NAME¶
yodlbuiltins - Builtins for the Yodl converters
SYNOPSIS¶
This manual page lists the standard builtins of the Yodl package.
DESCRIPTION¶
The following list shows the builtins defined by the Yodl converters define and
which can be used in Yodl documents. Refer to the Yodl user guide, distributed
with the Yodl package, for a full description.
The following list shows all builtins of the package in alphabetical order.
NOTE: Starting with Yodl version 3.00.0 Yodl’s default file
inclusion behavior has changed. The current working directory no longer
remains fixed at the directory in which Yodl is called, but is volatile,
changing to the directory in which a yodl-file is located. This has the
advantage that Yodl’s file inclusion behavior now matches the way
C’s #include directive operates; it has the disadvantage that it
may break some current documents. Conversion, however is simple but can be
avoided altogether if Yodl’s -L (--legacy-include) option is used. The
builtins INCLUDEFILE, NOEXPANDINCLUDE and NOEXPANDPATHINCLUDE are affected by
this new behavior.
- Yodl’s builtin commands
- As mentioned previously, YODL’s input consists of
text and of commands. YODL supports a number of built-in commands which
may either be used in a YODL document, or which can be used to create a
macro package.
- Don’t despair if you find that the description of
this section is too technical. Exactly for this reason, YODL supports the
macro packages to make the life of a documentation writer easier. E.g.,
see chapter [MACROPACKAGE] that describes a macro package for YODL.
- Most built-in functions and macros expand the information
they receive the way they receive the information. I.e., the information
itself is only evaluated by the time it is eventually inserted into an
output medium (usually a file). However, some builtin functions will
evaluate their argument(s) once the argument is processed. They
are:
- o
- The ERROR() built-in function (see section [ERROR]);
- o
- The EVAL() built-in function (see section [EVAL]);
- o
- The FPUTS() built-in function (see section [FPUTS]);
- o
- The INTERNALINDEX() built-in function (see section
[INTERNALINDEX]);
- o
- The TYPEOUT() built-in function (see section
[TYPEOUT]);
- o
- The UPPERCASE() built-in function (see section
[UPPERCASE]);
- o
- The WARNING() built-in function (see section [WARNING]);
All other built-in functions will not evaluate their arguments. See
the mentioned functions for details, and in particular EVAL() for a
description of this evaluation process.
- ADDTOCOUNTER
- The ADDTOCOUNTER function adds a given value to a counter.
It expects two parameter lists: the counter name, and the value to add.
The counter must be previously created with DEFINECOUNTER.
- The value to add can be negative; in that case, a value is
of course subtracted from the counter.
- See further section [COUNTERS].
- ADDTOSYMBOL
- Since Yodl version 2.00 symbols can be manipulated. To add
text to an existing symbol the builtin ADDTOSYMBOL is available. It
expects two parameter lists: the symbol’s name, and the text to add
to the symbol. The symbol must have been created earlier using
DEFINECOUNTER (see section [DEFINECOUNTER]). The macro’s second
argument is not evaluated while ADDTOSYMBOL is processed. Therefore, it is
easy to add the text of another symbol or the expansion of a macro to a
symbol value. E.g.,
ADDTOSYMBOL(one)(SYMBOLVALUE(two)XXnl())
This will add the text of symbol two, followed by a new line, to the
contents of symbol one only when symbol one is evaluated, not when
ADDTOSYMBOL is evaluated.
- Example:
ADDTOSYMBOL(LOCATION)(this is appended to LOCATION)
- ATEXIT
- ATEXIT takes one parameter list as argument. The text of
the parameter list is appended to the output file. Note that this text is
subject to character table translations etc..
- An example using this function is the following. A document
in the LaTeX typesetting language requires \end{document} to occur at the
end of the document. To automatically append this string to the output
file, the following specification can be used:
ATEXIT(NOEXPAND(\end{document}))
Several ATEXIT lists can be defined. They are appended to the output file in
the reverse order of specification; i.e., the first ATEXIT list is
appended to the output file last. That means that in general the ATEXIT
text should be specified when a `matching’ starting command is sent
to the output file; as in:
COMMENT(Start the LaTeX document.)
NOEXPAND(\begin{document})
COMMENT(Ensure its proper ending.)
ATEXIT(NOEXPAND(\end{document}))
- CHAR
- The command CHAR takes one argument, a number or a
character, and outputs its corresponding ASCII character to the final
output file. This command is built for `emergency situations’, where
you need to typeset a character despite the fact that it may be redefined
in the current character table (for a discussion of character tables, see
[CHARTABLES]). Also, the CHAR function can be used to circumvent
Yodl’s way of matching parentheses in a parameter list.
- The following arguments may be specified with CHAR
(attempted in this order):
- o
- A decimal number indicating the number of the character in
the ascii-table (for example CHAR(41));
- o
- A plain, single character (for example CHAR(#)).
- So, when you’re sure that you want to send a
printable character that is not a closing parenthesis to the output file,
you can use the form CHAR(c), c being the character (as in, CHAR(;)). To
send a non-printable character or a closing parenthesis to the output
file, look up the ASCII number of the character, and supply that number as
argument to the CHAR command.
- Example: The following two statements send an A to the
output file.
CHAR(65)
CHAR(A)
The following statement sends a closing parenthesis:
CHAR(41)
Another way to send a string to the output file without expansion by
character tables or by macro interpretation, is by using the function
NOTRANS (see section [NOTRANS]). If you want to send a string to the
output without macro interpretation, but with character
table translation, use NOEXPAND (see section [NOEXPAND]).
- CHDIR
- The command CHDIR takes one argument, a directory to change
to. This command is implemented to simplify the working with includefile
(see includefile in yodlmacros(7)). As a demonstration, consider the
following fragment:
includefile(subdir/onefile)
includefile(subdir/anotherfile)
includefile(subdir/yetanotherfile)
This fragment can be changed to:
CHDIR(subdir)
includefile(onefile)
includefile(anotherfile)
includefile(yetanotherfile)
CHDIR(..)
The current directory, as given to CHDIR, only affects how includefile will
search for its files.
- Note that this example assumes that the current working
directory is a member of Yodl’s include-path specification (cf.,
Yodl’s --include option).
- COMMENT
- The COMMENT function takes one parameter list. The text in
the list is treated as comment. I.e., it is ignored. The text is not
copied to the final output file.
- COUNTERVALUE
- COUNTERVALUE expands to the value of a counter. Its single
parameter list must contain the name of a counter. The counter must have
been created earlier using the builtin DEFINECOUNTER.
Example:
The counter has value COUNTERVALUE(MYCOUNTER).
See also section [COUNTERS].
- DECWSLEVEL
- DECWSLEVEL requires one (empty) parameter list. It reduces
the current white-space level. The white-space level typically is used in
files that only define Yodl macros. When no output should be generated
while processing these files, the white-space level can be used to check
for this. If the white-space level exceeds zero, a warning will be
generated if the file produces non-whitespace output. The builtin function
DECWSLEVEL is used to reduce the whitespace level following a previous
call of INCWSLEVEL.
- Once the white space level exceeds zero, no output will be
generated. White space, therefore will effectively be ignored. The white
space level cannot be reduced to negative values. A warning is issued if
that would have happened if it were allowed.
- Example:
INCWSLEVEL()
DEFINESYMBOL(....)
DEFINEMACRO(...)(...)(...)
DECWSLEVEL()
Without the INCWSLEVEL and DECWSLEVEL, calls, the above definition would
generate four empty lines to the output stream.
- The INCWSLEVEL and DECWSLEVEL calls may be nested. The best
approach is to put an INCWSLEVEL at the first line of a macro-defining
Yodl-file, and a matching DECWSLEVEL call at the very last line.
- DEFINECHARTABLE
- DEFINECHARTABLE is used to define a character translation
table. The function expects two parameterlists, containing the name of the
character table and character table translations on separate lines. These
character table translations are of the form
character = quoted-string
Here, character is always a value within single quotes. It may be a single
character, an octal character value or a hexadecimal character value. The
single character may be prefixed by a \-character (e.g.,
’\\’). The octal character value must start with a backslash,
followed by three octal digits (e.g., ’\045’. The hexadecimal
character value starts with 0x, followed by two hexadecimal characters.
E.g., ’0xbe’. The double quoted string may contain anything
(but the string must be on one line), possibly containing escape-sequences
as well: in the double quoted string the standard C escape
sequences \a (alert), \b (beep), \f (formfeed), \n (newline), \r (carriage
return), \t (tab), and \v (vertical tab) are recognized and automatically
converted to their special meanings. Starting with Yodl 2.14.0 octal and
hexadecimal constants may also be used. E.g., character Y may also be
specified using the octal value \131 or the hexadecimal value \x59. Any
other character following a defines itself: \\ represents a single
backslash character.
- Example:
DEFINECHARTABLE(demotable)(
’&’ = "&"
’\\’ = "\\backslash"
’\045’ = "oct(45)"
’0xa4’ = "hex(a4)"
)
The builtin function DEFINECHARTABLE does not activate the table. The
table is merely defined. To activate the character translation table, use
USECHARTABLE. The discussion of character tables is postponed to section
[CHARTABLES].
- DEFINECOUNTER
- DEFINECOUNTER creates a new counter, to be subsequently
used by, e.g, the USECOUNTER function. DEFINECOUNTER expects two parameter
list: the name of the counter to create and an optional initial value. By
default the counter will be initialized to zero.
- Examples:
DEFINECOUNTER(YEAR)(1950)
DEFINECOUNTER(NTIMES)()
See also section [COUNTERS].
- DEFINEMACRO
- DEFINEMACRO is used to define new macros. This function
requires three parameter lists:
- o
- An identifier, being the name of the macro to define. This
identifier may only consist of uppercase or lowercase characters. Note
that it can not contain numbers, nor underscore characters.
- o
- A number, stating the number of arguments that the macro
will require once used. The number must be in the range 0 to 61.
- o
- The text that the macro will expand to, once used. This
text may contain the strings ARG x, x being 1, 2, etc.. At
these places the arguments to the macro will be pasted in. The numbers
that identify the arguments are 1 to 9, then A to Z and finally a to z.
This gives a range of 61 expandable arguments, which is enough for all
real-life applications. For example, the following fragment defines a
macro bookref, which can be used to typeset a reference to a book. It
requires three arguments; say, an author, a title and the name of a
publisher:
DEFINEMACRO(bookref)(3)(
Author(s): ARG1
Book title: ARG2
Published by: ARG3
)
Such a macro could be used as follows:
bookref(Sobotta/Becher)
(Atlas der Anatomie des Menschen)
(Urban und Schwarzenberg, Berlin, 1972)
When called, it would produce the following output:
Author(s): Sobotta/Becher
Book title: Atlas der Anatomie des Menschen
Published by: Urban und Schwarzenberg, Berlin, 1972
While applying a macro, the three parameter lists are pasted to the places
where ARG1, ARG2 etc. occur in the definition.
- Note the following when defining new macros:
- o
- The parameter list containing the name of the new macro,
(bookref) in the above example, must occur right after DEFINEMACRO. No
spaces are allowed in between. Space characters and newlines may however
occur following this first parameter list.
- This behavior of the yodl program is similar to the usage
of the defined macro: the author information must, enclosed in
parentheses, follow right after the bookref identifier. I implemented this
feature to improve the distinguishing between macros and real text. E.g.,
a macro me might be defined, but the text
I like me (but so do you)
still is simple text; the macro me only is activated when a parenthesis
immediately follows it.
- o
- Be careful when placing newlines or spaces in the
definition of a new macro. E.g., the definition, as given:
DEFINEMACRO(bookref)(3)(
Author(s): ARG1
Book title: ARG2
Published by: ARG3
)
introduces extra newlines at the beginning and ending of the macro, which
will be copied to the output each time the macro is used. The extra
newline occurs, of course, right before the sequence Author(s): and
following the evaluation of ARG3. A simple backslash character at the end
of the DEFINEMACRO line would prevent the insertion of extra newline
characters:
DEFINEMACRO(bookref)(3)(\
Author(s): ARG1
Book title: ARG2
Published by: ARG3
)
- o
- Note that when a macro is used which requires no arguments
at all, one empty parameter list still must be specified. E.g., my macro
package (see chapter [MACROPACKAGE]) defines a macro it that starts a
bullet item in a list. The macro takes no arguments, but still must be
typed as it().
- This behavior is consistent: it helps distinguish which
identifiers are macros and which are simple text.
- o
- Macro arguments may evaluate to text. When a \ is appended
to the macro-argument, or in the default input handling within a non-zero
white-space level (see section [INCWSLEVEL]) this may invalidate a
subsequent macro call. E.g., the macro
DEFINEMACRO(oops)(1)(
ARG1
XXnl()
)
will, when called as oops(hello world), produce the output:
hello worldXXnl()
To prevent this gluing to arguments to subsequent macros, a single + should
be prepended to the macro call:
DEFINEMACRO(oops)(1)(
ARG1
+XXnl()
)
See also section [PLUSIDENT] obout the `+identifier’-sequence.
- o
- Note the preferred layout of macro definitions and macro
calls. Adhere to this form, to prevent drowning in too many parentheses.
In particular:
- o
- Put all elements of the macro definition on one line,
except for the macro-expansion itself. Each expansion element should be on
a line by itself.
- o
- When calling macros put the macro parameter lists
underneath each other. If the macrolists themselves contain macro-calls,
put each call again on a line of its own, indenting one tab-position
beyond the location of the opening parenthesis of the argument.
- o
- No continnuation backslashes are required between parameter
lists. So, do not use them there to prevent unnecessary clutter.
- o
- With complex calls, indent just the arguments, and put the
parentheses in their required of logical locations. Example of a complex
call:
complex(
first(
ARG1
)(
ARG2
+XXnl()
)
ARG3
+nop()
ARG4
+XXnl()
)
- o
- Macro expansion proceeds as follows:
- o
- The parameter lists are read from the input
- o
- The contents of the parameters then replace their ARGx
references in the macro’s definition (in some exceptional cases,
clearly indicated as such when applicable, the arguments will themselves
be evaluated first, and then these evaluated arguments are used as
replacements for their corresponding ARGx references).
- o
- The now modified macro is read by Yodl’s lexical
scanner. This may result in yet another macro expansion, which will then
be evaluated recursively.
- o
- Eventually, all expansion is completed (well, should
complete, since Yodl doesn’t test for eternal recursion) and
scanning of the input continues beyond the original macro call. For
example, assume we have the following two macros:
DEFINEMACRO(First)(1)(
Hello ARG1
+XXnl()
)
DEFINEMACRO(Second)(1)(
First(ARG1)
First(ARG1)
)
and the following call is issued:
Second(Yodl)
then the following will happen:
- o
- Second(Yodl) is read as encountered.
- o
- ARG1 in Second is replaced by YODL, and the resulting macro
body is sent to the lexical scanner for evaluation: It will see:
First(Yodl)First(Yodl)
- o
- The first call to First() is now evaluated. This will put
(after replacing ARG1 by YODL) the following on the scanner’s input:
Hello Yodl+XXnl()First(Yodl)
- o
- Hello Yodl contains no macro call, so it is written to the
output stream. Remains:
+XXnl()First(Yodl)
- o
- Assume XXnl() merely contains a newline (represented by \n,
here), so +XXnl() is now replaced by \n. This results in the following
input for the lexical scanner:
\nFirst(Yodl)
- o
- The \n is now written to the output stream, and the scanner
sees:
First(Yodl)
- o
- The second call to First() is now evaluated. This will put
the following on the scanner’s input:
Hello Yodl+XXnl()
- o
- Hello Yodl is written to the output stream. Remains:
+XXnl()
- o
- +XXnl() is now replaced by \n. The lexical scanner sees:
\n
- o
- The newline is printed and we’re done.
- DEFINESYMBOL
- NOTE: this function has changed at the release of Yodl
2.00. It now expects two parameter lists, rather than one
- DEFINESYMBOL expects two arguments. An identifier, which is
the name of the symbol to define, and the textual value of the symbol. If
the second argument is empty, the symbol is defined, but has an empty
value.
- The earlier interpretation of a Yodl symbol as a logical
flag can still be used, but allowing it to obtain textual values greatly
simplifies various Yodl macros.
- Example:
DEFINESYMBOL(Yodl)(Your own document language)
DEFINESYMBOL(Options)()
- DELETECHARTABLE
- DELETECHARTABLE removes a definition of a character table
that was defined by DEFINECHARTABLE. This function expects one argument:
the name of the character table remove.
- It’s an error to attempt to delete a character table
that is currently in use or to attempt to delete a non-existing character
table.
- Example:
DELETECHARTABLE(mytable)
- DELETECOUNTER
- DELETECOUNTER removes a definition of a counter that was
defined by DEFINECOUNTER. This function expects one argument: the name of
the counter to remove.
- If the counter does not exist, a warning is issued. It is
not considered an error to try to delete a counter that has not been
defined earlier.
- Example:
DELETECOUNTER(mycounter)
- DELETEMACRO
- DELETEMACRO removes a definition of a macro that was
defined by DEFINEMACRO. This function takes one argument: the macro name
to remove.
- There is no error condition (except for syntax errors):
when no macro with a matching name was previously defined, no action is
taken.
- For example, the safe way to define a macro is by first
undefining it. This ensures that possible previous definitions are removed
first:
- Example:
DELETEMACRO(mymacro)
- DELETENOUSERMACRO
- DELETENOUSERMACRO removes a `nousermacro’ definition.
The function expects one argument: the name of the `nousermacro’
identifier to be removed from the nousermacro-set.
- There is no error condition (except for syntax errors):
when the identifier wasn’t stored as a `nousermacro’ no action
is taken.
- Example:
DELETENOUSERMACRO(mymacro)
- DELETESYMBOL
- DELETESYMBOL removes the definition of a symbol variable.
It expects one parameter list, holding the name of the variable to
deleted.
- This macro has no error condition (except for syntax
errors): the symbol in question may be previously defined, but that is not
necessary.
- Example:
DELETESYMBOL(Options)
- DUMMY
- This function is obsolete. It does nothing, and may be
removed in future versions of Yodl.
- ENDDEF
- ENDDEF is obsolete, and should be replaced by DECWSLEVEL.
It may be removed in future versions of Yodl.
- ERROR
- The ERROR function takes one argument: text to display to
the standard error stream. The current input file and line number are also
displayed. After displaying the text, the yodl program aborts with an exit
status of 1.
- The text passed to the function is expanded first. See the
example.
- The ERROR function is an example of a function that
evaluates its parameter list itself.
- This command can be used, e.g., in a macro package when an
incorrect macro is expanded. In my macro package (see chapter
[MACROPACKAGE]) the ERROR function is used when the sectioning command
chapter() is used in an article document (in the package, chapter’s
are only available in books or reports).
- An analogous builtin function is WARNING, which also prints
a message but does not exit (see section [WARNING]).
- Example: In the following call, COUNTERVALUE(NTRIES) is
replaced by its actual value:
ERROR(Stopping after COUNTERVALUE(NTRIES) attempts)
- EVAL
- The EVAL function takes one argument: the text to be
evaluated. This function allows you to perform an indirect evaluation of
Yodl commands. Assume that there is a symbol varnam containing the name of
a counter variable, then the following will display the value of the
counter, incrementing it first:
EVAL(NOTRANS(USECOUNTER)(SYMBOLVALUE(varnam)))
The actions of the EVAL function can be described as follows:
- o
- First, the NOTRANS(USECOUNTER) is evaluated, producing
USECOUNTER.
- o
- Next, the open parentheses is processed, producing the open
parenthesis itself
- o
- Then, SYMBOLVALUE(varnam) is evaluated, producing the name
of a counter, e.g. `counter’.
- o
- Eventually the closing parentheis is processed, producing
the closing parenthesis itself.
- o
- All this results in the text
USECOUNTER(counter)
- o
- This text is now presented to Yodl’s lexical scanner,
resulting in incrementing the counter, and displaying its incremented
value. It should be realized that macro arguments themselves are usually
not evaluated. So, a construction like
USECOUNTER(EVAL(SYMBOLVALUE(varnam)))
will fail, since EVAL(SYMBOLVALUE(varnam)) is not a legal name for a
counter: the EVAL() call is used here as an argument, which is not
expanded. The distinction is subtle, and is caused by the fact that
builtin functions receive unprocessed arguments, and may impose certain
requirements on them (like USECOUNTER requiring the name of a
counter).
- Summarizing: EVAL acts as follows:
- o
- Its argument is presented to Yodl’s lexical
scanner
- o
- The output produced by the processing of the argument is
then inserted into the input stream in lieu of the original EVAL
call.
- Mosy built-in functions will not evaluate their
arguments. In fact, only ERROR, EVAL, FPUTS, INTERNALINDEX, TYPEOUT,
UPPERCASE and WARNING() will evaluate their arguments.
- Postponing evaluations allows you to write:
DEFINESYMBOL(later)(SYMBOLVALUE(earlier))
Eventually, and not when later is defined, a statement like
SYMBOLVALUE(later)
will produce the value of earlier at the moment SYMBOLVALUE(later) is
processed. This is, in all its complex consequences, what would be
expected in most cases. It allows us to write general macros producing
output that is only evaluated when the text of symbols and values of
arguments become eventually, rather than when the macro is defined,
available.
- Decisions like these invariably result in questions like
`what if I have to keep original values in some situation?’ In those
situations EVAL() must be used. The following example shows the definition
of three symbols: one receives an initial value, two will return
one’s actual value when two’s value is displayed, three will,
using EVAL(), store one’s initial value. The example also shows yet
another way to suppress macro calls. It uses the macro nop() which is
defined in the all standard conversion types.
DEFINESYMBOL(one)(This is one, before)
DEFINESYMBOL(two)(SYMBOLVALUE(one))
EVAL(DEFINESYMBOL+nop()(three)(SYMBOLVALUE(one)))
SETSYMBOL(one)(this is one, after)
SYMBOLVALUE(two)
SYMBOLVALUE(three)
- FILENAME
- The function FILENAME() produces an absolute path to the
currently processed Yodl file. This is not necessarily the
canonical path name, as it may contain current- and parent-path
directories.
- FPUTS
- The function FPUTS expects two arguments: the first argment
is information to be appended to a file, whose name is given as the second
argument. The first argument is processed by Yodl before it is appended to
the requested filename, so it may contain macro calls.
- For example, the following statement will append a
countervalue to the mentioned file:
FPUTS(There have been COUNTERVALUE(attempts) attempts)(/tmp/logfile)
The second argument (name of the file) is not evaluated, but is used as
received.
- IFBUILTIN
- The IFBUILTIN function tests whether its first argument is
the name of a builtin function. If so, the second parameter list is
evaluated, else, the third parameter list is evaluated. All three
parameter lists (the variable, the true-list and the false-list) must be
present; though the true-list and/or the false-list may be empty parameter
lists.
- Example:
IFBUILTIN(IFBUILTIN)(\
`BUILTIN’ is a builtin - function
)(\
`BUILTIN’ is NOT a builtin - function
)
Please note the preferred layout: The first argument immediately follows the
function name, then the second argument (the true list) is
indented, as is the false list. The layout closely follows the
preferred layout of if-else statements of many programming languages.
- IFCHARTABLE
- The IFCHARTABLE function tests whether its first argument
is the name of a character table. The character table needs not be active.
If the name is the name of a character table, the second parameter list is
evaluated, else, the third parameter list is evaluated. All three
parameter lists (the name, the true list and the false list) must be
present; though the true list and/or the false list may be empty parameter
lists.
- Example:
IFCHARTABLE(standard)(\
`standard’ is a character tablebuiltin - function
)(\
`standard’ is NOT a character tablebuiltin - function
)
Please note the preferred layout: The first argument immediately follows the
function name, then the second argument (the true list) is
indented, as is the false list. The layout closely follows the
preferred layout of if-else statements of many programming languages.
- IFDEF
- The IFDEF function tests for the definition status of the
argument in its first parameter list. If it is a defined entity, the
second parameter list is evaluated, else, the third parameter list is
evaluated. All three parameter lists (the entity, the true list and the
false list) must be present; though the true list and/or the false list
may be empty parameter lists.
- The true list is evaluated if the first argument is the
name of:
- o
- a built-in function, or
- o
- a character table, or
- o
- a counter, or
- o
- a no-user-macro symbol, or
- o
- a symbol, or
- o
- a user-defined macro, or Example:
IFDEF(someName)(\
`someName’ is a defined entity
)(\
`someName is not defined.
)
Please note the preferred layout: The first argument immediately follows the
function name, then the second argument (the true list) is
indented, as is the false list. The layout closely follows the
preferred layout of if-else statements of many programming languages.
- IFEMPTY
- IFEMPTY expects three arguments: a symbol, a true-list and
a false-list. IFEMPTY evaluates to the true-list if the symbol is an empty
string; otherwise, it evaluates to the false-list.
- The function does not further evaluate its argument. Its
use is primarily to test whether a macro has received an argument or not.
If the intent is to check whether a symbol’s value is empty or not,
IFSTREQUAL [IFSTREQUAL] should be used, where the first argument is the
name of a symbol, and the second argument is empty.
- Example:
IFEMPTY(something)(\
`something’ is empty...
)(\
`something’ is not an empty string
)
In the same way, IFEMPTY can be used to test whether an argument expands to
a non-empty string. A more elaborate example follows below. Say you want
to define a bookref macro to typeset information about an author, a book
title and about the publisher. The publisher information may be absent,
the macro then typesets unknown:
\
DEFINEMACRO(bookref)(3)(\
Author(s): ARG1
Title: ARG2
Published by: \
IFEMPTY(ARG3)
(\
Unknown\
)(\
ARG3\
)
)
Using the macro, as in:
\
bookref(Helmut Leonhardt)
(Histologie, Zytologie und Microanatomie des Menschen)
()
would now result in the text Unknown behind the Published by: line.
- Please note the preferred layout: The first argument
immediately follows the function name, then the second argument (the
true list) is indented, as is the false list. The layout
closely follows the preferred layout of if-else statements of many
programming languages.
- IFEQUAL
- IFEQUAL expects four argument lists. It tests whether its
first argument is equal to its second argument. If so, the third parameter
list is evaluated, else, the fourth parameter list is evaluated. All four
argument lists must be present, though all can be empty lists.
- The first two arguments of IFEQUAL should be integral
numerical arguments. In order to determine whether the first two arguments
are equal, their values are determined:
- o
- If the argument starts with an integral numerical value,
that value is the value of the argument.
- o
- If the argument is the name of a counter, the
counter’s value is the value of the argument
- o
- If the values of the first two arguments van be determined
accordingly, their equality will determine whether the true list (when the
values are equal) or the false list (when the values are unequal) will be
evaluated.
- o
- Otherwise, IFEQUAL will evaluate the false list.
- Example:
IFEQUAL(0)()(\
0 and an empty string are equal
)(\
0 and an empty string are not equal
)
Please note the preferred layout: The first argument immediately follows the
function name, then the second argument (the true list) is
indented, as is the false list. The layout closely follows the
preferred layout of if-else statements of many programming languages.
- IFGREATER
- IFGREATER expects four argument lists. It tests whether its
first argument is greater to its second argument. If so, the third
parameter list is evaluated, else, the fourth parameter list is evaluated.
All four argument lists must be present, though all can be empty
lists.
- The first two arguments of IFGREATER should be integral
numerical arguments. In order to determine whether the first two arguments
are equal, their values are determined:
- o
- If the argument starts with an integral numerical value,
that value is the value of the argument.
- o
- If the argument is the name of a counter, the
counter’s value is the value of the argument
- o
- If the values of the first two arguments van be determined
accordingly, their order relation will determine whether the true list
(when the first value is greater than the second value) or the false list
(when the first value is smaller or equal than the second value) will be
evaluated.
- o
- Otherwise, IFGREATER will evaluate the false list.
- Example:
IFGREATER(counter)(5)(\
counter exceeds the value 5
)(\
counter does not exceeds the value 5, or counter is no Yodl-counter.
)
Please note the preferred layout: The first argument immediately follows the
function name, then the second argument (the true list) is
indented, as is the false list. The layout closely follows the
preferred layout of if-else statements of many programming languages.
- IFMACRO
- The IFMACRO function tests whether its first argument is
the name of a macro. If the name is the name of a macro, the second
parameter list is evaluated, else, the third parameter list is evaluated.
All three parameter lists (the name, the true list and the false list)
must be present; though the true list and/or the false list may be empty
parameter lists.
- Example:
IFMACRO(nested)(\
`nested’ is the name of a macro
)(\
There is no macro named `nested’
)
Please note the preferred layout: The first argument immediately follows the
function name, then the second argument (the true list) is
indented, as is the false list. The layout closely follows the
preferred layout of if-else statements of many programming languages.
- IFSMALLER
- IFSMALLER expects four argument lists. It tests whether its
first argument is smaller to its second argument. If so, the third
parameter list is evaluated, else, the fourth parameter list is evaluated.
All four argument lists must be present, though all can be empty
lists.
- The first two arguments of IFSMALLER should be integral
numerical arguments. In order to determine whether the first two arguments
are equal, their values are determined:
- o
- If the argument starts with an integral numerical value,
that value is the value of the argument.
- o
- If the argument is the name of a counter, the
counter’s value is the value of the argument
- o
- If the values of the first two arguments van be determined
accordingly, their order relation will determine whether the true list
(when the first value is smaller than the second value) or the false list
(when the first value is greater than or equal to the second value) will
be evaluated.
- o
- Otherwise, IFSMALLER will evaluate the false list.
- Example:
IFSMALLER(counter)(5)(\
counter is smaller than the value 5, or counter is no Yodl-counter
)(\
counter exceeds the value 5
)
Please note the preferred layout: The first argument immediately follows the
function name, then the second argument (the true list) is
indented, as is the false list. The layout closely follows the
preferred layout of if-else statements of many programming languages.
- IFSTREQUAL
- IFSTREQUAL tests for the equality of two strings. It
expects four arguments: two strings to match, a true list and a false
list. The true list is only evaluated when the contents of the two string
arguments exactly match.
- The first two arguments of IFSTREQUAL are partially
evaluated:
- o
- If the argument is the name of a symbol, the symbol’s
value is the value of the argument
- o
- Otherwise, the argument itself is used.
- In the degenerate case where the string to be compared is
actually the name of a SYMBOL, use a temporary SYMBOL variable containing
the name of that symbol, and compare it to whatever you want to compare it
with. Alternatively, write a blank space behind the arguments, since the
arguments are then interpreted `as is’. In practice, the need for
these constructions seem to arise seldomly, however.
- Example:
IFSTREQUAL(MYSYMBOL)(Hello world)(
The symbol `MYSYMBOL’ holds the value `Hello world’
)(
The symbol `MYSYMBOL’ doesn’t hold the value `Hello world’
)
- IFSTRSUB
- IFSTRSUB tests whether a string is a sub-string of another
string. It acts similar to IFSTREQUAL, but it tests whether the second
string is part of the first one.
- The first two arguments of IFSTREQULA are partially
evaluated:
- o
- If the argument is the name of a symbol, the symbol’s
value is the value of the argument
- o
- Otherwise, the argument itself is used.
- In the degenerate case where the string to be compared is
actually the name of a SYMBOL, use a temporary SYMBOL variable containing
the name of that symbol, and compare it to whatever you want to compare it
with. Alternatively, write a blank space behind the arguments, since the
arguments are then interpreted `as is’. In practice, the need for
these constructions seem to arise seldomly, however.
- Example:
IFSTRSUB(haystack)(needle)(
`needle’ was found in `haystack’
)(
`needle’ was not found in `haystack’
)
Note that both `haystack’ and `needle’ may be the names of
symbols. If they are, their contents are is compared, rather than the
literal names `haystack’ and `needle’
- IFSYMBOL
- The IFSYMBOL function tests whether its first argument is
the name of a symbol. If it is the name of a symbol, the second parameter
list is evaluated, else, the third parameter list is evaluated. All three
parameter lists (the name, the true list and the false list) must be
present; though the true list and/or the false list may be empty parameter
lists.
- Example:
IFSYMBOL(nested)(\
`nested’ is the name of a symbol
)(\
There is no symbol named `nested’
)
Please note the preferred layout: The first argument immediately follows the
function name, then the second argument (the true list) is
indented, as is the false list. The layout closely follows the
preferred layout of if-else statements of many programming languages.
- IFZERO
- IFZERO expects three parameter lists. The first argument
defines whether the whole function expands to the true list or to the
false list.
- The first argument of IFZERO should be an integral
numerical value. Its value is determined as follows:
- o
- If the argument starts with an integral numerical value,
that value is the value of the argument.
- o
- If the argument is the name of a counter, the
counter’s value is the value of the argument
- o
- Otherwise, IFZERO will evaluate the false list.
- Note that, starting with Yodl version 2.00 the first
argument is not evaluated any further. So, COUNTERVALUE(somecounter) will
always be evaluated as 0. If the value of a counter is required, simply
provide its name as the first argument of the IFZERO function.
- Example:
DEFINEMACRO(environment)(2)(\
IFZERO(ARG2)(\
NOEXPAND(\end{ARG1})\
)(\
NOEXPAND(\begin{ARG1})\
)\
)
Such a macro may be used as follows:
environment(center)(1)
Now comes centered text.
environment(center)(0)
which would of course lead to \begin and \end{center}. The numeric second
argument is used here as a on/off switch.
- INCLUDEFILE
- INCLUDEFILE takes one argument, a filename. The file is
processed by Yodl. If a file should be inserted without processing the
builtin function NOEXPANDINCLUDE [NOEXPANDINCLUDE] or NOEXPANDPATHINCLUDE
[NOEXPANDPATHINCLUDE] should be used.
- The yodl program supplies, when necessary, an extension to
the filename. The supplied extension is .yo, unless defined otherwise
during the compilation of the program.
- Furthermore, Yodl tries to locate the file in the
Yodl’s include path (which may be set using the --include option).
The actual value of the include path is shown in the usage information,
displayed when Yodl is started without arguments.
- NOTE: Starting with Yodl version 3.00.0 Yodl’s
default file inclusion behavior has changed. The current working directory
no longer remains fixed at the directory in which Yodl is called, but is
volatile, changing to the directory in which a yodl-file is located. This
has the advantage that Yodl’s file inclusion behavior now matches
the way C’s #include directive operates; it has the
disadvantage that it may break some current documents. Conversion, however
is simple and can be avoided altogether if Yodl’s -L
(--legacy-include) option is used.
- Example:
INCLUDEFILE(latex)
will try to include the file latex or latex.yo from the current include
parth. When the file is not found, Yodl aborts.
- INCLUDELIT, INCLUDELITERAL
- INCLUDELIT and INCLUDELITERAL are obsolete. NOEXPANDINCLUDE
[NOEXPANDINCLUDE] or NOEXPANDPATHINCLUDE [NOEXPANDPATHINCLUDE] should be
used instead.
- INCWSLEVEL
- INCWSLEVEL requires one (empty) parameter list. It
increases the current white-space level. The white-space level typically
is used in files that only define Yodl macros. When no output should be
generated while processing these files, the white-space level can be used
to check for this. If the white-space level exceeds zero, a warning will
be generated if the file produces non-whitespace output. The builtin
function DECWSLEVEL is used to reduce the whitespace level following a
previous call of INCWSLEVEL.
- Once the white space level exceeds zero, no output will be
generated. White space, therefore will effectively be ignored. The white
space level cannot be reduced to negative values. A warning is issued if
that would have happened if it were allowed.
- Example:
INCWSLEVEL()
DEFINESYMBOL(....)
DEFINEMACRO(...)(...)(...)
DECWSLEVEL()
Without the INCWSLEVEL and DECWSLEVEL, calls, the above definition would
generate four empty lines to the output stream.
- The INCWSLEVEL and DECWSLEVEL calls may be nested. The best
approach is to put an INCWSLEVEL at the first line of a macro-defining
Yodl-file, and a matching DECWSLEVEL call at the very last line.
- INTERNALINDEX
- INTERNALINDEX expects one argument list. The argument list
is evaluated and written to the index file.
- The index file is defined since Yodl version 2.00, and
contains the fixup information which was previously written to
Yodl’s output as the .YODLTAGSTART. ... .YODLTAGEND. sequence.
- The index file allows for greated processing speed, at the
expense of an additional file. The associated yodlpost postprocessing
program will read and process the index file, and will fixup the
corresponding yodl-output accordingly.
- The index file is not created when output is written to the
standard output name, since Yodl is unable to request the system for the
current file offset.
- The entries of the index file always fit on one line.
INTERNALINDEX will alter newline characters in its argument into single
blank spaces. Each line starts with the current offset of Yodl’s
output file, thus indicating the exact location where a fixup is
requested. An example of a produced fixup line could be
3004 ref MACROPACKAGE
indicating that at offset 3004 in the produced output file a reference to
the label MACROPACKAGE is requested. Assuming a html conversion, The
postprocessor will thereupon write something like
<a href="outfile04.html#MACROPACKAGE">4.3.2.</a>
into the actual output file while processing Yodl’s output up to
offset location 3004.
- Consequently, producing Yodl-output normally consists of
two steps:
- o
- First, Yodl itself is started, producing, e.g., out.idx
(the index file) and out.yodl (Yodl’s raw output).
- o
- Then, Yodl’s post-processor processes out.idx and
out.yodl, producing one or more final output files, in which the elements
of the index file have been properly handled. This may result in multiple
output file, like report.html, report01.html, report02.html etc.
- NEWCOUNTER
- NEWCOUNTER is obsolete. DEFINECOUNTER [DEFINECOUNTER]
should be used instead.
- NOEXPAND
- NOEXPAND is used to send text to the final output file
without being expanded by Yodl (the other methods are the CHAR macro, see
section [CHAR], and the NOTRANS macro, see section [NOTRANS]). NOEXPAND
takes one parameter list, the text in question. Whatever occurs in the
argument is not subject to parsing or expansion by Yodl, but is simply
copied to the output file (except for CHAR functions in the argument,
which are expanded. If CHAR-expansion is not required either
NOTRANS [NOTRANS] can be used).
- Furthermore, the contents of the parameter list are also
subject to character table translations, using the currently active table.
This should come as no surprise. Ignoring character tables would make both
the processing of CHAR calls and the NOTRANS function superfluous.
- So, the following situations are recognized:
|
support chartables |
|
|
and CHAR |
|
|
|
|
| Macro expansion |
yes |
no |
| Yes |
(standard) |
Push chartable |
|
|
|
(standard) |
|
|
Pop chartable |
| No |
NOEXPAND |
NOTRANS |
|
|
|
E.g., let’s assume that you need to write in your document the
following text:
INCLUDEFILE(something or the other)
IFDEF(onething)(
...
)(
....
)
NOEXPAND(whatever)
- The way to accomplish this is by prefixing the text by
NOEXPAND followed by an open parenthesis, and by postfixing it by a
closing parenthesis. Otherwise, the text would be expanded by Yodl while
processing it (and would lead to syntax errors, since the text isn’t
correct in the sence of the Yodl language).
- For this function, keep the following caveats in mind:
- o
- There is only one thing that a NOEXPAND cannot protect from
expansion: an ARG x in a macro definition. The argument specifier
is always processed. E.g., after
DEFINEMACRO(thatsit)(1)(
That is --> NOEXPAND(ARG1) <-- it!
)
thatsit(after all)
the ARG1 inside the NOEXPAND statement is replaced with after all.
- o
- The NOEXPAND function must, as all functions, be followed
by a parameter list. The parentheses of the list must therefore be
`balanced’. For unbalanced lists, use CHAR(40) to set an open
parenthesis, or CHAR(41) to typeset a closing parenthesis.
- NOEXPANDINCLUDE
- NOEXPANDINCLUDE takes one argument, a filename. The file is
included.
- The filename is uses as specified. The include path is not
used when locating this file.
- NOTE: Starting with Yodl version 3.00.0 Yodl’s
default file inclusion behavior has changed. The current working directory
no longer remains fixed at the directory in which Yodl is called, but is
volatile, changing to the directory in which a yodl-file is located. This
has the advantage that Yodl’s file inclusion behavior now matches
the way C’s #include directive operates; it has the
disadvantage that it may break some current documents. Conversion, however
is simple and can be avoided altogether if Yodl’s -L
(--legacy-include) option is used.
- The argument to NOEXPANDINCLUDE is partially
evaluated:
- o
- If the argument is the name of a symbol, the symbol’s
value is the value of the argument
- o
- Otherwise, the argument itself is used. The thus obtained
file name is not further evaluated: in particular, it will not be subject
to character translations.
- The contents of the file are included literally, not
subject to macro expansion. Character translations are performed, though.
If character translations are not appropriate, PUSHCHARTABLE can be used
to suppress character table translations temporarily.
- The purpose of NOEXPANDINCLUDE is to include source code
literally in the document, as in:
NOEXPANDINCLUDE(literal.c)
The function NOEXPANDPATHINCLUDE can be used to insert a file which
is located in one of the directories specified in Yodl’s
include path.
- NOEXPANDPATHINCLUDE
- NOEXPANDPATHINCLUDE takes one argument, a filename. The
file is included. The file is searched for in the directories specified in
Yodl’s includepath.
- NOTE: Starting with Yodl version 3.00.0 Yodl’s
default file inclusion behavior has changed. The current working directory
no longer remains fixed at the directory in which Yodl is called, but is
volatile, changing to the directory in which a yodl-file is located. This
has the advantage that Yodl’s file inclusion behavior now matches
the way C’s #include directive operates; it has the
disadvantage that it may break some current documents. Conversion, however
is simple and can be avoided altogether if Yodl’s -L
(--legacy-include) option is used.
- The argument to NOEXPANDPATHINCLUDE is partially
evaluated:
- o
- If the argument is the name of a symbol, the symbol’s
value is the value of the argument
- o
- Otherwise, the argument itself is used. The thus obtained
file name is not further evaluated: in particular, it will not be subject
to character translations.
- Like the NOEXPANDINCLUDE function, the contents of the file
are included literally, not subject to macro expansion. Character
translations are performed, though. If character translations are not
appropriate, PUSHCHARTABLE [PUSHCHARTABLE] can be used to suppress
character table translations temporarily.
- The purpose of NOEXPANDPATHINCLUDE is to include source
code as defined in a macro package literally into the document, as in:
NOEXPANDPATHINCLUDE(rug-menubegin.xml)
- NOTRANS
- NOTRANS copies its one argument literally to the output
file, without expanding macros in it and without translating the
characters with the current translation table. The NOTRANS function is
typically used to send commands for the output format to the output
file.
- For example, consider the following code fragment:
COMMENT(--- Define character translations for \, { and } in LaTeX. ---)
DEFINECHARTABLE(standard)(
’\\’ = "$\\backslash$"
’{’ = "\\verb+{+"
’}’ = "\\verb+}+"
)
COMMENT(--- Activate the translation table. ---)
USECHARTABLE(standard)
COMMENT(--- Now two tests: ---)
NOEXPAND(\input{epsf.tex})
NOTRANS(\input{epsf.tex})
NOEXPAND will send
$\backslash$input\verb+{+epsf.tex\verb+}+
since the characters in its argument are translated with the standard
translation table. In contrast, NOTRANS will send \input{epsf.tex}.
- The parameter list of NOTRANS must be balanced with
respect to its parentheses. When using an unbalanced set of parentheses,
use CHAR(40) to send a literal (, or CHAR(41) to send a ).
- The NOEXPAND description summarizes all combinations of
character translations and/or macro expansion, and how they are handled
and realized by Yodl.
- NOUSERMACRO
- NOUSERMACRO controls yodl’s warnings in the following
way: When Yodl is started with the -w flag on the command line, then
warnings are generated when Yodl encounters a possible macro name,
followed by a parameter list, without finding a macro by that name. Yodl
then prints something like cannot expand possible user macro.
- Examples of such sequences are, The necessary file(s) are
in /usr/local/lib/yodl, or see the manual page for sed(1). The candidate
macros are file and sed; these names could just as well be `valid’
user macros followed by their parameter list.
- When a corresponding NOUSERMACRO statement appears
before yodl encounters the candidate macros, no warning is
generated. A fragment might therefore be:
NOUSERMACRO(file sed)
The necessary file(s) are in ...
See the manual page for sed(1).
The NOUSERMACRO accepts one or more names in its argument, separated by
white space, commas, colons, or semi-colons.
- OUTBASE
- OUTBASE inserts the current basename of the output file
into the output file. The basename is the name of the file of which the
directory components and extension were stripped.
- If the output file is the standard output file, - is
inserted.
- OUTDIR
- OUTDIR inserts the current path name of the output file
into the output file. The path name is a, not necessarily absolute,
designator of the directory in which the output file is located. If the
output file is indicated as, e.g., -o out, then OUTDIR simply inserts a
dot.
- If the output file is the standard output file, a dot is
inserted too.
- OUTFILENAME
- OUTFILENAME inserts the current filename of the output file
into the output file. The filename is the name of the file of which the
directory components were stripped.
- If the output file is the standard output file, - is
inserted.
- PARAGRAPH
- PARAGRAPH isn’t really a builtin function, but as it
is handled especially by Yodl, it is described here nonetheless. Starting
with Yodl 2.00 PARAGRAPH operates as follows:
- If the macro is not defined, new paragraphs, defined as
series of consecutive empty lines written to the output stream, are not
handled different from any other series of characters sent to the output
stream. I.e., they are inserted into that stream.
- However, if the macro has been defined, Yodl will call it
whenever a new paragraph (defined as a series of at least two blank lines)
was recognized.
- The empty lines that were actually recognized may be
obtained inside the PARAGRAPH macro from the XXparagraph symbol, if
this symbol has been be defined by that time. If defined, it will contain
the white space that caused Yodl to call the PARAGRAPH macro.
- Note that, in order to inspect XXparagraph it must have
been defined first. Yodl itself will not define this symbol
itself.
- The PARAGRAPH macro should be defined as a macro not
expecting arguments. The macro is thus given a chance to process the
paragraph in a way that’s fitting for the particular conversion
type. If the PARAGRAPH macro produces series of empty lines itself, then
those empty lines will not cause Yodl to activate PARAGRAPH. So,
Yodl itself will not recursively call PARAGRAPH, although the macro could
call itself recursively. Of course, such recursive activcation of
PARAGRAPH is then the sole responsibility of the macro’s author, and
not Yodl’s.
- Some document languages do not need paragraph starts; e.g.,
LaTeX handles its own paragraphs. Other document languages do need it:
typically, PARAGRAPH is then defined in a macro file to trigger some
special action. E.g., a HTML converter might define a paragraph as:
DEFINEMACRO(PARAGRAPH)(0)(
XXnl()
NOTRANS(<p>)
)
A sytem like xml has more strict requirements. Paragraphs here must be
opened and closed using pairs of <p> and </p> tags. In those
cases an auxiliary counter can be used to indicate whether there is an
open paragraph or not. The PARAGRAPH macro could check for this as
follows, assuming the availability of a counter XXp:
DEFINEMACRO(PARAGRAPH)(0)(
XXnl()
IFZERO(XXp)(
)(
NOTRANS(</p>)
)
NOTRANS(<p>)
SETCOUNTER(XXp)(1)
)
Note that the above fragment exemplifies an approach, not necessarily
the implementation of the PARAGRAPH macro for an
xml-convertor.
- PIPETHROUGH
- The builtin function PIPETHROUGH is, besides SYSTEM, the
second function with which a Yodl document can affect its environment.
Therefore, the danger of `live data’ exists which is also described
in the section about SYSTEM (see section [SYSTEM]). Nevertheless,
PIPETHROUGH can be very useful. It is intended to use external programs to
accomplish special features. The idea is that an external command is
started, to which a block of text from within a Yodl document is
`piped’. The output of that child program is piped back into the
Yodl document; hence, a block of text is `piped through’ an external
program. Whatever is received again in the Yodl run, is further
processed.
- The PIPETHROUGH function takes two arguments:
- o
- the command to run, and
- o
- the text to send to that command.
- Functionally, the occurrence of the PIPETHROUGH function
and of its two arguments is replaced by whatever the child program
produces on its standard output.
- An example might be the inclusion of the current date, as
in:
-
The current date is:
PIPETHROUGH(date)()
- In this example the command is date and the text to send to
that program is empty.
- The main purpose of this function is to provide a way by
which external programs can be used to create, e.g., tables or figures for
a given output format. Further releases of Yodl may contain such dedicated
programs for the output formats.
- POPCHARTABLE
- Character tables which are pushed onto the table stack
using PUSHCHARTABLE() are restored (popped) using POPCHARTABLE(). For a
description of this mechanism please refer to section
[PUSHINGTABLES].
- POPCOUNTER
- POPCOUNTER is used to remove the topmost counter from the
counter stack. The values of counters may be pushed on a stack using
PUSHCOUNTER [PUSHCOUNTER]. To remove the topmost element of a
counter’s stack POPCOUNTER is available. POPCOUNTER expects one
argument: the name of the counter to pop. The previously pushed value then
becomes the new value of the counter. A counter’s value may be
popped after defining it, whereafter the stack will be empty, but the
counter will still be defined. In that case, using the counter’s
value is considered an error.
- Examples:
DEFINECOUNTER(YEAR)(1950)
POPCOUNTER(YEAR)
COMMENT(YEAR now has an undefined value)
See also section [COUNTERS].
- POPMACRO
- POPMACRO is used to remove the actual macro definition,
restoring a previously pushed definition. The values of macros may be
pushed on a stack using PUSHMACRO. To remove the topmost element of a
macro’s stack POPMACRO is available. POPMACRO expects one argument:
the name of the macro to pop. The previously pushed value then becomes the
new value of the macro.
- A macro’s value may be popped after defining it,
whereafter the stack will be empty, but the macro will still be defined.
In that case, using the macro is considered an error.
- Example:
DEFINEMACRO(Hello)(1)(Hello, ARG1, this is a macro definition)
Hello(Karel)
PUSHMACRO(Hello)(1)(Hello, ARG1, this is the new definition)
Hello(Karel)
POPMACRO(Hello)
Hello(Karel)
COMMENT(The third activation of Hello() produces the same output
as the first activation)
- POPSYMBOL
- POPSYMBOL is used to remove the topmost symbol from the
symbol stack. The values of symbols may be pushed on a stack using
PUSHSYMBOL [PUSHSYMBOL]. To remove the topmost element of a symbol’s
stack POPSYMBOL is available.
- POPSYMBOL expects one argument: the name of the symbol to
pop. The previously pushed value then becomes the new value of the symbol.
A symbol’s value may be popped after defining it, whereafter the
stack will be empty, but the symbol will still be defined. In that case,
using the symbol’s value is considered an error.
- Example:
DEFINESYMBOL(YEAR)(This happened in 1950)
POPSYMBOL(YEAR)
COMMENT(YEAR now has an undefined value)
- POPWSLEVEL
- POPWSLEVEL is used to remove the topmost wslevel from the
wslevel stack. The values of wslevels may be pushed on a stack using
PUSHWSLEVEL [PUSHWSLEVEL]. See also section DECWSLEVEL [DECWSLEVEL]
- To remove the topmost element of a wslevel’s stack
POPWSLEVEL is available. POPWSLEVEL expects one argument: the name of the
wslevel to pop. The previously pushed value then becomes the new value of
the wslevel. A wslevel’s value may be popped after defining it,
whereafter the stack will be empty, but the wslevel will still be defined.
In that case, using the wslevel’s value is considered an error.
- Example:
COMMENT(Assume WS level is zero)
PUSHWSLEVEL(1)
COMMENT(WS level now equals 1)
POPWSLEVEL()
COMMENT(WS level now equals 0 again)
- PUSHCHARTABLE
- Once a character table has been defined, it can be
pushed onto a stack using PUSHCHARTABLE. The pushed chartable may
be popped later. PUSHCHARTABLE is described in more detail in
section [PUSHINGTABLES].
- PUSHCOUNTER
- PUSHCOUNTER is used to start another lifetime for a
counter, pushing its current value on a stack. A stack is available for
each individual counter.
- PUSHCOUNTER expects two arguments: the name of the counter
to push and its new value after pushing. When the second argument is an
empty parameter list, the new value will be zero. The new value may be
specified as a numerical value, or as the name of an existing counter.
Specify the name of the counter twice to merely push its value, without
modifying its current value.
- Examples:
DEFINECOUNTER(YEAR)(1950)
PUSHCOUNTER(YEAR)(1962)
COMMENT(YEAR now has the value 1962, and a pushed value of 1950)
See also section [COUNTERS].
- PUSHMACRO
- PUSHMACRO is used to start another lifetime for a macro,
pushing its current definition on a stack. A stack is available for each
individual macro.
- PUSHMACRO expects three arguments: the name of the macro to
push, the number of its arguments after pushing (which may be different
from the number of arguments interpreted by the pushed macro) and its new
definition.
- So, PUSHMACRO is used exactly like DEFINEMACRO, but will
redefine a current macro (or define a new macro if no macro was defined by
the name specified as its first argument.
- Example:
DEFINEMACRO(Hello)(1)(Hello, ARG1, this is a macro definition)
Hello(Karel)
PUSHMACRO(Hello)(1)(Hello, ARG1, this is the new definition)
Hello(Karel)
POPMACRO(Hello)
Hello(Karel)
COMMENT(The third activation of Hello() produces the same output
as the first activation)
- PUSHSYMBOL
- PUSHSYMBOL is used to start another lifetime for a symbol,
pushing its current value on a stack. A stack is available for each
individual symbol.
- PUSHSYMBOL expects two arguments: the name of the symbol to
push and its new value after pushing. When the second argument is an empty
parameter list, the new value will be zero. The new value may be specified
as a numerical value, or as the name of an existing symbol. Specify the
name of the symbol twice to merely push its value, without modifying its
current value.
- Examples:
DEFINESYMBOL(YEAR)(This happened in 1950)
PUSHSYMBOL(YEAR)(This happended in 1962)
COMMENT(YEAR now has the value `This happended in 1962’ and a
pushed value of `This happened in 1950’)
- PUSHWSLEVEL
- PUSHWSLEVEL is used to start another lifetime of the
white-space level pushing the level’s current value on a stack. See
also section INCWSLEVEL [INCWSLEVEL]
- PUSHWSLEVEL expects one argument, the new value of the
white-space level. This value may be specified as a numerical value or as
the name of a counter. The argument may be empty, in which the new value
will be zero.
- Example:
COMMENT(Assume WS level is zero)
PUSHWSLEVEL(1)
COMMENT(WS level now equals 1)
POPWSLEVEL()
COMMENT(WS level now equals 0 again)
- RENAMEMACRO
- RENAMEMACRO takes two arguments: the name of a built-in
macro (such as INCLUDEFILE) and its new name.
- E.g., after
RENAMEMACRO(INCLUDEFILE)(include)
- a file must be included by include(file).
INCLUDEFILE can no longer be used for this: following the RENAMEMACRO
action, the old name can no longer be used; it becomes an undefined
symbol.
- If you want to make an alias for a built-in command,
do it with DEFINEMACRO. E.g., after:
DEFINEMACRO(include)(1)(INCLUDEFILE(ARG1))
both INCLUDEFILE and include can be used to include a file.
- SETCOUNTER
- SETCOUNTER expects two parameter lists: the name of a
counter, and a numeric value or the name of another counter.
- The corresponding counter (which must be previously created
with NEWCOUNTER) is set to, respectively, the numeric value or the value
of the other counter.
- See also section [COUNTERS].
- SETSYMBOL
- SETSYMBOL expects two parameter lists: the name of a
symbol, and the text to assign to the named symbol.
- STARTDEF
- STARTDEF is obsolete. Instead, INCWSLEVEL [INCWSLEVEL]
should be used.
- SUBST
- SUBST is a general-purpose substitution mechanism for
strings in the input. SUBST takes two arguments: a search string and a
substitution string. E.g., after
SUBST(VERSION)(1.00)
YODL will transorm all occurrences of VERSION in its input into 1.00.
- SUBST is also useful in situations where multi-character
sequences should be converted to accent characters. E.g., a LaTeX
converter might define:
SUBST(’e)(NOTRANS(\’{e}))
Each ’e in the input will then be converted to e.
- SUBST may be useed in combination with the command line
flag -P, as in a invocation
yodl2html -P’SUBST(VERSION)(1.00)’ myfile.yo
- Another useful substitution might be:
SUBST(_OP_)(CHAR(40))
SUBST(_CP_)(CHAR(41))
- which defines an opening parenthesis (_OP_) and a closing
parenthesis (_CP_) as mapped to the CHAR function. The strings _OP_ and
_CP_ might then be used to produce unbalanced parameter lists.
- Note that:
- o
- The first argument of the SUBST command, the search string,
is taken literally. Yodl does not expand it; the string must be literally
matched in the input.
- o
- The second argument, the replacement, is further processed
by Yodl. Protect this text by NOTRANS or NOEXPAND where appropriate.
- Substitutions occur extremely early while YODL processes
its input files. In order to processs its input files, YODL takes the
following basic steps:
- 1.
- It requests input from its lexical scanner (so-called
tokens)
- 2.
- Its parser processes the tokens produced by the lexical
scanner
- 3.
- Its parser may send text to an output `object’, which
will eventually appear in the output file generated by YODL. YODL will
perform all macro substitutions in step 2, and all character table
conversions in step 3. However, the lexical scanner has access to the
SUBST definitions: as soon as its lexical analyzer detects a series of
characters matching the defining sequence of a SUBST definition, it will
replace that defining sequence by its definition. That definition is then
again read by the lexical scanner. Of course, this definition may, in
turn, contain defining sequences of other SUBST definitions: these will
then be replaced by their definitions as well. This implies:
- o
- Circular definitions may cause the lexical scanner to get
stuck in a replacement loop. It is the responsibility of the author
defining SUBST definitions to make sure that this doesn’t
happen.
- o
- Neither the parser, nor the output object ever sees the
SUBST defining character sequences: they will only see their definitions.
- SYMBOLVALUE
- SYMBOLVALUE expands to the value of a symbol. Its single
parameter list must contain the name of a symbol. The symbol must have
been created earlier using the builtin DEFINESYMBOL.
Example:
The symbol has value SYMBOLVALUE(MYSYMBOL).
- SYSTEM
- SYSTEM takes one argument: a command to execute. The
command is run via the standard C function system. The presence of this
function in the Yodl language introduces the danger of live data.
Imagine someone sending you a document containing
SYSTEM(rm *)
To avoid such malevolent side effects, YODL has a flag -l to define the
`live data policy’. By default, -l0 is implied which suppresses the
SYSTEM function and the related PIPETHROUGH function. See also section
[USING].
- Despite the potential danger, SYSTEM can be useful in many
ways. E.g., you might want to log when someone processes your document, as
in:
SYSTEM(echo Document processed! | mail myself@my.host)
Note that SYSTEM merely performs an system-related task. It’s a
process that is separated from the YODL process itself. One of the
consequences of this is that any output generated by SYSTEM will not
normally appear into YODL’s output file. If the output of a
subprocess should be inserted into YODL’s output file, either use
PIPETHROUGH [PIPETHROUGH], or insert a temporary file as shown in the
following example:
SYSTEM(date > datefile)
The current date is:
INCLUDEFILE(datefile)
SYSTEM(rm datefile)
- TYPEOUT
- TYPEOUT requires one parameter list. The text of the list
is sent to the standard error stream, followed by a newline. This feature
can be handy to show, e.g., messages such as version numbers in macro
package files.
- Example: The following macro includes a file and writes to
the screen that this file is currently processed.
DEFINEMACRO(includefile)(1)(
TYPEOUT(About to process document: ARG1)
INCLUDEFILE(ARG1)
)
- UNDEFINEMACRO
- UNDEFINEMACRO is deprecated. Use DELETEMACRO [DELETEMACRO]
instead.
- UPPERCASE
- UPPERCASE converts a string or a part of it to upper case.
It has two arguments:
- o
- The string to convert;
- o
- A length, indicating how many characters (starting from the
beginning of the string) should be converted. The length indicator can be
smaller than one or larger than the length of the string; in that case,
the whole string is convertered.
- Example:
UPPERCASE(hello world)(1)
UPPERCASE(hello world)(5)
UPPERCASE(hello world)(0)
This code sample expands to:
Hello world
HELLO world
HELLO WORLD
- USECHARTABLE
- USECHARTABLE takes one parameter list: the name of a
translation table to activate. The table must previously have been defined
using DEFINECHARTABLE. See section [CHARTABLES] for a description of
character translation tables.
- Alternatively, the name may be empty in which case the
default character mapping is restored.
- USECOUNTER
- USECOUNTER is a combination of ADDTOCOUNTER and
COUNTERVALUE. It expects one parameter list: the name of an defined
counter (see DEFINECOUNTER [DEFINECOUNTER]).
- The counter is first incremented by 1. Then the function
expands to the counter’s value.
- See also section [COUNTERS].
- VERBOSITY
- VERBOSITY expects two arguments, and may be used to change
the verbosity level inside YODL files. The function may be used profitably
for debugging purposes, to debug the expansion of a macro or the
processing of a YODL input file.
- The first argument indicates the procesing mode of the
second argument, and it may be:
- o
- Empty, in which case the message-level is set to the value
specified in the second argument;
- o
- +, in which case the value specified in the second argument
augments the current message level;
- o
- -, in which case the value specified in the second argument
augments is removed from the current message level
- The second argument specifies one or more, separated by
blanks, message level names or it may be set to a hexadecimal value
(starting with 0x), using hexadecimal values to represent message levels.
Also, NONE may be used, to specify no message level, or ALL can be used to
specify all message levels.
- The following message levels are defined:
- o
- ALERT (0x40). When an alert-error occurs, Yodl terminates.
Here Yodl requests something of the system (like a get_cwd()), but the
system fails.
- o
- CRITICAL (0x20). When a critical error occurs, Yodl
terminates. The message itself can be suppressed, but exiting can’t.
A critical condition is, e.g., the omission of an open parenthesis at a
location where a parameter list should appear, or a non-existing file in
an INCLUDEFILE specification (as this file should be parsed). A
non-existing file with a NOEXPANDINCLUDE specification is a plain
(non-critical) error.
- o
- DEBUG (0x01). Probably too much info, like getting
information about each character that was read by Yodl.
- o
- ERROR (0x10). An error (like doubly defined symbols). Error
messages will not stop the parsing of the input (up to a maximum number of
errors), but no output is generated.
- o
- INFO (0x02). Not as detailed as `debug’, but still
very much info, like information about media switches.
- o
- NOTICE (0x04). Information about, e.g., calls to the
builtin function calls.
- o
- WARNING (0x08). Something you should know about, but
probably not affecting Yodl’s proper functioning
- There also exists a level EMERG (0x80) which cannot be
suppressed.
- The value 0x00 represents NONE, the value 0xff represents
ALL.
- When specifying multiple message levels using the
hexadecimal form, their hexadecimal values should be binary-or-ed: adding
them is ok, as long as you don’t specify ALL:
VERBOSITY()(0x06)
COMMENT(this specifies `INFO’ and `NOTICE’)
When specifying message levels by their names, the names may be truncated at
a unique point. However, the message level names are interpreted case
sensitively, so INF for INFO is recognized as such, but info for INFO
isn’t. The following examples all specify verbosity levels INFO and
NOTICE:
VERBOSITY()(I N)
VERBOSITY()(N I)
VERBOSITY()(NOT IN)
VERBOSITY()(INFO NOTICE)
- WARNING
- WARNING takes one argument: text to display as a warning.
The yodl program makes sure that before showing the text, the current file
and line number are printed. Other than this, WARNING works just as
TYPEOUT (see section [TYPEOUT]).
- Note that an analogous function ERROR exists, which prints
a message and then terminates the program (see section [ERROR]).
- WRITEOUT
- WRITEOUT is deprecated, use FPUTS [FPUTS] instead.
FILES¶
The files in
/usr/share/yodl define the converter’s macro packages.
The scripts
yodl2tex,
yodl2html,
yodl2man etc. perform
the conversions.
SEE ALSO¶
yodlstriproff(1),
yodl(1),
yodlconverters(1),
yodlletter(7),
yodlmacros(7),
yodlmanpage(7),
yodlpost(1),
yodlverbinsert(1).
BUGS¶
--
AUTHOR¶
Frank B. Brokken (f.b.brokken@rug.nl),