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DSL
2009

Gel: A Generic Extensible Language

13 years 9 months ago
Gel: A Generic Extensible Language
Abstract. Both XML and Lisp have demonstrated the utility of generic syntax for expressing tree-structured data. But generic languages do not provide the syntactic richness of custom languages. Generic Expression Language (Gel) is a rich generic syntax that embodies many of the common syntactic conventions for operators, grouping and lists in widely-used languages. Prefix/infix operators are disambiguated by white-space, so that documents which violate common white-space conventions will not necessarily parse correctly with Gel. With some character replacements and adjusting for mismatch in operator precedence, Gel can extract meaningful structure from typical files in many languages, including Java, CSS, Smalltalk, and ANTLR grammars. This evaluation shows the expressive power of Gel, not that Gel can be used as a parser for existing languages. Gel is intended to serve as a generic language for creating composable domainspecific languages.
Jose Falcon, William R. Cook
Added 17 Feb 2011
Updated 17 Feb 2011
Type Journal
Year 2009
Where DSL
Authors Jose Falcon, William R. Cook
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