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Use Rhai as a Domain-Specific Language (DSL)
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Rhai can be successfully used as a domain-specific language (DSL).
Expressions Only
In many DSL scenarios, only evaluation of expressions is needed.
The [Engine::eval_expression_XXX][eval_expression] API can be used to restrict
a script to expressions only.
Unicode Standard Annex #31 Identifiers
Variable names and other identifiers do not necessarily need to be ASCII-only.
The [unicode-xid-ident] feature, when turned on, causes Rhai to allow variable names and identifiers
that follow Unicode Standard Annex #31.
This is sometimes useful in a non-English DSL.
Disable Keywords and/or Operators
In some DSL scenarios, it is necessary to further restrict the language to exclude certain language features that are not necessary or dangerous to the application.
For example, a DSL may disable the while loop while keeping all other statement types intact.
It is possible, in Rhai, to surgically [disable keywords and operators].
Custom Operators
On the other hand, some DSL scenarios require special operators that make sense only for that specific environment. In such cases, it is possible to define [custom operators] in Rhai.
For example:
let animal = "rabbit";
let food = "carrot";
animal eats food // custom operator 'eats'
eats(animal, food) // <- the above really de-sugars to this
Although a [custom operator] always de-sugars to a simple function call, nevertheless it makes the DSL syntax much simpler and expressive.
Custom Syntax
For advanced DSL scenarios, it is possible to define entire expression [syntax][custom syntax] &ndash essentially custom statement types.
For example, the following is a SQL-like syntax for some obscure DSL operation:
let table = [..., ..., ..., ...];
// Syntax = calculate $ident$ ( $expr$ -> $ident$ ) => $ident$ : $expr$
let total = calculate sum(table->price) => row : row.weight > 50;
// Note: There is nothing special about those symbols; to make it look exactly like SQL:
// Syntax = SELECT $ident$ ( $ident$ ) AS $ident$ FROM $expr$ WHERE $expr$
let total = SELECT sum(price) AS row FROM table WHERE row.weight > 50;
After registering this custom syntax with Rhai, it can be used anywhere inside a script as a normal expression.
For its evaluation, the callback function will receive the following list of inputs:
inputs[0] = "sum"- math operatorinputs[1] = "price"- field nameinputs[2] = "row"- loop variable nameinputs[3] = Expression(table)- data sourceinputs[4] = Expression(row.wright > 50)- filter predicate
Other identifiers, such as "calculate", "FROM", as well as symbols such as -> and : etc.,
are parsed in the order defined within the custom syntax.