4061 lines
		
	
	
		
			102 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Groff
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			4061 lines
		
	
	
		
			102 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Groff
		
	
	
	
	
	
| .TH FLEX 1 "April 1995" "Version 2.5"
 | |
| .SH NAME
 | |
| flex \- fast lexical analyzer generator
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| .SH SYNOPSIS
 | |
| .B flex
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| .B [\-bcdfhilnpstvwBFILTV78+? \-C[aefFmr] \-ooutput \-Pprefix \-Sskeleton]
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| .B [\-\-help \-\-version]
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| .I [filename ...]
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| .SH OVERVIEW
 | |
| This manual describes
 | |
| .I flex,
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| a tool for generating programs that perform pattern-matching on text.  The
 | |
| manual includes both tutorial and reference sections:
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| .nf
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| 
 | |
|     Description
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|         a brief overview of the tool
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| 
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|     Some Simple Examples
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| 
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|     Format Of The Input File
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| 
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|     Patterns
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|         the extended regular expressions used by flex
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| 
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|     How The Input Is Matched
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|         the rules for determining what has been matched
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| 
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|     Actions
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|         how to specify what to do when a pattern is matched
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| 
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|     The Generated Scanner
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|         details regarding the scanner that flex produces;
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|         how to control the input source
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| 
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|     Start Conditions
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|         introducing context into your scanners, and
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|         managing "mini-scanners"
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| 
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|     Multiple Input Buffers
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|         how to manipulate multiple input sources; how to
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|         scan from strings instead of files
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| 
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|     End-of-file Rules
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|         special rules for matching the end of the input
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| 
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|     Miscellaneous Macros
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|         a summary of macros available to the actions
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| 
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|     Values Available To The User
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|         a summary of values available to the actions
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| 
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|     Interfacing With Yacc
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|         connecting flex scanners together with yacc parsers
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| 
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|     Options
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|         flex command-line options, and the "%option"
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|         directive
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| 
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|     Performance Considerations
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|         how to make your scanner go as fast as possible
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| 
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|     Generating C++ Scanners
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|         the (experimental) facility for generating C++
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|         scanner classes
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| 
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|     Incompatibilities With Lex And POSIX
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|         how flex differs from AT&T lex and the POSIX lex
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|         standard
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| 
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|     Diagnostics
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|         those error messages produced by flex (or scanners
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|         it generates) whose meanings might not be apparent
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| 
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|     Files
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|         files used by flex
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| 
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|     Deficiencies / Bugs
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|         known problems with flex
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| 
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|     See Also
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|         other documentation, related tools
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| 
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|     Author
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|         includes contact information
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| 
 | |
| .fi
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| .SH DESCRIPTION
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| .I flex
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| is a tool for generating
 | |
| .I scanners:
 | |
| programs which recognized lexical patterns in text.
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| .I flex
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| reads
 | |
| the given input files, or its standard input if no file names are given,
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| for a description of a scanner to generate.  The description is in
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| the form of pairs
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| of regular expressions and C code, called
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| .I rules.  flex
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| generates as output a C source file,
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| .B lex.yy.c,
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| which defines a routine
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| .B yylex().
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| This file is compiled and linked with the
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| .B \-lfl
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| library to produce an executable.  When the executable is run,
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| it analyzes its input for occurrences
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| of the regular expressions.  Whenever it finds one, it executes
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| the corresponding C code.
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| .SH SOME SIMPLE EXAMPLES
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| .PP
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| First some simple examples to get the flavor of how one uses
 | |
| .I flex.
 | |
| The following
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| .I flex
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| input specifies a scanner which whenever it encounters the string
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| "username" will replace it with the user's login name:
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| .nf
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| 
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|     %%
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|     username    printf( "%s", getlogin() );
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| 
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| .fi
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| By default, any text not matched by a
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| .I flex
 | |
| scanner
 | |
| is copied to the output, so the net effect of this scanner is
 | |
| to copy its input file to its output with each occurrence
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| of "username" expanded.
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| In this input, there is just one rule.  "username" is the
 | |
| .I pattern
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| and the "printf" is the
 | |
| .I action.
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| The "%%" marks the beginning of the rules.
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| .PP
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| Here's another simple example:
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| .nf
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| 
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|             int num_lines = 0, num_chars = 0;
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| 
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|     %%
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|     \\n      ++num_lines; ++num_chars;
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|     .       ++num_chars;
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| 
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|     %%
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|     main()
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|             {
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|             yylex();
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|             printf( "# of lines = %d, # of chars = %d\\n",
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|                     num_lines, num_chars );
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|             }
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| 
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| .fi
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| This scanner counts the number of characters and the number
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| of lines in its input (it produces no output other than the
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| final report on the counts).  The first line
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| declares two globals, "num_lines" and "num_chars", which are accessible
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| both inside
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| .B yylex()
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| and in the
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| .B main()
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| routine declared after the second "%%".  There are two rules, one
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| which matches a newline ("\\n") and increments both the line count and
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| the character count, and one which matches any character other than
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| a newline (indicated by the "." regular expression).
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| .PP
 | |
| A somewhat more complicated example:
 | |
| .nf
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| 
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|     /* scanner for a toy Pascal-like language */
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| 
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|     %{
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|     /* need this for the call to atof() below */
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|     #include <math.h>
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|     %}
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| 
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|     DIGIT    [0-9]
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|     ID       [a-z][a-z0-9]*
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| 
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|     %%
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| 
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|     {DIGIT}+    {
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|                 printf( "An integer: %s (%d)\\n", yytext,
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|                         atoi( yytext ) );
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|                 }
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| 
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|     {DIGIT}+"."{DIGIT}*        {
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|                 printf( "A float: %s (%g)\\n", yytext,
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|                         atof( yytext ) );
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|                 }
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| 
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|     if|then|begin|end|procedure|function        {
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|                 printf( "A keyword: %s\\n", yytext );
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|                 }
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| 
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|     {ID}        printf( "An identifier: %s\\n", yytext );
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| 
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|     "+"|"-"|"*"|"/"   printf( "An operator: %s\\n", yytext );
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| 
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|     "{"[^}\\n]*"}"     /* eat up one-line comments */
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| 
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|     [ \\t\\n]+          /* eat up whitespace */
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| 
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|     .           printf( "Unrecognized character: %s\\n", yytext );
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| 
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|     %%
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| 
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|     main( argc, argv )
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|     int argc;
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|     char **argv;
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|         {
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|         ++argv, --argc;  /* skip over program name */
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|         if ( argc > 0 )
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|                 yyin = fopen( argv[0], "r" );
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|         else
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|                 yyin = stdin;
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|         
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|         yylex();
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|         }
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| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| This is the beginnings of a simple scanner for a language like
 | |
| Pascal.  It identifies different types of
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| .I tokens
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| and reports on what it has seen.
 | |
| .PP
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| The details of this example will be explained in the following
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| sections.
 | |
| .SH FORMAT OF THE INPUT FILE
 | |
| The
 | |
| .I flex
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| input file consists of three sections, separated by a line with just
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| .B %%
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| in it:
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| .nf
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| 
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|     definitions
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|     %%
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|     rules
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|     %%
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|     user code
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| 
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| .fi
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| The
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| .I definitions
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| section contains declarations of simple
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| .I name
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| definitions to simplify the scanner specification, and declarations of
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| .I start conditions,
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| which are explained in a later section.
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| .PP
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| Name definitions have the form:
 | |
| .nf
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| 
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|     name definition
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| 
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| .fi
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| The "name" is a word beginning with a letter or an underscore ('_')
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| followed by zero or more letters, digits, '_', or '-' (dash).
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| The definition is taken to begin at the first non-white-space character
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| following the name and continuing to the end of the line.
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| The definition can subsequently be referred to using "{name}", which
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| will expand to "(definition)".  For example,
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| .nf
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| 
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|     DIGIT    [0-9]
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|     ID       [a-z][a-z0-9]*
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| 
 | |
| .fi
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| defines "DIGIT" to be a regular expression which matches a
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| single digit, and
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| "ID" to be a regular expression which matches a letter
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| followed by zero-or-more letters-or-digits.
 | |
| A subsequent reference to
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| .nf
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| 
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|     {DIGIT}+"."{DIGIT}*
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| 
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| .fi
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| is identical to
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| .nf
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| 
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|     ([0-9])+"."([0-9])*
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| 
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| .fi
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| and matches one-or-more digits followed by a '.' followed
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| by zero-or-more digits.
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| .PP
 | |
| The
 | |
| .I rules
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| section of the
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| input contains a series of rules of the form:
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| .nf
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| 
 | |
|     pattern   action
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| 
 | |
| .fi
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| where the pattern must be unindented and the action must begin
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| on the same line.
 | |
| .PP
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| See below for a further description of patterns and actions.
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| .PP
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| Finally, the user code section is simply copied to
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| .B lex.yy.c
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| verbatim.
 | |
| It is used for companion routines which call or are called
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| by the scanner.  The presence of this section is optional;
 | |
| if it is missing, the second
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| .B %%
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| in the input file may be skipped, too.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| In the definitions and rules sections, any
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| .I indented
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| text or text enclosed in
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| .B %{
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| and
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| .B %}
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| is copied verbatim to the output (with the %{}'s removed).
 | |
| The %{}'s must appear unindented on lines by themselves.
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| .PP
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| In the rules section,
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| any indented or %{} text appearing before the
 | |
| first rule may be used to declare variables
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| which are local to the scanning routine and (after the declarations)
 | |
| code which is to be executed whenever the scanning routine is entered.
 | |
| Other indented or %{} text in the rule section is still copied to the output,
 | |
| but its meaning is not well-defined and it may well cause compile-time
 | |
| errors (this feature is present for
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| .I POSIX
 | |
| compliance; see below for other such features).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| In the definitions section (but not in the rules section),
 | |
| an unindented comment (i.e., a line
 | |
| beginning with "/*") is also copied verbatim to the output up
 | |
| to the next "*/".
 | |
| .SH PATTERNS
 | |
| The patterns in the input are written using an extended set of regular
 | |
| expressions.  These are:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     x          match the character 'x'
 | |
|     .          any character (byte) except newline
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|     [xyz]      a "character class"; in this case, the pattern
 | |
|                  matches either an 'x', a 'y', or a 'z'
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|     [abj-oZ]   a "character class" with a range in it; matches
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|                  an 'a', a 'b', any letter from 'j' through 'o',
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|                  or a 'Z'
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|     [^A-Z]     a "negated character class", i.e., any character
 | |
|                  but those in the class.  In this case, any
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|                  character EXCEPT an uppercase letter.
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|     [^A-Z\\n]   any character EXCEPT an uppercase letter or
 | |
|                  a newline
 | |
|     r*         zero or more r's, where r is any regular expression
 | |
|     r+         one or more r's
 | |
|     r?         zero or one r's (that is, "an optional r")
 | |
|     r{2,5}     anywhere from two to five r's
 | |
|     r{2,}      two or more r's
 | |
|     r{4}       exactly 4 r's
 | |
|     {name}     the expansion of the "name" definition
 | |
|                (see above)
 | |
|     "[xyz]\\"foo"
 | |
|                the literal string: [xyz]"foo
 | |
|     \\X         if X is an 'a', 'b', 'f', 'n', 'r', 't', or 'v',
 | |
|                  then the ANSI-C interpretation of \\x.
 | |
|                  Otherwise, a literal 'X' (used to escape
 | |
|                  operators such as '*')
 | |
|     \\0         a NUL character (ASCII code 0)
 | |
|     \\123       the character with octal value 123
 | |
|     \\x2a       the character with hexadecimal value 2a
 | |
|     (r)        match an r; parentheses are used to override
 | |
|                  precedence (see below)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
|     rs         the regular expression r followed by the
 | |
|                  regular expression s; called "concatenation"
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
|     r|s        either an r or an s
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
|     r/s        an r but only if it is followed by an s.  The
 | |
|                  text matched by s is included when determining
 | |
|                  whether this rule is the "longest match",
 | |
|                  but is then returned to the input before
 | |
|                  the action is executed.  So the action only
 | |
|                  sees the text matched by r.  This type
 | |
|                  of pattern is called trailing context".
 | |
|                  (There are some combinations of r/s that flex
 | |
|                  cannot match correctly; see notes in the
 | |
|                  Deficiencies / Bugs section below regarding
 | |
|                  "dangerous trailing context".)
 | |
|     ^r         an r, but only at the beginning of a line (i.e.,
 | |
|                  which just starting to scan, or right after a
 | |
|                  newline has been scanned).
 | |
|     r$         an r, but only at the end of a line (i.e., just
 | |
|                  before a newline).  Equivalent to "r/\\n".
 | |
| 
 | |
|                Note that flex's notion of "newline" is exactly
 | |
|                whatever the C compiler used to compile flex
 | |
|                interprets '\\n' as; in particular, on some DOS
 | |
|                systems you must either filter out \\r's in the
 | |
|                input yourself, or explicitly use r/\\r\\n for "r$".
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <s>r       an r, but only in start condition s (see
 | |
|                  below for discussion of start conditions)
 | |
|     <s1,s2,s3>r
 | |
|                same, but in any of start conditions s1,
 | |
|                  s2, or s3
 | |
|     <*>r       an r in any start condition, even an exclusive one.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <<EOF>>    an end-of-file
 | |
|     <s1,s2><<EOF>>
 | |
|                an end-of-file when in start condition s1 or s2
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Note that inside of a character class, all regular expression operators
 | |
| lose their special meaning except escape ('\\') and the character class
 | |
| operators, '-', ']', and, at the beginning of the class, '^'.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The regular expressions listed above are grouped according to
 | |
| precedence, from highest precedence at the top to lowest at the bottom.
 | |
| Those grouped together have equal precedence.  For example,
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     foo|bar*
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| is the same as
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     (foo)|(ba(r*))
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| since the '*' operator has higher precedence than concatenation,
 | |
| and concatenation higher than alternation ('|').  This pattern
 | |
| therefore matches
 | |
| .I either
 | |
| the string "foo"
 | |
| .I or
 | |
| the string "ba" followed by zero-or-more r's.
 | |
| To match "foo" or zero-or-more "bar"'s, use:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     foo|(bar)*
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| and to match zero-or-more "foo"'s-or-"bar"'s:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     (foo|bar)*
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| In addition to characters and ranges of characters, character classes
 | |
| can also contain character class
 | |
| .I expressions.
 | |
| These are expressions enclosed inside
 | |
| .B [:
 | |
| and
 | |
| .B :]
 | |
| delimiters (which themselves must appear between the '[' and ']' of the
 | |
| character class; other elements may occur inside the character class, too).
 | |
| The valid expressions are:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     [:alnum:] [:alpha:] [:blank:]
 | |
|     [:cntrl:] [:digit:] [:graph:]
 | |
|     [:lower:] [:print:] [:punct:]
 | |
|     [:space:] [:upper:] [:xdigit:]
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| These expressions all designate a set of characters equivalent to
 | |
| the corresponding standard C
 | |
| .B isXXX
 | |
| function.  For example,
 | |
| .B [:alnum:]
 | |
| designates those characters for which
 | |
| .B isalnum()
 | |
| returns true - i.e., any alphabetic or numeric.
 | |
| Some systems don't provide
 | |
| .B isblank(),
 | |
| so flex defines
 | |
| .B [:blank:]
 | |
| as a blank or a tab.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| For example, the following character classes are all equivalent:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     [[:alnum:]]
 | |
|     [[:alpha:][:digit:]
 | |
|     [[:alpha:]0-9]
 | |
|     [a-zA-Z0-9]
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| If your scanner is case-insensitive (the
 | |
| .B \-i
 | |
| flag), then
 | |
| .B [:upper:]
 | |
| and
 | |
| .B [:lower:]
 | |
| are equivalent to
 | |
| .B [:alpha:].
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Some notes on patterns:
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| A negated character class such as the example "[^A-Z]"
 | |
| above
 | |
| .I will match a newline
 | |
| unless "\\n" (or an equivalent escape sequence) is one of the
 | |
| characters explicitly present in the negated character class
 | |
| (e.g., "[^A-Z\\n]").  This is unlike how many other regular
 | |
| expression tools treat negated character classes, but unfortunately
 | |
| the inconsistency is historically entrenched.
 | |
| Matching newlines means that a pattern like [^"]* can match the entire
 | |
| input unless there's another quote in the input.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| A rule can have at most one instance of trailing context (the '/' operator
 | |
| or the '$' operator).  The start condition, '^', and "<<EOF>>" patterns
 | |
| can only occur at the beginning of a pattern, and, as well as with '/' and '$',
 | |
| cannot be grouped inside parentheses.  A '^' which does not occur at
 | |
| the beginning of a rule or a '$' which does not occur at the end of
 | |
| a rule loses its special properties and is treated as a normal character.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| The following are illegal:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     foo/bar$
 | |
|     <sc1>foo<sc2>bar
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Note that the first of these, can be written "foo/bar\\n".
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| The following will result in '$' or '^' being treated as a normal character:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     foo|(bar$)
 | |
|     foo|^bar
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| If what's wanted is a "foo" or a bar-followed-by-a-newline, the following
 | |
| could be used (the special '|' action is explained below):
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     foo      |
 | |
|     bar$     /* action goes here */
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| A similar trick will work for matching a foo or a
 | |
| bar-at-the-beginning-of-a-line.
 | |
| .SH HOW THE INPUT IS MATCHED
 | |
| When the generated scanner is run, it analyzes its input looking
 | |
| for strings which match any of its patterns.  If it finds more than
 | |
| one match, it takes the one matching the most text (for trailing
 | |
| context rules, this includes the length of the trailing part, even
 | |
| though it will then be returned to the input).  If it finds two
 | |
| or more matches of the same length, the
 | |
| rule listed first in the
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| input file is chosen.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Once the match is determined, the text corresponding to the match
 | |
| (called the
 | |
| .I token)
 | |
| is made available in the global character pointer
 | |
| .B yytext,
 | |
| and its length in the global integer
 | |
| .B yyleng.
 | |
| The
 | |
| .I action
 | |
| corresponding to the matched pattern is then executed (a more
 | |
| detailed description of actions follows), and then the remaining
 | |
| input is scanned for another match.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| If no match is found, then the
 | |
| .I default rule
 | |
| is executed: the next character in the input is considered matched and
 | |
| copied to the standard output.  Thus, the simplest legal
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| input is:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| which generates a scanner that simply copies its input (one character
 | |
| at a time) to its output.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Note that
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| can be defined in two different ways: either as a character
 | |
| .I pointer
 | |
| or as a character
 | |
| .I array.
 | |
| You can control which definition
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| uses by including one of the special directives
 | |
| .B %pointer
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B %array
 | |
| in the first (definitions) section of your flex input.  The default is
 | |
| .B %pointer,
 | |
| unless you use the
 | |
| .B -l
 | |
| lex compatibility option, in which case
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| will be an array.
 | |
| The advantage of using
 | |
| .B %pointer
 | |
| is substantially faster scanning and no buffer overflow when matching
 | |
| very large tokens (unless you run out of dynamic memory).  The disadvantage
 | |
| is that you are restricted in how your actions can modify
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| (see the next section), and calls to the
 | |
| .B unput()
 | |
| function destroys the present contents of
 | |
| .B yytext,
 | |
| which can be a considerable porting headache when moving between different
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| versions.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The advantage of
 | |
| .B %array
 | |
| is that you can then modify
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| to your heart's content, and calls to
 | |
| .B unput()
 | |
| do not destroy
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| (see below).  Furthermore, existing
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| programs sometimes access
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| externally using declarations of the form:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
|     extern char yytext[];
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| This definition is erroneous when used with
 | |
| .B %pointer,
 | |
| but correct for
 | |
| .B %array.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .B %array
 | |
| defines
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| to be an array of
 | |
| .B YYLMAX
 | |
| characters, which defaults to a fairly large value.  You can change
 | |
| the size by simply #define'ing
 | |
| .B YYLMAX
 | |
| to a different value in the first section of your
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| input.  As mentioned above, with
 | |
| .B %pointer
 | |
| yytext grows dynamically to accommodate large tokens.  While this means your
 | |
| .B %pointer
 | |
| scanner can accommodate very large tokens (such as matching entire blocks
 | |
| of comments), bear in mind that each time the scanner must resize
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| it also must rescan the entire token from the beginning, so matching such
 | |
| tokens can prove slow.
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| presently does
 | |
| .I not
 | |
| dynamically grow if a call to
 | |
| .B unput()
 | |
| results in too much text being pushed back; instead, a run-time error results.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Also note that you cannot use
 | |
| .B %array
 | |
| with C++ scanner classes
 | |
| (the
 | |
| .B c++
 | |
| option; see below).
 | |
| .SH ACTIONS
 | |
| Each pattern in a rule has a corresponding action, which can be any
 | |
| arbitrary C statement.  The pattern ends at the first non-escaped
 | |
| whitespace character; the remainder of the line is its action.  If the
 | |
| action is empty, then when the pattern is matched the input token
 | |
| is simply discarded.  For example, here is the specification for a program
 | |
| which deletes all occurrences of "zap me" from its input:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     "zap me"
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| (It will copy all other characters in the input to the output since
 | |
| they will be matched by the default rule.)
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Here is a program which compresses multiple blanks and tabs down to
 | |
| a single blank, and throws away whitespace found at the end of a line:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     [ \\t]+        putchar( ' ' );
 | |
|     [ \\t]+$       /* ignore this token */
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| If the action contains a '{', then the action spans till the balancing '}'
 | |
| is found, and the action may cross multiple lines.
 | |
| .I flex 
 | |
| knows about C strings and comments and won't be fooled by braces found
 | |
| within them, but also allows actions to begin with
 | |
| .B %{
 | |
| and will consider the action to be all the text up to the next
 | |
| .B %}
 | |
| (regardless of ordinary braces inside the action).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| An action consisting solely of a vertical bar ('|') means "same as
 | |
| the action for the next rule."  See below for an illustration.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Actions can include arbitrary C code, including
 | |
| .B return
 | |
| statements to return a value to whatever routine called
 | |
| .B yylex().
 | |
| Each time
 | |
| .B yylex()
 | |
| is called it continues processing tokens from where it last left
 | |
| off until it either reaches
 | |
| the end of the file or executes a return.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Actions are free to modify
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| except for lengthening it (adding
 | |
| characters to its end--these will overwrite later characters in the
 | |
| input stream).  This however does not apply when using
 | |
| .B %array
 | |
| (see above); in that case,
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| may be freely modified in any way.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Actions are free to modify
 | |
| .B yyleng
 | |
| except they should not do so if the action also includes use of
 | |
| .B yymore()
 | |
| (see below).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| There are a number of special directives which can be included within
 | |
| an action:
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .B ECHO
 | |
| copies yytext to the scanner's output.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .B BEGIN
 | |
| followed by the name of a start condition places the scanner in the
 | |
| corresponding start condition (see below).
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .B REJECT
 | |
| directs the scanner to proceed on to the "second best" rule which matched the
 | |
| input (or a prefix of the input).  The rule is chosen as described
 | |
| above in "How the Input is Matched", and
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| and
 | |
| .B yyleng
 | |
| set up appropriately.
 | |
| It may either be one which matched as much text
 | |
| as the originally chosen rule but came later in the
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| input file, or one which matched less text.
 | |
| For example, the following will both count the
 | |
| words in the input and call the routine special() whenever "frob" is seen:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|             int word_count = 0;
 | |
|     %%
 | |
| 
 | |
|     frob        special(); REJECT;
 | |
|     [^ \\t\\n]+   ++word_count;
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Without the
 | |
| .B REJECT,
 | |
| any "frob"'s in the input would not be counted as words, since the
 | |
| scanner normally executes only one action per token.
 | |
| Multiple
 | |
| .B REJECT's
 | |
| are allowed, each one finding the next best choice to the currently
 | |
| active rule.  For example, when the following scanner scans the token
 | |
| "abcd", it will write "abcdabcaba" to the output:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     a        |
 | |
|     ab       |
 | |
|     abc      |
 | |
|     abcd     ECHO; REJECT;
 | |
|     .|\\n     /* eat up any unmatched character */
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| (The first three rules share the fourth's action since they use
 | |
| the special '|' action.)
 | |
| .B REJECT
 | |
| is a particularly expensive feature in terms of scanner performance;
 | |
| if it is used in
 | |
| .I any
 | |
| of the scanner's actions it will slow down
 | |
| .I all
 | |
| of the scanner's matching.  Furthermore,
 | |
| .B REJECT
 | |
| cannot be used with the
 | |
| .I -Cf
 | |
| or
 | |
| .I -CF
 | |
| options (see below).
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| Note also that unlike the other special actions,
 | |
| .B REJECT
 | |
| is a
 | |
| .I branch;
 | |
| code immediately following it in the action will
 | |
| .I not
 | |
| be executed.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .B yymore()
 | |
| tells the scanner that the next time it matches a rule, the corresponding
 | |
| token should be
 | |
| .I appended
 | |
| onto the current value of
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| rather than replacing it.  For example, given the input "mega-kludge"
 | |
| the following will write "mega-mega-kludge" to the output:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     mega-    ECHO; yymore();
 | |
|     kludge   ECHO;
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| First "mega-" is matched and echoed to the output.  Then "kludge"
 | |
| is matched, but the previous "mega-" is still hanging around at the
 | |
| beginning of
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| so the
 | |
| .B ECHO
 | |
| for the "kludge" rule will actually write "mega-kludge".
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Two notes regarding use of
 | |
| .B yymore().
 | |
| First,
 | |
| .B yymore()
 | |
| depends on the value of
 | |
| .I yyleng
 | |
| correctly reflecting the size of the current token, so you must not
 | |
| modify
 | |
| .I yyleng
 | |
| if you are using
 | |
| .B yymore().
 | |
| Second, the presence of
 | |
| .B yymore()
 | |
| in the scanner's action entails a minor performance penalty in the
 | |
| scanner's matching speed.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .B yyless(n)
 | |
| returns all but the first
 | |
| .I n
 | |
| characters of the current token back to the input stream, where they
 | |
| will be rescanned when the scanner looks for the next match.
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| and
 | |
| .B yyleng
 | |
| are adjusted appropriately (e.g.,
 | |
| .B yyleng
 | |
| will now be equal to
 | |
| .I n
 | |
| ).  For example, on the input "foobar" the following will write out
 | |
| "foobarbar":
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     foobar    ECHO; yyless(3);
 | |
|     [a-z]+    ECHO;
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| An argument of 0 to
 | |
| .B yyless
 | |
| will cause the entire current input string to be scanned again.  Unless you've
 | |
| changed how the scanner will subsequently process its input (using
 | |
| .B BEGIN,
 | |
| for example), this will result in an endless loop.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Note that
 | |
| .B yyless
 | |
| is a macro and can only be used in the flex input file, not from
 | |
| other source files.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .B unput(c)
 | |
| puts the character
 | |
| .I c
 | |
| back onto the input stream.  It will be the next character scanned.
 | |
| The following action will take the current token and cause it
 | |
| to be rescanned enclosed in parentheses.
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     {
 | |
|     int i;
 | |
|     /* Copy yytext because unput() trashes yytext */
 | |
|     char *yycopy = strdup( yytext );
 | |
|     unput( ')' );
 | |
|     for ( i = yyleng - 1; i >= 0; --i )
 | |
|         unput( yycopy[i] );
 | |
|     unput( '(' );
 | |
|     free( yycopy );
 | |
|     }
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Note that since each
 | |
| .B unput()
 | |
| puts the given character back at the
 | |
| .I beginning
 | |
| of the input stream, pushing back strings must be done back-to-front.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| An important potential problem when using
 | |
| .B unput()
 | |
| is that if you are using
 | |
| .B %pointer
 | |
| (the default), a call to
 | |
| .B unput()
 | |
| .I destroys
 | |
| the contents of
 | |
| .I yytext,
 | |
| starting with its rightmost character and devouring one character to
 | |
| the left with each call.  If you need the value of yytext preserved
 | |
| after a call to
 | |
| .B unput()
 | |
| (as in the above example),
 | |
| you must either first copy it elsewhere, or build your scanner using
 | |
| .B %array
 | |
| instead (see How The Input Is Matched).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Finally, note that you cannot put back
 | |
| .B EOF
 | |
| to attempt to mark the input stream with an end-of-file.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .B input()
 | |
| reads the next character from the input stream.  For example,
 | |
| the following is one way to eat up C comments:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     "/*"        {
 | |
|                 register int c;
 | |
| 
 | |
|                 for ( ; ; )
 | |
|                     {
 | |
|                     while ( (c = input()) != '*' &&
 | |
|                             c != EOF )
 | |
|                         ;    /* eat up text of comment */
 | |
| 
 | |
|                     if ( c == '*' )
 | |
|                         {
 | |
|                         while ( (c = input()) == '*' )
 | |
|                             ;
 | |
|                         if ( c == '/' )
 | |
|                             break;    /* found the end */
 | |
|                         }
 | |
| 
 | |
|                     if ( c == EOF )
 | |
|                         {
 | |
|                         error( "EOF in comment" );
 | |
|                         break;
 | |
|                         }
 | |
|                     }
 | |
|                 }
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| (Note that if the scanner is compiled using
 | |
| .B C++,
 | |
| then
 | |
| .B input()
 | |
| is instead referred to as
 | |
| .B yyinput(),
 | |
| in order to avoid a name clash with the
 | |
| .B C++
 | |
| stream by the name of
 | |
| .I input.)
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .B YY_FLUSH_BUFFER
 | |
| flushes the scanner's internal buffer
 | |
| so that the next time the scanner attempts to match a token, it will
 | |
| first refill the buffer using
 | |
| .B YY_INPUT
 | |
| (see The Generated Scanner, below).  This action is a special case
 | |
| of the more general
 | |
| .B yy_flush_buffer()
 | |
| function, described below in the section Multiple Input Buffers.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .B yyterminate()
 | |
| can be used in lieu of a return statement in an action.  It terminates
 | |
| the scanner and returns a 0 to the scanner's caller, indicating "all done".
 | |
| By default,
 | |
| .B yyterminate()
 | |
| is also called when an end-of-file is encountered.  It is a macro and
 | |
| may be redefined.
 | |
| .SH THE GENERATED SCANNER
 | |
| The output of
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| is the file
 | |
| .B lex.yy.c,
 | |
| which contains the scanning routine
 | |
| .B yylex(),
 | |
| a number of tables used by it for matching tokens, and a number
 | |
| of auxiliary routines and macros.  By default,
 | |
| .B yylex()
 | |
| is declared as follows:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     int yylex()
 | |
|         {
 | |
|         ... various definitions and the actions in here ...
 | |
|         }
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| (If your environment supports function prototypes, then it will
 | |
| be "int yylex( void )".)  This definition may be changed by defining
 | |
| the "YY_DECL" macro.  For example, you could use:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     #define YY_DECL float lexscan( a, b ) float a, b;
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| to give the scanning routine the name
 | |
| .I lexscan,
 | |
| returning a float, and taking two floats as arguments.  Note that
 | |
| if you give arguments to the scanning routine using a
 | |
| K&R-style/non-prototyped function declaration, you must terminate
 | |
| the definition with a semi-colon (;).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Whenever
 | |
| .B yylex()
 | |
| is called, it scans tokens from the global input file
 | |
| .I yyin
 | |
| (which defaults to stdin).  It continues until it either reaches
 | |
| an end-of-file (at which point it returns the value 0) or
 | |
| one of its actions executes a
 | |
| .I return
 | |
| statement.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| If the scanner reaches an end-of-file, subsequent calls are undefined
 | |
| unless either
 | |
| .I yyin
 | |
| is pointed at a new input file (in which case scanning continues from
 | |
| that file), or
 | |
| .B yyrestart()
 | |
| is called.
 | |
| .B yyrestart()
 | |
| takes one argument, a
 | |
| .B FILE *
 | |
| pointer (which can be nil, if you've set up
 | |
| .B YY_INPUT
 | |
| to scan from a source other than
 | |
| .I yyin),
 | |
| and initializes
 | |
| .I yyin
 | |
| for scanning from that file.  Essentially there is no difference between
 | |
| just assigning
 | |
| .I yyin
 | |
| to a new input file or using
 | |
| .B yyrestart()
 | |
| to do so; the latter is available for compatibility with previous versions
 | |
| of
 | |
| .I flex,
 | |
| and because it can be used to switch input files in the middle of scanning.
 | |
| It can also be used to throw away the current input buffer, by calling
 | |
| it with an argument of
 | |
| .I yyin;
 | |
| but better is to use
 | |
| .B YY_FLUSH_BUFFER
 | |
| (see above).
 | |
| Note that
 | |
| .B yyrestart()
 | |
| does
 | |
| .I not
 | |
| reset the start condition to
 | |
| .B INITIAL
 | |
| (see Start Conditions, below).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| If
 | |
| .B yylex()
 | |
| stops scanning due to executing a
 | |
| .I return
 | |
| statement in one of the actions, the scanner may then be called again and it
 | |
| will resume scanning where it left off.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| By default (and for purposes of efficiency), the scanner uses
 | |
| block-reads rather than simple
 | |
| .I getc()
 | |
| calls to read characters from
 | |
| .I yyin.
 | |
| The nature of how it gets its input can be controlled by defining the
 | |
| .B YY_INPUT
 | |
| macro.
 | |
| YY_INPUT's calling sequence is "YY_INPUT(buf,result,max_size)".  Its
 | |
| action is to place up to
 | |
| .I max_size
 | |
| characters in the character array
 | |
| .I buf
 | |
| and return in the integer variable
 | |
| .I result
 | |
| either the
 | |
| number of characters read or the constant YY_NULL (0 on Unix systems)
 | |
| to indicate EOF.  The default YY_INPUT reads from the
 | |
| global file-pointer "yyin".
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| A sample definition of YY_INPUT (in the definitions
 | |
| section of the input file):
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %{
 | |
|     #define YY_INPUT(buf,result,max_size) \\
 | |
|         { \\
 | |
|         int c = getchar(); \\
 | |
|         result = (c == EOF) ? YY_NULL : (buf[0] = c, 1); \\
 | |
|         }
 | |
|     %}
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| This definition will change the input processing to occur
 | |
| one character at a time.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| When the scanner receives an end-of-file indication from YY_INPUT,
 | |
| it then checks the
 | |
| .B yywrap()
 | |
| function.  If
 | |
| .B yywrap()
 | |
| returns false (zero), then it is assumed that the
 | |
| function has gone ahead and set up
 | |
| .I yyin
 | |
| to point to another input file, and scanning continues.  If it returns
 | |
| true (non-zero), then the scanner terminates, returning 0 to its
 | |
| caller.  Note that in either case, the start condition remains unchanged;
 | |
| it does
 | |
| .I not
 | |
| revert to
 | |
| .B INITIAL.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| If you do not supply your own version of
 | |
| .B yywrap(),
 | |
| then you must either use
 | |
| .B %option noyywrap
 | |
| (in which case the scanner behaves as though
 | |
| .B yywrap()
 | |
| returned 1), or you must link with
 | |
| .B \-lfl
 | |
| to obtain the default version of the routine, which always returns 1.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Three routines are available for scanning from in-memory buffers rather
 | |
| than files:
 | |
| .B yy_scan_string(), yy_scan_bytes(),
 | |
| and
 | |
| .B yy_scan_buffer().
 | |
| See the discussion of them below in the section Multiple Input Buffers.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The scanner writes its
 | |
| .B ECHO
 | |
| output to the
 | |
| .I yyout
 | |
| global (default, stdout), which may be redefined by the user simply
 | |
| by assigning it to some other
 | |
| .B FILE
 | |
| pointer.
 | |
| .SH START CONDITIONS
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| provides a mechanism for conditionally activating rules.  Any rule
 | |
| whose pattern is prefixed with "<sc>" will only be active when
 | |
| the scanner is in the start condition named "sc".  For example,
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <STRING>[^"]*        { /* eat up the string body ... */
 | |
|                 ...
 | |
|                 }
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| will be active only when the scanner is in the "STRING" start
 | |
| condition, and
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <INITIAL,STRING,QUOTE>\\.        { /* handle an escape ... */
 | |
|                 ...
 | |
|                 }
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| will be active only when the current start condition is
 | |
| either "INITIAL", "STRING", or "QUOTE".
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Start conditions
 | |
| are declared in the definitions (first) section of the input
 | |
| using unindented lines beginning with either
 | |
| .B %s
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B %x
 | |
| followed by a list of names.
 | |
| The former declares
 | |
| .I inclusive
 | |
| start conditions, the latter
 | |
| .I exclusive
 | |
| start conditions.  A start condition is activated using the
 | |
| .B BEGIN
 | |
| action.  Until the next
 | |
| .B BEGIN
 | |
| action is executed, rules with the given start
 | |
| condition will be active and
 | |
| rules with other start conditions will be inactive.
 | |
| If the start condition is
 | |
| .I inclusive,
 | |
| then rules with no start conditions at all will also be active.
 | |
| If it is
 | |
| .I exclusive,
 | |
| then
 | |
| .I only
 | |
| rules qualified with the start condition will be active.
 | |
| A set of rules contingent on the same exclusive start condition
 | |
| describe a scanner which is independent of any of the other rules in the
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| input.  Because of this,
 | |
| exclusive start conditions make it easy to specify "mini-scanners"
 | |
| which scan portions of the input that are syntactically different
 | |
| from the rest (e.g., comments).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| If the distinction between inclusive and exclusive start conditions
 | |
| is still a little vague, here's a simple example illustrating the
 | |
| connection between the two.  The set of rules:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %s example
 | |
|     %%
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <example>foo   do_something();
 | |
| 
 | |
|     bar            something_else();
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| is equivalent to
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %x example
 | |
|     %%
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <example>foo   do_something();
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <INITIAL,example>bar    something_else();
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Without the
 | |
| .B <INITIAL,example>
 | |
| qualifier, the
 | |
| .I bar
 | |
| pattern in the second example wouldn't be active (i.e., couldn't match)
 | |
| when in start condition
 | |
| .B example.
 | |
| If we just used
 | |
| .B <example>
 | |
| to qualify
 | |
| .I bar,
 | |
| though, then it would only be active in
 | |
| .B example
 | |
| and not in
 | |
| .B INITIAL,
 | |
| while in the first example it's active in both, because in the first
 | |
| example the
 | |
| .B example
 | |
| startion condition is an
 | |
| .I inclusive
 | |
| .B (%s)
 | |
| start condition.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Also note that the special start-condition specifier
 | |
| .B <*>
 | |
| matches every start condition.  Thus, the above example could also
 | |
| have been written;
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %x example
 | |
|     %%
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <example>foo   do_something();
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <*>bar    something_else();
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The default rule (to
 | |
| .B ECHO
 | |
| any unmatched character) remains active in start conditions.  It
 | |
| is equivalent to:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <*>.|\\n     ECHO;
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .B BEGIN(0)
 | |
| returns to the original state where only the rules with
 | |
| no start conditions are active.  This state can also be
 | |
| referred to as the start-condition "INITIAL", so
 | |
| .B BEGIN(INITIAL)
 | |
| is equivalent to
 | |
| .B BEGIN(0).
 | |
| (The parentheses around the start condition name are not required but
 | |
| are considered good style.)
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .B BEGIN
 | |
| actions can also be given as indented code at the beginning
 | |
| of the rules section.  For example, the following will cause
 | |
| the scanner to enter the "SPECIAL" start condition whenever
 | |
| .B yylex()
 | |
| is called and the global variable
 | |
| .I enter_special
 | |
| is true:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|             int enter_special;
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %x SPECIAL
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|             if ( enter_special )
 | |
|                 BEGIN(SPECIAL);
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <SPECIAL>blahblahblah
 | |
|     ...more rules follow...
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| To illustrate the uses of start conditions,
 | |
| here is a scanner which provides two different interpretations
 | |
| of a string like "123.456".  By default it will treat it as
 | |
| three tokens, the integer "123", a dot ('.'), and the integer "456".
 | |
| But if the string is preceded earlier in the line by the string
 | |
| "expect-floats"
 | |
| it will treat it as a single token, the floating-point number
 | |
| 123.456:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %{
 | |
|     #include <math.h>
 | |
|     %}
 | |
|     %s expect
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     expect-floats        BEGIN(expect);
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <expect>[0-9]+"."[0-9]+      {
 | |
|                 printf( "found a float, = %f\\n",
 | |
|                         atof( yytext ) );
 | |
|                 }
 | |
|     <expect>\\n           {
 | |
|                 /* that's the end of the line, so
 | |
|                  * we need another "expect-number"
 | |
|                  * before we'll recognize any more
 | |
|                  * numbers
 | |
|                  */
 | |
|                 BEGIN(INITIAL);
 | |
|                 }
 | |
| 
 | |
|     [0-9]+      {
 | |
|                 printf( "found an integer, = %d\\n",
 | |
|                         atoi( yytext ) );
 | |
|                 }
 | |
| 
 | |
|     "."         printf( "found a dot\\n" );
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Here is a scanner which recognizes (and discards) C comments while
 | |
| maintaining a count of the current input line.
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %x comment
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|             int line_num = 1;
 | |
| 
 | |
|     "/*"         BEGIN(comment);
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <comment>[^*\\n]*        /* eat anything that's not a '*' */
 | |
|     <comment>"*"+[^*/\\n]*   /* eat up '*'s not followed by '/'s */
 | |
|     <comment>\\n             ++line_num;
 | |
|     <comment>"*"+"/"        BEGIN(INITIAL);
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| This scanner goes to a bit of trouble to match as much
 | |
| text as possible with each rule.  In general, when attempting to write
 | |
| a high-speed scanner try to match as much possible in each rule, as
 | |
| it's a big win.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Note that start-conditions names are really integer values and
 | |
| can be stored as such.  Thus, the above could be extended in the
 | |
| following fashion:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %x comment foo
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|             int line_num = 1;
 | |
|             int comment_caller;
 | |
| 
 | |
|     "/*"         {
 | |
|                  comment_caller = INITIAL;
 | |
|                  BEGIN(comment);
 | |
|                  }
 | |
| 
 | |
|     ...
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <foo>"/*"    {
 | |
|                  comment_caller = foo;
 | |
|                  BEGIN(comment);
 | |
|                  }
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <comment>[^*\\n]*        /* eat anything that's not a '*' */
 | |
|     <comment>"*"+[^*/\\n]*   /* eat up '*'s not followed by '/'s */
 | |
|     <comment>\\n             ++line_num;
 | |
|     <comment>"*"+"/"        BEGIN(comment_caller);
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Furthermore, you can access the current start condition using
 | |
| the integer-valued
 | |
| .B YY_START
 | |
| macro.  For example, the above assignments to
 | |
| .I comment_caller
 | |
| could instead be written
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     comment_caller = YY_START;
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Flex provides
 | |
| .B YYSTATE
 | |
| as an alias for
 | |
| .B YY_START
 | |
| (since that is what's used by AT&T
 | |
| .I lex).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Note that start conditions do not have their own name-space; %s's and %x's
 | |
| declare names in the same fashion as #define's.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Finally, here's an example of how to match C-style quoted strings using
 | |
| exclusive start conditions, including expanded escape sequences (but
 | |
| not including checking for a string that's too long):
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %x str
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|             char string_buf[MAX_STR_CONST];
 | |
|             char *string_buf_ptr;
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
|     \\"      string_buf_ptr = string_buf; BEGIN(str);
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <str>\\"        { /* saw closing quote - all done */
 | |
|             BEGIN(INITIAL);
 | |
|             *string_buf_ptr = '\\0';
 | |
|             /* return string constant token type and
 | |
|              * value to parser
 | |
|              */
 | |
|             }
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <str>\\n        {
 | |
|             /* error - unterminated string constant */
 | |
|             /* generate error message */
 | |
|             }
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <str>\\\\[0-7]{1,3} {
 | |
|             /* octal escape sequence */
 | |
|             int result;
 | |
| 
 | |
|             (void) sscanf( yytext + 1, "%o", &result );
 | |
| 
 | |
|             if ( result > 0xff )
 | |
|                     /* error, constant is out-of-bounds */
 | |
| 
 | |
|             *string_buf_ptr++ = result;
 | |
|             }
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <str>\\\\[0-9]+ {
 | |
|             /* generate error - bad escape sequence; something
 | |
|              * like '\\48' or '\\0777777'
 | |
|              */
 | |
|             }
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <str>\\\\n  *string_buf_ptr++ = '\\n';
 | |
|     <str>\\\\t  *string_buf_ptr++ = '\\t';
 | |
|     <str>\\\\r  *string_buf_ptr++ = '\\r';
 | |
|     <str>\\\\b  *string_buf_ptr++ = '\\b';
 | |
|     <str>\\\\f  *string_buf_ptr++ = '\\f';
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <str>\\\\(.|\\n)  *string_buf_ptr++ = yytext[1];
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <str>[^\\\\\\n\\"]+        {
 | |
|             char *yptr = yytext;
 | |
| 
 | |
|             while ( *yptr )
 | |
|                     *string_buf_ptr++ = *yptr++;
 | |
|             }
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Often, such as in some of the examples above, you wind up writing a
 | |
| whole bunch of rules all preceded by the same start condition(s).  Flex
 | |
| makes this a little easier and cleaner by introducing a notion of
 | |
| start condition
 | |
| .I scope.
 | |
| A start condition scope is begun with:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <SCs>{
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| where
 | |
| .I SCs
 | |
| is a list of one or more start conditions.  Inside the start condition
 | |
| scope, every rule automatically has the prefix
 | |
| .I <SCs>
 | |
| applied to it, until a
 | |
| .I '}'
 | |
| which matches the initial
 | |
| .I '{'.
 | |
| So, for example,
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <ESC>{
 | |
|         "\\\\n"   return '\\n';
 | |
|         "\\\\r"   return '\\r';
 | |
|         "\\\\f"   return '\\f';
 | |
|         "\\\\0"   return '\\0';
 | |
|     }
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| is equivalent to:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <ESC>"\\\\n"  return '\\n';
 | |
|     <ESC>"\\\\r"  return '\\r';
 | |
|     <ESC>"\\\\f"  return '\\f';
 | |
|     <ESC>"\\\\0"  return '\\0';
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Start condition scopes may be nested.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Three routines are available for manipulating stacks of start conditions:
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B void yy_push_state(int new_state)
 | |
| pushes the current start condition onto the top of the start condition
 | |
| stack and switches to
 | |
| .I new_state
 | |
| as though you had used
 | |
| .B BEGIN new_state
 | |
| (recall that start condition names are also integers).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B void yy_pop_state()
 | |
| pops the top of the stack and switches to it via
 | |
| .B BEGIN.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B int yy_top_state()
 | |
| returns the top of the stack without altering the stack's contents.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The start condition stack grows dynamically and so has no built-in
 | |
| size limitation.  If memory is exhausted, program execution aborts.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| To use start condition stacks, your scanner must include a
 | |
| .B %option stack
 | |
| directive (see Options below).
 | |
| .SH MULTIPLE INPUT BUFFERS
 | |
| Some scanners (such as those which support "include" files)
 | |
| require reading from several input streams.  As
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| scanners do a large amount of buffering, one cannot control
 | |
| where the next input will be read from by simply writing a
 | |
| .B YY_INPUT
 | |
| which is sensitive to the scanning context.
 | |
| .B YY_INPUT
 | |
| is only called when the scanner reaches the end of its buffer, which
 | |
| may be a long time after scanning a statement such as an "include"
 | |
| which requires switching the input source.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| To negotiate these sorts of problems,
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| provides a mechanism for creating and switching between multiple
 | |
| input buffers.  An input buffer is created by using:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     YY_BUFFER_STATE yy_create_buffer( FILE *file, int size )
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| which takes a
 | |
| .I FILE
 | |
| pointer and a size and creates a buffer associated with the given
 | |
| file and large enough to hold
 | |
| .I size
 | |
| characters (when in doubt, use
 | |
| .B YY_BUF_SIZE
 | |
| for the size).  It returns a
 | |
| .B YY_BUFFER_STATE
 | |
| handle, which may then be passed to other routines (see below).  The
 | |
| .B YY_BUFFER_STATE
 | |
| type is a pointer to an opaque
 | |
| .B struct yy_buffer_state
 | |
| structure, so you may safely initialize YY_BUFFER_STATE variables to
 | |
| .B ((YY_BUFFER_STATE) 0)
 | |
| if you wish, and also refer to the opaque structure in order to
 | |
| correctly declare input buffers in source files other than that
 | |
| of your scanner.  Note that the
 | |
| .I FILE
 | |
| pointer in the call to
 | |
| .B yy_create_buffer
 | |
| is only used as the value of
 | |
| .I yyin
 | |
| seen by
 | |
| .B YY_INPUT;
 | |
| if you redefine
 | |
| .B YY_INPUT
 | |
| so it no longer uses
 | |
| .I yyin,
 | |
| then you can safely pass a nil
 | |
| .I FILE
 | |
| pointer to
 | |
| .B yy_create_buffer.
 | |
| You select a particular buffer to scan from using:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     void yy_switch_to_buffer( YY_BUFFER_STATE new_buffer )
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| switches the scanner's input buffer so subsequent tokens will
 | |
| come from
 | |
| .I new_buffer.
 | |
| Note that
 | |
| .B yy_switch_to_buffer()
 | |
| may be used by yywrap() to set things up for continued scanning, instead
 | |
| of opening a new file and pointing
 | |
| .I yyin
 | |
| at it.  Note also that switching input sources via either
 | |
| .B yy_switch_to_buffer()
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B yywrap()
 | |
| does
 | |
| .I not
 | |
| change the start condition.
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     void yy_delete_buffer( YY_BUFFER_STATE buffer )
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| is used to reclaim the storage associated with a buffer.  (
 | |
| .B buffer
 | |
| can be nil, in which case the routine does nothing.)
 | |
| You can also clear the current contents of a buffer using:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     void yy_flush_buffer( YY_BUFFER_STATE buffer )
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| This function discards the buffer's contents,
 | |
| so the next time the scanner attempts to match a token from the
 | |
| buffer, it will first fill the buffer anew using
 | |
| .B YY_INPUT.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .B yy_new_buffer()
 | |
| is an alias for
 | |
| .B yy_create_buffer(),
 | |
| provided for compatibility with the C++ use of
 | |
| .I new
 | |
| and
 | |
| .I delete
 | |
| for creating and destroying dynamic objects.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Finally, the
 | |
| .B YY_CURRENT_BUFFER
 | |
| macro returns a
 | |
| .B YY_BUFFER_STATE
 | |
| handle to the current buffer.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Here is an example of using these features for writing a scanner
 | |
| which expands include files (the
 | |
| .B <<EOF>>
 | |
| feature is discussed below):
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     /* the "incl" state is used for picking up the name
 | |
|      * of an include file
 | |
|      */
 | |
|     %x incl
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %{
 | |
|     #define MAX_INCLUDE_DEPTH 10
 | |
|     YY_BUFFER_STATE include_stack[MAX_INCLUDE_DEPTH];
 | |
|     int include_stack_ptr = 0;
 | |
|     %}
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     include             BEGIN(incl);
 | |
| 
 | |
|     [a-z]+              ECHO;
 | |
|     [^a-z\\n]*\\n?        ECHO;
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <incl>[ \\t]*      /* eat the whitespace */
 | |
|     <incl>[^ \\t\\n]+   { /* got the include file name */
 | |
|             if ( include_stack_ptr >= MAX_INCLUDE_DEPTH )
 | |
|                 {
 | |
|                 fprintf( stderr, "Includes nested too deeply" );
 | |
|                 exit( 1 );
 | |
|                 }
 | |
| 
 | |
|             include_stack[include_stack_ptr++] =
 | |
|                 YY_CURRENT_BUFFER;
 | |
| 
 | |
|             yyin = fopen( yytext, "r" );
 | |
| 
 | |
|             if ( ! yyin )
 | |
|                 error( ... );
 | |
| 
 | |
|             yy_switch_to_buffer(
 | |
|                 yy_create_buffer( yyin, YY_BUF_SIZE ) );
 | |
| 
 | |
|             BEGIN(INITIAL);
 | |
|             }
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <<EOF>> {
 | |
|             if ( --include_stack_ptr < 0 )
 | |
|                 {
 | |
|                 yyterminate();
 | |
|                 }
 | |
| 
 | |
|             else
 | |
|                 {
 | |
|                 yy_delete_buffer( YY_CURRENT_BUFFER );
 | |
|                 yy_switch_to_buffer(
 | |
|                      include_stack[include_stack_ptr] );
 | |
|                 }
 | |
|             }
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Three routines are available for setting up input buffers for
 | |
| scanning in-memory strings instead of files.  All of them create
 | |
| a new input buffer for scanning the string, and return a corresponding
 | |
| .B YY_BUFFER_STATE
 | |
| handle (which you should delete with
 | |
| .B yy_delete_buffer()
 | |
| when done with it).  They also switch to the new buffer using
 | |
| .B yy_switch_to_buffer(),
 | |
| so the next call to
 | |
| .B yylex()
 | |
| will start scanning the string.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B yy_scan_string(const char *str)
 | |
| scans a NUL-terminated string.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B yy_scan_bytes(const char *bytes, int len)
 | |
| scans
 | |
| .I len
 | |
| bytes (including possibly NUL's)
 | |
| starting at location
 | |
| .I bytes.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Note that both of these functions create and scan a
 | |
| .I copy
 | |
| of the string or bytes.  (This may be desirable, since
 | |
| .B yylex()
 | |
| modifies the contents of the buffer it is scanning.)  You can avoid the
 | |
| copy by using:
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B yy_scan_buffer(char *base, yy_size_t size)
 | |
| which scans in place the buffer starting at
 | |
| .I base,
 | |
| consisting of
 | |
| .I size
 | |
| bytes, the last two bytes of which
 | |
| .I must
 | |
| be
 | |
| .B YY_END_OF_BUFFER_CHAR
 | |
| (ASCII NUL).
 | |
| These last two bytes are not scanned; thus, scanning
 | |
| consists of
 | |
| .B base[0]
 | |
| through
 | |
| .B base[size-2],
 | |
| inclusive.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| If you fail to set up
 | |
| .I base
 | |
| in this manner (i.e., forget the final two
 | |
| .B YY_END_OF_BUFFER_CHAR
 | |
| bytes), then
 | |
| .B yy_scan_buffer()
 | |
| returns a nil pointer instead of creating a new input buffer.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| The type
 | |
| .B yy_size_t
 | |
| is an integral type to which you can cast an integer expression
 | |
| reflecting the size of the buffer.
 | |
| .SH END-OF-FILE RULES
 | |
| The special rule "<<EOF>>" indicates
 | |
| actions which are to be taken when an end-of-file is
 | |
| encountered and yywrap() returns non-zero (i.e., indicates
 | |
| no further files to process).  The action must finish
 | |
| by doing one of four things:
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| assigning
 | |
| .I yyin
 | |
| to a new input file (in previous versions of flex, after doing the
 | |
| assignment you had to call the special action
 | |
| .B YY_NEW_FILE;
 | |
| this is no longer necessary);
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| executing a
 | |
| .I return
 | |
| statement;
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| executing the special
 | |
| .B yyterminate()
 | |
| action;
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| or, switching to a new buffer using
 | |
| .B yy_switch_to_buffer()
 | |
| as shown in the example above.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| <<EOF>> rules may not be used with other
 | |
| patterns; they may only be qualified with a list of start
 | |
| conditions.  If an unqualified <<EOF>> rule is given, it
 | |
| applies to
 | |
| .I all
 | |
| start conditions which do not already have <<EOF>> actions.  To
 | |
| specify an <<EOF>> rule for only the initial start condition, use
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <INITIAL><<EOF>>
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| These rules are useful for catching things like unclosed comments.
 | |
| An example:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %x quote
 | |
|     %%
 | |
| 
 | |
|     ...other rules for dealing with quotes...
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <quote><<EOF>>   {
 | |
|              error( "unterminated quote" );
 | |
|              yyterminate();
 | |
|              }
 | |
|     <<EOF>>  {
 | |
|              if ( *++filelist )
 | |
|                  yyin = fopen( *filelist, "r" );
 | |
|              else
 | |
|                 yyterminate();
 | |
|              }
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .SH MISCELLANEOUS MACROS
 | |
| The macro
 | |
| .B YY_USER_ACTION
 | |
| can be defined to provide an action
 | |
| which is always executed prior to the matched rule's action.  For example,
 | |
| it could be #define'd to call a routine to convert yytext to lower-case.
 | |
| When
 | |
| .B YY_USER_ACTION
 | |
| is invoked, the variable
 | |
| .I yy_act
 | |
| gives the number of the matched rule (rules are numbered starting with 1).
 | |
| Suppose you want to profile how often each of your rules is matched.  The
 | |
| following would do the trick:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     #define YY_USER_ACTION ++ctr[yy_act]
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| where
 | |
| .I ctr
 | |
| is an array to hold the counts for the different rules.  Note that
 | |
| the macro
 | |
| .B YY_NUM_RULES
 | |
| gives the total number of rules (including the default rule, even if
 | |
| you use
 | |
| .B \-s),
 | |
| so a correct declaration for
 | |
| .I ctr
 | |
| is:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     int ctr[YY_NUM_RULES];
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The macro
 | |
| .B YY_USER_INIT
 | |
| may be defined to provide an action which is always executed before
 | |
| the first scan (and before the scanner's internal initializations are done).
 | |
| For example, it could be used to call a routine to read
 | |
| in a data table or open a logging file.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The macro
 | |
| .B yy_set_interactive(is_interactive)
 | |
| can be used to control whether the current buffer is considered
 | |
| .I interactive.
 | |
| An interactive buffer is processed more slowly,
 | |
| but must be used when the scanner's input source is indeed
 | |
| interactive to avoid problems due to waiting to fill buffers
 | |
| (see the discussion of the
 | |
| .B \-I
 | |
| flag below).  A non-zero value
 | |
| in the macro invocation marks the buffer as interactive, a zero  
 | |
| value as non-interactive.  Note that use of this macro overrides
 | |
| .B %option always-interactive
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B %option never-interactive
 | |
| (see Options below).
 | |
| .B yy_set_interactive()
 | |
| must be invoked prior to beginning to scan the buffer that is
 | |
| (or is not) to be considered interactive.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The macro
 | |
| .B yy_set_bol(at_bol)
 | |
| can be used to control whether the current buffer's scanning
 | |
| context for the next token match is done as though at the
 | |
| beginning of a line.  A non-zero macro argument makes rules anchored with
 | |
| '^' active, while a zero argument makes '^' rules inactive.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The macro
 | |
| .B YY_AT_BOL()
 | |
| returns true if the next token scanned from the current buffer
 | |
| will have '^' rules active, false otherwise.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| In the generated scanner, the actions are all gathered in one large
 | |
| switch statement and separated using
 | |
| .B YY_BREAK,
 | |
| which may be redefined.  By default, it is simply a "break", to separate
 | |
| each rule's action from the following rule's.
 | |
| Redefining
 | |
| .B YY_BREAK
 | |
| allows, for example, C++ users to
 | |
| #define YY_BREAK to do nothing (while being very careful that every
 | |
| rule ends with a "break" or a "return"!) to avoid suffering from
 | |
| unreachable statement warnings where because a rule's action ends with
 | |
| "return", the
 | |
| .B YY_BREAK
 | |
| is inaccessible.
 | |
| .SH VALUES AVAILABLE TO THE USER
 | |
| This section summarizes the various values available to the user
 | |
| in the rule actions.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .B char *yytext
 | |
| holds the text of the current token.  It may be modified but not lengthened
 | |
| (you cannot append characters to the end).
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| If the special directive
 | |
| .B %array
 | |
| appears in the first section of the scanner description, then
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| is instead declared
 | |
| .B char yytext[YYLMAX],
 | |
| where
 | |
| .B YYLMAX
 | |
| is a macro definition that you can redefine in the first section
 | |
| if you don't like the default value (generally 8KB).  Using
 | |
| .B %array
 | |
| results in somewhat slower scanners, but the value of
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| becomes immune to calls to
 | |
| .I input()
 | |
| and
 | |
| .I unput(),
 | |
| which potentially destroy its value when
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| is a character pointer.  The opposite of
 | |
| .B %array
 | |
| is
 | |
| .B %pointer,
 | |
| which is the default.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| You cannot use
 | |
| .B %array
 | |
| when generating C++ scanner classes
 | |
| (the
 | |
| .B \-+
 | |
| flag).
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .B int yyleng
 | |
| holds the length of the current token.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .B FILE *yyin
 | |
| is the file which by default
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| reads from.  It may be redefined but doing so only makes sense before
 | |
| scanning begins or after an EOF has been encountered.  Changing it in
 | |
| the midst of scanning will have unexpected results since
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| buffers its input; use
 | |
| .B yyrestart()
 | |
| instead.
 | |
| Once scanning terminates because an end-of-file
 | |
| has been seen, you can assign
 | |
| .I yyin
 | |
| at the new input file and then call the scanner again to continue scanning.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .B void yyrestart( FILE *new_file )
 | |
| may be called to point
 | |
| .I yyin
 | |
| at the new input file.  The switch-over to the new file is immediate
 | |
| (any previously buffered-up input is lost).  Note that calling
 | |
| .B yyrestart()
 | |
| with
 | |
| .I yyin
 | |
| as an argument thus throws away the current input buffer and continues
 | |
| scanning the same input file.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .B FILE *yyout
 | |
| is the file to which
 | |
| .B ECHO
 | |
| actions are done.  It can be reassigned by the user.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .B YY_CURRENT_BUFFER
 | |
| returns a
 | |
| .B YY_BUFFER_STATE
 | |
| handle to the current buffer.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .B YY_START
 | |
| returns an integer value corresponding to the current start
 | |
| condition.  You can subsequently use this value with
 | |
| .B BEGIN
 | |
| to return to that start condition.
 | |
| .SH INTERFACING WITH YACC
 | |
| One of the main uses of
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| is as a companion to the
 | |
| .I yacc
 | |
| parser-generator.
 | |
| .I yacc
 | |
| parsers expect to call a routine named
 | |
| .B yylex()
 | |
| to find the next input token.  The routine is supposed to
 | |
| return the type of the next token as well as putting any associated
 | |
| value in the global
 | |
| .B yylval.
 | |
| To use
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| with
 | |
| .I yacc,
 | |
| one specifies the
 | |
| .B \-d
 | |
| option to
 | |
| .I yacc
 | |
| to instruct it to generate the file
 | |
| .B y.tab.h
 | |
| containing definitions of all the
 | |
| .B %tokens
 | |
| appearing in the
 | |
| .I yacc
 | |
| input.  This file is then included in the
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| scanner.  For example, if one of the tokens is "TOK_NUMBER",
 | |
| part of the scanner might look like:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %{
 | |
|     #include "y.tab.h"
 | |
|     %}
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
| 
 | |
|     [0-9]+        yylval = atoi( yytext ); return TOK_NUMBER;
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .SH OPTIONS
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| has the following options:
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-b
 | |
| Generate backing-up information to
 | |
| .I lex.backup.
 | |
| This is a list of scanner states which require backing up
 | |
| and the input characters on which they do so.  By adding rules one
 | |
| can remove backing-up states.  If
 | |
| .I all
 | |
| backing-up states are eliminated and
 | |
| .B \-Cf
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B \-CF
 | |
| is used, the generated scanner will run faster (see the
 | |
| .B \-p
 | |
| flag).  Only users who wish to squeeze every last cycle out of their
 | |
| scanners need worry about this option.  (See the section on Performance
 | |
| Considerations below.)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-c
 | |
| is a do-nothing, deprecated option included for POSIX compliance.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-d
 | |
| makes the generated scanner run in
 | |
| .I debug
 | |
| mode.  Whenever a pattern is recognized and the global
 | |
| .B yy_flex_debug
 | |
| is non-zero (which is the default),
 | |
| the scanner will write to
 | |
| .I stderr
 | |
| a line of the form:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     --accepting rule at line 53 ("the matched text")
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| The line number refers to the location of the rule in the file
 | |
| defining the scanner (i.e., the file that was fed to flex).  Messages
 | |
| are also generated when the scanner backs up, accepts the
 | |
| default rule, reaches the end of its input buffer (or encounters
 | |
| a NUL; at this point, the two look the same as far as the scanner's concerned),
 | |
| or reaches an end-of-file.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-f
 | |
| specifies
 | |
| .I fast scanner.
 | |
| No table compression is done and stdio is bypassed.
 | |
| The result is large but fast.  This option is equivalent to
 | |
| .B \-Cfr
 | |
| (see below).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-h
 | |
| generates a "help" summary of
 | |
| .I flex's
 | |
| options to
 | |
| .I stdout 
 | |
| and then exits.
 | |
| .B \-?
 | |
| and
 | |
| .B \-\-help
 | |
| are synonyms for
 | |
| .B \-h.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-i
 | |
| instructs
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| to generate a
 | |
| .I case-insensitive
 | |
| scanner.  The case of letters given in the
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| input patterns will
 | |
| be ignored, and tokens in the input will be matched regardless of case.  The
 | |
| matched text given in
 | |
| .I yytext
 | |
| will have the preserved case (i.e., it will not be folded).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-l
 | |
| turns on maximum compatibility with the original AT&T
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| implementation.  Note that this does not mean
 | |
| .I full
 | |
| compatibility.  Use of this option costs a considerable amount of
 | |
| performance, and it cannot be used with the
 | |
| .B \-+, -f, -F, -Cf,
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B -CF
 | |
| options.  For details on the compatibilities it provides, see the section
 | |
| "Incompatibilities With Lex And POSIX" below.  This option also results
 | |
| in the name
 | |
| .B YY_FLEX_LEX_COMPAT
 | |
| being #define'd in the generated scanner.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-n
 | |
| is another do-nothing, deprecated option included only for
 | |
| POSIX compliance.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-p
 | |
| generates a performance report to stderr.  The report
 | |
| consists of comments regarding features of the
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| input file which will cause a serious loss of performance in the resulting
 | |
| scanner.  If you give the flag twice, you will also get comments regarding
 | |
| features that lead to minor performance losses.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| Note that the use of
 | |
| .B REJECT,
 | |
| .B %option yylineno,
 | |
| and variable trailing context (see the Deficiencies / Bugs section below)
 | |
| entails a substantial performance penalty; use of
 | |
| .I yymore(),
 | |
| the
 | |
| .B ^
 | |
| operator,
 | |
| and the
 | |
| .B \-I
 | |
| flag entail minor performance penalties.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-s
 | |
| causes the
 | |
| .I default rule
 | |
| (that unmatched scanner input is echoed to
 | |
| .I stdout)
 | |
| to be suppressed.  If the scanner encounters input that does not
 | |
| match any of its rules, it aborts with an error.  This option is
 | |
| useful for finding holes in a scanner's rule set.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-t
 | |
| instructs
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| to write the scanner it generates to standard output instead
 | |
| of
 | |
| .B lex.yy.c.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-v
 | |
| specifies that
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| should write to
 | |
| .I stderr
 | |
| a summary of statistics regarding the scanner it generates.
 | |
| Most of the statistics are meaningless to the casual
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| user, but the first line identifies the version of
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| (same as reported by
 | |
| .B \-V),
 | |
| and the next line the flags used when generating the scanner, including
 | |
| those that are on by default.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-w
 | |
| suppresses warning messages.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-B
 | |
| instructs
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| to generate a
 | |
| .I batch
 | |
| scanner, the opposite of
 | |
| .I interactive
 | |
| scanners generated by
 | |
| .B \-I
 | |
| (see below).  In general, you use
 | |
| .B \-B
 | |
| when you are
 | |
| .I certain
 | |
| that your scanner will never be used interactively, and you want to
 | |
| squeeze a
 | |
| .I little
 | |
| more performance out of it.  If your goal is instead to squeeze out a
 | |
| .I lot
 | |
| more performance, you should  be using the
 | |
| .B \-Cf
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B \-CF
 | |
| options (discussed below), which turn on
 | |
| .B \-B
 | |
| automatically anyway.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-F
 | |
| specifies that the
 | |
| .ul
 | |
| fast
 | |
| scanner table representation should be used (and stdio
 | |
| bypassed).  This representation is
 | |
| about as fast as the full table representation
 | |
| .B (-f),
 | |
| and for some sets of patterns will be considerably smaller (and for
 | |
| others, larger).  In general, if the pattern set contains both "keywords"
 | |
| and a catch-all, "identifier" rule, such as in the set:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     "case"    return TOK_CASE;
 | |
|     "switch"  return TOK_SWITCH;
 | |
|     ...
 | |
|     "default" return TOK_DEFAULT;
 | |
|     [a-z]+    return TOK_ID;
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| then you're better off using the full table representation.  If only
 | |
| the "identifier" rule is present and you then use a hash table or some such
 | |
| to detect the keywords, you're better off using
 | |
| .B -F.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| This option is equivalent to
 | |
| .B \-CFr
 | |
| (see below).  It cannot be used with
 | |
| .B \-+.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-I
 | |
| instructs
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| to generate an
 | |
| .I interactive
 | |
| scanner.  An interactive scanner is one that only looks ahead to decide
 | |
| what token has been matched if it absolutely must.  It turns out that
 | |
| always looking one extra character ahead, even if the scanner has already
 | |
| seen enough text to disambiguate the current token, is a bit faster than
 | |
| only looking ahead when necessary.  But scanners that always look ahead
 | |
| give dreadful interactive performance; for example, when a user types
 | |
| a newline, it is not recognized as a newline token until they enter
 | |
| .I another
 | |
| token, which often means typing in another whole line.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .I Flex
 | |
| scanners default to
 | |
| .I interactive
 | |
| unless you use the
 | |
| .B \-Cf
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B \-CF
 | |
| table-compression options (see below).  That's because if you're looking
 | |
| for high-performance you should be using one of these options, so if you
 | |
| didn't,
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| assumes you'd rather trade off a bit of run-time performance for intuitive
 | |
| interactive behavior.  Note also that you
 | |
| .I cannot
 | |
| use
 | |
| .B \-I
 | |
| in conjunction with
 | |
| .B \-Cf
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B \-CF.
 | |
| Thus, this option is not really needed; it is on by default for all those
 | |
| cases in which it is allowed.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| You can force a scanner to
 | |
| .I not
 | |
| be interactive by using
 | |
| .B \-B
 | |
| (see above).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-L
 | |
| instructs
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| not to generate
 | |
| .B #line
 | |
| directives.  Without this option,
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| peppers the generated scanner
 | |
| with #line directives so error messages in the actions will be correctly
 | |
| located with respect to either the original
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| input file (if the errors are due to code in the input file), or
 | |
| .B lex.yy.c
 | |
| (if the errors are
 | |
| .I flex's
 | |
| fault -- you should report these sorts of errors to the email address
 | |
| given below).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-T
 | |
| makes
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| run in
 | |
| .I trace
 | |
| mode.  It will generate a lot of messages to
 | |
| .I stderr
 | |
| concerning
 | |
| the form of the input and the resultant non-deterministic and deterministic
 | |
| finite automata.  This option is mostly for use in maintaining
 | |
| .I flex.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-V
 | |
| prints the version number to
 | |
| .I stdout
 | |
| and exits.
 | |
| .B \-\-version
 | |
| is a synonym for
 | |
| .B \-V.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-7
 | |
| instructs
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| to generate a 7-bit scanner, i.e., one which can only recognized 7-bit
 | |
| characters in its input.  The advantage of using
 | |
| .B \-7
 | |
| is that the scanner's tables can be up to half the size of those generated
 | |
| using the
 | |
| .B \-8
 | |
| option (see below).  The disadvantage is that such scanners often hang
 | |
| or crash if their input contains an 8-bit character.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| Note, however, that unless you generate your scanner using the
 | |
| .B \-Cf
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B \-CF
 | |
| table compression options, use of
 | |
| .B \-7
 | |
| will save only a small amount of table space, and make your scanner
 | |
| considerably less portable.
 | |
| .I Flex's
 | |
| default behavior is to generate an 8-bit scanner unless you use the
 | |
| .B \-Cf
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B \-CF,
 | |
| in which case
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| defaults to generating 7-bit scanners unless your site was always
 | |
| configured to generate 8-bit scanners (as will often be the case
 | |
| with non-USA sites).  You can tell whether flex generated a 7-bit
 | |
| or an 8-bit scanner by inspecting the flag summary in the
 | |
| .B \-v
 | |
| output as described above.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| Note that if you use
 | |
| .B \-Cfe
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B \-CFe
 | |
| (those table compression options, but also using equivalence classes as
 | |
| discussed see below), flex still defaults to generating an 8-bit
 | |
| scanner, since usually with these compression options full 8-bit tables
 | |
| are not much more expensive than 7-bit tables.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-8
 | |
| instructs
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| to generate an 8-bit scanner, i.e., one which can recognize 8-bit
 | |
| characters.  This flag is only needed for scanners generated using
 | |
| .B \-Cf
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B \-CF,
 | |
| as otherwise flex defaults to generating an 8-bit scanner anyway.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| See the discussion of
 | |
| .B \-7
 | |
| above for flex's default behavior and the tradeoffs between 7-bit
 | |
| and 8-bit scanners.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-+
 | |
| specifies that you want flex to generate a C++
 | |
| scanner class.  See the section on Generating C++ Scanners below for
 | |
| details.
 | |
| .TP 
 | |
| .B \-C[aefFmr]
 | |
| controls the degree of table compression and, more generally, trade-offs
 | |
| between small scanners and fast scanners.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .B \-Ca
 | |
| ("align") instructs flex to trade off larger tables in the
 | |
| generated scanner for faster performance because the elements of
 | |
| the tables are better aligned for memory access and computation.  On some
 | |
| RISC architectures, fetching and manipulating longwords is more efficient
 | |
| than with smaller-sized units such as shortwords.  This option can
 | |
| double the size of the tables used by your scanner.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .B \-Ce
 | |
| directs
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| to construct
 | |
| .I equivalence classes,
 | |
| i.e., sets of characters
 | |
| which have identical lexical properties (for example, if the only
 | |
| appearance of digits in the
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| input is in the character class
 | |
| "[0-9]" then the digits '0', '1', ..., '9' will all be put
 | |
| in the same equivalence class).  Equivalence classes usually give
 | |
| dramatic reductions in the final table/object file sizes (typically
 | |
| a factor of 2-5) and are pretty cheap performance-wise (one array
 | |
| look-up per character scanned).
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .B \-Cf
 | |
| specifies that the
 | |
| .I full
 | |
| scanner tables should be generated -
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| should not compress the
 | |
| tables by taking advantages of similar transition functions for
 | |
| different states.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .B \-CF
 | |
| specifies that the alternate fast scanner representation (described
 | |
| above under the
 | |
| .B \-F
 | |
| flag)
 | |
| should be used.  This option cannot be used with
 | |
| .B \-+.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .B \-Cm
 | |
| directs
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| to construct
 | |
| .I meta-equivalence classes,
 | |
| which are sets of equivalence classes (or characters, if equivalence
 | |
| classes are not being used) that are commonly used together.  Meta-equivalence
 | |
| classes are often a big win when using compressed tables, but they
 | |
| have a moderate performance impact (one or two "if" tests and one
 | |
| array look-up per character scanned).
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .B \-Cr
 | |
| causes the generated scanner to
 | |
| .I bypass
 | |
| use of the standard I/O library (stdio) for input.  Instead of calling
 | |
| .B fread()
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B getc(),
 | |
| the scanner will use the
 | |
| .B read()
 | |
| system call, resulting in a performance gain which varies from system
 | |
| to system, but in general is probably negligible unless you are also using
 | |
| .B \-Cf
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B \-CF.
 | |
| Using
 | |
| .B \-Cr
 | |
| can cause strange behavior if, for example, you read from
 | |
| .I yyin
 | |
| using stdio prior to calling the scanner (because the scanner will miss
 | |
| whatever text your previous reads left in the stdio input buffer).
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .B \-Cr
 | |
| has no effect if you define
 | |
| .B YY_INPUT
 | |
| (see The Generated Scanner above).
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| A lone
 | |
| .B \-C
 | |
| specifies that the scanner tables should be compressed but neither
 | |
| equivalence classes nor meta-equivalence classes should be used.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| The options
 | |
| .B \-Cf
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B \-CF
 | |
| and
 | |
| .B \-Cm
 | |
| do not make sense together - there is no opportunity for meta-equivalence
 | |
| classes if the table is not being compressed.  Otherwise the options
 | |
| may be freely mixed, and are cumulative.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| The default setting is
 | |
| .B \-Cem,
 | |
| which specifies that
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| should generate equivalence classes
 | |
| and meta-equivalence classes.  This setting provides the highest
 | |
| degree of table compression.  You can trade off
 | |
| faster-executing scanners at the cost of larger tables with
 | |
| the following generally being true:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     slowest & smallest
 | |
|           -Cem
 | |
|           -Cm
 | |
|           -Ce
 | |
|           -C
 | |
|           -C{f,F}e
 | |
|           -C{f,F}
 | |
|           -C{f,F}a
 | |
|     fastest & largest
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Note that scanners with the smallest tables are usually generated and
 | |
| compiled the quickest, so
 | |
| during development you will usually want to use the default, maximal
 | |
| compression.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .B \-Cfe
 | |
| is often a good compromise between speed and size for production
 | |
| scanners.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-ooutput
 | |
| directs flex to write the scanner to the file
 | |
| .B output
 | |
| instead of
 | |
| .B lex.yy.c.
 | |
| If you combine
 | |
| .B \-o
 | |
| with the
 | |
| .B \-t
 | |
| option, then the scanner is written to
 | |
| .I stdout
 | |
| but its
 | |
| .B #line
 | |
| directives (see the
 | |
| .B \\-L
 | |
| option above) refer to the file
 | |
| .B output.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-Pprefix
 | |
| changes the default
 | |
| .I "yy"
 | |
| prefix used by
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| for all globally-visible variable and function names to instead be
 | |
| .I prefix.
 | |
| For example,
 | |
| .B \-Pfoo
 | |
| changes the name of
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| to
 | |
| .B footext.
 | |
| It also changes the name of the default output file from
 | |
| .B lex.yy.c
 | |
| to
 | |
| .B lex.foo.c.
 | |
| Here are all of the names affected:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     yy_create_buffer
 | |
|     yy_delete_buffer
 | |
|     yy_flex_debug
 | |
|     yy_init_buffer
 | |
|     yy_flush_buffer
 | |
|     yy_load_buffer_state
 | |
|     yy_switch_to_buffer
 | |
|     yyin
 | |
|     yyleng
 | |
|     yylex
 | |
|     yylineno
 | |
|     yyout
 | |
|     yyrestart
 | |
|     yytext
 | |
|     yywrap
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| (If you are using a C++ scanner, then only
 | |
| .B yywrap
 | |
| and
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer
 | |
| are affected.)
 | |
| Within your scanner itself, you can still refer to the global variables
 | |
| and functions using either version of their name; but externally, they
 | |
| have the modified name.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| This option lets you easily link together multiple
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| programs into the same executable.  Note, though, that using this
 | |
| option also renames
 | |
| .B yywrap(),
 | |
| so you now
 | |
| .I must
 | |
| either
 | |
| provide your own (appropriately-named) version of the routine for your
 | |
| scanner, or use
 | |
| .B %option noyywrap,
 | |
| as linking with
 | |
| .B \-lfl
 | |
| no longer provides one for you by default.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-Sskeleton_file
 | |
| overrides the default skeleton file from which
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| constructs its scanners.  You'll never need this option unless you are doing
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| maintenance or development.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| also provides a mechanism for controlling options within the
 | |
| scanner specification itself, rather than from the flex command-line.
 | |
| This is done by including
 | |
| .B %option
 | |
| directives in the first section of the scanner specification.
 | |
| You can specify multiple options with a single
 | |
| .B %option
 | |
| directive, and multiple directives in the first section of your flex input
 | |
| file.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Most options are given simply as names, optionally preceded by the
 | |
| word "no" (with no intervening whitespace) to negate their meaning.
 | |
| A number are equivalent to flex flags or their negation:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     7bit            -7 option
 | |
|     8bit            -8 option
 | |
|     align           -Ca option
 | |
|     backup          -b option
 | |
|     batch           -B option
 | |
|     c++             -+ option
 | |
| 
 | |
|     caseful or
 | |
|     case-sensitive  opposite of -i (default)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     case-insensitive or
 | |
|     caseless        -i option
 | |
| 
 | |
|     debug           -d option
 | |
|     default         opposite of -s option
 | |
|     ecs             -Ce option
 | |
|     fast            -F option
 | |
|     full            -f option
 | |
|     interactive     -I option
 | |
|     lex-compat      -l option
 | |
|     meta-ecs        -Cm option
 | |
|     perf-report     -p option
 | |
|     read            -Cr option
 | |
|     stdout          -t option
 | |
|     verbose         -v option
 | |
|     warn            opposite of -w option
 | |
|                     (use "%option nowarn" for -w)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     array           equivalent to "%array"
 | |
|     pointer         equivalent to "%pointer" (default)
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Some
 | |
| .B %option's
 | |
| provide features otherwise not available:
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B always-interactive
 | |
| instructs flex to generate a scanner which always considers its input
 | |
| "interactive".  Normally, on each new input file the scanner calls
 | |
| .B isatty()
 | |
| in an attempt to determine whether
 | |
| the scanner's input source is interactive and thus should be read a
 | |
| character at a time.  When this option is used, however, then no
 | |
| such call is made.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B main
 | |
| directs flex to provide a default
 | |
| .B main()
 | |
| program for the scanner, which simply calls
 | |
| .B yylex().
 | |
| This option implies
 | |
| .B noyywrap
 | |
| (see below).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B never-interactive
 | |
| instructs flex to generate a scanner which never considers its input
 | |
| "interactive" (again, no call made to
 | |
| .B isatty()).
 | |
| This is the opposite of
 | |
| .B always-interactive.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B stack
 | |
| enables the use of start condition stacks (see Start Conditions above).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B stdinit
 | |
| if set (i.e.,
 | |
| .B %option stdinit)
 | |
| initializes
 | |
| .I yyin
 | |
| and
 | |
| .I yyout
 | |
| to
 | |
| .I stdin
 | |
| and
 | |
| .I stdout,
 | |
| instead of the default of
 | |
| .I nil.
 | |
| Some existing
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| programs depend on this behavior, even though it is not compliant with
 | |
| ANSI C, which does not require
 | |
| .I stdin
 | |
| and
 | |
| .I stdout
 | |
| to be compile-time constant.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B yylineno
 | |
| directs
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| to generate a scanner that maintains the number of the current line
 | |
| read from its input in the global variable
 | |
| .B yylineno.
 | |
| This option is implied by
 | |
| .B %option lex-compat.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B yywrap
 | |
| if unset (i.e.,
 | |
| .B %option noyywrap),
 | |
| makes the scanner not call
 | |
| .B yywrap()
 | |
| upon an end-of-file, but simply assume that there are no more
 | |
| files to scan (until the user points
 | |
| .I yyin
 | |
| at a new file and calls
 | |
| .B yylex()
 | |
| again).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| scans your rule actions to determine whether you use the
 | |
| .B REJECT
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B yymore()
 | |
| features.  The
 | |
| .B reject
 | |
| and
 | |
| .B yymore
 | |
| options are available to override its decision as to whether you use the
 | |
| options, either by setting them (e.g.,
 | |
| .B %option reject)
 | |
| to indicate the feature is indeed used, or
 | |
| unsetting them to indicate it actually is not used
 | |
| (e.g.,
 | |
| .B %option noyymore).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Three options take string-delimited values, offset with '=':
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %option outfile="ABC"
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| is equivalent to
 | |
| .B -oABC,
 | |
| and
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %option prefix="XYZ"
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| is equivalent to
 | |
| .B -PXYZ.
 | |
| Finally,
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %option yyclass="foo"
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| only applies when generating a C++ scanner (
 | |
| .B \-+
 | |
| option).  It informs
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| that you have derived
 | |
| .B foo
 | |
| as a subclass of
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer,
 | |
| so
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| will place your actions in the member function
 | |
| .B foo::yylex()
 | |
| instead of
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer::yylex().
 | |
| It also generates a
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer::yylex()
 | |
| member function that emits a run-time error (by invoking
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer::LexerError())
 | |
| if called.
 | |
| See Generating C++ Scanners, below, for additional information.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| A number of options are available for lint purists who want to suppress
 | |
| the appearance of unneeded routines in the generated scanner.  Each of the
 | |
| following, if unset
 | |
| (e.g.,
 | |
| .B %option nounput
 | |
| ), results in the corresponding routine not appearing in
 | |
| the generated scanner:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     input, unput
 | |
|     yy_push_state, yy_pop_state, yy_top_state
 | |
|     yy_scan_buffer, yy_scan_bytes, yy_scan_string
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| (though
 | |
| .B yy_push_state()
 | |
| and friends won't appear anyway unless you use
 | |
| .B %option stack).
 | |
| .SH PERFORMANCE CONSIDERATIONS
 | |
| The main design goal of
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| is that it generate high-performance scanners.  It has been optimized
 | |
| for dealing well with large sets of rules.  Aside from the effects on
 | |
| scanner speed of the table compression
 | |
| .B \-C
 | |
| options outlined above,
 | |
| there are a number of options/actions which degrade performance.  These
 | |
| are, from most expensive to least:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     REJECT
 | |
|     %option yylineno
 | |
|     arbitrary trailing context
 | |
| 
 | |
|     pattern sets that require backing up
 | |
|     %array
 | |
|     %option interactive
 | |
|     %option always-interactive
 | |
| 
 | |
|     '^' beginning-of-line operator
 | |
|     yymore()
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| with the first three all being quite expensive and the last two
 | |
| being quite cheap.  Note also that
 | |
| .B unput()
 | |
| is implemented as a routine call that potentially does quite a bit of
 | |
| work, while
 | |
| .B yyless()
 | |
| is a quite-cheap macro; so if just putting back some excess text you
 | |
| scanned, use
 | |
| .B yyless().
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .B REJECT
 | |
| should be avoided at all costs when performance is important.
 | |
| It is a particularly expensive option.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Getting rid of backing up is messy and often may be an enormous
 | |
| amount of work for a complicated scanner.  In principal, one begins
 | |
| by using the
 | |
| .B \-b 
 | |
| flag to generate a
 | |
| .I lex.backup
 | |
| file.  For example, on the input
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     foo        return TOK_KEYWORD;
 | |
|     foobar     return TOK_KEYWORD;
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| the file looks like:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     State #6 is non-accepting -
 | |
|      associated rule line numbers:
 | |
|            2       3
 | |
|      out-transitions: [ o ]
 | |
|      jam-transitions: EOF [ \\001-n  p-\\177 ]
 | |
| 
 | |
|     State #8 is non-accepting -
 | |
|      associated rule line numbers:
 | |
|            3
 | |
|      out-transitions: [ a ]
 | |
|      jam-transitions: EOF [ \\001-`  b-\\177 ]
 | |
| 
 | |
|     State #9 is non-accepting -
 | |
|      associated rule line numbers:
 | |
|            3
 | |
|      out-transitions: [ r ]
 | |
|      jam-transitions: EOF [ \\001-q  s-\\177 ]
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Compressed tables always back up.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| The first few lines tell us that there's a scanner state in
 | |
| which it can make a transition on an 'o' but not on any other
 | |
| character, and that in that state the currently scanned text does not match
 | |
| any rule.  The state occurs when trying to match the rules found
 | |
| at lines 2 and 3 in the input file.
 | |
| If the scanner is in that state and then reads
 | |
| something other than an 'o', it will have to back up to find
 | |
| a rule which is matched.  With
 | |
| a bit of headscratching one can see that this must be the
 | |
| state it's in when it has seen "fo".  When this has happened,
 | |
| if anything other than another 'o' is seen, the scanner will
 | |
| have to back up to simply match the 'f' (by the default rule).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The comment regarding State #8 indicates there's a problem
 | |
| when "foob" has been scanned.  Indeed, on any character other
 | |
| than an 'a', the scanner will have to back up to accept "foo".
 | |
| Similarly, the comment for State #9 concerns when "fooba" has
 | |
| been scanned and an 'r' does not follow.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The final comment reminds us that there's no point going to
 | |
| all the trouble of removing backing up from the rules unless
 | |
| we're using
 | |
| .B \-Cf
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B \-CF,
 | |
| since there's no performance gain doing so with compressed scanners.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The way to remove the backing up is to add "error" rules:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     foo         return TOK_KEYWORD;
 | |
|     foobar      return TOK_KEYWORD;
 | |
| 
 | |
|     fooba       |
 | |
|     foob        |
 | |
|     fo          {
 | |
|                 /* false alarm, not really a keyword */
 | |
|                 return TOK_ID;
 | |
|                 }
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Eliminating backing up among a list of keywords can also be
 | |
| done using a "catch-all" rule:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     foo         return TOK_KEYWORD;
 | |
|     foobar      return TOK_KEYWORD;
 | |
| 
 | |
|     [a-z]+      return TOK_ID;
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| This is usually the best solution when appropriate.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Backing up messages tend to cascade.
 | |
| With a complicated set of rules it's not uncommon to get hundreds
 | |
| of messages.  If one can decipher them, though, it often
 | |
| only takes a dozen or so rules to eliminate the backing up (though
 | |
| it's easy to make a mistake and have an error rule accidentally match
 | |
| a valid token.  A possible future
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| feature will be to automatically add rules to eliminate backing up).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| It's important to keep in mind that you gain the benefits of eliminating
 | |
| backing up only if you eliminate
 | |
| .I every
 | |
| instance of backing up.  Leaving just one means you gain nothing.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .I Variable
 | |
| trailing context (where both the leading and trailing parts do not have
 | |
| a fixed length) entails almost the same performance loss as
 | |
| .B REJECT
 | |
| (i.e., substantial).  So when possible a rule like:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     mouse|rat/(cat|dog)   run();
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| is better written:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     mouse/cat|dog         run();
 | |
|     rat/cat|dog           run();
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| or as
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     mouse|rat/cat         run();
 | |
|     mouse|rat/dog         run();
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Note that here the special '|' action does
 | |
| .I not
 | |
| provide any savings, and can even make things worse (see
 | |
| Deficiencies / Bugs below).
 | |
| .LP
 | |
| Another area where the user can increase a scanner's performance
 | |
| (and one that's easier to implement) arises from the fact that
 | |
| the longer the tokens matched, the faster the scanner will run.
 | |
| This is because with long tokens the processing of most input
 | |
| characters takes place in the (short) inner scanning loop, and
 | |
| does not often have to go through the additional work of setting up
 | |
| the scanning environment (e.g.,
 | |
| .B yytext)
 | |
| for the action.  Recall the scanner for C comments:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %x comment
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|             int line_num = 1;
 | |
| 
 | |
|     "/*"         BEGIN(comment);
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <comment>[^*\\n]*
 | |
|     <comment>"*"+[^*/\\n]*
 | |
|     <comment>\\n             ++line_num;
 | |
|     <comment>"*"+"/"        BEGIN(INITIAL);
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| This could be sped up by writing it as:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %x comment
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|             int line_num = 1;
 | |
| 
 | |
|     "/*"         BEGIN(comment);
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <comment>[^*\\n]*
 | |
|     <comment>[^*\\n]*\\n      ++line_num;
 | |
|     <comment>"*"+[^*/\\n]*
 | |
|     <comment>"*"+[^*/\\n]*\\n ++line_num;
 | |
|     <comment>"*"+"/"        BEGIN(INITIAL);
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Now instead of each newline requiring the processing of another
 | |
| action, recognizing the newlines is "distributed" over the other rules
 | |
| to keep the matched text as long as possible.  Note that
 | |
| .I adding
 | |
| rules does
 | |
| .I not
 | |
| slow down the scanner!  The speed of the scanner is independent
 | |
| of the number of rules or (modulo the considerations given at the
 | |
| beginning of this section) how complicated the rules are with
 | |
| regard to operators such as '*' and '|'.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| A final example in speeding up a scanner: suppose you want to scan
 | |
| through a file containing identifiers and keywords, one per line
 | |
| and with no other extraneous characters, and recognize all the
 | |
| keywords.  A natural first approach is:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     asm      |
 | |
|     auto     |
 | |
|     break    |
 | |
|     ... etc ...
 | |
|     volatile |
 | |
|     while    /* it's a keyword */
 | |
| 
 | |
|     .|\\n     /* it's not a keyword */
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| To eliminate the back-tracking, introduce a catch-all rule:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     asm      |
 | |
|     auto     |
 | |
|     break    |
 | |
|     ... etc ...
 | |
|     volatile |
 | |
|     while    /* it's a keyword */
 | |
| 
 | |
|     [a-z]+   |
 | |
|     .|\\n     /* it's not a keyword */
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Now, if it's guaranteed that there's exactly one word per line,
 | |
| then we can reduce the total number of matches by a half by
 | |
| merging in the recognition of newlines with that of the other
 | |
| tokens:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     asm\\n    |
 | |
|     auto\\n   |
 | |
|     break\\n  |
 | |
|     ... etc ...
 | |
|     volatile\\n |
 | |
|     while\\n  /* it's a keyword */
 | |
| 
 | |
|     [a-z]+\\n |
 | |
|     .|\\n     /* it's not a keyword */
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| One has to be careful here, as we have now reintroduced backing up
 | |
| into the scanner.  In particular, while
 | |
| .I we
 | |
| know that there will never be any characters in the input stream
 | |
| other than letters or newlines,
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| can't figure this out, and it will plan for possibly needing to back up
 | |
| when it has scanned a token like "auto" and then the next character
 | |
| is something other than a newline or a letter.  Previously it would
 | |
| then just match the "auto" rule and be done, but now it has no "auto"
 | |
| rule, only a "auto\\n" rule.  To eliminate the possibility of backing up,
 | |
| we could either duplicate all rules but without final newlines, or,
 | |
| since we never expect to encounter such an input and therefore don't
 | |
| how it's classified, we can introduce one more catch-all rule, this
 | |
| one which doesn't include a newline:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     asm\\n    |
 | |
|     auto\\n   |
 | |
|     break\\n  |
 | |
|     ... etc ...
 | |
|     volatile\\n |
 | |
|     while\\n  /* it's a keyword */
 | |
| 
 | |
|     [a-z]+\\n |
 | |
|     [a-z]+   |
 | |
|     .|\\n     /* it's not a keyword */
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Compiled with
 | |
| .B \-Cf,
 | |
| this is about as fast as one can get a
 | |
| .I flex 
 | |
| scanner to go for this particular problem.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| A final note:
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| is slow when matching NUL's, particularly when a token contains
 | |
| multiple NUL's.
 | |
| It's best to write rules which match
 | |
| .I short
 | |
| amounts of text if it's anticipated that the text will often include NUL's.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Another final note regarding performance: as mentioned above in the section
 | |
| How the Input is Matched, dynamically resizing
 | |
| .B yytext
 | |
| to accommodate huge tokens is a slow process because it presently requires that
 | |
| the (huge) token be rescanned from the beginning.  Thus if performance is
 | |
| vital, you should attempt to match "large" quantities of text but not
 | |
| "huge" quantities, where the cutoff between the two is at about 8K
 | |
| characters/token.
 | |
| .SH GENERATING C++ SCANNERS
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| provides two different ways to generate scanners for use with C++.  The
 | |
| first way is to simply compile a scanner generated by
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| using a C++ compiler instead of a C compiler.  You should not encounter
 | |
| any compilations errors (please report any you find to the email address
 | |
| given in the Author section below).  You can then use C++ code in your
 | |
| rule actions instead of C code.  Note that the default input source for
 | |
| your scanner remains
 | |
| .I yyin,
 | |
| and default echoing is still done to
 | |
| .I yyout.
 | |
| Both of these remain
 | |
| .I FILE *
 | |
| variables and not C++
 | |
| .I streams.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| You can also use
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| to generate a C++ scanner class, using the
 | |
| .B \-+
 | |
| option (or, equivalently,
 | |
| .B %option c++),
 | |
| which is automatically specified if the name of the flex
 | |
| executable ends in a '+', such as
 | |
| .I flex++.
 | |
| When using this option, flex defaults to generating the scanner to the file
 | |
| .B lex.yy.cc
 | |
| instead of
 | |
| .B lex.yy.c.
 | |
| The generated scanner includes the header file
 | |
| .I FlexLexer.h,
 | |
| which defines the interface to two C++ classes.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The first class,
 | |
| .B FlexLexer,
 | |
| provides an abstract base class defining the general scanner class
 | |
| interface.  It provides the following member functions:
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B const char* YYText()
 | |
| returns the text of the most recently matched token, the equivalent of
 | |
| .B yytext.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B int YYLeng()
 | |
| returns the length of the most recently matched token, the equivalent of
 | |
| .B yyleng.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B int lineno() const
 | |
| returns the current input line number
 | |
| (see
 | |
| .B %option yylineno),
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B 1
 | |
| if
 | |
| .B %option yylineno
 | |
| was not used.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B void set_debug( int flag )
 | |
| sets the debugging flag for the scanner, equivalent to assigning to
 | |
| .B yy_flex_debug
 | |
| (see the Options section above).  Note that you must build the scanner
 | |
| using
 | |
| .B %option debug
 | |
| to include debugging information in it.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B int debug() const
 | |
| returns the current setting of the debugging flag.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Also provided are member functions equivalent to
 | |
| .B yy_switch_to_buffer(),
 | |
| .B yy_create_buffer()
 | |
| (though the first argument is an
 | |
| .B istream*
 | |
| object pointer and not a
 | |
| .B FILE*),
 | |
| .B yy_flush_buffer(),
 | |
| .B yy_delete_buffer(),
 | |
| and
 | |
| .B yyrestart()
 | |
| (again, the first argument is a
 | |
| .B istream*
 | |
| object pointer).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The second class defined in
 | |
| .I FlexLexer.h
 | |
| is
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer,
 | |
| which is derived from
 | |
| .B FlexLexer.
 | |
| It defines the following additional member functions:
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| yyFlexLexer( istream* arg_yyin = 0, ostream* arg_yyout = 0 )
 | |
| constructs a
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer
 | |
| object using the given streams for input and output.  If not specified,
 | |
| the streams default to
 | |
| .B cin
 | |
| and
 | |
| .B cout,
 | |
| respectively.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B virtual int yylex()
 | |
| performs the same role is
 | |
| .B yylex()
 | |
| does for ordinary flex scanners: it scans the input stream, consuming
 | |
| tokens, until a rule's action returns a value.  If you derive a subclass
 | |
| .B S
 | |
| from
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer
 | |
| and want to access the member functions and variables of
 | |
| .B S
 | |
| inside
 | |
| .B yylex(),
 | |
| then you need to use
 | |
| .B %option yyclass="S"
 | |
| to inform
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| that you will be using that subclass instead of
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer.
 | |
| In this case, rather than generating
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer::yylex(),
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| generates
 | |
| .B S::yylex()
 | |
| (and also generates a dummy
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer::yylex()
 | |
| that calls
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer::LexerError()
 | |
| if called).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| virtual void switch_streams(istream* new_in = 0,
 | |
| .B
 | |
| ostream* new_out = 0)
 | |
| reassigns
 | |
| .B yyin
 | |
| to
 | |
| .B new_in
 | |
| (if non-nil)
 | |
| and
 | |
| .B yyout
 | |
| to
 | |
| .B new_out
 | |
| (ditto), deleting the previous input buffer if
 | |
| .B yyin
 | |
| is reassigned.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| int yylex( istream* new_in, ostream* new_out = 0 )
 | |
| first switches the input streams via
 | |
| .B switch_streams( new_in, new_out )
 | |
| and then returns the value of
 | |
| .B yylex().
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| In addition,
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer
 | |
| defines the following protected virtual functions which you can redefine
 | |
| in derived classes to tailor the scanner:
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| virtual int LexerInput( char* buf, int max_size )
 | |
| reads up to
 | |
| .B max_size
 | |
| characters into
 | |
| .B buf
 | |
| and returns the number of characters read.  To indicate end-of-input,
 | |
| return 0 characters.  Note that "interactive" scanners (see the
 | |
| .B \-B
 | |
| and
 | |
| .B \-I
 | |
| flags) define the macro
 | |
| .B YY_INTERACTIVE.
 | |
| If you redefine
 | |
| .B LexerInput()
 | |
| and need to take different actions depending on whether or not
 | |
| the scanner might be scanning an interactive input source, you can
 | |
| test for the presence of this name via
 | |
| .B #ifdef.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| virtual void LexerOutput( const char* buf, int size )
 | |
| writes out
 | |
| .B size
 | |
| characters from the buffer
 | |
| .B buf,
 | |
| which, while NUL-terminated, may also contain "internal" NUL's if
 | |
| the scanner's rules can match text with NUL's in them.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| virtual void LexerError( const char* msg )
 | |
| reports a fatal error message.  The default version of this function
 | |
| writes the message to the stream
 | |
| .B cerr
 | |
| and exits.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Note that a
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer
 | |
| object contains its
 | |
| .I entire
 | |
| scanning state.  Thus you can use such objects to create reentrant
 | |
| scanners.  You can instantiate multiple instances of the same
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer
 | |
| class, and you can also combine multiple C++ scanner classes together
 | |
| in the same program using the
 | |
| .B \-P
 | |
| option discussed above.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Finally, note that the
 | |
| .B %array
 | |
| feature is not available to C++ scanner classes; you must use
 | |
| .B %pointer
 | |
| (the default).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Here is an example of a simple C++ scanner:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|         // An example of using the flex C++ scanner class.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %{
 | |
|     int mylineno = 0;
 | |
|     %}
 | |
| 
 | |
|     string  \\"[^\\n"]+\\"
 | |
| 
 | |
|     ws      [ \\t]+
 | |
| 
 | |
|     alpha   [A-Za-z]
 | |
|     dig     [0-9]
 | |
|     name    ({alpha}|{dig}|\\$)({alpha}|{dig}|[_.\\-/$])*
 | |
|     num1    [-+]?{dig}+\\.?([eE][-+]?{dig}+)?
 | |
|     num2    [-+]?{dig}*\\.{dig}+([eE][-+]?{dig}+)?
 | |
|     number  {num1}|{num2}
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
| 
 | |
|     {ws}    /* skip blanks and tabs */
 | |
| 
 | |
|     "/*"    {
 | |
|             int c;
 | |
| 
 | |
|             while((c = yyinput()) != 0)
 | |
|                 {
 | |
|                 if(c == '\\n')
 | |
|                     ++mylineno;
 | |
| 
 | |
|                 else if(c == '*')
 | |
|                     {
 | |
|                     if((c = yyinput()) == '/')
 | |
|                         break;
 | |
|                     else
 | |
|                         unput(c);
 | |
|                     }
 | |
|                 }
 | |
|             }
 | |
| 
 | |
|     {number}  cout << "number " << YYText() << '\\n';
 | |
| 
 | |
|     \\n        mylineno++;
 | |
| 
 | |
|     {name}    cout << "name " << YYText() << '\\n';
 | |
| 
 | |
|     {string}  cout << "string " << YYText() << '\\n';
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
| 
 | |
|     int main( int /* argc */, char** /* argv */ )
 | |
|         {
 | |
|         FlexLexer* lexer = new yyFlexLexer;
 | |
|         while(lexer->yylex() != 0)
 | |
|             ;
 | |
|         return 0;
 | |
|         }
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| If you want to create multiple (different) lexer classes, you use the
 | |
| .B \-P
 | |
| flag (or the
 | |
| .B prefix=
 | |
| option) to rename each
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer
 | |
| to some other
 | |
| .B xxFlexLexer.
 | |
| You then can include
 | |
| .B <FlexLexer.h>
 | |
| in your other sources once per lexer class, first renaming
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer
 | |
| as follows:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     #undef yyFlexLexer
 | |
|     #define yyFlexLexer xxFlexLexer
 | |
|     #include <FlexLexer.h>
 | |
| 
 | |
|     #undef yyFlexLexer
 | |
|     #define yyFlexLexer zzFlexLexer
 | |
|     #include <FlexLexer.h>
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| if, for example, you used
 | |
| .B %option prefix="xx"
 | |
| for one of your scanners and
 | |
| .B %option prefix="zz"
 | |
| for the other.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| IMPORTANT: the present form of the scanning class is
 | |
| .I experimental
 | |
| and may change considerably between major releases. 
 | |
| .SH INCOMPATIBILITIES WITH LEX AND POSIX
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| is a rewrite of the AT&T Unix
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| tool (the two implementations do not share any code, though),
 | |
| with some extensions and incompatibilities, both of which
 | |
| are of concern to those who wish to write scanners acceptable
 | |
| to either implementation.  Flex is fully compliant with the POSIX
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| specification, except that when using
 | |
| .B %pointer
 | |
| (the default), a call to
 | |
| .B unput()
 | |
| destroys the contents of
 | |
| .B yytext,
 | |
| which is counter to the POSIX specification.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| In this section we discuss all of the known areas of incompatibility
 | |
| between flex, AT&T lex, and the POSIX specification.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .I flex's
 | |
| .B \-l
 | |
| option turns on maximum compatibility with the original AT&T
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| implementation, at the cost of a major loss in the generated scanner's
 | |
| performance.  We note below which incompatibilities can be overcome
 | |
| using the
 | |
| .B \-l
 | |
| option.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| is fully compatible with
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| with the following exceptions:
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| The undocumented
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| scanner internal variable
 | |
| .B yylineno
 | |
| is not supported unless
 | |
| .B \-l
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B %option yylineno
 | |
| is used.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .B yylineno
 | |
| should be maintained on a per-buffer basis, rather than a per-scanner
 | |
| (single global variable) basis.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .B yylineno
 | |
| is not part of the POSIX specification.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| The
 | |
| .B input()
 | |
| routine is not redefinable, though it may be called to read characters
 | |
| following whatever has been matched by a rule.  If
 | |
| .B input()
 | |
| encounters an end-of-file the normal
 | |
| .B yywrap()
 | |
| processing is done.  A ``real'' end-of-file is returned by
 | |
| .B input()
 | |
| as
 | |
| .I EOF.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| Input is instead controlled by defining the
 | |
| .B YY_INPUT
 | |
| macro.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| The
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| restriction that
 | |
| .B input()
 | |
| cannot be redefined is in accordance with the POSIX specification,
 | |
| which simply does not specify any way of controlling the
 | |
| scanner's input other than by making an initial assignment to
 | |
| .I yyin.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| The
 | |
| .B unput()
 | |
| routine is not redefinable.  This restriction is in accordance with POSIX.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| scanners are not as reentrant as
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| scanners.  In particular, if you have an interactive scanner and
 | |
| an interrupt handler which long-jumps out of the scanner, and
 | |
| the scanner is subsequently called again, you may get the following
 | |
| message:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     fatal flex scanner internal error--end of buffer missed
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| To reenter the scanner, first use
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     yyrestart( yyin );
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Note that this call will throw away any buffered input; usually this
 | |
| isn't a problem with an interactive scanner.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| Also note that flex C++ scanner classes
 | |
| .I are
 | |
| reentrant, so if using C++ is an option for you, you should use
 | |
| them instead.  See "Generating C++ Scanners" above for details.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .B output()
 | |
| is not supported.
 | |
| Output from the
 | |
| .B ECHO
 | |
| macro is done to the file-pointer
 | |
| .I yyout
 | |
| (default
 | |
| .I stdout).
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| .B output()
 | |
| is not part of the POSIX specification.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| does not support exclusive start conditions (%x), though they
 | |
| are in the POSIX specification.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| When definitions are expanded,
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| encloses them in parentheses.
 | |
| With lex, the following:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     NAME    [A-Z][A-Z0-9]*
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     foo{NAME}?      printf( "Found it\\n" );
 | |
|     %%
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| will not match the string "foo" because when the macro
 | |
| is expanded the rule is equivalent to "foo[A-Z][A-Z0-9]*?"
 | |
| and the precedence is such that the '?' is associated with
 | |
| "[A-Z0-9]*".  With
 | |
| .I flex,
 | |
| the rule will be expanded to
 | |
| "foo([A-Z][A-Z0-9]*)?" and so the string "foo" will match.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| Note that if the definition begins with
 | |
| .B ^
 | |
| or ends with
 | |
| .B $
 | |
| then it is
 | |
| .I not
 | |
| expanded with parentheses, to allow these operators to appear in
 | |
| definitions without losing their special meanings.  But the
 | |
| .B <s>, /,
 | |
| and
 | |
| .B <<EOF>>
 | |
| operators cannot be used in a
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| definition.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| Using
 | |
| .B \-l
 | |
| results in the
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| behavior of no parentheses around the definition.
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| The POSIX specification is that the definition be enclosed in parentheses.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| Some implementations of
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| allow a rule's action to begin on a separate line, if the rule's pattern
 | |
| has trailing whitespace:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     foo|bar<space here>
 | |
|       { foobar_action(); }
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| does not support this feature.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| The
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| .B %r
 | |
| (generate a Ratfor scanner) option is not supported.  It is not part
 | |
| of the POSIX specification.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| After a call to
 | |
| .B unput(),
 | |
| .I yytext
 | |
| is undefined until the next token is matched, unless the scanner
 | |
| was built using
 | |
| .B %array.
 | |
| This is not the case with
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| or the POSIX specification.  The
 | |
| .B \-l
 | |
| option does away with this incompatibility.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| The precedence of the
 | |
| .B {}
 | |
| (numeric range) operator is different.
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| interprets "abc{1,3}" as "match one, two, or
 | |
| three occurrences of 'abc'", whereas
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| interprets it as "match 'ab'
 | |
| followed by one, two, or three occurrences of 'c'".  The latter is
 | |
| in agreement with the POSIX specification.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| The precedence of the
 | |
| .B ^
 | |
| operator is different.
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| interprets "^foo|bar" as "match either 'foo' at the beginning of a line,
 | |
| or 'bar' anywhere", whereas
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| interprets it as "match either 'foo' or 'bar' if they come at the beginning
 | |
| of a line".  The latter is in agreement with the POSIX specification.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| The special table-size declarations such as
 | |
| .B %a
 | |
| supported by
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| are not required by
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| scanners;
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| ignores them.
 | |
| .IP -
 | |
| The name
 | |
| .bd
 | |
| FLEX_SCANNER
 | |
| is #define'd so scanners may be written for use with either
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| or
 | |
| .I lex.
 | |
| Scanners also include
 | |
| .B YY_FLEX_MAJOR_VERSION
 | |
| and
 | |
| .B YY_FLEX_MINOR_VERSION
 | |
| indicating which version of
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| generated the scanner
 | |
| (for example, for the 2.5 release, these defines would be 2 and 5
 | |
| respectively).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The following
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| features are not included in
 | |
| .I lex
 | |
| or the POSIX specification:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     C++ scanners
 | |
|     %option
 | |
|     start condition scopes
 | |
|     start condition stacks
 | |
|     interactive/non-interactive scanners
 | |
|     yy_scan_string() and friends
 | |
|     yyterminate()
 | |
|     yy_set_interactive()
 | |
|     yy_set_bol()
 | |
|     YY_AT_BOL()
 | |
|     <<EOF>>
 | |
|     <*>
 | |
|     YY_DECL
 | |
|     YY_START
 | |
|     YY_USER_ACTION
 | |
|     YY_USER_INIT
 | |
|     #line directives
 | |
|     %{}'s around actions
 | |
|     multiple actions on a line
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| plus almost all of the flex flags.
 | |
| The last feature in the list refers to the fact that with
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| you can put multiple actions on the same line, separated with
 | |
| semi-colons, while with
 | |
| .I lex,
 | |
| the following
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     foo    handle_foo(); ++num_foos_seen;
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| is (rather surprisingly) truncated to
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     foo    handle_foo();
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| does not truncate the action.  Actions that are not enclosed in
 | |
| braces are simply terminated at the end of the line.
 | |
| .SH DIAGNOSTICS
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .I warning, rule cannot be matched
 | |
| indicates that the given rule
 | |
| cannot be matched because it follows other rules that will
 | |
| always match the same text as it.  For
 | |
| example, in the following "foo" cannot be matched because it comes after
 | |
| an identifier "catch-all" rule:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     [a-z]+    got_identifier();
 | |
|     foo       got_foo();
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| Using
 | |
| .B REJECT
 | |
| in a scanner suppresses this warning.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .I warning,
 | |
| .B \-s
 | |
| .I
 | |
| option given but default rule can be matched
 | |
| means that it is possible (perhaps only in a particular start condition)
 | |
| that the default rule (match any single character) is the only one
 | |
| that will match a particular input.  Since
 | |
| .B \-s
 | |
| was given, presumably this is not intended.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .I reject_used_but_not_detected undefined
 | |
| or
 | |
| .I yymore_used_but_not_detected undefined -
 | |
| These errors can occur at compile time.  They indicate that the
 | |
| scanner uses
 | |
| .B REJECT
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B yymore()
 | |
| but that
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| failed to notice the fact, meaning that
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| scanned the first two sections looking for occurrences of these actions
 | |
| and failed to find any, but somehow you snuck some in (via a #include
 | |
| file, for example).  Use
 | |
| .B %option reject
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B %option yymore
 | |
| to indicate to flex that you really do use these features.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .I flex scanner jammed -
 | |
| a scanner compiled with
 | |
| .B \-s
 | |
| has encountered an input string which wasn't matched by
 | |
| any of its rules.  This error can also occur due to internal problems.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .I token too large, exceeds YYLMAX -
 | |
| your scanner uses
 | |
| .B %array
 | |
| and one of its rules matched a string longer than the
 | |
| .B YYLMAX
 | |
| constant (8K bytes by default).  You can increase the value by
 | |
| #define'ing
 | |
| .B YYLMAX
 | |
| in the definitions section of your
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| input.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .I scanner requires \-8 flag to
 | |
| .I use the character 'x' -
 | |
| Your scanner specification includes recognizing the 8-bit character
 | |
| .I 'x'
 | |
| and you did not specify the \-8 flag, and your scanner defaulted to 7-bit
 | |
| because you used the
 | |
| .B \-Cf
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B \-CF
 | |
| table compression options.  See the discussion of the
 | |
| .B \-7
 | |
| flag for details.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .I flex scanner push-back overflow -
 | |
| you used
 | |
| .B unput()
 | |
| to push back so much text that the scanner's buffer could not hold
 | |
| both the pushed-back text and the current token in
 | |
| .B yytext.
 | |
| Ideally the scanner should dynamically resize the buffer in this case, but at
 | |
| present it does not.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .I
 | |
| input buffer overflow, can't enlarge buffer because scanner uses REJECT -
 | |
| the scanner was working on matching an extremely large token and needed
 | |
| to expand the input buffer.  This doesn't work with scanners that use
 | |
| .B
 | |
| REJECT.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .I
 | |
| fatal flex scanner internal error--end of buffer missed -
 | |
| This can occur in an scanner which is reentered after a long-jump
 | |
| has jumped out (or over) the scanner's activation frame.  Before
 | |
| reentering the scanner, use:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     yyrestart( yyin );
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| or, as noted above, switch to using the C++ scanner class.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .I too many start conditions in <> construct! -
 | |
| you listed more start conditions in a <> construct than exist (so
 | |
| you must have listed at least one of them twice).
 | |
| .SH FILES
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \-lfl
 | |
| library with which scanners must be linked.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .I lex.yy.c
 | |
| generated scanner (called
 | |
| .I lexyy.c
 | |
| on some systems).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .I lex.yy.cc
 | |
| generated C++ scanner class, when using
 | |
| .B -+.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .I <FlexLexer.h>
 | |
| header file defining the C++ scanner base class,
 | |
| .B FlexLexer,
 | |
| and its derived class,
 | |
| .B yyFlexLexer.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .I flex.skl
 | |
| skeleton scanner.  This file is only used when building flex, not when
 | |
| flex executes.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .I lex.backup
 | |
| backing-up information for
 | |
| .B \-b
 | |
| flag (called
 | |
| .I lex.bck
 | |
| on some systems).
 | |
| .SH DEFICIENCIES / BUGS
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Some trailing context
 | |
| patterns cannot be properly matched and generate
 | |
| warning messages ("dangerous trailing context").  These are
 | |
| patterns where the ending of the
 | |
| first part of the rule matches the beginning of the second
 | |
| part, such as "zx*/xy*", where the 'x*' matches the 'x' at
 | |
| the beginning of the trailing context.  (Note that the POSIX draft
 | |
| states that the text matched by such patterns is undefined.)
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| For some trailing context rules, parts which are actually fixed-length are
 | |
| not recognized as such, leading to the abovementioned performance loss.
 | |
| In particular, parts using '|' or {n} (such as "foo{3}") are always
 | |
| considered variable-length.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Combining trailing context with the special '|' action can result in
 | |
| .I fixed
 | |
| trailing context being turned into the more expensive
 | |
| .I variable
 | |
| trailing context.  For example, in the following:
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| 
 | |
|     %%
 | |
|     abc      |
 | |
|     xyz/def
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Use of
 | |
| .B unput()
 | |
| invalidates yytext and yyleng, unless the
 | |
| .B %array
 | |
| directive
 | |
| or the
 | |
| .B \-l
 | |
| option has been used.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Pattern-matching of NUL's is substantially slower than matching other
 | |
| characters.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Dynamic resizing of the input buffer is slow, as it entails rescanning
 | |
| all the text matched so far by the current (generally huge) token.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Due to both buffering of input and read-ahead, you cannot intermix
 | |
| calls to <stdio.h> routines, such as, for example,
 | |
| .B getchar(),
 | |
| with
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| rules and expect it to work.  Call
 | |
| .B input()
 | |
| instead.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The total table entries listed by the
 | |
| .B \-v
 | |
| flag excludes the number of table entries needed to determine
 | |
| what rule has been matched.  The number of entries is equal
 | |
| to the number of DFA states if the scanner does not use
 | |
| .B REJECT,
 | |
| and somewhat greater than the number of states if it does.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .B REJECT
 | |
| cannot be used with the
 | |
| .B \-f
 | |
| or
 | |
| .B \-F
 | |
| options.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| internal algorithms need documentation.
 | |
| .SH SEE ALSO
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| lex(1), yacc(1), sed(1), awk(1).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| John Levine, Tony Mason, and Doug Brown,
 | |
| .I Lex & Yacc,
 | |
| O'Reilly and Associates.  Be sure to get the 2nd edition.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| M. E. Lesk and E. Schmidt,
 | |
| .I LEX \- Lexical Analyzer Generator
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Alfred Aho, Ravi Sethi and Jeffrey Ullman,
 | |
| .I Compilers: Principles, Techniques and Tools,
 | |
| Addison-Wesley (1986).  Describes the pattern-matching techniques used by
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| (deterministic finite automata).
 | |
| .SH AUTHOR
 | |
| Vern Paxson, with the help of many ideas and much inspiration from
 | |
| Van Jacobson.  Original version by Jef Poskanzer.  The fast table
 | |
| representation is a partial implementation of a design done by Van
 | |
| Jacobson.  The implementation was done by Kevin Gong and Vern Paxson.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Thanks to the many
 | |
| .I flex
 | |
| beta-testers, feedbackers, and contributors, especially Francois Pinard,
 | |
| Casey Leedom,
 | |
| Robert Abramovitz,
 | |
| Stan Adermann, Terry Allen, David Barker-Plummer, John Basrai,
 | |
| Neal Becker, Nelson H.F. Beebe, benson@odi.com,
 | |
| Karl Berry, Peter A. Bigot, Simon Blanchard,
 | |
| Keith Bostic, Frederic Brehm, Ian Brockbank, Kin Cho, Nick Christopher,
 | |
| Brian Clapper, J.T. Conklin,
 | |
| Jason Coughlin, Bill Cox, Nick Cropper, Dave Curtis, Scott David
 | |
| Daniels, Chris G. Demetriou, Theo Deraadt,
 | |
| Mike Donahue, Chuck Doucette, Tom Epperly, Leo Eskin,
 | |
| Chris Faylor, Chris Flatters, Jon Forrest, Jeffrey Friedl,
 | |
| Joe Gayda, Kaveh R. Ghazi, Wolfgang Glunz,
 | |
| Eric Goldman, Christopher M. Gould, Ulrich Grepel, Peer Griebel,
 | |
| Jan Hajic, Charles Hemphill, NORO Hideo,
 | |
| Jarkko Hietaniemi, Scott Hofmann,
 | |
| Jeff Honig, Dana Hudes, Eric Hughes, John Interrante,
 | |
| Ceriel Jacobs, Michal Jaegermann, Sakari Jalovaara, Jeffrey R. Jones,
 | |
| Henry Juengst, Klaus Kaempf, Jonathan I. Kamens, Terrence O Kane,
 | |
| Amir Katz, ken@ken.hilco.com, Kevin B. Kenny,
 | |
| Steve Kirsch, Winfried Koenig, Marq Kole, Ronald Lamprecht,
 | |
| Greg Lee, Rohan Lenard, Craig Leres, John Levine, Steve Liddle,
 | |
| David Loffredo, Mike Long,
 | |
| Mohamed el Lozy, Brian Madsen, Malte, Joe Marshall,
 | |
| Bengt Martensson, Chris Metcalf,
 | |
| Luke Mewburn, Jim Meyering, R. Alexander Milowski, Erik Naggum,
 | |
| G.T. Nicol, Landon Noll, James Nordby, Marc Nozell,
 | |
| Richard Ohnemus, Karsten Pahnke,
 | |
| Sven Panne, Roland Pesch, Walter Pelissero, Gaumond
 | |
| Pierre, Esmond Pitt, Jef Poskanzer, Joe Rahmeh, Jarmo Raiha,
 | |
| Frederic Raimbault, Pat Rankin, Rick Richardson,
 | |
| Kevin Rodgers, Kai Uwe Rommel, Jim Roskind, Alberto Santini,
 | |
| Andreas Scherer, Darrell Schiebel, Raf Schietekat,
 | |
| Doug Schmidt, Philippe Schnoebelen, Andreas Schwab,
 | |
| Larry Schwimmer, Alex Siegel, Eckehard Stolz, Jan-Erik Strvmquist,
 | |
| Mike Stump, Paul Stuart, Dave Tallman, Ian Lance Taylor,
 | |
| Chris Thewalt, Richard M. Timoney, Jodi Tsai,
 | |
| Paul Tuinenga, Gary Weik, Frank Whaley, Gerhard Wilhelms, Kent Williams, Ken
 | |
| Yap, Ron Zellar, Nathan Zelle, David Zuhn,
 | |
| and those whose names have slipped my marginal
 | |
| mail-archiving skills but whose contributions are appreciated all the
 | |
| same.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Thanks to Keith Bostic, Jon Forrest, Noah Friedman,
 | |
| John Gilmore, Craig Leres, John Levine, Bob Mulcahy, G.T.
 | |
| Nicol, Francois Pinard, Rich Salz, and Richard Stallman for help with various
 | |
| distribution headaches.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Thanks to Esmond Pitt and Earle Horton for 8-bit character support; to
 | |
| Benson Margulies and Fred Burke for C++ support; to Kent Williams and Tom
 | |
| Epperly for C++ class support; to Ove Ewerlid for support of NUL's; and to
 | |
| Eric Hughes for support of multiple buffers.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| This work was primarily done when I was with the Real Time Systems Group
 | |
| at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory in Berkeley, CA.  Many thanks to all there
 | |
| for the support I received.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Send comments to vern@ee.lbl.gov.
 | 
