We prove a property of generalized LR (GLR) parsing -if the grammar is without right and hidden left recursions, then the number of consecutive reductions between the shifts of two adjacent symbols cannot be greater than a constant. Further, we show that this property can be used for constructing an optimized version of our GLR parser. Compared with a standard GLR parser, our optimized parser reads one symbol on every transition and performs significantly fewer stack operations. Our timings show that, especially for highly ambiguous grammars, our parser is significantly faster than a standard GLR parser.
Subtree matching is an important problem in Computer Science on which a number of tasks, such as mechanical theorem proving, term-rewriting, symbolic computation and nonprocedural programming languages are based on. A systematic approach to the construction of subtree pattern matchers by deterministic pushdown automata, which read subject trees in prefix and postfix notation, is presented. The method is analogous to the construction of string pattern matchers: for a given pattern, a nondeterministic pushdown automaton is created and is then determinised. In addition, it is shown that the size of the resulting deterministic pushdown automata directly corresponds to the size of the existing string pattern matchers based on finite automata.
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