Provided by: ocaml-man_4.13.1-3ubuntu1_all bug

NAME

       Stdlib.Scanf - no description

Module

       Module   Stdlib.Scanf

Documentation

       Module Scanf
        : (module Stdlib__Scanf)

   Introduction
   Functional input with format strings
       The module Scanf provides formatted input functions or scanners.

       The  formatted  input functions can read from any kind of input, including strings, files,
       or anything that can return characters. The more general source of characters is  named  a
       formatted  input channel (or     scanning buffer) and has type Scanf.Scanning.in_channel .
       The more general formatted input function reads from any  scanning  buffer  and  is  named
       bscanf .

       Generally speaking, the formatted input functions have 3 arguments:

       -the first argument is a source of characters for the input,

       -the second argument is a format string that specifies the values to read,

       -the third argument is a receiver function that is applied to the values read.

       Hence,  a  typical  call to the formatted input function Scanf.bscanf is bscanf ic fmt f ,
       where:

       - ic is a source  of  characters  (typically  a      formatted  input  channel  with  type
       Scanf.Scanning.in_channel ),

       -  fmt  is  a  format string (the same format strings as those used to print material with
       module Printf or Format ),

       - f is a function that has as many arguments as the number of values to read in the  input
       according to fmt .

   A simple example
       As  suggested  above,  the  expression bscanf ic "%d" f reads a decimal integer n from the
       source of characters ic and returns f n .

       For instance,

       -if we use stdin as the source of characters  (  Scanf.Scanning.stdin  is  the  predefined
       formatted input channel that reads from standard input),

       -if we define the receiver f as let f x = x + 1 ,

       then bscanf Scanning.stdin "%d" f reads an integer n from the standard input and returns f
       n (that is n + 1 ). Thus, if we evaluate bscanf stdin "%d" f , and then enter  41  at  the
       keyboard, the result we get is 42 .

   Formatted input as a functional feature
       The OCaml scanning facility is reminiscent of the corresponding C feature.  However, it is
       also largely different, simpler, and yet more powerful: the formatted input functions  are
       higher-order  functionals and the parameter passing mechanism is just the regular function
       application not the variable assignment based mechanism which  is  typical  for  formatted
       input  in  imperative languages; the OCaml format strings also feature useful additions to
       easily define complex tokens; as expected within a functional  programming  language,  the
       formatted  input  functions also support polymorphism, in particular arbitrary interaction
       with polymorphic user-defined scanners. Furthermore, the OCaml formatted input facility is
       fully type-checked at compile time.

   Formatted input channel
       module Scanning : sig end

   Type of formatted input functions
       type ('a, 'b, 'c, 'd) scanner = ('a, Scanning.in_channel, 'b, 'c, 'a -> 'd, 'd) format6 ->
       'c

       The type of formatted input scanners: ('a, 'b, 'c, 'd) scanner is the type of a  formatted
       input  function  that  reads  from  some  formatted input channel according to some format
       string; more precisely, if scan is some formatted input function, then scan
           ic fmt f applies f to all the arguments specified by format string fmt , when scan has
       read those arguments from the Scanf.Scanning.in_channel formatted input channel ic .

       For  instance, the Scanf.scanf function below has type ('a, 'b, 'c, 'd) scanner , since it
       is a formatted input function that reads from Scanf.Scanning.stdin : scanf fmt f applies f
       to the arguments specified by fmt , reading those arguments from stdin as expected.

       If  the  format  fmt  has some %r indications, the corresponding formatted input functions
       must be provided before receiver function f . For  instance,  if  read_elem  is  an  input
       function for values of type t , then bscanf ic "%r;" read_elem f reads a value v of type t
       followed by a ';' character, and returns f v .

       Since 3.10.0

       exception Scan_failure of string

       When the input can not be read according to the  format  string  specification,  formatted
       input functions typically raise exception Scan_failure .

   The general formatted input function
       val bscanf : Scanning.in_channel -> ('a, 'b, 'c, 'd) scanner

       bscanf  ic  fmt  r1 ... rN f reads characters from the Scanf.Scanning.in_channel formatted
       input channel ic and converts them to values according to format string fmt .  As a  final
       step, receiver function f is applied to the values read and gives the result of the bscanf
       call.

       For instance, if f is the function fun s i -> i + 1 , then Scanf.sscanf "x= 1" "%s = %i" f
       returns 2 .

       Arguments  r1  to rN are user-defined input functions that read the argument corresponding
       to the %r conversions specified in the format string.

   Format string description
       The format string is a character string which contains three types of objects:

       -plain characters, which are simply matched with the  characters  of  the  input  (with  a
       special case for space and line feed, see Scanf.space ),

       -conversion  specifications,  each  of which causes reading and conversion of one argument
       for the function f (see Scanf.conversion ),

       -scanning indications to specify boundaries of tokens (see scanning Scanf.indication ).

   The space character in format strings
       As mentioned above, a plain character in the format string is just matched with  the  next
       character  of  the input; however, two characters are special exceptions to this rule: the
       space character ( ' ' or ASCII code 32) and the line feed character ( '\n' or  ASCII  code
       10).   A  space does not match a single space character, but any amount of 'whitespace' in
       the input. More precisely, a space inside the format string matches  any  number  of  tab,
       space,  line  feed and carriage return characters. Similarly, a line feed character in the
       format string matches either a single line feed or a carriage return followed  by  a  line
       feed.

       Matching  any amount of whitespace, a space in the format string also matches no amount of
       whitespace at all; hence, the call bscanf ib
           "Price = %d $" (fun p -> p) succeeds and returns 1 when reading an input with  various
       whitespace in it, such as Price = 1 $ , Price  =  1    $ , or even Price=1$ .

   Conversion specifications in format strings
       Conversion  specifications  consist  in  the % character, followed by an optional flag, an
       optional field width, and followed by one or two conversion characters.

       The conversion characters and their meanings are:

       - d : reads an optionally signed decimal integer ( 0-9 +).

       - i : reads an optionally signed integer (usual input conventions for decimal  (  0-9  +),
       hexadecimal  (  0x[0-9a-f]+ and 0X[0-9A-F]+ ), octal ( 0o[0-7]+ ), and binary ( 0b[0-1]+ )
       notations are understood).

       - u : reads an unsigned decimal integer.

       - x or X : reads an unsigned hexadecimal integer ( [0-9a-fA-F]+ ).

       - o : reads an unsigned octal integer ( [0-7]+ ).

       - s : reads a string argument that spreads  as  much  as  possible,  until  the  following
       bounding condition holds:

       -a whitespace has been found (see Scanf.space ),

       -a scanning indication (see scanning Scanf.indication ) has been encountered,

       -the end-of-input has been reached.

       Hence,  this  conversion  always  succeeds:  it  returns  an  empty string if the bounding
       condition holds when the scan begins.

       - S : reads a delimited string argument (delimiters and special escaped characters  follow
       the lexical conventions of OCaml).

       -  c  :  reads a single character. To test the current input character without reading it,
       specify a null field width, i.e. use specification %0c . Raise Invalid_argument ,  if  the
       field width specification is greater than 1.

       - C : reads a single delimited character (delimiters and special escaped characters follow
       the lexical conventions of OCaml).

       - f , e , E , g , G  :  reads  an  optionally  signed  floating-point  number  in  decimal
       notation, in the style dddd.ddd
             e/E+-dd .

       - h , H : reads an optionally signed floating-point number in hexadecimal notation.

       -  F  : reads a floating point number according to the lexical conventions of OCaml (hence
       the decimal point is mandatory if the exponent part is not mentioned).

       - B : reads a boolean argument ( true or false ).

       - b : reads a boolean argument (for backward compatibility; do not use in new programs).

       - ld , li , lu , lx , lX , lo : reads an int32 argument to the  format  specified  by  the
       second letter for regular integers.

       -  nd , ni , nu , nx , nX , no : reads a nativeint argument to the format specified by the
       second letter for regular integers.

       - Ld , Li , Lu , Lx , LX , Lo : reads an int64 argument to the  format  specified  by  the
       second letter for regular integers.

       -  [  range ] : reads characters that matches one of the characters mentioned in the range
       of characters range (or not mentioned in it, if the range starts with ^ ). Reads a  string
       that  can  be  empty,  if  the  next  input character does not match the range. The set of
       characters from c1 to c2 (inclusively) is denoted by c1-c2  .   Hence,  %[0-9]  returns  a
       string  representing  a  decimal  number  or an empty string if no decimal digit is found;
       similarly, %[0-9a-f] returns a string of hexadecimal digits.  If a closing bracket appears
       in a range, it must occur as the first character of the range (or just after the ^ in case
       of range negation); hence []] matches a ] character and [^]] matches any character that is
       not ] .  Use %% and %@ to include a % or a @ in a range.

       -  r  :  user-defined reader. Takes the next ri formatted input function and applies it to
       the scanning buffer ib to read the next argument. The input  function  ri  must  therefore
       have type Scanning.in_channel -> 'a and the argument read has type 'a .

       -  {  fmt  %}  : reads a format string argument. The format string read must have the same
       type as the format string specification fmt . For instance, "%{ %i %}"  reads  any  format
       string  that  can  read  a  value of type int ; hence, if s is the string "fmt:\"number is
       %u\"" , then Scanf.sscanf s "fmt: %{%i%}" succeeds and returns the format  string  "number
       is %u" .

       -  (  fmt  %)  : scanning sub-format substitution.  Reads a format string rf in the input,
       then goes on scanning with rf instead of scanning with fmt .  The format  string  rf  must
       have the same type as the format string specification fmt that it replaces.  For instance,
       "%( %i %)" reads any format string that can read a value of type  int  .   The  conversion
       returns  the  format string read rf , and then a value read using rf .  Hence, if s is the
       string "\"%4d\"1234.00" , then Scanf.sscanf s "%(%i%)" (fun fmt i -> fmt, i) evaluates  to
       ("%4d",  1234)  .   This  behaviour  is not mere format substitution, since the conversion
       returns  the  format  string  read  as  additional  argument.  If  you  need  pure  format
       substitution, use special flag _ to discard the extraneous argument: conversion %_( fmt %)
       reads a format string rf and then behaves the same as format string rf .  Hence, if  s  is
       the  string  "\"%4d\"1234.00"  ,  then  Scanf.sscanf  s  "%_(%i%)" is simply equivalent to
       Scanf.sscanf "1234.00" "%4d" .

       - l : returns the number of lines read so far.

       - n : returns the number of characters read so far.

       - N or L : returns the number of tokens read so far.

       - !  : matches the end of input condition.

       - % : matches one % character in the input.

       - @ : matches one @ character in the input.

       - , : does nothing.

       Following the % character that introduces a conversion, there may be the special flag _  :
       the  conversion  that  follows occurs as usual, but the resulting value is discarded.  For
       instance, if f is the function fun i -> i + 1 , and s  is  the  string  "x  =  1"  ,  then
       Scanf.sscanf s "%_s = %i" f returns 2 .

       The field width is composed of an optional integer literal indicating the maximal width of
       the token to read.  For instance, %6d reads an integer, having at most 6  decimal  digits;
       %4f  reads  a  float  with  at  most  4  characters;  and %8[\000-\255] returns the next 8
       characters (or all the  characters  still  available,  if  fewer  than  8  characters  are
       available in the input).

       Notes:

       -as  mentioned above, a %s conversion always succeeds, even if there is nothing to read in
       the input: in this case, it simply returns "" .

       -in addition to the relevant digits, '_' characters may appear  inside  numbers  (this  is
       reminiscent  to the usual OCaml lexical conventions). If stricter scanning is desired, use
       the range conversion facility instead of the number conversions.

       -the scanf facility is not intended for heavy duty lexical analysis  and  parsing.  If  it
       appears  not  expressive  enough  for  your  needs,  several  alternative  exists: regular
       expressions  (module  Str  ),  stream  parsers,  ocamllex  -generated  lexers,   ocamlyacc
       -generated parsers.

   Scanning indications in format strings
       Scanning indications appear just after the string conversions %s and %[ range ] to delimit
       the end of the token. A scanning indication is introduced by a @  character,  followed  by
       some  plain  character  c . It means that the string token should end just before the next
       matching c (which is skipped). If no c character is encountered, the string token  spreads
       as  much as possible. For instance, "%s@\t" reads a string up to the next tab character or
       to the end of input. If a @ character appears anywhere else in the format  string,  it  is
       treated as a plain character.

       Note:

       -As  usual  in  format  strings, % and @ characters must be escaped using %% and %@ ; this
       rule still holds within range specifications  and  scanning  indications.   For  instance,
       format  "%s@%%"  reads  a  string  up  to the next % character, and format "%s@%@" reads a
       string up to the next @ .

       -The scanning indications introduce slight differences  in  the  syntax  of  Scanf  format
       strings,  compared  to those used for the Printf module. However, the scanning indications
       are similar to those used in the Format module; hence, when producing formatted text to be
       scanned by Scanf.bscanf , it is wise to use printing functions from the Format module (or,
       if you need to use functions from Printf , banish or carefully  double  check  the  format
       strings that contain '@' characters).

   Exceptions during scanning
       Scanners may raise the following exceptions when the input cannot be read according to the
       format string:

       -Raise Scanf.Scan_failure if the input does not match the format.

       -Raise Failure if a conversion to a number is not possible.

       -Raise End_of_file if the end of input is  encountered  while  some  more  characters  are
       needed to read the current conversion specification.

       -Raise Invalid_argument if the format string is invalid.

       Note:

       -as  a  consequence,  scanning a %s conversion never raises exception End_of_file : if the
       end of input is reached the conversion succeeds and simply returns the characters read  so
       far, or "" if none were ever read.

   Specialised formatted input functions
       val sscanf : string -> ('a, 'b, 'c, 'd) scanner

       Same as Scanf.bscanf , but reads from the given string.

       val scanf : ('a, 'b, 'c, 'd) scanner

       Same   as   Scanf.bscanf   ,  but  reads  from  the  predefined  formatted  input  channel
       Scanf.Scanning.stdin that is connected to stdin .

       val kscanf : Scanning.in_channel -> (Scanning.in_channel -> exn -> 'd) -> ('a, 'b, 'c, 'd)
       scanner

       Same as Scanf.bscanf , but takes an additional function argument ef that is called in case
       of error: if the scanning process or some conversion fails, the scanning  function  aborts
       and  calls  the  error  handling  function  ef  with  the  formatted input channel and the
       exception that aborted the scanning process as arguments.

       val ksscanf : string -> (Scanning.in_channel -> exn -> 'd) -> ('a, 'b, 'c, 'd) scanner

       Same as Scanf.kscanf but reads from the given string.

       Since 4.02.0

   Reading format strings from input
       val bscanf_format : Scanning.in_channel -> ('a, 'b, 'c, 'd, 'e, 'f) format6 ->  (('a,  'b,
       'c, 'd, 'e, 'f) format6 -> 'g) -> 'g

       bscanf_format  ic  fmt f reads a format string token from the formatted input channel ic ,
       according to the given format string fmt , and applies f to the  resulting  format  string
       value.

       Since 3.09.0

       Raises Scan_failure if the format string value read does not have the same type as fmt .

       val  sscanf_format  :  string -> ('a, 'b, 'c, 'd, 'e, 'f) format6 -> (('a, 'b, 'c, 'd, 'e,
       'f) format6 -> 'g) -> 'g

       Same as Scanf.bscanf_format , but reads from the given string.

       Since 3.09.0

       val format_from_string : string -> ('a, 'b, 'c, 'd, 'e, 'f) format6 -> ('a,  'b,  'c,  'd,
       'e, 'f) format6

       format_from_string  s  fmt converts a string argument to a format string, according to the
       given format string fmt .

       Since 3.10.0

       Raises Scan_failure if s , considered as a format string, does not have the same  type  as
       fmt .

       val unescaped : string -> string

       unescaped s return a copy of s with escape sequences (according to the lexical conventions
       of  OCaml)  replaced  by  their  corresponding  special   characters.    More   precisely,
       Scanf.unescaped   has   the  following  property:  for  all  string  s  ,  Scanf.unescaped
       (String.escaped s) = s .

       Always return a copy of the argument, even if there is no escape sequence in the argument.

       Since 4.00.0

       Raises Scan_failure if s is not properly escaped (i.e.  s has invalid escape sequences  or
       special  characters  that  are  not properly escaped).  For instance, Scanf.unescaped "\""
       will fail.

   Deprecated
       val fscanf : in_channel -> ('a, 'b, 'c, 'd) scanner

       Deprecated.

       Scanf.fscanf is error prone and deprecated since 4.03.0.

       This function violates the following invariant of the Scanf module: To  preserve  scanning
       semantics,  all  scanning  functions  defined  in  Scanf  must  read  from  a user defined
       Scanf.Scanning.in_channel formatted input channel.

       If  you  need  to  read  from  a  in_channel  input  channel  ic   ,   simply   define   a
       Scanf.Scanning.in_channel  formatted input channel as in let ib = Scanning.from_channel ic
       , then use Scanf.bscanf ib as usual.

       val kfscanf : in_channel -> (Scanning.in_channel -> exn -> 'd) -> ('a, 'b, 'c, 'd) scanner

       Deprecated.

       Scanf.kfscanf is error prone and deprecated since 4.03.0.