Question

I try to implement a Lexer for a little programming language with Boost Spirit.

I have to get the value of a token and I get a bad_get exception :

terminate called after throwing an instance of 'boost::bad_get'
what(): boost::bad_get: failed value get using boost::get Aborted

I obtain this exception when doing :

std::string contents = "void";

base_iterator_type first = contents.begin();
base_iterator_type last = contents.end();

SimpleLexer<lexer_type> lexer;

iter = lexer.begin(first, last);
end = lexer.end();

std::cout << "Value = " << boost::get<std::string>(iter->value()) << std::endl;

My lexer is defined like that :

typedef std::string::iterator base_iterator_type;
typedef boost::spirit::lex::lexertl::token<base_iterator_type, boost::mpl::vector<unsigned int, std::string>> Tok;
typedef lex::lexertl::actor_lexer<Tok> lexer_type;

template<typename L>
class SimpleLexer : public lex::lexer<L> {
    private:

    public:
        SimpleLexer() {
            keyword_for = "for";
            keyword_while = "while";
            keyword_if = "if";
            keyword_else = "else";
            keyword_false = "false";
            keyword_true = "true";
            keyword_from = "from";
            keyword_to = "to";
            keyword_foreach = "foreach";

            word = "[a-zA-Z]+";
            integer = "[0-9]+";
            litteral = "...";

            left_parenth = '('; 
            right_parenth = ')'; 
            left_brace = '{'; 
            right_brace = '}'; 

            stop = ';';
            comma = ',';

            swap = "<>";
            assign = '=';
            addition = '+';
            subtraction = '-';
            multiplication = '*';
            division = '/';
            modulo = '%';

            equals = "==";
            not_equals = "!=";
            greater = '>';
            less = '<';
            greater_equals = ">=";
            less_equals = "<=";

            whitespaces = "[ \\t\\n]+";
            comments = "\\/\\*[^*]*\\*+([^/*][^*]*\\*+)*\\/";

            //Add keywords
            this->self += keyword_for | keyword_while | keyword_true | keyword_false | keyword_if | keyword_else | keyword_from | keyword_to | keyword_foreach;
            this->self += integer | litteral | word;

            this->self += equals | not_equals | greater_equals | less_equals | greater | less ;
            this->self += left_parenth | right_parenth | left_brace | right_brace;
            this->self += comma | stop;
            this->self += assign | swap | addition | subtraction | multiplication | division | modulo;

            //Ignore whitespaces and comments
            this->self += whitespaces [lex::_pass = lex::pass_flags::pass_ignore];
            this->self += comments [lex::_pass = lex::pass_flags::pass_ignore]; 
        }

        lex::token_def<std::string> word, litteral, integer;

        lex::token_def<lex::omit> left_parenth, right_parenth, left_brace, right_brace;

        lex::token_def<lex::omit> stop, comma;

        lex::token_def<lex::omit> assign, swap, addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, modulo;
        lex::token_def<lex::omit> equals, not_equals, greater, less, greater_equals, less_equals;

        //Keywords
        lex::token_def<lex::omit> keyword_if, keyword_else, keyword_for, keyword_while, keyword_from, keyword_to, keyword_foreach;
        lex::token_def<lex::omit> keyword_true, keyword_false;

        //Ignored tokens
        lex::token_def<lex::omit> whitespaces;
        lex::token_def<lex::omit> comments;
};

Is there an other way to get the value of a Token ?

Was it helpful?

Solution

You can always use the 'default' token data (which is iterator_range of the source iterator type).

std::string tokenvalue(iter->value().begin(), iter->value().end());

After studying the test cases in the boost repository, I found out a number of things:

  • this is by design
  • there is an easier way
  • the easier way comes automated in Lex semantic actions (e.g. using _1) and when using the lexer token in Qi; the assignment will automatically convert to the Qi attribute type
  • this has (indeed) got the 'lazy, one-time, evaluation' semantics mentioned in the docs

The cinch is that the token data is variant, which starts out as the raw input iterator range. Only after 'a' forced assignment, the converted attribute is cached in the variant. You can witness the transition:

lexer_type::iterator_type iter = lexer.begin(first, last);
lexer_type::iterator_type end = lexer.end();

assert(0 == iter->value().which());
std::cout << "Value = " << boost::get<boost::iterator_range<base_iterator_type> >(iter->value()) << std::endl;

std::string s;
boost::spirit::traits::assign_to(*iter, s);
assert(1 == iter->value().which());
std::cout << "Value = " << s << std::endl;

As you can see, the attribute assignment is forced here, directly using the assign_to trait implementation.

Full working demonstration:

#include <boost/spirit/include/lex_lexertl.hpp>

#include <iostream>
#include <string>

namespace lex = boost::spirit::lex;

typedef std::string::iterator base_iterator_type;
typedef boost::spirit::lex::lexertl::token<base_iterator_type, boost::mpl::vector<int, std::string>> Tok;
typedef lex::lexertl::actor_lexer<Tok> lexer_type;

template<typename L>
class SimpleLexer : public lex::lexer<L> {
    private:

    public:
        SimpleLexer() {
            word = "[a-zA-Z]+";
            integer = "[0-9]+";
            literal = "...";

            this->self += integer | literal | word;
        }

        lex::token_def<std::string> word, literal;
        lex::token_def<int> integer;
};

int main(int argc, const char* argv[]) {
    SimpleLexer<lexer_type> lexer;

    std::string contents = "void";

    base_iterator_type first = contents.begin();
    base_iterator_type last = contents.end();

    lexer_type::iterator_type iter = lexer.begin(first, last);
    lexer_type::iterator_type end = lexer.end();

    assert(0 == iter->value().which());
    std::cout << "Value = " << boost::get<boost::iterator_range<base_iterator_type> >(iter->value()) << std::endl;

    std::string s;
    boost::spirit::traits::assign_to(*iter, s);
    assert(2 == iter->value().which());
    std::cout << "Value = " << s << std::endl;

    return 0;
}
Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top