@techreport{ljunglof-2002-functional-10778, title = {Functional Programming and NLP}, abstract = {Most of today's NLP software is developed using either a logic programming language such as Prolog, or a low-level imperative language such as C or C++. In this paper I will try to argue why the paradigm of functional programming (as opposed to logic and imperative programming) matters for natural language processing.}, author = {Ljunglöf, Peter}, year = {2002}, publisher = {Chalmers University of Technology}, address = {Göteborg}, } @book{ljunglof-2002-pure-10783, title = {Pure Functional Parsing - an advanced tutorial}, abstract = {Parsing is the problem of deciding whether a sequence of tokens is recognized by a given grammar, and in that case returning the grammatical structure of the sequence. This thesis investigates di erent aspects of the parsing problem from the viewpoint of a functional programmer. It is conceptually divided into two parts, discussing the parsing problem from di erent perspectives; rst as a comprehensive survey of possible implementations of combinator parsers; and second as pure functional implementations of standard context-free parsing algorithms. The rst part of the thesis is a survey of the possible implementations of combinator parsers that have previously been suggested in the litterature, relating their dirrefent usages. A number of previously unknown parser implementations are also given, especially e cient for small and medium-sized natural language applications. The second part of the thesis de ne elegant and declarative, pure functional versions of some standard parsing algorithms for context-free grammars. The goal has been to implement the algorithms in a way that is close to their intuitive formulations, not sacri cing computational e ciency. The implementations only use simple data structures not relying on a global updateable state, thus opening the way for nice functional implementations. Finally the thesis implements parser combinators that can collect the grammatical structure in the program, to be able to use any suitable parsing algorithm and not just recursive descent. However, this requires an mildly impure extension of the host language Haskell.}, author = {Ljunglöf, Peter}, year = {2002}, publisher = {Chalmers University of Technology}, address = {Göteborg}, }