# C♯ ## Which frameworks are supported? The C# runtime is CLS compliant, and only requires a corresponding 3.5 .Net framework. In practice, the runtime has been extensively tested against: * Microsoft .Net 3.5 framework * Mono .Net 3.5 framework No issue was found, so you should find that the runtime works pretty much against any recent .Net framework. ## How do I get started? You will find full instructions on the [Git repo page for ANTLR C# runtime](https://github.com/antlr/antlr4/tree/master/runtime/CSharp). ## How do I use the runtime from my project? (i.e., How do I run the generated lexer and/or parser?) Let's suppose that your grammar is named `MyGrammar`. The tool will generate for you the following files: * MyGrammarLexer.cs * MyGrammarParser.cs * MyGrammarListener.cs (if you have not activated the -no-listener option) * MyGrammarBaseListener.cs (if you have not activated the -no-listener option) * MyGrammarVisitor.cs (if you have activated the -visitor option) * MyGrammarBaseVisitor.cs (if you have activated the -visitor option) Now a fully functioning code might look like the following for start rule `StartRule`: ``` using Antlr4.Runtime; public void MyParseMethod() { String input = "your text to parse here"; ICharStream stream = CharStreams.fromstring(input); ITokenSource lexer = new MyGrammarLexer(stream); ITokenStream tokens = new CommonTokenStream(lexer); MyGrammarParser parser = new MyGrammarParser(tokens); parser.buildParseTrees = true; IParseTree tree = parser.StartRule(); } ``` This program will work. But it won't be useful unless you do one of the following: * you visit the parse tree using a custom listener * you visit the parse tree using a custom visitor * your grammar comprises production code (like AntLR3) (please note that production code is target specific, so you can't have multi target grammars that include production code) ## How do I create and run a custom listener? Let's suppose your MyGrammar grammar comprises 2 rules: "key" and "value". The antlr4 tool will have generated the following listener (only partial code shown here): ``` interface IMyGrammarParserListener : IParseTreeListener { void EnterKey (MyGrammarParser.KeyContext context); void ExitKey (MyGrammarParser.KeyContext context); void EnterValue (MyGrammarParser.ValueContext context); void ExitValue (MyGrammarParser.ValueContext context); } ``` In order to provide custom behavior, you might want to create the following class: ``` class KeyPrinter : MyGrammarBaseListener { // override default listener behavior void ExitKey (MyGrammarParser.KeyContext context) { Console.WriteLine("Oh, a key!"); } } ``` In order to execute this listener, you would simply add the following lines to the above code: ``` ... IParseTree tree = parser.StartRule() - only repeated here for reference KeyPrinter printer = new KeyPrinter(); ParseTreeWalker.DEFAULT.walk(printer, tree); ``` Further information can be found from The Definitive ANTLR Reference book. The C# implementation of ANTLR is as close as possible to the Java one, so you shouldn't find it difficult to adapt the examples for C#. See also [Sam Harwell's alternative C# target](https://github.com/tunnelvisionlabs/antlr4cs)