# NimbleParsec
[Online Documentation](https://hexdocs.pm/nimble_parsec).
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`NimbleParsec` is a simple and fast library for text-based parser
combinators.
Combinators are composed programatically and compiled into multiple
clauses with binary matching. This provides the following benefits:
* Performance: since it compiles to binary matching, it leverages
many Erlang VM optimizations to generate a fast parser code with
low memory usage
* Composable: this library does not rely on macros for building and
composing parsers, therefore they are fully composable. The only
macros are `defparsec/3` and `defparsecp/3` which emit the compiled
clauses with binary matching
* No runtime dependency: after compilation, the generated parser
clauses have no runtime dependency on `NimbleParsec`. This opens up
the possibility to compile parsers and do not impose a dependency on
users of your library
* No footprints: `NimbleParsec` only needs to be imported in your modules.
There is no need for `use NimbleParsec`, leaving no footprints on your
modules
The goal of this library is to focus on a set of primitives for writing
efficient parser combinators. The composition aspect means you should be
able to use those primitives to implement higher level combinators.
Note this library does not handle low-level binary parsing. In such cases,
we recommend using [Elixir's bitstring syntax](https://hexdocs.pm/elixir/Kernel.SpecialForms.html#%3C%3C%3E%3E/1).
## Examples
```elixir
defmodule MyParser do
import NimbleParsec
date =
integer(4)
|> ignore(string("-"))
|> integer(2)
|> ignore(string("-"))
|> integer(2)
time =
integer(2)
|> ignore(string(":"))
|> integer(2)
|> ignore(string(":"))
|> integer(2)
|> optional(string("Z"))
defparsec :datetime, date |> ignore(string("T")) |> concat(time), debug: true
end
MyParser.datetime("2010-04-17T14:12:34Z")
#=> {:ok, [2010, 4, 17, 14, 12, 34, "Z"], "", %{}, {1, 0}, 20}
```
If you add `debug: true` to `defparsec/3`, it will print the generated
clauses, which are shown below:
```elixir
defp datetime__0(<<x0, x1, x2, x3, "-", x4, x5, "-", x6, x7, "T",
x8, x9, ":", x10, x11, ":", x12, x13, rest::binary>>,
acc, stack, comb__context, comb__line, comb__column)
when x0 >= 48 and x0 <= 57 and (x1 >= 48 and x1 <= 57) and
(x2 >= 48 and x2 <= 57) and (x3 >= 48 and x3 <= 57) and
(x4 >= 48 and x4 <= 57) and (x5 >= 48 and x5 <= 57) and
(x6 >= 48 and x6 <= 57) and (x7 >= 48 and x7 <= 57) and
(x8 >= 48 and x8 <= 57) and (x9 >= 48 and x9 <= 57) and
(x10 >= 48 and x10 <= 57) and (x11 >= 48 and x11 <= 57) and
(x12 >= 48 and x12 <= 57) and (x13 >= 48 and x13 <= 57) do
datetime__1(
rest,
[(x13 - 48) * 1 + (x12 - 48) * 10, (x11 - 48) * 1 + (x10 - 48) * 10,
(x9 - 48) * 1 + (x8 - 48) * 10, (x7 - 48) * 1 + (x6 - 48) * 10, (x5 - 48) * 1 + (x4 - 48) * 10,
(x3 - 48) * 1 + (x2 - 48) * 10 + (x1 - 48) * 100 + (x0 - 48) * 1000] ++ acc,
stack,
comb__context,
comb__line,
comb__column + 19
)
end
defp datetime__0(rest, acc, _stack, context, line, column) do
{:error, "...", rest, context, line, column}
end
defp datetime__1(<<"Z", rest::binary>>, acc, stack, comb__context, comb__line, comb__column) do
datetime__2(rest, ["Z"] ++ acc, stack, comb__context, comb__line, comb__column + 1)
end
defp datetime__1(rest, acc, stack, context, line, column) do
datetime__2(rest, acc, stack, context, line, column)
end
defp datetime__2(rest, acc, _stack, context, line, column) do
{:ok, acc, rest, context, line, column}
end
```
As you can see, it generates highly inlined code, comparable to
hand-written parsers. This gives `NimbleParsec` an order of magnitude
performance gains compared to other parser combinators. Further performance
can be gained by giving the `inline: true` option to `defparsec/3`.
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## Installation
Add `nimble_parsec` to your list of dependencies in `mix.exs`:
```elixir
def deps do
[
{:nimble_parsec, "~> 1.0"}
]
end
```
## Nimble*
All nimble libraries by Dashbit:
* [NimbleCSV](https://github.com/dashbitco/nimble_csv) - simple and fast CSV parsing
* [NimbleOptions](https://github.com/dashbitco/nimble_options) - tiny library for validating and documenting high-level options
* [NimbleParsec](https://github.com/dashbitco/nimble_parsec) - simple and fast parser combinators
* [NimblePool](https://github.com/dashbitco/nimble_pool) - tiny resource-pool implementation
* [NimblePublisher](https://github.com/dashbitco/nimble_publisher) - a minimal filesystem-based publishing engine with Markdown support and code highlighting
* [NimbleTOTP](https://github.com/dashbitco/nimble_totp) - tiny library for generating time-based one time passwords (TOTP)
## License
Copyright 2018 Plataformatec \
Copyright 2020 Dashbit
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.