Provided by: tcllib_1.20+dfsg-1_all bug

NAME

       page - Parser Generator

SYNOPSIS

       page ?options...? ?input ?output??

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       The  application  described  by this document, page, is actually not just a parser generator, as the name
       implies, but a generic tool for the execution of arbitrary transformations on texts.

       Its genericity comes through the use of plugins for reading, transforming,  and  writing  data,  and  the
       predefined set of plugins provided by Tcllib is for the generation of memoizing recursive descent parsers
       (aka packrat parsers) from grammar specifications (Parsing Expression Grammars).

       page is written on top of the package page::pluginmgr, wrapping its functionality  into  a  command  line
       based  application.  All  the  other  page::*  packages  are  plugin  and/or  supporting packages for the
       generation  of  parsers.   The   parsers   themselves   are   based   on   the   packages   grammar::peg,
       grammar::peg::interp, and grammar::mengine.

   COMMAND LINE
       page ?options...? ?input ?output??
              This  is  general form for calling page. The application will read the contents of the file input,
              process them under the control of the specified options, and then write the  result  to  the  file
              output.

              If  input  is  the  string  -  the  data  to  process  will  be read from stdin instead of a file.
              Analogously the result will be written to stdout instead of a file if output is the  string  -.  A
              missing output or input specification causes the application to assume -.

              The detailed specifications of the recognized options are provided in section OPTIONS.

              path input (in)
                     This  argument specifies the path to the file to be processed by the application, or -. The
                     last value causes the application to read the text from stdin. Otherwise it has  to  exist,
                     and be readable. If the argument is missing - is assumed.

              path output (in)
                     This argument specifies where to write the generated text. It can be the path to a file, or
                     -. The last value causes the application to write the generated documented to stdout.

                     If the file output does not exist then [file dirname $output] has to exist and  must  be  a
                     writable directory, as the application will create the fileto write to.

                     If the argument is missing - is assumed.

   OPERATION
       ... reading ... transforming ... writing - plugins - pipeline ...

   OPTIONS
       This  section  describes  all  the  options  available to the user of the application. Options are always
       processed in order. I.e. of both --help and --version are specified  the  option  encountered  first  has
       precedence.

       Unknown  options specified before any of the options -rd, -wr, or -tr will cause processing to abort with
       an error. Unknown options coming in between these options, or after the  last  of  them  are  assumed  to
       always  take  a  single  argument and are associated with the last plugin option coming before them. They
       will be checked after all the relevant plugins, and thus the options they  understand,  are  known.  I.e.
       such  unknown  options  cause  error  if  and only if the plugin option they are associated with does not
       understand them, and was not superceded by a plugin option coming after.

       Default options are used if and only if the command line did not contain any options at  all.  They  will
       set the application up as a PEG-based parser generator. The exact list of options is

              -c peg

       And now the recognized options and their arguments, if they have any:

       --help

       -h

       -?     When  one  of  these options is found on the command line all arguments coming before or after are
              ignored. The application will print a short description of the recognized options and exit.

       --version

       -V     When one of these options is found on the command line all arguments coming before  or  after  are
              ignored. The application will print its own revision and exit.

       -P     This option signals the application to activate visual feedback while reading the input.

       -T     This  option  signals  the  application to collect statistics while reading the input and to print
              them after reading has completed, before processing started.

       -D     This option signals the application to activate logging in the Safe base,  for  the  debugging  of
              problems with plugins.

       -r parser

       -rd parser

       --reader parser
              These  options specify the plugin the application has to use for reading the input. If the options
              are used multiple times the last one will be used.

       -w generator

       -wr generator

       --writer generator
              These options specify the plugin the application has to use for generating and writing  the  final
              output. If the options are used multiple times the last one will be used.

       -t process

       -tr process

       --transform process
              These  options  specify  a plugin to run on the input. In contrast to readers and writers each use
              will not supersede previous uses, but add each chosen plugin to a list of transformations,  either
              at  the front, or the end, per the last seen use of either option -p or -a. The initial default is
              to append the new transformations.

       -a

       --append
              These options signal the application that all following transformations should be added at the end
              of the list of transformations.

       -p

       --prepend
              These  options  signal  the  application that all following transformations should be added at the
              beginning of the list of transformations.

       --reset
              This option signals the application to clear the list of transformations.  This  is  necessary  to
              wipe out the default transformations used.

       -c file

       --configuration file
              This  option  causes  the application to load a configuration file and/or plugin. This is a plugin
              which in essence provides a pre-defined set of commandline options. They are processed exactly  as
              if  they  have  been  specified  in place of the option and its arguments. This means that unknown
              options found at the beginning of the configuration file are associated with the last plugin, even
              if  that  plugin  was  specified before the configuration file itself. Conversely, unknown options
              coming after the configuration file can be associated with a plugin specified in the file.

              If the argument is a file which cannot be loaded as a plugin the application will assume that  its
              contents  are  a  list  of  options  and  their arguments, separated by space, tabs, and newlines.
              Options and argumentes containing spaces can be quoted via double-quotes (") and quotes  (').  The
              quote  character  can  be specified within in a quoted string by doubling it. Newlines in a quoted
              string are accepted as is.

   PLUGINS
       page makes use of four different  types  of  plugins,  namely:  readers,  writers,  transformations,  and
       configurations.  Here  we  provide only a basic introduction on how to use them from page. The exact APIs
       provided to and expected from the plugins can be found in  the  documentation  for  page::pluginmgr,  for
       those who wish to write their own plugins.

       Plugins  are specified as arguments to the options -r, -w, -t, -c, and their equivalent longer forms. See
       the section OPTIONS for reference.

       Each such argument will be first treated as the name of a file and this file is loaded as the plugin.  If
       however  there is no file with that name, then it will be translated into the name of a package, and this
       package is then loaded. For each type of plugins the package management searches  not  only  the  regular
       paths,  but  a  set application- and type-specific paths as well. Please see the section PLUGIN LOCATIONS
       for a listing of all paths and their sources.

       -c name
              Configurations. The name of the package for the plugin name is "page::config::name".

              We have one predefined plugin:

              peg    It sets the application up as a parser generator accepting parsing expression grammars  and
                     writing a packrat parser in Tcl. The actual arguments it specifies are:

                       --reset
                       --append
                       --reader    peg
                       --transform reach
                       --transform use
                       --writer    me

       -r name
              Readers. The name of the package for the plugin name is "page::reader::name".

              We have five predefined plugins:

              peg    Interprets  the  input  as  a  parsing  expression  grammar  (PEG)  and  generates  a  tree
                     representation for it. Both the syntax of PEGs and the structure of the tree representation
                     are explained in their own manpages.

              hb     Interprets  the  input  as  Tcl code as generated by the writer plugin hb and generates its
                     tree representation.

              ser    Interprets the input as the serialization of a PEG, as generated by the writer plugin  ser,
                     using the package grammar::peg.

              lemon  Interprets  the  input  as  a  grammar  specification as understood by Richard Hipp's LEMON
                     parser generator and generates a tree representation for it. Both the input syntax and  the
                     structure of the tree representation are explained in their own manpages.

              treeser
                     Interprets  the  input as the serialization of a struct::tree. It is validated as such, but
                     nothing else. It is not assumed to be the tree representation of a grammar.

       -w name
              Writers. The name of the package for the plugin name is "page::writer::name".

              We have eight predefined plugins:

              identity
                     Simply writes the incoming data as it is, without making any  changes.  This  is  good  for
                     inspecting the raw result of a reader or transformation.

              null   Generates nothing, and ignores the incoming data structure.

              tree   Assumes  that  the  incoming  data  structure  is  a struct::tree and generates an indented
                     textual representation of all nodes, their  parental  relationships,  and  their  attribute
                     information.

              peg    Assumes  that  the incoming data structure is a tree representation of a PEG or other other
                     grammar and writes it out as a PEG. The result is nicely formatted and partially simplified
                     (strings  as sequences of characters). A pretty printer in essence, but can also be used to
                     obtain a canonical representation of the input grammar.

              tpc    Assumes that the incoming data structure is a tree representation of a PEG or  other  other
                     grammar  and  writes  out  Tcl  code defining a package which defines a grammar::peg object
                     containing the grammar when it is loaded into an interpreter.

              hb     This is like the writer plugin tpc, but it writes only the  statements  which  define  stat
                     expression and grammar rules. The code making the result a package is left out.

              ser    Assumes  that  the incoming data structure is a tree representation of a PEG or other other
                     grammar,  transforms  it  internally  into  a  grammar::peg  object  and  writes  out   its
                     serialization.

              me     Assumes  that  the incoming data structure is a tree representation of a PEG or other other
                     grammar and writes out Tcl code defining a package which implements a  memoizing  recursive
                     descent parser based on the match engine (ME) provided by the package grammar::mengine.

       -t name
              Transformers. The name of the package for the plugin name is "page::transform::name".

              We have two predefined plugins:

              reach  Assumes  that  the incoming data structure is a tree representation of a PEG or other other
                     grammar. It determines which nonterminal  symbols  and  rules  are  reachable  from  start-
                     symbol/expression. All nonterminal symbols which were not reached are removed.

              use    Assumes  that  the incoming data structure is a tree representation of a PEG or other other
                     grammar. It determines which nonterminal symbols and rules are able to  generate  a  finite
                     sequences  of  terminal  symbols (in the sense for a Context Free Grammar). All nonterminal
                     symbols which were not deemed useful in this sense are removed.

   PLUGIN LOCATIONS
       The application-specific paths searched by page either are, or come from:

       [1]    The directory            "~/.page/plugin"

       [2]    The environment variable PAGE_PLUGINS

       [3]    The registry entry       HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\PAGE\PLUGINS

       [4]    The registry entry       HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\PAGE\PLUGINS

       The type-specific paths searched by page either are, or come from:

       [1]    The directory            "~/.page/plugin/<TYPE>"

       [2]    The environment variable PAGE_<TYPE>_PLUGINS

       [3]    The registry entry       HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\PAGE\<TYPE>\PLUGINS

       [4]    The registry entry       HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\PAGE\<TYPE>\PLUGINS

       Where the placeholder <TYPE> is always one of the values below, properly capitalized.

       [1]    reader

       [2]    writer

       [3]    transform

       [4]    config

       The registry entries are specific to the Windows(tm) platform, all other platforms will ignore them.

       The contents of both environment variables and registry entries are interpreted as a list of paths,  with
       the elements separated by either colon (Unix), or semicolon (Windows).

BUGS, IDEAS, FEEDBACK

       This  document,  and  the package it describes, will undoubtedly contain bugs and other problems.  Please
       report such in the category page 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

       page::pluginmgr

KEYWORDS

       parser generator, text processing

CATEGORY

       Page Parser Generator

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2005 Andreas Kupries <andreas_kupries@users.sourceforge.net>