I wanted to focus more on the actual rules of FIRST and FOLLOW then on a specific grammar. So that if you know these rules, you can complete the sets for any grammar
I know I know. Just kidding. I tried my feet in C many times, because the arguments for simplicity are very persuasive. But I'm always coming back to C++.
I'd write a recursive descent parser, exactly because it's simple to do, easy, and there's so much science behind it. It's proven to work, it's easy to do, it just works, and it's fast.
And I do usually write recursive descent parsers rather than tables or a tool. Because I enjoy it, and if I wouldn't then who cares if the tool or library is written in C++ or C so long as it integrates with me C++ code.
All I'm saying is that C has its place. Sometimes when we say C++ we actually refer in part to C. That's what C++ is: a hybrid language. So it's wrong to dismiss C with an argument like "it's primitive".
well it is. but in a proper, ok way. you know what i mean.
Sometimes checking return codes is the way to go. Check out boost::filesystem that doubles signatures with throwing and filling an error object. For destructors, it's cleaner this way.
I just love C++'s hybrid nature, and I accept it, and I embrace it. C is part of C++, in its culture and way of doing things. It's a choice. Bad programmers stick to it when coding C++, but good programmers know this choice and take it when appropriate.
The C part of C++ should have been ejectable. So that when the language became popular allegedly thanks to C, it could eject the C in it and become clean.
@wilhelmtell C is definitly not part of C++ in the way we do things. C has return code, we have exceptions, C has manual memory management, we have RAII, etc etc
For example, try { /* code */ } catch ( ... ) { } in dtors is boilerplate, and that's a bad thing. we're so proud of having less boilerplate than Java, so we should avoid boilerplate.
@wilhelmtell Err, I'd rather have verbosity when I ignore something than the other way around. You know, explicitly seeing you ignore something is good
@CatPlusPlus It seems to be some standard build system... you say ./build.sh proj config to configure and ./build.sh proj to build. Config scripts seem to be in build/unix/* etc. It must be some premade system.
my only issue is that i use recursive make and i'm scared of the idea of transferring it to none-recursive. because i know that it'll expand in size exponentially.