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NAMEMarpa::PP::Semantics::Infinite - How Marpa Deals with Infinite CyclesINFINITELY AMBIGUOUS GRAMMARSMarpa will parse using an infinitely ambiguous grammar. (In the technical literature, an infinite ambiguity is more usually called a cycle or a loop.)An example of an infinitely ambiguous grammar is the following: S ::= A A ::= B B ::= A B :: 'x' Given the input 'x', this grammar will produce these parses S -> A -> B -> x S -> A -> B -> A -> B -> x S -> A -> B -> A -> B -> A -> B -> x . . . Because of the two rules "A ::= B" and "B ::= A", this list of parses could go on forever. The two rules "A ::= B" and "B ::= A" form what is called a cycle. Typically, if a user has written an grammar with an infinite cycle, it was a mistake and he wants to rewrite it before proceeding. By default, an infinitely ambiguous grammar is a fatal error. This is the behavior most users will want. To proceed to producing parse results from an infinitely ambiguous grammar, the user must set the grammar's "infinite_action" named argument to a value other than ""fatal"". The other choices are ""warn"" and ""quiet"". CYCLE LENGTHObviously, Marpa cannot list all of an infinite number of parse results. Marpa deals with potentially infinite parses by limiting the cycle length. Cycle length is the number of times a parse derivation goes around a potentially infinite cycle.Marpa limits all cycles to a length of 1. There will always be a finite number of these parse results. Above I showed a set of parses from an example of an infinitely ambiguous grammar. Here are those parses again, this time labeled with their cycle length. Cycle length 1: S -> A -> B -> x Cycle length 2: S -> A -> B -> A -> B -> x Cycle length 3: S -> A -> B -> A -> B -> A -> B -> x Of the parse results in the above list, Marpa would return a value only for the first, the one whose cycle length is 1. LIMITATIONSThe precise behavior of Marpa's cycle detection is, at this point, not strictly defined and applications should avoid relying on the details of its semantics. The exact point at which a cycle is broken varies among implementations.In future releases, Marpa's cycle detection may be more carefully defined. But cycles at this point are universally considered useless, and there seems to be literally nobody who cares about the details of their semantics. The quality of the present implementation seems to be completely adequate in terms of the present interest. At this point it seems that a cycle should be broken when it is about to loop back to the "same rule". But in current Marpa implementations, the "same rule" means the same rule after Marpa's rewriting of the grammar, not the same rule as in the original grammar. If a more careful semantics is created, it probably should be defined in terms of the rules as the user sees them, rather than in terms of the rules as rewritten by Marpa's internals. COPYRIGHT AND LICENSECopyright 2012 Jeffrey Kegler This file is part of Marpa::PP. Marpa::PP is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. Marpa::PP is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with Marpa::PP. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
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