--- title: Grammar author: - Quinn Dougherty --- Formal grammar specification, reference material for parser implementation. _In all likelihood the reference will have to be debugged as we see what tests pass and don't pass during implementation_. ## Lexical descriptions of constants and identifiers ``` ::= [-]? [0-9]+ (.[0-9]+)? | [-]? [0-9]+ (.[0-9]+)? [e] [-]? [0-9]+ ::= [a-zA-Z]+ [a-zA-Z0-9]? ::= true | false ``` ## Expressions The following gives no typing information. You can obey the grammar and still write nonsensical code. Think of javascript's list unpacking notation to read our variable-argument function `mixture`. ``` ::= + | - | .+ | .- | ::= * | | / | .* | | ::= ^ | .^ | ::= | | | ( ) | | | . | => | () | (, ) | ... ``` ## Data structures ``` ::= [] | [] | [, ] | ... ::= {} | {: } | {: , : } | ... ``` ## Statements ``` ::= | ::= = ::= () = | (, ) = | ... ``` ## A squiggle file To be valid and raise no errors as of current (apr22) interpreter, ``` ::= ; | \n ::= | | | ... ``` This isn't strictly speaking true; the interpreter allows expressions outside of the final line.