Provided by: re2c_4.3.1-1_amd64 bug

Name

       re2py - generate fast lexical analyzers for Python

SYNOPSIS

       re2py [ OPTIONS ] [ WARNINGS ] INPUT

       Input can be either a file or - for stdin.

Introduction

       re2py  works as a preprocessor. It reads the input file (which is usually a program in Python, but can be
       anything) and looks for blocks of code enclosed in special-form start/end markers. The  text  outside  of
       these  blocks is copied verbatim into the output file. The contents of the blocks are processed by re2py.
       It translates them to code in Python and outputs the generated code in place of the block.

       Here is an example of a small program that checks if a given string contains a decimal number:

          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT

          def lex(yyinput):
              yycursor = 0
          %{
              re2c:yyfill:enable = 0;
              re2c:indent:top = 1;

              [1-9][0-9]* { return True }
              *           { return False }
          %}

          assert lex(b"1234\0")

       In the output re2py replaced the block in the middle with the generated code:

          # Generated by re2py
          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT

          def lex(yyinput):
              yycursor = 0

              yystate = 0
              while True:
                  match yystate:
                      case 0:
                          yych = yyinput[yycursor]
                          yycursor += 1
                          if yych <= 0x30:
                              yystate = 1
                              continue
                          if yych <= 0x39:
                              yystate = 2
                              continue
                          yystate = 1
                          continue
                      case 1:
                          return False
                      case 2:
                          yych = yyinput[yycursor]
                          if yych <= 0x2F:
                              yystate = 3
                              continue
                          if yych <= 0x39:
                              yycursor += 1
                              yystate = 2
                              continue
                          yystate = 3
                          continue
                      case 3:
                          return True
                      case _:
                          raise "internal lexer error"

          assert lex(b"1234\0")

Basics

       A re2py program consists of a sequence of blocks intermixed with code in the target language. A block may
       contain definitions, configurations, rules, actions and directives in any order:

       name = regular-expression ;
              A definition binds name to regular-expression.  Names  may  contain  alphanumeric  characters  and
              underscore.  The  regular  expressions  section  gives  an  overview  of  re2py syntax for regular
              expressions. Once defined, the name can be  used  in  other  regular  expressions  and  in  rules.
              Recursion  in named definitions is not allowed, and each name should be defined before it is used.
              A block inherits named definitions from the global scope. Redefining a name  that  exists  in  the
              current scope is an error.

       configuration = value ;
              A  configuration  allows one to change re2py behavior and customize the generated code. For a full
              list of configurations  supported  by  re2py  see  the  configurations  section.  Depending  on  a
              particular  configuration,  the value can be a keyword, a nonnegative integer number or a one-line
              string which should be enclosed in double or single quotes  unless  it  consists  of  alphanumeric
              characters. A block inherits configurations from the global scope and may redefine them or add new
              ones.  Configurations defined inside of a block affect the whole block, even if they appear at the
              end of it.

       regular-expression code
              A rule binds regular-expression to its semantic action (a block of code  in  curly  braces,  or  a
              block of code that starts with := and ends on a newline followed by any non-whitespace character).
              If  the regular-expression matches, the associated code is executed.  If multiple rules match, the
              longest match takes precedence. If multiple rules match the same string, the  earliest  one  takes
              precedence.  There are two special rules: the default rule * and the end of input rule $.  Default
              rule should always be defined, it has the lowest priority regardless of its place  in  the  block,
              and  it  matches  any  code  unit  (not  necessarily  a  valid character, see the encoding support
              section). The end of input rule should be defined if the corresponding method for handling the end
              of input is used.  With start conditions rules have more complex syntax.

       !action code
              An action binds a user-defined block of code to a particular place in the generated  finite  state
              machine  (in  the  same  way  as  semantic actions bind code to the final states). See the actions
              section for a full list of predefined actions.

       !directive ;
              A directive is one of the special predefined statements. Each directive has a unique purpose.  See
              the directives section for details.

   Blocks
       Block start and end markers are either /*!re2c and */, or %{ and %} (both styles are supported). Starting
       from  version 2.2 blocks may have optional names that allow them to be referenced in other blocks.  There
       are different kinds of blocks:

       /*!re2c[:<name>] ... */ or %{[:<name>] ... %}
              A global block contains definitions, configurations, rules and directives.  re2py compiles regular
              expressions associated with each rule into a deterministic finite automaton,  encodes  it  in  the
              form  of  conditional jumps in the target language and replaces the block with the generated code.
              Names and configurations defined in a global block are  added  to  the  global  scope  and  become
              visible  to  subsequent  blocks.  At the start of the program the global scope is initialized with
              command-line options.

       /*!local:re2c[:<name>] ... */ or %{local[:<name>] ... %}
              A local block is like a global block, but the names and configurations  in  it  have  local  scope
              (they do not affect other blocks).

       /*!rules:re2c[:<name>] ... */ or %{rules[:<name>] ... %}
              A  rules block is like a local block, but it does not generate any code by itself, nor does it add
              any definitions to the global scope -- it is meant to be reused in other blocks. This is a way  of
              sharing  code  (more  details  in  the  reusable blocks section). Prior to re2py version 2.2 rules
              blocks required -r --reusable option.

       /*!use:re2c[:<name>] ... */ or %{use[:<name>] ... %}
              A use block that references a previously defined rules block. If  the  name  is  specified,  re2py
              looks  for  a rules blocks with this name. Otherwise the most recent rules block is used (either a
              named or an unnamed one). A use block can add definitions, configurations and rules  of  its  own,
              which  are  added  to  those  of the referenced rules block. Prior to re2py version 2.2 use blocks
              required -r --reusable option.

       /*!max:re2c[:<name1>[:<name2>...]] ... */ or %{max[:<name1>[:<name2>...]] ... %}
              A block that generates YYMAXFILL definition. An optional  list  of  block  names  specifies  which
              blocks  should  be  included  when computing YYMAXFILL value (if the list is empty, all blocks are
              included).  By default the generated code is a macro-definition for C (#define YYMAXFILL <n>),  or
              a  global  variable  for  Go  (var  YYMAXFILL  int  =  <n>). It can be customized with an optional
              configuration format that specifies a template string where @@{max} (or @@ for short) is  replaced
              with the numeric value of YYMAXFILL.

       /*!maxnmatch:re2c[:<name1>[:<name2>...]] ... */ or %{maxnmatch[:<name1>[:<name2>...]] ... %}
              A  block  that  generates  YYMAXNMATCH  definition  (it  requires  -P --posix-captures option). An
              optional list of block names specifies which blocks should be included when computing  YYMAXNMATCH
              value  (if  the  list  is  empty,  all  blocks  are included).  By default the generated code is a
              macro-definition for C (#define YYMAXNMATCH <n>), or a global variable for Go (var YYMAXNMATCH int
              = <n>). It can be customized with an optional  configuration  format  that  specifies  a  template
              string where @@{max} (or @@ for short) is replaced with the numeric value of YYMAXNMATCH.

       /*!stags:re2c[:<name1>[:<name2>...]] ... */, /*!mtags:re2c[:<name1>[:<name2>...]] ... */ or
       %{stags[:<name1>[:<name2>...]] ... %}, %{mtags[:<name1>[:<name2>...]] ... %{
              Blocks  that  specify  a  template  piece  of  code that is expanded for each s-tag/m-tag variable
              generated by re2py. An optional list of block names specifies which blocks should be included when
              computing the set of tag variables (if the list is empty, all blocks are included).  There are two
              optional configurations: format and separator.  Configuration format specifies a  template  string
              where  @@{tag}  (or  @@  for short) is replaced with the name of each tag variable.  Configuration
              separator specifies a piece of code used to join the generated format  pieces  for  different  tag
              variables.

       /*!svars:re2c[:<name1>[:<name2>...]] ... */, /*!mvars:re2c[:<name1>[:<name2>...]] ... */ or
       %{svars[:<name1>[:<name2>...]] ... %}, %{mvars[:<name1>[:<name2>...]] ... %{
              Blocks  that specify a template piece of code that is expanded for each s-tag/m-tag that is either
              explicitly mentioned by the rules (with --tags option) or  implicitly  generated  by  re2py  (with
              --captvars  or  --posix-captvars  options). An optional list of block names specifies which blocks
              should be included when computing the set of tags (if the list is empty, all blocks are included).
              There are two optional configurations: format and separator.   Configuration  format  specifies  a
              template  string  where  @@{tag}  (or  @@  for  short)  is  replaced  with  the  name of each tag.
              Configuration separator specifies a piece of code used to join the  generated  format  pieces  for
              different tags.

       /*!getstate:re2c[:<name1>[:<name2>...]] ... */ or %{getstate[:<name1>[:<name2>...]] ... %}
              A  block  that  generates  conditional  dispatch  on the lexer state (it requires --storable-state
              option). An optional list of block names specifies which blocks should be included  in  the  state
              dispatch.  The  default  transition goes to the start label of the first block on the list. If the
              list is empty, all blocks are included, and the default transition goes to the first block in  the
              file that has a start label.  This block type is incompatible with the --loop-switch option, as it
              requires cross-block transitions that are unsupported without goto or function calls.

       /*!conditions:re2c[:<name1>[:<name2>...]] ... */, /*!types:re2c... */ or
       %{conditions[:<name1>[:<name2>...]] ... %}, %{types... %}
              A  block  that generates condition enumeration (it requires --conditions option). An optional list
              of block names specifies which blocks should be included when computing the set of conditions  (if
              the  list  is  empty,  all  blocks are included).  By default the generated code is an enumeration
              YYCONDTYPE. It can be customized with optional configurations format and separator.  Configuration
              format specifies a template string where @@{cond} (or @@ for short) is replaced with the  name  of
              each  condition,  and  @@{num}  is replaced with a numeric index of that condition.  Configuration
              separator specifies a piece of code used  to  join  the  generated  format  pieces  for  different
              conditions.

       /*!include:re2c <file> */ or %{include <file> %}
              This  block allows one to include <file>, which must be a double-quoted file path. The contents of
              the file are literally substituted in place of the block, in the same way  as  #include  works  in
              C/C++.  This  block  can  be  used  together  with  the  --depfile option to generate build system
              dependencies on the included files.

       /*!header:re2c:on*/ or %{header:on %}
              This block marks the start of header file. Everything after it and up to the following  header:off
              block is processed by re2py and written to the header file specified with -t --type-header option.

       /*!header:re2c:off*/ or %{header:off %}
              This block marks the end of header file started with header:on*/ block.

       /*!ignore:re2c ... */ or %{ignore ... %}
              A block which contents are ignored and removed from the output file.

   Configurations
       Here is a full list of configurations supported by re2py:

       re2c:api, re2c:input
              Same as the --api option.

       re2c:api:sigil
              Specify  the  marker  ("sigil")  that is used for argument placeholders in the API primitives. The
              default is @@. A placeholder starts with sigil followed by the argument name in curly braces.  For
              example,  if sigil is set to $, then placeholders will have the form ${name}. Single-argument APIs
              may use shorthand notation without the name in braces. This option can be  overridden  by  options
              for individual API primitives, e.g.  re2c:YYFILL@len for YYFILL.

       re2c:api:style
              Specify  API  style.  Possible values are functions (the default for C) and free-form (the default
              for Go and Rust).  In functions style API primitives  are  generated  with  an  argument  list  in
              parentheses following the name of the primitive. The arguments are provided only for autogenerated
              parameters  (such  as  the  number  of characters passed to YYFILL), but not for the general lexer
              context, so the primitives behave more like macros in C/C++  or  closures  in  Go  and  Rust.   In
              free-form  style  API  primitives  do  not  have  a  fixed form: they should be defined as strings
              containing free-form pieces of code with interpolated variables of the form @@{var}  or  @@  (they
              correspond  to  arguments  in  function-like  style).   This  configuration  may be overridden for
              individual API primitives, see for example re2c:YYFILL:naked configuration for YYFILL.

       re2c:bit-vectors, re2c:flags:bit-vectors, re2c:flags:b
              Same as the --bit-vectors option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:captures, re2c:leftmost-captures
              Same as the --leftmost-captures option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:captvars, re2c:leftmost-captvars
              Same as the --leftmost-captvars option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:case-insensitive, re2c:flags:case-insensitive
              Same as the --case-insensitive option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:case-inverted, re2c:flags:case-inverted
              Same as the --case-inverted option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:case-ranges, re2c:flags:case-ranges
              Same as the --case-ranges option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:computed-gotos, re2c:flags:computed-gotos, re2c:flags:g
              Same as the --computed-gotos option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:computed-gotos:relative, re2c:cgoto:relative
              Same as the --computed-gotos-relative option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:computed-gotos:threshold, re2c:cgoto:threshold
              If computed goto is used, this configuration specifies the complexity threshold that triggers  the
              generation of jump tables instead of nested if statements and bitmaps. The default value is 9.

       re2c:cond:abort
              If  set  to  a positive integer value, the default case in the generated condition dispatch aborts
              program execution.

       re2c:cond:goto
              Specifies a piece of code used for the autogenerated shortcut rules :=> in conditions. The default
              is goto  @@;.   The  @@  placeholder  is  substituted  with  condition  name  (see  configurations
              re2c:api:sigil and re2c:cond:goto@cond).

       re2c:cond:goto@cond
              Specifies the sigil used for argument substitution in re2c:cond:goto definition. The default value
              is @@.  Overrides the more generic re2c:api:sigil configuration.

       re2c:cond:divider
              Defines     the     divider    for    condition    blocks.     The    default    value    is    /*
              *********************************** */.  Placeholders are substituted  with  condition  name  (see
              re2c:api;sigil and re2c:cond:divider@cond).

       re2c:cond:divider@cond
              Specifies the sigil used for argument substitution in re2c:cond:divider definition. The default is
              @@.  Overrides the more generic re2c:api:sigil configuration.

       re2c:cond:prefix, re2c:condprefix
              Specifies the prefix used for condition labels.  The default is yyc_.

       re2c:cond:enumprefix, re2c:condenumprefix
              Specifies the prefix used for condition identifiers.  The default is yyc.

       re2c:debug-output, re2c:flags:debug-output, re2c:flags:d
              Same as the --debug-output option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:empty-class, re2c:flags:empty-class
              Same as the --empty-class option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:encoding:ebcdic, re2c:flags:ecb, re2c:flags:e
              Same as the --ebcdic option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:encoding:ucs2, re2c:flags:wide-chars, re2c:flags:w
              Same as the --ucs2 option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:encoding:utf8, re2c:flags:utf-8, re2c:flags:8
              Same as the --utf8 option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:encoding:utf16, re2c:flags:utf-16, re2c:flags:x
              Same as the --utf16 option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:encoding:utf32, re2c:flags:unicode, re2c:flags:u
              Same as the --utf32 option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:encoding-policy, re2c:flags:encoding-policy
              Same as the --encoding-policy option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:eof
              Specifies  the  sentinel symbol used with the end-of-input rule $. The default value is -1 ($ rule
              is not used). Other possible values include  all  valid  code  units.  Only  decimal  numbers  are
              recognized.

       re2c:header, re2c:flags:type-header, re2c:flags:t
              Specifies the name of the generated header file relative to the directory of the output file. Same
              as the --header option except that the file path is relative.

       re2c:indent:string
              Specifies  the  string  used  for  indentation. The default is a single tab character "\t". Indent
              string should contain whitespace characters only.   To  disable  indentation  entirely,  set  this
              configuration to an empty string.

       re2c:indent:top
              Specifies the minimum amount of indentation to use. The default value is zero. The value should be
              a non-negative integer number.

       re2c:invert-captures
              Same as the --invert-captures option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:label:prefix, re2c:labelprefix
              Specifies the prefix used for DFA state labels. The default is yy.

       re2c:label:start, re2c:startlabel
              Controls  the  generation  of a block start label. The default value is zero, which means that the
              start label is generated only if it is used.  An  integer  value  greater  than  zero  forces  the
              generation  of  start  label  even  if it is unused by the lexer. A string value also forces start
              label generation and sets the label name to the specified string. This configuration applies  only
              to the current block (it is reset to default for the next block).

       re2c:label:yyFillLabel
              Specifies the prefix of YYFILL labels used with re2c:eof and in storable state mode.

       re2c:label:yyloop
              Specifies the name of the label marking the start of the lexer loop with --loop-switch option. The
              default is yyloop.

       re2c:label:yyNext
              Specifies  the  name  of  the optional label that follows YYGETSTATE switch in storable state mode
              (enabled with re2c:state:nextlabel). The default is yyNext.

       re2c:lookahead, re2c:flags:lookahead
              Deprecated (see the deprecated --no-lookahead option).

       re2c:monadic
              If set to non-zero, the generated lexer will use monadic notation (this configuration is  specific
              to Haskell).

       re2c:nested-ifs, re2c:flags:nested-ifs, re2c:flags:s
              Same as the --nested-ifs option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:posix-captures, re2c:flags:posix-captures, re2c:flags:P
              Same as the --posix-captures option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:posix-captvars
              Same as the --posix-captvars option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:tags, re2c:flags:tags, re2c:flags:T
              Same as the --tags option, but can be configured on per-block basis.

       re2c:tags:expression
              Specifies  the  expression  used for tag variables.  By default re2py generates expressions of the
              form yyt<N>. This might be inconvenient, for example if tag variables are defined as fields  in  a
              struct.  All  occurrences  of  @@{tag}  or  @@ are replaced with the actual tag name. For example,
              re2c:tags:expression = "s.@@"; results in expressions of the form s.yyt<N> in the generated  code.
              See also re2c:api:sigil configuration.

       re2c:tags:negative
              Specifies  the constant expression that is used for negative tag value (typically this would be -1
              if tags are integer offsets in the input string, or null pointer if they are pointers).

       re2c:tags:prefix
              Specifies the prefix for tag variable names. The default is yyt.

       re2c:sentinel
              Specifies the sentinel symbol used for the end-of-input checks (when bounds  checks  are  disabled
              with  re2c:yyfill:enable  =  0;  and re2c:eof is not set). This configuration does not affect code
              generation: its purpose is to verify that the sentinel is not allowed in the middle of a rule, and
              ensure that the lexer won't read past the end of buffer. The default value is -1`  (in  that  case
              re2py  assumes that the sentinel is zero, which is the most common case). Only decimal numbers are
              recognized.

       re2c:state:abort
              If set to a positive integer value, the default  case  in  the  generated  state  dispatch  aborts
              program execution, and an explicit -1 case contains transition to the start of the block.

       re2c:state:nextlabel
              Controls if the YYGETSTATE switch is followed by an yyNext label (the default value is zero, which
              corresponds to no label).  Alternatively one can use re2c:label:start to generate a specific start
              label,  or  an explicit getstate block to generate the YYGETSTATE switch separately from the lexer
              block.

       re2c:unsafe, re2c:flags:unsafe
              Same as the --no-unsafe option, but can be configured on per-block basis.   If  set  to  zero,  it
              suppresses  the generation of unsafe wrappers around YYPEEK. The default is non-zero (wrappers are
              generated).  This configuration is specific to Rust.

       re2c:YYBACKUP, re2c:define:YYBACKUP
              Defines generic API primitive YYBACKUP.

       re2c:YYBACKUPCTX, re2c:define:YYBACKUPCTX
              Defines generic API primitive YYBACKUPCTX.

       re2c:YYCONDTYPE, re2c:define:YYCONDTYPE
              Defines API primitive YYCONDTYPE.

       re2c:YYCTYPE, re2c:define:YYCTYPE
              Defines API primitive YYCTYPE.

       re2c:YYCTXMARKER, re2c:define:YYCTXMARKER
              Defines API primitive YYCTXMARKER.

       re2c:YYCURSOR, re2c:define:YYCURSOR
              Defines API primitive YYCURSOR.

       re2c:YYDEBUG, re2c:define:YYDEBUG
              Defines API primitive YYDEBUG.

       re2c:YYFILL, re2c:define:YYFILL
              Defines API primitive YYFILL.

       re2c:YYFILL@len, re2c:define:YYFILL@len
              Specifies the sigil  used  for  argument  substitution  in  YYFILL  definition.  Defaults  to  @@.
              Overrides the more generic re2c:api:sigil configuration.

       re2c:YYFILL:naked, re2c:define:YYFILL:naked
              Overrides  the  more  generic  re2c:api:style configuration for YYFILL.  Zero value corresponds to
              free-form API style.

       re2c:YYFN
              Defines API primitive YYFN.

       re2c:YYINPUT
              Defines API primitive YYINPUT.

       re2c:YYGETCOND, re2c:define:YYGETCONDITION
              Defines API primitive YYGETCOND.

       re2c:YYGETCOND:naked, re2c:define:YYGETCONDITION:naked
              Overrides the more generic re2c:api:style configuration for YYGETCOND. Zero value  corresponds  to
              free-form API style.

       re2c:YYGETSTATE, re2c:define:YYGETSTATE
              Defines API primitive YYGETSTATE.

       re2c:YYGETSTATE:naked, re2c:define:YYGETSTATE:naked
              Overrides  the more generic re2c:api:style configuration for YYGETSTATE. Zero value corresponds to
              free-form API style.

       re2c:YYGETACCEPT, re2c:define:YYGETACCEPT
              Defines API primitive YYGETACCEPT.

       re2c:YYLESSTHAN, re2c:define:YYLESSTHAN
              Defines generic API primitive YYLESSTHAN.

       re2c:YYLIMIT, re2c:define:YYLIMIT
              Defines API primitive YYLIMIT.

       re2c:YYMARKER, re2c:define:YYMARKER
              Defines API primitive YYMARKER.

       re2c:YYMTAGN, re2c:define:YYMTAGN
              Defines generic API primitive YYMTAGN.

       re2c:YYMTAGP, re2c:define:YYMTAGP
              Defines generic API primitive YYMTAGP.

       re2c:YYPEEK, re2c:define:YYPEEK
              Defines generic API primitive YYPEEK.

       re2c:YYRESTORE, re2c:define:YYRESTORE
              Defines generic API primitive YYRESTORE.

       re2c:YYRESTORECTX, re2c:define:YYRESTORECTX
              Defines generic API primitive YYRESTORECTX.

       re2c:YYRESTORETAG, re2c:define:YYRESTORETAG
              Defines generic API primitive YYRESTORETAG.

       re2c:YYSETCOND, re2c:define:YYSETCONDITION
              Defines API primitive YYSETCOND.

       re2c:YYSETCOND@cond, re2c:define:YYSETCONDITION@cond
              Specifies the sigil used for argument substitution in YYSETCOND definition. The default  value  is
              @@.  Overrides the more generic re2c:api:sigil configuration.

       re2c:YYSETCOND:naked, re2c:define:YYSETCONDITION:naked
              Overrides  the  more generic re2c:api:style configuration for YYSETCOND. Zero value corresponds to
              free-form API style.

       re2c:YYSETSTATE, re2c:define:YYSETSTATE
              Defines API primitive YYSETSTATE.

       re2c:YYSETSTATE@state, re2c:define:YYSETSTATE@state
              Specifies the sigil used for argument substitution in YYSETSTATE definition. The default value  is
              @@.  Overrides the more generic re2c:api:sigil configuration.

       re2c:YYSETSTATE:naked, re2c:define:YYSETSTATE:naked
              Overrides  the more generic re2c:api:style configuration for YYSETSTATE. Zero value corresponds to
              free-form API style.

       re2c:YYSETACCEPT, re2c:define:YYSETACCEPT
              Defines API primitive YYSETACCEPT.

       re2c:YYSKIP, re2c:define:YYSKIP
              Defines generic API primitive YYSKIP.

       re2c:YYSHIFT, re2c:define:YYSHIFT
              Defines generic API primitive YYSHIFT.

       re2c:YYCOPYMTAG, re2c:define:YYCOPYMTAG
              Defines generic API primitive YYCOPYMTAG.

       re2c:YYCOPYSTAG, re2c:define:YYCOPYSTAG
              Defines generic API primitive YYCOPYSTAG.

       re2c:YYSHIFTMTAG, re2c:define:YYSHIFTMTAG
              Defines generic API primitive YYSHIFTMTAG.

       re2c:YYSHIFTSTAG, re2c:define:YYSHIFTSTAG
              Defines generic API primitive YYSHIFTSTAG.

       re2c:YYSTAGN, re2c:define:YYSTAGN
              Defines generic API primitive YYSTAGN.

       re2c:YYSTAGP, re2c:define:YYSTAGP
              Defines generic API primitive YYSTAGP.

       re2c:yyaccept, re2c:variable:yyaccept
              Defines API primitive yyaccept.

       re2c:yybm, re2c:variable:yybm
              Defines API primitive yybm.

       re2c:yybm:hex, re2c:variable:yybm:hex
              If set to nonzero, bitmaps for the --bit-vectors option are generated in hexadecimal  format.  The
              default is zero (bitmaps are in decimal format).

       re2c:yych, re2c:variable:yych
              Defines API primitive yych.

       re2c:yych:emit, re2c:variable:yych:emit
              If set to zero, yych definition is not generated.  The default is non-zero.

       re2c:yych:conversion, re2c:variable:yych:conversion
              If set to non-zero, re2py automatically generates a conversion to YYCTYPE every time yych is read.
              The default is to zero (no conversion).

       re2c:yych:literals, re2c:variable:yych:literals
              Specifies  the form of literals that yych is matched against. Possible values are: char (character
              literals in single quotes, non-printable ones use escape sequences that start with backslash), hex
              (hexadecimal integers) and char_or_hex (a  mixture  of  both,  character  literals  for  printable
              characters and hexadecimal integers for others).

       re2c:yyctable, re2c:variable:yyctable
              Defines API primitive yyctable.

       re2c:yynmatch, re2c:variable:yynmatch
              Defines API primitive yynmatch.

       re2c:yypmatch, re2c:variable:yypmatch
              Defines API primitive yypmatch.

       re2c:yytarget, re2c:variable:yytarget
              Defines API primitive yytarget.

       re2c:yystable, re2c:variable:yystable
              Deprecated.

       re2c:yystate, re2c:variable:yystate
              Defines API primitive yystate.

       re2c:yyfill, re2c:variable:yyfill
              Defines API primitive yyfill.

       re2c:yyfill:check
              If  set  to zero, suppresses the generation of pre-YYFILL check for the number of input characters
              (the YYLESSTHAN definition in generic API and the YYLIMIT-based comparison in C pointer API).  The
              default is non-zero (generate the check).

       re2c:yyfill:enable
              If set to zero, suppresses the generation of YYFILL (together with the check). This should be used
              when  the  whole  input  fits  into  one  piece of memory (there is no need for buffering) and the
              end-of-input checks do not rely on the YYFILL checks (e.g. if a sentinel character is used).   Use
              warnings  (-W  option)  and  re2c:sentinel configuration to verify that the generated lexer cannot
              read past the end of input.  The default is non-zero (YYFILL is enabled).

       re2c:yyfill:parameter
              If set to zero, suppresses the generation of parameter passed to YYFILL.   The  parameter  is  the
              minimum  number  of  characters  that  must  be  supplied.  Defaults to non-zero (the parameter is
              generated).  This configuration can be overridden with re2c:YYFILL:naked or re2c:api:style.

       re2c:yyfn:sep
              Specifies separator used in YYFN elements (defaults to semicolon).

       re2c:yyfn:throw
              Specifies exceptions thrown by YYFN function (defaults to empty, which means no exceptions).

   Regular expressions
       re2py uses the following syntax for regular expressions:

       "foo"  Case-sensitive string literal.

       'foo'  Case-insensitive string literal.

       [a-xyz], [^a-xyz]
              Character class (possibly negated).

       .      Any character except newline.

       R \ S  Difference of character classes R and S.

       R*     Zero or more occurrences of R.

       R+     One or more occurrences of R.

       R?     Optional R.

       R{n}   Repetition of R exactly n times.

       R{n,}  Repetition of R at least n times.

       R{n,m} Repetition of R from n to m times.

       (R)    Just R; parentheses are used to override precedence. If submatch extraction is enabled, (R)  is  a
              capturing or a non-capturing group depending on --invert-captures option.

       (!R)   If  submatch  extraction  is  enabled,  (!R)  is a non-capturing or a capturing group depending on
              --invert-captures option.

       R S    Concatenation: R followed by S.

       R | S  Alternative: R or S.

       R / S  Lookahead: R followed by S, but S is not consumed.

       name   Regular expression defined as name (or literal string "name" in Flex compatibility mode).

       {name} Regular expression defined as name in Flex compatibility mode.

       @stag  An s-tag: saves the last input position at which @stag matches in a variable named stag.

       #mtag  An m-tag: saves all input positions at which #mtag matches in a variable named mtag.

       Character classes and string literals may contain the following escape sequences: \a, \b, \f, \n, \r, \t,
       \v, \\, octal escapes \ooo and hexadecimal escapes \xhh, \uhhhh and \Uhhhhhhhh.

   Actions
       Here is a list of predefined actions supported by re2py:

       !entry code
              Entry action binds a user-defined block of code to the start state of  the  current  finite  state
              machine.  If  start  conditions  are  used,  the  entry  action  can  be set individually for each
              condition. This action may be used to perform initialization, e.g. to save  start  location  of  a
              lexeme.

       !pre_rule code
              Pre-rule  action  prepends  a  user-defined  block of code to semantic actions of all rules in the
              current block (or condition, if start conditions are used). This action may be used to factor  out
              the common part of all semantic actions (e.g. saving the end location of a lexeme).

       !post_rule code
              Post-rule  action  appends  a  user-defined  block of code to semantic actions of all rules in the
              current block (or condition, if start conditions are used). This action may be used to  emit  trap
              statements that guard against unintended control flow.

   Directives
       Here is a full list of directives supported by re2py:

       !use:name ;
              An  in-block  use  directive  that merges a previously defined rules block with the specified name
              into the current block. Named definitions, configurations and rules of the  referenced  block  are
              added  to the current ones. Conflicts between overlapping rules and configurations are resolved in
              the usual way: the first rule takes priority, and the latest configuration overrides the preceding
              ones. One exception is the special rules *, $ and <!> for which a  block-local  definition  always
              takes  priority.  A  use  directive  can  be  placed  anywhere inside of a block, and multiple use
              directives are allowed.

       !include file ;
              This directive is the same as include block: it inserts file contents verbatim  in  place  of  the
              directive.

   Program interface
       The  generated  code interfaces with the outer program with the help of primitives, collectively referred
       to as the API.  Which primitives should be defined for a particular program depends on multiple  factors,
       including  the  complexity of regular expressions, input representation, buffering and the use of various
       features. All the necessary primitives should be defined by the user in the form  of  macros,  functions,
       variables  or  any  other  suitable  form  that  makes  the generated code syntactically and semantically
       correct. re2py does not (and cannot) check  the  definitions,  so  if  anything  is  missing  or  defined
       incorrectly,  the  generated  program  may  have  compile-time  or run-time errors.  This manual provides
       examples of API definitions in the most common cases.

       re2py has three API flavors that define the core set of primitives used by a program:

       Simple API
              This is the default API for the Python backend. It consists of the following  primitives:  YYINPUT
              (which  should  be  defined  as  a  sequence of code units, e.g. a string) and YYCURSOR, YYMARKER,
              YYCTXMARKER, YYLIMIT (which should be defined as indices in YYINPUT).

       Record API
              Record API is useful in cases when lexer state must be stored in a  class.   It  is  enabled  with
              --api  record  option or re2c:api = record configuration. This API consists of a variable yyrecord
              (the name can be overridden with re2c:yyrecord) that should be defined as a class with  attributes
              yyinput, yycursor, yymarker, yyctxmarker, yylimit (only the fields used by the generated code need
              to be defined, and their names can be configured).

       Generic API
              This  is  the  most  flexible  API.  It is enabled with --api generic option or re2c:api = generic
              configuration.   It  contains  primitives  for  generic  operations:  YYPEEK,  YYSKIP,   YYBACKUP,
              YYBACKUPCTX,  YYSTAGP,  YYSTAGN, YYMTAGP, YYMTAGN, YYRESTORE, YYRESTORECTX, YYRESTORETAG, YYSHIFT,
              YYSHIFTSTAG, YYSHIFTMTAG, YYLESSTHAN.

       Here is a full list of API primitives that may be used by the generated code in order to  interface  with
       the outer program.

       YYCTYPE
              The type of the input characters (code units).  For ASCII, EBCDIC and UTF-8 encodings it should be
              1-byte  unsigned integer.  For UTF-16 or UCS-2 it should be 2-byte unsigned integer. For UTF-32 it
              should be 4-byte unsigned integer.

       YYCURSOR
              An l-value that stores the current input position (a pointer or an  integer  offset  in  YYINPUT).
              Initially  YYCURSOR  should  point  to  the first input character, and later it is advanced by the
              generated code. When a rule  matches,  YYCURSOR  position  is  the  one  after  the  last  matched
              character.

       YYLIMIT
              An  r-value  that  stores  the  end of input position (a pointer or an integer offset in YYINPUT).
              Initially YYLIMIT should point to the position after the last available input character. It is not
              changed by the generated code. The lexer compares YYCURSOR to YYLIMIT in  order  to  determine  if
              there are enough input characters left.

       YYMARKER
              An  l-value that stores the position of the latest matched rule (a pointer or an integer offset in
              YYINPUT). It is used to restore the YYCURSOR position if the longer  match  fails  and  the  lexer
              needs to rollback.  Initialization is not needed.

       YYCTXMARKER
              An  l-value  that  stores  the position of the trailing context (a pointer or an integer offset in
              YYINPUT). No initialization is needed. YYCTXMARKER is needed only if the lookahead operator  /  is
              used.

       YYFILL A  generic  API  primitive  with  one variable len.  YYFILL should provide at least len more input
              characters or fail.  If re2c:eof is used, then len is always 1 and  YYFILL should always return to
              the calling function; zero return value indicates success.  If re2c:eof is not used,  then  YYFILL
              return  value  is  ignored  and  it  should  not  return  on  failure. The maximum value of len is
              YYMAXFILL.

       YYFN   A primitive that defines function prototype in --recursive-functions code model. Its value  should
              be  an  array of one or more strings, where each string contains two or three components separated
              by the string specified in re2c:fn:sep configuration (typically  a  semicolon).  The  first  array
              element  defines  function  name and return type (empty for a void function).  Subsequent elements
              define function arguments: first, the expression for the argument used in function  body  (usually
              just a name); second, argument type; third, an optional formal parameter (it defaults to the first
              component - usually both the argument and the parameter are the same identifier).

       YYINPUT
              An r-value that stores the current input character sequence (string, buffer, etc.).

       YYMAXFILL
              An  integral  constant  equal to the maximum value of the argument to YYFILL.  It can be generated
              with a max block.

       YYLESSTHAN
              A generic API primitive with one variable len.  It should be defined as an r-value of boolean type
              that equals true if and only if there are less than len input characters left.

       YYPEEK A generic API primitive with no variables.  It should be defined as an  r-value  of  type  YYCTYPE
              that is equal to the character at the current input position.

       YYSKIP A generic API primitive that should advance the current input position by one code unit.

       YYBACKUP
              A generic API primitive that should save the current input position (to be restored with YYRESTORE
              later).

       YYRESTORE
              A  generic  API  primitive  that  should  restore the current input position to the value saved by
              YYBACKUP.

       YYBACKUPCTX
              A generic API primitive that should save the  current  input  position  as  the  position  of  the
              trailing context (to be restored with YYRESTORECTX later).

       YYRESTORECTX
              A generic API primitive that should restore the trailing context position saved with YYBACKUPCTX.

       YYRESTORETAG
              A generic API primitive with one variable tag that should restore the trailing context position to
              the value of tag.

       YYSTAGP
              A  generic API primitive with one variable tag, where tag can be a pointer or an offset in YYINPUT
              (see submatch extraction section for details).  YYSTAGP  should  set  tag  to  the  current  input
              position.

       YYSTAGN
              A  generic API primitive with one variable tag, where tag can be a pointer or an offset in YYINPUT
              (see submatch extraction section for  details).  YYSTAGN  should  to  set  tag  to  a  value  that
              represents non-existent input position.

       YYMTAGP
              A  generic API primitive with one variable tag.  YYMTAGP should append the current position to the
              submatch history of tag (see the submatch extraction section for details.)

       YYMTAGN
              A generic API primitive with one variable tag.  YYMTAGN should  append  a  value  that  represents
              non-existent  input  position position to the submatch history of tag (see the submatch extraction
              section for details.)

       YYSHIFT
              A generic API primitive with one variable shift that should shift the current  input  position  by
              shift characters (the shift value may be negative).

       YYCOPYSTAG
              A  generic  API  primitive  with two variables, lhs and rhs that should copy right-hand-side s-tag
              variable rhs to the left-hand-side s-tag variable lhs. For most languages  this  primitive  has  a
              default definition that assigns lhs to rhs.

       YYCOPYMTAG
              A  generic  API  primitive  with two variables, lhs and rhs that should copy right-hand-side m-tag
              variable rhs to the left-hand-side m-tag variable lhs. For most languages  this  primitive  has  a
              default definition that assigns lhs to rhs.

       YYSHIFTSTAG
              A  generic   API  primitive  with two variables, tag and shift that should shift tag by shift code
              units (the shift value may be negative).

       YYSHIFTMTAG
              A generic API primitive with two variables, tag and shift that should shift the  latest  value  in
              the history of tag by shift code units (the shift value may be negative).

       YYMAXNMATCH
              An  integral  constant  equal  to  the  maximal  number of POSIX capturing groups in a rule. It is
              generated with a maxnmatch block.

       YYCONDTYPE
              The type of the condition enum.  It can be generated either  with  conditions  block  or  --header
              option.

       YYGETACCEPT
              A  primitive  with  one  variable  var that stores numeric selector of the accepted rule. For most
              languages this primitive has a default definition that reads from var.

       YYSETACCEPT
              A primitive with two variables: var (an l-value that  stores  numeric  selector  of  the  accepted
              rule), and val (the value of selector). For most languages this primitive has a default definition
              that assigns var to val.

       YYGETCOND
              An r-value of type YYCONDTYPE that is equal to the current condition identifier.

       YYSETCOND
              A primitive with one variable cond that should set the current condition identifier to cond.

       YYGETSTATE
              An  r-value  of integer type that is equal to the current lexer state. It should be initialized to
              -1.

       YYSETSTATE
              A primitive with one variable state that should set the current lexer state to state.

       YYDEBUG
              This primitive is generated only with -d, --debug-output option.  Its purpose is to add logging to
              the generated code (typical YYDEBUG definition is  a  print  statement).  YYDEBUG  statements  are
              generated in every state and have two variables: state (either a DFA state index or -1) and symbol
              (the current input symbol).

       yyaccept
              An  l-value  of  unsigned  integral  type  that stores the number of the latest matched rule. User
              definition is necessary only with --storable-state option.

       yybm   A table containing compressed bitmaps for up to 8 transitions (used with  the  --bitmaps  option).
              The  table  contains 256 elements and is indexed by 1-byte code units. Each 8-bit element combines
              boolean values for up to 8 transitions. k-Th bit of n-th element is true iff n-th code unit is  in
              the  range  of  k-th  transition. The idea of this bitmap is to replace many if branches or switch
              cases with one check of a single bit in the table.

       yych   An l-value of type YYCTYPE that stores the current input character.  User definition is  necessary
              only with -f --storable-state option.

       yyctable
              Jump  table  generated  for  the  initial  condition  dispatch  (enabled  with  the combination of
              --conditions and --computed-gotos options).

       yyfill An l-value that stores the result of YYFILL call  (this  may  be  necessary  for  pure  functional
              languages, where YYFILL is a monadic function with complex return value).

       yynmatch
              An  l-value  of  unsigned  integral  type  that stores the number of POSIX capturing groups in the
              matched rule.  Used only with -P --posix-captures option.

       yypmatch
              An array of l-values that are  used  to  hold  the  tag  values  corresponding  to  the  capturing
              parentheses  in the matching rule. Array length must be at least yynmatch * 2 (usually YYMAXNMATCH
              * 2 is a good choice).  Used only with -P --posix-captures option.

       yystable
              Deprecated.

       yystate
              An l-value used with the --loop-switch option to store the current DFA state.

       yytarget
              Jump table that contains jump targets (label addresses) for all transitions  from  a  state.  This
              table  is  local  to  each  state.  Generation of yytarget tables is enabled with --computed-gotos
              option.

   Options
       Some of the options have corresponding configurations, others are global and cannot be changed after re2c
       starts reading the input file.  Debug options generally require building  re2c  in  debug  configuration.
       Internal options are useful for experimenting with the algorithms used in re2c.

       -? --help -h
              Show help message.

       --api <simple | record | generic>
              Specify  the  API  used  by  the generated code to interface with used-defined code. Option simple
              should be used in simple cases when there's no need for buffer refilling and storing lexer  state.
              Option  record  should  be  used  when  lexer state needs to be stored in a record (struct, class,
              etc.).  Option generic should be used in complex cases when the other two APIs  are  not  flexible
              enough.

       --bit-vectors -b
              Optimize conditional jumps using bit masks.  This option implies --nested-ifs.

       --captures, --leftmost-captures
              Enable  submatch extraction with leftmost greedy capturing groups. The result is collected into an
              array yybmatch of capacity 2 * YYMAXNMATCH, and yynmatch is set to the number of  groups  for  the
              matching rule.

       --captvars, --leftmost-captvars
              Enable  submatch  extraction  with  leftmost greedy capturing groups. The result is collected into
              variables yytl<k>, yytr<k> for k-th capturing group.

       --case-insensitive
              Treat single-quoted and double-quoted strings as case-insensitive.

       --case-inverted
              Invert the meaning of single-quoted and double-quoted  strings:  treat  single-quoted  strings  as
              case-sensitive and double-quoted strings as case-insensitive.

       --case-ranges
              Collapse  consecutive  cases  in  a  switch statements into a range of the form low ... high. This
              syntax is a C/C++ language extension that is supported by compilers like GCC, Clang and  Tcc.  The
              main  advantage  over  using  single  cases  is smaller generated code and faster generation time,
              although for some compilers like Tcc it also results in smaller binary size.

       --computed-gotos -g
              Optimize conditional jumps using non-standard "computed goto" extension (which must  be  supported
              by  the  compiler).  re2py  generates  jump tables only in complex cases with a lot of conditional
              branches. Complexity threshold can be configured  with  cgoto:threshold  configuration.   Relative
              offsets can be enabled with cgoto:relative configuration. This option implies --bit-vectors.

       --computed-gotos-relative
              Similar  to  --computed-gotos but generate relative offsets for jump tables instead (which must be
              supported by the compiler). This option implies --computed-gotos.

       --conditions --start-conditions -c
              Enable support of Flex-like "conditions": multiple interrelated lexers within one block.  This  is
              an  alternative  to  manually  specifying  different  re2py blocks connected with goto or function
              calls.

       --depfile FILE
              Write dependency information to FILE in the form of a Makefile rule <output-file>  :  <input-file>
              [include-file  ...].  This  allows  one  to  track  build  dependencies in the presence of include
              blocks/directives, so that updating include files triggers regeneration of the output file.   This
              option depends on the --output option.

       --ebcdic --ecb -e
              Generate  a lexer that reads input in EBCDIC encoding. re2py assumes that the character range is 0
              -- 0xFF and character size is 1 byte.

       --empty-class <match-empty | match-none | error>
              Define the way re2py treats empty character classes. With match-empty (the  default)  empty  class
              matches  empty  input  (which is illogical, but backwards-compatible). With match-none empty class
              always fails to match.  With error empty class raises a compilation error.

       --encoding-policy <fail | substitute | ignore>
              Define the way re2py treats Unicode surrogates.  With fail re2py  aborts  with  an  error  when  a
              surrogate  is encountered.  With substitute re2py silently replaces surrogates with the error code
              point 0xFFFD. With ignore (the default) re2py treats surrogates as normal code points. The Unicode
              standard says that standalone surrogates are invalid, but real-world libraries and programs behave
              in different ways.

       --flex-syntax -F
              Partial support for Flex syntax: in this mode named definitions don't need the equal sign and  the
              terminating  semicolon,  and  when  used  they must be surrounded with curly braces. Names without
              curly braces are treated as double-quoted strings.

       --goto-label
              Use "goto/label" code model: encode DFA in  form  of  labeled  code  blocks  connected  with  goto
              transitions across blocks. This is only supported for languages that have a goto statement.

       --header --type-header -t HEADER
              Generate  a  HEADER file. The contents of the file can be specified using special blocks header:on
              and header:off. If  conditions  are  used,  the  generated  header  will  have  a  condition  enum
              automatically appended to it (unless there is an explicit conditions block).

       -I PATH
              Add  PATH to the list of locations which are used when searching for include files. This option is
              useful in combination with include block or directive. re2py looks for FILE in  the  directory  of
              the parent file and in the include locations specified with -I option.

       --input <default | custom>
              Deprecated  alias  for  --api.  Option default corresponds to simple (it is indeed the default for
              most backends, but not for all). Option custom corresponds to generic.

       --input-encoding <ascii | utf8>
              Specify the way re2py parses regular expressions.  With ascii (the default) re2py handles input as
              ASCII-encoded: any sequence of code units is a sequence of  standalone  1-byte  characters.   With
              utf8 re2py handles input as UTF8-encoded and recognizes multibyte characters.

       --invert-captures
              Invert  the  meaning  of  capturing and non-capturing groups. By default (...) is capturing and (!
              ...) is non-capturing. With this option (! ...) is capturing and (...) is non-capturing.

       --lang <none | c | d | go | haskell | java | js | ocaml | python | rust | swift | v | zig>
              Specify the target language. Supported languages are C, D, Go, Haskell, Java, JS,  OCaml,  Python,
              Rust,  Swift,  V, Zig (more languages can be added via user-defined syntax files, see the --syntax
              option). Option none disables default suntax configs, so that the target language is undefined.

       --location-format <gnu | msvc>
              Specify location format in messages.  With gnu locations  are  printed  as  'filename:line:column:
              ...'.  With msvc locations are printed as 'filename(line,column) ...'.  The default is gnu.

       --loop-switch
              Use  "loop/switch"  code  model:  encode  DFA  in  form  of  a loop over a switch statement, where
              individual states are switch cases. State is stored in a  variable  yystate.  Transitions  between
              states  update  yystate  to  the case label of the destination state and continue execution to the
              head of the loop.

       --nested-ifs -s
              Use nested if statements instead of switch statements in conditional jumps. This  usually  results
              in more efficient code with non-optimizing compilers.

       --no-debug-info -i
              Do  not  output line directives. This may be useful when the generated code is stored in a version
              control system (to avoid huge autogenerated diffs on small changes).

       --no-generation-date
              Suppress date output in the generated file.

       --no-version
              Suppress version output in the generated file.

       --no-unsafe
              Do not generate unsafe wrapper over YYPEEK (this option is  specific  to  Rust).  For  performance
              reasons  YYPEEK should avoid bounds-checking, as the lexer already performs end-of-input checks in
              a more efficient way.  The user may choose to provide a safe YYPEEK definition,  or  a  definition
              that  is  unsafe  only  in  release  builds,  in  which case the --no-unsafe option helps to avoid
              warnings about redundant unsafe blocks.

       --output -o OUTPUT
              Specify the OUTPUT file.

       --posix-captures, -P
              Enable submatch extraction with POSIX-style capturing groups. The  result  is  collected  into  an
              array  yybmatch  of  capacity 2 * YYMAXNMATCH, and yynmatch is set to the number of groups for the
              matching rule.

       --posix-captvars
              Enable submatch extraction with  POSIX-style  capturing  groups.  The  result  is  collected  into
              variables yytl<k>, yytr<k> for k-th capturing group.

       --recursive-functions
              Use  code  model based on co-recursive functions, where each DFA state is a separate function that
              may call other state-functions or itself.

       --reusable -r
              Deprecated since version 2.2 (reusable blocks are allowed by default now).

       --skeleton -S
              Ignore user-defined interface code and generate a self-contained "skeleton" program. Additionally,
              generate input files with strings derived from the regular grammar and  compressed  match  results
              that  are used to verify "skeleton" behavior on all inputs. This option is useful for finding bugs
              in optimizations and code generation. This option is supported only for C.

       --storable-state -f
              Generate a lexer which can store its inner state.  This is useful in push-model lexers  which  are
              stopped  by  an  outer  program  when  there is not enough input, and then resumed when more input
              becomes available. In this  mode  users  should  additionally  define  YYGETSTATE  and  YYSETSTATE
              primitives, and variables yych, yyaccept and state should be part of the stored lexer state.

       --syntax FILE
              Load configurations from the specified FILE and apply them on top of the default syntax file. Note
              that FILE can define only a few configurations (if it's used to amend the default syntax file), or
              it  can  define  a  whole new language backend (in the latter case it is recommended to use --lang
              none option).

       --tags -T
              Enable submatch extraction with tags.

       --ucs2 --wide-chars -w
              Generate a lexer that reads UCS2-encoded input. re2py assumes that the character  range  is  0  --
              0xFFFF and character size is 2 bytes.  This option implies --nested-ifs.

       --utf8 --utf-8 -8
              Generate  a  lexer that reads input in UTF-8 encoding. re2py assumes that the character range is 0
              -- 0x10FFFF and character size is 1 byte.

       --utf16 --utf-16 -x
              Generate a lexer that reads UTF16-encoded input. re2py assumes that the character range  is  0  --
              0x10FFFF and character size is 2 bytes.  This option implies --nested-ifs.

       --utf32 --unicode -u
              Generate  a  lexer  that reads UTF32-encoded input. re2py assumes that the character range is 0 --
              0x10FFFF and character size is 4 bytes.  This option implies --nested-ifs.

       --verbose
              Output a short message in case of success.

       --vernum -V
              Show version information in MMmmpp format (major, minor, patch).

       --version -v
              Show version information.

       --single-pass -1
              Deprecated. Does nothing (single pass is the default now).

       --debug-output -d
              Emit YYDEBUG invocations in the generated code. This is useful to trace lexer execution.

       --dump-adfa
              Debug option: output DFA after tunneling (in .dot format).

       --dump-cfg
              Debug option: output control flow graph of tag variables (in .dot format).

       --dump-closure-stats
              Debug option: output statistics on the number of states in closure.

       --dump-dfa-det
              Debug option: output DFA immediately after determinization (in .dot format).

       --dump-dfa-min
              Debug option: output DFA after minimization (in .dot format).

       --dump-dfa-tagopt
              Debug option: output DFA after tag optimizations (in .dot format).

       --dump-dfa-tree
              Debug option: output DFA under construction with states represented as tag history trees (in  .dot
              format).

       --dump-dfa-raw
              Debug option: output DFA under construction with expanded state-sets (in .dot format).

       --dump-interf
              Debug option: output interference table produced by liveness analysis of tag variables.

       --dump-nfa
              Debug option: output NFA (in .dot format).

       --emit-dot -D
              Instead  of  normal output generate lexer graph in .dot format.  The output can be converted to an
              image with the help of Graphviz (e.g. something like dot -Tpng -odfa.png dfa.dot).

       --dfa-minimization <moore | table>
              Internal option: DFA minimization algorithm used by re2py. The moore option is the Moore algorithm
              (it is the default). The table option is the "table filling"  algorithm.  Both  algorithms  should
              produce  the same DFA up to states relabeling; table filling is simpler and much slower and serves
              as a reference implementation.

       --eager-skip
              Internal option: make the generated lexer advance the input position eagerly -- immediately  after
              reading  the  input  symbol. This changes the default behavior when the input position is advanced
              lazily -- after transition to the next state.

       --no-lookahead
              Internal option, deprecated.  It  used  to  enable  TDFA(0)  algorithm.  Unlike  TDFA(1),  TDFA(0)
              algorithm  does  not  use  one-symbol  lookahead.  It  applies register operations to the incoming
              transitions rather than the outgoing ones.  Benchmarks  showed  that  TDFA(0)  algorithm  is  less
              efficient than TDFA(1).

       --no-optimize-tags
              Internal option: suppress optimization of tag variables (useful for debugging).

       --posix-closure <gor1 | gtop>
              Internal option: specify shortest-path algorithm used for the construction of epsilon-closure with
              POSIX  disambiguation semantics: gor1 (the default) stands for Goldberg-Radzik algorithm, and gtop
              stands for "global topological order" algorithm.

       --posix-prectable <complex | naive>
              Internal option: specify the algorithm  used  to  compute  POSIX  precedence  table.  The  complex
              algorithm  computes  precedence  table  in  one  traversal  of  tag history tree and has quadratic
              complexity in the number of TNFA states; it is the default. The  naive  algorithm  has  worst-case
              cubic  complexity  in  the  number  of TNFA states, but it is much simpler than complex and may be
              slightly faster in non-pathological cases.

       --stadfa
              Internal option, deprecated.  It used to enable staDFA algorithm, which differs from TDFA in  that
              register operations are placed in states rather than on transitions. Benchmarks showed that staDFA
              algorithm is less efficient than TDFA.

       --fixed-tags <none | toplevel | all>
              Internal  option:  specify whether the fixed-tag optimization should be applied to all tags (all),
              none of them (none), or only those in toplevel  concatenation  (toplevel).  The  default  is  all.
              "Fixed" tags are those that are located within a fixed distance to some other tag (called "base").
              In  such  cases  only  the  base  tag  needs  to be tracked, and the value of the fixed tag can be
              computed as the value of the base tag plus a static offset. For tags that are under alternative or
              repetition it is also necessary to check if the base tag has a no-match value (in that case  fixed
              tag  should also be set to no-match, disregarding the offset). For tags in top-level concatenation
              the check is not needed, because they always match.

   Warnings
       Warnings can be invividually enabled, disabled and turned into an error.

       -W     Turn on all warnings.

       -Werror
              Turn warnings into errors. Note that this option alone doesn't  turn  on  any  warnings;  it  only
              affects those warnings that have been turned on so far or will be turned on later.

       -W<warning>
              Turn on warning.

       -Wno-<warning>
              Turn off warning.

       -Werror-<warning>
              Turn on warning and treat it as an error (this implies -W<warning>).

       -Wno-error-<warning>
              Don't treat this particular warning as an error. This doesn't turn off the warning itself.

       -Wcondition-order
              Warn if the generated program makes implicit assumptions about condition numbering. One should use
              either --header option or conditions block to generate a mapping of condition names to numbers and
              then use the autogenerated condition names.

       -Wempty-character-class
              Warn if a regular expression contains an empty character class. Trying to match an empty character
              class  makes  no sense: it should always fail.  However, for backwards compatibility reasons re2py
              permits empty character classes and treats them as empty strings. Use the --empty-class option  to
              change the default behavior.

       -Wmatch-empty-string
              Warn  if  a rule is nullable (matches an empty string).  If the lexer runs in a loop and the empty
              match is unintentional, the lexer may unexpectedly hang in an infinite loop.

       -Wswapped-range
              Warn if the lower bound of a range is greater than its upper bound. The  default  behavior  is  to
              silently swap the range bounds.

       -Wundefined-control-flow
              Warn  if  some  input  strings  cause undefined control flow in the lexer (the faulty patterns are
              reported). This is a dangerous and common mistake. It can be easily fixed by  adding  the  default
              rule  *  which  has  the lowest priority, matches any code unit, and always consumes a single code
              unit.

       -Wunreachable-rules
              Warn about rules that are shadowed by other rules and will never match.

       -Wdeprecated-eof_rule
              Warn about standalone end of input rules $ that will be broken by the future changes  and  require
              fixing. At the moment these rules take precedence when conflicting with other rules, but after the
              introduction  of  generalized  end  of input symbol $ precedence order will change and these rules
              will become shadowed by other rules.

       -Wuseless-escape
              Warn if a symbol is escaped when it  shouldn't  be.   By  default,  re2py  silently  ignores  such
              escapes, but this may as well indicate a typo or an error in the escape sequence.

       -Wnondeterministic-tags
              Warn if a tag has n-th degree of nondeterminism, where n is greater than 1.

       -Wsentinel-in-midrule
              Warn  if  the sentinel symbol occurs in the middle of a rule --- this may cause reads past the end
              of buffer, crashes or memory corruption in the generated lexer. This warning is only applicable if
              the sentinel method of checking for the end  of  input  is  used.   It  is  set  to  an  error  if
              re2c:sentinel configuration is used.

       -Wundefined-syntax-config
              Warn  if  the  syntax  file  specified  with  --syntax  option  is  missing  definitions  of  some
              configurations. This  helps  to  maintain  user-defined  syntax  files:  if  a  new  release  adds
              configurations,  old  syntax  file  will  raise  a warning, and the user will be notified. If some
              configurations are unused and do  not  need  a  definition,  they  should  be  explicitly  set  to
              <undefined>.

   Syntax files
       Support  for  different  languages  in  re2c  is  based  on the idea of syntax files.  A syntax file is a
       configuration file that defines syntax of the target language -- not the whole language, but a small part
       of it that is used by the generated code. Syntax files make re2c very flexible, but they  should  not  be
       used as a replacement for re2c: configurations: their purpose is to define syntax of the target language,
       not to customize one particular lexer. All supported languages have default syntax files that are part of
       the  distribution  (see  include/syntax subdirectory); they are also embedded in the re2py binary.  Users
       may provide a custom syntax file that overrides a few configurations for one of supported  languages,  or
       they  may choose to redefine all configurations (in that case --lang none option should be used).  Syntax
       files contain configurations of four different kinds: feature  lists,  language  configurations,  inplace
       configurations and code templates.

       Feature lists
          A few list configurations define various features supported by a given backend, so that re2py may give
          a clear error if the user tries to enable an unsupported feature:

          supported_apis
                 A list of supported APIs with possible elements simple, record, generic.

          supported_api_styles
                 A list of supported API styles with possible elements functions, free-form.

          supported_code_models
                 A   list   of   supported   code   models   with  possible  elements  goto-label,  loop-switch,
                 recursive-functions.

          supported_targets
                 A list of supported codegen targets with possible elements code, dot, skeleton.

          supported_features
                 A list of supported  features  with  possible  elements  nested-ifs,  bitmaps,  computed-gotos,
                 case-ranges, monadic, unsafe, tags, captures, captvars.

       Language configurations
          A  few  boolean  configurations  describe features of the target language that affect re2py parser and
          code generator:

          semicolons
                 Non-zero if the language uses semicolons after statements.

          backtick_quoted_strings
                 Non-zero if the language has backtick-quoted strings.

          single_quoted_strings
                 Non-zero if the language has single-quoted strings.

          indentation_sensitive
                 Non-zero if the language is indentation sensitive.

          wrap_blocks_in_braces
                 Non-zero if compound statements must be wrapped in curly braces.

       Inplace configurations
          Syntax files define initial values of all re2c: configurations,  as  they  may  differ  for  different
          languages. See configurations section for a full list of all inplace configurations and their meaning.

       Code templates
          Code  templates  define  syntax  of  the target language. They are written in a simple domain-specific
          language with the following formal grammar:

              code-template ::
                    name '=' code-exprs ';'
                  | CODE_TEMPLATE ';'
                  | '<undefined>' ';'

              code-exprs ::
                    <EMPTY>
                  | code-exprs code-expr

              code-expr ::
                    STRING
                  | VARIABLE
                  | optional
                  | list

              optional ::
                    '(' CONDITIONAL '?' code-exprs ')'
                  | '(' CONDITIONAL '?' code-exprs ':' code-exprs ')'

              list ::
                    '[' VARIABLE ':' code-exprs ']'
                  | '[' VARIABLE '{' NUMBER '}' ':' code-exprs ']'
                  | '[' VARIABLE '{' NUMBER ',' NUMBER '}' ':' code-exprs ']'

          A code template is a sequence of string  literals,  variables,  optional  elements  and  lists,  or  a
          reference  to  another  code template, or a special value <undefined>. Variables are placeholders that
          are substituted during code  generation  phase.  List  variables  are  special:  when  expanding  list
          templates,  re2py  repeats  expressions  the  right  hand  side  of  the column a few times, each time
          replacing occurrences of the list variable with a  value  specific  to  this  repetition.  Lists  have
          optional  bounds  (negative  values  are  counted  from  the  end,  e.g.  -1  means the last element).
          Conditional names start with a dot.  Both conditionals and variables may be either local (specific  to
          the  given  code template) or global (allowed in all code templates). When re2py reads syntax file, it
          checks that each code template uses only the variables and conditionals that are allowed in it.

          For example, the following code template defines if-then-else construct for a C-like language:

              code:if_then_else =
                  [branch{0}: topindent "if " cond " {" nl
                      indent [stmt: stmt] dedent]
                  [branch{1:-1}: topindent "} else" (.cond ? " if " cond) " {" nl
                      indent [stmt: stmt] dedent]
                  topindent "}" nl;

          Here branch is a list variable: branch{0} expands to the first branch (which is special, as  there  is
          no  else part), branch{1:-1} expands to all remaining branches (if any). stmt is also a list variable:
          [stmt: stmt] is a nested list that expands to a list of statements in the body of the current  branch.
          topindent, indent, dedent and nl are global variables, and .cond is a local conditional (their meaning
          is described below). This code template could produce the following code:

              if x {
                  // do something
              } else if y {
                  // do something else
              } else {
                  // don't do anything
              }

          Here's  a  list  of all code templates supported by re2py with their local variables and conditionals.
          Note that a particular definition may, but does not have to use local variables and conditionals.  Any
          unused code templates should be set to <undefined>.

          code:var_local
                 Declaration or definition of a local variable. Supported  variables:  type  (the  type  of  the
                 variable), name (its name) and init (initial value, if any). Conditionals: .init (true if there
                 is an initializer).

          code:var_global
                 Same as code:var_local, except that it's used in top-level.

          code:const_local
                 Definition of a local constant. Supported variables: type (the type of the constant), name (its
                 name) and init (initial value).

          code:const_global
                 Same as code:const_local, except that it's used in top-level.

          code:array_local
                 Definition  of  a  local array (table). Supported variables: type (the type of array elements),
                 name (array name), size (its size), row (a list variable that does not itself produce any code,
                 but expands list expression as many times as there are rows in the  table)  and  elem  (a  list
                 variable  that  expands  to all table elements in the current row -- it's meant to be nested in
                 the row list).  Supported conditional: .const (true if the array is immutable).

          code:array_global
                 Same as code:array_local, except that it's used in top-level.

          code:array_elem
                 Reference to an element of an array (table). Supported variables: array (the name of the array)
                 and index (index of the element).

          code:enum
                 Definition of an enumeration (it  may  be  defined  using  a  special  language  construct  for
                 enumerations,  or  simply  as  a  few  standalone  constants).   Supported  variables  are type
                 (user-defined enumeration type or type of the constants), elem (list variable that  expands  to
                 the  name  of each member) and init (initializer for each member). Conditionals: .init (true if
                 there is an initializer).

          code:enum_elem
                 Enumeration element (a member of a user-defined enumeration type  or  a  name  of  a  constant,
                 depending on how code:enum is defined).  Supported variables are name (the name of the element)
                 and type (its type).

          code:assign
                 Assignment statement. Supported variables are lhs (left hand side) and rhs (right hand side).

          code:type_int
                 Signed integer type.

          code:type_uint
                 Unsigned integer type.

          code:type_yybm
                 Type of elements in the yybm table.

          code:type_yytarget
                 Type of elements in the yytarget table.

          code:type_yyctable
                 Type of elements in the yyctable table.

          code:cmp_eq
                 Operator "equals".

          code:cmp_ne
                 Operator "not equals".

          code:cmp_lt
                 Operator "less than".

          code:cmp_gt
                 Operator "greater than"

          code:cmp_le
                 Operator "less or equal"

          code:cmp_ge
                 Operator "greater or equal"

          code:if_then_else
                 If-then-else  statement with one or more branches. Supported variables: branch (a list variable
                 that does not itself produce any code, but expands list expression as many times as  there  are
                 branches), cond (condition of the current branch) and stmt (a list variable that expands to all
                 statements  in  the  current  branch).  Conditionals:  .cond  (true if the current branch has a
                 condition), .many (true if there's more than one branch).

          code:if_then_else_oneline
                 A specialization of code:if_then_else for the case when all branches have one-line  statements.
                 If this is <undefined>, code:if_then_else is used instead.

          code:switch
                 A  switch  statement  with  one  or  more  cases.  Supported  variables:  expr (the switched-on
                 expression) and case (a list variable that expands to all cases-groups with their code blocks).

          code:switch_cases
                 A group of switch cases that maps to a single code block. Supported variables are case (a  list
                 variable that expands to all cases in this group) and stmt (a list variable that expands to all
                 statements in the code block.

          code:switch_cases_oneline
                 A  specialization  of  code:switch_cases  for the case when the code block consists of a single
                 one-line statement. If this is <undefined>, code:switch_cases is used instead.

          code:switch_case_range
                 A single switch case that covers a range of values (possibly consisting  of  a  single  value).
                 Supported  variable:  val  (a list variable that expands to all values in the range). Supported
                 conditionals: .many (true if there's more than one value in the range) and .char_literals (true
                 if this is a switch on character literals -- some languages provide  special  syntax  for  this
                 case).

          code:switch_case_default
                 Default switch case.

          code:loop
                 A  loop  that runs forever (unless interrupted from the loop body).  Supported variables: label
                 (loop label), stmt (a list variable that expands to all statements in the loop body).

          code:continue
                 Continue statement. Supported variables: label (label from which to continue execution).

          code:goto
                 Goto statement. Supported variables: label (label of the jump target).

          code:cgoto
                 Computed goto statement.  Supported  variables:  array  (the  table  containing  computed  goto
                 information),  index  (index  of  the  element in the table) and base (base label, only used if
                 .cgoto.relative is true).

          code:cgoto:data
                 Initializer expression for a single element in computed goto table.  Supported variables: label
                 (the label that is used to initialize the  current  element),  type  (underlying  type  of  the
                 elements in the table) and base (base label - only used if .cgoto.relative is true).

          code:fndecl
                 Function  declaration.  Supported  variables:  name  (function name), type (return type), throw
                 (exceptions thrown by this function,  maps  to  re2c:yyfn:throw  configuration),  arg  (a  list
                 variable  that does not itself produce code, but expands list expression as many times as there
                 are function arguments), argname (name of the current argument), argtype (type of  the  current
                 argument). Conditional: .type (true if this is a non-void function).

          code:fndef
                 Like  code:fndecl,  but  used  for function definitions, so it has one additional list variable
                 stmt that expands to all statements in the function body.

          code:fncall
                 Function call statement. Supported variables: name (function name), retval (l-value  where  the
                 return  value  is  stored,  if  any)  and  arg  (a  list  variable that expands to all function
                 arguments).  Conditionals: .args (true if the function has  arguments)  and  .retval  (true  if
                 return value needs to be saved).

          code:tailcall
                 Tail  call  statement. Supported variables: name (function name), and arg (a list variable that
                 expands to all function arguments).  Conditionals: .args (true if the function  has  arguments)
                 and .retval (true if this is a non-void function).

          code:recursive_functions
                 Program  body  with  --recursive-functions code model. Supported variables: fn (a list variable
                 that does not itself produce any code, but expands list expression as many times as  there  are
                 functions),  fndecl  (declaration of the current function) and fndef (definition of the current
                 function).

          code:fingerprint
                 The fingerprint at the top of the  generated  output  file.  Supported  variables:  ver  (re2py
                 version that was used to generate this) and date (generation date).

          code:line_info
                 The  format  of  line  directives (if this is set to <undefined>, no directives are generated).
                 Supported variables: line (line number) and file (filename).

          code:abort
                 A statement that aborts program execution.

          code:yydebug
                 YYDEBUG statement, possibly specialized for  different  APIs.   Supported  variables:  YYDEBUG,
                 yyrecord, yych (map to the corresponding re2c: configurations), state (DFA state number).

          code:yypeek
                 YYPEEK  statement,  possibly  specialized  for  different  APIs.   Supported variables: YYPEEK,
                 YYCTYPE, YYINPUT, YYCURSOR, yyrecord, yych (map to  the  corresponding  re2c:  configurations).
                 Conditionals: .cast (true if re2c:yych:conversion is set to non-zero).

          code:yyskip
                 YYSKIP  statement,  possibly  specialized  for  different  APIs.   Supported variables: YYSKIP,
                 YYCURSOR, yyrecord (map to the corresponding re2c: configurations).

          code:yybackup
                 YYBACKUP statement, possibly specialized for different APIs.   Supported  variables:  YYBACKUP,
                 YYCURSOR, YYMARKER, yyrecord (map to the corresponding re2c: configurations).

          code:yybackupctx
                 YYBACKUPCTX   statement,   possibly  specialized  for  different  APIs.   Supported  variables:
                 YYBACKUPCTX, YYCURSOR, YYCTXMARKER, yyrecord (map to the corresponding re2c: configurations).

          code:yyskip_yypeek
                 Combined  code:yyskip  and  code:yypeek  statement  (defaults  to   code:yyskip   followed   by
                 code:yypeek).

          code:yypeek_yyskip
                 Combined   code:yypeek   and   code:yyskip  statement  (defaults  to  code:yypeek  followed  by
                 code:yyskip).

          code:yyskip_yybackup
                 Combined  code:yyskip  and  code:yybackup  statement  (defaults  to  code:yyskip  followed   by
                 code:yybackup).

          code:yybackup_yyskip
                 Combined  code:yybackup  and  code:yyskip  statement  (defaults  to  code:yybackup  followed by
                 code:yyskip).

          code:yybackup_yypeek
                 Combined code:yybackup  and  code:yypeek  statement  (defaults  to  code:yybackup  followed  by
                 code:yypeek).

          code:yyskip_yybackup_yypeek
                 Combined  code:yyskip,  code:yybackup  and  code:yypeek  statement  (defaults to``code:yyskip``
                 followed by code:yybackup followed by code:yypeek).

          code:yybackup_yypeek_yyskip
                 Combined code:yybackup, code:yypeek and  code:yyskip  statement  (defaults  to``code:yybackup``
                 followed by code:yypeek followed by code:yyskip).

          code:yyrestore
                 YYRESTORE  statement, possibly specialized for different APIs.  Supported variables: YYRESTORE,
                 YYCURSOR, YYMARKER, yyrecord (map to the corresponding re2c: configurations).

          code:yyrestorectx
                 YYRESTORECTX  statement,  possibly  specialized  for  different  APIs.   Supported   variables:
                 YYRESTORECTX, YYCURSOR, YYCTXMARKER, yyrecord (map to the corresponding re2c: configurations).

          code:yyrestoretag
                 YYRESTORETAG   statement,  possibly  specialized  for  different  APIs.   Supported  variables:
                 YYRESTORETAG, YYCURSOR, yyrecord (map to the corresponding re2c: configurations), tag (the name
                 of tag variable used to restore position).

          code:yyshift
                 YYSHIFT statement, possibly specialized for  different  APIs.   Supported  variables:  YYSHIFT,
                 YYCURSOR,  yyrecord (map to the corresponding re2c: configurations), offset (the number of code
                 units to shift the current position).

          code:yyshiftstag
                 YYSHIFTSTAG  statement,  possibly  specialized  for  different  APIs.    Supported   variables:
                 YYSHIFTSTAG,  yyrecord,  negative  (map  to  the  corresponding re2c: configurations), tag (tag
                 variable which needs to be shifted), offset (the number of code units to shift).  Conditionals:
                 .nested   (true   if   this  is  a  nested  tag  --  in  this  case  its  value  may  equal  to
                 re2c:tags:negative, which should not be shifted).

          code:yyshiftmtag
                 YYSHIFTMTAG  statement,  possibly  specialized  for  different  APIs.    Supported   variables:
                 YYSHIFTMTAG  (maps  to the corresponding re2c: configuration), tag (tag variable which needs to
                 be shifted), offset (the number of code units to shift).

          code:yystagp
                 YYSTAGP statement, possibly specialized for  different  APIs.   Supported  variables:  YYSTAGP,
                 YYCURSOR,  yyrecord  (map  to  the  corresponding re2c: configurations), tag (tag variable that
                 should be updated).

          code:yymtagp
                 YYMTAGP statement, possibly specialized for different APIs.  Supported variables: YYMTAGP (maps
                 to the corresponding re2c: configuration), tag (tag variable that should be updated).

          code:yystagn
                 YYSTAGN statement, possibly specialized for  different  APIs.   Supported  variables:  YYSTAGN,
                 negative,  yyrecord  (map  to  the  corresponding re2c: configurations), tag (tag variable that
                 should be updated).

          code:yymtagn
                 YYMTAGN statement, possibly specialized for different APIs.  Supported variables: YYMTAGN (maps
                 to the corresponding re2c: configuration), tag (tag variable that should be updated).

          code:yycopystag
                 YYCOPYSTAG  statement,  possibly  specialized  for  different   APIs.    Supported   variables:
                 YYCOPYSTAG,  yyrecord (map to the corresponding re2c: configurations), lhs, rhs (left and right
                 hand side tag variables of the copy operation).

          code:yycopymtag
                 YYCOPYMTAG  statement,  possibly  specialized  for  different   APIs.    Supported   variables:
                 YYCOPYMTAG,  yyrecord (map to the corresponding re2c: configurations), lhs, rhs (left and right
                 hand side tag variables of the copy operation).

          code:yygetaccept
                 YYGETACCEPT  statement,  possibly  specialized  for  different  APIs.    Supported   variables:
                 YYGETACCEPT,   yyrecord   (map  to  the  corresponding  re2c:  configurations),  var  (maps  to
                 re2c:yyaccept configuration).

          code:yysetaccept
                 YYSETACCEPT  statement,  possibly  specialized  for  different  APIs.    Supported   variables:
                 YYSETACCEPT,   yyrecord   (map  to  the  corresponding  re2c:  configurations),  var  (maps  to
                 re2c:yyaccept configuration) and val (numeric value of the accepted rule).

          code:yygetcond
                 YYGETCOND statement, possibly specialized for different APIs.  Supported variables:  YYGETCOND,
                 yyrecord   (map   to   the  corresponding  re2c:  configurations),  var  (maps  to  re2c:yycond
                 configuration).

          code:yysetcond
                 YYSETCOND statement, possibly specialized for different APIs.  Supported variables:  YYSETCOND,
                 yyrecord   (map   to   the  corresponding  re2c:  configurations),  var  (maps  to  re2c:yycond
                 configuration) and val (numeric condition identifier).

          code:yygetstate
                 YYGETSTATE  statement,  possibly  specialized  for  different   APIs.    Supported   variables:
                 YYGETSTATE, yyrecord (map to the corresponding re2c: configurations), var (maps to re2c:yystate
                 configuration).

          code:yysetstate
                 YYSETSTATE   statement,   possibly   specialized  for  different  APIs.   Supported  variables:
                 YYSETSTATE, yyrecord (map to the corresponding re2c: configurations), var (maps to re2c:yystate
                 configuration) and val (state number).

          code:yylessthan
                 YYLESSTHAN  statement,  possibly  specialized  for  different   APIs.    Supported   variables:
                 YYLESSTHAN,  YYCURSOR,  YYLIMIT, yyrecord (map to the corresponding re2c: configurations), need
                 (the number of code units to check against). Conditional: .many (true if the need is more  than
                 one).

          code:yybm_filter
                 Condition  that  is used to filter out yych values that are not covered by the yybm table (used
                 with --bitmaps option).  Supported variable: yych (maps to re2c:yych configuration).

          code:yybm_match
                 The format of yybm table check (generated with --bitmaps option).  Supported  variables:  yybm,
                 yych  (map  to  the  corresponding re2c: configurations), offset (offset in the yybm table that
                 needs to be added to yych) and mask (bit mask that should be applied  to  the  table  entry  to
                 retrieve the boolean value that needs to be checked)

          code:yytarget_filter
                 Condition  that  is  used  to filter out yych values that are not covered by the yytarget table
                 (used  with  --computed-gotos  option).   Supported   variable:   yych   (maps   to   re2c:yych
                 configuration).

          Here's a list of all global variables that are allowed in syntax files:

          nl     A newline.

          indent A  variable  that  does  not  produce any code, but has a side-effect of increasing indentation
                 level.

          dedent A variable that does not produce any code, but has  a  side-effect  of  decreasing  indentation
                 level.

          topindent
                 Indentation  string  for  the current statement. Indentation level is tracked and automatically
                 updated by the code generator.

          Here's a list of all global conditionals that are allowed in syntax files:

          .api.simple
                 True if simple API is used (--api simple or re2c:api = simple).

          .api.generic
                 True if generic API is used (--api generic or re2c:api = generic).

          .api.record
                 True if record API is used (--api record or re2c:api = record).

          .api_style.functions
                 True if function-like API style is used (re2c:api-style = functions).

          .api_style.freeform
                 True if free-form API style is used (re2c:api-style = free-form).

          .case_ranges
                 True if case ranges feature is enabled (--case-ranges or re2c:case-ranges = 1).

          .cgoto.relative
                 True  if  the  relative  form  of  computed  goto   is   used   (--computed-gotos-relative   or
                 re2c:cgoto:relative = 1).

          .code_model.goto_label
                 True if  code model based on goto/label is used (--goto-label).

          .code_model.loop_switch
                 True if code model based on loop/switch is used (--loop-switch).

          .code_model.recursive_functions
                 True if code model based on recursive functions is used (--recursive-function).

          .date  True if the generated fingerprint should contain generation date.

          .loop_label
                 True  if  re2py  generated  loops  must  have  a  label (re2c:label:yyloop is set to a nonempty
                 string).

          .monadic
                 True if the generated code should be monadic (re2c:monadic = 1).  This  is  only  relevant  for
                 pure functional languages.

          .start_conditions
                 True if start conditions are enabled (--start-conditions).

          .storable_state
                 True if storable state is enabled (--storable-state).

          .unsafe
                 True  if  re2py  should  use  "unsafe"  blocks  in  order  to  generate  faster code (--unsafe,
                 re2c:unsafe = 1). This is only relevant for languages that have "unsafe" feature.

          .version
                 True if the generated fingerprint should contain re2py version.

          .yyfn.throw
                 True if re2c:yyfn:throw configuration is defined to a nonempty string.

Handling the end of input

       One of the main problems for the lexer is to know when to stop.  There are a few terminating conditions:

       • the lexer may match some rule (including default rule *) and come to a final state

       • the lexer may fail to match any rule and come to a default state

       • the lexer may reach the end of input

       The first two conditions terminate the lexer in a "natural" way: it comes to a  state  with  no  outgoing
       transitions,  and  the  matching automatically stops. The third condition, end of input, is different: it
       may happen in any state, and the lexer should be able to  handle  it.  Checking  for  the  end  of  input
       interrupts the normal lexer workflow and adds conditional branches to the generated program, therefore it
       is  necessary  to minimize the number of such checks. re2py supports a few different methods for handling
       the end of input. Which one to use depends on  the  complexity  of  regular  expressions,  the  need  for
       buffering, performance considerations and other factors. Here is a list of methods:

       • Sentinel.   This  method  eliminates  the need for the end of input checks altogether. It is simple and
         efficient, but limited to the case when there is a natural "sentinel" character that can never occur in
         valid input. This character may still occur in invalid input, but it  should  not  be  allowed  by  the
         regular  expressions,  except  perhaps as the last character of a rule. The sentinel is appended at the
         end of input and serves as a stop signal: when the lexer reads this character, it is  either  a  syntax
         error  or  the  end  of  input.  In  both cases the lexer should stop. This method is used if YYFILL is
         disabled with re2c:yyfill:enable = 0; and re2c:eof has the default value -1.

       • Sentinel with bounds checks.  This method is generic:  it  allows  one  to  handle  any  input  without
         restrictions  on  the  regular  expressions. The idea is to reduce the number of end of input checks by
         performing them only on certain characters. Similar to the "sentinel" method, one of the characters  is
         chosen  as a "sentinel" and appended at the end of input. However, there is no restriction on where the
         sentinel may occur (in fact, any character can be chosen for a sentinel).  When the  lexer  reads  this
         character,  it  additionally  performs  a  bounds check.  If the current position is within bounds, the
         lexer resumes matching and handles the sentinel as a regular character.  Otherwise  it  invokes  YYFILL
         (unless  it  is  disabled).  If  more  input is supplied, the lexer will rematch the last character and
         continue as if the sentinel wasn't there. Otherwise it must be the real end of  input,  and  the  lexer
         stops.  This method is used when re2c:eof has non-negative value (it should be set to the numeric value
         of the sentinel). YYFILL is optional.

       • Bounds checks with padding.  This method is generic, and it may  be  faster  than  the  "sentinel  with
         bounds  checks"  method, but it is also more complex. The idea is to partition DFA states into strongly
         connected components (SCCs) and generate a single check per SCC for  enough  characters  to  cover  the
         longest  non-looping  path  in this SCC. This reduces the number of checks, but there is a problem with
         short lexemes at the end of input, as the check requires enough characters to cover the longest lexeme.
         This can be fixed by padding the input with a few fake characters that  do  not  form  a  valid  lexeme
         suffix (so that the lexer cannot match them). The length of padding should be YYMAXFILL, generated with
         a  max  block.  If there is not enough input, the lexer invokes YYFILL which should supply at least the
         required number of characters or not return.  This method is used if YYFILL is enabled and re2c:eof  is
         -1 (this is the default configuration).

       • Custom  checks.   Generic  API  allows one to override basic operations like reading a character, which
         makes it possible to include the end-of-input checks as part of them.  This approach is error-prone and
         should be used with caution. To use a custom method, enable generic API with --api custom or re2c:api =
         custom; and disable default bounds checks with re2c:yyfill:enable = 0; or re2c:yyfill:check = 0;.

       The following subsections contain an example of each method.

   Sentinel
       This example uses a sentinel character to handle the end of input.  The  program  counts  space-separated
       words  in  a null-terminated string. The sentinel is null: it is the last character of each input string,
       and it is not allowed in the middle of a lexeme by any of the rules (in particular, it is not included in
       character ranges where it is easy to overlook). If a null occurs in the middle  of  a  string,  it  is  a
       syntax  error  and  the lexer will match default rule *, but it won't read past the end of input or crash
       (use  -Wsentinel-in-midrule  <https://re2c.org/manual/basics/warnings/warnings.html#wsentinel-in-midrule>
       warning and re2c:sentinel configuration to verify this). Configuration re2c:yyfill:enable = 0; suppresses
       the generation of bounds checks and YYFILL invocations.

          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT

          # expect a null-terminated string
          def lex(yyinput):
              yycursor = 0
              count = 0

              while True: %{
                  re2c:yyfill:enable = 0;
                  re2c:indent:top = 2;

                  *      { return -1 }
                  [\x00] { return count }
                  [ ]+   { break }
                  [a-z]+ {
                      count += 1
                      break
                  }
              %}

          assert lex(b"\0") == 0
          assert lex(b"one two three\0") == 3
          assert lex(b"f0ur\0") == -1

   Sentinel with bounds checks
       This  example  uses  sentinel  with  bounds  checks  to handle the end of input (this method was added in
       version 1.2). The program counts space-separated single-quoted strings. The sentinel character  is  null,
       which  is  specified  with  re2c:eof  =  0;  configuration.  As  in the sentinel method, null is the last
       character of each input string, but it is allowed in the middle of a rule (for  example,  'aaa\0aa'\0  is
       valid  input,  but  'aaa\0 is a syntax error).  Bounds checks are generated in each state that matches an
       input character, but they are scoped to the branch that handles null.  Bounds  checks  are  of  the  form
       YYLIMIT  <= YYCURSOR or YYLESSTHAN(1) with generic API. If the check condition is true, lexer has reached
       the end of input and should stop (YYFILL is disabled with re2c:yyfill:enable = 0; as the input fits  into
       one  buffer,  see  the YYFILL with sentinel section for an example that uses YYFILL). Reaching the end of
       input opens three possibilities: if the lexer is in the initial state it will match the end-of-input rule
       $, otherwise it may fallback to a previously matched rule (including default rule *) or go to  a  default
       state,     causing    -Wundefined-control-flow    <https://re2c.org/manual/basics/warnings/warnings.html#
       wundefined-control-flow>.

          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT

          # expect a null-terminated string
          def lex(yyinput):
              yycursor = 0
              yylimit = len(yyinput) - 1 # terminating null not included
              count = 0

              while True: %{
                  re2c:yyfill:enable = 0;
                  re2c:eof = 0;
                  re2c:indent:top = 2;

                  str = ['] ([^'\\] | [\\][^])* ['];

                  *    { return -1 }
                  $    { return count }
                  [ ]+ { break }
                  str  {
                      count += 1
                      break
                  }
              %}

          def test(str, count):
              # termunating null not included in `lim`
              assert count == lex(str)

          test(b"\0", 0);
          test(b"'qu\0tes' 'are' 'fine: \\'' \0", 3);
          test(b"'unterminated\\'\0", -1)

   Bounds checks with padding
       This example uses bounds checks with padding to handle the end  of  input  (this  method  is  enabled  by
       default).  The program counts space-separated single-quoted strings. There is a padding of YYMAXFILL null
       characters appended at the end of input, where YYMAXFILL value is autogenerated with a max block.  It  is
       not  necessary to use null for padding --- any characters can be used as long as they do not form a valid
       lexeme suffix (in this example padding should not contain single quotes, as they may be  mistaken  for  a
       suffix of a single-quoted string). There is a "stop" rule that matches the first padding character (null)
       and  terminates  the lexer (note that it checks if null is at the beginning of padding, otherwise it is a
       syntax error). Bounds checks are generated only in some  states  that  are  determined  by  the  strongly
       connected  components  of  the  underlying  automaton.  Checks  have the form (YYLIMIT - YYCURSOR) < n or
       YYLESSTHAN(n) with generic API, where n is the minimum number of characters that are needed for the lexer
       to proceed (it also means that the next bounds check will occur in at most n characters).  If  the  check
       condition  is  true,  the lexer has reached the end of input and will invoke YYFILL(n) that should either
       supply at least n input characters or not return. In this example YYFILL always fails and terminates  the
       lexer  with  an error (which is fine because the input fits into one buffer). See the YYFILL with padding
       section for an example that refills the input buffer with YYFILL.

          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT

          %{max %}

          def lex(yyinput):
              yycursor = 0
              yylimit = len(yyinput)
              count = 0

              while True: %{
                  re2c:YYFILL = "return -1";
                  re2c:indent:top = 2;

                  str = ['] ([^'\\] | [\\][^])* ['];

                  [\x00] {
                      # check that it is the sentinel, not some unexpected null
                      return count if yycursor == yylimit - YYMAXFILL + 1 else -1
                  }
                  str {
                      count += 1
                      break
                  }
                  [ ]+ { break }
                  *    { return -1 }
              %}

          def test(str, count):
              padded_str = str + (b"\0" * YYMAXFILL)
              assert lex(padded_str) == count

          test(b"", 0)
          test(b"'unterminated\\'", -1)
          test(b"'qu\x00tes' 'are' 'fine: \\'' ", 3)
          test(b"'unexpected \x00 null", -1)

   Custom checks
       This example uses a custom end-of-input handling  method  based  on  generic  API.   The  program  counts
       space-separated  single-quoted  strings. It is the same as the sentinel example, except that the input is
       not null-terminated. To cover up for the absence of a sentinel character at the end of input,  YYPEEK  is
       redefined  to  perform  a  bounds  check  before  it reads the next input character.  This is inefficient
       because checks are done very often. If the check condition fails,  YYPEEK  returns  the  real  character,
       otherwise it returns a fake sentinel character.

          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT

          # expect a string without terminating null
          def lex(str):
              cur = 0
              lim = len(str)
              count = 0

              while True: %{
                  re2c:api = generic;
                  re2c:YYPEEK = "str[cur] if cur < lim else 0";
                  re2c:YYSKIP = "cur += 1";
                  re2c:yyfill:enable = 0;
                  re2c:indent:top = 2;

                  *      { return -1 }
                  [\x00] { return count }
                  [ ]+   { break }
                  [a-z]+ {
                      count += 1
                      break
                  }
              %}

          assert lex(b"") == 0
          assert lex(b"one two three") == 3
          assert lex(b"f0ur") == -1

Buffer refilling

       The  need  for  buffering  arises when the input cannot be mapped in memory all at once: either it is too
       large, or it comes in a streaming fashion (like reading from a socket). The usual technique in such cases
       is to allocate a fixed-sized memory buffer and process input in chunks that fit into the buffer. When the
       current chunk is processed, it is moved out and new data is moved in. In practice  it  is  somewhat  more
       complex,  because  lexer  state  consists  not  of  a  single  input  position, but a set of interrelated
       positions:

       • cursor: the next input character to be read (YYCURSOR in C pointer API or YYSKIP/YYPEEK in generic API)

       • limit: the position after the last available input character (YYLIMIT  in  C  pointer  API,  implicitly
         handled by YYLESSTHAN in generic API)

       • marker: the position of the most recent match, if any (YYMARKER in default API or YYBACKUP/YYRESTORE in
         generic API)

       • token: the start of the current lexeme (implicit in re2py API, as it is not needed for the normal lexer
         operation and can be defined and updated by the user)

       • context   marker:   the   position   of   the  trailing  context  (YYCTXMARKER  in  C  pointer  API  or
         YYBACKUPCTX/YYRESTORECTX in generic API)

       • tag variables: submatch positions (defined with stags and  mtags  blocks  and  generic  API  primitives
         YYSTAGP/YYSTAGN/YYMTAGP/YYMTAGN)

       Not  all  these are used in every case, but if used, they must be updated by YYFILL. All active positions
       are contained in the segment between token and cursor, therefore  everything  between  buffer  start  and
       token  can  be  discarded,  the  segment  from  token and up to limit should be moved to the beginning of
       buffer, and the free space at the end of buffer should be filled  with  new  data.   In  order  to  avoid
       frequent  YYFILL  calls  it  is  best  to fill in as many input characters as possible (even though fewer
       characters might suffice to resume  the  lexer).  The  details  of  YYFILL  implementation  are  slightly
       different  depending  on which EOF handling method is used: the case of EOF rule is somewhat simpler than
       the case of bounds-checking with padding. Also note that if -f --storable-state option  is  used,  YYFILL
       has slightly different semantics (described in the section about storable state).

   YYFILL with sentinel
       If  EOF  rule  is used, YYFILL is a function-like primitive that accepts no arguments and returns a value
       which is checked against zero. YYFILL invocation is triggered by  condition  YYLIMIT  <=  YYCURSOR  in  C
       pointer  API  and  YYLESSTHAN()  in  generic API. A non-zero return value means that YYFILL has failed. A
       successful YYFILL call must supply at least one character and adjust input positions  accordingly.  Limit
       must  always  be  set  to  one  after  the  last input position in buffer, and the character at the limit
       position must be the sentinel symbol specified by re2c:eof configuration. The  pictures  below  show  the
       relative  locations  of input positions in buffer before and after YYFILL call (sentinel symbol is marked
       with #, and the second picture shows the case when there is not enough input to fill the whole buffer).

                         <-- shift -->
                       >-A------------B---------C-------------D#-----------E->
                       buffer       token    marker         limit,
                                                            cursor
          >-A------------B---------C-------------D------------E#->
                       buffer,  marker        cursor        limit
                       token

                         <-- shift -->
                       >-A------------B---------C-------------D#--E (EOF)
                       buffer       token    marker         limit,
                                                            cursor
          >-A------------B---------C-------------D---E#........
                       buffer,  marker       cursor limit
                       token

       Here is an example of a program that reads input file input.txt in chunks of  4096  bytes  and  uses  EOF
       rule.

          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT

          from enum import Enum
          import os

          BUFSIZE = 4096

          class State:
              def __init__(self, fname):
                  self.file = open(fname, "rb")
                  self.yyinput = bytearray(BUFSIZE)
                  self.yylimit = BUFSIZE - 1 # exclude terminating null
                  self.yycursor = self.yylimit
                  self.yymarker = self.yylimit
                  self.token = self.yylimit
                  self.eof = False

              def __del__(self):
                  self.file.close()

          class Status(Enum):
              OK = 0
              EOF = 1
              LONG_LEXEME = 2

          def fill(st):
              if st.eof:
                  return Status.EOF

              # Error: lexeme too long. In real life could reallocate a larger buffer.
              if st.token < 1:
                  return Status.LONG_LEXEME

              # Shift buffer contents (discard everything up to the current token).
              st.yyinput = st.yyinput[st.token:st.yylimit]
              st.yycursor -= st.token;
              st.yymarker -= st.token;
              st.yylimit -= st.token;
              st.token = 0;

              # Fill free space at the end of buffer with new data from file.
              bytes = st.file.read(BUFSIZE - st.yylimit - 1) # -1 for sentinel
              if not bytes:
                  st.eof = True # end of file
              else:
                  st.yylimit += len(bytes);
                  st.yyinput += bytes

              st.yyinput += b'\0' # append sentinel

              return Status.OK

          def lex(yyrecord, count):
              while True:
                  yyrecord.token = yyrecord.yycursor
              %{
                  re2c:api = record;
                  re2c:define:YYFILL = "fill(yyrecord) == Status.OK";
                  re2c:eof = 0;
                  re2c:indent:top = 2;

                  str = ['] ([^'\\] | [\\][^])* ['];

                  *    { return -1 }
                  $    { return count }
                  [ ]+ { break }
                  str  {
                      count += 1
                      break
                  }
              %}

          def main():
              fname = "input"

              # Prepare input file.
              f = open(fname, "w")
              for i in range(BUFSIZE):
                  f.write("'qu\0tes' 'are' 'fine: \\'' ")
              f.close()

              # Run lexer on the prepared file.
              st = State(fname)
              assert lex(st, 0) == 3 * BUFSIZE

              # Cleanup.
              os.remove(fname)

          if __name__ == '__main__':
              main()

   YYFILL with padding
       In the default case (when EOF rule is not used) YYFILL is a function-like primitive that accepts a single
       argument and does not return any value.  YYFILL invocation is triggered by condition (YYLIMIT - YYCURSOR)
       <  n  in  C  pointer  API  and YYLESSTHAN(n) in generic API. The argument passed to YYFILL is the minimal
       number of characters that must be supplied. If it fails to do so, YYFILL must not  return  to  the  lexer
       (for  that  reason  it is best implemented as a macro that returns from the calling function on failure).
       In case of a successful YYFILL invocation the limit position must be set either to  one  after  the  last
       input  position  in  buffer,  or to the end of YYMAXFILL padding (in case YYFILL has successfully read at
       least n characters, but not enough to fill the entire buffer).  The  pictures  below  show  the  relative
       locations  of  input  positions  in  buffer  before and after YYFILL invocation (YYMAXFILL padding on the
       second picture is marked with # symbols).

                         <-- shift -->                 <-- need -->
                       >-A------------B---------C-----D-------E---F--------G->
                       buffer       token    marker cursor  limit

          >-A------------B---------C-----D-------E---F--------G->
                       buffer,  marker cursor               limit
                       token

                         <-- shift -->                 <-- need -->
                       >-A------------B---------C-----D-------E-F        (EOF)
                       buffer       token    marker cursor  limit

          >-A------------B---------C-----D-------E-F###############
                       buffer,  marker cursor                   limit
                       token                        <- YYMAXFILL ->

       Here is an example of a program that reads input  file  input.txt  in  chunks  of  4096  bytes  and  uses
       bounds-checking with padding.

          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT

          from enum import Enum
          import os

          BUFSIZE = 4096
          %{max %}

          class State:
              def __init__(self, fname):
                  self.file = open(fname, "rb")
                  self.yyinput = bytearray(BUFSIZE)
                  self.yylimit = BUFSIZE - YYMAXFILL
                  self.yycursor = self.yylimit
                  self.yymarker = self.yylimit
                  self.token = self.yylimit
                  self.eof = False

              def __del__(self):
                  self.file.close()

          class Status(Enum):
              OK = 0
              EOF = 1
              LONG_LEXEME = 2

          def fill(st, need):
              if st.eof:
                  return Status.EOF

              # Error: lexeme too long. In real life could reallocate a larger buffer.
              if st.token < need:
                  return Status.LONG_LEXEME

              # Shift buffer contents (discard everything up to the current token).
              st.yyinput = st.yyinput[st.token:st.yylimit]
              st.yycursor -= st.token;
              st.yymarker -= st.token;
              st.yylimit -= st.token;
              st.token = 0;

              # Fill free space at the end of buffer with new data from file.
              bytes = st.file.read(BUFSIZE - st.yylimit - 1) # -1 for sentinel
              if not bytes:
                  st.eof = True # end of file
                  st.yylimit += YYMAXFILL
                  st.yyinput += b"\0" * YYMAXFILL
              else:
                  st.yylimit += len(bytes);
                  st.yyinput += bytes

              return Status.OK

          def lex(yyrecord):
              count = 0
              while True:
                  yyrecord.token = yyrecord.yycursor
              %{
                  re2c:api = record;
                  re2c:YYFILL = "if fill(yyrecord, @@) != Status.OK: return -1";
                  re2c:indent:top = 2;

                  str = ['] ([^'\\] | [\\][^])* ['];

                  [\x00] {
                      # Check that it is the sentinel, not some unexpected null.
                      return count if yyrecord.token == yyrecord.yylimit - YYMAXFILL else -1
                  }
                  str {
                      count += 1
                      break
                  }
                  [ ]+ { break }
                  *    { return -1 }
              %}

          def main():
              fname = "input"

              # Prepare input file.
              f = open(fname, "w")
              for i in range(BUFSIZE):
                  f.write("'qu\0tes' 'are' 'fine: \\'' ")
              f.close()

              # Run lexer on the prepared file.
              st = State(fname)
              assert lex(st) == 3 * BUFSIZE

              # Cleanup.
              os.remove(fname)

          if __name__ == '__main__':
              main()

Features

   Multiple blocks
       Sometimes  it  is  necessary  to have multiple interrelated lexers (for example, if there is a high-level
       state machine that transitions between lexer modes). This can be  implemented  using  multiple  connected
       re2py blocks. Another option is to use start conditions.

       The  implementation of connections between blocks depends on the target language.  In languages that have
       goto statement (such as C/C++ and Go) one can have all blocks in one function, each of them prefixed with
       a label. Transition from one block to another is a simple goto.  In languages that do not have goto (such
       as Rust) it is necessary to use a loop with a  switch  on  a  state  variable,  similar  to  the  yystate
       loop/switch generated by re2py, or else wrap each block in a function and use function calls.

       The example below uses multiple blocks to parse binary, octal, decimal and hexadecimal numbers. Each base
       has  its  own  block.  The  initial  block  determines  base  and  dispatches  to  other  blocks.  Common
       configurations are defined in a separate block at the beginning of the program; they are inherited by the
       other blocks.

          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT

          class State:
              def __init__(self, str):
                  self.yyinput = str
                  self.yycursor = 0
                  self.yymarker = 0

          # Common re2c definitions shared between all functions.
          %{
              re2c:api = record;
              re2c:yyrecord = st;
              re2c:yyfill:enable = 0;
              re2c:indent:top = 2;
          %}

          def parse_u32(str):
              st = State(str)
          %{local
              re2c:indent:top = 1;

              '0b' / [01]        { return parse_bin(st) }
              "0"                { return parse_oct(st) }
              "" / [1-9]         { return parse_dec(st) }
              '0x' / [0-9a-fA-F] { return parse_hex(st) }
              *                  { return None }
          %}

          def parse_bin(st):
              n = 0
              while True: %{
                  [01] {
                      n = n * 2 + (st.yyinput[st.yycursor - 1] - 48)
                      break
                  }
                  * { return n }
              %}

          def parse_oct(st):
              n = 0
              while True: %{
                  [0-7] {
                      n = n * 8 + (st.yyinput[st.yycursor - 1] - 48)
                      break
                  }
                  * { return n }
              %}

          def parse_dec(st):
              n = 0
              while True: %{
                  [0-9] {
                      n = n * 10 + (st.yyinput[st.yycursor - 1] - 48)
                      break
                  }
                  * { return n }
              %}

          def parse_hex(st):
              n = 0
              while True: %{
                  [0-9] {
                      n = n * 16 + (st.yyinput[st.yycursor - 1] - 48)
                      break
                  }
                  [a-f] {
                      n = n * 16 + (st.yyinput[st.yycursor - 1] - 87)
                      break
                  }
                  [A-F] {
                      n = n * 16 + (st.yyinput[st.yycursor - 1] - 55)
                      break
                  }
                  * { return n }
              %}

          assert parse_u32(b"\0") == None
          assert parse_u32(b"1234567890\0") == 1234567890
          assert parse_u32(b"0b1101\0") == 13
          assert parse_u32(b"0x7Fe\0") == 2046
          assert parse_u32(b"0644\0") == 420
          assert parse_u32(b"9999999999\0") == 9999999999

   Start conditions
       Start conditions are enabled with --start-conditions option.  They  provide  a  way  to  encode  multiple
       interrelated automata within the same re2py block.

       Each condition corresponds to a single automaton and has a unique name specified by the user and a unique
       internal  number  defined by re2py. The numbers are used to switch between conditions: the generated code
       uses YYGETCOND and YYSETCOND primitives to get the current condition or set it to the given  number.  Use
       conditions block, --header option or re2c:header configuration to generate numeric condition identifiers.
       Configuration re2c:cond:enumprefix specifies the generated identifier prefix.

       In  condition  mode  every  rule must be prefixed with a list of comma-separated condition names in angle
       brackets, or a wildcard <*> to denote all conditions. The rule syntax is extended as follows:

          < condition-list > regular-expression code
                 A rule that is merged to every condition on the condition-list.  It matches  regular-expression
                 and executes the associated code.

          < condition-list > regular-expression => condition code
                 A rule that is merged to every condition on the condition-list.  It matches regular-expression,
                 sets the current condition to condition and executes the associated code.

          < condition-list > regular-expression :=> condition
                 A  rule that is merged to every condition on the condition-list.  It matches regular-expression
                 and immediately transitions to condition (there is no semantic action).

          < condition-list > !action code
                 A rule that binds code to the place defined by action in every condition on the  condition-list
                 (see the actions section for various types of actions).

          <! condition-list > code
                 A  rule  that  prepends  code  to  semantic  actions  of  all  rules for every condition on the
                 condition-list. This syntax is deprecated and the !pre_rule action should be used  instead  (it
                 does exactly the same).

          < > code
                 A  rule that creates a special entry condition with number zero and name "0" that executes code
                 before jumping to other conditions.  This syntax is deprecated, and the !entry action should be
                 used instead (it provides a more fine-grained control, as  the  code  can  be  specified  on  a
                 per-condition  basis,  and  one  can  jump  directly  to  condition start without going through
                 condition dispatch).

          < > => condition code
                 Same as the previous rule, except that it sets the next condition.

          < > :=> condition
                 Same as the previous rule, except that it has no  associated  code  and  immediately  jumps  to
                 condition.

       The  code re2py generates for conditions depends on whether re2py uses goto/label approach or loop/switch
       approach to encode the automata.

       In languages that have goto statement (such as C/C++ and Go)  conditions  are  naturally  implemented  as
       blocks  of code prefixed with labels of the form yyc_<cond>, where cond is a condition name (label prefix
       can be changed with re2c:cond:prefix). Transitions between conditions  are  implemented  using  goto  and
       condition labels. Before all conditions re2py generates an initial switch on YYGETSTATE that jumps to the
       start state of the current condition.  The shortcut rules :=> bypass the initial switch and jump directly
       to  the  specified  condition (re2c:cond:goto can be used to change the default behavior). The rules with
       semantic actions do not automatically jump to the next condition; this should be done by the user-defined
       action code.

       In languages that do not have goto (such as Rust) re2py reuses the yystate variable  to  store  condition
       numbers.  Each  condition  gets a numeric identifier equal to the number of its start state, and a switch
       between conditions is no different than a switch between DFA states of a single condition.  There  is  no
       need  for  a  separate  initial condition switch.  (Since the same approach is used to implement storable
       states, YYGETCOND/YYSETCOND are redundant if both storable states and conditions are used).

       The program below uses start conditions to parse binary, octal, decimal and hexadecimal numbers. There is
       a single block where each base has its own condition, and the initial condition is connected  to  all  of
       them.  User-defined variable cond stores the current condition number; it is initialized to the number of
       the initial condition generated with conditions block.

          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT -c

          %{conditions %}

          def parse_u32(yyinput):
              yycursor = 0
              yycond = YYC_INIT
              num = 0

              while True: %{
                  re2c:yyfill:enable = 0;
                  re2c:indent:top = 2;

                  <INIT> '0b' / [01]        :=> BIN
                  <INIT> "0"                :=> OCT
                  <INIT> "" / [1-9]         :=> DEC
                  <INIT> '0x' / [0-9a-fA-F] :=> HEX
                  <INIT> * { return None }

                  <BIN> [01] {
                      num = num * 2 + (yyinput[yycursor - 1] - 48)
                      break
                  }
                  <OCT> [0-7] {
                      num = num * 8 + (yyinput[yycursor - 1] - 48)
                      break
                  }
                  <DEC> [0-9] {
                      num = num * 10 + (yyinput[yycursor - 1] - 48)
                      break
                  }
                  <HEX> [0-9] {
                      num = num * 16 + (yyinput[yycursor - 1] - 48)
                      break
                  }
                  <HEX> [a-f] {
                      num = num * 16 + (yyinput[yycursor - 1] - 87)
                      break
                  }
                  <HEX> [A-F] {
                      num = num * 16 + (yyinput[yycursor - 1] - 55)
                      break
                  }

                  <BIN, OCT, DEC, HEX> * { return num }
              %}

          assert parse_u32(b"\0") == None
          assert parse_u32(b"1234567890\0") == 1234567890
          assert parse_u32(b"0b1101\0") == 13
          assert parse_u32(b"0x7Fe\0") == 2046
          assert parse_u32(b"0644\0") == 420
          assert parse_u32(b"9999999999\0") == 9999999999

   Storable state
       With --storable-state option re2py generates a lexer that can store its  current  state,  return  to  the
       caller,  and later resume operations exactly where it left off. The default mode of operation in re2py is
       a "pull" model, in which the lexer "pulls" more input whenever it needs it. This may be  unacceptable  in
       cases  when  the  input  becomes  available  piece  by piece (for example, if the lexer is invoked by the
       parser, or if the lexer program communicates via a socket protocol with some other program that must wait
       for a reply from the lexer before it transmits the next message).  Storable  state  feature  is  intended
       exactly  for  such  cases:  it  allows one to generate lexers that work in a "push" model. When the lexer
       needs more input, it stores its state  and  returns  to  the  caller.  Later,  when  more  input  becomes
       available,  the  caller  resumes  the  lexer  exactly where it stopped. There are a few changes necessary
       compared to the "pull" model:

       • Define YYSETSTATE() and YYGETSTATE(state) primitives.

       • Define yych, yyaccept (if used) and state variables as a part of  persistent  lexer  state.  The  state
         variable should be initialized to -1.

       • YYFILL  should  return  to the outer program instead of trying to supply more input. Return code should
         indicate that lexer needs more input.

       • The outer program should recognize situations when lexer needs more input and respond appropriately.

       • Optionally use getstate block to generate YYGETSTATE switch detached from the  main  lexer.  This  only
         works for languages that have goto (not in --loop-switch mode).

       • Use  re2c:eof  and  the  sentinel  with  bounds checks method to handle the end of input. Padding-based
         method may not work because it is unclear when to append padding: the current end of input may  not  be
         the  ultimate end of input, and appending padding too early may cut off a partially read greedy lexeme.
         Furthermore, due to high-level program logic getting more input may depend on processing the lexeme  at
         the end of buffer (which already is blocked due to the end-of-input condition).

       Here  is an example of a "push" model lexer that simulates reading packets from a socket. The lexer loops
       until it encounters the end of input and returns to the calling function. The calling  function  provides
       more  input by "sending" the next packet and resumes lexing. This process stops when all the packets have
       been sent, or when there is an error.

          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT -f

          from enum import Enum
          import os

          # Use a small buffer to cover the case when a lexeme doesn't fit.
          # In real world use a larger buffer.
          BUFSIZE = 10
          DEBUG = False

          class State:
              def __init__(self, file):
                  self.file = file
                  self.yyinput = bytearray(BUFSIZE)
                  self.yylimit = BUFSIZE - 1 # exclude terminating null
                  self.yycursor = self.yylimit
                  self.yymarker = self.yylimit
                  self.token = self.yylimit
                  self.yystate = -1

          class Status(Enum):
              END = 0
              READY = 1
              WAITING = 2
              BIG_PACKET = 3
              BAD_PACKET = 4

          def fill(st):
              # Error: lexeme too long. In real life could reallocate a larger buffer.
              if st.token < 1:
                  return Status.BIG_PACKET

              # Shift buffer contents (discard everything up to the current token).
              st.yyinput = st.yyinput[st.token:st.yylimit]
              st.yycursor -= st.token;
              st.yymarker -= st.token;
              st.yylimit -= st.token;
              st.token = 0;

              # Fill free space at the end of buffer with new data from file.
              bytes = st.file.read(BUFSIZE - st.yylimit - 1) # -1 for sentinel
              if bytes:
                  st.yylimit += len(bytes);
                  st.yyinput += bytes

              st.yyinput += b'\0' # append sentinel

              return Status.READY

          def lex(yyrecord, recv):
              while True:
                  yyrecord.token = yyrecord.yycursor
              %{
                  re2c:api = record;
                  re2c:YYFILL = "return Status.WAITING, recv";
                  re2c:eof = 0;
                  re2c:indent:top = 2;

                  packet = [a-z]+[;];

                  *      { return Status.BAD_PACKET, recv }
                  $      { return Status.END, recv }
                  packet {
                      recv += 1
                      break
                  }
              %}

          def test(packets, expect):
              # Create a pipe (open the same file for reading and writing).
              fname = "pipe"
              fw = open(fname, "wb")
              fr = open(fname, "rb")

              # Initialize lexer state
              st = State(fr)

              # Main loop. The buffer contains incomplete data which appears packet by
              # packet. When the lexer needs more input it saves its internal state and
              # returns to the caller which should provide more input and resume lexing.
              send = 0
              recv = 0
              while True:
                  status, recv = lex(st, recv)

                  if status == Status.END:
                      if DEBUG: print("done: got {} packets".format(recv))
                      break

                  elif status == Status.WAITING:
                      if DEBUG: print("waiting...");

                      if send < len(packets):
                          if DEBUG: print("sent packet {}: {}".format(send, packets[send]))
                          fw.write(packets[send])
                          fw.flush()
                          send += 1

                      status = fill(st)
                      if DEBUG: print("queue: '{}', status: {}".format(st.yyinput, status))
                      if status == Status.BIG_PACKET:
                          if DEBUG: print("error: packet too big")
                          break

                      assert status == Status.READY

                  else:
                      assert status == Status.BAD_PACKET
                      if DEBUG: print("error: ill-formed packet")
                      break

              # Check results.
              assert status == expect
              if status == Status.END:
                  assert recv == send

              # Cleanup: remove input file.
              fr.close()
              fw.close()
              os.remove(fname)

          def main():
              test([], Status.END)
              test([b"zero;", b"one;", b"two;", b"three;", b"four;"], Status.END)
              test([b"zer0;"], Status.BAD_PACKET)
              test([b"goooooooooogle;"], Status.BIG_PACKET)

          if __name__ == '__main__':
              main()

   Reusable blocks
       Reusable blocks of the form /*!rules:re2c[:<name>] ... */ or %{rules[:<name>] ... %} can  be  reused  any
       number  of  times and combined with other re2py blocks. The <name> is optional. A rules block can be used
       in a use block or directive. The code for a rules block is generated at every point of use.

       Use blocks are defined with /*!use:re2c[:<name>] ... */ or %{use[:<name>] ... %}. The <name> is optional:
       if it's not specified, the associated rules block is the most recent one (whether named or  unnamed).   A
       use  block can add named definitions, configurations and rules of its own.  An important use case for use
       blocks is a lexer that supports multiple input encodings: the same rules block is reused  multiple  times
       with encoding-specific configurations (see the example below).

       In-block  use  directive  !use:<name>; can be used from inside of a re2py block. It merges the referenced
       block <name> into the current one. If some of the  merged  rules  and  configurations  overlap  with  the
       previously  defined  ones, conflicts are resolved in the usual way: the earliest rule takes priority, and
       latest configuration overrides preceding ones. One exception are the special rules *, $ and (in condition
       mode) <!>, for which a block-local definition overrides any inherited ones. Use directive allows  one  to
       combine different re2py blocks together in one block (see the example below).

       Named  blocks  and  in-block  use directive were added in re2py version 2.2.  Since that version reusable
       blocks are allowed by default (no special option is needed). Before version 2.2 reuse  mode  was  enabled
       with -r --reusable option. Before version 1.2 reusable blocks could not be mixed with normal blocks.

   Example of a !use directive
          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT

          # This example shows how to combine reusable re2c blocks: two blocks
          # ('colors' and 'fish') are merged into one. The 'salmon' rule occurs
          # in both blocks; the 'fish' block takes priority because it is used
          # earlier. Default rule * occurs in all three blocks; the local (not
          # inherited) definition takes priority.

          from enum import Enum

          class Ans(Enum):
              COLOR = 1
              FISH = 2
              DUNNO = 3

          %{rules:colors
              *                            { raise "ah" }
              "red" | "salmon" | "magenta" { return Ans.COLOR }
          %}

          %{rules:fish
              *                            { raise "oh" }
              "haddock" | "salmon" | "eel" { return Ans.FISH }
          %}

          def lex(yyinput):
              yycursor = 0
          %{
              re2c:yyfill:enable = 0;
              re2c:indent:top = 1;

              !use:fish;
              !use:colors;
              * { return Ans.DUNNO } // overrides inherited '*' rules
          %}

          assert lex(b"salmon") == Ans.FISH
          assert lex(b"what?") == Ans.DUNNO

   Example of a /*!use:re2c ... */ block
          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT --input-encoding utf8

          # This example supports multiple input encodings: UTF-8 and UTF-32.
          # Both lexers are generated from the same rules block, and the use
          # blocks add only encoding-specific configurations.
          %{rules
              re2c:yyfill:enable = 0;
              re2c:indent:top = 1;

              "∀x ∃y" { return yycursor }
              *       { return None }
          %}

          def lex_utf8(yyinput):
              yycursor = 0
              %{use
                  re2c:encoding:utf8 = 1;
              %}

          def lex_utf32(yyinput):
              yycursor = 0
              %{use
                  re2c:encoding:utf32 = 1;
              %}

          s8 = [0xe2, 0x88, 0x80, 0x78, 0x20, 0xe2, 0x88, 0x83, 0x79]
          assert lex_utf8(s8) == len(s8)

          s32 = [0x2200, 0x78, 0x20, 0x2203, 0x79]
          assert lex_utf32(s32) == len(s32)

   Submatch extraction
       re2py has two options for submatch extraction.

       Tags   The  first  option  is  to use standalone tags of the form @stag or #mtag, where stag and mtag are
              arbitrary used-defined  names.   Tags  are  enabled  with  -T  --tags  option  or  re2c:tags  =  1
              configuration.  Semantically tags are position markers: they can be inserted anywhere in a regular
              expression, and they bind to the corresponding position  (or  multiple  positions)  in  the  input
              string.   S-tags  bind to the last matching position, and m-tags bind to a list of positions (they
              may be used in repetition  subexpressions,  where  a  single  position  in  a  regular  expression
              corresponds  to  multiple  positions in the input string). All tags should be defined by the user,
              either manually or with the help of svars and mvars blocks. If there is more than one way tags can
              be matched against the input, ambiguity is resolved using leftmost greedy disambiguation strategy.

       Captures
              The second option is to  use  capturing  groups.  They  are  enabled  with  --captures  option  or
              re2c:captures  =  1  configuration.  There are two flavours for different disambiguation policies,
              --leftmost-captures (the default) is for leftmost greedy  policy,  and,  --posix-captures  is  for
              POSIX longest-match policy. In this mode all parenthesized subexpressions are considered capturing
              groups,  and  a  bang  can  be used to mark non-capturing groups: (! ... ). With --invert-captures
              option or re2c:invert-captures = 1 configuration the meaning of bang is inverted.  The  number  of
              groups  for  the  matching  rule is stored in a variable yynmatch (the whole regular expression is
              group number zero), and submatch results are stored in yypmatch array. Both yynmatch and  yypmatch
              should  be  defined  by the user, and yypmatch size must be at least [yynmatch * 2]. Use maxnmatch
              block to  define YYMAXNMATCH, a constant that equals to the maximum value of  yynmatch  among  all
              rules.

       Captvars
              Another  way  to use capturing groups is the --captvars option or re2c:captvars = 1 configuration.
              The only difference with --captures is in the way the  generated  code  stores  submatch  results:
              instead  of yynmatch and yypmatch re2py generates variables yytl<k> and yytr<k> for k-th capturing
              group (the user should declare these using an svars block). Captures with  variables  support  two
              disambiguation  policies:  --leftmost-captvars  or  re2c:leftmost-captvars = 1 for leftmost greedy
              policy (the default one) and  --posix-captvars  or  re2c:posix-captvars  for  POSIX  longest-match
              policy.

       Under  the  hood  all  these  options  translate  into tags and Tagged Deterministic Finite Automata with
       Lookahead <https://arxiv.org/abs/1907.08837>.  The core idea of TDFA  is  to  minimize  the  overhead  on
       submatch  extraction.   In  the extreme, if there're no tags or captures in a regular expression, TDFA is
       just an ordinary DFA. If the number of tags is moderate, the overhead is barely noticeable. The generated
       TDFA uses a number of tag variables which do not map directly to tags: a single variable may be used  for
       different  tags,  and  a  tag  may require multiple variables to hold all its possible values. Eventually
       ambiguity is resolved, and only one final variable per tag survives.  Tag  variables  should  be  defined
       using stags or mtags blocks. If lexer state is stored, tag variables should be part of it. They also need
       to be updated  by YYFILL.

       S-tags support the following operations:

       • save input position to an s-tag: t = YYCURSOR with C pointer API or a user-defined operation YYSTAGP(t)
         with generic API

       • save default value to an s-tag: t = NULL with C pointer API or a user-defined operation YYSTAGN(t) with
         generic API

       • copy one s-tag to another: t1 = t2

       M-tags support the following operations:

       • append  input  position  to an m-tag: a user-defined operation YYMTAGP(t) with both default and generic
         API

       • append default value to an m-tag: a user-defined operation YYMTAGN(t) with both default and generic API

       • copy one m-tag to another: t1 = t2

       S-tags can  be  implemented  as  scalar  values  (pointers  or  offsets).  M-tags  need  a  more  complex
       representation,  as  they  need  to  store  a  sequence  of  tag  values.  The most naive and inefficient
       representation of an m-tag is a list (array, vector) of tag values; a more efficient representation is to
       store all m-tags in a prefix-tree represented as array of nodes (v, p), where v is tag value and p  is  a
       pointer to parent node.

       Here  is  a  simple  example  of  using  s-tags  to  parse  semantic versions consisting of three numeric
       components: major, minor, patch (the latter is optional).  See below for a more complex example that uses
       YYFILL.

          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT

          from collections import namedtuple

          SemVer = namedtuple('SemVer', 'major minor patch')

          NONE = -1

          def parse(yyinput):
              yycursor = 0
          %{
              re2c:yyfill:enable = 0;
              re2c:tags = 1;
              re2c:indent:top = 1;

              num = [0-9]+;

              @t1 num @t2 "." @t3 num @t4 ("." @t5 num)? [\x00] {
                  major = int(yyinput[t1:t2])
                  minor = int(yyinput[t3:t4])
                  patch = int(yyinput[t5:yycursor - 1]) if t5 != NONE else 0
                  return SemVer(major, minor, patch)
              }
              * { return None }
          %}

          assert parse(b"23.34\0") == SemVer(23, 34, 0)
          assert parse(b"1.2.99999\0") == SemVer(1, 2, 99999)
          assert parse(b"1.a\0") == None

       Here is a more complex example of using s-tags  with  YYFILL  to  parse  a  file  with  newline-separated
       semantic  versions. Tag variables are part of the lexer state, and they are adjusted in YYFILL like other
       input positions.  Note that it is necessary  for  s-tags  because  their  values  are  invalidated  after
       shifting  buffer  contents.  It may not be necessary in a custom implementation where tag variables store
       offsets relative to the start of the input string rather than the buffer, which  may  be  the  case  with
       m-tags.

          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT

          from collections import namedtuple
          from enum import Enum
          import os

          BUFSIZE = 4096

          SemVer = namedtuple('SemVer', 'major minor patch')

          class State:
              def __init__(self, fname):
                  self.file = open(fname, "rb")
                  self.yyinput = bytearray(BUFSIZE)
                  self.yylimit = BUFSIZE - 1 # exclude terminating null
                  self.yycursor = self.yylimit
                  self.yymarker = self.yylimit
                  self.token = self.yylimit
                  self.eof = False
                  %{stags format = "\n        self.@@ = -1"; %}

              def __del__(self):
                  self.file.close()

          class Status(Enum):
              OK = 0
              EOF = 1
              LONG_LEXEME = 2

          def fill(st):
              if st.eof:
                  return Status.EOF

              # Error: lexeme too long. In real life could reallocate a larger buffer.
              if st.token < 1:
                  return Status.LONG_LEXEME

              # Shift buffer contents (discard everything up to the current token).
              st.yyinput = st.yyinput[st.token:st.yylimit]
              st.yycursor -= st.token;
              st.yymarker -= st.token;
              st.yylimit -= st.token;
              %{stags format = "\n    if st.@@ != -1: st.@@ -= st.token"; %}
              st.token = 0;

              # Fill free space at the end of buffer with new data from file.
              bytes = st.file.read(BUFSIZE - st.yylimit - 1) # -1 for sentinel
              if not bytes:
                  st.eof = True # end of file
              else:
                  st.yylimit += len(bytes);
                  st.yyinput += bytes

              st.yyinput += b'\0' # append sentinel

              return Status.OK

          def lex(st, count):
              vers = []
              while True:
                  st.token = st.yycursor
              %{
                  re2c:api = record;
                  re2c:yyrecord = st;
                  re2c:YYFILL = "fill(st) == Status.OK";
                  re2c:eof = 0;
                  re2c:indent:top = 2;
                  re2c:tags = 1;

                  num = [0-9]+;

                  num @t1 "." @t2 num @t3 ("." @t4 num)? [\n] {
                      major = int(st.yyinput[st.token:t1])
                      minor = int(st.yyinput[t2:t3])
                      patch = int(st.yyinput[t4:st.yycursor - 1]) if t4 != -1 else 0
                      vers.append(SemVer(major, minor, patch))
                      break
                  }
                  $ { return vers }
                  * { return None }
              %}

          def main():
              fname = "input"
              verstr = b"1.22.333\n"
              expect = [SemVer(1, 22, 333)] * BUFSIZE

              # Prepare input file.
              f = open(fname, "wb")
              for i in range(BUFSIZE):
                  f.write(verstr)
              f.close()

              # Run lexer on the prepared file.
              st = State(fname)
              assert lex(st, 0) == expect

              # Cleanup.
              os.remove(fname)

          if __name__ == '__main__':
              main()

       Here is an example of using capturing groups to parse semantic versions.

          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT

          from collections import namedtuple

          SemVer = namedtuple('SemVer', 'major minor patch')

          NONE = -1

          def parse(yyinput):
              yycursor = 0
          %{
              re2c:yyfill:enable = 0;
              re2c:captvars = 1;
              re2c:indent:top = 1;

              num = [0-9]+;

              (num) "." (num) ("." num)? [\x00] {
                  major = int(yyinput[yytl1:yytr1])
                  minor = int(yyinput[yytl2:yytr2])
                  patch = 0 if yytl3 == NONE else int(yyinput[yytl3 + 1:yytr3])
                  return SemVer(major, minor, patch)
              }
              * { return None }
          %}

          assert parse(b"23.34\0") == SemVer(23, 34, 0)
          assert parse(b"1.2.99999\0") == SemVer(1, 2, 99999)
          assert parse(b"1.a\0") == None

       Here is an example of using m-tags to parse a version with a variable number of components. Tag variables
       are stored in a trie.

          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT

          NONE = -1

          def parse(yyinput):
              yycursor = 0
              %{mtags format = '\n    @@ = []'; %} # autogenerated tag variables

          %{
              re2c:YYMTAGP = "@@.append(yycursor)";
              re2c:YYMTAGN = ""; // do nothing
              re2c:yyfill:enable = 0;
              re2c:tags = 1;
              re2c:indent:top = 1;

              num = [0-9]+;

              @t1 num @t2 ("." #t3 num #t4)* [\x00] {
                  vers = [int(yyinput[t1:t2])]
                  for i in range(len(t3)):
                      vers.append(int(yyinput[t3[i]:t4[i]]))
                  return vers
              }
              * { return None }
          %}

          assert parse(b"1\0") == [1]
          assert parse(b"1.2.3.4.5.6.7\0") == [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]
          assert parse(b"1.2.\0") == None

   Encoding support
       It  is  necessary  to  understand  the  difference  between code points and code units. A code point is a
       numeric identifier of a symbol. A code unit is the smallest unit of storage in the encoded text. A single
       code point may be represented with one or more code units. In a fixed-length encoding all code points are
       represented with the same number of code  units.  In  a  variable-length  encoding  code  points  may  be
       represented  with a different number of code units.  Note that the "any" rule [^] matches any code point,
       but not necessarily any code unit (the only way to match any code unit regardless of the encoding is  the
       default  rule  *).   The  generated lexer works with a stream of code units: yych stores a code unit, and
       YYCTYPE is the code unit type. Regular expressions, on the other hand, are specified  in  terms  of  code
       points. When re2py compiles regular expressions to automata it translates code points to code units. This
       is  generally  not  a  simple  mapping:  in  variable-length  encodings a single code point range may get
       translated to a complex code unit graph.  The following encodings are supported:

       • ASCII (enabled by default). It is a fixed-length encoding with  code  space  [0-255]  and  1-byte  code
         points and code units.

       • EBCDIC  (enabled  with --ebcdic or re2c:encoding:ebcdic). It is a fixed-length encoding with code space
         [0-255] and 1-byte code points and code units.

       • UCS2 (enabled with --ucs2 or re2c:encoding:ucs2).  It  is  a  fixed-length  encoding  with  code  space
         [0-0xFFFF] and 2-byte code points and code units.

       • UTF8  (enabled  with --utf8 or re2c:encoding:utf8). It is a variable-length Unicode encoding. Code unit
         size is 1 byte. Code points are represented with 1 -- 4 code units.

       • UTF16 (enabled with --utf16 or re2c:encoding:utf16). It is a  variable-length  Unicode  encoding.  Code
         unit size is 2 bytes. Code points are represented with 1 -- 2 code units.

       • UTF32  (enabled  with  --utf32 or re2c:encoding:utf32). It is a fixed-length Unicode encoding with code
         space [0-0x10FFFF] and 4-byte code points and code units.

       Include  file  include/unicode_categories.re  provides  re2py  definitions  for  the   standard   Unicode
       categories.

       Option  --input-encoding  specifies source file encoding, which can be used to enable Unicode literals in
       regular expressions. For example --input-encoding utf8 tells re2py that the source file is  in  UTF8  (it
       differs  from  --utf8  which  sets input text encoding). Option --encoding-policy specifies the way re2py
       handles Unicode surrogates (code points in range [0xD800-0xDFFF]).

       Below is an example of a lexer for UTF8 encoded Unicode identifiers.

          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT --utf8

          %{include "unicode_categories.re" %}

          def lex(yyinput):
              yycursor = 0
          %{
              re2c:yyfill:enable = 0;
              re2c:indent:top = 1;

              // Simplified "Unicode Identifier and Pattern Syntax"
              // (see https://unicode.org/reports/tr31)
              id_start    = L | Nl | [$_];
              id_continue = id_start | Mn | Mc | Nd | Pc | [\u200D\u05F3];
              identifier  = id_start id_continue*;

              identifier { return True }
              *          { return False }
          %}

          assert lex(bytes("_Ыдентификатор\0", "utf-8"))

   Include files
       re2py allows one to include other files using a block of the form /*!include:re2c FILE  */  or  %{include
       FILE  %},  or  an  in-block  directive  !include FILE ;, where FILE is a path to the file to be included.
       re2py looks for include files in the directory of the including file and in include locations, which  can
       be  specified  with  the  -I  option.  Include  blocks/directives  in re2py work in the same way as C/C++
       #include: FILE contents are copy-pasted verbatim in place of the block/directive. Include files may  have
       further  includes  of  their  own. Use --depfile option to track build dependencies of the output file on
       include files.  re2py provides  some  predefined  include  files  that  can  be  found  in  the  include/
       subdirectory  of  the project. These files contain definitions that may be useful to other projects (such
       as Unicode categories) and form something like a standard library for re2py. Below is an example of using
       include files.

   Include file 1 (definitions.py)
          from enum import Enum

          class Num(Enum):
              INT = 1
              FLOAT = 2
              NAN = 3

          %{
              number = [1-9][0-9]*;
          %}

   Include file 2 (extra_rules.re.inc)
          // floating-point numbers
          frac  = [0-9]* "." [0-9]+ | [0-9]+ ".";
          exp   = 'e' [+-]? [0-9]+;
          float = frac exp? | [0-9]+ exp;

          float { return Num.FLOAT }

   Input file
          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT

          %{include "definitions.py" %}

          def lex(yyinput):
              yycursor = 0
          %{
              re2c:yyfill:enable = 0;
              re2c:indent:top = 1;

              *      { return Num.NAN }
              number { return Num.INT }
              !include "extra_rules.re.inc";
          %}

          assert lex(b"123\0") == Num.INT
          assert lex(b"123.4567\0") == Num.FLOAT

   Header files
       re2py allows one to generate header file from the input .re file using  --header  option  or  re2c:header
       configuration  and block pairs of the form /*!header:re2c:on*/ and /*!header:re2c:off*/, or %{header:on%}
       and %{header:off%}. The first block marks the beginning of header file, and the second  block  marks  the
       end  of  it.  Everything between these blocks is processed by re2py, and the generated code is written to
       the file specified with --header option or re2c:header configuration (or stdout  if  neither  option  nor
       configuration  is  used). Autogenerated header file may be needed in cases when re2py is used to generate
       definitions  that must be visible from other translation units.

       Here is an example of generating a header file that contains definition  of  the  lexer  state  with  tag
       variables (the number variables depends on the regular grammar and is unknown to the programmer).

   Input file
          # re2py $INPUT -o $OUTPUT --header lexer/state.py

          from lexer.state import State

          %{header:on %}
          class State:
              def __init__(self, str):
                  self.yyinput = str
                  self.yycursor = 0
                  %{stags format = "\n        self.@@ = 0"; %}
          %{header:off %}

          def lex(yyrecord):
          %{
              re2c:api = record;
              re2c:tags = 1;
              re2c:yyfill:enable = 0;
              re2c:indent:top = 1;
              re2c:header = "lexer/state.py";

              [a]* @t [b]* { return t }
          %}

          assert lex(State(b"ab\0")) == 1

   Header file
          # Generated by re2c

          class State:
              def __init__(self, str):
                  self.yyinput = str
                  self.yycursor = 0

                  self.yyt1 = 0

   Skeleton programs
       With the -S, --skeleton option, re2py ignores all non-re2py code and generates a self-contained C program
       that  can  be further compiled and executed.  The program consists of lexer code and input data. For each
       constructed DFA (block or condition) re2py generates a standalone lexer and two  files:  an  .input  file
       with  strings  derived  from  the DFA and a .keys file with expected match results. The program runs each
       lexer on the corresponding .input file and compares results with the expectations.  Skeleton programs are
       very useful for a number of reasons:

       • They can check correctness of various re2py optimizations (the data is generated early in the  process,
         before any DFA transformations have taken place).

       • Generating a set of input data with good coverage may be useful for both testing and benchmarking.

       • Generating self-contained executable programs allows one to get minimized test cases (the original code
         may be large or have a lot of dependencies).

       The  difficulty  with  generating  input  data  is  that for all but the most trivial cases the number of
       possible input strings is too large (even if the string length is limited). re2py solves this  difficulty
       by  generating  sufficiently  many  strings  to  cover  almost all DFA transitions. It uses the following
       algorithm. First, it constructs a skeleton of the DFA. For encodings with 1-byte code unit size (such  as
       ASCII, UTF-8 and EBCDIC) skeleton is just an exact copy of the original DFA. For encodings with multibyte
       code  units  skeleton  is a copy of DFA with certain transitions omitted: namely, re2py takes at most 256
       code units for each disjoint continuous range that corresponds to a DFA transition.   The  chosen  values
       are  evenly  distributed  and  include range bounds. Instead of trying to cover all possible paths in the
       skeleton (which is infeasible) re2py generates sufficiently many paths to cover all skeleton transitions,
       and thus trigger the corresponding conditional jumps in  the  lexer.   The  algorithm  implementation  is
       limited  by ~1Gb of transitions and consumes constant amount of memory (re2py writes data to file as soon
       as it is generated).

   Visualization and debug
       With the -D, --emit-dot option, re2py does not generate code. Instead, it dumps the generated DFA in  DOT
       format.   One  can convert this dump to an image of the DFA using Graphviz or another library.  Note that
       this option shows the final DFA after it has gone through a number of optimizations and  transformations.
       Earlier stages can be dumped with various debug options, such as --dump-nfa, --dump-dfa-raw etc. (see the
       full list of options).

SEE ALSO

       You  can  find  more information about re2c at the official website: <http://re2c.org>.  Similar programs
       are flex(1), lex(1), quex(<http://quex.sourceforge.net>).

AUTHORS

       re2py was originally written by Peter Bumbulis (<peter@csg.uwaterloo.ca>) in 1993.   Marcus  Boerger  and
       Dan  Nuffer  spent  several years to turn the original idea into a production ready code generator. Since
       then it has been maintained and developed by multiple volunteers, most notably, Brian Young (<bayoung@acm
       .org>), Marcus Boerger <https://github.com/helly25>, Dan  Nuffer  (<nuffer@users.sourceforge.net>),  Ulya
       Trofimovich  <https://github.com/skvadrik>  (<skvadrik@gmail.com>), Serghei Iakovlev <https://github.com/
       sergeyklay>, Sergei Trofimovich  <https://github.com/trofi>,  Petr  Skocik  <https://github.com/pskocik>,
       ligfx  <https://github.com/ligfx>  raekye <https://github.com/raekye> and PolarGoose <https://github.com/
       PolarGoose>.

                                                                                                        re2py(1)