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String::Tokenizer(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
String::Tokenizer(3) |
String::Tokenizer - A simple string tokenizer.
use String::Tokenizer;
# create the tokenizer and tokenize input
my $tokenizer = String::Tokenizer->new("((5+5) * 10)", '+*()');
# create tokenizer
my $tokenizer = String::Tokenizer->new();
# ... then tokenize the string
$tokenizer->tokenize("((5 + 5) - 10)", '()');
# will print '(, (, 5, +, 5, ), -, 10, )'
print join ", " => $tokenizer->getTokens();
# create tokenizer which retains whitespace
my $st = String::Tokenizer->new(
'this is a test with, (significant) whitespace',
',()',
String::Tokenizer->RETAIN_WHITESPACE
);
# this will print:
# 'this', ' ', 'is', ' ', 'a', ' ', 'test', ' ', 'with', ' ', '(', 'significant', ')', ' ', 'whitespace'
print "'" . (join "', '" => $tokenizer->getTokens()) . "'";
# get a token iterator
my $i = $tokenizer->iterator();
while ($i->hasNextToken()) {
my $next = $i->nextToken();
# peek ahead at the next token
my $look_ahead = $i->lookAheadToken();
# ...
# skip the next 2 tokens
$i->skipTokens(2);
# ...
# then backtrack 1 token
my $previous = $i->prevToken();
# ...
# get the current token
my $current = $i->currentToken();
# ...
}
A simple string tokenizer which takes a string and splits it on whitespace. It
also optionally takes a string of characters to use as delimiters, and returns
them with the token set as well. This allows for splitting the string in many
different ways.
This is a very basic tokenizer, so more complex needs should be
either addressed with a custom written tokenizer or post-processing of the
output generated by this module. Basically, this will not fill everyone's
needs, but it spans a gap between simple "split / /,
$string" and the other options that involve much larger and
complex modules.
Also note that this is not a lexical analyser. Many people confuse
tokenization with lexical analysis. A tokenizer merely splits its input into
specific chunks, a lexical analyzer classifies those chunks. Sometimes these
two steps are combined, but not here.
- new ($string, $delimiters,
$handle_whitespace)
- If you do not supply any parameters, nothing happens, the instance is just
created. But if you do supply parameters, they are passed on to the
"tokenize" method and that method is
run. For information about those arguments, see
"tokenize" below.
- setDelimiter ($delimiter)
- This can be used to set the delimiter string, this is used by
"tokenize".
- handleWhitespace ($value)
- This can be used to set the whitespace handling. It accepts one of the two
constant values "RETAIN_WHITESPACE" or
"IGNORE_WHITESPACE".
- tokenize ($string, $delimiters,
$handle_whitespace )
- Takes a $string to tokenize, and optionally a set
of $delimiter characters to facilitate the
tokenization and the type of whitespace handling with
$handle_whitespace. The
$string parameter and the
$handle_whitespace parameter are pretty obvious,
the $delimiter parameter is not as transparent.
$delimiter is a string of characters, these
characters are then separated into individual characters and are used to
split the $string with. So given this string:
(5 + (100 * (20 - 35)) + 4)
The "tokenize" method
without a $delimiter parameter would return the
following comma separated list of tokens:
'(5', '+', '(100', '*', '(20', '-', '35))', '+', '4)'
However, if you were to pass the following set of delimiters
"(, )" to
"tokenize", you would get the
following comma separated list of tokens:
'(', '5', '+', '(', '100', '*', '(', '20', '-', '35', ')', ')', '+', '4', ')'
We now can differentiate the parens from the numbers, and no
globbing occurs. If you wanted to allow for optionally leaving out the
whitespace in the expression, like this:
(5+(100*(20-35))+4)
as some languages do. Then you would give this delimiter
"+*-()" to arrive at the same
result.
If you decide that whitespace is significant in your string,
then you need to specify that like this:
my $st = String::Tokenizer->new(
'this is a test with, (significant) whitespace',
',()',
String::Tokenizer->RETAIN_WHITESPACE
);
A call to "getTokens" on
this instance would result in the following token set.
'this', ' ', 'is', ' ', 'a', ' ', 'test', ' ', 'with', ' ', '(', 'significant', ')', ' ', 'whitespace'
All running whitespace is grouped together into a single
token, we make no attempt to split it into its individual parts.
- getTokens
- Simply returns the array of tokens. It returns an array-ref in scalar
context.
- iterator
- Returns a String::Tokenizer::Iterator instance, see below for more
details.
A String::Tokenizer::Iterator instance is returned from the
String::Tokenizer's "iterator" method
and serves as yet another means of iterating through an array of tokens. The
simplest way would be to call "getTokens"
and just manipulate the array yourself, or push the array into another object.
However, iterating through a set of tokens tends to get messy when done
manually. So here I have provided the String::Tokenizer::Iterator to
address those common token processing idioms. It is basically a bi-directional
iterator which can look ahead, skip and be reset to the beginning.
NOTE: String::Tokenizer::Iterator is an inner class,
which means that only String::Tokenizer objects can create an
instance of it. That said, if String::Tokenizer::Iterator's
"new" method is called from outside of the
String::Tokenizer package, an exception is thrown.
- new ($tokens_array_ref)
- This accepts an array reference of tokens and sets up the iterator. This
method can only be called from within the String::Tokenizer
package, otherwise an exception will be thrown.
- reset
- This will reset the internal counter, bringing it back to the beginning of
the token list.
- hasNextToken
- This will return true (1) if there are more tokens to be iterated over,
and false (0) otherwise.
- hasPrevToken
- This will return true (1) if the beginning of the token list has been
reached, and false (0) otherwise.
- nextToken
- This dispenses the next available token, and move the internal counter
ahead by one.
- prevToken
- This dispenses the previous token, and moves the internal counter back by
one.
- currentToken
- This returns the current token, which will match the last token retrieved
by "nextToken".
- lookAheadToken
- This peeks ahead one token to the next one in the list. This item will
match the next item dispensed with
"nextToken". This is a non-destructive
look ahead, meaning it does not alter the position of the internal
counter.
- skipToken
- This will jump the internal counter ahead by 1.
- skipTokens ($number_to_skip)
- This will jump the internal counter ahead by
$number_to_skip.
- skipTokenIfWhitespace
- This will skip the next token if it is whitespace.
- skipTokensUntil ($token_to_match)
- Given a string as a $token_to_match, this will
skip all tokens until it matches that string. If the
$token_to_match is never matched, then the
iterator will return the internal pointer to its initial state.
- collectTokensUntil ($token_to_match)
- Given a string as a $token_to_match, this will
collect all tokens until it matches that string, at which point the
collected tokens will be returned. If the
$token_to_match is never matched, then the
iterator will return the internal pointer to its initial state and no
tokens will be returned.
- Inline token expansion
- The Java StringTokenizer class allows for a token to be tokenized further,
therefore breaking it up more and including the results into the current
token stream. I have never used this feature in this class, but I can see
where it might be a useful one. This may be in the next release if it
works out.
Possibly compliment this expansion with compression as well,
so for instance double quoted strings could be compressed into a single
token.
- Token Bookmarks
- Allow for the creation of "token bookmarks". Meaning we could
tag a specific token with a label, that index could be returned to from
any point in the token stream. We could mix this with a memory stack as
well, so that we would have an ordering to the bookmarks as well.
None that I am aware of. Of course, if you find a bug, let me know, and I will
be sure to fix it.
I use Devel::Cover to test the code coverage of my tests, below is the
Devel::Cover report on this module's test suite.
------------------------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
File stmt branch cond sub pod time total
------------------------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
String/Tokenizer.pm 100.0 100.0 64.3 100.0 100.0 100.0 97.6
------------------------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
Total 100.0 100.0 64.3 100.0 100.0 100.0 97.6
------------------------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
The interface and workings of this module are based largely on the
StringTokenizer class from the Java standard library.
Below is a short list of other modules that might be considered
similar to this one. If this module does not suit your needs, you might look
at one of these.
- String::Tokeniser
- Along with being a tokenizer, it also provides a means of moving through
the resulting tokens, allowing for skipping of tokens and such. It was
last updated in 2011.
- Parse::Tokens
- This one hasn't been touched since 2001, although it did get up to version
0.27. It looks to lean over more towards the parser side than a basic
tokenizer.
- Text::Tokenizer
- This is both a lexical analyzer and a tokenizer. It also uses XS, where
String::Tokenizer is pure perl. This is something maybe to look into if
you were to need a more beefy solution than String::Tokenizer
provides.
- Thanks to Stephan Tobias for finding bugs and suggestions on whitespace
handling.
stevan little, <stevan@cpan.org>
Copyright 2004-2016 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.
<http://www.iinteractive.com>
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
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