Difference between revisions of "BNF - Syntax Diagrams"

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(BNF)
(Syntax Diagrams)
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[[File:Syntaxdiagram.gif]]
 
[[File:Syntaxdiagram.gif]]
 
so using this diagram, we can see that a digit can be 0-9, and alpha can only be A,B,J, or Z. A stock code must therefore start with one of the alpha characters and then followed by a colon. It can then have any combination of alpha characters or digit characters. Therefore a stock code starting 'AA:' will be invalid, as will a stock code starting '1:'.
 
  
 
The shape of the components are important:
 
The shape of the components are important:
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* 'lozenge' is literal text (ie the exact text contained within the shape, it is not a variable name).
 
* 'lozenge' is literal text (ie the exact text contained within the shape, it is not a variable name).
 
* 'rectangle' is used to enclose elements defined by other rules
 
* 'rectangle' is used to enclose elements defined by other rules
 +
 +
so using this diagram, we can see that a digit can be 0-9, and alpha can only be A,B,J, or Z. A stock code must therefore start with one of the alpha characters and then followed by a colon. It can then have any combination of alpha characters or digit characters. Therefore a stock code starting 'AA:' will be invalid, as will a stock code starting '1:'.
  
 
You could also say the 'circle' & 'lozenge' are 'terminal' and the 'rectangle' is 'non-terminal'.
 
You could also say the 'circle' & 'lozenge' are 'terminal' and the 'rectangle' is 'non-terminal'.

Revision as of 08:50, 9 January 2020

Overview

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x1gGInKNCRw&list=PLCiOXwirraUAnbNTfWFxkoq5MoIair49B&index=6

BNF

Backus Naur Form is a way of describing the syntax of a of a language.

The symbols used are:

::= 	is defined as
|    	or
< >   	meta variables or syntactic variables (non-terminal symbols)

For example a numerical digit could be defined as:

<digit> ::= 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9

This declares that <digit> can only be the numbers 0-9, specifically 0 OR 1 OR 2 OR 3 etc. These digits are also considered to be 'terminal' because they can not be broken down any further. 'A', 'B' , or 'C' would clearly be invalid digits.

The variables created can be used to define other variables for example:

<lesson> ::= A | B | C 
<lesson code> ::= <lesson><digit>

This notation can also be recursive:

<integer> ::= <digit> | <digit><integer>

This states that an integer can be a digit or a digit followed by another integer. If the definition was just '<digit> <digit>' this would only allow integers of exactly 2 digits.

Quiz

To see if you remember what you have learned about BNF, take this quick test either by yourself, or with friends: https://play.kahoot.it/#/?quizId=cad3ec51-29de-45d6-968d-6a95958553f2

Syntax Diagrams

These are a diagram approach similar to BNF, they also describe the syntax allowed.

Instead of writing the you create diagrams and you are looking for path from left to right, some paths can loop back to allow for multiple digits.

Syntaxdiagram.gif

The shape of the components are important:

  • 'circle' is a literal character (ie it literally is the actual character contained within the circle).
  • 'lozenge' is literal text (ie the exact text contained within the shape, it is not a variable name).
  • 'rectangle' is used to enclose elements defined by other rules

so using this diagram, we can see that a digit can be 0-9, and alpha can only be A,B,J, or Z. A stock code must therefore start with one of the alpha characters and then followed by a colon. It can then have any combination of alpha characters or digit characters. Therefore a stock code starting 'AA:' will be invalid, as will a stock code starting '1:'.

You could also say the 'circle' & 'lozenge' are 'terminal' and the 'rectangle' is 'non-terminal'.

A another example, this time it is recursive (factor uses exp as part of the diagram):

Recursivesyntax.jpg

Follow this example from the bottom up, starting at digit and then progress up the diagrams.