mirror of
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c54f2f66fc
while and killing centaurs with the flechette. - Fixed: Moving to an old level in a hub caused the old player's inventory to spawn owned by the current player (but still hanging off the old player), so the game would hang when trying to delete it. - Modified re2c so that it doesn't add a date to the file it generates. Thus, if it regenerates a file during a full rebuild, SVN won't see it as a change. Also updated it to 0.10.5. - Fixed: SC_GetString() did not properly terminate sc_String when the last token in the file had no white space after it. Since I could not actually find the problem (it works fine in debug mode and I saw no logic errors), I decided to take this opportunity to reimplement it using an re2c-generated scanner. Now it's 1.6x faster than before and correctness is easier to verify. - Fixed: FMODSoundRenderer::Shutdown() also needs to reset NumChannels. - Added back the Manifest to zdoom.rc for non-VC8 Windows compilers. - Fixed MinGW compilation again. Now it uses the same method as Makefile.linux to find all the source files so that it doesn't need to be manually updated each time source files are added or removed. - Added the SVN revision number to the version string. A new tool is used to obtain this information from the svnversion command and write it into a header file. If you don't have the svn command line tools installed or didn't check it out from the repository, you can still build. I added some rules for this to Makefile.linux, and I assume they work because they do for Makefile.mingw. - Fixed: MIDISong2 did not delete MusHeader in its destructor. SVN r200 (trunk)
516 lines
19 KiB
Groff
516 lines
19 KiB
Groff
./"
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./" $Id: re2c.1.in 523 2006-05-25 13:32:09Z helly $
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./"
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.TH RE2C 1 "22 April 2005" "Version 0.10.5"
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.ds re \fBre2c\fP
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.ds le \fBlex\fP
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.ds rx regular expression
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.ds lx \fIl\fP-expression
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.SH NAME
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re2c \- convert regular expressions to C/C++
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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\*(re [\fB-bdefghisvVw1\fP] [\fB-o output\fP] file\fP
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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\*(re is a preprocessor that generates C-based recognizers from regular
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expressions.
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The input to \*(re consists of C/C++ source interleaved with
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comments of the form \fC/*!re2c\fP ... \fC*/\fP which contain
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scanner specifications.
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In the output these comments are replaced with code that, when
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executed, will find the next input token and then execute
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some user-supplied token-specific code.
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For example, given the following code
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.in +3
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.nf
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#define NULL ((char*) 0)
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char *scan(char *p)
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{
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#define YYCTYPE char
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#define YYCURSOR p
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#define YYLIMIT p
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#define YYFILL(n)
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/*!re2c
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[0-9]+ {return YYCURSOR;}
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[\\000-\\377] {return NULL;}
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*/
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}
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.fi
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.in -3
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\*(re will generate
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.in +3
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.nf
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/* Generated by re2c on Sat Apr 16 11:40:58 1994 */
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#line 1 "simple.re"
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#define NULL ((char*) 0)
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char *scan(char *p)
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{
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#define YYCTYPE char
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#define YYCURSOR p
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#define YYLIMIT p
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#define YYFILL(n)
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{
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YYCTYPE yych;
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unsigned int yyaccept;
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goto yy0;
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yy1: ++YYCURSOR;
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yy0:
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if((YYLIMIT - YYCURSOR) < 2) YYFILL(2);
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yych = *YYCURSOR;
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if(yych <= '/') goto yy4;
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if(yych >= ':') goto yy4;
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yy2: yych = *++YYCURSOR;
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goto yy7;
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yy3:
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#line 9
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{return YYCURSOR;}
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yy4: yych = *++YYCURSOR;
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yy5:
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#line 10
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{return NULL;}
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yy6: ++YYCURSOR;
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if(YYLIMIT == YYCURSOR) YYFILL(1);
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yych = *YYCURSOR;
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yy7: if(yych <= '/') goto yy3;
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if(yych <= '9') goto yy6;
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goto yy3;
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}
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#line 11
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}
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.fi
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.in -3
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You can place one \fC/*!max:re2c */\fP comment that will output a "#define
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\fCYYMAXFILL\fP <n>" line that holds the maximum number of characters
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required to parse the input. That is the maximum value \fCYYFILL\fP(n)
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will receive. If -1 is in effect then YYMAXFILL can only be triggered once
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after the last \fC/*!re2c */\fP.
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You can also use \fC/*!ignore:re2c */\fP blocks that allows to document the
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scanner code and will not be part of the output.
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.SH OPTIONS
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\*(re provides the following options:
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.TP
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\fB-?\fP
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\fB-h\fP
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Invoke a short help.
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.TP
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\fB-b\fP
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Implies \fB-s\fP. Use bit vectors as well in the attempt to coax better
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code out of the compiler. Most useful for specifications with more than a
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few keywords (e.g. for most programming languages).
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.TP
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\fB-d\fP
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Creates a parser that dumps information about the current position and in
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which state the parser is while parsing the input. This is useful to debug
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parser issues and states. If you use this switch you need to define a macro
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\fIYYDEBUG\fP that is called like a function with two parameters:
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\fIvoid YYDEBUG(int state, char current)\fP. The first parameter receives the
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state or -1 and the second parameter receives the input at the current cursor.
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.TP
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\fB-e\fP
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Cross-compile from an ASCII platform to an EBCDIC one.
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.TP
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\fB-f\fP
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Generate a scanner with support for storable state.
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For details see below at \fBSCANNER WITH STORABLE STATES\fP.
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.TP
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\fB-g\fP
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Generate a scanner that utilizes GCC's computed goto feature. That is re2c
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generates jump tables whenever a decision is of a certain complexity (e.g. a
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lot of if conditions are otherwise necessary). This is only useable with GCC
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and produces output that cannot be compiled with any other compiler. Note that
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this implies -b and that the complexity threshold can be configured using the
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inplace configuration "cgoto:threshold".
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.TP
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\fB-i\fP
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Do not output #line information. This is usefull when you want use a CMS tool
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with the re2c output which you might want if you do not require your users to
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have re2c themselves when building from your source.
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\fB-o output\fP
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Specify the output file.
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.TP
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\fB-s\fP
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Generate nested \fCif\fPs for some \fCswitch\fPes. Many compilers need this
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assist to generate better code.
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.TP
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\fB-v\fP
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Show version information.
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.TP
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\fB-V\fP
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Show the version as a number XXYYZZ.
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.TP
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\fB-w\fP
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Create a parser that supports wide chars (UCS-2). This implies \fB-s\fP and
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cannot be used together with \fB-e\fP switch.
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.TP
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\fB-1\fP
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Force single pass generation, this cannot be combined with -f and disables
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YYMAXFILL generation prior to last re2c block.
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.SH "INTERFACE CODE"
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Unlike other scanner generators, \*(re does not generate complete scanners:
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the user must supply some interface code.
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In particular, the user must define the following macros:
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.TP
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\fCYYCTYPE\fP
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Type used to hold an input symbol.
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Usually \fCchar\fP or \fCunsigned char\fP.
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.TP
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\fCYYCURSOR\fP
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\*(lx of type \fC*YYCTYPE\fP that points to the current input symbol.
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The generated code advances \fCYYCURSOR\fP as symbols are matched.
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On entry, \fCYYCURSOR\fP is assumed to point to the first character of the
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current token. On exit, \fCYYCURSOR\fP will point to the first character of
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the following token.
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.TP
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\fCYYLIMIT\fP
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Expression of type \fC*YYCTYPE\fP that marks the end of the buffer
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(\fCYYLIMIT[-1]\fP is the last character in the buffer).
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The generated code repeatedly compares \fCYYCURSOR\fP to \fCYYLIMIT\fP
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to determine when the buffer needs (re)filling.
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.TP
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\fCYYMARKER\fP
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\*(lx of type \fC*YYCTYPE\fP.
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The generated code saves backtracking information in \fCYYMARKER\fP. Some easy
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scanners might not use this.
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.TP
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\fCYYCTXMARKER\fP
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\*(lx of type \fC*YYCTYPE\fP.
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The generated code saves trailing context backtracking information in \fCYYCTXMARKER\fP.
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The user only needs to define this macro if a scanner specification uses trailing
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context in one or more of its regular expressions.
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.TP
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\fCYYFILL(\fP\fIn\fP\fC)\fP
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The generated code "calls" \fCYYFILL\fP(n) when the buffer needs
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(re)filling: at least \fIn\fP additional characters should
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be provided. \fCYYFILL\fP(n) should adjust \fCYYCURSOR\fP, \fCYYLIMIT\fP,
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\fCYYMARKER\fP and \fCYYCTXMARKER\fP as needed. Note that for typical
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programming languages \fIn\fP will be the length of the longest keyword plus one.
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The user can place a comment of the form \fC/*!max:re2c */\fP once to insert
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a \fCYYMAXFILL\fP definition that is set to the maximum length value. If -1
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switch is used then YYMAXFILL can be triggered once after the last \fC/*!re2c */\fP
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block.
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.TP
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\fCYYGETSTATE()\fP
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The user only needs to define this macro if the \fB-f\fP flag was specified.
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In that case, the generated code "calls" \fCYYGETSTATE\fP at the very beginning
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of the scanner in order to obtain the saved state. YYGETSTATE must return a signed
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integer. The value must be either -1, indicating that the scanner is entered for the
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first time, or a value previously saved by \fCYYSETSTATE\fP. In the second case, the
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scanner will resume operations right after where the last \fCYYFILL\fP(n) was called.
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.TP
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\fCYYSETSTATE(\fP\fIn\fP\fC)\fP
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The user only needs to define this macro if the \fB-f\fP flag was specified.
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In that case, the generated code "calls" \fCYYSETSTATE\fP just before calling
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\fCYYFILL\fP(n). The parameter to \fCYYSETSTATE\fP is a signed integer that uniquely
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identifies the specific instance of \fCYYFILL\fP(n) that is about to be called.
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Should the user wish to save the state of the scanner and have \fCYYFILL\fP(n) return
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to the caller, all he has to do is store that unique identifer in a variable.
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Later, when the scannered is called again, it will call \fCYYGETSTATE()\fP and
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resume execution right where it left off.
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.TP
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\fCYYDEBUG(\fP\fIstate\fP,\fIcurrent\fC)\fP
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This is only needed if the \fB-d\fP flag was specified. It allows to easily debug
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the generated parser by calling a user defined function for every state. The function
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should have the following signature: \fIvoid YYDEBUG(int state, char current)\fP.
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The first parameter receives the state or -1 and the second parameter receives the
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input at the current cursor.
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.TP
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\fCYYMAXFILL
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This will be automatically defined by \fC/*!max:re2c */\fP blocks as explained above.
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.SH "SCANNER WITH STORABLE STATES"
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When the \fB-f\fP flag is specified, re2c generates a scanner that
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can store its current state, return to the caller, and later resume
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operations exactly where it left off.
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The default operation of re2c is a "pull" model, where the scanner asks
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for extra input whenever it needs it. However, this mode of operation
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assumes that the scanner is the "owner" the parsing loop, and that may
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not always be convenient.
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Typically, if there is a preprocessor ahead of the scanner in the stream,
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or for that matter any other procedural source of data, the scanner cannot
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"ask" for more data unless both scanner and source live in a separate threads.
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The \fB-f\fP flag is useful for just this situation : it lets users design
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scanners that work in a "push" model, i.e. where data is fed to the scanner
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chunk by chunk. When the scanner runs out of data to consume, it just stores
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its state, and return to the caller. When more input data is fed to the scanner,
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it resumes operations exactly where it left off.
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When using the -f option re2c does not accept stdin because it has to do the
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full generation process twice which means it has to read the input twice. That
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means re2c would fail in case it cannot open the input twice or reading the
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input for the first time influences the second read attempt.
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Changes needed compared to the "pull" model.
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1. User has to supply macros YYSETSTATE() and YYGETSTATE(state)
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2. The \fB-f\fP option inhibits declaration of \fIyych\fP and
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\fIyyaccept\fP. So the user has to declare these. Also the user has
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to save and restore these. In the example \fIexamples/push.re\fP these
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are declared as fields of the (C++) class of which the scanner is a
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method, so they do not need to be saved/restored explicitly. For C
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they could e.g. be made macros that select fields from a structure
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passed in as parameter. Alternatively, they could be declared as local
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variables, saved with YYFILL(n) when it decides to return and restored
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at entry to the function. Also, it could be more efficient to save the
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state from YYFILL(n) because YYSETSTATE(state) is called
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unconditionally. YYFILL(n) however does not get \fIstate\fP as
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parameter, so we would have to store state in a local variable by
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YYSETSTATE(state).
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3. Modify YYFILL(n) to return (from the function calling it) if more
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input is needed.
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4. Modify caller to recognise "more input is needed" and respond
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appropriately.
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5. The generated code will contain a switch block that is used to restores
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the last state by jumping behind the corrspoding YYFILL(n) call. This code is
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automatically generated in the epilog of the first "\fC/*!re2c */\fP" block.
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It is possible to trigger generation of the YYGETSTATE() block earlier by
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placing a "\fC/*!getstate:re2c */\fP" comment. This is especially useful when
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the scanner code should be wrapped inside a loop.
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Please see examples/push.re for push-model scanner. The generated code can be
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tweaked using inplace configurations "\fBstate:abort\fP" and "\fBstate:nextlabel\fP".
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.SH "SCANNER SPECIFICATIONS"
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Each scanner specification consists of a set of \fIrules\fP, \fIname
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definitions\fP and \fIconfigurations\fP.
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.LP
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\fIRules\fP consist of a regular expression along with a block of C/C++ code that
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is to be executed when the associated \fIregular expression\fP is matched.
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.P
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.RS
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\fIregular expression\fP \fC{\fP \fIC/C++ code\fP \fC}\fP
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.RE
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.LP
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Named definitions are of the form:
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.P
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.RS
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\fIname\fP \fC=\fP \fIregular expression\fP\fC;\fP
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.RE
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.LP
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Configurations look like name definitions whose names start
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with "\fBre2c:\fP":
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.P
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.RS
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\fCre2c:\fP\fIname\fP \fC=\fP \fIvalue\fP\fC;\fP
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.RE
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.SH "SUMMARY OF RE2C REGULAR EXPRESSIONS"
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.TP
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\fC"foo"\fP
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the literal string \fCfoo\fP.
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ANSI-C escape sequences can be used.
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.TP
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\fC'foo'\fP
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the literal string \fCfoo\fP (characters [a-zA-Z] treated case-insensitive).
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ANSI-C escape sequences can be used.
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.TP
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\fC[xyz]\fP
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a "character class"; in this case,
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the \*(rx matches either an '\fCx\fP', a '\fCy\fP', or a '\fCz\fP'.
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.TP
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\fC[abj-oZ]\fP
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a "character class" with a range in it;
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matches an '\fCa\fP', a '\fCb\fP', any letter from '\fCj\fP' through '\fCo\fP',
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or a '\fCZ\fP'.
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.TP
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\fC[^\fIclass\fP\fC]\fP
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an inverted "character class".
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.TP
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\fIr\fP\fC\e\fP\fIs\fP
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match any \fIr\fP which isn't an \fIs\fP. \fIr\fP and \fIs\fP must be regular expressions
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which can be expressed as character classes.
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.TP
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\fIr\fP\fC*\fP
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zero or more \fIr\fP's, where \fIr\fP is any regular expression
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.TP
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\fC\fIr\fP\fC+\fP
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one or more \fIr\fP's
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.TP
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\fC\fIr\fP\fC?\fP
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zero or one \fIr\fP's (that is, "an optional \fIr\fP")
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.TP
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name
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the expansion of the "name" definition (see above)
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.TP
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\fC(\fP\fIr\fP\fC)\fP
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an \fIr\fP; parentheses are used to override precedence
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(see below)
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.TP
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\fIrs\fP
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an \fIr\fP followed by an \fIs\fP ("concatenation")
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.TP
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\fIr\fP\fC|\fP\fIs\fP
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either an \fIr\fP or an \fIs\fP
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.TP
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\fIr\fP\fC/\fP\fIs\fP
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an \fIr\fP but only if it is followed by an \fIs\fP. The \fIs\fP is not part of
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the matched text. This type of \*(rx is called "trailing context". A trailing
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context can only be the end of a rule and not part of a named definition.
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.TP
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\fIr\fP\fC{\fP\fIn\fP\fC}\fP
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matches \fIr\fP exactly \fIn\fP times.
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.TP
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\fIr\fP\fC{\fP\fIn\fP\fC,}\fP
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matches \fIr\fP at least \fIn\fP times.
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.TP
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\fIr\fP\fC{\fP\fIn\fP\fC,\fP\fIm\fP\fC}\fP
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matches \fIr\fP at least \fIn\fP but not more than \fIm\fP times.
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.TP
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\fC.\fP
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match any character except newline (\\n).
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.TP
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\fIdef\fP
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matches named definition as specified by \fIdef\fP.
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.LP
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Character classes and string literals may contain octoal or hexadecimal
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character definitions and the following set of escape sequences (\fB\\n\fP,
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\fB\\t\fP, \fB\\v\fP, \fB\\b\fP, \fB\\r\fP, \fB\\f\fP, \fB\\a\fP, \fB\\\\\fP).
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An octal character is defined by a backslash followed by its three octal digits
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and a hexadecimal character is defined by backslash, a lower cased '\fBx\fP'
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and its two hexadecimal digits or a backslash, an upper cased \fBX\fP and its
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four hexadecimal digits.
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.LP
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re2c
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further more supports the c/c++ unicode notation. That is a backslash followed
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by either a lowercased \fBu\fP and its four hexadecimal digits or an uppercased
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\fBU\fP and its eight hexadecimal digits. However using the U notation it is
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not possible to support characters greater \fB\\U0000FFFF\fP due to an internal
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limitation of re2c.
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.LP
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Since characters greater \fB\\X00FF\fP are not allowed in non unicode mode, the
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only portable "\fBany\fP" rules are \fB(.|"\\n")\fP and \fB[^]\fP.
|
|
.LP
|
|
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.
|
|
|
|
.SH "INPLACE CONFIGURATION"
|
|
.LP
|
|
It is possible to configure code generation inside re2c blocks. The following
|
|
lists the available configurations:
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fIre2c:indent:top\fP \fB=\fP 0 \fB;\fP
|
|
Specifies the minimum number of indendation to use. Requires a numeric value
|
|
greater than or equal zero.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fIre2c:indent:string\fP \fB=\fP "\\t" \fB;\fP
|
|
Specifies the string to use for indendation. Requires a string that should
|
|
contain only whitespace unless you need this for external tools. The easiest
|
|
way to specify spaces is to enclude them in single or double quotes. If you do
|
|
not want any indendation at all you can simply set this to \fB""\fP.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fIre2c:yybm:hex\fP \fB=\fP 0 \fB;\fP
|
|
If set to zero then a decimal table is being used else a hexadecimal table
|
|
will be generated.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fIre2c:yyfill:enable\fP \fB=\fP 1 \fB;\fP
|
|
Set this to zero to suppress generation of YYFILL(n). When using this be sure
|
|
to verify that the generated scanner does not read behind input. Allowing
|
|
this behavior might introduce sever security issues to you programs.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fIre2c:startlabel\fP \fB=\fP 0 \fB;\fP
|
|
If set to a non zero integer then the start label of the next scanner blocks
|
|
will be generated even if not used by the scanner itself. Otherwise the normal
|
|
\fByy0\fP like start label is only being generated if needed. If set to a text
|
|
value then a label with that text will be generated regardless of whether the
|
|
normal start label is being used or not. This setting is being reset to \fB0\fP
|
|
after a start label has been generated.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fIre2c:state:abort\fP \fB=\fP 0 \fB;\fP
|
|
When not zero and switch -f is active then the \fCYYGETSTATE\fP block will
|
|
contain a default case that aborts and a -1 case is used for initialization.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fIre2c:state:nextlabel\fP \fB=\fP 0 \fB;\fP
|
|
Used when -f is active to control whether the \fCYYGETSTATE\fP block is
|
|
followed by a \fCyyNext:\fP label line. Instead of using \fCyyNext\fP you can
|
|
usually also use configuration \fIstartlabel\fP to force a specific start label
|
|
or default to \fCyy0\fP as start label. Instead of using a dedicated label it
|
|
is often better to separate the YYGETSTATE code from the actual scanner code by
|
|
placing a "\fC/*!getstate:re2c */\fP" comment.
|
|
.TP
|
|
\fIre2c:cgoto:threshold\fP \fB=\fP 9 \fB;\fP
|
|
When -g is active this value specifies the complexity threshold that triggers
|
|
generation of jump tables rather than using nested if's and decision bitfields.
|
|
The threshold is compared against a calculated estimation of if-s needed where
|
|
every used bitmap divides the threshold by 2.
|
|
|
|
.SH "UNDERSTANDING RE2C"
|
|
.LP
|
|
The subdirectory lessons of the re2c distribution contains a few step by step
|
|
lessons to get you started with re2c. All examples in the lessons subdirectory
|
|
can be compiled and actually work.
|
|
|
|
.SH FEATURES
|
|
.LP
|
|
\*(re does not provide a default action:
|
|
the generated code assumes that the input
|
|
will consist of a sequence of tokens.
|
|
Typically this can be dealt with by adding a rule such as the one for
|
|
unexpected characters in the example above.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The user must arrange for a sentinel token to appear at the end of input
|
|
(and provide a rule for matching it):
|
|
\*(re does not provide an \fC<<EOF>>\fP expression.
|
|
If the source is from a null-byte terminated string, a
|
|
rule matching a null character will suffice. If the source is from a
|
|
file then you could pad the input with a newline (or some other character that
|
|
cannot appear within another token); upon recognizing such a character check
|
|
to see if it is the sentinel and act accordingly. And you can also use YYFILL(n)
|
|
to end the scanner in case not enough characters are available which is nothing
|
|
else then e detection of end of data/file.
|
|
.LP
|
|
\*(re does not provide start conditions: use a separate scanner
|
|
specification for each start condition (as illustrated in the above example).
|
|
|
|
.SH BUGS
|
|
.LP
|
|
Difference only works for character sets.
|
|
.LP
|
|
The \*(re internal algorithms need documentation.
|
|
|
|
.SH "SEE ALSO"
|
|
.LP
|
|
flex(1), lex(1).
|
|
.P
|
|
More information on \fBre2c\fP can be found here:
|
|
.PD 0
|
|
.P
|
|
.B http://sourceforge.net/projects/re2c/
|
|
.PD 1
|
|
|
|
.SH AUTHORS
|
|
.PD 0
|
|
.P
|
|
Peter Bumbulis <peter@csg.uwaterloo.ca>
|
|
.P
|
|
Brian Young <bayoung@acm.org>
|
|
.P
|
|
Dan Nuffer <nuffer@users.sourceforge.net>
|
|
.P
|
|
Marcus Boerger <helly@users.sourceforge.net>
|
|
.P
|
|
Hartmut Kaiser <hkaiser@users.sourceforge.net>
|
|
.P
|
|
Emmanuel Mogenet <mgix@mgix.com> added storable state
|
|
.P
|
|
.PD 1
|
|
|
|
.SH VERSION INFORMATION
|
|
This manpage describes \fBre2c\fP, version 0.10.5.
|
|
|
|
.fi
|