Introduction to Syntax/Exercise 1
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The Problem
Consider the following grammar:
bexpr -> bexpr or bexpr | bterm bterm -> bterm and bterm | bfactor bfactor -> not bfactor | ( bexpr ) | true | false
- Identify the terminal and non-terminal symbols of the grammar.
- Show that the grammar is ambiguous by deriving two different trees for the same input sequence.
- Write a non-ambiguous grammar for the same language.
- Build the tree corresponding to the analysis of the following input sequence: not ( true or false and true )
Solution
1. The terminal symbols are all the symbols not defined by a rule: or, and, not, (, ), true, false.
2. The following trees are possible for true and false and true (an analogous analysis could be done for or). Terminals are in blue and non-terminals in black.
<graph> graph nfa { node [shape=plaintext]
0 [id=0,label="bexpr"]; 1 [id=1,label="bterm"]; 2 [id=2,label="bterm"]; 3 [id=3,label="bterm"]; 4 [id=4,label="bfactor"]; 5 [id=5,label="true", fontcolor=blue]; 6 [id=6,label="and", fontcolor=blue]; 7 [id=7,label="bterm"]; 8 [id=8,label="bfactor"]; 9 [id=9,label="false", fontcolor=blue]; 10 [id=10,label="and", fontcolor=blue]; 11 [id=11,label="bterm"]; 12 [id=12,label="bfactor"]; 13 [id=13,label="true", fontcolor=blue]; 20 [id=20,label="bexpr"]; 21 [id=21,label="bterm"]; 22 [id=22,label="bterm"]; 23 [id=23,label="bfactor"]; 24 [id=24,label="true", fontcolor=blue]; 25 [id=25,label="and", fontcolor=blue]; 26 [id=26,label="bterm"]; 27 [id=27,label="bterm"]; 28 [id=28,label="bfactor"]; 29 [id=29,label="false", fontcolor=blue]; 30 [id=30,label="and", fontcolor=blue]; 31 [id=31,label="bterm"]; 32 [id=32,label="bfactor"]; 33 [id=33,label="true", fontcolor=blue];
{ rank = same; 5; 6; 9; 10; 13; 24; 25; 29; 30; 33 } { rank = same; 4; 8; 12; 23; 28; 32 }
0 -- 1 1-- 2 1-- 10 1 -- 11 2 -- 3 -- 4 -- 5 2 -- 6 2 -- 7 -- 8 -- 9 11 -- 12 -- 13
20 -- 21 21-- 22 21-- 25 21-- 26 22 -- 23 -- 24 26 -- 27 -- 28 -- 29 26 -- 30 26 -- 31 -- 32 -- 33
} </graph>
3. The following grammar selects left associativity for the binary operators (and and or):
bexpr -> bexpr or bterm | bterm bterm -> bterm and bfactor | bfactor bfactor -> not bfactor | ( bexpr ) | true | false
4. The following analysis considers the grammar defined in 3 (again, terminals are in blue and non-terminals in black).
<graph> graph nfa { node [shape=plaintext]
0 [id=0,label="bexpr"]; 1 [id=1,label="bterm"]; 2 [id=2,label="bfactor"]; 3 [id=3,label="not",fontcolor=blue]; 4 [id=4,label="bfactor"]; 5 [id=5,label="(", fontcolor=blue]; 6 [id=6,label="bexpr"]; 7 [id=7,label="bexpr"]; 8 [id=8,label="bterm"]; 9 [id=9,label="bfactor"]; 10 [id=10,label="true", fontcolor=blue]; 11 [id=11,label="or", fontcolor=blue]; 12 [id=12,label="bterm"]; 13 [id=13,label="bterm"]; 14 [id=14,label="bfactor"]; 15 [id=15,label="false", fontcolor=blue]; 16 [id=16,label="and", fontcolor=blue]; 17 [id=17,label="bfactor"]; 18 [id=18,label="true", fontcolor=blue]; 19 [id=19,label=")", fontcolor=blue];
{ rank = same; 3; 5; 10; 11; 15; 16; 18; 19 } { rank = same; 9; 14; 17 }
0 -- 1 -- 2 2 -- 3 2 -- 4 4 -- 5 4 -- 6
6 -- 7 -- 8 -- 9 -- 10 6 -- 11 6 -- 12 12 -- 13 -- 14 -- 15 12 -- 16 12 -- 17 -- 18
4 -- 19
} </graph>