A
Simple LR parser or
SLR parser is an
LR parser for which the parsing tables are generated as for an
LR(0) parser except that it only performs a reduction with a grammar rule
A →
w if the next symbol on the input stream is in the follow set of
A (see
LL parser for a definition of follow set). Such a parser can prevent certain shift-reduce and reduce-reduce conflicts (see
LR parser) that occur in LR(0) parsers and it can therefore deal with more grammars. However, it still cannot parse all grammars that can be parsed by an
LR(1) parser. A grammar that can be parsed by an SLR parser is called a
SLR grammar.
A grammar that can be parsed by an SLR parser but not by an LR(0) parser is the following:
- (1) E → 1 E
- (2) E → 1
Constructing the action and goto table as is done for LR(0) parsers would give the following item sets and tables:
- Item set 0
- S → · E
- + E → · 1 E
- + E → · 1
- Item set 1
- E → 1 · E
- E → 1 ·
- + E → · 1 E
- + E → · 1
- Item set 2
- S → E ·
- Item set 3
- E → 1 E ·
The action and goto tables:
|
action |
goto |
state |
1 |
$ |
E |
0 |
s1 |
|
2 |
1 |
s2/r2 |
r2 |
3 |
2 |
|
acc |
|
3 |
r1 |
r1 |
|
As can be observed there is a shift-reduce conflict for state 1 and terminal '1'. However, the follow set of E is { $ } so the reduce actions r1 and r2 are only valid in the column for $. The result are the following conflict-less action and goto table:
|
action |
goto |
state |
1 |
$ |
E |
0 |
s1 |
|
2 |
1 |
s2 |
r2 |
3 |
2 |
|
acc |
|
3 |
|
r1 |
|
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