yyerror
The Bison parser detects a parse error or syntax error
whenever it reads a token which cannot satisfy any syntax rule. A
action in the grammar can also explicitly proclaim an error, using the
macro YYERROR
(see section Special Features for Use in Actions).
The Bison parser expects to report the error by calling an error
reporting function named yyerror
, which you must supply. It is
called by yyparse
whenever a syntax error is found, and it
receives one argument. For a parse error, the string is normally
"parse error"
.
If you define the macro YYERROR_VERBOSE
in the Bison declarations
section (see section The Bison Declarations Section), then Bison provides a more verbose
and specific error message string instead of just plain "parse
error"
. It doesn't matter what definition you use for
YYERROR_VERBOSE
, just whether you define it.
The parser can detect one other kind of error: stack overflow. This
happens when the input contains constructions that are very deeply
nested. It isn't likely you will encounter this, since the Bison
parser extends its stack automatically up to a very large limit. But
if overflow happens, yyparse
calls yyerror
in the usual
fashion, except that the argument string is "parser stack
overflow"
.
The following definition suffices in simple programs:
yyerror (s) char *s; { fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", s); }
After yyerror
returns to yyparse
, the latter will attempt
error recovery if you have written suitable error recovery grammar rules
(see section Error Recovery). If recovery is impossible, yyparse
will
immediately return 1.
The variable yynerrs
contains the number of syntax errors
encountered so far. Normally this variable is global; but if you
request a pure parser (see section A Pure (Reentrant) Parser) then it is a local variable
which only the actions can access.
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