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lex(1)				 User Commands				lex(1)

NAME
       lex - generate programs for lexical tasks

SYNOPSIS
       lex [-cntv] [-e | -w]  [ -V -Q
	[y | n] ] [file...]

DESCRIPTION
       The  lex	 utility generates C programs to be used in lexical processing
       of character input, and that can be used as an interface to yacc. The C
       programs	 are  generated	 from lex source code and conform to the ISO C
       standard. Usually, the lex utility writes 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 EXTENDED DESCRIPTION  for  a  complete
       description of the lex input language.

OPTIONS
       The following options are supported:

       -c	       Indicates C-language action (default option).

       -e	       Generates  a  program  that  can	 handle EUC characters
		       (cannot be used with the -w  option).  yytext[]	is  of
		       type unsigned char[].

       -n	       Suppresses  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	       Writes the resulting program to standard output instead
		       of lex.yy.c.

       -v	       Writes  a  summary  of  lex  statistics to the standard
		       error. (See the discussion of lex table sizes under the
		       heading	Definitions in lex.) If table sizes are speci‐
		       fied in the lex source code, and if the	-n  option  is
		       not specified, the -v option may be enabled.

       -w	       Generates  a  program  that  can	 handle EUC characters
		       (cannot be used with the	 -e  option).  Unlike  the  -e
		       option, yytext[] is of type wchar_t[].

       -V	       Prints out version information on standard error.

       -Q[y|n]	       Prints  out version information to output file lex.yy.c
		       by using -Qy. The -Qn option does not print out version
		       information and is the default.

OPERANDS
       The following operand is supported:

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

OUTPUT
       The lex output files are described below.

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

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

       If the -t option is not specified:

       1.  Informational error and warning messages concerning the contents of
	   lex source code input will 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 will also be written to standard error.  These  sta‐
	   tistics may also be generated if table sizes are specified with a %
	   operator in the Definitions in lex section (see  EXTENDED  DESCRIP‐
	   TION), as long as the -n option is not specified.

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

EXTENDED DESCRIPTION
       Each input file contains lex source code, which is a table  of  regular
       expressions  with  corresponding actions in the form of C program frag‐
       ments.

       When lex.yy.c is compiled and linked with the lex  library  (using  the
       -l l  operand  with  c89	 or cc), the resulting program reads character
       input from the standard input and partitions it into strings that match
       the given expressions.

       When an expression is matched, these actions will occur:

	 ·  The input string that was matched is left in yytext as a null-ter‐
	    minated string; yytext is either 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 %array.

	 ·  The	 external  int	yyleng	is  set	 to the length of the matching
	    string.

	 ·  The expression's corresponding program  fragment,  or  action,  is
	    executed.

       During  pattern matching, lex searches the set of patterns for the sin‐
       gle longest possible match. Among rules that match the same  number  of
       characters, the rule given first will be chosen.

       The general format of lex source is:

       Definitions
       %%
       Rules
       %%
       User Subroutines

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

       Any line in the Definitions in lex section beginning with a blank char‐
       acter will be assumed to be a C program fragment and will be copied  to
       the  external definition area of the lex.yy.c file. Similarly, anything
       in the Definitions in lex section included between delimiter lines con‐
       taining	only  %{  and %} will also be copied unchanged to the external
       definition area of the lex.yy.c file.

       Any such input (beginning with a blank character or within  %{  and  %}
       delimiter lines) appearing at the beginning of the Rules section before
       any rules are specified will be written to lex.yy.c after the  declara‐
       tions  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 character 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.

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

       name   substitute

       If a name does not meet the requirements for identifiers in the	ISO  C
       standard,  the  result is undefined. The string substitute will replace
       the string { name } when it is used in a rule. The name string is  rec‐
       ognized	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 in lex section, any line beginning with a % (percent
       sign)  character	 and  followed	by an alphanumeric word beginning with
       either s or S defines a set of start  conditions.  Any  line  beginning
       with  a % followed by a word beginning with either x or X defines a set
       of exclusive start conditions. When the generated scanner is  in	 a  %s
       state,  patterns	 with  no state specified will be also active; in a %x
       state, such patterns will not be active. The rest of  the  line,	 after
       the  first  word, is considered to be one or more blank-character-sepa‐
       rated names of start conditions. Start condition names are  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	accept	either of the following two mutually exclusive
       declarations in the Definitions in lex 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.

       Note: When using the %pointer option, you may not also use  the	yyless
       function to alter yytext.

       %array  is  the	default. If %array is specified (or neither %array nor
       %pointer is specified), then the correct way to make an external refer‐
       ence to yyext is with a declaration of the form:

	      extern char yytext[]

       If %pointer is specified, then the correct external reference is of the
       form:

	      extern char *yytext;

       lex will accept declarations in the Definitions in lex section for set‐
       ting  certain  internal	table sizes. The declarations are shown in the
       following table.

	      Table Size Declaration in lex

       ┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
       │ Declaration		   Description		       Default	  │
       │     %pn	Number of positions		     2500	  │
       │     %nn	Number of states		     500	  │
       │    %a n	Number of transitions		     2000	  │
       │     %en	Number of parse tree nodes	     1000	  │
       │     %kn	Number of packed character classes   10000	  │
       │     %on	Size of the output array	     3000	  │
       └──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

       Programs generated by lex need either the -e or	-w  option  to	handle
       input that contains EUC characters from supplementary codesets. If nei‐
       ther of these options is specified, yytext is of the type  char[],  and
       the generated program can handle only ASCII characters.

       When  the  -e option is used, yytext is of the type unsigned char[] and
       yyleng gives the total number of bytes in the matched string. With this
       option,	the  macros input(), unput(c), and output(c) should do a byte-
       based I/O in the same way as with the regular ASCII lex. Two more vari‐
       ables  are  available  with  the	 -e option, yywtext and yywleng, which
       behave the same as yytext and yyleng would under the -w option.

       When the -w option is used, yytext is of the type wchar_t[] and	yyleng
       gives  the  total  number  of characters in the matched string.	If you
       supply your own	input(),  unput(c),  or	 output(c)  macros  with  this
       option,	they  must return or accept EUC characters in the form of wide
       character (wchar_t). This allows a  different  interface	 between  your
       program and the lex internals, to expedite some programs.

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

       ERE action
       ERE action
       ...

       The  extended  regular  expression (ERE) portion of a row will be sepa‐
       rated from action by one or more blank characters. A regular expression
       containing  blank  characters  is recognized under one of the following
       conditions:

	 ·  The entire expression appears within double-quotes.

	 ·  The blank characters appear within double-quotes or square	brack‐
	    ets.

	 ·  Each blank character is preceded by a backslash character.

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

   Regular Expressions	   in lex
       The lex utility supports the set of Extended Regular Expressions (EREs)
       described  on  regex(5)	with the following additions and exceptions to
       the syntax:

       ...

	   Any string enclosed in double-quotes will represent the  characters
	   within  the	double-quotes  as  themselves,	except	that backslash
	   escapes (which appear in the following table) are  recognized.  Any
	   backslash-escape  sequence  is 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 will be matched only when the program is
	   in one of the start conditions indicated by state, state1,  and  so
	   forth. For more information, see Actions in lex. As an exception to
	   the typographical conventions of the rest of this document, in this
	   case	 <state>  does	not  represent a metavariable, but the literal
	   angle-bracket characters surrounding a symbol. The start  condition
	   is  recognized  as  such only at the beginning of a regular expres‐
	   sion.

       r/x

	   The regular expression r will be matched only if it is followed  by
	   an occurrence of regular expression x. The token returned in yytext
	   will only match r. If the trailing portion of r matches the	begin‐
	   ning	 of  x,	 the  result  is  unspecified. The r expression cannot
	   include further trailing context or the $ (match-end-of-line) oper‐
	   ator;  x  cannot  include the ^ (match-beginning-of-line) operator,
	   nor trailing context, nor the $ operator. That is, only one	occur‐
	   rence  of  trailing context is allowed in a lex regular expression,
	   and the ^ operator only can be used at the  beginning  of  such  an
	   expression.	 A  further  restriction  is that the trailing-context
	   operator / (slash) cannot be grouped within parentheses.

       {name}

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

       Within  an  ERE, a backslash character (\\, \a, \b, \f, \n, \r, \t, \v)
       is considered to begin an escape	 sequence.  In	addition,  the	escape
       sequences in the following table will be recognized.

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

       Escape Sequences in lex

       ┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
       │			   Escape Sequences in lex			      │
       │Escape Sequence	  Description			  Meaning		      │
       │\digits		  A  backslash	character  fol‐	  The character whose  encod‐ │
       │		  lowed by the longest sequence	  ing  is  represented by the │
       │		  of  one,  two or three octal-	  one-, two-  or  three-digit │
       │		  digit characters  (01234567).	  octal	 integer.  Multi-byte │
       │		  Ifall	 of  the  digits are 0,	  characters  require  multi‐ │
       │		  (that is,  representation  of	  ple,	 concatenated  escape │
       │		  the	NUL   character),   the	  sequences  of	 this	type, │
       │		  behavior is undefined.	  including the leading \ for │
       │						  each byte.		      │
       │\xdigits	  A  backslash	character  fol‐	  The  character whose encod‐ │
       │		  lowed by the longest sequence	  ing is represented  by  the │
       │		  of hexadecimal-digit	charac‐	  hexadecimal integer.	      │
       │		  ters	(01234567abcdefABCDEF).				      │
       │		  If all of the digits	are  0,				      │
       │		  (that	 is,  representation of				      │
       │		  the	NUL   character),   the				      │
       │		  behavior is undefined.				      │
       │\c		  A  backslash	character  fol‐	  The character c, unchanged. │
       │		  lowed by  any	 character  not				      │
       │		  described   in   this	 table.				      │
       │		  (\\, \a, \b, \f, \en, \r, \t,				      │
       │		  \v).							      │
       └──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

       The  order  of precedence given to extended regular expressions for lex
       is 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	condi‐
		tion, trailing context and anchoring notations have been omit‐
		ted from the  table  because  of  the  placement  restrictions
		described  in this section; they can only appear at the begin‐
		ning or ending of an ERE.

       ┌────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
       │		     ERE Precedence in lex			│
       │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 pat‐
       tern were written ^abc|def$, it would match either of 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 com‐
       plete word. This functionality can be obtained using existing lex  fea‐
       tures:

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

       Notice  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 /  (slash)
       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 are special only in a start con‐
       dition at the beginning of a regular expression; elsewhere in the regu‐
       lar expression they are treated as ordinary characters.

       The  following  examples	 clarify  the  differences between lex regular
       expressions and regular expressions appearing elsewhere in  this	 docu‐
       ment. 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 will extend 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.

   Actions in lex
       The  action to be taken when an ERE is matched can be a C program frag‐
       ment 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 ; is 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 is not 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 default action when a string in the input to a lex.yy.c program  is
       not  matched  by	 any  expression  is 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 %% generates a C program that simply copies the input  to  the
       output unchanged.

       Four special actions are 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 semi‐
		       colon-terminated. It must be specified alone,  with  no
		       other actions.

       ECHO;	       Writes 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 causes
		       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,  usu‐
		       ally  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  in	 lex  section,
		       the results are unspecified. The initial state is indi‐
		       cated 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 c89 or cc (the lex library).

       int yylex(void)	       Performs lexical analysis on the input; this is
			       the primary function generated by the lex util‐
			       ity.  The function returns zero when the end of
			       input is reached; otherwise it returns 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 replac‐
			       ing it; the value in yyleng is adjusted accord‐
			       ingly.

       intyyless(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 is adjusted accordingly.

       int input(void)	       Returns	the  next character from the input, or
			       zero on end-of-file. It obtains 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  is  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 expres‐
			       sion is matched. The result of using unput  for
			       more characters than have been input is unspec‐
			       ified.

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

       int yywrap(void)

	   Called by yylex at end-of-file;  the	 default  yywrap  always  will
	   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 will 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, call‐
	   ing yylex as applicable.

       The reason for breaking these functions into two	 lists	is  that  only
       those  functions	 in  libl.a  can  be  reliably redefined by a portable
       application.

       Except for input, unput and main, all external and static names	gener‐
       ated by lex begin with the prefix yy or YY.

USAGE
       Portable	 applications  are warned that in the Rules in lex section, an
       ERE without an action is not acceptable, but need not  be  detected  as
       erroneous by lex. This may result in compilation or run-time 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 reg‐
       ular  expressions in the lex source code or generated lexical analyzer.
       It would seem desirable to have the lexical analyzer interpret the reg‐
       ular  expressions  given in the lex source according to the environment
       specified when the lexical analyzer is executed, but this is not possi‐
       ble  with  the  current lex technology. Furthermore, the very nature of
       the lexical analyzers produced by lex must be closely tied to the lexi‐
       cal requirements of the input language being described, which will fre‐
       quently be locale-specific anyway. (For example,	 writing  an  analyzer
       that  is used for French text will not automatically be useful for pro‐
       cessing other languages.)

EXAMPLES
       Example 1: Using lex

       The following is an example of a lex program that implements a rudimen‐
       tary 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();
       }

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       See  environ(5) for descriptions of the following environment variables
       that affect the execution of lex: LANG, LC_ALL,	LC_COLLATE,  LC_CTYPE,
       LC_MESSAGES, and NLSPATH.

EXIT STATUS
       The following exit values are returned:

       0	Successful completion.

       >0	An error occurred.

ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

       ┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
       │      ATTRIBUTE TYPE	     │	    ATTRIBUTE VALUE	   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Availability		     │SUNWbtool			   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Interface Stability	     │Standard			   │
       └─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘

SEE ALSO
       yacc(1), attributes(5), environ(5), regex(5), standards(5)

NOTES
       If  routines such as yyback(), yywrap(), and yylock() in .l (ell) files
       are to be external C functions, the command line to compile a C++  pro‐
       gram must define the __EXTERN_C__ macro. For example:

       example%	 CC -D__EXTERN_C__ ... file

SunOS 5.10			  22 Aug 1997				lex(1)
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