Experiment 4
Experiment 4
Experiment No: 04
Theory:
Operator precedence determines the grouping of terms in an expression and decides how an
expression is evaluated. Certain operators have higher precedence than others; for example, the
multiplication operator has a higher precedence than the addition operator.
For example, x = 7 + 3 * 2; here, x is assigned 13, not 20 because operator * has a higher
precedence than +, so it first gets multiplied with 3*2 and then adds into 7.
Here, operators with the highest precedence appear at the top of the table, those with the lowest
appear at the bottom. Within an expression, higher precedence operators will be evaluated first.
Operator precedence grammars rely on the following three precedence relations between the
terminals:
Relation Meaning
#include<stdio.h>
#include<string.h>
char *input;
int i=0;
char lasthandle[6],stack[50],handles[][5]={")E(","E*E","E+E","i","E^E"};
//(E) becomes )E( when pushed to stack
DEAPRTMENT OF COMPUTER ENGINEERING
int top=0,l;
char prec[9][9]={
/*input*/
/*stack + - * / ^ i ( ) $ */
/* + */ '>', '>','<','<','<','<','<','>','>',
/* - */ '>', '>','<','<','<','<','<','>','>',
/* * */ '>', '>','>','>','<','<','<','>','>',
/* / */ '>', '>','>','>','<','<','<','>','>',
/* ^ */ '>', '>','>','>','<','<','<','>','>',
/* i */ '>', '>','>','>','>','e','e','>','>',
/* ( */ '<', '<','<','<','<','<','<','>','e',
/* ) */ '>', '>','>','>','>','e','e','>','>',
/* $ */ '<', '<','<','<','<','<','<','<','>',
};
int getindex(char c)
{
switch(c)
DEAPRTMENT OF COMPUTER ENGINEERING
{
case '+':return 0;
case '-':return 1;
case '*':return 2;
case '/':return 3;
case '^':return 4;
case 'i':return 5;
case '(':return 6;
case ')':return 7;
case '$':return 8;
}
}
int shift()
{
stack[++top]=*(input+i++);
stack[top+1]='\0';
}
int reduce()
{
int i,len,found,t;
for(i=0;i<5;i++)//selecting handles
{
len=strlen(handles[i]);
if(stack[top]==handles[i][0]&&top+1>=len)
{
found=1;
for(t=0;t<len;t++)
{
if(stack[top-t]!=handles[i][t])
{
found=0;
DEAPRTMENT OF COMPUTER ENGINEERING
break;
}
}
if(found==1)
{
stack[top-t+1]='E';
top=top-t+1;
strcpy(lasthandle,handles[i]);
stack[top+1]='\0';
return 1;//successful reduction
}
}
}
return 0;
}
void dispstack()
{
int j;
for(j=0;j<=top;j++)
printf("%c",stack[j]);
}
void dispinput()
{
int j;
for(j=i;j<l;j++)
printf("%c",*(input+j));}
void main()
{
int j;
input=(char*)malloc(50*sizeof(char));
printf("\nEnter the string\n");
DEAPRTMENT OF COMPUTER ENGINEERING
scanf("%s",input);
input=strcat(input,"$");
l=strlen(input);
strcpy(stack,"$");
printf("\nSTACK\tINPUT\tACTION");
while(i<=l) {
shift();
printf("\n");
dispstack();
printf("\t");
dispinput();
printf("\tShift");
if(prec[getindex(stack[top])][getindex(input[i])]=='>') {
while(reduce())
{
printf("\n");
dispstack();
printf("\t");
dispinput();
printf("\tReduced: E->%s",lasthandle);
}}}
if(strcmp(stack,"$E$")==0)
printf("\nAccepted;");
else printf("\nNot Accepted;");}
DEAPRTMENT OF COMPUTER ENGINEERING
Conclusion: This experiment will help students to understand the concept of bottom-up
parsing technique.