# Features ## Main Features - Earley parser, capable of parsing any context-free grammar - Implements SPPF, for efficient parsing and storing of ambiguous grammars. - LALR(1) parser, limited in power of expression, but very efficient in space and performance (O(n)). - Implements a parse-aware lexer that provides a better power of expression than traditional LALR implementations (such as ply). - EBNF-inspired grammar, with extra features (See: [Grammar Reference](grammar.md)) - Builds a parse-tree (AST) automagically based on the grammar - Stand-alone parser generator - create a small independent parser to embed in your project. ([read more](tools.html#stand-alone-parser)) - Flexible error handling by using an interactive parser interface (LALR only) - Automatic line & column tracking (for both tokens and matched rules) - Automatic terminal collision resolution - Standard library of terminals (strings, numbers, names, etc.) - Unicode fully supported - Extensive test suite - MyPy support using type stubs - Python 2 & Python 3 compatible - Pure-Python implementation [Read more about the parsers](parsers.md) ## Extra features - Import rules and tokens from other Lark grammars, for code reuse and modularity. - Support for external regex module ([see here](classes.html#using-unicode-character-classes-with-regex)) - Import grammars from Nearley.js ([read more](tools.html#importing-grammars-from-nearleyjs)) - CYK parser - Visualize your parse trees as dot or png files ([see_example](https://github.com/lark-parser/lark/blob/master/examples/fruitflies.py)) ### Experimental features - Automatic reconstruction of input from parse-tree (see examples) ### Planned features (not implemented yet) - Generate code in other languages than Python - Grammar composition - LALR(k) parser - Full regexp-collision support using NFAs