There are a lot of books and articles about creating compilers which do all the compilation job at a time. And what about design of incremental compilers/parsers, which are used by IDEs? I'm familiar with first class of compilers, but I have never work with the second one.
I tried to read some articles about Eclipse Java Development Tools, but they describe how to use complete infrastructure(i.e. APIs) instead of describing internal design(i.e. how it works internally).
My goal is to implement incremental compiler for my own programming language. Which books or articles would you recommend me?
This book is worth a look: Builing a Flexible Incremental Compiler Back-End.
Quote from Ch. 10 "Conclusions":
I think this is what you are looking for...
Edit:
So you plan to create something that is known as a "cross compiler"?!
I started a new attempt. Until now, I can't provide the ultimate reference. If you plan such a big project, I'm sure you are an experienced programmer. Therefore it is possible, that you already know these link(s).
Compilers.net
List of certain compilers, even cross compilers (Translators). Unfortunately with some broken links, but 'Toba' is still working and has a link to its source code. May be that this can inspire you.
clang: a C language family frontend for LLVM
Ok, it's for LVVM but source is available in a SVN repository and it seems to be a front end for a compiler (translator). May be that this can inspire you as well.
I'm going to disagree with conventional wisdom on this one because most conventional wisdom makes unwritten assumptions about your goals, such as complete language designs and the need for extreme efficiency. From your question, I am assuming these goals:
You want to build a hacking harness and a recursive descent parser.
Here is what you might want to build for a harness, using just a text based processor.
Toggle Run on home hardware (now OFF)
Your command, sire?
You will probably want to write your code in Python or some other scripting language. You are optimizing your speed of play, not execution. A recursive descent parser might look like:
So you need to write:
This approach is aimed at speeding up the cycle for hacking together the language. When you have finished this approach, then you reach for BISON, test harnesses, etc.
Making your own language can be a wonderful journey! Expect to learn. Do not expect to get rich.
I see that there is an accepted answer, but I think that some additional material could be usefully included on this page.
I read the Wikipedia article on this topic and it linked to a DDJ article from 1997:
http://www.drdobbs.com/cpp/codestore-and-incremental-c/184410345?pgno=1
The meat of the article is the first page. It explains that the code in the editor is divided into pieces that are "incorporated" into a "CodeStore" (database). The pieces are incorporated via a work queue which contains unincorporated pieces. A piece of code may be parsed and returned to the work queue multiple times, with some failure on each attempt, until it goes through successfully. The database includes dependencies between the pieces so that when the source code is edited the effects on the edited piece and other pieces can be seen and these pieces can be reprocessed.
I believe other systems approach the problem differently. Java presents different problems than C/C++ but has advantages as well, so Eclipse perhaps has a different design.