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Home/ Questions/Q 8671173
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 12, 20262026-06-12T18:53:05+00:00 2026-06-12T18:53:05+00:00

I’m working on a Bison file for a mathematical expression parser. Up to now

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I’m working on a Bison file for a mathematical expression parser. Up to now it’s mostly fine, but I’m facing a problem with implicit multiplications.

You see, I’d like to support expressions like 2x sin(4x) cos(4x). It should parse like 2 * x * sin(4 * x) * cos(4 * x). Nothing too bad here, but consider the following set of rules:

expr
    : /* snip */
    | '-' expr      { /* negate expression */ }
    | expr '-' expr { /* subtract expressions */ }
    | expr expr     { /* multiply expressions */ }

Having that implicit multiplication rule creates an ambiguity with the subtraction rule: is x - log(x) the subtraction of log(x) to x or the multiplication of x by -log(x)?

I’d be ready to settle for an easy solution, like “it’s a multiplication unless it’s subtracting”, but I don’t know how to tell that to Bison.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-12T18:53:07+00:00Added an answer on June 12, 2026 at 6:53 pm

    Having that implicit multiplication rule creates an ambiguity with the subtraction rule: is x – log(x) the subtraction of log(x) to x or the multiplication of x by -log(x)?

    Or even, is it x - l * o * g * x? Or maybe just x - log * x?

    So not quite a simple problem. Suppose you can tell just by looking at log that it is a function. Then you can disambiguate in your lexer, and you’re left with “in case of doubt, an operator that looks like an infix operator is an infix operator”. Here’s a quick solution:

    term   : ID
           | NUMBER
           | '(' expr ')'      { $$ = $2; }
           | FUNC '(' expr ')' { $$ = new_expr($1, 'c', $3); }
           ;
    
    factor : term
           | term factor       { $$ = new_expr($1, '*', $2); }
           ;
    
    prefix : factor
           | '-' factor        { $$ = new_expr(0, '-', $2); }
           ;
    
    muldiv : prefix
           | muldiv '/' prefix { $$ = new_expr($1, '/', $3); }
           | muldiv '*' prefix { $$ = new_expr($1, '*', $3); }
           ;
    
    expr   : muldiv
           | expr '+' muldiv { $$ = new_expr($1, '+', $3); }
           | expr '-' muldiv { $$ = new_expr($1, '-', $3); }
           ;
    

    This particular grammar disallows –x, although it’s perfectly happy with y–x, which means y-(-x). If you want to accept –x, you could change the second prefix production to '-' prefix.

    Personally, I’d prefer to be able to type sin 2x and log 3n but that starts to get a bit tricky. What does sin 2x cos 2x mean? Presumably, it means (sin(2*x))*(cos(2*x)). But does log nlog n not mean log(n*log(n)) ? This can all be achieved; it just requires thinking through all the possibilities.

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