Practice: Multiplication and Division
We have addition and subtraction. Let's add multiplication and division the same way.
Add Star and Slash to Token
#[derive(Debug, Clone, PartialEq)]
enum Token {
Number(f64),
Plus,
Minus,
Star, // <- added
Slash, // <- added
}
Lexer
'*' => {
tokens.push(Token::Star);
self.pos += 1;
}
'/' => {
tokens.push(Token::Slash);
self.pos += 1;
}
You should be used to this by now.
Parser
Add Star and Slash to the loop in parse:
fn parse(&mut self) -> Expr {
let mut left = self.parse_primary();
loop {
match self.peek() {
Some(Token::Plus)
| Some(Token::Minus)
| Some(Token::Star) // <- added
| Some(Token::Slash) => { // <- added
let op = self.next_token().unwrap();
let right = self.parse_primary();
left = Expr::BinOp {
op,
left: Box::new(left),
right: Box::new(right),
};
}
_ => break,
}
}
left
}
eval
match op {
Token::Plus => l + r,
Token::Minus => l - r,
Token::Star => l * r, // <- added
Token::Slash => l / r, // <- added
_ => panic!("unknown operator: {:?}", op),
}
Try It Out
fn main() {
let tests = vec![
("2 * 3", 6.0),
("10 / 3", 10.0 / 3.0),
("2 + 3 * 4", 20.0), // ???
];
for (input, expected) in tests {
let mut lexer = Lexer::new(input.to_string());
let tokens = lexer.tokenize();
let mut parser = Parser::new(tokens);
let ast = parser.parse();
let result = eval(ast);
println!("{} = {} (expected {})", input, result, expected);
}
}
2 * 3 = 6 (expected 6)
10 / 3 = 3.3333333333333335 (expected 3.3333333333333335)
2 + 3 * 4 = 20 (expected 20)
Wait. 2 + 3 * 4 gives 20?
In arithmetic, 3 * 4 should be computed first, giving 2 + 12 = 14.
But our Parser treats all operators with the same precedence from left to right, so it computes (2 + 3) * 4 = 20.
Let's look at the AST:
let mut lexer = Lexer::new("2 + 3 * 4".to_string());
let tokens = lexer.tokenize();
let mut parser = Parser::new(tokens);
let ast = parser.parse();
println!("{:?}", ast);
BinOp { op: Star, left: BinOp { op: Plus, left: Number(2.0), right: Number(3.0) }, right: Number(4.0) }
Plus gets grouped first. It should be Star that gets grouped first.
We'll fix this in the next chapter.
Complete Code for This Chapter
#[derive(Debug, Clone, PartialEq)]
enum Token {
Number(f64),
Plus,
Minus,
Star,
Slash,
}
struct Lexer {
input: Vec<char>,
pos: usize,
}
impl Lexer {
fn new(input: String) -> Lexer {
Lexer {
input: input.chars().collect(),
pos: 0,
}
}
fn tokenize(&mut self) -> Vec<Token> {
let mut tokens = Vec::new();
while self.pos < self.input.len() {
let ch = self.input[self.pos];
match ch {
' ' | '\t' => {
self.pos += 1;
}
'+' => {
tokens.push(Token::Plus);
self.pos += 1;
}
'-' => {
tokens.push(Token::Minus);
self.pos += 1;
}
'*' => {
tokens.push(Token::Star);
self.pos += 1;
}
'/' => {
tokens.push(Token::Slash);
self.pos += 1;
}
'0'..='9' => {
let token = self.read_number();
tokens.push(token);
}
_ => {
self.pos += 1;
}
}
}
tokens
}
fn read_number(&mut self) -> Token {
let start = self.pos;
while self.pos < self.input.len()
&& (self.input[self.pos].is_ascii_digit() || self.input[self.pos] == '.')
{
self.pos += 1;
}
let num_str: String = self.input[start..self.pos].iter().collect();
let num: f64 = num_str.parse().unwrap();
Token::Number(num)
}
}
#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
enum Expr {
Number(f64),
BinOp {
op: Token,
left: Box<Expr>,
right: Box<Expr>,
},
}
struct Parser {
tokens: Vec<Token>,
pos: usize,
}
impl Parser {
fn new(tokens: Vec<Token>) -> Parser {
Parser { tokens, pos: 0 }
}
fn peek(&self) -> Option<Token> {
if self.pos < self.tokens.len() {
Some(self.tokens[self.pos].clone())
} else {
None
}
}
fn next_token(&mut self) -> Option<Token> {
if self.pos < self.tokens.len() {
let token = self.tokens[self.pos].clone();
self.pos += 1;
Some(token)
} else {
None
}
}
fn parse(&mut self) -> Expr {
let mut left = self.parse_primary();
loop {
match self.peek() {
Some(Token::Plus)
| Some(Token::Minus)
| Some(Token::Star)
| Some(Token::Slash) => {
let op = self.next_token().unwrap();
let right = self.parse_primary();
left = Expr::BinOp {
op,
left: Box::new(left),
right: Box::new(right),
};
}
_ => break,
}
}
left
}
fn parse_primary(&mut self) -> Expr {
match self.next_token() {
Some(Token::Number(n)) => Expr::Number(n),
other => panic!("expected number, got {:?}", other),
}
}
}
fn eval(expr: Expr) -> f64 {
match expr {
Expr::Number(n) => n,
Expr::BinOp { op, left, right } => {
let l = eval(*left);
let r = eval(*right);
match op {
Token::Plus => l + r,
Token::Minus => l - r,
Token::Star => l * r,
Token::Slash => l / r,
_ => panic!("unknown operator: {:?}", op),
}
}
}
}
fn main() {
// All four operations work! ...but precedence is wrong
let input = String::from("2 + 3 * 4");
let mut lexer = Lexer::new(input);
let tokens = lexer.tokenize();
let mut parser = Parser::new(tokens);
let ast = parser.parse();
let result = eval(ast);
println!("2 + 3 * 4 = {} (should be 14)", result); // gives 20
}
All four operations are in, but operator precedence is broken. Next chapter, we fix this and finish the calculator.