Result for 1B6F8AC7E493F014E4B31FF0862B8B92512674DF

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/frown-doc/examples/other/VarParen.lg
FileSize726
MD5C9B1C390B8A66D3671E1202F14CF04C2
SHA-11B6F8AC7E493F014E4B31FF0862B8B92512674DF
SHA-2564D44DA19A06BE323038E44161617B3FF8B2D303944A440C3FED047159D182988
SSDEEP12:ppTV8CRqzz8m+GjFA2S/v/iVvj31qVHL56oWJ7La:p1a8qzzDJjFRS/vwvj31qBL56bJ7La
TLSHT14E0197642B69C336760388349F23808FB5F58C751190337032BE10C87749DB8AEF57A4
hashlookup:parent-total36
hashlookup:trust100

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Parents (Total: 36)

The searched file hash is included in 36 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize678724
MD5598AC54F792A0F53157CF500DEA3299A
PackageDescriptionManual of the frown parser generator for Haskell 98 The manual and examples of the frown LALR(k) parser generator. , Frown is inspired by the parser generator Happy and uses a syntax quite simular as the syntax used by Happy. Happy only handles LALR(1) grammars while Frown can use more extensive LALR(k) grammars and the parsers generated by Frown are also faster than the parsers generated by Happy. . The salient features of Frown are: - The generated parsers are time and space efficient. On the downside, the parsers are quite large. - Frown generates four different types of parsers. As a common characteristic, the parsers are genuinely functional (ie 'table-free'); the states of the underlying LR automaton are encoded as mutually recursive functions. Three output formats use a typed stack representation, one format due to Ross Paterson (code=stackless) works even without a stack. - Encoding states as functions means that each state can be treated individually as opposed to a table driven-approach, which necessitates a uniform treatment of states. For instance, look-ahead is only used when necessary to resolve conflicts. - Frown comes with debugging and tracing facilities; the standard output format due to Doaitse Swierstra (code=standard) may be useful for teaching LR parsing. - Common grammatical patterns such as repetition of symbols can be captured using rule schemata. There are several predefined rule schemata. - Terminal symbols are arbitrary variable-free Haskell patterns or guards. Both terminal and nonterminal symbols may have an arbitrary number of synthesized attributes. - Frown comes with extensive documentation; several example grammars are included. . Furthermore, Frown supports the use of monadic lexers, monadic semantic actions, precedences and associativity, the generation of backtracking parsers, multiple start symbols, error reporting and a weak form of error correction.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefrown-doc
PackageSectiondoc
PackageVersion0.6.1-8
SHA-1040FE0A775057711304D7D095F396756A57F46DF
SHA-256495F1F169D78DF7236316921D5F370148BF113A4467B278F412934F8E3F3E2C2
Key Value
FileSize678736
MD5638386344253EB989DBD662E3D30E68C
PackageDescriptionManual of the frown parser generator for Haskell 98 The manual and examples of the frown LALR(k) parser generator. , Frown is inspired by the parser generator Happy and uses a syntax quite simular as the syntax used by Happy. Happy only handles LALR(1) grammars while Frown can use more extensive LALR(k) grammars and the parsers generated by Frown are also faster than the parsers generated by Happy. . The salient features of Frown are: - The generated parsers are time and space efficient. On the downside, the parsers are quite large. - Frown generates four different types of parsers. As a common characteristic, the parsers are genuinely functional (ie 'table-free'); the states of the underlying LR automaton are encoded as mutually recursive functions. Three output formats use a typed stack representation, one format due to Ross Paterson (code=stackless) works even without a stack. - Encoding states as functions means that each state can be treated individually as opposed to a table driven-approach, which necessitates a uniform treatment of states. For instance, look-ahead is only used when necessary to resolve conflicts. - Frown comes with debugging and tracing facilities; the standard output format due to Doaitse Swierstra (code=standard) may be useful for teaching LR parsing. - Common grammatical patterns such as repetition of symbols can be captured using rule schemata. There are several predefined rule schemata. - Terminal symbols are arbitrary variable-free Haskell patterns or guards. Both terminal and nonterminal symbols may have an arbitrary number of synthesized attributes. - Frown comes with extensive documentation; several example grammars are included. . Furthermore, Frown supports the use of monadic lexers, monadic semantic actions, precedences and associativity, the generation of backtracking parsers, multiple start symbols, error reporting and a weak form of error correction.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefrown-doc
PackageSectiondoc
PackageVersion0.6.1-8
SHA-10EF5E02F509A4D6CA0D4AEA975D0A0FA910C0100
SHA-256D3D1174C850B551A52AC5B4F61AC0B93371667165DF259383D28B09498893091
Key Value
FileSize563396
MD55180FE28B5F47328886488547BF2785A
PackageDescriptionManual of the frown parser generator for Haskell 98 The manual and examples of the frown LALR(k) parser generator. , Frown is inspired by the parser generator Happy and uses a syntax quite simular as the syntax used by Happy. Happy only handles LALR(1) grammars while Frown can use more extensive LALR(k) grammars and the parsers generated by Frown are also faster than the parsers generated by Happy. . The salient features of Frown are: - The generated parsers are time and space efficient. On the downside, the parsers are quite large. - Frown generates four different types of parsers. As a common characteristic, the parsers are genuinely functional (ie 'table-free'); the states of the underlying LR automaton are encoded as mutually recursive functions. Three output formats use a typed stack representation, one format due to Ross Paterson (code=stackless) works even without a stack. - Encoding states as functions means that each state can be treated individually as opposed to a table driven-approach, which necessitates a uniform treatment of states. For instance, look-ahead is only used when necessary to resolve conflicts. - Frown comes with debugging and tracing facilities; the standard output format due to Doaitse Swierstra (code=standard) may be useful for teaching LR parsing. - Common grammatical patterns such as repetition of symbols can be captured using rule schemata. There are several predefined rule schemata. - Terminal symbols are arbitrary variable-free Haskell patterns or guards. Both terminal and nonterminal symbols may have an arbitrary number of synthesized attributes. - Frown comes with extensive documentation; several example grammars are included. . Furthermore, Frown supports the use of monadic lexers, monadic semantic actions, precedences and associativity, the generation of backtracking parsers, multiple start symbols, error reporting and a weak form of error correction.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefrown-doc
PackageSectiondoc
PackageVersion0.6.1-12
SHA-11D40ADBA5EC953E0BCE1590136FD2CA275DB1C62
SHA-256B919057C84A5A8CE102391CD36B6583B25E51B4421A2D6C3AF74BBE6F887071E
Key Value
FileSize1687038
MD528828B659B6A36918D77857832E0126C
PackageDescriptionLALR(k) parser generator for Haskell 98 Frown is inspired by the parser generator Happy and uses a syntax quite simular as the syntax used by Happy. Happy only handles LALR(1) grammars while Frown can use more extensive LALR(k) grammars and the parsers generated by Frown are also faster than the parsers generated by Happy. . The salient features of Frown are: - The generated parsers are time and space efficient. On the downside, the parsers are quite large. - Frown generates four different types of parsers. As a common characteristic, the parsers are genuinely functional (ie 'table-free'); the states of the underlying LR automaton are encoded as mutually recursive functions. Three output formats use a typed stack representation, one format due to Ross Paterson (code=stackless) works even without a stack. - Encoding states as functions means that each state can be treated individually as opposed to a table driven-approach, which necessitates a uniform treatment of states. For instance, look-ahead is only used when necessary to resolve conflicts. - Frown comes with debugging and tracing facilities; the standard output format due to Doaitse Swierstra (code=standard) may be useful for teaching LR parsing. - Common grammatical patterns such as repetition of symbols can be captured using rule schemata. There are several predefined rule schemata. - Terminal symbols are arbitrary variable-free Haskell patterns or guards. Both terminal and nonterminal symbols may have an arbitrary number of synthesized attributes. - Frown comes with extensive documentation; several example grammars are included. . Furthermore, Frown supports the use of monadic lexers, monadic semantic actions, precedences and associativity, the generation of backtracking parsers, multiple start symbols, error reporting and a weak form of error correction. . Homepage: http://www.informatik.uni-bonn.de/~ralf/frown/index.html
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefrown
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.6.1-6
SHA-131784888944A203E2EF498DD62B74D12D454B703
SHA-256961FFDE5AFFD5681A49942F6FE8C328A6ECD40ED2EE9DF039E82C2F701AB54E8
Key Value
FileSize678692
MD518192518B2909546945A7F4A8391021B
PackageDescriptionManual of the frown parser generator for Haskell 98 The manual and examples of the frown LALR(k) parser generator. , Frown is inspired by the parser generator Happy and uses a syntax quite simular as the syntax used by Happy. Happy only handles LALR(1) grammars while Frown can use more extensive LALR(k) grammars and the parsers generated by Frown are also faster than the parsers generated by Happy. . The salient features of Frown are: - The generated parsers are time and space efficient. On the downside, the parsers are quite large. - Frown generates four different types of parsers. As a common characteristic, the parsers are genuinely functional (ie 'table-free'); the states of the underlying LR automaton are encoded as mutually recursive functions. Three output formats use a typed stack representation, one format due to Ross Paterson (code=stackless) works even without a stack. - Encoding states as functions means that each state can be treated individually as opposed to a table driven-approach, which necessitates a uniform treatment of states. For instance, look-ahead is only used when necessary to resolve conflicts. - Frown comes with debugging and tracing facilities; the standard output format due to Doaitse Swierstra (code=standard) may be useful for teaching LR parsing. - Common grammatical patterns such as repetition of symbols can be captured using rule schemata. There are several predefined rule schemata. - Terminal symbols are arbitrary variable-free Haskell patterns or guards. Both terminal and nonterminal symbols may have an arbitrary number of synthesized attributes. - Frown comes with extensive documentation; several example grammars are included. . Furthermore, Frown supports the use of monadic lexers, monadic semantic actions, precedences and associativity, the generation of backtracking parsers, multiple start symbols, error reporting and a weak form of error correction.
PackageMaintainerArjan Oosting <arjan@debian.org>
PackageNamefrown-doc
PackageSectiondoc
PackageVersion0.6.1-8
SHA-132500F777F50FE0B583A83A14406DDF27C22FC8C
SHA-256423A100FCF3D0AB4F8E6F1AD10BFCA1F4433DA563986A02E1EAE0D6EAB353FDF
Key Value
FileSize678750
MD560F269BC640D2F6C24137EAF014C8783
PackageDescriptionManual of the frown parser generator for Haskell 98 The manual and examples of the frown LALR(k) parser generator. , Frown is inspired by the parser generator Happy and uses a syntax quite simular as the syntax used by Happy. Happy only handles LALR(1) grammars while Frown can use more extensive LALR(k) grammars and the parsers generated by Frown are also faster than the parsers generated by Happy. . The salient features of Frown are: - The generated parsers are time and space efficient. On the downside, the parsers are quite large. - Frown generates four different types of parsers. As a common characteristic, the parsers are genuinely functional (ie 'table-free'); the states of the underlying LR automaton are encoded as mutually recursive functions. Three output formats use a typed stack representation, one format due to Ross Paterson (code=stackless) works even without a stack. - Encoding states as functions means that each state can be treated individually as opposed to a table driven-approach, which necessitates a uniform treatment of states. For instance, look-ahead is only used when necessary to resolve conflicts. - Frown comes with debugging and tracing facilities; the standard output format due to Doaitse Swierstra (code=standard) may be useful for teaching LR parsing. - Common grammatical patterns such as repetition of symbols can be captured using rule schemata. There are several predefined rule schemata. - Terminal symbols are arbitrary variable-free Haskell patterns or guards. Both terminal and nonterminal symbols may have an arbitrary number of synthesized attributes. - Frown comes with extensive documentation; several example grammars are included. . Furthermore, Frown supports the use of monadic lexers, monadic semantic actions, precedences and associativity, the generation of backtracking parsers, multiple start symbols, error reporting and a weak form of error correction.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefrown-doc
PackageSectiondoc
PackageVersion0.6.1-8
SHA-13474AAA6CF0E6EF58E4D1D759334E9A69DB649CE
SHA-2562FE1C7E2A9BA5DC458CD404CBFC76B000850F6CFC7C1236F039F0BCF6B226FDB
Key Value
FileSize564000
MD5C09319D36FAD4BD1A1944694463E1BEA
PackageDescriptionManual of the frown parser generator for Haskell 98 The manual and examples of the frown LALR(k) parser generator. , Frown is inspired by the parser generator Happy and uses a syntax quite simular as the syntax used by Happy. Happy only handles LALR(1) grammars while Frown can use more extensive LALR(k) grammars and the parsers generated by Frown are also faster than the parsers generated by Happy. . The salient features of Frown are: - The generated parsers are time and space efficient. On the downside, the parsers are quite large. - Frown generates four different types of parsers. As a common characteristic, the parsers are genuinely functional (ie 'table-free'); the states of the underlying LR automaton are encoded as mutually recursive functions. Three output formats use a typed stack representation, one format due to Ross Paterson (code=stackless) works even without a stack. - Encoding states as functions means that each state can be treated individually as opposed to a table driven-approach, which necessitates a uniform treatment of states. For instance, look-ahead is only used when necessary to resolve conflicts. - Frown comes with debugging and tracing facilities; the standard output format due to Doaitse Swierstra (code=standard) may be useful for teaching LR parsing. - Common grammatical patterns such as repetition of symbols can be captured using rule schemata. There are several predefined rule schemata. - Terminal symbols are arbitrary variable-free Haskell patterns or guards. Both terminal and nonterminal symbols may have an arbitrary number of synthesized attributes. - Frown comes with extensive documentation; several example grammars are included. . Furthermore, Frown supports the use of monadic lexers, monadic semantic actions, precedences and associativity, the generation of backtracking parsers, multiple start symbols, error reporting and a weak form of error correction.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefrown-doc
PackageSectiondoc
PackageVersion0.6.1-13
SHA-1364C97306A4F546CDF35907BD9F334F0AD8F4B62
SHA-2561B5EC951566D57B4839A2C12337EC9D4FCA7FDE198CB41D7583C51DDE8B67BD1
Key Value
FileSize468612
MD57FD0FF60B254A3D3ABE0A38A9F3BC91F
PackageDescriptionLALR(k) parser generator -- documentation Frown is an LALR(k) parser generator for Haskell 98 written in Haskell 98. . Its salient features are: - The generated parsers are time and space efficient. On the downside, the parsers are quite large. - Frown generates four different types of parsers. as a common characteristic, the parsers are genuinely functional (ie ‘table-free’); the states of the underlying LR automaton are encoded as mutually recursive functions. Three output formats use a typed stack representation, and one format due to Ross Paterson (code=stackless) works even without a stack. - Encoding states as functions means that each state can be treated individually as opposed to a table-driven approach, which necessitates a uniform treatment of states. For instance, look-ahead is only used when necessary to resolve conflicts. - Frown comes with debugging and tracing facilities; the standard output format due to Doaitse Swierstra (code=standard) may be useful for teaching LR parsing. - Common grammatical patterns such as repetition of symbols can be captured using rule schemata. There are several predefined rule schemata. - Terminal symbols are arbitrary variable-free Haskell patterns or guards. Both terminal and nonterminal symbols may have an arbitrary number of synthesized attributes. - Frown comes with extensive documentation; several example grammars are included. Furthermore, Frown supports the use of monadic lexers, monadic semantic actions, precedences, and associativity, the generation of backtracking parsers, multiple start symbols, error reporting, and a weak form of error correction.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefrown-doc
PackageSectiondoc
PackageVersion0.6.2.3-5
SHA-140A3F919DED8898AC8E551DA3325BE2206CCBBF3
SHA-256E5999F59150ECE6662AD72D3190784574050B6241142997194A138EF51DF12A8
Key Value
FileSize678834
MD5D2B11E538B9C8B1111732A7549AE9995
PackageDescriptionManual of the frown parser generator for Haskell 98 The manual and examples of the frown LALR(k) parser generator. , Frown is inspired by the parser generator Happy and uses a syntax quite simular as the syntax used by Happy. Happy only handles LALR(1) grammars while Frown can use more extensive LALR(k) grammars and the parsers generated by Frown are also faster than the parsers generated by Happy. . The salient features of Frown are: - The generated parsers are time and space efficient. On the downside, the parsers are quite large. - Frown generates four different types of parsers. As a common characteristic, the parsers are genuinely functional (ie 'table-free'); the states of the underlying LR automaton are encoded as mutually recursive functions. Three output formats use a typed stack representation, one format due to Ross Paterson (code=stackless) works even without a stack. - Encoding states as functions means that each state can be treated individually as opposed to a table driven-approach, which necessitates a uniform treatment of states. For instance, look-ahead is only used when necessary to resolve conflicts. - Frown comes with debugging and tracing facilities; the standard output format due to Doaitse Swierstra (code=standard) may be useful for teaching LR parsing. - Common grammatical patterns such as repetition of symbols can be captured using rule schemata. There are several predefined rule schemata. - Terminal symbols are arbitrary variable-free Haskell patterns or guards. Both terminal and nonterminal symbols may have an arbitrary number of synthesized attributes. - Frown comes with extensive documentation; several example grammars are included. . Furthermore, Frown supports the use of monadic lexers, monadic semantic actions, precedences and associativity, the generation of backtracking parsers, multiple start symbols, error reporting and a weak form of error correction.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefrown-doc
PackageSectiondoc
PackageVersion0.6.1-9
SHA-148EBA95007969C96A2ACC21B718517183C7BFB53
SHA-256FC88943F03DE0C948E0B1094E3BA746DD900A0153410573B22087C9D2E15BCB2
Key Value
FileSize543914
MD57634D19593D4D203236C084DB5D946FC
PackageDescriptionManual of the frown parser generator for Haskell 98 The manual and examples of the frown LALR(k) parser generator. . Frown is inspired by the parser generator Happy and uses a syntax quite simular as the syntax used by Happy. Happy only handles LALR(1) grammars while Frown can use more extensive LALR(k) grammars and the parsers generated by Frown are also faster than the parsers generated by Happy. . The salient features of Frown are: - The generated parsers are time and space efficient. On the downside, the parsers are quite large. - Frown generates four different types of parsers. As a common characteristic, the parsers are genuinely functional (ie 'table-free'); the states of the underlying LR automaton are encoded as mutually recursive functions. Three output formats use a typed stack representation, one format due to Ross Paterson (code=stackless) works even without a stack. - Encoding states as functions means that each state can be treated individually as opposed to a table driven-approach, which necessitates a uniform treatment of states. For instance, look-ahead is only used when necessary to resolve conflicts. - Frown comes with debugging and tracing facilities; the standard output format due to Doaitse Swierstra (code=standard) may be useful for teaching LR parsing. - Common grammatical patterns such as repetition of symbols can be captured using rule schemata. There are several predefined rule schemata. - Terminal symbols are arbitrary variable-free Haskell patterns or guards. Both terminal and nonterminal symbols may have an arbitrary number of synthesized attributes. - Frown comes with extensive documentation; several example grammars are included. . Furthermore, Frown supports the use of monadic lexers, monadic semantic actions, precedences and associativity, the generation of backtracking parsers, multiple start symbols, error reporting and a weak form of error correction.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefrown-doc
PackageSectiondoc
PackageVersion0.6.1-14
SHA-14CD838C52831675A627E55C86CCF0235FCAFAABF
SHA-2568D6AC933C52C2796BC765B7E65020151BA083331B20DBD01EAA0D5874008DC21