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lout-doc-3.40-7.mga5.noarch.rpm

@Section
   @Title { Filtered right and body parameters }
   @Tag { filters }
@Begin
@PP
A right or body parameter may be filtered by some other computer
program before being included by Lout.  As an example of such a program
we will use the Unix @Code sort command:
@ID @Code "sort  -o outfile  infile"
This causes file @Code outfile to contain a sorted copy of file
{@Code infile}.  We incorporate this into a Lout definition as follows:
@ID @OneRow @Code {
"def @Sort"
"    named @Options {}"
"    right x"
"{"
"    def @Filter { sort @Options  -o @FilterOut  @FilterIn }"
""
"    lines @Break x"
"}"
}
The presence within @Code "@Sort" of a definition of a symbol called
@Code "@Filter" tells Lout that the right parameter of @Code "@Sort"
is to be filtered before inclusion.  When @Code "@Sort" is invoked,
@Code "@Filter" is evaluated and its value executed as a system
command.  In addition to the symbols ordinarily available within the
body of {@Code "@Filter"}, there are three others:
@VeryWideTaggedList
@TI { @Code "@FilterIn" } {
the name of a file which will, at the time the system command is
executed, contain the actual right or body parameter of the
symbol, exactly as it appears in the input file;
}
@TI { @Code "@FilterOut" } {
the name of a file of Lout text whose contents Lout will read after
the system command has finished, as a replacement for what was put
into file {@Code "@FilterIn"};
}
@TI { @Code "@FilterErr" } {
the name of a file that Lout will attempt to read after the system
command has finished, containing error messages produced by the
command that Lout will pass on to the user as non-fatal errors.  Use
of this file is optional.
}
@EndList
It is a fatal error for the system command to return a non-zero status.
@PP
Now the @Code sort command has options @Code -u for deleting duplicate
lines, and @Code -r for reversing the sorting order.  So the result of
@ID @OneRow @Code {
"@Sort"
"    @Options { -r -u }"
"{"
"Austen, Jane"
"Dickens, Charles"
"Eliot, George"
"Hardy, Thomas"
"Bront{@Char edieresis}, Charlotte"
"}"
}
is
@ID @OneRow lines @Break
{
Hardy, Thomas
Eliot, George
Dickens, Charles
Bront{@Char edieresis}, Charlotte
Austen, Jane
}
Unlike all the other examples in this manual, this output
is simulated.  This was done so that the ability to format this
manual is not dependent on the existence of the Unix {@Code "sort"}
command, and it highlights the fact that filtered actual parameters
are by their nature of uncertain portability.
@PP
There is no need for an actual filtered parameter to obey the lexical
rules of Lout, since it is passed directly to the other program.  However,
Lout must be able to work out where the parameter ends, which gives
rise to the following rules.  As with a body parameter, a symbol
@Code "@Sym" with a filtered parameter must be invoked in either the
form @Code "@Sym { ... }" or the form {@Code "@Sym @Begin ... @End @Sym"},
plus options as usual.  In the former case, braces within the
actual parameter must match; in the latter case, the actual parameter
may not contain {@Code "@End"}.
@PP
If an actual filtered parameter contains @@Include, this is taken to
begin a Lout @@Include directive in the usual form (Section
{@NumberOf include}):
@ID @OneRow @Code {
"@Sort {"
"Austen, Jane"
"@Include { authors }"
"Hardy, Thomas"
"}"
}
The included file becomes part of {@Code "@FilterIn"}, but any braces,
@@Include, or @@End within it are not noticed by Lout.
@PP
The first character of file @Code "@FilterIn" will be the first
non-white space character following the opening @Code "{" or @@Begin,
or the first character of an included file if @@Include comes first.  The
second-last character of file @Code "@FilterIn" will be the last non-white
space character preceding the closing @Code "}" or {@Code "@End @Sym"},
or the last character of an included file if @@Include comes last.  One
newline character is always appended and is the last character of file
{@Code "@FilterIn"}.  This effects a compromise between the Lout convention,
that spaces following @Code "{" or preceding @Code "}" are not significant,
with the Unix convention that all text files end with a newline character.
@End @Section