X-Git-Url: https://git.madduck.net/etc/vim.git/blobdiff_plain/366a0806eb4edd94d4d20cc6912333586bdc9fa7..9424e795bf662743da6423b74e30ab74d1a93775:/src/blib2to3/Grammar.txt?ds=inline diff --git a/src/blib2to3/Grammar.txt b/src/blib2to3/Grammar.txt index ac8a067..c3001e8 100644 --- a/src/blib2to3/Grammar.txt +++ b/src/blib2to3/Grammar.txt @@ -105,7 +105,7 @@ global_stmt: ('global' | 'nonlocal') NAME (',' NAME)* exec_stmt: 'exec' expr ['in' test [',' test]] assert_stmt: 'assert' test [',' test] -compound_stmt: if_stmt | while_stmt | for_stmt | try_stmt | with_stmt | funcdef | classdef | decorated | async_stmt +compound_stmt: if_stmt | while_stmt | for_stmt | try_stmt | with_stmt | funcdef | classdef | decorated | async_stmt | match_stmt async_stmt: ASYNC (funcdef | with_stmt | for_stmt) if_stmt: 'if' namedexpr_test ':' suite ('elif' namedexpr_test ':' suite)* ['else' ':' suite] while_stmt: 'while' namedexpr_test ':' suite ['else' ':' suite] @@ -115,9 +115,8 @@ try_stmt: ('try' ':' suite ['else' ':' suite] ['finally' ':' suite] | 'finally' ':' suite)) -with_stmt: 'with' with_item (',' with_item)* ':' suite -with_item: test ['as' expr] -with_var: 'as' expr +with_stmt: 'with' asexpr_test (',' asexpr_test)* ':' suite + # NB compile.c makes sure that the default except clause is last except_clause: 'except' [test [(',' | 'as') test]] suite: simple_stmt | NEWLINE INDENT stmt+ DEDENT @@ -131,7 +130,15 @@ testlist_safe: old_test [(',' old_test)+ [',']] old_test: or_test | old_lambdef old_lambdef: 'lambda' [varargslist] ':' old_test -namedexpr_test: test [':=' test] +namedexpr_test: asexpr_test [':=' asexpr_test] + +# This is actually not a real rule, though since the parser is very +# limited in terms of the strategy about match/case rules, we are inserting +# a virtual case ( as ) as a valid expression. Unless a better +# approach is thought, the only side effect of this seem to be just allowing +# more stuff to be parser (which would fail on the ast). +asexpr_test: test ['as' test] + test: or_test ['if' or_test 'else' test] | lambdef or_test: and_test ('or' and_test)* and_test: not_test ('and' not_test)* @@ -179,6 +186,7 @@ arglist: argument (',' argument)* [','] # that precede iterable unpackings are blocked; etc. argument: ( test [comp_for] | test ':=' test | + test 'as' test | test '=' test | '**' test | '*' test ) @@ -213,3 +221,31 @@ encoding_decl: NAME yield_expr: 'yield' [yield_arg] yield_arg: 'from' test | testlist_star_expr + + +# 3.10 match statement definition + +# PS: normally the grammar is much much more restricted, but +# at this moment for not trying to bother much with encoding the +# exact same DSL in a LL(1) parser, we will just accept an expression +# and let the ast.parse() step of the safe mode to reject invalid +# grammar. + +# The reason why it is more restricted is that, patterns are some +# sort of a DSL (more advanced than our LHS on assignments, but +# still in a very limited python subset). They are not really +# expressions, but who cares. If we can parse them, that is enough +# to reformat them. + +match_stmt: "match" subject_expr ':' NEWLINE INDENT case_block+ DEDENT + +# This is more permissive than the actual version. For example it +# accepts `match *something:`, even though single-item starred expressions +# are forbidden. +subject_expr: (namedexpr_test|star_expr) (',' (namedexpr_test|star_expr))* [','] + +# cases +case_block: "case" patterns [guard] ':' suite +guard: 'if' namedexpr_test +patterns: pattern ['as' pattern] +pattern: (expr|star_expr) (',' (expr|star_expr))* [',']