NAME¶
Marpa::R2::Acknowledgements - Marpa acknowledgements
Acknowledgements¶
Marpa is directly derived from two other parsers. The first was discovered by
John Aycock and R. Nigel Horspool and is described in their Aycock and
Horspool 2002. The second was discovered by Joop Leo and is described in Leo
1991. Aycock, Horspool, and Leo, in turn, based their algorithms on the
algorithm discovered by Jay Earley. I combined the Aycock-Horspool algorithm
with the Leo algorithm, and added significant changes of my own.
I'm grateful to Randal Schwartz for his support over the years that I've been
working on Marpa. My chats with Larry Wall have been few and brief, but his
openness to new ideas has been a major encouragement and his insight into the
relationship between "natural language" and computer language has
been a major influence. More recently, Allison Randal and Patrick Michaud have
been generous with their very valuable time. They might have preferred that I
volunteered as a Parrot cage-cleaner, but if so, they were too polite to say.
Many at perlmonks.org answered questions for me. I used answers from chromatic,
Corion, dragonchild, jdporter, samtregar and Juerd, among others, in writing
this module. I'm just as grateful to those whose answers I didn't use. My
inquiries were made while I was thinking out the code and it wasn't always
100% clear what I was after. If the butt is moved after the round, it
shouldn't count against the archer.
In writing the Pure Perl version of Marpa, I benefited from studying the work of
Francois Desarmenien ("Parse::Yapp"), Damian Conway
("Parse::RecDescent") and Graham Barr ("Scalar::Util").
Adam Kennedy patiently instructed me in module writing, both on the finer
points and on issues about which I really should have known better.
I am very grateful to a handful of early contributors, whose contributions were
made when I desperately needed help. I am especially grateful to Ron Savage,
who has been a very aggressive early adopter of all Marpa's versions. Ruslan
Zakirov generously started, and agreed to moderate, the "Marpa
parser" mailing list. Peter Stuifzand invented the "Stuifzand
interface", which was the original inspiration for the SLIF.
Ron, Peter and Ruslan Z. have since gone on to contribute in ways too numerous
to mention, and others have joined in. Jean-Damien Durand's numerous
contributions include the Windows port of Marpa. Ruslan Shvedov helped with
ASF's and my documentation. Andrew Rodland's TAP parser, with one Marpa
grammar layered on another, was another major inspiration for the SLIF.
Finally, my thanks to all those who participated on the "Marpa parser"
mailing list. It is hard to describe how important informed and constructive
feedback is to a lone laborer on a complex and large project like Marpa, and I
greatly appreciate all the contributors to the list.
Copyright and License¶
Copyright 2014 Jeffrey Kegler
This file is part of Marpa::R2. Marpa::R2 is free software: you can
redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser
General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation,
either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
Marpa::R2 is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser
General Public License along with Marpa::R2. If not, see
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.