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Canonical Precedence Schemes
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Volume 20 ,  Issue 2  (April 1973) table of contents
Pages: 214 - 234  
Year of Publication: 1973
ISSN:0004-5411
Authors
James N. Gray  IBM Research Laboratory, San Jose, California
Michael A. Harrison  Department of Computer Science, University of California, Berkeley, California
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 7,   Downloads (12 Months): 38,   Citation Count: 3
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ABSTRACT

A general theory of canonical precedence analysis is defined and studied. The familiar types of precedence analysis such as operator precedence or simple precedence occur as special cases of this theory. Among the theoretical results obtained are a characterization of the structure of precedence relations and the relation of canonical precedence schemes to operator sets.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
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COLMERAUER, A. Precedence, analyse syntaxique et languages de prograrnmation. Th., U. of Grenoble, 1967.
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GRAI~AM, S.L. Extended precedence languages, bounded right context languages and deterministic languages. Proc. IEEE llth Annum Symp. on Switching and Automata Theory, Oct. 1970, pp. 175-180.
 
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GRAY, J.N. Precedence parsers for programming languages. Ph.D. Th., Dep. of Computer Sci., U. of California, Berkeley, Calif., Sept. 1969.
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KNUTH, D. E. On the translation of languages from left to right. Inform. and Contr. 8, (1965), 607-639.
 
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MCKEEMAN, W.M. An approach to computer language design. Tech. Rep. CS48, Cornput. Sci. Dep., Stanford U., Stanford, Calif., 1966.
 
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PAIR, C. Arbres, piles et compilation. Revue Franfalse de Tra~tement de l'Informatio~ 7, 3 0964), 199-216.
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Collaborative Colleagues:
James N. Gray: colleagues
Michael A. Harrison: colleagues