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       This  manual  page  is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual.  The Linux implementation of
       this interface may differ (consult the corresponding Linux  manual  page  for  details  of
       Linux behavior), or the interface may not be implemented on Linux.

NAME

       lex — generate programs for lexical tasks (DEVELOPMENT)

SYNOPSIS

       lex [−t] [−n|−v] [file...]

DESCRIPTION

       The  lex  utility  shall generate C programs to be used in lexical processing of character
       input, and that can be used as an interface to yacc.  The C programs  shall  be  generated
       from  lex  source  code  and  conform  to  the  ISO C  standard,  without depending on any
       undefined, unspecified, or implementation-defined behavior, except in cases where the code
       is  copied  directly  from  the  supplied  source,  or in cases that are documented by the
       implementation. Usually, the lex utility shall write the program it generates to the  file
       lex.yy.c;  the state of this file is unspecified if lex exits with a non-zero exit status.
       See the EXTENDED DESCRIPTION section for a complete description of the lex input language.

OPTIONS

       The lex utility shall conform to the Base  Definitions  volume  of  POSIX.1‐2008,  Section
       12.2, Utility Syntax Guidelines, except for Guideline 9.

       The following options shall be supported:

       −n        Suppress  the  summary  of  statistics usually written with the −v option. If no
                 table sizes are specified in the lex source  code  and  the  −v  option  is  not
                 specified, then −n is implied.

       −t        Write the resulting program to standard output instead of lex.yy.c.

       −v        Write a summary of lex statistics to the standard output. (See the discussion of
                 lex table sizes in Definitions in lex.)  If the −t option is specified and −n is
                 not  specified,  this  report shall be written to standard error. If table sizes
                 are specified in the lex source code, and if the −n option is not specified, the
                 −v option may be enabled.

OPERANDS

       The following operand shall be supported:

       file      A  pathname of an input file. If more than one such file is specified, all files
                 shall be concatenated to produce a single lex program. If no file  operands  are
                 specified, or if a file operand is '−', the standard input shall be used.

STDIN

       The  standard  input shall be used if no file operands are specified, or if a file operand
       is '−'.  See INPUT FILES.

INPUT FILES

       The input files shall be text files containing  lex  source  code,  as  described  in  the
       EXTENDED DESCRIPTION section.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       The following environment variables shall affect the execution of lex:

       LANG      Provide a default value for the internationalization variables that are unset or
                 null.  (See  the  Base  Definitions  volume  of   POSIX.1‐2008,   Section   8.2,
                 Internationalization   Variables  for  the  precedence  of  internationalization
                 variables used to determine the values of locale categories.)

       LC_ALL    If set to a non-empty string  value,  override  the  values  of  all  the  other
                 internationalization variables.

       LC_COLLATE
                 Determine the locale for the behavior of ranges, equivalence classes, and multi-
                 character collating elements within regular expressions. If this variable is not
                 set to the POSIX locale, the results are unspecified.

       LC_CTYPE  Determine  the  locale for the interpretation of sequences of bytes of text data
                 as characters (for example, single-byte as opposed to multi-byte  characters  in
                 arguments and input files), and the behavior of character classes within regular
                 expressions. If this variable is not set to the POSIX locale,  the  results  are
                 unspecified.

       LC_MESSAGES
                 Determine  the  locale  that should be used to affect the format and contents of
                 diagnostic messages written to standard error.

       NLSPATH   Determine the location of message catalogs for the processing of LC_MESSAGES.

ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS

       Default.

STDOUT

       If the −t option is specified, the text file of C source  code  output  of  lex  shall  be
       written to standard output.

       If the −t option is not specified:

        *  Implementation-defined  informational,  error,  and  warning  messages  concerning the
           contents of lex source code input shall be written to either the  standard  output  or
           standard error.

        *  If the −v option is specified and the −n option is not specified, lex statistics shall
           also be written to either the standard output or standard error, in an implementation-
           defined  format.  These  statistics may also be generated if table sizes are specified
           with a '%' operator in the Definitions section, as  long  as  the  −n  option  is  not
           specified.

STDERR

       If  the  −t  option is specified, implementation-defined informational, error, and warning
       messages concerning the contents of lex source code input shall be written to the standard
       error.

       If the −t option is not specified:

        1. Implementation-defined  informational,  error,  and  warning  messages  concerning the
           contents of lex source code input shall be written to either the  standard  output  or
           standard error.

        2. If the −v option is specified and the −n option is not specified, lex statistics shall
           also be written to either the standard output or standard error, in an implementation-
           defined  format.  These  statistics may also be generated if table sizes are specified
           with a '%' operator in the Definitions section, as  long  as  the  −n  option  is  not
           specified.

OUTPUT FILES

       A  text  file  containing  C  source code shall be written to lex.yy.c, or to the standard
       output if the −t option is present.

EXTENDED DESCRIPTION

       Each input file shall contain lex source code, which is a  table  of  regular  expressions
       with corresponding actions in the form of C program fragments.

       When  lex.yy.c  is  compiled  and linked with the lex library (using the −l l operand with
       c99), the resulting program shall read character input from the standard input  and  shall
       partition it into strings that match the given expressions.

       When an expression is matched, these actions shall occur:

        *  The input string that was matched shall be left in yytext as a null-terminated string;
           yytext shall either be an external character array or a pointer to a character string.
           As  explained  in  Definitions  in  lex, the type can be explicitly selected using the
           %array or %pointer declarations, but the default is implementation-defined.

        *  The external int yyleng shall be set to the length of the matching string.

        *  The expression's corresponding program fragment, or action, shall be executed.

       During pattern matching, lex shall search the set  of  patterns  for  the  single  longest
       possible match. Among rules that match the same number of characters, the rule given first
       shall be chosen.

       The general format of lex source shall be:

              Definitions %% Rules %% UserSubroutines

       The first "%%" is required to mark the beginning of the  rules  (regular  expressions  and
       actions); the second "%%" is required only if user subroutines follow.

       Any  line  in  the Definitions section beginning with a <blank> shall be assumed to be a C
       program fragment and shall be copied to the external definition area of the lex.yy.c file.
       Similarly, anything in the Definitions section included between delimiter lines containing
       only "%{" and "%}" shall also be copied unchanged to the external definition area  of  the
       lex.yy.c file.

       Any  such  input  (beginning  with  a  <blank>  or  within  "%{" and "%}" delimiter lines)
       appearing at the beginning of the Rules section before any rules are  specified  shall  be
       written  to  lex.yy.c  after  the  declarations  of variables for the yylex() function and
       before the first line of code in yylex().  Thus, user variables local to  yylex()  can  be
       declared here, as well as application code to execute upon entry to yylex().

       The  action  taken  by  lex when encountering any input beginning with a <blank> or within
       "%{" and "%}" delimiter lines appearing in the Rules section but coming after one or  more
       rules  is  undefined.  The presence of such input may result in an erroneous definition of
       the yylex() function.

       C-language code in the input shall not contain C-language trigraphs.  The C-language  code
       within  "%{" and "%}" delimiter lines shall not contain any lines consisting only of "%}",
       or only of "%%".

   Definitions in lex
       Definitions appear before the first "%%" delimiter. Any line in this section not contained
       between  "%{" and "%}" lines and not beginning with a <blank> shall be assumed to define a
       lex substitution string. The format of these lines shall be:

           name substitute

       If a name does not meet the requirements for identifiers in the ISO C standard, the result
       is  undefined.  The string substitute shall replace the string {name} when it is used in a
       rule. The name string shall be recognized  in  this  context  only  when  the  braces  are
       provided and when it does not appear within a bracket expression or within double-quotes.

       In  the  Definitions section, any line beginning with a <percent-sign> ('%') character and
       followed by an alphanumeric word beginning with either 's' or 'S' shall define  a  set  of
       start  conditions.  Any line beginning with a '%' followed by a word beginning with either
       'x' or 'X' shall define a set of exclusive start conditions. When the generated scanner is
       in  a %s state, patterns with no state specified shall be also active; in a %x state, such
       patterns shall not be active. The rest of  the  line,  after  the  first  word,  shall  be
       considered  to be one or more <blank>-separated names of start conditions. Start condition
       names shall be constructed in the same way as definition names. Start  conditions  can  be
       used to restrict the matching of regular expressions to one or more states as described in
       Regular Expressions in lex.

       Implementations shall accept either of the following two  mutually-exclusive  declarations
       in the Definitions section:

       %array    Declare the type of yytext to be a null-terminated character array.

       %pointer  Declare  the  type  of  yytext  to  be  a pointer to a null-terminated character
                 string.

       The default type of yytext is implementation-defined. If an application refers  to  yytext
       outside of the scanner source file (that is, via an extern), the application shall include
       the appropriate %array or %pointer declaration in the scanner source file.

       Implementations shall accept declarations in the Definitions section for  setting  certain
       internal table sizes. The declarations are shown in the following table.

                                 Table: Table Size Declarations in lex

                   ┌────────────┬────────────────────────────────────┬───────────────┐
                   │DeclarationDescriptionMinimum Value │
                   ├────────────┼────────────────────────────────────┼───────────────┤
                   │%p n        │ Number of positions                │     2500      │
                   │%n n        │ Number of states                   │      500      │
                   │%a n        │ Number of transitions              │     2000      │
                   │%e n        │ Number of parse tree nodes         │     1000      │
                   │%k n        │ Number of packed character classes │     1000      │
                   │%o n        │ Size of the output array           │     3000      │
                   └────────────┴────────────────────────────────────┴───────────────┘
       In  the  table,  n  represents a positive decimal integer, preceded by one or more <blank>
       characters. The exact meaning of these table size numbers is  implementation-defined.  The
       implementation  shall  document  how these numbers affect the lex utility and how they are
       related to any output that may be generated by the implementation  should  limitations  be
       encountered  during  the  execution  of  lex.  It shall be possible to determine from this
       output which of the table size values needs to be modified to permit lex  to  successfully
       generate  tables  for the input language. The values in the column Minimum Value represent
       the lowest values conforming implementations shall provide.

   Rules in lex
       The rules in lex source files are a table  in  which  the  left  column  contains  regular
       expressions  and  the  right  column contains actions (C program fragments) to be executed
       when the expressions are recognized.

           ERE action
           ERE action
           ...

       The extended regular expression (ERE) portion of a row shall be separated from  action  by
       one  or  more <blank> characters. A regular expression containing <blank> characters shall
       be recognized under one of the following conditions:

        *  The entire expression appears within double-quotes.

        *  The <blank> characters appear within double-quotes or square brackets.

        *  Each <blank> is preceded by a <backslash> character.

   User Subroutines in lex
       Anything in the user subroutines section shall be copied to lex.yy.c following yylex().

   Regular Expressions in lex
       The lex utility shall support the set  of  extended  regular  expressions  (see  the  Base
       Definitions  volume  of POSIX.1‐2008, Section 9.4, Extended Regular Expressions), with the
       following additions and exceptions to the syntax:

       "..."     Any string enclosed in double-quotes shall represent the characters  within  the
                 double-quotes  as  themselves,  except that <backslash>-escapes (which appear in
                 the following table) shall be recognized. Any <backslash>-escape sequence  shall
                 be  terminated  by  the closing quote. For example, "\01""1" represents a single
                 string: the octal value 1 followed by the character '1'.

       <state>r, <state1,state2,...>r
                 The regular expression r shall be matched only when the program is in one of the
                 start conditions indicated by state, state1, and so on; see Actions in lex.  (As
                 an exception to the typographical conventions of the  rest  of  this  volume  of
                 POSIX.1‐2008,  in  this  case <state> does not represent a metavariable, but the
                 literal angle-bracket characters surrounding  a  symbol.)  The  start  condition
                 shall be recognized as such only at the beginning of a regular expression.

       r/x       The  regular  expression  r  shall  be  matched  only  if  it  is followed by an
                 occurrence of regular expression x (x  is  the  instance  of  trailing  context,
                 further defined below). The token returned in yytext shall only match r.  If the
                 trailing portion of r matches the beginning of x, the result is unspecified. The
                 r  expression  cannot include further trailing context or the '$' (match-end-of-
                 line) operator; x cannot include the '^' (match-beginning-of-line) operator, nor
                 trailing context, nor the '$' operator. That is, only one occurrence of trailing
                 context is allowed in a lex regular expression, and the '^' operator only can be
                 used at the beginning of such an expression.

       {name}    When  name  is one of the substitution symbols from the Definitions section, the
                 string, including the enclosing braces, shall  be  replaced  by  the  substitute
                 value.  The substitute value shall be treated in the extended regular expression
                 as if it were enclosed in parentheses. No substitution  shall  occur  if  {name}
                 occurs within a bracket expression or within double-quotes.

       Within  an ERE, a <backslash> character shall be considered to begin an escape sequence as
       specified in the table in the Base Definitions volume of  POSIX.1‐2008,  Chapter  5,  File
       Format Notation ('\\', '\a', '\b', '\f', '\n', '\r', '\t', '\v').  In addition, the escape
       sequences in the following table shall be recognized.

       A literal <newline> cannot occur within an ERE; the escape sequence '\n' can  be  used  to
       represent a <newline>.  A <newline> shall not be matched by a period operator.

                                     Table: Escape Sequences in lex

                    ┌─────────┬──────────────────────────┬──────────────────────────┐
                    │ Escape  │                          │                          │
                    │SequenceDescriptionMeaning          │
                    ├─────────┼──────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
                    │\digits  │ A <backslash> character  │ The character whose      │
                    │         │ followed by the longest  │ encoding is represented  │
                    │         │ sequence of one, two, or │ by the one, two, or      │
                    │         │ three octal-digit        │ three-digit octal        │
                    │         │ characters (01234567).   │ integer. Multi-byte      │
                    │         │ If all of the digits are │ characters require       │
                    │         │ 0 (that is,              │ multiple, concatenated   │
                    │         │ representation of the    │ escape sequences of this │
                    │         │ NUL character), the      │ type, including the      │
                    │         │ behavior is undefined.   │ leading <backslash> for  │
                    │         │                          │ each byte.               │
                    ├─────────┼──────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
                    │\xdigits │ A <backslash> character  │ The character whose      │
                    │         │ followed by the longest  │ encoding is represented  │
                    │         │ sequence of hexadecimal- │ by the hexadecimal       │
                    │         │ digit characters         │ integer.                 │
                    │         │ (01234567abcdefABCDEF).  │                          │
                    │         │ If all of the digits are │                          │
                    │         │ 0 (that is,              │                          │
                    │         │ representation of the    │                          │
                    │         │ NUL character), the      │                          │
                    │         │ behavior is undefined.   │                          │
                    ├─────────┼──────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
                    │\c       │ A <backslash> character  │ The character 'c',       │
                    │         │ followed by any          │ unchanged.               │
                    │         │ character not described  │                          │
                    │         │ in this table or in the  │                          │
                    │         │ table in the Base        │                          │
                    │         │ Definitions volume of    │                          │
                    │         │ POSIX.1‐2008, Chapter 5, │                          │
                    │         │ File Format Notation     │                          │
                    │         │ ('\\', '\a', '\b', '\f', │                          │
                    │         │ '\n', '\r', '\t', '\v'). │                          │
                    └─────────┴──────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────┘
       Note:     If a '\x' sequence needs to be  immediately  followed  by  a  hexadecimal  digit
                 character, a sequence such as "\x1""1" can be used, which represents a character
                 containing the value 1, followed by the character '1'.

       The order of precedence given to extended regular expressions for lex  differs  from  that
       specified  in  the  Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2008, Section 9.4, Extended Regular
       Expressions.  The order of precedence for lex shall be as shown in  the  following  table,
       from high to low.

       Note:     The escaped characters entry is not meant to imply that these are operators, but
                 they are included  in  the  table  to  show  their  relationships  to  the  true
                 operators.  The  start condition, trailing context, and anchoring notations have
                 been omitted from the table because of the placement restrictions  described  in
                 this section; they can only appear at the beginning or ending of an ERE.

                                      Table: ERE Precedence in lex

                       ┌──────────────────────────────────┬──────────────────────┐
                       │   Extended Regular ExpressionPrecedence      │
                       ├──────────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
                       │collation-related bracket symbols │ [= =]  [: :]  [. .]  │
                       │escaped characters                │ \<special character> │
                       │bracket expression                │ [ ]                  │
                       │quoting                           │ "..."                │
                       │grouping                          │ ( )                  │
                       │definition                        │ {name}               │
                       │single-character RE duplication   │ * + ?                │
                       │concatenation                     │                      │
                       │interval expression               │ {m,n}                │
                       │alternation                       │ |                    │
                       └──────────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────┘
       The  ERE  anchoring  operators  '^'  and  '$' do not appear in the table. With lex regular
       expressions, these operators are restricted in their use: the '^'  operator  can  only  be
       used  at  the  beginning of an entire regular expression, and the '$' operator only at the
       end. The operators apply to the entire regular expression. Thus, for example, the  pattern
       "(^abc)|(def$)"  is  undefined;  it can instead be written as two separate rules, one with
       the regular expression "^abc" and one with "def$", which share a  common  action  via  the
       special  '|'  action  (see below). If the pattern were written "^abc|def$", it would match
       either "abc" or "def" on a line by itself.

       Unlike the general ERE rules, embedded anchoring is not allowed  by  most  historical  lex
       implementations.  An  example  of  embedded  anchoring  would  be  for  patterns  such  as
       "(^| )foo( |$)" to match "foo" when it exists as a complete word. This  functionality  can
       be obtained using existing lex features:

           ^foo/[ \n]      |
           " foo"/[ \n]    /* Found foo as a separate word. */

       Note  also  that '$' is a form of trailing context (it is equivalent to "/\n") and as such
       cannot be used with regular expressions containing another instance of the  operator  (see
       the preceding discussion of trailing context).

       The  additional  regular  expressions  trailing-context  operator  '/'  can  be used as an
       ordinary character if presented within double-quotes,  "/";  preceded  by  a  <backslash>,
       "\/";  or  within  a bracket expression, "[/]".  The start-condition '<' and '>' operators
       shall be special only in a start condition at  the  beginning  of  a  regular  expression;
       elsewhere in the regular expression they shall be treated as ordinary characters.

   Actions in lex
       The  action  to be taken when an ERE is matched can be a C program fragment or the special
       actions described below; the program fragment can contain one or more  C  statements,  and
       can  also  include special actions. The empty C statement ';' shall be a valid action; any
       string in the lex.yy.c  input  that  matches  the  pattern  portion  of  such  a  rule  is
       effectively  ignored or skipped. However, the absence of an action shall not be valid, and
       the action lex takes in such a condition is undefined.

       The specification for an action, including C statements and special  actions,  can  extend
       across several lines if enclosed in braces:

           ERE <one or more blanks> { program statement
                                      program statement }

       The program statements shall not contain unbalanced curly brace preprocessing tokens.

       The  default action when a string in the input to a lex.yy.c program is not matched by any
       expression shall be to copy the string to the output. Because the default  behavior  of  a
       program  generated  by  lex  is to read the input and copy it to the output, a minimal lex
       source program that has just "%%" shall generate a C program that simply copies the  input
       to the output unchanged.

       Four special actions shall be available:

           |   ECHO;   REJECT;   BEGIN

       |         The  action  '|'  means that the action for the next rule is the action for this
                 rule.  Unlike the other three actions, '|' cannot be enclosed in  braces  or  be
                 <semicolon>-terminated; the application shall ensure that it is specified alone,
                 with no other actions.

       ECHO;     Write the contents of the string yytext on the output.

       REJECT;   Usually only a single expression is matched by a  given  string  in  the  input.
                 REJECT means ``continue to the next expression that matches the current input'',
                 and shall cause whatever rule was the second choice after the current rule to be
                 executed  for  the  same input. Thus, multiple rules can be matched and executed
                 for one input string or  overlapping  input  strings.  For  example,  given  the
                 regular expressions "xyz" and "xy" and the input "xyz", usually only the regular
                 expression "xyz" would match. The next attempted match would start after z.   If
                 the  last  action  in the "xyz" rule is REJECT, both this rule and the "xy" rule
                 would be executed. The REJECT action may be implemented in such a  fashion  that
                 flow  of  control does not continue after it, as if it were equivalent to a goto
                 to another part of yylex().  The use of REJECT may result in somewhat larger and
                 slower scanners.

       BEGIN     The action:

                     BEGIN newstate;

                 switches  the  state  (start condition) to newstate.  If the string newstate has
                 not been declared previously as a start condition in  the  Definitions  section,
                 the  results are unspecified. The initial state is indicated by the digit '0' or
                 the token INITIAL.

       The functions or macros described below are accessible to user code included  in  the  lex
       input.  It  is  unspecified  whether  they  appear  in  the  C  code output of lex, or are
       accessible only through the −l l operand to c99 (the lex library).

       int yylex(void)
             Performs lexical analysis on the input; this is the primary  function  generated  by
             the  lex  utility.  The function shall return zero when the end of input is reached;
             otherwise, it shall return non-zero values (tokens) determined by the  actions  that
             are selected.

       int yymore(void)
             When  called,  indicates  that when the next input string is recognized, it is to be
             appended to the current value of yytext rather  than  replacing  it;  the  value  in
             yyleng shall be adjusted accordingly.

       int yyless(int n)
             Retains  n  initial  characters  in yytext, NUL-terminated, and treats the remaining
             characters as if they had not been read; the  value  in  yyleng  shall  be  adjusted
             accordingly.

       int input(void)
             Returns  the  next character from the input, or zero on end-of-file. It shall obtain
             input from the stream pointer yyin, although possibly via  an  intermediate  buffer.
             Thus,  once  scanning  has  begun,  the  effect  of  altering  the  value of yyin is
             undefined. The character read shall be removed from the input stream of the  scanner
             without any processing by the scanner.

       int unput(int c)
             Returns  the  character  'c' to the input; yytext and yyleng are undefined until the
             next expression is matched. The result of using unput()  for  more  characters  than
             have been input is unspecified.

       The  following  functions shall appear only in the lex library accessible through the −l l
       operand; they can therefore be redefined by a conforming application:

       int yywrap(void)
             Called by yylex() at end-of-file; the default yywrap() shall always return 1. If the
             application  requires  yylex()  to continue processing with another source of input,
             then the application can include a function yywrap(), which associates another  file
             with the external variable FILE * yyin and shall return a value of zero.

       int main(int argc, char *argv[])
             Calls  yylex()  to  perform  lexical analysis, then exits. The user code can contain
             main() to perform application-specific operations, calling yylex() as applicable.

       Except for input(), unput(), and main(), all external and static names  generated  by  lex
       shall begin with the prefix yy or YY.

EXIT STATUS

       The following exit values shall be returned:

        0    Successful completion.

       >0    An error occurred.

CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS

       Default.

       The following sections are informative.

APPLICATION USAGE

       Conforming  applications are warned that in the Rules section, an ERE without an action is
       not acceptable, but need not be  detected  as  erroneous  by  lex.   This  may  result  in
       compilation or runtime errors.

       The  purpose of input() is to take characters off the input stream and discard them as far
       as the lexical analysis is concerned. A common use is to discard the  body  of  a  comment
       once the beginning of a comment is recognized.

       The  lex utility is not fully internationalized in its treatment of regular expressions in
       the lex source code or generated lexical analyzer. It would seem  desirable  to  have  the
       lexical  analyzer  interpret  the regular expressions given in the lex source according to
       the environment specified when the lexical analyzer is executed, but this is not  possible
       with  the  current  lex  technology. Furthermore, the very nature of the lexical analyzers
       produced by lex must be closely tied to the lexical requirements  of  the  input  language
       being  described,  which  is  frequently  locale-specific anyway. (For example, writing an
       analyzer that is used for French text is not automatically  useful  for  processing  other
       languages.)

EXAMPLES

       The  following  is an example of a lex program that implements a rudimentary scanner for a
       Pascal-like syntax:

           %{
           /* Need this for the call to atof() below. */
           #include <math.h>
           /* Need this for printf(), fopen(), and stdin below. */
           #include <stdio.h>
           %}

           DIGIT    [0−9]
           ID       [a−z][a−z0−9]*

           %%

           {DIGIT}+ {
               printf("An integer: %s (%d)\n", yytext,
                   atoi(yytext));
               }

           {DIGIT}+"."{DIGIT}*        {
               printf("A float: %s (%g)\n", yytext,
                   atof(yytext));
               }

           if|then|begin|end|procedure|function        {
               printf("A keyword: %s\n", yytext);
               }

           {ID}    printf("An identifier: %s\n", yytext);

           "+"|"−"|"*"|"/"        printf("An operator: %s\n", yytext);

           "{"[^}\n]*"}"    /* Eat up one-line comments. */

           [ \t\n]+        /* Eat up white space. */

           .  printf("Unrecognized character: %s\n", yytext);

           %%

           int main(int argc, char *argv[])
           {
               ++argv, −−argc;  /* Skip over program name. */
               if (argc > 0)
                   yyin = fopen(argv[0], "r");
               else
                   yyin = stdin;

               yylex();
           }

RATIONALE

       Even though the −c  option  and  references  to  the  C  language  are  retained  in  this
       description,  lex  may be generalized to other languages, as was done at one time for EFL,
       the Extended FORTRAN Language. Since the lex input specification is essentially  language-
       independent, versions of this utility could be written to produce Ada, Modula-2, or Pascal
       code, and there are known historical implementations that do so.

       The current description of lex bypasses the issue of dealing with  internationalized  EREs
       in  the lex source code or generated lexical analyzer. If it follows the model used by awk
       (the source code is assumed to be presented in the POSIX locale, but input and output  are
       in  the  locale  specified  by  the environment variables), then the tables in the lexical
       analyzer produced by lex would interpret EREs specified in the lex source in terms of  the
       environment variables specified when lex was executed. The desired effect would be to have
       the lexical analyzer interpret  the  EREs  given  in  the  lex  source  according  to  the
       environment specified when the lexical analyzer is executed, but this is not possible with
       the current lex technology.

       The description of octal and hexadecimal-digit escape  sequences  agrees  with  the  ISO C
       standard use of escape sequences.

       Earlier  versions of this standard allowed for implementations with bytes other than eight
       bits, but this has been modified in this version.

       There is no detailed output format specification. The observed behavior of lex under  four
       different  historical  implementations was that none of these implementations consistently
       reported the line numbers for error and warning messages. Furthermore, there was a  desire
       that  lex  be  allowed  to  output additional diagnostic messages. Leaving message formats
       unspecified avoids these formatting questions and problems with internationalization.

       Although the %x specifier for exclusive start conditions is not historical practice, it is
       believed  to  be  a  minor  change  to historical implementations and greatly enhances the
       usability of lex  programs  since  it  permits  an  application  to  obtain  the  expected
       functionality with fewer statements.

       The  %array  and  %pointer  declarations  were  added  as  a compromise between historical
       systems.  The System V-based lex copies the matched text  to  a  yytext  array.  The  flex
       program, supported in BSD and GNU systems, uses a pointer. In the latter case, significant
       performance improvements are available for some scanners. Most historical programs  should
       require  no  change  in  porting  from  one  system  to  another  because the string being
       referenced is null-terminated in both cases. (The method used by flex in its  case  is  to
       null-terminate  the  token  in  place by remembering the character that used to come right
       after the token and replacing it before  continuing  on  to  the  next  scan.)  Multi-file
       programs  with  external  references  to  yytext  outside  the  scanner source file should
       continue to operate on their  historical  systems,  but  would  require  one  of  the  new
       declarations to be considered strictly portable.

       The  description  of  EREs  avoids  unnecessary  duplication  of ERE details because their
       meanings within a lex ERE are the same as that for the ERE in this volume of POSIX.1‐2008.

       The reason for the undefined condition associated with text beginning with  a  <blank>  or
       within  "%{"  and  "%}"  delimiter  lines  appearing  in  the  Rules section is historical
       practice. Both the BSD and System V lex copy the indented (or enclosed) input in the Rules
       section  (except  at the beginning) to unreachable areas of the yylex() function (the code
       is written directly after a break statement). In some cases, the System V lex generates an
       error message or a syntax error, depending on the form of indented input.

       The  intention  in  breaking  the list of functions into those that may appear in lex.yy.c
       versus those that only appear in libl.a is that only those  functions  in  libl.a  can  be
       reliably redefined by a conforming application.

       The  descriptions  of  standard output and standard error are somewhat complicated because
       historical lex implementations chose to  issue  diagnostic  messages  to  standard  output
       (unless  −t  was  given). POSIX.1‐2008 allows this behavior, but leaves an opening for the
       more expected behavior of using standard  error  for  diagnostics.   Also,  the  System  V
       behavior  of  writing the statistics when any table sizes are given is allowed, while BSD-
       derived systems can avoid it. The programmer  can  always  precisely  obtain  the  desired
       results by using either the −t or −n options.

       The  OPERANDS  section  does not mention the use of  as a synonym for standard input; not
       all historical implementations support such usage for any of the file operands.

       A description of the translation table was deleted from early  proposals  because  of  its
       relatively low usage in historical applications.

       The  change  to  the  definition  of  the  input() function that allows buffering of input
       presents the opportunity for major performance gains in some applications.

       The following examples clarify the differences between lex regular expressions and regular
       expressions appearing elsewhere in this volume of POSIX.1‐2008. For regular expressions of
       the form "r/x", the string matching r is always returned; confusion  may  arise  when  the
       beginning  of  x  matches  the  trailing  portion  of  r.   For example, given the regular
       expression "a*b/cc" and the input "aaabcc", yytext would contain the string "aaab" on this
       match.  But  given the regular expression "x*/xy" and the input "xxxy", the token xxx, not
       xx, is returned by some implementations because xxx matches "x*".

       In the rule "ab*/bc", the "b*" at the end of r extends r's match into the beginning of the
       trailing  context,  so  the result is unspecified. If this rule were "ab/bc", however, the
       rule matches the text "ab" when it is followed by the text "bc".  In this latter case, the
       matching of r cannot extend into the beginning of x, so the result is specified.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS

       None.

SEE ALSO

       c99, ed, yacc

       The  Base  Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2008, Chapter 5, File Format Notation, Chapter 8,
       Environment Variables, Chapter  9,  Regular  Expressions,  Section  12.2,  Utility  Syntax
       Guidelines

COPYRIGHT

       Portions  of  this  text  are  reprinted  and  reproduced in electronic form from IEEE Std
       1003.1, 2013 Edition, Standard for Information Technology  --  Portable  Operating  System
       Interface  (POSIX),  The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7, Copyright (C) 2013 by the
       Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc  and  The  Open  Group.   (This  is
       POSIX.1-2008  with  the  2013  Technical  Corrigendum  1  applied.)  In  the  event of any
       discrepancy between this version and the original IEEE and The Open  Group  Standard,  the
       original  IEEE  and The Open Group Standard is the referee document. The original Standard
       can be obtained online at http://www.unix.org/online.html .

       Any typographical or formatting errors that appear in this page are most  likely  to  have
       been  introduced  during  the conversion of the source files to man page format. To report
       such errors, see https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/reporting_bugs.html .