" (read all of) stdin and then
~~ m :global # match it "globally" (all matches) against
/ '#article{' (<-[,]>+) ',' \s+ # a "nextgen regex" that uses (`(...)`) to
'title={' (<-[}]>+) '}' / # capture the article id and title and then
-> $/ { put "$0: $1\n" } # for each article, print "article id: title".
Don't worry if the above still seems like pure gobbledygook. Later sections explain the above while also introducing code that's more general, clean, and readable.[2]
Four statements instead of one
my \input = slurp;
my \pattern = rule { '#article{' ( <-[,]>+ ) ','
'title={' ( <-[}]>+ ) }
my \articles = input .match: pattern, :global;
for articles -> $/ { put "$0: $1\n" }
my declares a lexical variable. Raku supports sigils at the start of variable names. But it also allows devs to "slash them out" as I have done.
my \pattern ...
my \pattern = rule { '#article{' ( <-[,]>+ ) ','
'title={' ( <-[}]>+ ) }
I've switched the pattern syntax from / ... / in the original one-liner to rule { ... }. I did this to:
Eliminate the risk of pathological backtracking
Classic regexes risk pathological backtracking. That's fine if you can just kill a program that's gone wild, but click the link to read how bad it can get! 🤪 We don't need backtracking to match the .bib format.
Communicate that the pattern is a rule
If you write a good deal of pattern matching code, you'll frequently want to use rule { ... }. A rule eliminates any risk of the classic regex problem just described (pathological backtracking), and has another superpower. I'll cover both aspects below, after first introducing the adverbs corresponding to those superpowers.
Raku regexes/rules can be (often are) used with "adverbs". These are convenient shortcuts that modify how patterns are applied.
I've already used an adverb in the earlier versions of this code. The "global" adverb (specified using :global or its shorthand alias :g) directs the matching engine to consume all of the input, generating a list of as many matches as it contains, instead of returning just the first match.
While there are shorthand aliases for adverbs, some are used so repeatedly that it's a lot tidier to bundle them up into distinct rule declarators. That's why I've used rule. It bundles up two adverbs appropriate for matching many data formats like .bib files:
:ratchet (alias :r)
:sigspace (alias :s)
Ratcheting (:r / :ratchet) tells the compiler that when an "atom" (a sub-pattern in a rule that is treated as one unit) has matched, there can be no going back on that. If an atom further on in the pattern in the same rule fails, then the whole rule immediately fails.
This eliminates any risk of the "pathological backtracking" discussed earlier.
Significant space handling (:s / :sigspace) tells the compiler that an atom followed by literal spacing that is in the pattern indicates that a "token" boundary pattern, aka ws should be appended to the atom.
Thus this adverb deals with tokenizing. Did you spot that I'd dropped the \s+ from the pattern compared to the original one in the one-liner? That's because :sigspace, which use of rule implies, takes care of that automatically:
say 'x#y x # y' ~~ m:g:s /x\#y/; # (「x#y」) <-- only one match
say 'x#y x # y' ~~ m:g /x \# y/; # (「x#y」) <-- only one match
say 'x#y x # y' ~~ m:g:s /x \# y/; # (「x#y」 「x # y」) <-- two matches
You might wonder why I've reverted to using / ... / to show these two examples. Turns out that while you can use rule { ... } with the .match method (described in the next section), you can't use rule with m. No problem; I just used :s instead to get the desired effect. (I didn't bother to use :r for ratcheting because it makes no difference for this pattern/input.)
To round out this dive into the difference between classic regexes (which can also be written regex { ... }) and rule rules, let me mention the other main option: token. The token declarator implies the :ratchet adverb, but not the :sigspace one. So it also eliminates the pathological backtracking risk of a regex (or / ... /) but, just like a regex, and unlike a rule, a token ignores whitespace used by a dev in writing out the rule's pattern.
my \articles = input .match: pattern, :global
This line uses the method form (.match) of the m routine used in the one-liner solution.
The result of a match when :global is used is a list of Match objects rather than just one. In this case we'll get three, corresponding to the three articles in the input file.
for articles -> $/ { put "$0: $1\n" }
This for statement successively binds a Match object corresponding to each of the three articles in your sample file to the symbol $/ inside the code block ({ ... }).
Per Raku doc on $/, "$/ is the match variable, so it usually contains objects of type Match.". It also provides some other conveniences; we take advantage of one of these conveniences related to numbered captures:
The pattern that was matched earlier contained two pairs of parentheses;
The overall Match object ($/) provides access to these two Positional captures via Positional subscripting (postfix []), so within the for's block, $/[0] and $/[1] provide access to the two Positional captures for each article;
Raku aliases $0 to $/[0] (and so on) for convenience, so most devs use the shorter syntax.
Interlude
This would be a good time to take a break. Maybe just a cuppa, or return here another day.
The last part of this answer builds up and thoroughly explains a grammar-based approach. Reading it may provide further insight into the solutions above and will show how to extend Raku's parsing to more complex scenarios.
But first...
A "boring" practical approach
I want to parse this with Raku. Can anyone help?
Raku may make writing parsers less tedious than with other tools. But less tedious is still tedious. And Raku parsing is currently slow.
In most cases, the practical answer when you want to parse well known formats and/or really big files is to find and use an existing parser. This might mean not using Raku at all, or using an existing Raku module, or using an existing non-Raku parser in Raku.
A suggested starting point is to search for the file format on modules.raku.org or raku.land. Look for a publicly shared parsing module already specifically packaged for Raku for the given file format. Then do some simple testing to see if you have a good solution.
At the time of writing there are no matches for 'bib'.
Even if you don't know C, there's almost certainly a 'bib' parsing C library already available that you can use. And it's likely to be the fastest solution. It's typically surprisingly easy to use an external library in your own Raku code, even if it's written in another programming language.
Using C libs is done using a feature called NativeCall. The doc I just linked may well be too much or too little, but please feel free to visit the freenode IRC channel #raku and ask for help. (Or post an SO question.) We're friendly folk. :)
If a C lib isn't right for a particular use case, then you can probably still use packages written in some other language such as Perl, Python, Ruby, Lua, etc. via their respective Inline::* language adapters.
The steps are:
Install a package (that's written in Perl, Python or whatever);
Make sure it runs on your system using a compiler of the language it's written for;
Install the appropriate Inline language adapter that lets Raku run packages in that other language;
Use the "foreign" package as if it were a Raku package containing exported Raku functions, classes, objects, values, etc.
(At least, that's the theory. Again, if you need help, please pop on the IRC channel or post an SO question.)
The Perl adapter is the most mature so I'll use that as an example. Let's say you use Perl's Text::BibTex packages and now wish to use Raku with that package. First, setup it up as it's supposed to be per its README. Then, in Raku, write something like:
use Text::BibTeX::BibFormat:from<Perl5>;
...
#blocks = $entry.format;
Explanation of these two lines:
The first line is how you tell Raku that you wish to load a Perl module.
(It won't work unless Inline::Perl5 is already installed and working. But it should be if you're using a popular Raku bundle. And if not, you should at least have the module installer zef so you can run zef install Inline::Perl5.)
The last line is just a mechanical Raku translation of the #blocks = $entry->format; line from the SYNOPSIS of the Perl package Text::BibTeX::BibFormat.
A Raku grammar / parser
OK. Enough "boring" practical advice. Let's now try have some fun creating a grammar based Raku parser good enough for the example from your question.
► use glot.io to run the code below
unit grammar bib;
rule TOP { <article>* }
rule article { '#article{' $<id>=<-[,]>+ ','
<kv-pairs>
'}'
}
rule kv-pairs { <kv-pair>* % ',' }
rule kv-pair { $<key>=\w* '={' ~ '}' $<value>=<-[}]>* }
With this grammar in place, we can now write something like:
die "Use CommaIDE?" unless bib .parsefile: 'derm.bib';
for $<article> -> $/ { put "$<id>: $<kv-pairs><kv-pair>[0]<value>\n" }
to generate exactly the same output as the previous solutions.
When a match or parse fails, by default Raku just returns Nil, which is, well, rather terse feedback.
There are several nice debugging options to figure out what's going on with a regex or grammar, but the best option by far is to use CommaIDE's Grammar-Live-View.
If you haven't already installed and used Comma, you're missing one of the best parts of using Raku. The features built in to the free version of Comma ("Community Edition") include outstanding grammar development / tracing / debugging tools.
Explanation of the 'bib' grammar
unit grammar bib;
The unit declarator is used at the start of a source file to tell Raku that the rest of the file declares a named package of code of a particular type.
The grammar keyword specifies a grammar. A grammar is like a class, but contains named "rules" -- not just named methods, but also named regexs, tokens, and rules. A grammar also inherits a bunch of general purpose rules from a base grammar.
rule TOP {
Unless you specify otherwise, parsing methods (.parse and .parsefile) that are called on a grammar start by calling the grammar's rule named TOP (declared with a rule, token, regex, or method declarator).
As a, er, rule of thumb, if you don't know if you should be using a rule, regex, token, or method for some bit of parsing, use a token. (Unlike regex patterns, tokens don't risk pathological backtracking.)
But I've used a rule. Like token patterns, rules also avoid the pathological backtracking risk. But, in addition rules interpret some whitespace in the pattern to be significant, in a natural manner. (See this SO answer for precise details.)
rules are typically appropriate towards the top of the parse tree. (Tokens are typically appropriate towards the leaves.)
rule TOP { <article>* }
The space at the end of the rule (between the * and pattern closing }) means the grammar will match any amount of whitespace at the end of the input.
<article> invokes another named rule in this grammar.
Because it looks like one should allow for any number of articles per bib file, I added a * (zero or more quantifier) at the end of <article>*.
rule article { '#article{' $<id>=<-[,]>+ ','
<kv-pairs>
'}'
}
If you compare this article pattern with the ones I wrote for the earlier Raku rules based solutions, you'll see various changes:
Rule in original one-liner
Rule in this grammar
Kept pattern as simple as possible.
Introduced <kv-pairs> and closing }
No attempt to echo layout of your input.
Visually echoes your input.
<[...]> is the Raku syntax for a character class, like[...] in traditional regex syntax. It's more powerful, but for now all you need to know is that the - in <-[,]> indicates negation, i.e. the same as the ^ in the [^,] syntax of ye olde regex. So <-[,]>+ attempts a match of one or more characters, none of which are ,.
$<id>=<-[,]>+ tells Raku to attempt to match the quantified "atom" on the right of the = (i.e. the <-[,]>+ bit) and store the results at the key <id> within the current match object. The latter will be hung from a branch of the parse tree; we'll get to precisely where later.
rule kv-pairs { <kv-pair>* % ',' }
This pattern illustrates one of several convenient Raku regex features. It declares you want to match zero or more kv-pairs separated by commas.
(In more detail, the % regex infix operator requires that matches of the quantified atom on its left are separated by the atom on its right.)
rule kv-pair { $<key>=\w* '={' ~ '}' $<value>=<-[}]>* }
The new bit here is '={' ~ '}'. This is another convenient regex feature. The regex Tilde operator parses a delimited structure (in this case one with a ={ opener and } closer) with the bit between the delimiters matching the quantified regex atom on the right of the closer. This confers several benefits but the main one is that error messages can be clearer.
I could have used the ~ approach in the /.../ regex in the one-liner, and vice-versa. But I wanted this grammar solution to continue the progression toward illustrating "better practice" idioms.
Constructing / deconstructing the parse tree
for $<article> { put "$<id>: $<kv-pairs><kv-pair>[0]<value>\n" }`
$<article>, $<id> etc. refer to named match objects that are stored somewhere in the "parse tree". But how did they get there? And exactly where is "there"?
Returning to the top of the grammar:
rule TOP {
If a .parse is successful, a single 'TOP' level match object is returned. (After a parse is complete the variable $/ is also bound to that top match object.) During parsing a tree will have been formed by hanging other match objects off this top match object, and then others hung off those, and so on.
Addition of match objects to a parse tree is done by adding either a single generated match object, or a list of them, to either a Positional (numbered) or Associative (named) capture of a "parent" match object. This process is explained below.
rule TOP { <article>* }
<article> invokes a match of the rule named article. An invocation of the rule <article> has two effects:
Raku tries to match the rule.
If it matches, Raku captures that match by generating a corresponding match object and adding it to the parse tree under the key <article> of the parent match object. (In this case the parent is the top match object.)
If the successfully matched pattern had been specified as just <article>, rather than as <article>*, then only one match would have been attempted, and only one value, a single match object, would have been generated and added under the key <article>.
But the pattern was <article>*, not merely <article>. So Raku attempts to match the article rule as many times as it can. If it matches at all, then a list of one or more match objects is stored as the value of the <article> key. (See my answer to "How do I access the captures within a match?" for a more detailed explanation.)
$<article> is short for $/<article>. It refers to the value stored under the <article> key of the current match object (which is stored in $/). In this case that value is a list of 3 match objects corresponding to the 3 articles in the input.
rule article { '#article{' $<id>=<-[,]>+ ','
Just as the top match object has several match objects hung off of it (the three captures of article matches that are stored under the top match object's <article> key), so too do each of those three article match objects have their own "child" match objects hanging off of them.
To see how that works, let's consider just the first of the three article match objects, the one corresponding to the text that starts "#article{garg2017patch,...". The article rule matches this article. As it's doing that matching, the $<id>=<-[,]>+ part tells Raku to store the match object corresponding to the id part of the article ("garg2017patch") under that article match object's <id> key.
Hopefully this is enough (quite possibly way too much!) and I can at last exhaustively (exhaustingly?) explain the last line of code, which, once again, was:
for $<article> -> $/ { put "$<id>: $<kv-pairs><kv-pair>[0]<value>\n" }`
At the level of the for, the variable $/ refers to the top of the parse tree generated by the parse that just completed. Thus $<article>, which is shorthand for $/<article>, refers to the list of three article match objects.
The for then iterates over that list, binding $/ within the lexical scope of the -> $/ { ... } block to each of those 3 article match objects in turn.
The $<id> bit is shorthand for $/<id>, which inside the block refers to the <id> key within the article match object that $/ has been bound to. In other words, $<id> inside the block is equivalent to $<article><id> outside the block.
The $<kv-pairs><kv-pair>[0]<value> follows the same scheme, albeit with more levels and a positional child (the [0]) in the midst of all the key (named/ associative) children.
(Note that there was no need for the article pattern to include a $<kv-pairs>=<kv-pairs> because Raku just presumes a pattern of the form <foo> should store its results under the key <foo>. If you wish to disable that, write a pattern with a non-alpha character as the first symbol. For example, use <.foo> if you want to have exactly the same matching effect as <foo> but just not store the matched input in the parse tree.)
Phew!
When the automatically generated parse tree isn't what you want
As if all the above were not enough, I need to mention one more thing.
The parse tree strongly reflects the tree structure of the grammar's rules calling one another from the top rule down to leaf rules. But the resulting structure is sometimes inconvenient.
Often one still wants a tree, but a simpler one, or perhaps some non-tree data structure.
The primary mechanism for generating exactly what you want from a parse, when the automatic results aren't suitable, is make. (This can be used in code blocks inside rules or factored out into Action classes that are separate from grammars.)
In turn, the primary use case for make is to generate a sparse tree of nodes hanging off the parse tree, such as an AST.
Footnotes
[1] Basic Raku is good for exploratory programming, spikes, one-offs, PoCs and other scenarios where the emphasis is on quickly producing working code that can be refactored later if need be.
[2] Raku's regexes/rules scale up to arbitrary parsing, as introduced in the latter half of this answer. This contrasts with past generations of regex which could not.[3]
[3] That said, ZA̡͊͠͝LGΌ ISͮ̂҉̯͈͕̹̘̱ TO͇̹̺ͅƝ̴ȳ̳ TH̘Ë͖́̉ ͠P̯͍̭O̚​N̐Y̡ remains a great and relevant read. Not because Raku rules can't parse (X)HTML. In principle they can. But for a task as monumental as correctly handling full arbitrary in-the-wild XHTML I would strongly recommend you use an existing parser written expressly for that purpose. And this applies generally for existing formats; it's best not to reinvent the wheel. But the good news with Raku rules is that if you need to write a full parser, not just a bunch of regexes, you can do so, and it need not involve going insane!

xtext - how to set code areas, with excluded grammar check

Summary: I wish to set left and right margin for my own language - areas of code in which grammar check is excluded.
Background: Using xtext, I am trying to create nice Cobol editor. So far I finished grammar and encountered problem with margins and comments.
Left margin I can include within grammar: after ‘\n’ up to 6 !‘\n’ chars.
That is not solving my problem though. SLComment starts with '*' being placed at 7th position from left. I would be able to catch that with ‘\n’ '*' -> ‘\n’ rule, once I somehow exclude first 6 chars in each line.
I can’t just leave it as ‘*’ -> ‘\n’ and delegate position check to validate , because its messing up multiply rule, which of course uses ‘*’. Placing comment rule just after grammar margin rule isn’t also a solve, since that way I can’t catch margin within the first line of the code.
Also I know that I won’t solve right margin problem(exclude area after 78 position for example) using grammar rules.
I guess there is a way to interfere in text that xtext is checking, but haven’t found solution or hint how to accomplish this.
Also tried to find out if this can be made through preprocessing somehow, but also failed to find any hint how to do so.
Or maybe It is possible to use two grammars at once. Extra one will get each line and hide margins?
Hope I were able to describe what problem I’m facing and what I tried so far.
I guess you can use something like a LINE_START_COMMENT terminal rule that captures the first 6 characters of every line, and then hide it accross the grammar.
terminal LINE_START_COMMENT:
// Up to 6 chars that are NOT a new line
'\n' (!'\n')? (!'\n')? (!'\n')? (!'\n')? (!'\n')? (!'\n')?
;
Then, using this approach I guess you should also modify your full line comment rule, to something like:
terminal FULL_LINE_COMMENT:
LINE_START_COMMENT '*'
(LINE_START_COMMENT '*' | !(LINE_START_COMMENT) )+
(LINE_START_COMMENT)?
;
Here I have defined the FULL_LINE_COMMENT to end after the following LINE_START_COMMENT. To check for several consecutive commented lines, you have to accept as a comment anything thats not the comment terminator (in this case the LINE_START_COMMENT) or the LINE_START_COMMENT with a new '*' after it.

Encode FIRST and FOLLOW sets into a recursive descent parser

This is a follow up to a previous question I asked How to encode FIRST & FOLLOW sets inside a compiler, but this one is more about the design of my program.
I am implementing the Syntax Analysis phase of my compiler by writing a recursive descent parser. I need to be able to take advantage of the FIRST and FOLLOW sets so I can handle errors in the syntax of the source program more efficiently. I have already calculated the FIRST and FOLLOW for all of my non-terminals, but am have trouble deciding where to logically place them in my program and what the best data-structure would be to do so.
Note: all code will be pseudo code
Option 1) Use a map, and map all non-terminals by their name to two Sets that contains their FIRST and FOLLOW sets:
class ParseConstants
Map firstAndFollowMap = #create a map .....
firstAndFollowMap.put("<program>", FIRST_SET, FOLLOW_SET)
end
This seems like a viable option, but inside of my parser I would then need sorta ugly code like this to retrieve the FIRST and FOLLOW and pass to error function:
#processes the <program> non-terminal
def program
List list = firstAndFollowMap.get("<program>")
Set FIRST = list.get(0)
Set FOLLOW = list.get(1)
error(current_symbol, FOLLOW)
end
Option 2) Create a class for each non-terminal and have a FIRST and FOLLOW property:
class Program
FIRST = .....
FOLLOW = ....
end
this leads to code that looks a little nicer:
#processes the <program> non-terminal
def program
error(current_symbol, Program.FOLLOW)
end
These are the two options I thought up, I would love to hear any other suggestions for ways to encode these two sets, and also any critiques and additions to the two ways I posted would be helpful.
Thanks
I have also posted this question here: http://www.coderanch.com/t/570697/java/java/Encode-FIRST-FOLLOW-sets-recursive
You don't really need the FIRST and FOLLOW sets. You need to compute those to get the parse table. That is a table of {<non-terminal, token> -> <action, rule>} if LL(k) (which means seeing a non-terminal in stack and token in input, which action to take and if applies, which rule to apply), or a table of {<state, token> -> <action, state>} if (C|LA|)LR(k) (which means given state in stack and token in input, which action to take and go to which state.
After you get this table, you don't need the FIRST and FOLLOWS any more.
If you are writing a semantic analyzer, you must assume the parser is working correctly. Phrase level error handling (which means handling parse errors), is totally orthogonal to semantic analysis.
This means that in case of parse error, the phrase level error handler (PLEH) would try to fix the error. If it couldn't, parsing stops. If it could, the semantic analyzer shouldn't know if there was an error which was fixed, or there wasn't any error at all!
You can take a look at my compiler library for examples.
About phrase level error handling, you again don't need FIRST and FOLLOW. Let's talk about LL(k) for now (simply because about LR(k) I haven't thought about much yet). After you build the grammar table, you have many entries, like I said like this:
<non-terminal, token> -> <action, rule>
Now, when you parse, you take whatever is on the stack, if it was a terminal, then you must match it with the input. If it didn't match, the phrase level error handler kicks in:
Role one: handle missing terminals - simply generate a fake terminal of the type you need in your lexer and have the parser retry. You can do other stuff as well (for example check ahead in the input, if you have the token you want, drop one token from lexer)
If what you get is a non-terminal (T) from the stack instead, you must look at your lexer, get the lookahead and look at your table. If the entry <T, lookahead> existed, then you're good to go. Follow the action and push to/pop from the stack. If, however, no such entry existed, again, the phrase level error handler kicks in:
Role two: handle unexpected terminals - you can do many things to get passed this. What you do depends on what T and lookahead are and your expert knowledge of your grammar.
Examples of the things you can do are:
Fail! You can do nothing
Ignore this terminal. This means that you push lookahead to the stack (after pushing T back again) and have the parser continue. The parser would first match lookahead, throw it away and continues. Example: if you have an expression like this: *1+2/0.5, you can drop the unexpected * this way.
Change lookahead to something acceptable, push T back and retry. For example, an expression like this: 5id = 10; could be illegal because you don't accept ids that start with numbers. You can replace it with _5id for example to continue

How to parse comments with EBNF grammars

When defining the grammar for a language parser, how do you deal with things like comments (eg /* .... */) that can occur at any point in the text?
Building up your grammar from tags within tags seems to work great when things are structured, but comments seem to throw everything.
Do you just have to parse your text in two steps? First to remove these items, then to pick apart the actual structure of the code?
Thanks
Normally, comments are treated by the lexical analyzer outside the scope of the main grammar. In effect, they are (usually) treated as if they were blanks.
One approach is to use a separate lexer. Another, much more flexible way, is to amend all your token-like entries (keywords, lexical elements, etc.) with an implicit whitespace prefix, valid for the current context. This is how most of the modern Packrat parsers are dealing with whitespaces.

Resources