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Quasar

Build Status codecov Aqua QA

Quasar.jl, the Qu(antum) as(sembly) (lex/pars)er, is a package for lexing and parsing the OpenQASM quantum assembly IR.

Quasar.jl works in a two-step fashion: first, it uses a tokenizer to generate an abstract syntax tree (AST) representing the quantum program, which is a nested structure of QasmExpressions. Then, it walks (visits) the AST to evaluate all loops, conditionals, gate calls, and variable declarations.

Quasar has support for:

  • Basic builtin OpenQASM 3 gates gphase and U
  • Custom gate definitions
  • for and while loops
  • if, else, and switch conditional statements
  • Builtin OpenQASM3 functions
  • Function definitions and calls
  • Casting classical types
  • Timing statements barrier and delay
  • Pragmas (see below)

What is not yet supported:

  • angle types
  • Annotations
  • OpenPulse

If you need any of these features, feel free to open an issue requesting support for them!

Quick Start

For more extensive examples, see the tests in test/. Here, we can parse and visit a simple OpenQASM 3.0 program to generate a Bell circuit:

qasm = """OPENQASM 3.0;
gate h a { U(π/2, 0, π) a; gphase(-π/4);};
gate x a { U(π, 0, π) a; gphase(-π/2);};
gate cx a, b { ctrl @ x a, b; };

def bell(qubit q0, qubit q1) {
    h q0;
    cx q0, q1;
}
qubit[2] q;
bell(q[0], q[1]);
bit[2] b = "00";
b[0] = measure q[0];
b[1] = measure q[1];
"""

parsed = Quasar.parse_qasm(qasm)
visitor = Quasar.QasmProgramVisitor()
visitor(parsed)

You can supply inputs to your program by creating the QasmProgramVisitor with a Dict{String, Any} containing the names of the input variables as the keys and their values as the Dict's values. This allows you to re-use the same AST multiple times for different inputs.

Once the visitor has walked the AST, its instructions field contains CircuitInstruction NamedTuples you can use to construct your own circuit instruction types. These tuples have fields:

  • type::String - the name of the instruction, e.g. "measure" or "cx"
  • arguments - any arguments the instruction accepts, such as an angle for an rx gate or a Period for a duration
  • targets::Vector{Int} - the qubits targeted by this instruction. This should include any control qubits.
  • controls::Vector{Pair{Int,Int}} - any controls (including negctrl) applied to the instruction. The first item in the pair is the qubit, the second is the value controlled upon, so that 2=>0 represents a negctrl on qubit 2.
  • exponent::Float64 - the pow modifier applied to the instruction, if any

You can use a package such as StructTypes.jl to build your circuits and programs from these named tuples.

In the above example, the h, x, and cx were defined in terms of the built-in gates U and gphase. In many cases, you may have an implementation of these gates that is simpler or more efficient. In that case, you can supply your own gate definition file using the include instruction, or provide a function to generate a dictionary of builtin gates to Quasar.jl:

using Quasar

function my_builtin_generator()
    ...
end

Quasar.builtin_gates[] = my_builtin_generator

A generator function is used here in order to allow visitors to overwrite builtin functions in certain scopes without corrupting the reference definition. If you're writing a package which uses Quasar, the Quasar.builtin_gates[] = my_builtin_generator should be placed in your main module's __init__ function.