Thanks for answering my question. The regex solution is cool.

I should have qualified my statement by saying that standard regular grammars cannot handle this sort of pattern, whereas Perl's regexes can do everything and anything.

In fact embedded actions within a Perl regex can do anything Perl can do - Therefore Perl regex's can do anything Perl can do. :)

I guess I can see from your use of Parse::RecDescent, Update: And from re-reading the very long manual last night, that the answer to my question is something like:

my $grammar = q{ match : part(s) { print join('', @{$item[1]}) } part : AnB part : 'a' part : /[^a]+/ AnB : 'a' AnB 'b' { 'c' . $item[2] . 'd' } AnB : 'ab' { 'cd' } }

-Andrew.


In reply to Re^2: Parse::RecDescent for simple syntax-directed translation by tomazos
in thread Parse::RecDescent for simple syntax-directed translation by tomazos

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