Effacer les filtres
Effacer les filtres

General parsing function

2 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
maxroucool
maxroucool le 4 Mai 2012
Hi all,
I would like to parse a txt file in order to import it into Matlab so it is much more easier to treat.
The format of the txt file is kind of homemade, it looks like json but it doesn't seem to be so.
This is how it looks:
generator : "PAM-RTM 2011.0";
format_version : 2011.0;
date : "Thu May 03 15:04:21 2012";
General_Parameters {
simulation_description : "";
sampling_period : 10;
recover_sampling_period : 500;
max_experiment_time : 1.000000E+006;
fixed_dt_max : 1.000000E+025;
}
material {
name : "Default Resin";
family : material;
type : resin;
density : 1.000000E+003;
nb_vars_specific_heat : 0;
specific_heat {
family : function;
name : noname;
}
}
Of course I could do it with regexp() function, but I would like something robust. So I am looking for a function in which I could say what are the separating characters (such as {} : ;) and that generates a Matlab structure. Does it exists?
BR,
Max
  2 commentaires
Jan
Jan le 4 Mai 2012
As long as you do not define the wanted output format, an answer must contain a lot of guessing.
Daniel Shub
Daniel Shub le 4 Mai 2012
What makes you think that doing it with regexp is going to be robust? Or is it that you are worried that it is not going to be robust if you write it? It doesn't seem to me to be that hard of a question.

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Réponses (2)

Jan
Jan le 4 Mai 2012
No, due to the high level of generality, I'm sure there is no such function.

maxroucool
maxroucool le 4 Mai 2012
Thanks for your answers.
It's not that i don't trust regexp but rather that i don't trust my regexp skills. Anyway i will try it myself!
Br,
  3 commentaires
maxroucool
maxroucool le 4 Mai 2012
So what would you suggest without using regexp?
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 4 Mai 2012
What *I* would suggest would be to write a BNF grammar that matches your needs, and implement it in yacc and lex. That will produce C code, that you can write a mex wrapper for.
If you do not already know yacc and lex, I would suggest to you that it would be worth your time studying them: not necessarily for the syntax, but because they deal with fundamental text parsing concepts that you need to reproduce in whatever implementation you use.

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