Q: Can I get Stratego/XT running on Windows?
A: The 0.17 version does not work on Windows at the moment. The previous stable release, 0.16 does.
Q: Can I get Stratego/XT running on OSX?
A: This is Unix! I know this! (Yes, by either installing it through Nix or compiling from sources.)
Q: What's the difference between
spinetd
and
oncetd
?
A: The spine topdown traversal applies a strategy parameter at every
aterm on a spine from the root to a leaf. The once topdown strategy
applies its strategy parameter at only a single location.
signature
constructors
A : Term -> Term
A : Term * Term -> Term
A : Term * Term * Term -> Term
A : Term * Term * Term * Term -> Term
B : Term -> Term
B : Term * Term -> Term
strategies
main = !A(0,1,B(2,3),4) ; spinetd((not(int) ; debug(!"> ") <+ fail))
Running
main
gives you this:
> A(0,1,B(2,3),4)
> B(2,3)
A(0,1,B(2,3),4)
Q: Why does
sdf2table
(
SdfChecker?) always complain that the Main module is not defined?
A: When you run
sdf2table
in the present (0.17) Stratego/XT, e.g.
$ sdf2table -i Expression.def -o Expression.tbl -m Expression
you will always get the error message that the Main module is undefined:
SdfChecker:error: Main module not defined
This is a known bug. Ignore it. It's been fixed upstream already, and will trickle into newer Stratego/XT releases.
Technical details: The
sdf2table
script first does a check of the grammar using
sdfchecker
before it applies the generator,
parsetablegen
.
sdfchecker
is the one emitting the error message. Since
parsetablegen
is the tool responsible for actually generating the .tbl file, it doesn't matter that
sdfchecker
is being unreasonably cranky.
If this annoys you unbearably, name your main module
Main.sdf
.
Q: Where is this "alt" stuff coming from?
A:
Don't use alternatives in your
SDF, i.e. don't use productions of the
form
"foo" (A | B) "bar" -> C
Instead, write
"foo" AorB "bar" -> C
A -> AorB
B -> AorB
This is really equivalent, since the
SDF normalizer transforms the first
production to
"foo" (A | B) "bar" -> C
A -> (A | B)
B -> (A | B)
However,
asfix-implode
interprets the latter to include
alt
constructors. This is needed to cover cases such as
"foo" ("a" A | "b" B) "bar" -> C
such that the alternatives can be reconstructed (e.g. when
pretty-printing). Since the alternatives need to be named to
distinghuish them, this is better written as
"foo" AorB "bar" -> C {cons("Foo")}
"a" A -> AorB {cons("A")}
"b" B -> AorB {cons("B")}
so that you can actually control the names used.
--
KarlTrygveKalleberg - 30 Oct 2008