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Build Your Own Programming Language

You're reading from   Build Your Own Programming Language A programmer's guide to designing compilers, interpreters, and DSLs for solving modern computing problems

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800204805
Length 494 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Clinton  L. Jeffery Clinton L. Jeffery
Author Profile Icon Clinton L. Jeffery
Clinton L. Jeffery
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Toc

Table of Contents (25) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Programming Language Frontends
2. Chapter 1: Why Build Another Programming Language? FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Programming Language Design 4. Chapter 3: Scanning Source Code 5. Chapter 4: Parsing 6. Chapter 5: Syntax Trees 7. Section 2: Syntax Tree Traversals
8. Chapter 6: Symbol Tables 9. Chapter 7: Checking Base Types 10. Chapter 8: Checking Types on Arrays, Method Calls, and Structure Accesses 11. Chapter 9: Intermediate Code Generation 12. Chapter 10: Syntax Coloring in an IDE 13. Section 3: Code Generation and Runtime Systems
14. Chapter 11: Bytecode Interpreters 15. Chapter 12: Generating Bytecode 16. Chapter 13: Native Code Generation 17. Chapter 14: Implementing Operators and Built-In Functions 18. Chapter 15: Domain Control Structures 19. Chapter 16: Garbage Collection 20. Chapter 17: Final Thoughts 21. Section 4: Appendix
22. Assessments 23. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix: Unicon Essentials

Summary

In this chapter, you learned about the crucial technical skills and tools used in programming languages when they are reading the characters of program source code. Thanks to these skills, the rest of your programming language compiler or interpreter has a much smaller sequence of words/tokens to deal with, instead of the enormous number of characters that were in the source file. If we were successful, you will have taken away the following skills that you can use in your programming language or similar projects.

As input characters are read in, they are analyzed and grouped into lexemes. Lexemes are either discarded (in the case of comments and whitespace) or categorized for subsequent parsing purposes.

Besides categorizing lexemes, you learned to make tokens from them. A token is an object instance that is created for each lexeme when it is categorized. The token is a record of that lexeme, its category, and where it came from.

The lexemes' categories are the...

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