First some simple examples to get the flavor of how one
uses flex
. The following flex
input specifies a scanner
which whenever it encounters the string "username" will
replace it with the user's login name:
%% username printf( "%s", getlogin() );
By default, any text not matched by a flex
scanner is
copied to the output, so the net effect of this scanner is
to copy its input file to its output with each occurrence
of "username" expanded. In this input, there is just one
rule. "username" is the pattern and the "printf" is the
action. The "%%" marks the beginning of the rules.
Here's another simple example:
int num_lines = 0, num_chars = 0; %% \n ++num_lines; ++num_chars; . ++num_chars; %% main() { yylex(); printf( "# of lines = %d, # of chars = %d\n", num_lines, num_chars ); }
This scanner counts the number of characters and the number of lines in its input (it produces no output other than the final report on the counts). The first line declares two globals, "num_lines" and "num_chars", which are accessible both inside `yylex()' and in the `main()' routine declared after the second "%%". There are two rules, one which matches a newline ("\n") and increments both the line count and the character count, and one which matches any character other than a newline (indicated by the "." regular expression).
A somewhat more complicated example:
/* scanner for a toy Pascal-like language */ %{ /* need this for the call to atof() below */ #include <math.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 whitespace */ . printf( "Unrecognized character: %s\n", yytext ); %% main( argc, argv ) int argc; char **argv; { ++argv, --argc; /* skip over program name */ if ( argc > 0 ) yyin = fopen( argv[0], "r" ); else yyin = stdin; yylex(); }
This is the beginnings of a simple scanner for a language like Pascal. It identifies different types of tokens and reports on what it has seen.
The details of this example will be explained in the following sections.
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