1
0
mirror of https://git.FreeBSD.org/src.git synced 2024-12-04 09:09:56 +00:00
freebsd/contrib/bison/REFERENCES
Peter Wemm 9f36c7f497 Import the FSF release of bison-1.25 onto the vendor branch.
In case you're wondering, the gcc-2.7.2.1 import uses this to generate
code.  The size of the generated code is bigger than the entire bison
release, making this a saving.  The bison doc is pretty good apparently.
1996-09-10 13:12:03 +00:00

31 lines
1.2 KiB
Plaintext

From phr Tue Jul 8 10:36:19 1986
Date: Tue, 8 Jul 86 00:52:24 EDT
From: phr (Paul Rubin)
To: riferguson%watmath.waterloo.edu@CSNET-RELAY.ARPA, tower
Subject: Re: Bison documentation?
The main difference between Bison and Yacc that I know of is that
Bison supports the @N construction, which gives you access to
the starting and ending line number and character number associated
with any of the symbols in the current rule.
Also, Bison supports the command `%expect N' which says not to mention
the conflicts if there are N shift/reduce conflicts and no reduce/reduce
conflicts.
The differences in the algorithms stem mainly from the horrible
kludges that Johnson had to perpetrate to make Yacc fit in a PDP-11.
Also, Bison uses a faster but less space-efficient encoding for the
parse tables (see Corbett's PhD thesis from Berkeley, "Static
Semantics in Compiler Error Recovery", June 1985, Report No. UCB/CSD
85/251), and more modern technique for generating the lookahead sets.
(See "Efficient Construction of LALR(1) Lookahead Sets" by F. DeRemer
and A. Pennello, in ACM TOPLS Vol 4 No 4, October 1982. Their
technique is the standard one now.)
paul rubin
free software foundation