From e3556affad811976cfe2b24e69368b683d2f27c3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: dblack Date: Sat, 19 Jul 2003 12:34:45 +0000 Subject: Initial commit of scanf.rb. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@4103 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e --- lib/scanf.rb | 697 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 697 insertions(+) create mode 100644 lib/scanf.rb (limited to 'lib/scanf.rb') diff --git a/lib/scanf.rb b/lib/scanf.rb new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..e610cea24a --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/scanf.rb @@ -0,0 +1,697 @@ +# scanf for Ruby +# +# $Release Version: 1.1.2 $ +# $Revision$ +# $Id$ +# $Author$ +# $Date$ +# +# A product of the Austin Ruby Codefest (Austin, Texas, August 2002) + +=begin + +=scanf for Ruby + +==Description + +scanf for Ruby is an implementation of the C function scanf(3), +modified as necessary for Ruby compatibility. + +The methods provided are String#scanf, IO#scanf, and +Kernel#scanf. Kernel#scanf is a wrapper around STDIN.scanf. IO#scanf +can be used on any IO stream, including file handles and sockets. +scanf can be called either with or without a block. + +scanf for Ruby scans an input string or stream according to a +format, as described below ("Conversions"), and returns an +array of matches between the format and the input. The format is +defined in a string, and is similar (though not identical) to the +formats used in Kernel#printf and Kernel#sprintf. + +The format may contain conversion specifiers, which tell scanf +what form (type) each particular matched substring should be converted +to (e.g., decimal integer, floating point number, literal string, +etc.) The matches and conversions take place from left to right, and +the conversions themselves are returned as an array. + +The format string may also contain characters other than those in the +conversion specifiers. White space (blanks, tabs, or newlines) in the +format string matches any amount of white space, including none, in +the input. Everything else matches only itself. + +Scanning stops, and scanf returns, when any input character fails to +match the specifications in the format string, or when input is +exhausted, or when everything in the format string has been +matched. All matches found up to the stopping point are returned in +the return array (or yielded to the block, if a block was given). + + +==Basic usage + + require 'scanf.rb' + + # String#scanf and IO#scanf take a single argument (a format string) + array = aString.scanf("%d%s") + array = anIO.scanf("%d%s") + + # Kernel#scanf reads from STDIN + array = scanf("%d%s") + +==Block usage + +When called with a block, scanf keeps scanning the input, cycling back +to the beginning of the format string, and yields a new array of +conversions to the block every time the format string is matched +(including partial matches, but not including complete failures). The +actual return value of scanf when called with a block is an array +containing the results of all the executions of the block. + + str = "123 abc 456 def 789 ghi" + str.scanf("%d%s") { |num,str| [ num * 2, str.upcase ] } + # => [[246, "ABC"], [912, "DEF"], [1578, "GHI"]] + +==Conversions + +The single argument to scanf is a format string, which generally +includes one or more conversion specifiers. Conversion specifiers +begin with the percent character ('%') and include information about +what scanf should next scan for (string, decimal number, single +character, etc.). + +There may be an optional maximum field width, expressed as a decimal +integer, between the % and the conversion. If no width is given, a +default of `infinity' is used (with the exception of the %c specifier; +see below). Otherwise, given a field width of n for a given +conversion, at most n characters are scanned in processing +that conversion. Before conversion begins, most conversions skip +white space in the input string; this white space is not counted +against the field width. + +The following conversions are available. (See the files EXAMPLES +and tests/scanftests.rb for examples.) + +[%] + Matches a literal `%'. That is, `%%' in the format string matches a + single input `%' character. No conversion is done, and the resulting + '%' is not included in the return array. + +[d] + Matches an optionally signed decimal integer. + +[u] + Same as d. + +[i] + Matches an optionally signed integer. The integer is read in base + 16 if it begins with `0x' or `0X', in base 8 if it begins with `0', + and in base 10 other- wise. Only characters that correspond to the + base are recognized. + +[o] + Matches an optionally signed octal integer. + +[x,X] + Matches an optionally signed hexadecimal integer, + +[f,g,e,E] + Matches an optionally signed floating-point number. + +[s] + Matches a sequence of non-white-space character. The input string stops at + white space or at the maximum field width, whichever occurs first. + +[c] + Matches a single character, or a sequence of n characters if a + field width of n is specified. The usual skip of leading white + space is suppressed. To skip white space first, use an explicit space in + the format. + +[[] + Matches a nonempty sequence of characters from the specified set + of accepted characters. The usual skip of leading white space is + suppressed. This bracketed sub-expression is interpreted exactly like a + character class in a Ruby regular expression. (In fact, it is placed as-is + in a regular expression.) The matching against the input string ends with + the appearance of a character not in (or, with a circumflex, in) the set, + or when the field width runs out, whichever comes first. + +===Assignment suppression + +To require that a particular match occur, but without including the result +in the return array, place the assignment suppression flag, which is +the star character ('*'), immediately after the leading '%' of a format +specifier (just before the field width, if any). + +==Examples + +See the files EXAMPLES and tests/scanftests.rb. + +==scanf for Ruby compared with scanf in C + +scanf for Ruby is based on the C function scanf(3), but with modifications, +dictated mainly by the underlying differences between the languages. + +===Unimplemented flags and specifiers + +* The only flag implemented in scanf for Ruby is '*' (ignore + upcoming conversion). Many of the flags available in C versions of scanf(4) + have to do with the type of upcoming pointer arguments, and are literally + meaningless in Ruby. + +* The n specifier (store number of characters consumed so far in + next pointer) is not implemented. + +* The p specifier (match a pointer value) is not implemented. + +===Altered specifiers + +[o,u,x,X] + In scanf for Ruby, all of these specifiers scan for an optionally signed + integer, rather than for an unsigned integer like their C counterparts. + +===Return values + +scanf for Ruby returns an array of successful conversions, whereas +scanf(3) returns the number of conversions successfully +completed. (See below for more details on scanf for Ruby's return +values.) + +==Return values + +Without a block, scanf returns an array containing all the conversions +it has found. If none are found, scanf will return an empty array. An +unsuccesful match is never ignored, but rather always signals the end +of the scanning operation. If the first unsuccessful match takes place +after one or more successful matches have already taken place, the +returned array will contain the results of those successful matches. + +With a block scanf returns a 'map'-like array of transformations from +the block -- that is, an array reflecting what the block did with each +yielded result from the iterative scanf operation. (See "Block +usage", above.) + +==Test suite + +scanf for Ruby includes a suite of unit tests (requiring the +TestUnit package), which can be run with the command ruby +tests/scanftests.rb or the command make test. + +==Current limitations and bugs + +When using IO#scanf under Windows, make sure you open your files in +binary mode: + + File.open("filename", "rb") + +so that scanf can keep track of characters correctly. + +Support for character classes is reasonably complete (since it +essentially piggy-backs on Ruby's regular expression handling of +character classes), but users are advised that character class testing +has not been exhaustive, and that they should exercise some caution +in using any of the more complex and/or arcane character class +idioms. + + +==Technical notes + +===Rationale behind scanf for Ruby + +The impetus for a scanf implementation in Ruby comes chiefly from the fact +that existing pattern matching operations, such as Regexp#match and +String#scan, return all results as strings, which have to be converted to +integers or floats explicitly in cases where what's ultimately wanted are +integer or float values. + +===Design of scanf for Ruby + +scanf for Ruby is essentially a -to- converter. + +When scanf is called, a FormatString object is generated from the +format string ("%d%s...") argument. The FormatString object breaks the +format string down into atoms ("%d", "%5f", "blah", etc.), and from +each atom it creates a FormatSpecifier object, which it +saves. + +Each FormatSpecifier has a regular expression fragment and a "handler" +associated with it. For example, the regular expression fragment +associated with the format "%d" is "([-+]?\d+)", and the handler +associated with it is a wrapper around String#to_i. scanf itself calls +FormatString#match, passing in the input string. FormatString#match +iterates through its FormatSpecifiers; for each one, it matches the +corresponding regular expression fragment against the string. If +there's a match, it sends the matched string to the handler associated +with the FormatSpecifier. + +Thus, to follow up the "%d" example: if "123" occurs in the input +string when a FormatSpecifier consisting of "%d" is reached, the "123" +will be matched against "([-+]?\d+)", and the matched string will be +rendered into an integer by a call to to_i. + +The rendered match is then saved to an accumulator array, and the +input string is reduced to the post-match substring. Thus the string +is "eaten" from the left as the FormatSpecifiers are applied in +sequence. (This is done to a duplicate string; the original string is +not altered.) + +As soon as a regular expression fragment fails to match the string, or +when the FormatString object runs out of FormatSpecifiers, scanning +stops and results accumulated so far are returned in an array. + +==License and copyright + +Copyright:: (c) 2002-2003 David Alan Black +License:: Distributed on the same licensing terms as Ruby itself + +==Warranty disclaimer + +This software is provided "as is" and without any express or implied +warranties, including, without limitation, the implied warranties of +merchantibility and fitness for a particular purpose. + +==Credits and acknowledgements + +scanf for Ruby was developed as the major activity of the Austin +Ruby Codefest (Austin, Texas, August 2002). + +Principal author:: David Alan Black (mailto:dblack@superlink.net) +Co-author:: Hal Fulton (mailto:hal9000@hypermetrics.com) +Project contributors:: Nolan Darilek, Jason Johnston + +Thanks to Hal Fulton for hosting the Codefest. + +Thanks to Matz for suggestions about the class design. + +Thanks to Gavin Sinclair for some feedback on the documentation. + +The text for parts of this document, especially the Description and +Conversions sections, above, were adapted from the Linux Programmer's +Manual manpage for scanf(3), dated 1995-11-01. + +==Bugs and bug reports + +scanf for Ruby is based on something of an amalgam of C scanf +implementations and documentation, rather than on a single canonical +description. Suggestions for features and behaviors which appear in +other scanfs, and would be meaningful in Ruby, are welcome, as are +reports of suspicious behaviors and/or bugs. (Please see "Credits and +acknowledgements", above, for email addresses.) + +=end + +module Scanf + + class FormatSpecifier + + attr_reader :re_string, :matched_string, :conversion + attr_writer :i + + private + + def skip; /^\s*%\*/.match(@spec_string); end + + def extract_float(s); s.to_f if s &&! skip; end + def extract_decimal(s); s.to_i if s &&! skip; end + def extract_hex(s); s.hex if s &&! skip; end + def extract_octal(s); s.oct if s &&! skip; end + def extract_integer(s); Integer(s) if s &&! skip; end + def extract_plain(s); s unless skip; end + + def nil_proc(s); nil; end + + public + + def to_s + @spec_string + end + + def count_space? + /(?:\A|\S)%\*?\d*c|\[/.match(@spec_string) + end + + def initialize(str) + @spec_string = str + + h = '[A-Fa-f0-9]' + + @re_string, @handler = + case @spec_string + + # %[[:...:]] + when /%\*?(\[\[:[a-z]+:\]\])/ + [ "(#{$1}+)", :extract_plain ] + + # %5[[:...:]] + when /%\*?(\d+)(\[\[:[a-z]+:\]\])/ + [ "(#{$2}{1,#{$1}})", :extract_plain ] + + # %[...] + when /%\*?\[([^\]]*)\]/ + yes = $1 + if /^\^/.match(yes) then no = yes[1..-1] else no = '^' + yes end + [ "([#{yes}]+)(?=[#{no}]|\\z)", :extract_plain ] + + # %5[...] + when /%\*?(\d+)\[([^\]]*)\]/ + yes = $2 + w = $1 + [ "([#{yes}]{1,#{w}})", :extract_plain ] + + # %i + when /%\*?i/ + [ "([-+]?(?:(?:0[0-7]+)|(?:0[Xx]#{h}+)|(?:[1-9]\\d+)))", :extract_integer ] + + # %5i + when /%\*?(\d+)i/ + n = $1.to_i + s = "(" + if n > 1 then s += "[1-9]\\d{1,#{n-1}}|" end + if n > 1 then s += "0[0-7]{1,#{n-1}}|" end + if n > 2 then s += "[-+]0[0-7]{1,#{n-2}}|" end + if n > 2 then s += "[-+][1-9]\\d{1,#{n-2}}|" end + if n > 2 then s += "0[Xx]#{h}{1,#{n-2}}|" end + if n > 3 then s += "[-+]0[Xx]#{h}{1,#{n-3}}|" end + s += "\\d" + s += ")" + [ s, :extract_integer ] + + # %d, %u + when /%\*?[du]/ + [ '([-+]?\d+)', :extract_decimal ] + + # %5d, %5u + when /%\*?(\d+)[du]/ + n = $1.to_i + s = "(" + if n > 1 then s += "[-+]\\d{1,#{n-1}}|" end + s += "\\d{1,#{$1}})" + [ s, :extract_decimal ] + + # %x + when /%\*?[Xx]/ + [ "([-+]?(?:0[Xx])?#{h}+)", :extract_hex ] + + # %5x + when /%\*?(\d+)[Xx]/ + n = $1.to_i + s = "(" + if n > 3 then s += "[-+]0[Xx]#{h}{1,#{n-3}}|" end + if n > 2 then s += "0[Xx]#{h}{1,#{n-2}}|" end + if n > 1 then s += "[-+]#{h}{1,#{n-1}}|" end + s += "#{h}{1,#{n}}" + s += ")" + [ s, :extract_hex ] + + # %o + when /%\*?o/ + [ '([-+]?[0-7]+)', :extract_octal ] + + # %5o + when /%\*?(\d+)o/ + [ "([-+][0-7]{1,#{$1.to_i-1}}|[0-7]{1,#{$1}})", :extract_octal ] + + # %f + when /%\*?f/ + [ '([-+]?((\d+(?>(?=[^\d.]|$)))|(\d*(\.(\d*([eE][-+]?\d+)?)))))', :extract_float ] + + # %5f + when /%\*?(\d+)f/ + [ "(\\S{1,#{$1}})", :extract_float ] + + # %5s + when /%\*?(\d+)s/ + [ "(\\S{1,#{$1}})", :extract_plain ] + + # %s + when /%\*?s/ + [ '(\S+)', :extract_plain ] + + # %c + when /\s%\*?c/ + [ "\\s*(.)", :extract_plain ] + + # %c + when /%\*?c/ + [ "(.)", :extract_plain ] + + # %5c (whitespace issues are handled by the count_*_space? methods) + when /%\*?(\d+)c/ + [ "(.{1,#{$1}})", :extract_plain ] + + # %% + when /%%/ + [ '(\s*%)', :nil_proc ] + + # literal characters + else + [ "(#{Regexp.escape(@spec_string)})", :nil_proc ] + end + + @re_string = '\A' + @re_string + end + + def to_re + Regexp.new(@re_string,Regexp::MULTILINE) + end + + def match(str) + s = str.dup + s.sub!(/\A\s+/,'') unless count_space? + res = to_re.match(s) + if res + @conversion = send(@handler, res[1]) + @matched_string = @matched_item.to_s + end + res + end + + def letter + /%\*?\d*([a-z\[])/.match(@spec_string).to_a[1] + end + + def width + w = /%\*?(\d+)/.match(@spec_string).to_a[1] + w && w.to_i || 0 + end + + def mid_match? + cc_no_width = letter == '[' && width.zero? + c_or_cc_width = (letter == 'c' || letter == '[') &&! width.zero? + c_or_cc_open = c_or_cc_width && (matched_string.size < width) + + return c_or_cc_open || cc_no_width + end + + end + + class FormatString + + attr_reader :string_left, :last_spec_tried, :last_match_tried, :matched_count, :space + + SPECIFIERS = 'diuXxofeEgsc' + REGEX = / + # possible space, followed by... + (?:\s* + # percent sign, followed by... + % + # another percent sign, or... + (?:%| + # optional assignment suppression flag + \*? + # optional maximum field width + \d* + # named character class, ... + (?:\[\[:\w+:\]\]| + # traditional character class, or... + \[[^\]]*\]| + # specifier letter. + [#{SPECIFIERS}])))| + # or miscellaneous characters + [^%\s]+/ix + + def initialize(str) + @specs = [] + s = str.to_s + return unless /\S/.match(s) + @space = true if /\s\z/.match(s) + @specs.replace s.scan(REGEX).map {|spec| FormatSpecifier.new(spec) } + end + + def to_s + @spec_string + end + + def prune(n=matched_count) + n.times { @specs.shift } + end + + def spec_count + @specs.size + end + + def last_spec + @i == spec_count - 1 + end + + def match(str) + accum = [] + @string_left = str + @matched_count = 0 + + @specs.each_with_index do |spec,@i| + @last_spec_tried = spec + @last_match_tried = spec.match(@string_left) + break unless @last_match_tried + @matched_count += 1 + + accum << spec.conversion + + @string_left = @last_match_tried.post_match + break if @string_left.empty? + end + return accum.compact + end + end +end + +class IO + +# The trick here is doing a match where you grab one *line* +# of input at a time. The linebreak may or may not occur +# at the boundary where the string matches a format specifier. +# And if it does, some rule about whitespace may or may not +# be in effect... +# +# That's why this is much more elaborate than the string +# version. +# +# Match succeeds (non-emptily) +# and the last attempted spec/string sub-match succeeded: +# +# is the current matched spec a '%[...]' or '%c' with a width? +# yes: is current.string.size < available width? +# yes: save interim results +# no: width is used up, so move on (next) +# no: is it a '%[...]' with no width? +# yes: evidently nothing violated it yet, so store +# interim results and continue (next) +# +# The last attempted spec/string did not match: +# +# are we on the next-to-last spec in the string? +# yes: +# is fmt_string.string_left all spaces? +# yes: does current spec care about input space? +# yes: fatal failure +# no: save interim results and continue +# no: continue [this state could be analyzed further] +# +# + def scanf(str,&b) + return block_scanf(str,&b) if b + return [] unless str.size > 0 + + start_position = pos + matched_so_far = 0 + source_buffer = "" + result_buffer = [] + final_result = [] + + fstr = Scanf::FormatString.new(str) + + loop do + if eof + final_result.concat(result_buffer) + break + end + + source_buffer << gets + current_match = fstr.match(source_buffer) + + spec = fstr.last_spec_tried + + if fstr.last_match_tried + if spec.mid_match? + result_buffer.replace(current_match) + next + end + elsif (fstr.matched_count == fstr.spec_count - 1) + if /\A\s*\z/.match(fstr.string_left) + break if spec.count_space? + result_buffer.replace(current_match) + next + end + end + + final_result.concat(current_match) + + matched_so_far += source_buffer.size + source_buffer.replace(fstr.string_left) + matched_so_far -= source_buffer.size + break if fstr.last_spec + fstr.prune + end + + seek(start_position + matched_so_far, IO::SEEK_SET) rescue Errno::ESPIPE + soak_up_spaces if fstr.last_spec && fstr.space + + return final_result + end + + private + + def soak_up_spaces + c = getc + ungetc(c) if c + until eof ||! c || /\S/.match(c.chr) + c = getc + end + ungetc(c) if c + end + + def block_scanf(str) + final = [] + begin + current = scanf(str) + final.push(yield(current)) unless current.empty? + end until current.empty? || eof + return final + end +end + +class String + + def scanf(fstr,&b) + if b + block_scanf(fstr,&b) + else + fs = + if fstr.is_a? Scanf::FormatString + fstr + else + Scanf::FormatString.new(fstr) + end + fs.match(self) + end + end + + def block_scanf(fstr,&b) + fs = Scanf::FormatString.new(fstr) + str = self.dup + final = [] + begin + current = str.scanf(fs) + final.push(yield(current)) unless current.empty? + str = fs.string_left + end until current.empty? || str.empty? + return final + end +end + +module Kernel + private + def scanf(fs) + STDIN.scanf(fs) + end +end -- cgit v1.2.3