246 lines
		
	
	
		
			9.7 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Haskell
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			246 lines
		
	
	
		
			9.7 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Haskell
		
	
	
	
	
	
| {-
 | ||
| Here's the ledger 2.5 grammar:
 | ||
| "The ledger file format is quite simple, but also very flexible. It supports
 | ||
| many options, though typically the user can ignore most of them. They are
 | ||
| summarized below.  The initial character of each line determines what the
 | ||
| line means, and how it should be interpreted. Allowable initial characters
 | ||
| are:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| NUMBER      A line beginning with a number denotes an entry. It may be followed by any
 | ||
|             number of lines, each beginning with whitespace, to denote the entry’s account
 | ||
|             transactions. The format of the first line is:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|                     DATE[=EDATE] [*|!] [(CODE)] DESC
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|             If ‘*’ appears after the date (with optional effective date), it indicates the entry
 | ||
|             is “cleared”, which can mean whatever the user wants it t omean. If ‘!’ appears
 | ||
|             after the date, it indicates d the entry is “pending”; i.e., tentatively cleared from
 | ||
|             the user’s point of view, but not yet actually cleared. If a ‘CODE’ appears in
 | ||
|             parentheses, it may be used to indicate a check number, or the type of the
 | ||
|             transaction. Following these is the payee, or a description of the transaction.
 | ||
|             The format of each following transaction is:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|                       ACCOUNT     AMOUNT    [; NOTE]
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|             The ‘ACCOUNT’ may be surrounded by parentheses if it is a virtual
 | ||
|             transactions, or square brackets if it is a virtual transactions that must
 | ||
|             balance. The ‘AMOUNT’ can be followed by a per-unit transaction cost,
 | ||
|             by specifying ‘ AMOUNT’, or a complete transaction cost with ‘@ AMOUNT’.
 | ||
|             Lastly, the ‘NOTE’ may specify an actual and/or effective date for the
 | ||
|             transaction by using the syntax ‘[ACTUAL_DATE]’ or ‘[=EFFECTIVE_DATE]’ or
 | ||
|             ‘[ACTUAL_DATE=EFFECtIVE_DATE]’.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| =           An automated entry. A value expression must appear after the equal sign.
 | ||
|             After this initial line there should be a set of one or more transactions, just as
 | ||
|             if it were normal entry. If the amounts of the transactions have no commodity,
 | ||
|             they will be applied as modifiers to whichever real transaction is matched by
 | ||
|             the value expression.
 | ||
|  
 | ||
| ~           A period entry. A period expression must appear after the tilde.
 | ||
|             After this initial line there should be a set of one or more transactions, just as
 | ||
|             if it were normal entry.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| !           A line beginning with an exclamation mark denotes a command directive. It
 | ||
|             must be immediately followed by the command word. The supported commands
 | ||
|             are:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|            ‘!include’
 | ||
|                         Include the stated ledger file.
 | ||
|            ‘!account’
 | ||
|                         The account name is given is taken to be the parent of all transac-
 | ||
|                         tions that follow, until ‘!end’ is seen.
 | ||
|            ‘!end’       Ends an account block.
 | ||
|  
 | ||
| ;          A line beginning with a colon indicates a comment, and is ignored.
 | ||
|  
 | ||
| Y          If a line begins with a capital Y, it denotes the year used for all subsequent
 | ||
|            entries that give a date without a year. The year should appear immediately
 | ||
|            after the Y, for example: ‘Y2004’. This is useful at the beginning of a file, to
 | ||
|            specify the year for that file. If all entries specify a year, however, this command
 | ||
|            has no effect.
 | ||
|            
 | ||
|  
 | ||
| P          Specifies a historical price for a commodity. These are usually found in a pricing
 | ||
|            history file (see the ‘-Q’ option). The syntax is:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|                   P DATE SYMBOL PRICE
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| N SYMBOL   Indicates that pricing information is to be ignored for a given symbol, nor will
 | ||
|            quotes ever be downloaded for that symbol. Useful with a home currency, such
 | ||
|            as the dollar ($). It is recommended that these pricing options be set in the price
 | ||
|            database file, which defaults to ‘~/.pricedb’. The syntax for this command is:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|                   N SYMBOL
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|         
 | ||
| D AMOUNT   Specifies the default commodity to use, by specifying an amount in the expected
 | ||
|            format. The entry command will use this commodity as the default when none
 | ||
|            other can be determined. This command may be used multiple times, to set
 | ||
|            the default flags for different commodities; whichever is seen last is used as the
 | ||
|            default commodity. For example, to set US dollars as the default commodity,
 | ||
|            while also setting the thousands flag and decimal flag for that commodity, use:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|                   D $1,000.00
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| C AMOUNT1 = AMOUNT2
 | ||
|            Specifies a commodity conversion, where the first amount is given to be equiv-
 | ||
|            alent to the second amount. The first amount should use the decimal precision
 | ||
|            desired during reporting:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|                   C 1.00 Kb = 1024 bytes
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| i, o, b, h
 | ||
|            These four relate to timeclock support, which permits ledger to read timelog
 | ||
|            files. See the timeclock’s documentation for more info on the syntax of its
 | ||
|            timelog files."
 | ||
| -}
 | ||
| -- parsec example: http://pandoc.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/src/Text/Pandoc/Readers/RST.hs
 | ||
| -- sample data in Tests.hs 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| module Parse where
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| import Text.ParserCombinators.Parsec
 | ||
| import Text.ParserCombinators.Parsec.Language
 | ||
| import qualified Text.ParserCombinators.Parsec.Token as P
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| import Types
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| -- set up token parsing, though we're not yet using these much
 | ||
| ledgerLanguageDef = LanguageDef {
 | ||
|    commentStart   = ""
 | ||
|    , commentEnd     = ""
 | ||
|    , commentLine    = ";"
 | ||
|    , nestedComments = False
 | ||
|    , identStart     = letter <|> char '_'
 | ||
|    , identLetter    = alphaNum <|> oneOf "_':"
 | ||
|    , opStart        = opLetter emptyDef
 | ||
|    , opLetter       = oneOf "!#$%&*+./<=>?@\\^|-~"
 | ||
|    , reservedOpNames= []
 | ||
|    , reservedNames  = []
 | ||
|    , caseSensitive  = False
 | ||
|    }
 | ||
| lexer      = P.makeTokenParser ledgerLanguageDef
 | ||
| whiteSpace = P.whiteSpace lexer
 | ||
| lexeme     = P.lexeme lexer
 | ||
| symbol     = P.symbol lexer
 | ||
| natural    = P.natural lexer
 | ||
| parens     = P.parens lexer
 | ||
| semi       = P.semi lexer
 | ||
| identifier = P.identifier lexer
 | ||
| reserved   = P.reserved lexer
 | ||
| reservedOp = P.reservedOp lexer
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| -- ledger file parsers
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ledger :: Parser Ledger
 | ||
| ledger = do
 | ||
|   ledgernondatalines
 | ||
|   -- for now these must come first, unlike ledger
 | ||
|   modifier_entries <- many ledgermodifierentry
 | ||
|   periodic_entries <- many ledgerperiodicentry
 | ||
|   --
 | ||
|   entries <- (many ledgerentry) <?> "entry"
 | ||
|   eof
 | ||
|   return (Ledger modifier_entries periodic_entries entries)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ledgernondatalines :: Parser [String]
 | ||
| ledgernondatalines = many (ledgerdirective <|> ledgercomment <|> do {whiteSpace1; return []})
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ledgercomment :: Parser String
 | ||
| ledgercomment = char ';' >> restofline <?> "comment"
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ledgerdirective :: Parser String
 | ||
| ledgerdirective = char '!' >> restofline <?> "directive"
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ledgermodifierentry :: Parser ModifierEntry
 | ||
| ledgermodifierentry = do
 | ||
|   char '=' <?> "entry"
 | ||
|   many spacenonewline
 | ||
|   valueexpr <- restofline
 | ||
|   transactions <- ledgertransactions
 | ||
|   ledgernondatalines
 | ||
|   return (ModifierEntry valueexpr transactions)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ledgerperiodicentry :: Parser PeriodicEntry
 | ||
| ledgerperiodicentry = do
 | ||
|   char '~' <?> "entry"
 | ||
|   many spacenonewline
 | ||
|   periodexpr <- restofline
 | ||
|   transactions <- ledgertransactions
 | ||
|   ledgernondatalines
 | ||
|   return (PeriodicEntry periodexpr transactions)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ledgerentry :: Parser Entry
 | ||
| ledgerentry = do
 | ||
|   date <- ledgerdate
 | ||
|   status <- ledgerstatus
 | ||
|   code <- ledgercode
 | ||
|   description <- anyChar `manyTill` ledgereol
 | ||
|   transactions <- ledgertransactions
 | ||
|   ledgernondatalines
 | ||
|   let entry = Entry date status code description transactions
 | ||
|   return $ autofill entry
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ledgerdate :: Parser String
 | ||
| ledgerdate = do date <- many1 (digit <|> char '/'); many1 spacenonewline; return date
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ledgerstatus :: Parser Bool
 | ||
| ledgerstatus = try (do { char '*'; many1 spacenonewline; return True } ) <|> return False
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ledgercode :: Parser String
 | ||
| ledgercode = try (do { char '('; code <- anyChar `manyTill` char ')'; many1 spacenonewline; return code } ) <|> return ""
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ledgertransactions :: Parser [Transaction]
 | ||
| ledgertransactions = (ledgertransaction <?> "transaction") `manyTill` (newline <?> "blank line")
 | ||
|                      -- => unlike ledger, we need to end the file with a blank line
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ledgertransaction :: Parser Transaction
 | ||
| ledgertransaction = do
 | ||
|   many1 spacenonewline
 | ||
|   account <- ledgeraccount <?> "account"
 | ||
|   amount <- ledgeramount <?> "amount"
 | ||
|   many spacenonewline
 | ||
|   ledgereol
 | ||
|   many ledgercomment
 | ||
|   return (Transaction account amount)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| -- account names may have single spaces in them, and are terminated by two or more spaces
 | ||
| ledgeraccount :: Parser String
 | ||
| ledgeraccount = many1 (alphaNum <|> char ':' <|> try (do {spacenonewline; do {notFollowedBy spacenonewline; return ' '}}))
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ledgeramount :: Parser Amount
 | ||
| ledgeramount = try (do
 | ||
|                       many1 spacenonewline
 | ||
|                       currency <- many (noneOf "-.0123456789\n") <?> "currency"
 | ||
|                       quantity <- many1 (oneOf "-.,0123456789") <?> "quantity"
 | ||
|                       return (Amount currency (read $ stripcommas quantity))
 | ||
|                    ) <|> 
 | ||
|                     return (Amount "AUTO" 0)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| stripcommas = filter (',' /=)
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| ledgereol :: Parser String
 | ||
| ledgereol = ledgercomment <|> do {newline; return []}
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| spacenonewline :: Parser Char
 | ||
| spacenonewline = satisfy (\c -> c `elem` " \v\f\t")
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| restofline :: Parser String
 | ||
| restofline = anyChar `manyTill` newline
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| whiteSpace1 :: Parser ()
 | ||
| whiteSpace1 = do space; whiteSpace
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| -- ok, what can we do with it ?
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| printParseResult r = case r of
 | ||
|                        Left e -> parseError e
 | ||
|                        Right v  -> print v
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| parseError e = do putStr "ledger parse error at "; print e
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| parseLedgerFile :: IO String -> IO (Either ParseError Ledger)
 | ||
| parseLedgerFile f = f >>= parseFromFile ledger
 |