A General Method for Transforming Standard Parsers into Error-Repair Parsers
CICLing '09 Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Computational Linguistics and Intelligent Text Processing
Natural language processing: a prolog perspective
Artificial Intelligence Review
A local search algorithm for grammatical inference
ICGI'10 Proceedings of the 10th international colloquium conference on Grammatical inference: theoretical results and applications
On compiler error messages: what they say and what they mean
Advances in Human-Computer Interaction
Bringing domain-specific languages to digital forensics
Proceedings of the 33rd International Conference on Software Engineering
Precedence automata and languages
CSR'11 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Computer science: theory and applications
Operator precedence and the visibly pushdown property
LATA'10 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Language and Automata Theory and Applications
A finite state intersection approach to propositional satisfiability
Theoretical Computer Science
SFM'12 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Formal Methods for the Design of Computer, Communication, and Software Systems: formal methods for model-driven engineering
Operator precedence and the visibly pushdown property
Journal of Computer and System Sciences
Computer Standards & Interfaces
Parallel parsing of operator precedence grammars
Information Processing Letters
A Principled Approach to Grammars for Controlled Natural Languages and Predictive Editors
Journal of Logic, Language and Information
The HERMIT in the stream: fusing stream fusion's concatMap
Proceedings of the ACM SIGPLAN 2014 Workshop on Partial Evaluation and Program Manipulation
Proceedings of the 9th Central & Eastern European Software Engineering Conference in Russia
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This second edition of Grune and Jacobs brilliant work presents new developments and discoveries that have been made in the field. Parsing, also referred to as syntax analysis, has been and continues to be an essential part of computer science and linguistics. Parsing techniques have grown considerably in importance, both in computer science, ie. advanced compilers often use general CF parsers, and computational linguistics where such parsers are the only option. They are used in a variety of software products including Web browsers, interpreters in computer devices, and data compression programs; and they are used extensively in linguistics.