Hi,

I am writing a Text Adventure game in Haskell (like Zork)

I have all of the basic parser stuff written as described in Hutton's 
Programming in Haskell and his associated papers. (I'm trying to avoid using 
3rd party libraries, so that I can learn this myself)

Everything that I have works (so far...) except for the following problem:

I want to define a grammar using a series of Verbs like this:

data Verb = Go | Get | Jump | Climb | Give etc, etc deriving (Show, Read)

and then have my parser "get" one of these Verb tokens if possible; otherwise 
it should do something (?) else like give an error message stating "I don't 
know that command"

Now, Hutton gives examples of parsing strings into string whereas I want to 
parse Strings into my Verbs

So, if the user types "get sword" then it will tokenise "get" as type Verb's 
data constructor Get and perhaps "sword" into a Noun called Sword

My parser is defined like this:

newtype Parser a = Parser (String -> [(a, String)])

So I CAN give it a Verb type

but this is where I run into a problem....

I've written a Parser called keyword

keyword :: Parser Verb
keyword = do x <- many1 letter
                        return (read x)

(read this as "take-at-least-one-alphabetic-letter-and-convert-to-a-Verb-type")

which DOES work provided that the user types in one of my Verbs. If they don't, 
well, the whole thing fails with an Exception and halts processing, returning 
to GHCi prompt.

Question: Am I going about this the right way? I want to put together lots of 
"data" types like Verb and Noun etc so that I can build a kind of "BNF grammar".

Question: If I am going about this the right way then what do I about the "read 
x" bit failing when the user stops typing in a recognised keyword. I could 
catch the exception, but typing an incorrect sentence is just a typo, not 
really appropriate for an exception, I shouldn't think. If it IS appropriate to 
do this in Haskell, then how do I catch this exception and continue processing. 

I thought that exceptions should be for exceptional circumstances, and it would 
seem that I might be misusing them in this context.

Thanks

Mark Spezzano

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