Book Image

Perl 6 Deep Dive

By : Andrew Shitov
Book Image

Perl 6 Deep Dive

By: Andrew Shitov

Overview of this book

Perl is a family of high-level, general-purpose, interpreted, dynamic programming languages consisting of Perl 5 and Perl 6. Perl 6 helps developers write concise and declarative code that is easy to maintain. This book is an end-to-end guide that will help non-Perl developers get to grips with the language and use it to solve real-world problems. Beginning with a brief introduction to Perl 6, the first module in the book will teach you how to write and execute basic programs. The second module delves into language constructs, where you will learn about the built-in data types, variables, operators, modules, subroutines, and so on available in Perl 6. Here the book also delves deeply into data manipulation (for example, strings and text files) and you will learn how to create safe and correct Perl 6 modules. You will learn to create software in Perl by following the Object Oriented Paradigm. The final module explains in detail the incredible concurrency support provided by Perl 6. Here you will also learn about regexes, functional programming, and reactive programming in Perl 6. By the end of the book, with the help of a number of examples that you can follow and immediately run, modify, and use in practice, you will be fully conversant with the benefits of Perl 6.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Using rules and tokens

Grammars in Perl 6 offers a very useful way to split the grammar elements into parts. Let us use it to clarify the grammar elements.

The complex regex \s* (.*? ';') ['#' <-[\n]>* ]? contains two parts—the regex to extract a statement and the regex for comments. We are extracting them into separate rules. A single rule describes a small piece of the grammar and can refer to other rules. Examine the following example:

grammar G {
rule TOP {
^
[ <statement> \s* <comment>? ]*
$
}

rule statement {
.*? ';'
}

rule comment {

'#' <-[\n]>*
}
}

Now the TOP rule is much clearer and you immediately see that the program is a sequence of statements with optional comments after them (our grammar does not allow a comment without a statement).

So...