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Parsing Expression Grammars (PEGs) are a way of defining formal grammars for formatted data that allow you to identify matched structures and then take actions on them. They’re already used in R in the readr package, which is what makes readr so dang fast at type identification and parsing tabular data, but there’s not historically been a standard way of defining and using them.
piton
changes this, provides platform-independent PEG
support in Rcpp. It wraps the PEGTL library by Colin Hirsch
and Daniel Frey, which is header-only and so can be imported into other
packages.
Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms.
An example of PEGs is included in the package, and takes a comma-separated set of numbers and sums them together:
library(piton)
peg_sum("1,2, 5, 91, 34")
[1] 133
piton
itself is not designed for straight-up useR use -
instead, it’s a developer package. If you’re interested in implementing
a PEG using it, you need to:
piton
into your package as a dependency, using
//[[Rcpp::depends()]]
(see this
post for an example of how it works);#include <pegtl.hpp>
The PEGTL
docs contain quite a bit of documentation on how the underlying
library works, and various
examples of PEGs are included within the package itself. Integration
with Rcpp is pretty clean, although developers may benefit from not
explicitly using the Rcpp namespace due to a couple of collisions with
the PEGTL
namespace.
On CRAN:
install.packages("piton")
And for the development version:
devtools::install_github("ironholds/piton")
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.