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Second IEEE International Workshop on Source Code Analysis and Manipulation (SCAM'02)
Grammar Programming in TXL
Montreal, Canada
October 01-October 01
ISBN: 0-7695-1793-5
Thomas R. Dean, Queen?s University
James R. Cordy, Queen?s University
Andrew J. Malton, University of Waterloo
Kevin A. Schneider, University of Saskatchewan
Syntactic analysis forms a foundation of many source analysis and reverse engineering tools. However, a single grammar is not always appropriate for all source analysis and manipulation tasks. Small changes to the grammar can make the programs used to accomplish these tasks simpler and more straightforward. This leads to a new paradigm of programming these tools: grammar programming. This paper discusses several industry proven techniques that can be used when designing base grammars and when making task specific changes to grammars.
Citation:
Thomas R. Dean, James R. Cordy, Andrew J. Malton, Kevin A. Schneider, "Grammar Programming in TXL," scam, pp.93, Second IEEE International Workshop on Source Code Analysis and Manipulation (SCAM'02), 2002
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