I'm devising a very simple grammar, where I use the unary minus operand. However, I get a shift/reduce conflict. In the Bison manual, and everywhere else I look, it says that I should define a new token and give it higher precedence than the binary minus operand, and then use "%prec TOKEN" in the rule.
I've done that, but I still get the warning. Why?
I'm using bison (GNU Bison) 2.4.1. The grammar is shown below:
%{
#include <string>
extern "C" int yylex(void);
%}
%union {
std::string token;
}
%token <token> T_IDENTIFIER T_NUMBER
%token T_EQUAL T_LPAREN T_RPAREN
%right T_EQUAL
%left T_PLUS T_MINUS
%left T_MUL T_DIV
%left UNARY
%start program
%%
program : statements expr
;
statements : '\n'
| statements line
;
line : assignment
| expr
;
assignment : T_IDENTIFIER T_EQUAL expr
;
expr : T_NUMBER
| T_IDENTIFIER
| expr T_PLUS expr
| expr T_MINUS expr
| expr T_MUL expr
| expr T_DIV expr
| T_MINUS expr %prec UNARY
| T_LPAREN expr T_RPAREN
;