| Copyright | © 2015–present Megaparsec contributors | 
|---|---|
| License | FreeBSD | 
| Maintainer | Mark Karpov <markkarpov92@gmail.com> | 
| Stability | experimental | 
| Portability | portable | 
| Safe Haskell | Safe | 
| Language | Haskell2010 | 
Text.Megaparsec.Byte.Lexer
Contents
Description
Stripped-down version of Text.Megaparsec.Char.Lexer for streams of bytes.
This module is intended to be imported qualified:
import qualified Text.Megaparsec.Byte.Lexer as L
Synopsis
- space :: MonadParsec e s m => m () -> m () -> m () -> m ()
- lexeme :: MonadParsec e s m => m () -> m a -> m a
- symbol :: MonadParsec e s m => m () -> Tokens s -> m (Tokens s)
- symbol' :: (MonadParsec e s m, FoldCase (Tokens s)) => m () -> Tokens s -> m (Tokens s)
- skipLineComment :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8) => Tokens s -> m ()
- skipBlockComment :: MonadParsec e s m => Tokens s -> Tokens s -> m ()
- skipBlockCommentNested :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8) => Tokens s -> Tokens s -> m ()
- decimal :: forall e s m a. (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8, Num a) => m a
- binary :: forall e s m a. (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8, Num a) => m a
- octal :: forall e s m a. (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8, Num a) => m a
- hexadecimal :: forall e s m a. (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8, Num a) => m a
- scientific :: forall e s m. (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8) => m Scientific
- float :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8, RealFloat a) => m a
- signed :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8, Num a) => m () -> m a -> m a
White space
Arguments
| :: MonadParsec e s m | |
| => m () | A parser for space characters which does not accept empty
 input (e.g.  | 
| -> m () | A parser for a line comment (e.g.  | 
| -> m () | A parser for a block comment (e.g.  | 
| -> m () | 
space sc lineComment blockCommentspaceConsumer in documentation, usually it means that something like
 space is expected there).
sc is used to parse blocks of space characters. You can use
 space1 from Text.Megaparsec.Char for this
 purpose as well as your own parser (if you don't want to automatically
 consume newlines, for example). Make sure that the parser does not
 succeed on the empty input though. In an earlier version of the library
 spaceChar was recommended, but now parsers based
 on takeWhile1P are preferred because of their speed.
lineComment is used to parse line comments. You can use
 skipLineComment if you don't need anything special.
blockComment is used to parse block (multi-line) comments. You can use
 skipBlockComment or skipBlockCommentNested if you don't need anything
 special.
If you don't want to allow a kind of comment, simply pass empty which
 will fail instantly when parsing of that sort of comment is attempted and
 space will just move on or finish depending on whether there is more
 white space for it to consume.
Arguments
| :: MonadParsec e s m | |
| => m () | How to consume white space after lexeme | 
| -> m a | How to parse actual lexeme | 
| -> m a | 
This is a wrapper for lexemes. The typical usage is to supply the first
 argument (parser that consumes white space, probably defined via space)
 and use the resulting function to wrap parsers for every lexeme.
lexeme = L.lexeme spaceConsumer integer = lexeme L.decimal
Arguments
| :: MonadParsec e s m | |
| => m () | How to consume white space after lexeme | 
| -> Tokens s | Symbol to parse | 
| -> m (Tokens s) | 
This is a helper to parse symbols, i.e. verbatim strings. You pass the
 first argument (parser that consumes white space, probably defined via
 space) and then you can use the resulting function to parse strings:
symbol    = L.symbol spaceConsumer
parens    = between (symbol "(") (symbol ")")
braces    = between (symbol "{") (symbol "}")
angles    = between (symbol "<") (symbol ">")
brackets  = between (symbol "[") (symbol "]")
semicolon = symbol ";"
comma     = symbol ","
colon     = symbol ":"
dot       = symbol "."Arguments
| :: (MonadParsec e s m, FoldCase (Tokens s)) | |
| => m () | How to consume white space after lexeme | 
| -> Tokens s | Symbol to parse (case-insensitive) | 
| -> m (Tokens s) | 
A case-insensitive version of symbol. This may be helpful if you're
 working with case-insensitive languages.
Arguments
| :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8) | |
| => Tokens s | Line comment prefix | 
| -> m () | 
Given a comment prefix this function returns a parser that skips line
 comments. Note that it stops just before the newline character but
 doesn't consume the newline. Newline is either supposed to be consumed by
 space parser or picked up manually.
Arguments
| :: MonadParsec e s m | |
| => Tokens s | Start of block comment | 
| -> Tokens s | End of block comment | 
| -> m () | 
skipBlockComment start endstart and ending with end.
skipBlockCommentNested Source #
Arguments
| :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8) | |
| => Tokens s | Start of block comment | 
| -> Tokens s | End of block comment | 
| -> m () | 
skipBlockCommentNested start endstart and ending with end.
Since: 5.0.0
Numbers
decimal :: forall e s m a. (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8, Num a) => m a Source #
Parse an integer in the decimal representation according to the format of integer literals described in the Haskell report.
If you need to parse signed integers, see the signed combinator.
Warning: this function does not perform range checks.
binary :: forall e s m a. (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8, Num a) => m a Source #
Parse an integer in the binary representation. The binary number is expected to be a non-empty sequence of zeroes “0” and ones “1”.
You could of course parse some prefix before the actual number:
binary = char 48 >> char' 98 >> L.binary
Warning: this function does not perform range checks.
Since: 7.0.0
octal :: forall e s m a. (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8, Num a) => m a Source #
Parse an integer in the octal representation. The format of the octal number is expected to be according to the Haskell report except for the fact that this parser doesn't parse “0o” or “0O” prefix. It is a responsibility of the programmer to parse correct prefix before parsing the number itself.
For example you can make it conform to the Haskell report like this:
octal = char 48 >> char' 111 >> L.octal
Warning: this function does not perform range checks.
hexadecimal :: forall e s m a. (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8, Num a) => m a Source #
Parse an integer in the hexadecimal representation. The format of the hexadecimal number is expected to be according to the Haskell report except for the fact that this parser doesn't parse “0x” or “0X” prefix. It is a responsibility of the programmer to parse correct prefix before parsing the number itself.
For example you can make it conform to the Haskell report like this:
hexadecimal = char 48 >> char' 120 >> L.hexadecimal
Warning: this function does not perform range checks.
scientific :: forall e s m. (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8) => m Scientific Source #
Parse a floating point value as a Scientific number. Scientific is
 great for parsing of arbitrary precision numbers coming from an untrusted
 source. See documentation in Data.Scientific for more information.
The parser can be used to parse integers or floating point values. Use
 functions like floatingOrInteger from Data.Scientific
 to test and extract integer or real values.
This function does not parse sign, if you need to parse signed numbers,
 see signed.
float :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8, RealFloat a) => m a Source #
Parse a floating point number according to the syntax for floating point literals described in the Haskell report.
This function does not parse sign, if you need to parse signed numbers,
 see signed.
Note: in versions 6.0.0–6.1.1 this function accepted plain integers.
Arguments
| :: (MonadParsec e s m, Token s ~ Word8, Num a) | |
| => m () | How to consume white space after the sign | 
| -> m a | How to parse the number itself | 
| -> m a | Parser for signed numbers | 
signed space pspace parser), then it runs parser p which should return a number.
 Sign of the number is changed according to the previously parsed sign
 character.
For example, to parse signed integer you can write:
lexeme = L.lexeme spaceConsumer integer = lexeme L.decimal signedInteger = L.signed spaceConsumer integer