The Single UNIX ® Specification, Version 2
Copyright © 1997 The Open Group

 NAME

lex - generate programs for lexical tasks (DEVELOPMENT)

 SYNOPSIS



lex -c[-t][ -n| -v][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 the EXTENDED DESCRIPTION section for a complete description of the lex input language.

 OPTIONS

The lex utility supports the XBD specification, Utility Syntax Guidelines  .

The following options are supported:

-c
Indicate C-language action (default option).
-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 will 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 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.

 STDIN

The standard input will be used if no file operands are specified, or if a file operand is "-". See INPUT FILES.

 INPUT FILES

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

 ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

If this variable is not set to the POSIX locale, the results are unspecified. The following environment variables affect the execution of lex:
LANG
Provide a default value for the internationalisation variables that are unset or null. If LANG is unset or null, the corresponding value from the implementation-dependent default locale will be used. If any of the internationalisation variables contains an invalid setting, the utility will behave as if none of the variables had been defined.
LC_ALL
If set to a non-empty string value, override the values of all the other internationalisation variables.
LC_COLLATE
Determine the locale for the behaviour 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- as opposed to multi-byte characters in arguments and input files), and the behaviour 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 catalogues 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 will be written to standard output.

If the -t option is not specified:

  1. Implementation-dependent 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 either the standard output or standard error, in an implementation-dependent format. These statistics may also be generated if table sizes are specified with a "%" operator in the Definitions section (see the EXTENDED DESCRIPTION section), as long as the -n option is not specified.

 STDERR

If the -t option is specified, implementation-dependent 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. Implementation-dependent 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 either the standard output or standard error, in an implementation-dependent format. These statistics may also be generated if table sizes are specified with a "%" operator in the Definitions section (see the EXTENDED DESCRIPTION section), 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 fragments.

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:

During pattern matching, lex searches the set of patterns for the single 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 subroutines follow.

Any line in the Definitions section beginning with a blank character 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 section included between delimiter lines containing 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 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 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 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 recognised 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 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-separated 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 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-dependent. If an application refers to yytext outside of the scanner source file (that is, via an extern), the application will include the appropriate %array or %pointer declaration in the scanner source file.

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

Declaration Description Minimum 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
Table: Table Size Declarations in lex

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-dependent. The implementation will document how these numbers affect the lex utility and how they are related to any output that may be generated by the implementation should space limitations be encountered during the execution of lex. It is 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 will 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 recognised.
ERE action ERE action ...

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

 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 (see the XBD specification, Extended Regular Expressions  ), 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 recognised. 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 on; see Actions in lex . (As an exception to the typographical conventions of the rest of this specification, in this case <state> does not represent a metavariable, but the literal angle-bracket characters surrounding a symbol.) The start condition is recognised as such only at the beginning of a regular expression.
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 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, 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 is considered to begin an escape sequence as specified in the table in the XBD specification, File Format Notation  (\\, \a, \b, \f, \n, \r, \t, \v). In addition, the escape sequences in the following table will be recognised.

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
Sequence
Description Meaning
\digits A backslash character followed by the longest sequence of one, two or three octal-digit characters (01234567). If all of the digits are 0, (that is, representation of the NUL character), the behaviour is undefined. The character whose encoding is represented by the one-, two- or three-digit octal integer. If the size of a byte on the system is greater than nine bits, the valid escape sequence used to represent a byte is implementation-dependent. Multi-byte characters require multiple, concatenated escape sequences of this type, including the leading \ for each byte.
\xdigits A backslash character followed by the longest sequence of hexadecimal-digit characters (01234567abcdefABCDEF). If all of the digits are 0, (that is, representation of the NUL character), the behaviour is undefined. The character whose encoding is represented by the hexadecimal integer.
\c A backslash character followed by any character not described in this table or in the table in the XBD specification, File Format Notation  ( \\, \a, \b, \f, \n, \t, \v). The character c, unchanged.
Table: Escape Sequences in lex

The order of precedence given to extended regular expressions for lex differs from that specified in the XBD specification, Extended Regular Expressions  . The order of precedence 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 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.
Extended Regular Expression Precedence
collation-related bracket symbols [= =] [: :] [. .]
escaped characters \<special character>
bracket expression [ ]
quoting "..."
grouping ( )
definition {name}
single-character RE duplication * + ?
concatenation  
interval expression {m,n}
alternation |
Table: ERE Precedence in lex

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 are special only in a start condition at the beginning of a regular expression; elsewhere in the regular expression they are treated as ordinary characters.

The following examples clarify the differences between lex regular expressions and regular expressions appearing elsewhere in this specification. 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 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 ";" 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> { xprogram statement
'|\nxu'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 behaviour 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 semicolon-terminated; it must be 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 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, 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 c89 or cc (the lex library).

int yylex(void)
Performs lexical analysis on the input; this is the primary function generated by the lex utility. 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 recognised, it is to be appended to the current value of yytext rather than replacing it; the value in yyleng is 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 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 expression is matched. The result of using unput for more characters than have been input is unspecified.

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, calling 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 generated by lex begin with the prefix yy or YY.

 EXIT STATUS

The following exit values are returned:
0
Successful completion.
>0
An error occurred.

 CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS

Default.

 APPLICATION USAGE

Portable 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 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 recognised.

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

 FUTURE DIRECTIONS

None.

 SEE ALSO

c89, yacc.

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Copyright © 1997 The Open Group
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