Thanks. I am investigating several options now including modifying the v3 ANSI C grammar. I ran into an issue with typedef with that grammar and am trying to reproduce it in a simpler example.
rahul On Sun, Dec 13, 2009 at 1:02 PM, Jim Idle <[email protected]> wrote: > You could write your own based upon the v3 version of the C grammar. > Someone was transforming this to a full gcc compatible parser and said > they would publish it, but that seems to have gone away. Not sure about > ANTLR based tools, but there are plenty of C transformation tools out there. > > > > Jim > > > > *From:* [email protected] [mailto: > [email protected]] *On Behalf Of *Rahul Garg > *Sent:* Saturday, December 12, 2009 8:49 PM > > *To:* [email protected] > *Subject:* [antlr-interest] cgram project : updated to antlr 3.2? > > > > Hi. > > I am attempting to write a C source-to-source translator to add some code > transformations and some instrumentation to a bunch of C source code. The > source code is not entirely ANSI but is GCC compatible. > For this purpose, I found "cgram", an antlr based system but it appears to > be written for Antlr2. Are there any equivalent tools written for antlr 3? > > > thanks, > rahul > > > List: http://www.antlr.org/mailman/listinfo/antlr-interest > Unsubscribe: > http://www.antlr.org/mailman/options/antlr-interest/your-email-address > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "il-antlr-interest" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/il-antlr-interest?hl=en.
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