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Posted to commits@xmlbeans.apache.org by pc...@apache.org on 2004/02/18 21:19:51 UTC

cvs commit: xml-xmlbeans/v2/src/jam java.g

pcal        2004/02/18 12:19:50

  Added:       v2/src/jam java.g
  Log:
  build fix - missing file
  
  Revision  Changes    Path
  1.1                  xml-xmlbeans/v2/src/jam/java.g
  
  Index: java.g
  ===================================================================
  //
  // This is the ANTLR grammar used by JAM to parse java source files.
  //
  // I would rather have this file live down in ...impl.jam.internal.parser,
  // but that causes headaches during repackaging.
  //
  // This grammar was based on the work of those described in the comments
  // below.
  //
  // Patrick Calahan <pc...@bea.com>
  //
  
  header {
  
  package org.apache.xmlbeans.impl.jam.internal.parser.generated;
  
  import org.apache.xmlbeans.impl.jam.*;
  import org.apache.xmlbeans.impl.jam.editable.*;
  import java.util.*;
  import java.io.StringWriter;
  import java.lang.reflect.Modifier;
  
  }
  
  
  /** Java 1.5/JSR14 Recognizer
   *
   * Run 'java Main [-showtree] directory-full-of-java-files'
   *
   * [The -showtree option pops up a Swing frame that shows
   *  the AST constructed from the parser.]
   *
   * Run 'java Main <directory full of java files>'
   *
   * Contributing authors:
   *		John Mitchell		johnm@non.net
   *		Terence Parr		parrt@magelang.com
   *		John Lilley			jlilley@empathy.com
   *		Scott Stanchfield	thetick@magelang.com
   *		Markus Mohnen       mohnen@informatik.rwth-aachen.de
   *      Peter Williams      pete.williams@sun.com
   *      Allan Jacobs        Allan.Jacobs@eng.sun.com
   *      Steve Messick       messick@redhills.com
   *      John Pybus			john@pybus.org
   *
   * Version 1.00 December 9, 1997 -- initial release
   * Version 1.01 December 10, 1997
   *		fixed bug in octal def (0..7 not 0..8)
   * Version 1.10 August 1998 (parrt)
   *		added tree construction
   *		fixed definition of WS,comments for mac,pc,unix newlines
   *		added unary plus
   * Version 1.11 (Nov 20, 1998)
   *		Added "shutup" option to turn off last ambig warning.
   *		Fixed inner class def to allow named class defs as statements
   *		synchronized requires compound not simple statement
   *		add [] after builtInType DOT class in primaryExpression
   *		"const" is reserved but not valid..removed from modifiers
   * Version 1.12 (Feb 2, 1999)
   *		Changed LITERAL_xxx to xxx in tree grammar.
   *		Updated java.g to use tokens {...} now for 2.6.0 (new feature).
   *
   * Version 1.13 (Apr 23, 1999)
   *		Didn't have (stat)? for else clause in tree parser.
   *		Didn't gen ASTs for interface extends.  Updated tree parser too.
   *		Updated to 2.6.0.
   * Version 1.14 (Jun 20, 1999)
   *		Allowed final/abstract on local classes.
   *		Removed local interfaces from methods
   *		Put instanceof precedence where it belongs...in relationalExpr
   *			It also had expr not type as arg; fixed it.
   *		Missing ! on SEMI in classBlock
   *		fixed: (expr) + "string" was parsed incorrectly (+ as unary plus).
   *		fixed: didn't like Object[].class in parser or tree parser
   * Version 1.15 (Jun 26, 1999)
   *		Screwed up rule with instanceof in it. :(  Fixed.
   *		Tree parser didn't like (expr).something; fixed.
   *		Allowed multiple inheritance in tree grammar. oops.
   * Version 1.16 (August 22, 1999)
   *		Extending an interface built a wacky tree: had extra EXTENDS.
   *		Tree grammar didn't allow multiple superinterfaces.
   *		Tree grammar didn't allow empty var initializer: {}
   * Version 1.17 (October 12, 1999)
   *		ESC lexer rule allowed 399 max not 377 max.
   *		java.tree.g didn't handle the expression of synchronized
   *		statements.
   * Version 1.18 (August 12, 2001)
   *      	Terence updated to Java 2 Version 1.3 by
   *		observing/combining work of Allan Jacobs and Steve
   *		Messick.  Handles 1.3 src.  Summary:
   *		o  primary didn't include boolean.class kind of thing
   *      	o  constructor calls parsed explicitly now:
   * 		   see explicitConstructorInvocation
   *		o  add strictfp modifier
   *      	o  missing objBlock after new expression in tree grammar
   *		o  merged local class definition alternatives, moved after declaration
   *		o  fixed problem with ClassName.super.field
   *      	o  reordered some alternatives to make things more efficient
   *		o  long and double constants were not differentiated from int/float
   *		o  whitespace rule was inefficient: matched only one char
   *		o  add an examples directory with some nasty 1.3 cases
   *		o  made Main.java use buffered IO and a Reader for Unicode support
   *		o  supports UNICODE?
   *		   Using Unicode charVocabulay makes code file big, but only
   *		   in the bitsets at the end. I need to make ANTLR generate
   *		   unicode bitsets more efficiently.
   * Version 1.19 (April 25, 2002)
   *		Terence added in nice fixes by John Pybus concerning floating
   *		constants and problems with super() calls.  John did a nice
   *		reorg of the primary/postfix expression stuff to read better
   *		and makes f.g.super() parse properly (it was METHOD_CALL not
   *		a SUPER_CTOR_CALL).  Also:
   *
   *		o  "finally" clause was a root...made it a child of "try"
   *		o  Added stuff for asserts too for Java 1.4, but *commented out*
   *		   as it is not backward compatible.
   *
   * Version 1.20 (October 27, 2002)
   *
   *      Terence ended up reorging John Pybus' stuff to
   *      remove some nondeterminisms and some syntactic predicates.
   *      Note that the grammar is stricter now; e.g., this(...) must
   *	be the first statement.
   *
   *      Trinary ?: operator wasn't working as array name:
   *          (isBig ? bigDigits : digits)[i];
   *
   *      Checked parser/tree parser on source for
   *          Resin-2.0.5, jive-2.1.1, jdk 1.3.1, Lucene, antlr 2.7.2a4,
   *	    and the 110k-line jGuru server source.
   *
   * Version 1.21.2 (March, 2003)
   *      Changes by Matt Quail to support generics (as per JDK1.5/JSR14)
   *      Notes:
   *      o We only allow the "extends" keyword and not the "implements"
   *        keyword, since thats what JSR14 seems to imply.
   *      o Thanks to Monty Zukowski for his help on the antlr-interest
   *        mail list.
   *      o Thanks to Alan Eliasen for testing the grammar over his
   *        Fink source base
   *
   *
   * This grammar is in the PUBLIC DOMAIN
   */
  
  
  class JavaParser extends Parser;
  options {
  	k = 2;                           // two token lookahead
  	exportVocab=Java;                // Call its vocabulary "Java"
  	codeGenMakeSwitchThreshold = 2;  // Some optimizations
  	codeGenBitsetTestThreshold = 3;
  	defaultErrorHandler = false;     // Don't generate parser error handlers
  	buildAST = true;
  }
  
  
  tokens {
  	BLOCK; MODIFIERS; OBJBLOCK; SLIST; CTOR_DEF; METHOD_DEF; VARIABLE_DEF;
  	INSTANCE_INIT; STATIC_INIT; TYPE; CLASS_DEF; INTERFACE_DEF;
  	PACKAGE_DEF; ARRAY_DECLARATOR; EXTENDS_CLAUSE; IMPLEMENTS_CLAUSE;
  	PARAMETERS; PARAMETER_DEF; LABELED_STAT; TYPECAST; INDEX_OP;
  	POST_INC; POST_DEC; METHOD_CALL; EXPR; ARRAY_INIT;
  	IMPORT; UNARY_MINUS; UNARY_PLUS; CASE_GROUP; ELIST; FOR_INIT; FOR_CONDITION;
  	FOR_ITERATOR; EMPTY_STAT; FINAL="final"; ABSTRACT="abstract";
  	STRICTFP="strictfp"; SUPER_CTOR_CALL; CTOR_CALL;
  }
  
  {
    // ========================================================================
    // Variables
  
    private String /*EPackage*/ mPackage;
    private EService mService;
    private EClass mClass;
    private Collection mErrors = null;
  
    // ========================================================================
    // Public methods
  
    public void setService(EService service) {
      mService = service;
    }
  
    public EClass getResult() {
      return mClass;
    }
  
    // returns a collection of Strings and Throwables that were reported
    // as errors
    public Collection getErrors() { return mErrors; }
  
    public void reportError(antlr.RecognitionException re) {
      if (mErrors == null) mErrors = new ArrayList();
      mErrors.add(re);
    }
  
    public void reportError(Exception re) {
      if (mErrors == null) mErrors = new ArrayList();
      mErrors.add(re);
    }
  
    public void reportError(String msg) {
      if (mErrors == null) mErrors = new ArrayList();
      mErrors.add(msg);
    }
  
  //  public void reportWarning(String msg) {
  //  }
  
  
  
      /**
       * Counts the number of LT seen in the typeArguments production.
       * It is used in semantic predicates to ensure we have seen
       * enough closing '>' characters; which actually may have been
       * either GT, SR or BSR tokens.
       */
      private int ltCounter = 0;
  
  }
  
  
  start : compilationUnit;
  
  // Compilation Unit: In Java, this is a single file.  This is the start
  //   rule for this parser
  compilationUnit
  {
    String pkg = null;
  }
  	:	// A compilation unit starts with an optional package definition
  		(	pkg = packageDefinition |	/* nothing */)
  
  		// Next we have a series of zero or more import statements
  
  		( importDefinition )*
  
  		// Wrapping things up with any number of class or interface
  		//    definitions
  		( typeDefinition[pkg] )*
  
  		EOF!
  	;
  
  
  // Package statement: "package" followed by an identifier.
  packageDefinition returns [String packageDefinitionOut]
  	options {defaultErrorHandler = true;} // let ANTLR handle errors
  {
    packageDefinitionOut = null;
  }
  	:	"package"^ name:IDENT { packageDefinitionOut = name.getText(); } SEMI!
  	;
  
  // Import statement: import followed by a package or class name
  importDefinition
  	options {defaultErrorHandler = true;}
  	:	"import"^ spec:IDENT SEMI!
  	;
  
  // A type definition in a file is either a class or interface definition.
  typeDefinition[String pkg]
  	options {defaultErrorHandler = true; }
  { int m; }
  	:	m=newmodifiers
  		( classDefinition[pkg,m]
  		| interfaceDefinition[pkg,m]
  		)
  	|	SEMI!
  	;
  
  /** A declaration is the creation of a reference or primitive-type variable
   *  Create a separate Type/Var tree for each var in the var list.
   */
  declaration!
  	:	m:modifiers t:typeSpec[false] v:variableDefinitions[#m,#t]
  		{#declaration = #v;}
  	;
  
  // A type specification is a type name with possible brackets afterwards
  //   (which would make it an array type).
  typeSpec[boolean addImagNode]
  	: classTypeSpec[addImagNode]
  	| builtInTypeSpec[addImagNode]
  	;
  
  arraySpecOpt:
          (options{greedy=true;}: // match as many as possible
              lb:LBRACK^ {#lb.setType(ARRAY_DECLARATOR);} RBRACK!
          )*
      ;
  
  // A class type specification is a class type with either:
  // - possible brackets afterwards
  //   (which would make it an array type).
  // - generic type arguments after
  classTypeSpec[boolean addImagNode]
  	:   classOrInterfaceType[addImagNode]
          arraySpecOpt
  		{
  			if ( addImagNode ) {
  				#classTypeSpec = #(#[TYPE,"TYPE"], #classTypeSpec);
  			}
  		}
  	;
  classOrInterfaceType[boolean addImagNode]
  	:   IDENT (typeArguments[addImagNode])?
          (options{greedy=true;}: // match as many as possible
              DOT
              IDENT (typeArguments[addImagNode])?
          )*
      ;
  typeArguments[boolean addImagNode]
  {int currentLtLevel = 0;}
      :
          {currentLtLevel = ltCounter;}
          LT {ltCounter++;}
          classTypeSpec[addImagNode]
          (options{greedy=true;}: // match as many as possible
              COMMA classTypeSpec [addImagNode]
          )*
  
          (   // turn warning off since Antlr generates the right code,
              // plus we have our semantic predicate below
              options{generateAmbigWarnings=false;}:
              typeArgumentsEnd
          )?
  
          // make sure we have gobbled up enough '>' characters
          // if we are at the "top level" of nested typeArgument productions
          {(currentLtLevel != 0) || ltCounter == currentLtLevel}?
      ;
  
  // this gobbles up *some* amount of '>' characters, and counts how many
  // it gobbled.
  protected typeArgumentsEnd:
          GT {ltCounter-=1;}
      |   SR {ltCounter-=2;}
      |   BSR {ltCounter-=3;}
      ;
  
  // A builtin type specification is a builtin type with possible brackets
  // afterwards (which would make it an array type).
  builtInTypeSpec[boolean addImagNode]
  	:	builtInType arraySpecOpt
  		{
  			if ( addImagNode ) {
  				#builtInTypeSpec = #(#[TYPE,"TYPE"], #builtInTypeSpec);
  			}
  		}
  	;
  
  // A type name. which is either a (possibly qualified and parameterized)
  // class name or a primitive (builtin) type
  type
  	:	classOrInterfaceType[false]
  	|	builtInType
  	;
  
  // The primitive types.
  builtInType
  	:	"void"
  	|	"boolean"
  	|	"byte"
  	|	"char"
  	|	"short"
  	|	"int"
  	|	"float"
  	|	"long"
  	|	"double"
  	;
  
  
  
  // A list of zero or more modifiers.  We could have used (modifier)* in
  //   place of a call to modifiers, but I thought it was a good idea to keep
  //   this rule separate so they can easily be collected in a Vector if
  //   someone so desires
  modifiers
  	:	( modifier )*
  		{#modifiers = #([MODIFIERS, "MODIFIERS"], #modifiers);}
  	;
  
  newmodifiers returns [int out]
  {
    out = 0;
  }
  :
    (
      ("private"      { out = out | Modifier.PRIVATE; }) |
      ("public"       { out = out | Modifier.PUBLIC; }) |
      ("protected"    { out = out | Modifier.PROTECTED; }) |
      ("abstract"     { out = out | Modifier.ABSTRACT; }) |
      ("static"       { out = out | Modifier.STATIC; }) |
      ("final"        { out = out | Modifier.FINAL; }) |
      ("transient"    { out = out | Modifier.TRANSIENT; }) |
      ("synchronized" { out = out | Modifier.SYNCHRONIZED; }) |
      ("volatile"     { out = out | Modifier.VOLATILE; }) |
      ("native"       { out = out | Modifier.NATIVE; }) |
      ("strictfp"     { out = out | Modifier.STRICT; })
    )*
  ;
  
  
  
  // modifiers for Java classes, interfaces, class/instance vars and methods
  modifier
  	:	"private"
  	|	"public"
  	|	"protected"
  	|	"static"
  	|	"transient"
  	|	"final"
  	|	"abstract"
  	|	"native"
  	|	"threadsafe"
  	|	"synchronized"
  //	|	"const"			// reserved word, but not valid
  	|	"volatile"
  	|	"strictfp"
  	;
  
  // Definition of a Java class
  classDefinition![String pkg, int modifiers]
  	:	"class" name:IDENT {
  	    mClass = mService.addNewClass(pkg,name.getText());
  	    mClass.setModifiers(modifiers);
  	  }
          // it _might_ have type paremeters
          (typeParameters)?
  		// it _might_ have a superclass...
  		sc:superClassClause
  		// it might implement some interfaces...
  		ic:implementsClause
  		// now parse the body of the class
  		cb:classBlock {}
  		//{#classDefinition = #(#[CLASS_DEF,"CLASS_DEF"],
  //							   modifiers,IDENT,sc,ic,cb);}
  	;
  
  superClassClause!
  	:	( "extends" classOrInterfaceType[false] )?
  		//{#superClassClause = #(#[EXTENDS_CLAUSE,"EXTENDS_CLAUSE"],id);}
  	;
  
  // Definition of a Java Interface
  interfaceDefinition![String pkg, int modifiers]
  	:	"interface" IDENT
          // it _might_ have type paramaters
          (typeParameters)?
  		// it might extend some other interfaces
  		ie:interfaceExtends
  		// now parse the body of the interface (looks like a class...)
  		cb:classBlock
  //		{#interfaceDefinition = #(#[INTERFACE_DEF,"INTERFACE_DEF"],
  //									modifiers,IDENT,ie,cb);}
  	;
  
  typeParameters
  {int currentLtLevel = 0;}
      :
          {currentLtLevel = ltCounter;}
          LT {ltCounter++;}
          typeParameter (COMMA typeParameter)*
          (typeArgumentsEnd)?
          // make sure we have gobbled up enough '>' characters
          // if we are at the "top level" of nested typeArgument productions
          {(currentLtLevel != 0) || ltCounter == currentLtLevel}?
      ;
  
  typeParameter:
          IDENT
          (   // I'm pretty sure Antlr generates the right thing here:
              options{generateAmbigWarnings=false;}:
              "extends" classOrInterfaceType[false]
              (BAND classOrInterfaceType[false])*
          )?
      ;
  // This is the body of a class.  You can have fields and extra semicolons,
  // That's about it (until you see what a field is...)
  classBlock
  	:	LCURLY!
  			( field | SEMI! )*
  		RCURLY!
  		{#classBlock = #([OBJBLOCK, "OBJBLOCK"], #classBlock);}
  	;
  
  // An interface can extend several other interfaces...
  interfaceExtends
  	:	(
  		e:"extends"!
  		classOrInterfaceType[false] ( COMMA! classOrInterfaceType[false] )*
  		)?
  		{#interfaceExtends = #(#[EXTENDS_CLAUSE,"EXTENDS_CLAUSE"],
  							#interfaceExtends);}
  	;
  
  // A class can implement several interfaces...
  implementsClause
  	:	(
  			i:"implements"! classOrInterfaceType[false] ( COMMA! classOrInterfaceType[false] )*
  		)?
  		{#implementsClause = #(#[IMPLEMENTS_CLAUSE,"IMPLEMENTS_CLAUSE"],
  								 #implementsClause);}
  	;
  
  // Now the various things that can be defined inside a class or interface...
  // Note that not all of these are really valid in an interface (constructors,
  //   for example), and if this grammar were used for a compiler there would
  //   need to be some semantic checks to make sure we're doing the right thing...
  field!
  {
    int modifiers;
  }
  : // method, constructor, or variable declaration
  		mods:modifiers
  		(	h:ctorHead s:constructorBody // constructor
  			{#field = #(#[CTOR_DEF,"CTOR_DEF"], mods, h, s);}
  
  //		|	cd:classDefinition[#mods]       // inner class
  //			{#field = #cd;}
  
  //		|	id:interfaceDefinition[#mods]   // inner interface
  //			{#field = #id;}
  
  		|	// A generic method has the typeParameters before the return type.
              // This is not allowed for variable definitions, but this production
              // allows it, a semantic check could be used if you wanted.
              (typeParameters)? t:typeSpec[false]  // method or variable declaration(s)
  			(	IDENT  // the name of the method
  
  				// parse the formal parameter declarations.
  				LPAREN! param:parameterDeclarationList RPAREN!
  
  				rt:declaratorBrackets[#t]
  
  				// get the list of exceptions that this method is
  				// declared to throw
  				(tc:throwsClause)?
  
  				( s2:compoundStatement | SEMI )
  				{#field = #(#[METHOD_DEF,"METHOD_DEF"],
  						     mods,
  							 #(#[TYPE,"TYPE"],rt),
  							 IDENT,
  							 param,
  							 tc,
  							 s2);}
  			|	v:variableDefinitions[#mods,#t] SEMI
  //				{#field = #(#[VARIABLE_DEF,"VARIABLE_DEF"], v);}
  				{#field = #v;}
  			)
  		)
  
      // "static { ... }" class initializer
  	|	"static" s3:compoundStatement
  		{#field = #(#[STATIC_INIT,"STATIC_INIT"], s3);}
  
      // "{ ... }" instance initializer
  	|	s4:compoundStatement
  		{#field = #(#[INSTANCE_INIT,"INSTANCE_INIT"], s4);}
  	;
  
  constructorBody
      :   lc:LCURLY^ {#lc.setType(SLIST);}
              ( options { greedy=true; } : explicitConstructorInvocation)?
              (statement)*
          RCURLY!
      ;
  
  /** Catch obvious constructor calls, but not the expr.super(...) calls */
  explicitConstructorInvocation
      :   "this"! lp1:LPAREN^ argList RPAREN! SEMI!
  		{#lp1.setType(CTOR_CALL);}
      |   "super"! lp2:LPAREN^ argList RPAREN! SEMI!
  		{#lp2.setType(SUPER_CTOR_CALL);}
      ;
  
  variableDefinitions[AST mods, AST t]
  	:	variableDeclarator[getASTFactory().dupTree(mods),
  						   getASTFactory().dupTree(t)]
  		(	COMMA!
  			variableDeclarator[getASTFactory().dupTree(mods),
  							   getASTFactory().dupTree(t)]
  		)*
  	;
  
  /** Declaration of a variable.  This can be a class/instance variable,
   *   or a local variable in a method
   * It can also include possible initialization.
   */
  variableDeclarator![AST mods, AST t]
  	:	id:IDENT d:declaratorBrackets[t] v:varInitializer
  		{#variableDeclarator = #(#[VARIABLE_DEF,"VARIABLE_DEF"], mods, #(#[TYPE,"TYPE"],d), id, v);}
  	;
  
  declaratorBrackets[AST typ]
  	:	{#declaratorBrackets=typ;}
  		(lb:LBRACK^ {#lb.setType(ARRAY_DECLARATOR);} RBRACK!)*
  	;
  
  varInitializer
  	:	( ASSIGN^ initializer )?
  	;
  
  // This is an initializer used to set up an array.
  arrayInitializer
  	:	lc:LCURLY^ {#lc.setType(ARRAY_INIT);}
  			(	initializer
  				(
  					// CONFLICT: does a COMMA after an initializer start a new
  					//           initializer or start the option ',' at end?
  					//           ANTLR generates proper code by matching
  					//			 the comma as soon as possible.
  					options {
  						warnWhenFollowAmbig = false;
  					}
  				:
  					COMMA! initializer
  				)*
  				(COMMA!)?
  			)?
  		RCURLY!
  	;
  
  
  // The two "things" that can initialize an array element are an expression
  //   and another (nested) array initializer.
  initializer
  	:	expression
  	|	arrayInitializer
  	;
  
  // This is the header of a method.  It includes the name and parameters
  //   for the method.
  //   This also watches for a list of exception classes in a "throws" clause.
  ctorHead
  	:	IDENT  // the name of the method
  
  		// parse the formal parameter declarations.
  		LPAREN! parameterDeclarationList RPAREN!
  
  		// get the list of exceptions that this method is declared to throw
  		(throwsClause)?
  	;
  
  // This is a list of exception classes that the method is declared to throw
  throwsClause
  	:	"throws"^ IDENT ( COMMA! IDENT )*
  	;
  
  
  // A list of formal parameters
  parameterDeclarationList
  	:	( parameterDeclaration ( COMMA! parameterDeclaration )* )?
  		{#parameterDeclarationList = #(#[PARAMETERS,"PARAMETERS"],
  									#parameterDeclarationList);}
  	;
  
  // A formal parameter.
  parameterDeclaration!
  	:	pm:parameterModifier t:typeSpec[false] id:IDENT
  		pd:declaratorBrackets[#t]
  		{#parameterDeclaration = #(#[PARAMETER_DEF,"PARAMETER_DEF"],
  									pm, #([TYPE,"TYPE"],pd), id);}
  	;
  
  parameterModifier
  	:	(f:"final")?
  		{#parameterModifier = #(#[MODIFIERS,"MODIFIERS"], f);}
  	;
  
  // Compound statement.  This is used in many contexts:
  //   Inside a class definition prefixed with "static":
  //      it is a class initializer
  //   Inside a class definition without "static":
  //      it is an instance initializer
  //   As the body of a method
  //   As a completely indepdent braced block of code inside a method
  //      it starts a new scope for variable definitions
  
  compoundStatement
  	:	lc:LCURLY^ {#lc.setType(SLIST);}
  			// include the (possibly-empty) list of statements
  			(statement)*
  		RCURLY!
  	;
  
  
  statement
  	// A list of statements in curly braces -- start a new scope!
  	:	compoundStatement
  
  	// declarations are ambiguous with "ID DOT" relative to expression
  	// statements.  Must backtrack to be sure.  Could use a semantic
  	// predicate to test symbol table to see what the type was coming
  	// up, but that's pretty hard without a symbol table ;)
  	|	(declaration)=> declaration SEMI!
  
  	// An expression statement.  This could be a method call,
  	// assignment statement, or any other expression evaluated for
  	// side-effects.
  	|	expression SEMI!
  
  	// class definition
  //	|	m:modifiers! classDefinition[#m]
  
  	// Attach a label to the front of a statement
  	|	IDENT c:COLON^ {#c.setType(LABELED_STAT);} statement
  
  	// If-else statement
  	|	"if"^ LPAREN! expression RPAREN! statement
  		(
  			// CONFLICT: the old "dangling-else" problem...
  			//           ANTLR generates proper code matching
  			//			 as soon as possible.  Hush warning.
  			options {
  				warnWhenFollowAmbig = false;
  			}
  		:
  			"else"! statement
  		)?
  
  	// For statement
  	|	"for"^
  			LPAREN!
  				forInit SEMI!   // initializer
  				forCond	SEMI!   // condition test
  				forIter         // updater
  			RPAREN!
  			statement                     // statement to loop over
  
  	// While statement
  	|	"while"^ LPAREN! expression RPAREN! statement
  
  	// do-while statement
  	|	"do"^ statement "while"! LPAREN! expression RPAREN! SEMI!
  
  	// get out of a loop (or switch)
  	|	"break"^ (IDENT)? SEMI!
  
  	// do next iteration of a loop
  	|	"continue"^ (IDENT)? SEMI!
  
  	// Return an expression
  	|	"return"^ (expression)? SEMI!
  
  	// switch/case statement
  	|	"switch"^ LPAREN! expression RPAREN! LCURLY!
  			( casesGroup )*
  		RCURLY!
  
  	// exception try-catch block
  	|	tryBlock
  
  	// throw an exception
  	|	"throw"^ expression SEMI!
  
  	// synchronize a statement
  	|	"synchronized"^ LPAREN! expression RPAREN! compoundStatement
  
  	// asserts (uncomment if you want 1.4 compatibility)
  	//|	"assert"^ expression ( COLON! expression )? SEMI!
  
  	// empty statement
  	|	s:SEMI {#s.setType(EMPTY_STAT);}
  	;
  
  casesGroup
  	:	(	// CONFLICT: to which case group do the statements bind?
  			//           ANTLR generates proper code: it groups the
  			//           many "case"/"default" labels together then
  			//           follows them with the statements
  			options {
  				greedy = true;
  			}
  			:
  			aCase
  		)+
  		caseSList
  		{#casesGroup = #([CASE_GROUP, "CASE_GROUP"], #casesGroup);}
  	;
  
  aCase
  	:	("case"^ expression | "default") COLON!
  	;
  
  caseSList
  	:	(statement)*
  		{#caseSList = #(#[SLIST,"SLIST"],#caseSList);}
  	;
  
  // The initializer for a for loop
  forInit
  		// if it looks like a declaration, it is
  	:	(	(declaration)=> declaration
  		// otherwise it could be an expression list...
  		|	expressionList
  		)?
  		{#forInit = #(#[FOR_INIT,"FOR_INIT"],#forInit);}
  	;
  
  forCond
  	:	(expression)?
  		{#forCond = #(#[FOR_CONDITION,"FOR_CONDITION"],#forCond);}
  	;
  
  forIter
  	:	(expressionList)?
  		{#forIter = #(#[FOR_ITERATOR,"FOR_ITERATOR"],#forIter);}
  	;
  
  // an exception handler try/catch block
  tryBlock
  	:	"try"^ compoundStatement
  		(handler)*
  		( finallyClause )?
  	;
  
  finallyClause
  	:	"finally"^ compoundStatement
  	;
  
  // an exception handler
  handler
  	:	"catch"^ LPAREN! parameterDeclaration RPAREN! compoundStatement
  	;
  
  
  // expressions
  // Note that most of these expressions follow the pattern
  //   thisLevelExpression :
  //       nextHigherPrecedenceExpression
  //           (OPERATOR nextHigherPrecedenceExpression)*
  // which is a standard recursive definition for a parsing an expression.
  // The operators in java have the following precedences:
  //    lowest  (13)  = *= /= %= += -= <<= >>= >>>= &= ^= |=
  //            (12)  ?:
  //            (11)  ||
  //            (10)  &&
  //            ( 9)  |
  //            ( 8)  ^
  //            ( 7)  &
  //            ( 6)  == !=
  //            ( 5)  < <= > >=
  //            ( 4)  << >>
  //            ( 3)  +(binary) -(binary)
  //            ( 2)  * / %
  //            ( 1)  ++ -- +(unary) -(unary)  ~  !  (type)
  //                  []   () (method call)  . (dot -- identifier qualification)
  //                  new   ()  (explicit parenthesis)
  //
  // the last two are not usually on a precedence chart; I put them in
  // to point out that new has a higher precedence than '.', so you
  // can validy use
  //     new Frame().show()
  //
  // Note that the above precedence levels map to the rules below...
  // Once you have a precedence chart, writing the appropriate rules as below
  //   is usually very straightfoward
  
  
  
  // the mother of all expressions
  expression
  	:	assignmentExpression
  		{#expression = #(#[EXPR,"EXPR"],#expression);}
  	;
  
  
  // This is a list of expressions.
  expressionList
  	:	expression (COMMA! expression)*
  		{#expressionList = #(#[ELIST,"ELIST"], expressionList);}
  	;
  
  
  // assignment expression (level 13)
  assignmentExpression
  	:	conditionalExpression
  		(	(	ASSIGN^
              |   PLUS_ASSIGN^
              |   MINUS_ASSIGN^
              |   STAR_ASSIGN^
              |   DIV_ASSIGN^
              |   MOD_ASSIGN^
              |   SR_ASSIGN^
              |   BSR_ASSIGN^
              |   SL_ASSIGN^
              |   BAND_ASSIGN^
              |   BXOR_ASSIGN^
              |   BOR_ASSIGN^
              )
  			assignmentExpression
  		)?
  	;
  
  
  // conditional test (level 12)
  conditionalExpression
  	:	logicalOrExpression
  		( QUESTION^ assignmentExpression COLON! conditionalExpression )?
  	;
  
  
  // logical or (||)  (level 11)
  logicalOrExpression
  	:	logicalAndExpression (LOR^ logicalAndExpression)*
  	;
  
  
  // logical and (&&)  (level 10)
  logicalAndExpression
  	:	inclusiveOrExpression (LAND^ inclusiveOrExpression)*
  	;
  
  
  // bitwise or non-short-circuiting or (|)  (level 9)
  inclusiveOrExpression
  	:	exclusiveOrExpression (BOR^ exclusiveOrExpression)*
  	;
  
  
  // exclusive or (^)  (level 8)
  exclusiveOrExpression
  	:	andExpression (BXOR^ andExpression)*
  	;
  
  
  // bitwise or non-short-circuiting and (&)  (level 7)
  andExpression
  	:	equalityExpression (BAND^ equalityExpression)*
  	;
  
  
  // equality/inequality (==/!=) (level 6)
  equalityExpression
  	:	relationalExpression ((NOT_EQUAL^ | EQUAL^) relationalExpression)*
  	;
  
  
  // boolean relational expressions (level 5)
  relationalExpression
  	:	shiftExpression
  		(	(	(	LT^
  				|	GT^
  				|	LE^
  				|	GE^
  				)
  				shiftExpression
  			)*
  		|	"instanceof"^ typeSpec[true]
  		)
  	;
  
  
  // bit shift expressions (level 4)
  shiftExpression
  	:	additiveExpression ((SL^ | SR^ | BSR^) additiveExpression)*
  	;
  
  
  // binary addition/subtraction (level 3)
  additiveExpression
  	:	multiplicativeExpression ((PLUS^ | MINUS^) multiplicativeExpression)*
  	;
  
  
  // multiplication/division/modulo (level 2)
  multiplicativeExpression
  	:	unaryExpression ((STAR^ | DIV^ | MOD^ ) unaryExpression)*
  	;
  
  unaryExpression
  	:	INC^ unaryExpression
  	|	DEC^ unaryExpression
  	|	MINUS^ {#MINUS.setType(UNARY_MINUS);} unaryExpression
  	|	PLUS^  {#PLUS.setType(UNARY_PLUS);} unaryExpression
  	|	unaryExpressionNotPlusMinus
  	;
  
  unaryExpressionNotPlusMinus
  	:	BNOT^ unaryExpression
  	|	LNOT^ unaryExpression
  
  	|	(	// subrule allows option to shut off warnings
  			options {
  				// "(int" ambig with postfixExpr due to lack of sequence
  				// info in linear approximate LL(k).  It's ok.  Shut up.
  				generateAmbigWarnings=false;
  			}
  		:	// If typecast is built in type, must be numeric operand
  			// Also, no reason to backtrack if type keyword like int, float...
  			lpb:LPAREN^ {#lpb.setType(TYPECAST);} builtInTypeSpec[true] RPAREN!
  			unaryExpression
  
  			// Have to backtrack to see if operator follows.  If no operator
  			// follows, it's a typecast.  No semantic checking needed to parse.
  			// if it _looks_ like a cast, it _is_ a cast; else it's a "(expr)"
  		|	(LPAREN classTypeSpec[true] RPAREN unaryExpressionNotPlusMinus)=>
  			lp:LPAREN^ {#lp.setType(TYPECAST);} classTypeSpec[true] RPAREN!
  			unaryExpressionNotPlusMinus
  
  		|	postfixExpression
  		)
  	;
  
  // qualified names, array expressions, method invocation, post inc/dec
  postfixExpression
  	:
      /*
      "this"! lp1:LPAREN^ argList RPAREN!
  		{#lp1.setType(CTOR_CALL);}
  
      |   "super"! lp2:LPAREN^ argList RPAREN!
  		{#lp2.setType(SUPER_CTOR_CALL);}
      |
      */
          primaryExpression
  
  		(
              /*
              options {
  				// the use of postfixExpression in SUPER_CTOR_CALL adds DOT
  				// to the lookahead set, and gives loads of false non-det
  				// warnings.
  				// shut them off.
  				generateAmbigWarnings=false;
  			}
  		:	*/
              DOT^ IDENT
  			(	lp:LPAREN^ {#lp.setType(METHOD_CALL);}
  				argList
  				RPAREN!
  			)?
  		|	DOT^ "this"
  
  		|	DOT^ "super"
              (   // (new Outer()).super()  (create enclosing instance)
                  lp3:LPAREN^ argList RPAREN!
                  {#lp3.setType(SUPER_CTOR_CALL);}
  			|   DOT^ IDENT
                  (	lps:LPAREN^ {#lps.setType(METHOD_CALL);}
                      argList
                      RPAREN!
                  )?
              )
  		|	DOT^ newExpression
  		|	lb:LBRACK^ {#lb.setType(INDEX_OP);} expression RBRACK!
  		)*
  
  		(   // possibly add on a post-increment or post-decrement.
              // allows INC/DEC on too much, but semantics can check
  			in:INC^ {#in.setType(POST_INC);}
  	 	|	de:DEC^ {#de.setType(POST_DEC);}
  		)?
   	;
  
  // the basic element of an expression
  primaryExpression
  	:	identPrimary ( options {greedy=true;} : DOT^ "class" )?
      |   constant
  	|	"true"
  	|	"false"
  	|	"null"
      |   newExpression
  	|	"this"
  	|	"super"
  	|	LPAREN! assignmentExpression RPAREN!
  		// look for int.class and int[].class
  	|	builtInType
  		( lbt:LBRACK^ {#lbt.setType(ARRAY_DECLARATOR);} RBRACK! )*
  		DOT^ "class"
  	;
  
  /** Match a, a.b.c refs, a.b.c(...) refs, a.b.c[], a.b.c[].class,
   *  and a.b.c.class refs.  Also this(...) and super(...).  Match
   *  this or super.
   */
  identPrimary
  	:	IDENT
  		(
              options {
  				// .ident could match here or in postfixExpression.
  				// We do want to match here.  Turn off warning.
  				greedy=true;
  			}
  		:	DOT^ IDENT
  		)*
  		(
              options {
  				// ARRAY_DECLARATOR here conflicts with INDEX_OP in
  				// postfixExpression on LBRACK RBRACK.
  				// We want to match [] here, so greedy.  This overcomes
                  // limitation of linear approximate lookahead.
  				greedy=true;
  		    }
  		:   ( lp:LPAREN^ {#lp.setType(METHOD_CALL);} argList RPAREN! )
  		|	( options {greedy=true;} :
                lbc:LBRACK^ {#lbc.setType(ARRAY_DECLARATOR);} RBRACK!
              )+
  		)?
      ;
  
  /** object instantiation.
   *  Trees are built as illustrated by the following input/tree pairs:
   *
   *  new T()
   *
   *  new
   *   |
   *   T --  ELIST
   *           |
   *          arg1 -- arg2 -- .. -- argn
   *
   *  new int[]
   *
   *  new
   *   |
   *  int -- ARRAY_DECLARATOR
   *
   *  new int[] {1,2}
   *
   *  new
   *   |
   *  int -- ARRAY_DECLARATOR -- ARRAY_INIT
   *                                  |
   *                                EXPR -- EXPR
   *                                  |      |
   *                                  1      2
   *
   *  new int[3]
   *  new
   *   |
   *  int -- ARRAY_DECLARATOR
   *                |
   *              EXPR
   *                |
   *                3
   *
   *  new int[1][2]
   *
   *  new
   *   |
   *  int -- ARRAY_DECLARATOR
   *               |
   *         ARRAY_DECLARATOR -- EXPR
   *               |              |
   *             EXPR             1
   *               |
   *               2
   *
   */
  newExpression
  	:	"new"^ type
  		(	LPAREN! argList RPAREN! (classBlock)?
  
  			//java 1.1
  			// Note: This will allow bad constructs like
  			//    new int[4][][3] {exp,exp}.
  			//    There needs to be a semantic check here...
  			// to make sure:
  			//   a) [ expr ] and [ ] are not mixed
  			//   b) [ expr ] and an init are not used together
  
  		|	newArrayDeclarator (arrayInitializer)?
  		)
  	;
  
  argList
  	:	(	expressionList
  		|	/*nothing*/
  			{#argList = #[ELIST,"ELIST"];}
  		)
  	;
  
  newArrayDeclarator
  	:	(
  			// CONFLICT:
  			// newExpression is a primaryExpression which can be
  			// followed by an array index reference.  This is ok,
  			// as the generated code will stay in this loop as
  			// long as it sees an LBRACK (proper behavior)
  			options {
  				warnWhenFollowAmbig = false;
  			}
  		:
  			lb:LBRACK^ {#lb.setType(ARRAY_DECLARATOR);}
  				(expression)?
  			RBRACK!
  		)+
  	;
  
  constant
  	:	NUM_INT
  	|	CHAR_LITERAL
  	|	STRING_LITERAL
  	|	NUM_FLOAT
  	|	NUM_LONG
  	|	NUM_DOUBLE
  	;
  
  
  //----------------------------------------------------------------------------
  // The Java scanner
  //----------------------------------------------------------------------------
  class JavaLexer extends Lexer;
  
  options {
  	exportVocab=Java;      // call the vocabulary "Java"
  	testLiterals=false;    // don't automatically test for literals
  	k=4;                   // four characters of lookahead
  	charVocabulary='\u0003'..'\uFFFF';
  	// without inlining some bitset tests, couldn't do unicode;
  	// I need to make ANTLR generate smaller bitsets; see
  	// bottom of JavaLexer.java
  	codeGenBitsetTestThreshold=20;
  }
  
  
  
  // OPERATORS
  QUESTION		:	'?'		;
  LPAREN			:	'('		;
  RPAREN			:	')'		;
  LBRACK			:	'['		;
  RBRACK			:	']'		;
  LCURLY			:	'{'		;
  RCURLY			:	'}'		;
  COLON			:	':'		;
  COMMA			:	','		;
  //DOT			:	'.'		;
  ASSIGN			:	'='		;
  EQUAL			:	"=="	;
  LNOT			:	'!'		;
  BNOT			:	'~'		;
  NOT_EQUAL		:	"!="	;
  DIV				:	'/'		;
  DIV_ASSIGN		:	"/="	;
  PLUS			:	'+'		;
  PLUS_ASSIGN		:	"+="	;
  INC				:	"++"	;
  MINUS			:	'-'		;
  MINUS_ASSIGN	:	"-="	;
  DEC				:	"--"	;
  STAR			:	'*'		;
  STAR_ASSIGN		:	"*="	;
  MOD				:	'%'		;
  MOD_ASSIGN		:	"%="	;
  SR				:	">>"	;
  SR_ASSIGN		:	">>="	;
  BSR				:	">>>"	;
  BSR_ASSIGN		:	">>>="	;
  GE				:	">="	;
  GT				:	">"		;
  SL				:	"<<"	;
  SL_ASSIGN		:	"<<="	;
  LE				:	"<="	;
  LT				:	'<'		;
  BXOR			:	'^'		;
  BXOR_ASSIGN		:	"^="	;
  BOR				:	'|'		;
  BOR_ASSIGN		:	"|="	;
  LOR				:	"||"	;
  BAND			:	'&'		;
  BAND_ASSIGN		:	"&="	;
  LAND			:	"&&"	;
  SEMI			:	';'		;
  
  
  // Whitespace -- ignored
  WS	:	(	' '
  		|	'\t'
  		|	'\f'
  			// handle newlines
  		|	(	options {generateAmbigWarnings=false;}
  			:	"\r\n"  // Evil DOS
  			|	'\r'    // Macintosh
  			|	'\n'    // Unix (the right way)
  			)
  			{ newline(); }
  		)+
  		{ _ttype = Token.SKIP; }
  	;
  
  // Single-line comments
  SL_COMMENT
  	:	"//"
  		(~('\n'|'\r'))* ('\n'|'\r'('\n')?)
  		{$setType(Token.SKIP); newline();}
  	;
  
  // multiple-line comments
  ML_COMMENT
  	:	"/*"
  		(	/*	'\r' '\n' can be matched in one alternative or by matching
  				'\r' in one iteration and '\n' in another.  I am trying to
  				handle any flavor of newline that comes in, but the language
  				that allows both "\r\n" and "\r" and "\n" to all be valid
  				newline is ambiguous.  Consequently, the resulting grammar
  				must be ambiguous.  I'm shutting this warning off.
  			 */
  			options {
  				generateAmbigWarnings=false;
  			}
  		:
  			{ LA(2)!='/' }? '*'
  		|	'\r' '\n'		{newline();}
  		|	'\r'			{newline();}
  		|	'\n'			{newline();}
  		|	~('*'|'\n'|'\r')
  		)*
  		"*/"
  		{$setType(Token.SKIP);}
  	;
  
  
  // character literals
  CHAR_LITERAL
  	:	'\'' ( ESC | ~'\'' ) '\''
  	;
  
  // string literals
  STRING_LITERAL
  	:	'"' (ESC|~('"'|'\\'))* '"'
  	;
  
  
  // escape sequence -- note that this is protected; it can only be called
  //   from another lexer rule -- it will not ever directly return a token to
  //   the parser
  // There are various ambiguities hushed in this rule.  The optional
  // '0'...'9' digit matches should be matched here rather than letting
  // them go back to STRING_LITERAL to be matched.  ANTLR does the
  // right thing by matching immediately; hence, it's ok to shut off
  // the FOLLOW ambig warnings.
  protected
  ESC
  	:	'\\'
  		(	'n'
  		|	'r'
  		|	't'
  		|	'b'
  		|	'f'
  		|	'"'
  		|	'\''
  		|	'\\'
  		|	('u')+ HEX_DIGIT HEX_DIGIT HEX_DIGIT HEX_DIGIT
  		|	'0'..'3'
  			(
  				options {
  					warnWhenFollowAmbig = false;
  				}
  			:	'0'..'7'
  				(
  					options {
  						warnWhenFollowAmbig = false;
  					}
  				:	'0'..'7'
  				)?
  			)?
  		|	'4'..'7'
  			(
  				options {
  					warnWhenFollowAmbig = false;
  				}
  			:	'0'..'7'
  			)?
  		)
  	;
  
  
  // hexadecimal digit (again, note it's protected!)
  protected
  HEX_DIGIT
  	:	('0'..'9'|'A'..'F'|'a'..'f')
  	;
  
  
  // a dummy rule to force vocabulary to be all characters (except special
  //   ones that ANTLR uses internally (0 to 2)
  protected
  VOCAB
  	:	'\3'..'\377'
  	;
  
  
  
  // A very loose java identifier, including '*' import identifiers
  IDENT
  	options {testLiterals=true;}
  	:	('a'..'z'|'A'..'Z'|'_'|'$') ('a'..'z'|'A'..'Z'|'_'|'0'..'9'|'$'|'.'|'*')*
  	;
  
  // a numeric literal
  NUM_INT
  	{boolean isDecimal=false; Token t=null;}
      :   '.' {_ttype = DOT;}
              (	('0'..'9')+ (EXPONENT)? (f1:FLOAT_SUFFIX {t=f1;})?
                  {
  				if (t != null && t.getText().toUpperCase().indexOf('F')>=0) {
                  	_ttype = NUM_FLOAT;
  				}
  				else {
                  	_ttype = NUM_DOUBLE; // assume double
  				}
  				}
              )?
  
  	|	(	'0' {isDecimal = true;} // special case for just '0'
  			(	('x'|'X')
  				(											// hex
  					// the 'e'|'E' and float suffix stuff look
  					// like hex digits, hence the (...)+ doesn't
  					// know when to stop: ambig.  ANTLR resolves
  					// it correctly by matching immediately.  It
  					// is therefor ok to hush warning.
  					options {
  						warnWhenFollowAmbig=false;
  					}
  				:	HEX_DIGIT
  				)+
  			|	('0'..'7')+									// octal
  			)?
  		|	('1'..'9') ('0'..'9')*  {isDecimal=true;}		// non-zero decimal
  		)
  		(	('l'|'L') { _ttype = NUM_LONG; }
  
  		// only check to see if it's a float if looks like decimal so far
  		|	{isDecimal}?
              (   '.' ('0'..'9')* (EXPONENT)? (f2:FLOAT_SUFFIX {t=f2;})?
              |   EXPONENT (f3:FLOAT_SUFFIX {t=f3;})?
              |   f4:FLOAT_SUFFIX {t=f4;}
              )
              {
  			if (t != null && t.getText().toUpperCase() .indexOf('F') >= 0) {
                  _ttype = NUM_FLOAT;
  			}
              else {
  	           	_ttype = NUM_DOUBLE; // assume double
  			}
  			}
          )?
  	;
  
  
  // a couple protected methods to assist in matching floating point numbers
  protected
  EXPONENT
  	:	('e'|'E') ('+'|'-')? ('0'..'9')+
  	;
  
  
  protected
  FLOAT_SUFFIX
  	:	'f'|'F'|'d'|'D'
  	;
  
  
  
  

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