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The Postfix reference guide contains information about the structure and operations of the stack machine. | The Postfix reference guide contains information about the structure and operations of the stack machine. | ||
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+ | The original stack machine was created by Santos (2004). Is was composed by a set of macros to be used with printf functions. Each macro would “take” as arguments, either a number or a string. This was a simple and effective approach but was limited in its expressiveness. | ||
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+ | The current postfix code generator class maintains the stack machine abstraction, but does not rely on macros. Instead, it defines an interface to be used by semantic analysers, as defined by a strategy pattern (Gamma et al., 1995). Specific implementations provide the realization of the postfix commands for a particular target machine. Since it is written in C++, it's very easy to extend to new needs and implementations (new target machines). | ||
[[category:Compilers]] | [[category:Compilers]] | ||
[[category:Teaching]] | [[category:Teaching]] |
The Postfix reference guide contains information about the structure and operations of the stack machine.
The original stack machine was created by Santos (2004). Is was composed by a set of macros to be used with printf functions. Each macro would “take” as arguments, either a number or a string. This was a simple and effective approach but was limited in its expressiveness.
The current postfix code generator class maintains the stack machine abstraction, but does not rely on macros. Instead, it defines an interface to be used by semantic analysers, as defined by a strategy pattern (Gamma et al., 1995). Specific implementations provide the realization of the postfix commands for a particular target machine. Since it is written in C++, it's very easy to extend to new needs and implementations (new target machines).