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Home/ Questions/Q 8097633
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 5, 20262026-06-05T21:49:26+00:00 2026-06-05T21:49:26+00:00

I’ve got an example from documentation for Text.Parsec.Expr . expr = buildExpressionParser table term

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I’ve got an example from documentation for Text.Parsec.Expr.

expr    = buildExpressionParser table term
          <?> "expression"
term    =  parens expr 
      <|> natural
      <?> "simple expression"
table   = [ [prefix "-" negate, prefix "+" id ]
          , [postfix "++" (+1)]  
          , [binary "*" (*) AssocLeft, binary "/" (div) AssocLeft ]
          , [binary "+" (+) AssocLeft, binary "-" (-)   AssocLeft ]
          ]

I’d tried to add postfix -- operation and changed the second line for table to

          , [postfix "++" (+1), postfix "--" (subtract 1)]  

Now

runParser expr () "expr" "1--" 

give me Right 1 in ghci.

Why I got it and how to provide postfix (--)?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-05T21:49:27+00:00Added an answer on June 5, 2026 at 9:49 pm

    "--1" gets parsed as [prefix "-", prefix "-", number 1] and evaluated as negate (negate 1) which yields 1.

    To get a postfix (--), does runParser expr () "expr" "1--" not give you a postfix --?

    The parse seems to not consume the entire input. I can’t tell why, though,

    module ExParse where
    
    import Text.Parsec
    import Text.Parsec.Expr
    
    parens p = do
        char '('
        e <- p
        char ')'
        return e
    
    reservedOp s = do
        string s
        notFollowedBy letter
    
    natural = fmap read $ many1 digit
    
    expr    = buildExpressionParser table term
              <?> "expression"
    term    =  parens expr 
          <|> natural
          <?> "simple expression"
    table   = [ [prefix "-" negate, prefix "+" id ]
              , [postfix "++" (+1), postfix "--" (subtract 1)]  
              , [binary "*" (*) AssocLeft, binary "/" (div) AssocLeft ]
              , [binary "+" (+) AssocLeft, binary "-" (-)   AssocLeft ]
              ]
    
    binary  name fun assoc = Infix (do{ reservedOp name; return fun }) assoc
    prefix  name fun       = Prefix (do{ reservedOp name; return fun })
    postfix name fun       = Postfix (do{ reservedOp name; return fun })
    
    res = runParser expr () "expr" "1--"
    

    yields

    *ExParse> res
    Right 0
    

    as desired here.

    The problem with natural = P.natural lexer is that it is defined as

    natural = lexeme nat
    

    and

    lexeme p = do
        x <- p
        whiteSpace
        return x
    

    where comments count as whitespace. Now, the line comments in Haskell start with --, hence with natural = P.natural lexer, the natural consumes the entire string "1--". To make -- usable as a postfix operator, you have to choose a language definition where that is not a comment starter. For example, you can modify haskellDef per

    lexer = P.makeTokenParser (haskellDef{P.commentLine = "//"})
    

    or redefine the whiteSpace parser.

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