| 1 | #!/usr/bin/env bash
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| 2 | #
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| 3 | # Proof of concept for pgen2 and Oil syntax.
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| 4 | #
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| 5 | # Usage:
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| 6 | # ./pgen2-test.sh <function name>
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| 7 |
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| 8 | set -o nounset
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| 9 | set -o pipefail
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| 10 | set -o errexit
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| 11 |
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| 12 | banner() {
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| 13 | echo
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| 14 | echo "----- $@ -----"
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| 15 | echo
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| 16 | }
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| 17 |
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| 18 | grammar-gen() {
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| 19 | PYTHONPATH=. ysh/grammar_gen.py "$@"
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| 20 | }
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| 21 |
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| 22 | # Build the grammar and parse code. Outside of the Oil binary.
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| 23 | parse() {
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| 24 | grammar-gen parse "$@"
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| 25 | }
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| 26 |
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| 27 | parse-exprs() {
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| 28 | readonly -a exprs=(
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| 29 | '1+2'
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| 30 | '1 + 2 * 3'
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| 31 | 'x | ~y'
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| 32 | '1 << x'
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| 33 | 'a not in b'
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| 34 | 'a is not b'
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| 35 | '[x for x in a]'
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| 36 | '[1, 2]'
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| 37 | '{myset, a}'
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| 38 | '{mydict: a, key: b}'
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| 39 | '{x: dictcomp for x in b}'
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| 40 | 'a[1,2]'
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| 41 | 'a[i:i+1]'
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| 42 | )
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| 43 | for expr in "${exprs[@]}"; do
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| 44 | parse pgen2/oil.grammar eval_input "$expr"
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| 45 |
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| 46 | # TODO: switch to Oil
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| 47 | #parse $OIL_GRAMMAR test_input "$expr"
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| 48 | done
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| 49 | }
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| 50 |
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| 51 | parse-arglists() {
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| 52 | readonly -a arglists=(
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| 53 | 'a'
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| 54 | 'a,b'
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| 55 | 'a,b=1'
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| 56 | # Hm this parses, although isn't not valid
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| 57 | 'a=1,b'
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| 58 | 'a, *b, **kwargs'
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| 59 |
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| 60 | # Hm how is this valid?
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| 61 |
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| 62 | # Comment:
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| 63 | # "The reason that keywords are test nodes instead of NAME is that using
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| 64 | # NAME results in an ambiguity. ast.c makes sure it's a NAME."
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| 65 | #
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| 66 | # Hm is the parsing model powerful enough?
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| 67 | # TODO: change it to NAME and figure out what happens.
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| 68 | #
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| 69 | # Python 3.6's grammar has more comments!
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| 70 |
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| 71 | # "test '=' test" is really "keyword '=' test", but we have no such token.
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| 72 | # These need to be in a single rule to avoid grammar that is ambiguous
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| 73 | # to our LL(1) parser. Even though 'test' includes '*expr' in star_expr,
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| 74 | # we explicitly match '*' here, too, to give it proper precedence.
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| 75 | # Illegal combinations and orderings are blocked in ast.c:
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| 76 | # multiple (test comp_for) arguments are blocked; keyword unpackings
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| 77 | # that precede iterable unpackings are blocked; etc.
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| 78 |
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| 79 | 'a+1'
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| 80 | )
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| 81 |
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| 82 | for expr in "${arglists[@]}"; do
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| 83 | parse pgen2/oil.grammar arglist_input "$expr"
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| 84 | done
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| 85 | }
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| 86 |
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| 87 | # NOTE: Unused small demo.
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| 88 | parse-types() {
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| 89 | readonly -a types=(
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| 90 | 'int'
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| 91 | 'str'
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| 92 | 'List<str>'
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| 93 | 'Tuple<str, int, int>'
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| 94 | 'Dict<str, int>'
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| 95 | # aha! Tokenizer issue
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| 96 | #'Dict<str, Tuple<int, int>>'
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| 97 |
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| 98 | # Must be like this! That's funny. Oil will have lexer modes to solve
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| 99 | # this problem!
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| 100 | 'Dict<str, Tuple<int, int> >'
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| 101 | )
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| 102 | for expr in "${types[@]}"; do
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| 103 | parse pgen2/oil.grammar type_input "$expr"
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| 104 | done
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| 105 | }
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| 106 |
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| 107 | readonly OIL_GRAMMAR='ysh/grammar.pgen2'
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| 108 |
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| 109 | calc-test() {
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| 110 | local -a exprs=(
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| 111 | 'a + 2'
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| 112 | '1 + 2*3/4' # operator precedence and left assoc
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| 113 |
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| 114 | # Tuple
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| 115 | 'x+1, y+1'
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| 116 | #'(x+1, y+1)' # TODO: atom
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| 117 |
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| 118 | # Associative
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| 119 | '-1+2+3'
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| 120 | '4*5*6'
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| 121 | 'i % n'
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| 122 | 'i % n / 2'
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| 123 |
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| 124 | # Uses string tokens
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| 125 | #'"abc" + "def"'
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| 126 |
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| 127 | '2 ^ 3 ^ 4' # right assoc
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| 128 | 'f(1)'
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| 129 | 'f(1, 2, 3)'
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| 130 |
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| 131 | 'f(a[i], 2, 3)'
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| 132 | 'f(a[i, j], 2, 3)'
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| 133 |
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| 134 | 'f(x)^3'
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| 135 | 'f(x)[i]^3'
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| 136 |
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| 137 | #'x < 3 and y <= 4'
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| 138 |
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| 139 | # bad token
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| 140 | #'a * 3&4'
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| 141 | )
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| 142 |
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| 143 | for e in "${exprs[@]}"; do
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| 144 | echo "$e"
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| 145 | parse $OIL_GRAMMAR eval_input "$e"
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| 146 | done
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| 147 | }
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| 148 |
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| 149 | oil-productions() {
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| 150 | parse $OIL_GRAMMAR oil_var 'a = 1;'
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| 151 | parse $OIL_GRAMMAR oil_var 'a Int = 2;'
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| 152 |
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| 153 | # Invalid because += now allowed
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| 154 | #parse $OIL_GRAMMAR oil_var 'a += 1;'
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| 155 |
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| 156 | parse $OIL_GRAMMAR oil_setvar 'x = 3;'
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| 157 | parse $OIL_GRAMMAR oil_setvar 'x += 4;'
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| 158 |
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| 159 | # Invalid because type expression isn't allowed (it could conflict)
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| 160 | #parse $OIL_GRAMMAR oil_setvar 'x Int += 4;'
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| 161 | }
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| 162 |
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| 163 | mode-test() {
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| 164 | # Test all the mode transitions
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| 165 | local -a exprs=(
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| 166 | # Expr -> Array
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| 167 | # TODO: how is OilOuter different than Array
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| 168 | '@[]'
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| 169 | 'x + @[a b] + y'
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| 170 |
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| 171 | # Expr -> Command
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| 172 | # Hm empty could be illegal?
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| 173 | '$[]'
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| 174 | 'x + $[hi there] + y'
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| 175 |
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| 176 | # Expr -> Expr
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| 177 | '$(x)'
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| 178 | # NOTE: operator precedence is respected here!
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| 179 | 'x + $(f(y) - 3) * 4'
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| 180 | # Expr -> Expr even though we saw )
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| 181 | #'$(f(x, y) + (1 * 3))'
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| 182 |
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| 183 | # Expr -> OilVS
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| 184 | #'${}' # syntax error
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| 185 | '${x}'
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| 186 | # This will work when we add | to grammar
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| 187 | #'x + ${p|html} + y'
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| 188 |
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| 189 | # Expr -> Regex
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| 190 | #'$/ /'
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| 191 | 'x + $/ mypat / + y' # syntactically valid, semantically invalid
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| 192 |
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| 193 | # Expr -> OilDQ
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| 194 | '"hello \$"'
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| 195 | 'x + "hello \$" + y'
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| 196 | # TODO: Also do every other kind of string:
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| 197 | # r'raw' r"raw $sub" ''' """ r''' r"""
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| 198 |
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| 199 | # Regex -> CharClass
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| 200 | #'$/ any* "." [a-z A-Z _] [a-z A-Z _ 0-9]+ /'
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| 201 | '$/ "." [a-z A-Z _] [a-z A-Z _ 0-9] /'
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| 202 | '$/ a [b] c /'
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| 203 |
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| 204 | # Array -> CharClass
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| 205 | '@[one two *.[c h] *.[NOT c h] ]'
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| 206 |
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| 207 | # Expr -> Array -> CharClass
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| 208 | 'left + @[one two *.[c h] ] + right'
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| 209 | # Array brace sub. Not PARSED yet, but no lexer mode change AFAICT
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| 210 | #'@[ -{one,two}- *.[c h] ]'
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| 211 |
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| 212 | ## OilDQ -> Expr
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| 213 | '"var expr $(2 + 3)"'
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| 214 |
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| 215 | ## OilDQ -> Command
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| 216 | '"command $[echo hi]"'
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| 217 |
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| 218 | # OilDQ -> OilVS -- % is not an operator
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| 219 | #'"quoted ${x %02d}"'
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| 220 | '"quoted ${x}"'
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| 221 |
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| 222 | #)
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| 223 | #local -a exprs=(
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| 224 |
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| 225 | )
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| 226 |
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| 227 | for e in "${exprs[@]}"; do
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| 228 | echo "$e"
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| 229 | parse $OIL_GRAMMAR eval_input "$e"
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| 230 | done
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| 231 |
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| 232 | # Command stuff. TODO: we don't have a parser for this!
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| 233 | # Maybe add 'echo' do everything?
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| 234 | exprs+=(
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| 235 | #'x = $[echo one; echo *.[c h] ]'
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| 236 |
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| 237 | # Command -> Expr (PROBLEM: requires lookahead to =)
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| 238 | 'x = a + b'
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| 239 | 'var x = a + b'
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| 240 | 'setvar x = a + b'
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| 241 |
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| 242 | # Command -> Expr
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| 243 | 'echo $(a + b)'
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| 244 | 'echo ${x|html}'
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| 245 |
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| 246 | # Command -> Expr
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| 247 | 'echo $stringfunc(x, y)'
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| 248 | 'echo @arrayfunc(x, y)'
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| 249 |
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| 250 | # The signature must be parsed expression mode if it have
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| 251 | # defaults.
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| 252 | 'func foo(x Int, y Int = 42 + 1) Int {
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| 253 | echo $x $y
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| 254 | }
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| 255 | '
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| 256 | # I guess [] is parsed in expression mode too. It's a very simple grammar.
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| 257 | # It only accepts strings. Maybe there is a special "BLOCK" var you can
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| 258 | # evaluate.
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| 259 | 'proc copy [src dest="default $value"] {
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| 260 | echo $src $dest
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| 261 | }
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| 262 | '
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| 263 |
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| 264 | 'if (x > 1) { echo hi }'
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| 265 |
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| 266 | 'while (x > 0) {
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| 267 | set x -= 1
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| 268 | }
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| 269 | '
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| 270 | 'for (x in y) { # "var" is implied; error if x is already defined?
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| 271 | echo $y
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| 272 | }
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| 273 | '
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| 274 | 'for (i = 0; i < 10; ++i) {
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| 275 | echo $i
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| 276 | }
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| 277 | '
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| 278 | 'switch (i+1) {
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| 279 | case 1:
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| 280 | echo "one"
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| 281 | case 2:
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| 282 | echo "two"
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| 283 | }
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| 284 | '
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| 285 | 'match (x) {
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| 286 | 1 { echo "one" }
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| 287 | 2 { echo "two" }
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| 288 | }
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| 289 | '
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| 290 |
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| 291 | # Command -> OilVS -- % is not an operator
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| 292 | 'echo ${x %02d}'
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| 293 |
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| 294 | # Command -> CharClass is DISALLOWED. Must go through array?
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| 295 | # @() could be synonym for array expression.
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| 296 | # Although if you could come up with a custom syntax error for this: it
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| 297 | # might be OK.
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| 298 | # a[x] = 1
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| 299 | #'echo *.[c h]'
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| 300 | #
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| 301 | # I think you could restrict the first words
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| 302 | )
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| 303 |
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| 304 | # I don't think these are essential.
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| 305 | local -a deferred=(
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| 306 | # Expr -> Command (PROBLEM: mode is grammatical; needs state machine)
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| 307 | 'x = func(x, y={}) {
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| 308 | echo hi
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| 309 | }
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| 310 | '
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| 311 |
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| 312 | # Expr -> Command (PROBLEM: ditto)
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| 313 | # This one is even harder, because technically the expression on the left
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| 314 | # could have {}? Or we can ban that in patterns?
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| 315 | 'x = match(x) {
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| 316 | 1 { echo one }
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| 317 | 2 { echo two }
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| 318 | }
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| 319 | '
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| 320 |
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| 321 | # stays in Expr for comparison
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| 322 | 'x = match(x) {
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| 323 | 1 => "one"
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| 324 | 2 => "two"
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| 325 | }
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| 326 | '
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| 327 | )
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| 328 | }
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| 329 |
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| 330 | enum-test() {
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| 331 | readonly -a enums=(
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| 332 | # second alternative
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| 333 | 'for 3 a'
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| 334 | 'for 3 { a, b }'
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| 335 | 'for 3 a { a, b }'
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| 336 | #'for'
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| 337 | #'a'
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| 338 | )
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| 339 | for expr in "${enums[@]}"; do
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| 340 | parse pgen2/enum.grammar eval_input "$expr"
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| 341 | done
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| 342 | }
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| 343 |
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| 344 | all() {
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| 345 | banner 'exprs'
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| 346 | parse-exprs
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| 347 |
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| 348 | #banner 'arglists'
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| 349 | #parse-arglists
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| 350 |
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| 351 | banner 'calc'
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| 352 | calc-test
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| 353 |
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| 354 | banner 'mode-test'
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| 355 | mode-test
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| 356 |
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| 357 | banner 'oil-productions'
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| 358 | oil-productions
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| 359 |
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| 360 | # enum-test doesn't work?
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| 361 | }
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| 362 |
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| 363 | # Hm Python 3 has type syntax! But we may not use it.
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| 364 | # And it has async/await.
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| 365 | # And walrus operator :=.
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| 366 | # @ matrix multiplication operator.
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| 367 |
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| 368 | diff-grammars() {
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| 369 | wc -l ~/src/languages/Python-*/Grammar/Grammar
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| 370 |
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| 371 | cdiff ~/src/languages/Python-{2.7.15,3.7.3}/Grammar/Grammar
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| 372 | }
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| 373 |
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| 374 | stdlib-test() {
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| 375 | pgen2 stdlib-test
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| 376 | }
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| 377 |
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| 378 | "$@"
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