48 lines
2.9 KiB
Plaintext
48 lines
2.9 KiB
Plaintext
Mike Cifelli
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CIS 443 - Programming Languages
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Lisp Interpreter Design Document
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My implementation of LispScanner takes in an InputStream in its constructor
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that it will use to retrieve the Lisp tokens. It then creates a
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BufferedInputStream around this input stream so I can be sure that it will
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support the 'mark' and 'reset' methods (which the LispScanner requires to
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operate). A LispFilterStream is then created with this BufferedInputStream so I
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can retrieve all of the bytes from the original input stream without having to
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worry about dealing with Lisp comments.
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When the LispScanner looks for the next Lisp token to return it uses a
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switch statement to determine the type of the next token (or to skip over
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whitespace). In the case of an identifier or number the scanner has to keep
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accumulating characters until it sees one that can not be a part of the number
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or identifier. Once one is found it has obviously been read from the input
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stream and this is not desirable as it is not part of the current token. This
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is where I made use of the 'mark' and 'reset' methods in the scanner. I mark
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the position before I read each character and when one is found that is not
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part of the current token I reset the input stream to its last position before
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the token is returned. This effectively unreads the last character so the input
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stream is in the proper position for the scanner's next read.
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In the design of the LispParser I had some difficulty in implementing the
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'eof' method. This was due to the fact that in order to determine if a
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LispScanner was at the end of the input stream you have to read in a token.
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However, I did not want this method to read in a token since this would
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normally be part of an S-expression. Unfortunately, this meant that I would not
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be able to detect the end-of-file token until the 'getSExpr' method read it in.
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This is too late since the 'eof' method is used to determine when to stop
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calling the 'getSExpr' method.
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My solution involved reading a token in the 'eof' method and then storing
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it in a variable. This would only be done once, until the token was used in the
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'getSExpr' method. I also stored any exceptions that were thrown during the
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read so that the 'eof' method would not give the impression of having read in
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any tokens. Any exception thrown in the 'eof' method during the retrieval of a
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token is stored and thrown the next time the 'getSExpr' method is called.
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During the evaluation phase of the Lisp interpreter, I made use of the
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command pattern during function calls. By creating a LispFunction interface, I
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was able to place all of the built-in functions into a hash table mapping
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function names to the appropriate LispFunction. By looking up functions in this
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hash table, the proper function could be easily called during the evaluation of
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a list.
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FINAL NOTE: The function table is located in the EVAL class and the symbol
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table is located in the SETF class.
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