5.4 KiB
angel3_symbol_table
A generic symbol table implementation in Dart, with support for scopes and constants. The symbol tables produced by this package are hierarchical (in this case, tree-shaped), and utilize basic memoization to speed up repeated lookups.
Variables
To represent a symbol, use Variable
. I opted for the name
Variable
to avoid conflict with the Dart primitive Symbol
.
var foo = Variable<String>('foo');
var bar = Variable<String>('bar', value: 'baz');
// Call `lock` to mark a symbol as immutable.
var shelley = Variable<String>('foo', value: 'bar')..lock();
foo.value = 'bar';
shelley.value = 'Mary'; // Throws a StateError - constants cannot be overwritten.
foo.lock();
foo.value = 'baz'; // Also throws a StateError - Once a variable is locked, it cannot be overwritten.
Visibility
Variables are public by default, but can also be marked as private or protected. This can be helpful if you are trying to determine which symbols should be exported from a library or class.
myVariable.visibility = Visibility.protected;
myVariable.visibility = Visibility.private;
Symbol Tables
It's easy to create a basic symbol table:
var mySymbolTable = SymbolTable<int>();
var doubles = SymbolTable<double>(values: {
'hydrogen': 1.0,
'avogadro': 6.022e23
});
// Create a new variable within the scope.
doubles.create('one');
doubles.create('one', value: 1.0);
doubles.create('one', value: 1.0, constant: true);
// Set a variable within an ancestor, OR create a new variable if none exists.
doubles.assign('two', 2.0);
// Completely remove a variable.
doubles.remove('two');
// Find a symbol, either in this symbol table or an ancestor.
var symbol = doubles.resolve('one');
// Find OR create a symbol.
var symbol = doubles.resolveOrCreate('one');
var symbol = doubles.resolveOrCreate('one', value: 1.0);
var symbol = doubles.resolveOrCreate('one', value: 1.0, constant: true);
Exporting Symbols
Due to the tree structure of symbol tables, it is extremely easy to extract a linear list of distinct variables, with variables lower in the hierarchy superseding their parents (effectively accomplishing variable shadowing).
var allSymbols = mySymbolTable.allVariables;
We can also extract symbols which are not private. This helps us export symbols from libraries or classes.
var exportedSymbols = mySymbolTable.allPublicVariables;
It's easy to extract symbols of a given visibility:
var exportedSymbols = mySymbolTable.allVariablesWithVisibility(Visibility.protected);
Child Scopes
There are three ways to create a new symbol table:
Regular Children
This is what most interpreters need; it simply creates a symbol table with the current symbol table as its parent. The new scope can define its own symbols, which will only shadow the ancestors within the correct scope.
var child = mySymbolTable.createChild();
var child = mySymbolTable.createChild(values: {...});
Depth
Every symbol table has an associated depth
attached to it, with the depth
at the root
being 0
. When createChild
is called, the resulting child has an incremented depth
.
Clones
This creates a scope at the same level as the current one, with all the same variables.
var clone = mySymbolTable.clone();
Forked Scopes
If you are implementing a language with closure functions, you might consider looking into this. A forked scope is a scope identical to the current one, but instead of merely copying references to variables, the values of variables are copied into new ones.
The new scope is essentially a "frozen" version of the current one.
It is also effectively orphaned - though it is aware of its parent
, the parent scope is unaware
that the forked scope is a child. Thus, calls to resolve
may return old variables, if a parent
has called remove
on a symbol.
var forked = mySymbolTable.fork();
var forked = mySymbolTable.fork(values: {...});
Creating Names
In languages with block scope, oftentimes, identifiers will collide within a global scope.
To avoid this, symbol tables expose a uniqueName()
method that simply attaches a numerical suffix to
an input name. The name is guaranteed to never be repeated within a specific scope.
var name0 = mySymbolTable.uniqueName('foo'); // foo0
var name1 = mySymbolTable.uniqueName('foo'); // foo1
var name2 = mySymbolTable.uniqueName('foo'); // foo2
this
Context
Many languages handle a sort of this
context that values within a scope may
optionally be resolved against. Symbol tables can easily set their context
as follows:
void foo() {
mySymbolTable.context = thisContext;
}
Resolution of the context
getter functions just like a symbol; if none is
set locally, then it will refer to the parent.
void bar() {
mySymbolTable.context = thisContext;
expect(mySymbolTable.createChild().createChild().context, thisContext);
}