The more complex a grammar becomes, the more complex the actions. Almost every rule or token in our current grammar has an action. Even if most of the actions are just one or two lines of code, the fact that the Perl 6 code is mixed with the grammar language makes reading the code difficult. Formatting the code also becomes a difficult task, as you need to add more spaces to indent the code properly. In this section, we will see what Perl 6 offers to tackle this issue.
All actions may be moved to a separate class. Thus, the complete grammar contains a grammar itself and an actions class. Correspondence between the grammar rules and tokens and the actions is achieved by simply giving the same names to the methods of the action class. Let us convert our grammar to use the split approach.
First of all, create a class for actions and pass it to the parser:
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