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authorJSDurand <mmemmew@gmail.com>2023-01-06 23:42:28 +0800
committerJSDurand <mmemmew@gmail.com>2023-01-06 23:42:28 +0800
commitf27d604d93ce583d4404e1874664e08382ea2f00 (patch)
tree6fa8df26af954e94f3604ffabde4961ee8108c41 /forest
parent7dd4935230e303aef8d295d992239d59d95b32d7 (diff)
Save before system restart.
I am about to re-start my system, so I save before any crashes happen.
Diffstat (limited to 'forest')
-rw-r--r--forest/src/default.rs14
-rw-r--r--forest/src/design.org66
-rw-r--r--forest/src/lib.rs4
3 files changed, 69 insertions, 15 deletions
diff --git a/forest/src/default.rs b/forest/src/default.rs
index 456413b..5e438d4 100644
--- a/forest/src/default.rs
+++ b/forest/src/default.rs
@@ -61,14 +61,6 @@ impl<NodeLabel: GraphLabel, EdgeLabel: GraphLabel> Graph for DefaultForest<NodeL
}
}
-impl<NodeLabel: GraphLabel, EdgeLabel: GraphLabel> ExtGraph
- for DefaultForest<NodeLabel, EdgeLabel>
-{
- fn extend(&mut self, edges: impl IntoIterator<Item = usize>) -> Result<usize, GraphError> {
- self.graph.extend(edges)
- }
-}
-
#[derive(Debug)]
pub struct LabelIter<'a> {
set_iter: Iter<'a, usize>,
@@ -88,11 +80,7 @@ impl<'a> Iterator for LabelIter<'a> {
impl<'a> ExactSizeIterator for LabelIter<'a> {
fn len(&self) -> usize {
- let (lower, upper) = self.size_hint();
- // Note: This assertion is overly defensive, but it checks the
- // invariant guaranteed by the trait.
- debug_assert!(upper == Some(lower));
- lower
+ self.set_iter.len()
}
}
diff --git a/forest/src/design.org b/forest/src/design.org
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..771ca4b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/forest/src/design.org
@@ -0,0 +1,66 @@
+#+TITLE: Format of a binarised shared packed parse forests
+#+AUTHOR: Durand
+#+DATE: <2023-01-05 Jeu 23:55>
+#+STARTUP: content
+
+* Introduction
+
+I want to design a format for shared packed parse forests.
+They are needed for the chain-rule machine because the graphs need to
+be labelled (indirectly) by fragments of forests so that we can
+correctly and efficiently compute the semi-ring values along the
+chain-rule machine operations. Moreover, what we are really
+interested is the parse forests, so we will need to deal with this
+topic sooner or later, why not deal with it now? ;P
+
+* Principles
+
+- The number of children of nodes is bounded by a constant, in theory.
+ So it is only bounded by the computer hardware (and the grammar):
+ this representation is closer to the grammar rules.
+- Labels of nodes are grammar slots, that is positions within the
+ rules.
+- Edges have no labels: they are simply not needed.
+- We need to have two lists of "plugs" that we can plug other forests
+ in. For this we also need to know if a label is labelled on a node
+ that is a plug. This implies the use of hashmaps I guess.
+- When there are alternations in the forest, we use a "packed node" to
+ represent this alternation. Packed nodes are not labelled. They
+ just serve the role of putting nodes together.
+
+* Some thoughts [1/3]
+
+We do not need to attach forest fragments to nodes of nondeterministic
+finite automata: we just attach to them lists of grammar slots, which
+represent a sequence of "nulling out" nullable non-terminals, until
+the main non-terminal appears as the last element of the list (or even
+a range of slots to be even more efficient). A normal node would have
+a range with one element.
+
+That is it! We do not need to worry about the forests now as we would
+know how to combine the forest segments when we are performing the
+chain-rule operations: we know exactly when we are expanding
+non-terminals.
+
+Some caveats:
+
+- [X] Every node in the forest needs to know its parents. This is
+ needed for "reductions". That is, after we have parsed the entire
+ expansion for a non-terminal, we need to go back to where that
+ non-terminal was and continue from there.
+- [ ] We need to record the expansions of those "virtual nodes". That
+ is, the virtual nodes represent atomic languages such as [s]^{(t)}
+ where s is a non-terminal and t is a terminal. To be more specific,
+ it represents the derivative of the left-linear closure of the
+ non-terminal s with respect to the terminal t. The left-linear
+ closure of s is the set of all strings (consisting of terminals and
+ non-terminals alike) that are derivable from s alone, without
+ consuming any inputs, by expanding according to the grammar rules.
+ This means that we need to know if which non-terminals were expanded
+ in order to get to a state in [s]^{(t)}.
+- [ ] Each edge in the chain-rule machine needs to be labelled also
+ with a position in the forest. This perfectly solves the problem of
+ those "plugs"!
+
+
+
diff --git a/forest/src/lib.rs b/forest/src/lib.rs
index 527a78c..3925bd5 100644
--- a/forest/src/lib.rs
+++ b/forest/src/lib.rs
@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@
//! out-coming and in-coming plugs. These plugs are used to join
//! different fragments of forests together.
-use graph::{ExtGraph, GraphLabel};
+use graph::{Graph, GraphLabel};
use core::fmt::Display;
@@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ pub trait ForestBuilder<NodeLabel: GraphLabel, EdgeLabel: GraphLabel> {
///
/// Note that it contains a "striped down" version of the labelled
/// graphs.
-pub trait Forest<NodeLabel: GraphLabel, EdgeLabel: GraphLabel>: ExtGraph {
+pub trait Forest<NodeLabel: GraphLabel, EdgeLabel: GraphLabel>: Graph {
/// Type of iterator of plug-in nodes.
type PluginIter<'a>: Iterator<Item = usize> + 'a
where