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1990-01-31
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WART
Wart is a program that implements a small subset of the Unix 'lex' lexical
analyzer generator. Unlike lex, wart may be distributed without requirement
for a Unix license. Wart was written by Jeff Damens at the Columbia University
Center of Computing Activities to facilitate development of Unix Kermit.
Wart is intended for production of state table switchers. It allows a set of
states to be defined, along with a function for getting input, and a table of
state transitions. A C program is generated which performs actions and
switches states based on the current state and the input.
The following short program demonstrates some of the capabilities and
limitations of Wart. The program accepts from the command line a binary
number, preceded by an optional minus sign, and optionally containing a
fractional part. It prints the decimal equivalent.
#include <stdio.h>
int state, s = 1, m = 0, d;
float f;
char *b;
%states sign mantissa fraction /* Declare wart states */
%% /* Begin state table */
<sign>- { s = -1; BEGIN mantissa; } /* Look for sign */
<sign>0 { m = 0; BEGIN mantissa; } /* Got digit, start mantissa */
<sign>1 { m = 1; BEGIN mantissa; }
<sign>. { fatal("bad input"); } /* Detect bad format */
<mantissa>0 { m *= 2; } /* Accumulate mantissa */
<mantissa>1 { m = 2 * m + 1; }
<mantissa>$ { printf("%d\n", s * m); return; }
<mantissa>. { f = 0.0; d = 1; BEGIN fraction; } /* Start fraction */
<fraction>0 { d *= 2; } /* Accumulate fraction */
<fraction>1 { d *= 2; f += 1.0 / d; }
<fraction>$ { printf("%f\n", s * (m + f) ); return; }
<fraction>. { fatal("bad input"); }
%%
input() { /* Define input() function */
int x;
return(((x = *b++) == '\0') ? '$' : x );
}
fatal(s) char *s; { /* Error exit */
fprintf(stderr,"fatal - %s\n",s);
exit(1);
}
main(argc,argv) int argc; char **argv; { /* Main program */
if (argc < 1) exit(1);
b = *++argv;
state = sign; /* Initialize state */
wart(); /* Invoke state switcher */
exit(0); /* Done */
}
The wart program accepts as input a C program containing lines that start
with "%" or sections delimited by "%%". The directive "%states" declares
the program's states. The section enclosed by "%%" markers is the state
table, with entries of the form
<state>X { action }
which is read as "if in state <state> with input X perform { action }"
The optional <state> field tells the current state or states the program must
be in to perform the indicated action. If no state is specified, then it
means the action will be performed regardless of the current state. If more
than one state is specifed, then the action will be performed in any of the
listed states. Multiple states are separated by commas.
The required input field consists of a single literal character. When in
the indicated state, if the input is the specified character, then the
associated action will be performed. The character '.' matches any input
character. No pattern matching or range notation is provided. The input
character is obtained from the input() function, which you must define. It
should be alphanumeric, or else one of the characters ".% -$@" (quotes not
included). Note that the program above recognize the binary point '.'
through a ruse.
The action is a series of zero or more C language statements, enclosed in
curly braces.
The BEGIN macro is defined simply to be "state = ", as in lex.
The wart() function is generated by the wart program based on the state
declarations and the state transition table. It loops through calls to
input(), using the result to index into a big case statement it has created
from the state table.
Wart is invoked as follows:
wart (Input from stdin, output to stdout)
wart fn1 (Input from fn1, output to stdout)
wart fn1 fn2 (Input from fn1, output to fn2. Example: wart a.w a.c)
Wart programs have the conventional filetype '.w'.