Warning: This is the manual of the legacy Guile 2.2 series. You may want to read the manual of the current stable series instead.

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6.17 PEG Parsing

Parsing Expression Grammars (PEGs) are a way of specifying formal languages for text processing. They can be used either for matching (like regular expressions) or for building recursive descent parsers (like lex/yacc). Guile uses a superset of PEG syntax that allows more control over what information is preserved during parsing.

Wikipedia has a clear and concise introduction to PEGs if you want to familiarize yourself with the syntax: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parsing_expression_grammar.

The (ice-9 peg) module works by compiling PEGs down to lambda expressions. These can either be stored in variables at compile-time by the define macros (define-peg-pattern and define-peg-string-patterns) or calculated explicitly at runtime with the compile functions (compile-peg-pattern and peg-string-compile).

They can then be used for either parsing (match-pattern) or searching (search-for-pattern). For convenience, search-for-pattern also takes pattern literals in case you want to inline a simple search (people often use regular expressions this way).

The rest of this documentation consists of a syntax reference, an API reference, and a tutorial.