On Mon, Dec 10, 2018 at 3:00 PM Steven Watanabe via Boost-users
AMDG
On 12/10/2018 12:04 PM, Michael Powell via Boost-users wrote:
I have an AST successfully building, generating text file, and subsequently Spirit Qi parsing for verification purposes.
Now I want to implement a visitor pattern over that AST, somehow... For "calculators" and such, "evaluating" those expressions is one thing; however, this AST is not that. It is closer akin to a parsed Xml or Json model/tree.
In other words, I'd like for it to feel sort of like an iterator if that's even possible. It should have contextual awareness where it is at all times, etc, perhaps "incrementing" is a depth first analysis.
It's possible to do this, but making an iterator over a tree is quite a bit more complex than just using a depth-first visitation whenever you need to process the tree.
It is; I actually have a similar pattern in a "string rendering visitor" in which I have internally specialized template methods for the particular nodes of visitation. One might call that a unary visitor, given a single operand. In this case, I rinse and repeat given the binary case, two operands: template<typename T> bool equals(const T& x, const T& y) const { const auto message = "Comparator type '" + std::string(typeid(T).name()) + "' unsupported"; throw std::exception(message.c_str()); } template<> bool equalsast::TopLevelType(const ast::TopLevelType& x, const ast::TopLevelType& y) const { // ... } And so on... Which also guarantees that I am also walking both tree's at the same moment and in like fashion.
In particular I have in mind to iterate the expected and actual AST results in order to perform the verification.
For this case, the simplest method is a binary visitor.
For example, variant equality looks something like this:
struct equal_to_visitor { using result_type = void; template<class T> bool operator()(const T& lhs, const T& rhs) { return lhs == rhs; } template
bool operator()(const T&, const U&) { return false; } }; ... bool operator==(const variant<...>& lhs, const variant<...> rhs) { return boost::apply_visitor(equal_to_visitor{}, lhs, rhs); } Note that since we always return false if the types are different, a slight variation can make this work with a unary visitor.
In other words, I might do something like this:
auto expected_it = ast_visitor{&expected}; auto actual_it = ast_visitor{&actual};
REQUIRE(expected_it); REQUIRE(actual_it);
REQUIRE(*expected_it == *actual_it);
// Rinse and repeat ++expected_it; ++actual_it; REQUIRE(*expected_it == *actual_it);
I wonder if something like this is even possible from the Boost libraries? Or interested to hear any insights on the subject.
For that matter, I wonder it is more appropriate to simply implement the logical operators.
In Christ, Steven Watanabe _______________________________________________ Boost-users mailing list Boost-users@lists.boost.org https://lists.boost.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/boost-users