Provided by: tcllib_1.19-dfsg-2_all bug

NAME

       textutil - Procedures to manipulate texts and strings.

SYNOPSIS

       package require Tcl  8.2

       package require textutil  ?0.8?

       ::textutil::adjust string args

       ::textutil::adjust::readPatterns filename

       ::textutil::adjust::listPredefined

       ::textutil::adjust::getPredefined filename

       ::textutil::indent string prefix ?skip?

       ::textutil::undent string

       ::textutil::splitn string ?len?

       ::textutil::splitx string ?regexp?

       ::textutil::tabify string ?num?

       ::textutil::tabify2 string ?num?

       ::textutil::trim string ?regexp?

       ::textutil::trimleft string ?regexp?

       ::textutil::trimright string ?regexp?

       ::textutil::trimPrefix string prefix

       ::textutil::trimEmptyHeading string

       ::textutil::untabify string ?num?

       ::textutil::untabify2 string ?num?

       ::textutil::strRepeat text num

       ::textutil::blank num

       ::textutil::chop string

       ::textutil::tail string

       ::textutil::cap string

       ::textutil::uncap string

       ::textutil::longestCommonPrefixList list

       ::textutil::longestCommonPrefix ?string...?

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       The  package  textutil  provides commands that manipulate strings or texts (a.k.a. long strings or string
       with embedded newlines or paragraphs).  It is actually  a  bundle  providing  the  commands  of  the  six
       packages

       textutil::adjust

       textutil::repeat

       textutil::split

       textutil::string

       textutil::tabify

       textutil::trim

       in the namespace textutil.

       The  bundle  is deprecated, and it will be removed in a future release of Tcllib, after the next release.
       It is recommended to use the relevant sub packages instead for whatever functionality is  needed  by  the
       using package or application.

       The complete set of procedures is described below.

       ::textutil::adjust string args
              Do  a  justification  on  the string according to args.  The string is taken as one big paragraph,
              ignoring any newlines.  Then the line is formatted according to the options used, and the  command
              return  a  new  string with enough lines to contain all the printable chars in the input string. A
              line is a set of chars between the beginning of the string and a newline, or between  2  newlines,
              or  between a newline and the end of the string. If the input string is small enough, the returned
              string won't contain any newlines.

              Together with ::textutil::indent it  is  possible  to  create  properly  wrapped  paragraphs  with
              arbitrary indentations.

              By  default,  any  occurrence of spaces characters or tabulation are replaced by a single space so
              each word in a line is separated from the next one by exactly one space char,  and  this  forms  a
              real  line.  Each  real  line  is placed in a logical line, which have exactly a given length (see
              -length option below). The real line may have a lesser length.  Again  by  default,  any  trailing
              spaces are ignored before returning the string (see -full option below). The following options may
              be used after the string parameter, and change the way the command place a real line in a  logical
              line.

              -full boolean
                     If  set  to false, any trailing space chars are deleted before returning the string. If set
                     to true, any trailing space chars are left in the string. Default to false.

              -hyphenate boolean
                     if set to false, no hyphenation will be done. If set to true, the last word of  a  line  is
                     tried  to  be  hyphenated.   Defaults  to  false. Note: hyphenation patterns must be loaded
                     prior, using the command ::textutil::adjust::readPatterns.

              -justify center|left|plain|right
                     Set the justification of the returned string to center, left, plain or right.  By  default,
                     it  is  set  to left.  The justification means that any line in the returned string but the
                     last one is build according to the value. If the justification is  set  to  plain  and  the
                     number  of  printable  chars in the last line is less than 90% of the length of a line (see
                     -length), then this line is justified with the left value, avoiding the expansion  of  this
                     line when it is too small. The meaning of each value is:

                     center The  real line is centered in the logical line. If needed, a set of space characters
                            are added at the beginning (half of the needed set) and at  the  end  (half  of  the
                            needed set) of the line if required (see the option -full).

                     left   The  real  line  is  set on the left of the logical line. It means that there are no
                            space chars at the beginning of this line. If required, all needed space  chars  are
                            added at the end of the line (see the option -full).

                     plain  The real line is exactly set in the logical line. It means that there are no leading
                            or trailing space chars. All the needed space chars are  added  in  the  real  line,
                            between 2 (or more) words.

                     right  The  real  line  is set on the right of the logical line. It means that there are no
                            space chars at the end of this line, and there  may  be  some  space  chars  at  the
                            beginning, despite of the -full option.

              -length integer
                     Set  the  length  of the logical line in the string to integer.  integer must be a positive
                     integer value. Defaults to 72.

              -strictlength boolean
                     If set to false, a line can exceed the specified -length if a single word  is  longer  than
                     -length.  If  set  to  true,  words  that are longer than -length are split so that no line
                     exceeds the specified -length. Defaults to false.

       ::textutil::adjust::readPatterns filename
              Loads the internal storage for hyphenation patterns with the contents of the file  filename.  This
              has  to  be  done  prior  to  calling  command  ::textutil::adjust  with "-hyphenate true", or the
              hyphenation process will not work correctly.

              The  package  comes   with   a   number   of   predefined   pattern   files,   and   the   command
              ::textutil::adjust::listPredefined can be used to find out their names.

       ::textutil::adjust::listPredefined
              This  command  returns  a  list  containing  the  names  of the hyphenation files coming with this
              package.

       ::textutil::adjust::getPredefined filename
              Use this command to query the package for the full path name  of  the  hyphenation  file  filename
              coming    with   the   package.   Only   the   filenames   found   in   the   list   returned   by
              ::textutil::adjust::listPredefined are legal arguments for this command.

       ::textutil::indent string prefix ?skip?
              Each line in the string indented by adding the string prefix at its beginning. The modified string
              is returned as the result of the command.

              If  skip  is specified the first skip lines are left untouched. The default for skip is 0, causing
              the modification of all lines. Negative values for skip are treated like 0. In other words, skip >
              0 creates a hanging indentation.

              Together  with  ::textutil::adjust  it  is  possible  to  create  properly wrapped paragraphs with
              arbitrary indentations.

       ::textutil::undent string
              The command computes the  common  prefix  for  all  lines  in  string  consisting  solely  out  of
              whitespace, removes this from each line and returns the modified string.

              Lines  containing  only  whitespace  are  always reduced to completely empty lines. They and empty
              lines are also ignored when computing the prefix to remove.

              Together with ::textutil::adjust it  is  possible  to  create  properly  wrapped  paragraphs  with
              arbitrary indentations.

       ::textutil::splitn string ?len?
              This  command  splits the given string into chunks of len characters and returns a list containing
              these chunks. The argument len defaults to 1 if none  is  specified.  A  negative  length  is  not
              allowed  and  will  cause  the  command  to  throw an error. Providing an empty string as input is
              allowed, the command will then return an empty list. If the length of the string is not an  entire
              multiple of the chunk length, then the last chunk in the generated list will be shorter than len.

       ::textutil::splitx string ?regexp?
              Split the string and return a list. The string is split according to the regular expression regexp
              instead of a simple list of chars.  Note  that  if  you  add  parenthesis  into  the  regexp,  the
              parentheses  part  of  separator  would be added into list as additional element. If the string is
              empty the result is the empty list, like for split. If regexp is empty  the  string  is  split  at
              every character, like split does.  The regular expression regexp defaults to "[\\t \\r\\n]+".

       ::textutil::tabify string ?num?
              Tabify  the  string  by  replacing any substring of num space chars by a tabulation and return the
              result as a new string. num defaults to 8.

       ::textutil::tabify2 string ?num?
              Similar to ::textutil::tabify this command tabifies the string and returns the  result  as  a  new
              string.  A  different  algorithm is used however. Instead of replacing any substring of num spaces
              this command works more like an editor. num defaults to 8.

              Each line of the text in string is treated as if  there  are  tabstops  every  num  columns.  Only
              sequences  of  space  characters  containing  more  than one space character and found immediately
              before a tabstop are replaced with tabs.

       ::textutil::trim string ?regexp?
              Remove in string any leading and trailing substring according to the regular expression regexp and
              return  the  result  as a new string.  This apply on any line in the string, that is any substring
              between 2 newline chars, or between the beginning of the  string  and  a  newline,  or  between  a
              newline and the end of the string, or, if the string contain no newline, between the beginning and
              the end of the string.  The regular expression regexp defaults to "[ \\t]+".

       ::textutil::trimleft string ?regexp?
              Remove in string any leading substring according to the regular expression regexp and  return  the
              result  as  a  new  string.  This apply on any line in the string, that is any substring between 2
              newline chars, or between the beginning of the string and a newline, or between a newline and  the
              end  of the string, or, if the string contain no newline, between the beginning and the end of the
              string.  The regular expression regexp defaults to "[ \\t]+".

       ::textutil::trimright string ?regexp?
              Remove in string any trailing substring according to the regular expression regexp and return  the
              result  as  a  new  string.  This apply on any line in the string, that is any substring between 2
              newline chars, or between the beginning of the string and a newline, or between a newline and  the
              end  of the string, or, if the string contain no newline, between the beginning and the end of the
              string.  The regular expression regexp defaults to "[ \\t]+".

       ::textutil::trimPrefix string prefix
              Removes the prefix from the beginning of string  and  returns  the  result.  The  string  is  left
              unchanged if it doesn't have prefix at its beginning.

       ::textutil::trimEmptyHeading string
              Looks  for  empty  lines  (including  lines consisting of only whitespace) at the beginning of the
              string and removes it. The modified string is returned as the result of the command.

       ::textutil::untabify string ?num?
              Untabify the string by replacing any tabulation char by a substring of num space chars and  return
              the result as a new string. num defaults to 8.

       ::textutil::untabify2 string ?num?
              Untabify the string by replacing any tabulation char by a substring of at most num space chars and
              return the result as a new string. Unlike textutil::untabify each tab is not replaced by  a  fixed
              number  of space characters.  The command overlays each line in the string with tabstops every num
              columns instead and replaces tabs with just enough space characters to  reach  the  next  tabstop.
              This is the complement of the actions taken by ::textutil::tabify2. num defaults to 8.

              There  is  one  asymmetry though: A tab can be replaced with a single space, but not the other way
              around.

       ::textutil::strRepeat text num
              The implementation depends on the core executing the package. Used string repeat if it is present,
              or  a  fast  tcl  implementation  if  it is not. Returns a string containing the text repeated num
              times. The repetitions are joined without characters between them. A value of num <= 0 causes  the
              command to return an empty string.

       ::textutil::blank num
              A convenience command. Returns a string of num spaces.

       ::textutil::chop string
              A convenience command. Removes the last character of string and returns the shortened string.

       ::textutil::tail string
              A convenience command. Removes the first character of string and returns the shortened string.

       ::textutil::cap string
              Capitalizes the first character of string and returns the modified string.

       ::textutil::uncap string
              The complementary operation to ::textutil::cap. Forces the first character of string to lower case
              and returns the modified string.

       ::textutil::longestCommonPrefixList list

       ::textutil::longestCommonPrefix ?string...?
              Computes the longest common prefix for either the strings given to the  command,  or  the  strings
              specified in the single list, and returns it as the result of the command.

              If  no  strings  were specified the result is the empty string.  If only one string was specified,
              the string itself is returned, as it is its own longest common prefix.

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

       regexp(3tcl), split(3tcl), string(3tcl)

KEYWORDS

       TeX, formatting, hyphenation, indenting, paragraph, regular expression, string, trimming

CATEGORY

       Text processing