[ale] Reminder: GoLUG compiler theory presentations Wednesday, 12/6/2023

Bob Toxen transam at verysecurelinux.com
Tue Dec 5 23:43:25 EST 2023


What you want is

  Principles of Compiler Design
  by Alfred V. Aho and Jeffrey D. Ullman

Also known as "The Dragon Book".  Btw, Aho the is Bell Labs researcher
who is the "A" in "awk".  It's what taught me compiler design and
was the text at Berkeley.

Buy it at

  https://www.thriftbooks.com/w/principles-of-compiler-design_alfred-v-aho/280562/#edition=2074022&idiq=2219596

Bob

On Tue, Dec 05, 2023 at 09:06:29PM -0500, Steve Litt via Ale wrote:
> Hi all,
> 
> This email is both a reminder of the meeting's who, what, where
> and when, and a progress report on my presentation and David's.
> First the meeting details:
> 
> ======================================================================
> What: Online presentation, Computer language and compiler construction
> Who: GoLUG's Steve Litt and David Billsbrough
> When: Wednesday 12/6/2023 at 7PM Eastern Standard Time
> NOTE: We will start PROMPTLY at 7:00PM EXACTLY!
> Where: Jitsi online presentation, https://meet.jit.si/golug [1]
> ======================================================================
> 
> David and I have both made astonishing progress. David's ready to give
> you the nuts and bolts understandings about the compiler creation
> process, including Parse Trees and other stuff way above my pay grade.
> 
> As for my presentation on Backus-Naur Format (BNF) and Flex/Bison
> compilers and converters, over a week ago I realized that online docs
> for Flex and Bison were usually contradictory, incomplete and/or
> ambiguous. They were all written by very smart people who forgot what
> it was like to know nothing, not even the key understandings necessary
> for newbies.
> 
> The "Flex & Bison" book I ordered has not arrived, but judging from the
> first four chapters, which are are available online, this book is too
> ambiguous for a newbie and it doesn't give enough emphasis to the fact
> that, for a real compiler, converter or Domain Specific Language (DSL),
> Flex and Bison are a package deal, and that Bison-only and Lex-only
> examples are so contrived and misleading as to be learning
> disadvantages.
> 
> ChatGPT is somewhat helpful, but can take you down dead end rabbit
> holes because it frames its guesses as facts, and even responds to the
> same question differently depending on which websites it scrapes first.
> I found ChatGPT to be a great resource for hearing relevant
> terminology, which I can then look up with web searches or queries on
> mailing lists. Speaking of mailing lists, they're great, but only when
> you know what question you want to ask and how to frame the question,
> and until you have several key understandings and know a little
> vocabulary, you just can't gain the benefits of mailing lists.
> 
> At the meeting I'll showcase a Lex/Bison "Hello World" (proof of
> concept) that actually serves as a first step to learning how to build
> compilers, converters and DSLs. This Hello World can be used to
> incrementally learn and build more complex compilers, converters and
> DSLs. Also, while you see and listen to my presentation, you'll acquire
> the key understandings necessary to learn in a straightforward manner,
> without gratuitous dead ends and inability to frame a question. While
> you see and listen to my presentation, you'll also understand using BNF
> to define a grammar. A grammar is a set of rules determining valid
> syntax. This is a good thing because when David gives his presentation,
> you'll need these key understandings to benefit from his nuts and bolts
> description of compiler construction. 
> 
> If you've wondered how people build new computer languages, compilers,
> interpreters, markup languages with converters, or even Domain Specific
> Languages (DSLs), this introductory presentation will de-mystify the
> topic.
> 
> I think David's and my presentations will be valued and remembered
> fondly by anyone who has ever been curious about how computer languages
> and compilers are made. I hope to see you there.
> 
> 
> ====
> [1]
> 
> Online via Jitsi:
> https://meet.jit.si/golug
> 
> Mobile app:
> https://jitsi.org/downloads/
> 
> Desktop app:
> https://github.com/jitsi/jitsi-meet-electron/releases
> 
> -- 
> 
> Steve Litt
> GoLUG Publicity Coordinator
> 
> Originally founded in Orlando, Florida, United States, GoLUG now
> welcomes an international audience for online presentations and
> discussions on Linux and adjacent technologies.
> 
> http://golug.org
> 
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