%&latex -*- latex -*- \chapter{Reading delimited strings} \label{chapt:rdelim} Scsh provides a set of procedures that read delimited strings from input ports. There are procedures to read a single line of text (terminated by a newline character), a single paragraph (terminated by a blank line), and general delimited strings (terminated by a character belonging to an arbitrary character set). These procedures can be applied to any Scheme input port. However, the scsh virtual machine has native-code support for performing delimited reads on Unix ports, and these input operations should be particularly fast---much faster than doing the equivalent character-at-a-time operation from Scheme code. All of the delimited input operations described below take a \ex{handle-delim} parameter, which determines what the procedure does with the terminating delimiter character. There are four possible choices for a \ex{handle-delim} parameter: \begin{inset} \begin{tabular}{|l|l|} \hline \ex{handle-delim} & Meaning \\ \hline\hline \ex{'trim} & Ignore delimiter character. \\ \ex{'peek} & Leave delimiter character in input stream. \\ \ex{'concat} & Append delimiter character to returned value. \\ \ex{'split} & Return delimiter as second value. \\ \hline \end{tabular} \end{inset} The first case, \ex{'trim}, is the standard default for all the routines described in this section. The last three cases allow the programmer to distinguish between strings that are terminated by a delimiter character, and strings that are terminated by an end-of-file. \begin{defundesc} {read-line} {[port handle-newline]} {{\str} or eof-object} Reads and returns one line of text; on eof, returns the eof object. A line is terminated by newline or eof. \var{handle-newline} determines what \ex{read-line} does with the newline or EOF that terminates the line; it takes the general set of values described for the general \ex{handle-delim} case above, and defaults to \ex{'trim} (discard the newline). Using this argument allows one to tell whether or not the last line of input in a file is newline terminated. \end{defundesc} \defun{read-paragraph} {[port handle-delim]} {{\str} or eof} \begin{desc} This procedure skips blank lines, then reads text from a port until a blank line or eof is found. A ``blank line'' is a (possibly empty) line composed only of white space. The \var{handle-delim} parameter determines how the terminating blank line is handled. It is described above, and defaults to \ex{'trim}. The \ex{'peek} option is not available. \end{desc} The following procedures read in strings from ports delimited by characters belonging to a specific set. See section~\ref{sec:char-sets} for information on character set manipulation. \defun{read-delimited}{char-set [port handle-delim]} {{\str} or eof} \begin{desc} Read until we encounter one of the chars in \var{char-set} or eof. The \var{handle-delim} parameter determines how the terminating character is handled. It is described above, and defaults to \ex{'trim}. The \var{char-set} argument may be a charset, a string, or a character; it is coerced to a charset. \end{desc} \dfni{read-delimited!} {char-set buf [port handle-delim start end]} {nchars or eof or \#f}{procedure} {read-delimited"!@\texttt{read-delimited"!}} \begin{desc} A side-effecting variant of \ex{read-delimited}. The data is written into the string \var{buf} at the indices in the half-open interval $[\var{start},\var{end})$; the default interval is the whole string: $\var{start}=0$ and $\var{end}=\ex{(string-length \var{buf})}$. The values of \var{start} and \var{end} must specify a well-defined interval in \var{str}, \ie, $0 \le \var{start} \le \var{end} \le \ex{(string-length \var{buf})}$. It returns \var{nbytes}, the number of bytes read. If the buffer filled up without a delimiter character being found, \ex{\#f} is returned. If the port is at eof when the read starts, the eof object is returned. If an integer is returned (\ie, the read is successfully terminated by reading a delimiter character), then the \var{handle-delim} parameter determines how the terminating character is handled. It is described above, and defaults to \ex{'trim}. \end{desc} \dfni{\%read-delimited!} {char-set buf gobble? [port start end]} {[char-or-eof-or-\#f \integer]}{procedure} {\%read-delimited"!@\texttt{\%read-delimited"!}} \begin{desc} This low-level delimited reader uses an alternate interface. It returns two values: \var{terminator} and \var{num-read}. \begin{description} \item [terminator] A value describing why the read was terminated: \begin{flushleft} \begin{tabular}{l@{\qquad$\Rightarrow$\qquad}l} Character or eof-object & Read terminated by this value. \\ \ex{\#f} & Filled buffer without finding a delimiter. \end{tabular} \end{flushleft} \item [num-read] Number of characters read into \var{buf}. \end{description} If the read is successfully terminated by reading a delimiter character, then the \var{gobble?} parameter determines what to do with the terminating character. If true, the character is removed from the input stream; if false, the character is left in the input stream where a subsequent read operation will retrieve it. In either case, the character is also the first value returned by the procedure call. \end{desc} %Note: %- Invariant: TERMINATOR = #f => NUM-READ = END - START. %- Invariant: TERMINATOR = eof-object and NUM-READ = 0 => at EOF. %- When determining the TERMINATOR return value, ties are broken % favoring character or the eof-object over #f. That is, if the buffer % fills up, %READ-DELIMITED! will peek at one more character from the % input stream to determine if it terminates the input. If so, that % is returned, not #f. \begin{defundesc} {skip-char-set} {skip-chars [port]} {\integer} Skip characters occurring in the set \var{skip-chars}; return the number of characters skipped. The \var{skip-chars} argument may be a charset, a string, or a character; it is coerced to a charset. \end{defundesc} %%% Local Variables: %%% mode: latex %%% TeX-master: "man" %%% End: