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A type-safe applicative parsing library

Project description

functional_parsing_library

A small production non-ready Python library implementing basic applicative parsers. Roughly speaking, these are functions with signature str -> T | CouldNotParse transforming strings into structured data. For example, you might have a function integer which will transform "1" and "-1919" to the integers 1 and -1919, and the string "boink" to CouldNotParse().

What makes these functions useful is that they can be combined with so-called parser combinators. For example, if we already have parsers nonnegative_integer and negative_integer, the integer parser from earlier could be written as integer = nonnegative_integer | negative_integer. This library implements various such combinators, such as many, some, ignore_left, many_till, and so on.

Another piece of structure that makes these functions useful is that they're functorial: If I have a parser p of type Parser[T] (that is, a function which parses strings to objects of type T), and a function f: T -> S, then f * p will be a parser for objects of type S. For example, take len * many(word('borf')), and try to parse "borfborfborf". Here word('borf') will parse "borf" to the string "borf" (and any other string to CouldNotParse), so the parser many(word('borf') will try and match as many "borf"s as possible and parse our string to the list ['borf', 'borf', 'borf']. The length of this list is 3, so len * many(word('borf')) parses our string to the integer 3.

This works with multi-argument functions as well. If f is a function of type [T, S] -> U, and we have parsers p and q for objects of type T and S, then f * p & q will first try to match p, and if this succeeds it will try and match q, and finally it will apply f.

Another feature of this library is its type safety. Running mypy on

from functional_parsing_library.strings.modules.word import word


def add_strings(one: str, two: str, three: str) -> int:
    return len(one + two + three)


reveal_type(add_strings * word('hi'))
reveal_type(add_strings * word('hi') & word('hi'))
reveal_type(add_strings * word('hi') & word('hi') & word('di'))

will show that the first parser has type MappedParser[int, str, str], the second MappedParser[int, str], and the third Parser[int]. Something like

add_strings * word('hi') & word('hi') & integer

or

add_strings * word('hi') & word('hi') & word('hi') & word('hi')

will give a type error.

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