javalang is a pure Python library for working with Java source code. javalang provides a lexer and parser targeting Java 8. The implementation is based on the Java language spec available at http://docs.oracle.com/javase/specs/jls/se8/html/.
The following gives a very brief introduction to using javalang.
>>> import javalang
>>> tree = javalang.parse.parse("package javalang.brewtab.com; class Test {}")
This will return a CompilationUnit
instance. This object is the root of a
tree which may be traversed to extract different information about the
compilation unit,
>>> tree.package.name
u'javalang.brewtab.com'
>>> tree.types[0]
ClassDeclaration
>>> tree.types[0].name
u'Test'
The string passed to javalang.parse.parse()
must represent a complete unit
which simply means it should represent a complete, valid Java source file. Other
methods in the javalang.parse
module allow for some smaller code snippets to
be parsed without providing an entire compilation unit.
CompilationUnit
is a subclass of javalang.ast.Node
, as are its
descendants in the tree. The javalang.tree
module defines the different
types of Node
subclasses, each of which represent the different syntaxual
elements you will find in Java code. For more detail on what node types are
available, see the javalang/tree.py
source file until the documentation is
complete.
Node
instances support iteration,
>>> for path, node in tree:
... print path, node
...
() CompilationUnit
(CompilationUnit,) PackageDeclaration
(CompilationUnit, [ClassDeclaration]) ClassDeclaration
This iteration can also be filtered by type,
>>> for path, node in tree.filter(javalang.tree.ClassDeclaration):
... print path, node
...
(CompilationUnit, [ClassDeclaration]) ClassDeclaration
Internally, the javalang.parse.parse
method is a simple method which creates
a token stream for the input, initializes a new javalang.parser.Parser
instance with the given token stream, and then invokes the parser's parse()
method, returning the resulting CompilationUnit
. These components may be
also be used individually.
The tokenizer/lexer may be invoked directly be calling javalang.tokenizer.tokenize
,
>>> javalang.tokenizer.tokenize('System.out.println("Hello " + "world");')
<generator object tokenize at 0x1ce5190>
This returns a generator which provides a stream of JavaToken
objects. Each
token carries position (line, column) and value information,
>>> tokens = list(javalang.tokenizer.tokenize('System.out.println("Hello " + "world");'))
>>> tokens[6].value
u'"Hello "'
>>> tokens[6].position
(1, 19)
The tokens are not directly instances of JavaToken
, but are instead
instances of subclasses which identify their general type,
>>> type(tokens[6])
<class 'javalang.tokenizer.String'>
>>> type(tokens[7])
<class 'javalang.tokenizer.Operator'>
NOTE: The shift operators >>
and >>>
are represented by multiple
>
tokens. This is because multiple >
may appear in a row when closing
nested generic parameter/arguments lists. This abiguity is instead resolved by
the parser.
To parse snippets of code, a parser may be used directly,
>>> tokens = javalang.tokenizer.tokenize('System.out.println("Hello " + "world");')
>>> parser = javalang.parser.Parser(tokens)
>>> parser.parse_expression()
MethodInvocation
The parse methods are designed for incremental parsing so they will not restart
at the beginning of the token stream. Attempting to call a parse method more
than once will result in a JavaSyntaxError
exception.
Invoking the incorrect parse method will also result in a JavaSyntaxError
exception,
>>> tokens = javalang.tokenizer.tokenize('System.out.println("Hello " + "world");')
>>> parser = javalang.parser.Parser(tokens)
>>> parser.parse_type_declaration()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "javalang/parser.py", line 336, in parse_type_declaration
return self.parse_class_or_interface_declaration()
File "javalang/parser.py", line 353, in parse_class_or_interface_declaration
self.illegal("Expected type declaration")
File "javalang/parser.py", line 122, in illegal
raise JavaSyntaxError(description, at)
javalang.parser.JavaSyntaxError
The javalang.parse
module also provides convenience methods for parsing more
common types of code snippets.