TermL

TermL (“term-ell”) is the Term Language, a small expression-based language for representing arbitrary data in a simple structured format. It is ideal for expressing abstract syntax trees (ASTs) and other kinds of primitive data trees.

Creating Terms

>>> from terml.nodes import termMaker as t
>>> t.Term()
term('Term')

That’s it! We’ve created an empty term, Term, with nothing inside.

>>> t.Num(1)
term('Num(1)')
>>> t.Outer(t.Inner())
term('Outer(Inner)')

We can see that terms are not just namedtuple lookalikes. They have their own internals and store data in a slightly different and more structured way than a normal tuple.

Parsing Terms

Parsley can parse terms from streams. Terms can contain any kind of parseable data, including other terms. Returning to the ubiquitous calculator example:

add = Add(:x, :y) -> x + y

Here this rule matches a term called Add which has two components, bind those components to a couple of names (x and y), and return their sum. If this rule were applied to a term like Add(3, 5), it would return 8.

Terms can be nested, too. Here’s an example that performs a slightly contrived match on a negated term inside an addition:

add_negate = Add(:x, Negate(:y)) -> x - y