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<head>
<title>Tips for writing a good JavaCC lexical specification</title>
</head>
<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" >
<h1> Tips for writing a good JavaCC lexical specification</h1>
<p>
There are many ways to write the lexical specification for a grammar. But
the performance of the generated token manager varies significantly depending
on how you do this. Here are a few tips:
</p>
<ul>
<li> Try to specify as many String literals as possible. These are recognized
by a Deterministic Finite Automata (DFA), which is much faster than the Nondeterministic Finite Automata (NFA) needed to recognize other kinds
of complex regular expressions. For example, to skip blanks/tabs/newlines,
<pre>
SKIP : { " " | "\t" | "\n" }
</pre>
is more efficient than doing
<pre>
SKIP : { < ([" ", "\t", "\n"])+ > }
</pre>
because in the first case you only have string literals, it will generate
a DFA whereas for the second case it will generate an NFA.
</li>
<li> Try to use the pattern ~[] just by itself as much as possible. For example,
doing a
<pre>
MORE : { < ~[] > }
</pre>
is better than doing
<pre> TOKEN : { < (~[])+ > }
</pre>
of course, if your grammar dictates that one of these cannot be used, then
you don't have a choice, but try to use < ~[] > as much as possible.
</li>
<li> Specify all the String literals in the order of increasing length, i.e.,
all shorter string literals before longer ones. This will help optimizing
the bit vectors needed for string literals.
</li>
<li> Try to minimize the use of lexical states. When using these, try to move
all your complex regular expressions into a single lexical state, leaving
others to just recognize simple string literals.
</li>
<li> Try to use IGNORE_CASE judiciously. Best thing to do is to set this option
at the grammar level. If that is not possible, then try to have it set for
*all* regular expressions in a lexical state. There is heavy performance
penalty for setting IGNORE_CASE for some regular expressions and not for others in the
same lexical state.
</li>
<li> Try to SKIP as much possible, if you don't care about certain patterns.
Here, you have to be a bit careful about EOF. seeing an EOF after SKIP
is fine whereas, seeing an EOF after a MORE is a lexical error.
</li>
<li> Try to avoid specifying lexical actions with MORE specifications. Generally
every MORE should end up in a TOKEN (or SPECIAL_TOKEN) finally so you can
do the action there at the TOKEN level, if it is possible.
</li>
<li> Also try to avoid lexical actions and lexical state changes with SKIP
specifications (especially for single character SKIP's like " ", "\t",
"\n" etc.). For such cases, a simple loop is generated to eat up the
SKIP'ed single characters. So obviously, if there is a lexical action
or state change associated with this, it is not possible to it this way.
</li>
<li>Try to avoid having a choice of String literals for the same token, e.g.
<pre>
< NONE : "\"none\"" | "\'none\'" >
</pre>
Instead, have two different token kinds for this and use a nonterminal which
is a choice between those choices. The above example can be written as :
<pre>
< NONE1 : "\"none\"" >
|
< NONE2 : "\'none'\" >
</pre>
and define a nonterminal called None() as :
<pre>
void None() : {} { <NONE1> | <NONE2> }
</pre>
This will make recognition much faster. Note however, that if the choice is
between two complex regular expressions, it is OK to have the choice.
</li>
</ul>
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