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Re: bison ps f


From: Joel E. Denny
Subject: Re: bison ps f
Date: Wed, 8 Mar 2006 14:38:23 -0500 (EST)

On Wed, 8 Mar 2006, Paul Eggert wrote:

> "Joel E. Denny" <address@hidden> writes:
> 
> > Should we go ahead and update the same sentences in the Introduction in 
> > "doc/bison.texinfo"?
> > Are we not ready to advertise the C++ skeleton at this level?
> 
> I don't see why not.  (Perhaps you could do the honors?  Thanks.
> I continue to be leery of messing with C++ stuff....)

I committed these changes.

Joel

Index: bison.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /web/bison/bison/bison.html,v
retrieving revision 1.14
diff -p -u -r1.14 bison.html
--- bison.html  7 Mar 2006 07:07:24 -0000       1.14
+++ bison.html  8 Mar 2006 19:23:09 -0000
@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ WIDTH="129" HEIGHT="122"></A>
 <P>
 Bison is a general-purpose parser generator that converts
 a grammar description for an LALR(1) or GLR context-free grammar
-into a C program to parse that grammar.
+into a C or C++ program to parse that grammar.
 Once you are proficient with Bison,
 you can use it to develop a wide range of language parsers,
 from those used in simple desk calculators


2006-03-08  Joel E. Denny  <address@hidden>

        * doc/bison.texinfo (Introduction): Mention GLR and C++ as on the web
        page.  Say "you can use it" not "you may use it" as on the web page;
        we're describing capabilities not granting permission.

Index: doc/bison.texinfo
===================================================================
RCS file: /sources/bison/bison/doc/bison.texinfo,v
retrieving revision 1.178
diff -p -u -r1.178 bison.texinfo
--- doc/bison.texinfo   6 Mar 2006 07:39:11 -0000       1.178
+++ doc/bison.texinfo   8 Mar 2006 19:24:09 -0000
@@ -336,16 +336,16 @@ Copying This Manual
 @unnumbered Introduction
 @cindex introduction
 
address@hidden is a general-purpose parser generator that converts a
-grammar description for an @acronym{LALR}(1) context-free grammar into a C
-program to parse that grammar.  Once you are proficient with Bison,
-you may use it to develop a wide range of language parsers, from those
address@hidden is a general-purpose parser generator that converts a grammar
+description for an @acronym{LALR}(1) or @acronym{GLR} context-free grammar
+into a C or C++ program to parse that grammar.  Once you are proficient with
+Bison, you can use it to develop a wide range of language parsers, from those
 used in simple desk calculators to complex programming languages.
 
 Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all properly-written Yacc grammars
 ought to work with Bison with no change.  Anyone familiar with Yacc
 should be able to use Bison with little trouble.  You need to be fluent in
-C programming in order to use Bison or to understand this manual.
+C or C++ programming in order to use Bison or to understand this manual.
 
 We begin with tutorial chapters that explain the basic concepts of using
 Bison and show three explained examples, each building on the last.  If you




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