Details, Explanation and Meaning About Extended Backus-Naur form

Extended Backus-Naur form Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

The Extended Backus-Naur form (EBNF) is any variation on the basic Backus-Naur form (BNF) metasyntax notation with (some of) the following additional constructs:
  • square brackets "[..]" surrounding optional items,
  • suffix "*" for Kleene closure (a sequence of zero or more of an item), suffix "+" for one or more of an item, curly brackets enclosing a list of alternatives,
  • super/subscripts indicating between n and m occurrences.

When Niklaus Wirth was developing Pascal, he simplified Backus-Naur Form to create EBNF.

All these constructs can be expressed in plain BNF using extra productions and have been added for readability and succinctness.

There is an International standard (ISO 14977) that defines an EBNF. A draft is freely available from http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/iso-ebnf.html. This draft document has some mistakes in it. Throughout the text, as well as in the comments of the examples, `meta-identifiers' are `written as one or more words joined together by hyphens' (as stated in section 4). On the other hand, all examples (except the comments) use spaces to separate several words.

The W3C used a different EBNF to specify the XML syntax.

Table of contents
1 See also
2 References
3 External links

See also

  • Syntax diagram
  • Spirit Parser Framework

References

External links


This is an Article on Extended Backus-Naur form. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Extended Backus-Naur form


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