Limn  0.1
Limn

Limn is a tiny parser library for C++17 and up. It is designed to be easy to use and to compile quickly. It was inspired by the excellent Boost Spirit.

Compilation time

On my laptop, the Limn tests compile in about half a second. For reference, my laptop compiles the Boost Spirit employee example in about 10 seconds.

Compiler support

The earliest compiler versions that Limn supports are:

N.B. On MSVC I only tested compilation since I don't have a Windows computer.

Usage

This is a single header library. Simply #include "limn.h". There are no dependencies besides the STL's string_view and cctype.

Then call bool parse(std:string_view, Parser). Take a look at the example Parsers below.

For reference style documentation, go to codedocs or run make docs. To run the tests, run make && ./a.out.

Examples

#include "limn.h"

using namespace lm;

// Check if a string matches
bool isHelloWorld(std::string_view sv) {
    return parse(sv, lit_("Hello") >> *space_ >> lit_("World") >> end_);
}

// Return the match
std::string_view getMatch(std::string_view sv) {
    std::string_view out;
    parse(sv, (lit_("GET") | lit_("POST")) >> space_ >> (*alnum_)[out]);
    return out;
}

// Recursive example: match valid parentheses
// Can run at compile time
constexpr bool validParentheses(std::string_view& sv) {
    return parse_ref(
        sv,
        +(lit_("()") | (char_('(') >> action_(validParentheses) >> char_(')')))
    );
}

Look at tests.cpp and http.cpp for more example code.

Skip whitespace and Lexer mode

The parser automatically skip the whitespace between tokens, but in some cases you do not want to skip whitespace. For example, in lexer mode, if you to match an identifier such as alpha_ >> *alnum_, this will match the whole string a b, because when running the >> seq function, the space between a and b will get skipped, so the matched string is not you want. In this case, you have to write lexeme_(alpha_ >> *alnum_), here the class lexeme_ has skip whitespace feature disabled for all its sub parsers, so, you get a correct identifier a.