bionic (3) expander.3tcl.gz

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NAME

       textutil::expander - Procedures to process templates and expand text.

SYNOPSIS

       package require Tcl  8.2

       package require textutil::expander  ?1.3.1?

       ::textutil::expander expanderName

       expanderName cappend text

       expanderName cget varname

       expanderName cis cname

       expanderName cname

       expanderName cpop cname

       expanderName ctopandclear

       expanderName cpush cname

       expanderName cset varname value

       expanderName cvar varname

       expanderName errmode newErrmode

       expanderName evalcmd ?newEvalCmd?

       expanderName expand string ?brackets?

       expanderName lb ?newbracket?

       expanderName rb ?newbracket?

       expanderName reset

       expanderName setbrackets lbrack rbrack

       expanderName textcmd ?newTextCmd?

       expanderName where

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       The  Tcl  subst  command  is  often  used  to  support a kind of template processing. Given a string with
       embedded variables or function calls, subst will interpolate the variable and function values,  returning
       the new string:

                  % set greeting "Howdy"
                  Howdy
                  % proc place {} {return "World"}
                  % subst {$greeting, [place]!}
                  Howdy, World!
                  %

       By  defining  a suitable set of Tcl commands, subst can be used to implement a markup language similar to
       HTML.

       The subst command is efficient, but it has three drawbacks for this kind of template processing:

       •      There's no way to identify and process the plain text between  two  embedded  Tcl  commands;  that
              makes it difficult to handle plain text in a context-sensitive way.

       •      Embedded  commands  are  necessarily  bracketed  by  [ and ]; it's convenient to be able to choose
              different brackets in special cases.  Someone producing web pages that include a large quantity of
              Tcl code examples might easily prefer to use << and >> as the embedded code delimiters instead.

       •      There's  no easy way to handle incremental input, as one might wish to do when reading data from a
              socket.

       At present, expander solves the first two problems; eventually it will solve the third problem as well.

       The following section describes the command API to  the  expander;  this  is  followed  by  the  tutorial
       sections, see TUTORIAL.

EXPANDER API

       The  textutil::expander  package  provides  only one command, described below. The rest of the section is
       taken by a description of the methods for the expander objects created by this command.

       ::textutil::expander expanderName
              The command creates  a  new  expander  object  with  an  associated  Tcl  command  whose  name  is
              expanderName.  This  command  may  be  used  to  invoke  various  operations  on the graph. If the
              expanderName is not fully qualified it is interpreted as relative to the current  namespace.   The
              command has the following general form:

              expanderName option ?arg arg ...?

              Option and the args determine the exact behavior of the command.

       The following commands are possible for expander objects:

       expanderName cappend text
              Appends  a  string  to  the  output in the current context.  This command should rarely be used by
              macros or application code.

       expanderName cget varname
              Retrieves the value of variable varname, defined in the current context.

       expanderName cis cname
              Determines whether or not the name of the current context is cname.

       expanderName cname
              Returns the name of the current context.

       expanderName cpop cname
              Pops a context from the context stack, returning all accumulated  output  in  that  context.   The
              context must be named cname, or an error results.

       expanderName ctopandclear
              Returns  the  output  currently  captured  in  the topmost context and clears that buffer. This is
              similar to a combination of cpop followed by cpush,  except  that  internal  state  (brackets)  is
              preserved here.

       expanderName cpush cname
              Pushes  a  context  named cname onto the context stack.  The context must be popped by cpop before
              expansion ends or an error results.

       expanderName cset varname value
              Sets variable varname to value in the current context.

       expanderName cvar varname
              Retrieves the internal variable name of context variable varname; this allows the variable  to  be
              passed to commands like lappend.

       expanderName errmode newErrmode
              Sets the macro expansion error mode to one of nothing, macro, error, or fail; the default value is
              fail.  The value determines what the expander does if an error is detected during expansion  of  a
              macro.

              fail   The error propagates normally and can be caught or ignored by the application.

              error  The macro expands into a detailed error message, and expansion continues.

              macro  The macro expands to itself; that is, it is passed along to the output unchanged.

              nothing
                     The macro expands to the empty string, and is effectively ignored.

       expanderName evalcmd ?newEvalCmd?
              Returns  the  current  evaluation command, which defaults to uplevel #0.  If specified, newEvalCmd
              will be saved for future use and then returned; it must be a Tcl command expecting one  additional
              argument: the macro to evaluate.

       expanderName expand string ?brackets?
              Expands  the  input  string, replacing embedded macros with their expanded values, and returns the
              expanded string.

              Note that this method pushes a new (empty) context on the stack of contexts while it  is  running,
              and removes it on return.

              If  brackets  is  given,  it must be a list of two strings; the items will be used as the left and
              right macro expansion bracket sequences for this expansion only.

       expanderName lb ?newbracket?
              Returns the current value of the left macro expansion bracket; this is for  use  as  or  within  a
              macro,  when  the bracket needs to be included in the output text.  If newbracket is specified, it
              becomes the new bracket, and is returned.

       expanderName rb ?newbracket?
              Returns the current value of the right macro expansion bracket; this is for use  as  or  within  a
              macro,  when  the bracket needs to be included in the output text.  If newbracket is specified, it
              becomes the new bracket, and is returned.

       expanderName reset
              Resets all expander settings to their initial values.  Unusual results are likely if this  command
              is called from within a call to expand.

       expanderName setbrackets lbrack rbrack
              Sets  the  left and right macro expansion brackets.  This command is for use as or within a macro,
              or to permanently change the bracket definitions.  By default, the brackets are [ and ],  but  any
              non-empty string can be used; for example, < and > or (* and *) or even Hello, and World!.

       expanderName textcmd ?newTextCmd?
              Returns the current command for processing plain text, which defaults to the empty string, meaning
              identity. If specified, newTextCmd will be saved for future use and then returned; it  must  be  a
              Tcl  command expecting one additional argument: the text to process. The expander object will this
              command for all plain text it encounters, giving the user of the object the ability to process all
              plain  text  in  some  standard  way  before writing it to the output. The object expects that the
              command returns the processed plain text.

              Note that the combination of "textcmd plaintext"  is  run  through  the  evalcmd  for  the  actual
              evaluation.  In  other words, the textcmd is treated as a special macro implicitly surrounding all
              plain text in the template.

       expanderName where
              Returns a three-element list containing the current  character  position,  line,  and  column  the
              expander is at in the processing of the current input string.

TUTORIAL

   BASICS
       To begin, create an expander object:

                  % package require textutil::expander
                  1.2
                  % ::textutil::expander myexp
                  ::myexp
                  %

       The  created  ::myexp  object  can  be  used to expand text strings containing embedded Tcl commands.  By
       default, embedded commands are delimited by square brackets.   Note  that  expander  doesn't  attempt  to
       interpolate variables, since variables can be referenced by embedded commands:

                  % set greeting "Howdy"
                  Howdy
                  % proc place {} {return "World"}
                  % ::myexp expand {[set greeting], [place]!}
                  Howdy, World!
                  %

   EMBEDDING MACROS
       An expander macro is simply a Tcl script embedded within a text string.  Expander evaluates the script in
       the global context, and replaces it with its result string.  For example,

                  % set greetings {Howdy Hi "What's up"}
                  Howdy Hi "What's up"
                  % ::myexp expand {There are many ways to say "Hello, World!":
                  [set result {}
                  foreach greeting $greetings {
                append result "$greeting, World!\\n"
                  }
                  set result]
                  And that's just a small sample!}
                  There are many ways to say "Hello, World!":
                  Howdy, World!
                  Hi, World!
                  What's up, World!

                  And that's just a small sample!
                  %

   WRITING MACRO COMMANDS
       More typically, macro commands are used to create a markup language.  A  macro  command  is  just  a  Tcl
       command  that  returns an output string.  For example, expand can be used to implement a generic document
       markup language that can be retargeted to HTML or any other output format:

                  % proc bold {} {return "<b>"}
                  % proc /bold {} {return "</b>"}
                  % ::myexp expand {Some of this text is in [bold]boldface[/bold]}
                  Some of this text is in <b>boldface</b>
                  %

       The above definitions of bold and /bold returns HTML, but such commands can be as complicated as  needed;
       they could, for example, decide what to return based on the desired output format.

   CHANGING THE EXPANSION BRACKETS
       By  default,  embedded  macros  are  enclosed in square brackets, [ and ].  If square brackets need to be
       included in the output, the input can contain the lb  and  rb  commands.   Alternatively,  or  if  square
       brackets are objectionable for some other reason, the macro expansion brackets can be changed to any pair
       of non-empty strings.

       The setbrackets command changes the brackets permanently.  For example,  you  can  write  pseudo-html  by
       change them to < and >:

                  % ::myexp setbrackets < >
                  % ::myexp expand {<bold>This is boldface</bold>}
                  <b>This is boldface</b>

       Alternatively,  you  can change the expansion brackets temporarily by passing the desired brackets to the
       expand command:

                  % ::myexp setbrackets "\\[" "\\]"
                  % ::myexp expand {<bold>This is boldface</bold>} {< >}
                  <b>This is boldface</b>
                  %

   CUSTOMIZED MACRO EXPANSION
       By default, macros are evaluated using the Tcl uplevel #0 command, so that the embedded code executes  in
       the  global  context.   The  application  can  provide a different evaluation command using evalcmd; this
       allows the application to use a safe interpreter, for example, or even to evaluated something other  than
       Tcl  code.   There  is  one caveat: to be recognized as valid, a macro must return 1 when passed to Tcl's
       "info complete" command.

       For example, the following code "evaluates" each macro by returning the macro text itself.

                  proc identity {macro} {return $macro}
                  ::myexp evalcmd identity

   USING THE CONTEXT STACK
       Often it's desirable to define a pair of macros which operate in some way on the plain text between them.
       Consider  a  set  of  macros  for adding footnotes to a web page: one could have implement something like
       this:

                  Dr. Pangloss, however, thinks that this is the best of all
                  possible worlds.[footnote "See Candide, by Voltaire"]

       The footnote macro would, presumably, assign a number to this footnote and save the text to be  formatted
       later  on.   However,  this  solution  is  ugly if the footnote text is long or should contain additional
       markup.  Consider the following instead:

                  Dr. Pangloss, however, thinks that this is the best of all
                  possible worlds.[footnote]See [bookTitle "Candide"], by
                  [authorsName "Voltaire"], for more information.[/footnote]

       Here the footnote text is contained between footnote and /footnote macros, continues onto a second  line,
       and  contains  several  macros  of  its  own.   This is both clearer and more flexible; however, with the
       features presented so far there's no easy way to do it.  That's the purpose of the context stack.

       All macro expansion takes place in a particular context.  Here, the footnote macro pushes a  new  context
       onto the context stack.  Then, all expanded text gets placed in that new context.  /footnote retrieves it
       by popping the context.  Here's a skeleton implementation of these two macros:

                  proc footnote {} {
                      ::myexp cpush footnote
                  }

                  proc /footnote {} {
                      set footnoteText [::myexp cpop footnote]

                      # Save the footnote text, and return an appropriate footnote
                      # number and link.
                  }

       The cpush command pushes a new context onto the stack; the argument is the context's name.  It can be any
       string,  but  would  typically  be  the  name  of the macro itself.  Then, cpop verifies that the current
       context has the expected name, pops it off of the stack, and returns the accumulated text.

       Expand provides several other tools related to the context stack.  Suppose the first macro in  a  context
       pair  takes  arguments or computes values which the second macro in the pair needs.  After calling cpush,
       the first macro can define one or more context variables; the second macro can retrieve their values  any
       time before calling cpop.  For example, suppose the document must specify the footnote number explicitly:

                  proc footnote {footnoteNumber} {
                      ::myexp cpush footnote
                      ::myexp csave num $footnoteNumber
                      # Return an appropriate link
                  }

                  proc /footnote {} {
                      set footnoteNumber [::myexp cget num]
                      set footnoteText [::myexp cpop footnote]

                      # Save the footnote text and its footnoteNumber for future
                      # output.
                  }

       At  times,  it  might be desirable to define macros that are valid only within a particular context pair;
       such macros should verify that they are only called within the correct context using either cis or cname.

HISTORY

       expander was written by William H. Duquette; it is a repackaging of the central algorithm of  the  expand
       macro processing tool.

BUGS, IDEAS, FEEDBACK

       This  document,  and  the package it describes, will undoubtedly contain bugs and other problems.  Please
       report such in the category  textutil  of  the  Tcllib  Trackers  [http://core.tcl.tk/tcllib/reportlist].
       Please also report any ideas for enhancements you may have for either package and/or documentation.

       When proposing code changes, please provide unified diffs, i.e the output of diff -u.

       Note  further  that  attachments  are strongly preferred over inlined patches. Attachments can be made by
       going to the Edit form of the ticket immediately after its creation, and then using the left-most  button
       in the secondary navigation bar.

SEE ALSO

       [uri, http://www.wjduquette.com/expand, regexp, split, string

KEYWORDS

       string, template processing, text expansion

CATEGORY

       Documentation tools

       Copyright (c) William H. Duquette, http://www.wjduquette.com/expand