Lark can generate a stand-alone LALR(1) parser from a grammar.
The resulting module provides the same interface as Lark, but with a fixed grammar, and reduced functionality.
Run using:
python -m lark.tools.standalone
For a play-by-play, read the tutorial
Lark comes with a tool to convert grammars from Nearley, a popular Earley library for Javascript. It uses Js2Py to convert and run the Javascript postprocessing code segments.
- Install Lark with the
nearley
component:
pip install lark[nearley]
- Acquire a copy of the Nearley codebase. This can be done using:
git clone https://github.com/Hardmath123/nearley
The tool can be run using:
python -m lark.tools.nearley <grammar.ne> <start_rule> <path_to_nearley_repo>
Here's an example of how to import nearley's calculator example into Lark:
git clone https://github.com/Hardmath123/nearley
python -m lark.tools.nearley nearley/examples/calculator/arithmetic.ne main ./nearley > ncalc.py
You can use the output as a regular python module:
>>> import ncalc
>>> ncalc.parse('sin(pi/4) ^ e')
0.38981434460254655
The Nearley converter also supports an experimental converter for newer JavaScript (ES6+), using the --es6
flag:
git clone https://github.com/Hardmath123/nearley
python -m lark.tools.nearley nearley/examples/calculator/arithmetic.ne main nearley --es6 > ncalc.py
-
Lark currently cannot import templates from Nearley
-
Lark currently cannot export grammars to Nearley
These might get added in the future, if enough users ask for them.