flex
FLEX(X)                                                   FLEX(X)



NAME
       flex - fast lexical analyzer generator

SYNOPSIS
       flex  [-bcdfhilnpstvwBFILTV78+? -C[aefFmr] -ooutput -Ppre-
       fix -Sskeleton] [--help --version] [filename ...]

OVERVIEW
       This manual describes flex, a tool for generating programs
       that   perform   pattern-matching  on  text.   The  manual
       includes both tutorial and reference sections:

           Description
               a brief overview of the tool

           Some Simple Examples

           Format Of The Input File

           Patterns
               the extended regular expressions used by flex

           How The Input Is Matched
               the rules for determining what has been matched

           Actions
               how to specify what to do when a pattern is matched

           The Generated Scanner
               details regarding the scanner that flex produces;
               how to control the input source

           Start Conditions
               introducing context into your scanners, and
               managing "mini-scanners"

           Multiple Input Buffers
               how to manipulate multiple input sources; how to
               scan from strings instead of files

           End-of-file Rules
               special rules for matching the end of the input

           Miscellaneous Macros
               a summary of macros available to the actions

           Values Available To The User
               a summary of values available to the actions

           Interfacing With Yacc
               connecting flex scanners together with yacc parsers

           Options
               flex command-line options, and the "%option"
               directive

           Performance Considerations
               how to make your scanner go as fast as possible

           Generating C++ Scanners
               the (experimental) facility for generating C++
               scanner classes

           Incompatibilities With Lex And POSIX
               how flex differs from AT&T lex and the POSIX lex
               standard

           Diagnostics
               those error messages produced by flex (or scanners
               it generates) whose meanings might not be apparent

           Files
               files used by flex

           Deficiencies / Bugs
               known problems with flex

           See Also
               other documentation, related tools

           Author
               includes contact information


DESCRIPTION
       flex is a tool for  generating  scanners:  programs  which
       recognized lexical patterns in text.  flex reads the given
       input files, or its standard input if no  file  names  are
       given,  for  a  description of a scanner to generate.  The
       description is in the form of pairs of regular expressions
       and  C  code,  called  rules. flex generates as output a C
       source file, lex.yy.c, which defines  a  routine  yylex().
       This  file is compiled and linked with the -lfl library to
       produce an executable.  When the  executable  is  run,  it
       analyzes  its input for occurrences of the regular expres-
       sions.  Whenever it finds one, it executes the correspond-
       ing C code.

SOME SIMPLE EXAMPLES
       First  some  simple  examples to get the flavor of how one
       uses flex.  The following flex input specifies  a  scanner
       which  whenever  it  encounters the string "username" will
       replace it with the user's login name:

           %%
           username    printf( "%s", getlogin() );

       By default, any text not matched  by  a  flex  scanner  is
       copied to the output, so the net effect of this scanner is
       to copy its input file to its output with each  occurrence
       of  "username" expanded.  In this input, there is just one
       rule.  "username" is the pattern and the "printf"  is  the
       action.  The "%%" marks the beginning of the rules.

       Here's another simple example:

                   int num_lines = 0, num_chars = 0;

           %%
           \n      ++num_lines; ++num_chars;
           .       ++num_chars;

           %%
           main()
                   {
                   yylex();
                   printf( "# of lines = %d, # of chars = %d\n",
                           num_lines, num_chars );
                   }

       This  scanner counts the number of characters and the num-
       ber of lines in its input (it  produces  no  output  other
       than  the  final  report  on  the counts).  The first line
       declares two globals, "num_lines" and  "num_chars",  which
       are  accessible both inside yylex() and in the main() rou-
       tine declared after the second "%%".  There are two rules,
       one which matches a newline ("\n") and increments both the
       line count and the character count, and one which  matches
       any  character  other than a newline (indicated by the "."
       regular expression).

       A somewhat more complicated example:

           /* scanner for a toy Pascal-like language */

           %{
           /* need this for the call to atof() below */
           #include <math.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 whitespace */

           .           printf( "Unrecognized character: %s\n", yytext );

           %%

           main( argc, argv )
           int argc;
           char **argv;
               {
               ++argv, --argc;  /* skip over program name */
               if ( argc > 0 )
                       yyin = fopen( argv[0], "r" );
               else
                       yyin = stdin;

               yylex();
               }

       This is the beginnings of a simple scanner for a  language
       like  Pascal.  It identifies different types of tokens and
       reports on what it has seen.

       The details of this example will be explained in the  fol-
       lowing sections.

FORMAT OF THE INPUT FILE
       The  flex input file consists of three sections, separated
       by a line with just %% in it:

           definitions
           %%
           rules
           %%
           user code

       The definitions section contains  declarations  of  simple
       name  definitions  to  simplify the scanner specification,
       and declarations of start conditions, which are  explained
       in a later section.

       Name definitions have the form:

           name definition

       The  "name" is a word beginning with a letter or an under-
       score ('_') followed by zero or more letters, digits, '_',
       or  '-'  (dash).   The definition is taken to begin at the
       first non-white-space character  following  the  name  and
       continuing  to  the  end  of the line.  The definition can
       subsequently be referred to  using  "{name}",  which  will
       expand to "(definition)".  For example,

           DIGIT    [0-9]
           ID       [a-z][a-z0-9]*

       defines "DIGIT" to be a regular expression which matches a
       single digit, and "ID" to be a  regular  expression  which
       matches  a letter followed by zero-or-more letters-or-dig-
       its.  A subsequent reference to

           {DIGIT}+"."{DIGIT}*

       is identical to

           ([0-9])+"."([0-9])*

       and matches one-or-more digits followed by a '.'  followed
       by zero-or-more digits.

       The  rules  section of the flex input contains a series of
       rules of the form:

           pattern   action

       where the pattern must be unindented and the  action  must
       begin on the same line.

       See  below  for  a  further  description  of  patterns and
       actions.

       Finally,  the  user  code  section  is  simply  copied  to
       lex.yy.c  verbatim.   It  is  used  for companion routines
       which call or are called by the scanner.  The presence  of
       this  section is optional; if it is missing, the second %%
       in the input file may be skipped, too.

       In the definitions and rules sections, any  indented  text
       or  text  enclosed  in %{ and %} is copied verbatim to the
       output (with the %{}'s removed).  The  %{}'s  must  appear
       unindented on lines by themselves.

       In  the  rules section, any indented or %{} text appearing
       before the first rule may be  used  to  declare  variables
       which  are  local  to  the scanning routine and (after the
       declarations) code which is to be  executed  whenever  the
       scanning  routine  is entered.  Other indented or %{} text
       in the rule section is still copied to the output, but its
       meaning is not well-defined and it may well cause compile-
       time errors (this feature is present for POSIX compliance;
       see below for other such features).

       In the definitions section (but not in the rules section),
       an unindented comment (i.e., a line beginning  with  "/*")
       is also copied verbatim to the output up to the next "*/".

PATTERNS
       The patterns in the input are written  using  an  extended
       set of regular expressions.  These are:

           x          match the character 'x'
           .          any character (byte) except newline
           [xyz]      a "character class"; in this case, the pattern
                        matches either an 'x', a 'y', or a 'z'
           [abj-oZ]   a "character class" with a range in it; matches
                        an 'a', a 'b', any letter from 'j' through 'o',
                        or a 'Z'
           [^A-Z]     a "negated character class", i.e., any character
                        but those in the class.  In this case, any
                        character EXCEPT an uppercase letter.
           [^A-Z\n]   any character EXCEPT an uppercase letter or
                        a newline
           r*         zero or more r's, where r is any regular expression
           r+         one or more r's
           r?         zero or one r's (that is, "an optional r")
           r{2,5}     anywhere from two to five r's
           r{2,}      two or more r's
           r{4}       exactly 4 r's
           {name}     the expansion of the "name" definition
                      (see above)
           "[xyz]\"foo"
                      the literal string: [xyz]"foo
           \X         if X is an 'a', 'b', 'f', 'n', 'r', 't', or 'v',
                        then the ANSI-C interpretation of \x.
                        Otherwise, a literal 'X' (used to escape
                        operators such as '*')
           \0         a NUL character (ASCII code 0)
           \123       the character with octal value 123
           \x2a       the character with hexadecimal value 2a
           (r)        match an r; parentheses are used to override
                        precedence (see below)


           rs         the regular expression r followed by the
                        regular expression s; called "concatenation"


           r|s        either an r or an s


           r/s        an r but only if it is followed by an s.  The
                        text matched by s is included when determining
                        whether this rule is the "longest match",
                        but is then returned to the input before
                        the action is executed.  So the action only
                        sees the text matched by r.  This type
                        of pattern is called trailing context".
                        (There are some combinations of r/s that flex
                        cannot match correctly; see notes in the
                        Deficiencies / Bugs section below regarding
                        "dangerous trailing context".)
           ^r         an r, but only at the beginning of a line (i.e.,
                        which just starting to scan, or right after a
                        newline has been scanned).
           r$         an r, but only at the end of a line (i.e., just
                        before a newline).  Equivalent to "r/\n".

                      Note that flex's notion of "newline" is exactly
                      whatever the C compiler used to compile flex
                      interprets '\n' as; in particular, on some DOS
                      systems you must either filter out \r's in the
                      input yourself, or explicitly use r/\r\n for "r$".


           <s>r       an r, but only in start condition s (see
                        below for discussion of start conditions)
           <s1,s2,s3>r
                      same, but in any of start conditions s1,
                        s2, or s3
           <*>r       an r in any start condition, even an exclusive one.


           <<EOF>>    an end-of-file
           <s1,s2><<EOF>>
                      an end-of-file when in start condition s1 or s2

       Note that inside of a character class, all regular expres-
       sion operators lose their special  meaning  except  escape
       ('\') and the character class operators, '-', ']', and, at
       the beginning of the class, '^'.

       The regular expressions listed above are grouped according
       to  precedence, from highest precedence at the top to low-
       est at the bottom.   Those  grouped  together  have  equal
       precedence.  For example,

           foo|bar*

       is the same as

           (foo)|(ba(r*))

       since the '*' operator has higher precedence than concate-
       nation, and concatenation higher than  alternation  ('|').
       This  pattern therefore matches either the string "foo" or
       the string "ba" followed by zero-or-more  r's.   To  match
       "foo" or zero-or-more "bar"'s, use:

           foo|(bar)*

       and to match zero-or-more "foo"'s-or-"bar"'s:

           (foo|bar)*


       In  addition to characters and ranges of characters, char-
       acter   classes   can   also   contain   character   class
       expressions.  These are expressions enclosed inside [: and
       :] delimiters (which themselves must  appear  between  the
       '['  and  ']'  of  the character class; other elements may
       occur inside the character class, too).  The valid expres-
       sions are:

           [:alnum:] [:alpha:] [:blank:]
           [:cntrl:] [:digit:] [:graph:]
           [:lower:] [:print:] [:punct:]
           [:space:] [:upper:] [:xdigit:]

       These expressions all designate a set of characters equiv-
       alent to the corresponding standard C isXXX function.  For
       example,  [:alnum:]  designates those characters for which
       isalnum() returns true - i.e., any alphabetic or  numeric.
       Some  systems  don't  provide  isblank(),  so flex defines
       [:blank:] as a blank or a tab.

       For example,  the  following  character  classes  are  all
       equivalent:

           [[:alnum:]]
           [[:alpha:][:digit:]]
           [[:alpha:][0-9]]
           [a-zA-Z0-9]

       If  your  scanner  is case-insensitive (the -i flag), then
       [:upper:] and [:lower:] are equivalent to [:alpha:].

       Some notes on patterns:

       -      A negated character class such as the example "[^A-
              Z]"  above  will match a newline unless "\n" (or an
              equivalent escape sequence) is one of  the  charac-
              ters  explicitly  present  in the negated character
              class (e.g., "[^A-Z\n]").  This is unlike how  many
              other  regular expression tools treat negated char-
              acter classes, but unfortunately the  inconsistency
              is   historically  entrenched.   Matching  newlines
              means that a  pattern  like  [^"]*  can  match  the
              entire  input  unless  there's another quote in the
              input.

       -      A rule can have at most one  instance  of  trailing
              context  (the  '/'  operator  or the '$' operator).
              The start condition, '^',  and  "<<EOF>>"  patterns
              can  only occur at the beginning of a pattern, and,
              as well as with '/'  and  '$',  cannot  be  grouped
              inside  parentheses.  A '^' which does not occur at
              the beginning of a rule or a  '$'  which  does  not
              occur  at the end of a rule loses its special prop-
              erties and is treated as a normal character.

              The following are illegal:

                  foo/bar$
                  <sc1>foo<sc2>bar

              Note that  the  first  of  these,  can  be  written
              "foo/bar\n".

              The  following  will  result  in  '$'  or '^' being
              treated as a normal character:

                  foo|(bar$)
                  foo|^bar

              If what's wanted is a "foo" or a bar-followed-by-a-
              newline,  the  following could be used (the special
              '|' action is explained below):

                  foo      |
                  bar$     /* action goes here */

              A similar trick will work for matching a foo  or  a
              bar-at-the-beginning-of-a-line.

HOW THE INPUT IS MATCHED
       When  the  generated scanner is run, it analyzes its input
       looking for strings which match any of its  patterns.   If
       it  finds  more  than one match, it takes the one matching
       the most text (for trailing context rules,  this  includes
       the  length of the trailing part, even though it will then
       be returned to the  input).   If  it  finds  two  or  more
       matches  of  the same length, the rule listed first in the
       flex input file is chosen.

       Once the match is determined, the  text  corresponding  to
       the  match  (called  the  token)  is made available in the
       global character pointer yytext, and  its  length  in  the
       global  integer  yyleng.   The action corresponding to the
       matched pattern is then executed (a more detailed descrip-
       tion  of actions follows), and then the remaining input is
       scanned for another match.

       If no match is found, then the default rule  is  executed:
       the  next character in the input is considered matched and
       copied to the standard output.  Thus, the  simplest  legal
       flex input is:

           %%

       which  generates  a  scanner  that simply copies its input
       (one character at a time) to its output.

       Note that yytext can be defined  in  two  different  ways:
       either  as  a  character  pointer or as a character array.
       You can control which definition flex  uses  by  including
       one  of  the  special directives %pointer or %array in the
       first (definitions)  section  of  your  flex  input.   The
       default is %pointer, unless you use the -l lex compatibil-
       ity option, in which case yytext will be  an  array.   The
       advantage  of using %pointer is substantially faster scan-
       ning and no  buffer  overflow  when  matching  very  large
       tokens (unless you run out of dynamic memory).  The disad-
       vantage is that you are restricted in how your actions can
       modify  yytext  (see  the  next section), and calls to the
       unput() function destroys the present contents of  yytext,
       which  can  be a considerable porting headache when moving
       between different lex versions.

       The advantage of %array is that you can then modify yytext
       to  your  heart's  content,  and  calls  to unput() do not
       destroy yytext (see  below).   Furthermore,  existing  lex
       programs sometimes access yytext externally using declara-
       tions of the form:
           extern char yytext[];
       This definition is erroneous when used with %pointer,  but
       correct for %array.

       %array defines yytext to be an array of YYLMAX characters,
       which defaults to a fairly large value.   You  can  change
       the size by simply #define'ing YYLMAX to a different value
       in the first section of your  flex  input.   As  mentioned
       above,  with %pointer yytext grows dynamically to accommo-
       date large tokens.  While this means your %pointer scanner
       can accommodate very large tokens (such as matching entire
       blocks of comments), bear in mind that each time the scan-
       ner  must  resize  yytext  it  also must rescan the entire
       token from the beginning,  so  matching  such  tokens  can
       prove slow.  yytext presently does not dynamically grow if
       a call to unput() results in too much  text  being  pushed
       back; instead, a run-time error results.

       Also  note  that  you  cannot  use %array with C++ scanner
       classes (the c++ option; see below).

ACTIONS
       Each pattern in a rule has a corresponding  action,  which
       can be any arbitrary C statement.  The pattern ends at the
       first non-escaped whitespace character; the  remainder  of
       the line is its action.  If the action is empty, then when
       the pattern is matched the  input  token  is  simply  dis-
       carded.  For example, here is the specification for a pro-
       gram which deletes all occurrences of "zap  me"  from  its
       input:

           %%
           "zap me"

       (It  will  copy  all  other characters in the input to the
       output since they will be matched by the default rule.)

       Here is a program which  compresses  multiple  blanks  and
       tabs  down  to  a single blank, and throws away whitespace
       found at the end of a line:

           %%
           [ \t]+        putchar( ' ' );
           [ \t]+$       /* ignore this token */


       If the action contains a '{', then the action  spans  till
       the  balancing '}' is found, and the action may cross mul-
       tiple lines.  flex knows about C strings and comments  and
       won't  be  fooled  by  braces  found within them, but also
       allows actions to begin with  %{  and  will  consider  the
       action to be all the text up to the next %} (regardless of
       ordinary braces inside the action).

       An action consisting solely of a vertical bar ('|')  means
       "same  as the action for the next rule."  See below for an
       illustration.

       Actions can include arbitrary  C  code,  including  return
       statements  to  return  a value to whatever routine called
       yylex().  Each time yylex() is called  it  continues  pro-
       cessing tokens from where it last left off until it either
       reaches the end of the file or executes a return.

       Actions are free to modify yytext except  for  lengthening
       it  (adding  characters  to  its end--these will overwrite
       later characters in the input stream).  This however  does
       not  apply  when  using  %array (see above); in that case,
       yytext may be freely modified in any way.

       Actions are free to modify yyleng except they  should  not
       do  so  if  the  action also includes use of yymore() (see
       below).

       There are a number of  special  directives  which  can  be
       included within an action:

       -      ECHO copies yytext to the scanner's output.

       -      BEGIN  followed  by  the  name of a start condition
              places the scanner in the corresponding start  con-
              dition (see below).

       -      REJECT  directs  the  scanner  to proceed on to the
              "second best" rule which matched the  input  (or  a
              prefix  of  the  input).   The  rule  is  chosen as
              described above in "How the Input is Matched",  and
              yytext  and  yyleng  set  up appropriately.  It may
              either be one which matched as  much  text  as  the
              originally  chosen  rule but came later in the flex
              input file, or one which matched  less  text.   For
              example, the following will both count the words in
              the input and call the routine  special()  whenever
              "frob" is seen:

                          int word_count = 0;
                  %%

                  frob        special(); REJECT;
                  [^ \t\n]+   ++word_count;

              Without the REJECT, any "frob"'s in the input would
              not be counted as words, since the scanner normally
              executes  only  one  action  per  token.   Multiple
              REJECT's are allowed, each  one  finding  the  next
              best  choice  to  the  currently  active rule.  For
              example, when the following scanner scans the token
              "abcd", it will write "abcdabcaba" to the output:

                  %%
                  a        |
                  ab       |
                  abc      |
                  abcd     ECHO; REJECT;
                  .|\n     /* eat up any unmatched character */

              (The  first  three  rules share the fourth's action
              since they use the special '|' action.)  REJECT  is
              a  particularly expensive feature in terms of scan-
              ner performance; if it is used in any of the  scan-
              ner's  actions  it  will slow down all of the scan-
              ner's matching.  Furthermore, REJECT cannot be used
              with the -Cf or -CF options (see below).

              Note  also  that  unlike the other special actions,
              REJECT is a branch; code immediately  following  it
              in the action will not be executed.

       -      yymore()  tells  the  scanner that the next time it
              matches a rule, the corresponding token  should  be
              appended  onto  the  current value of yytext rather
              than replacing it.  For example,  given  the  input
              "mega-kludge"  the following will write "mega-mega-
              kludge" to the output:

                  %%
                  mega-    ECHO; yymore();
                  kludge   ECHO;

              First "mega-" is matched and echoed to the  output.
              Then  "kludge" is matched, but the previous "mega-"
              is still hanging around at the beginning of  yytext
              so  the  ECHO  for  the "kludge" rule will actually
              write "mega-kludge".

       Two notes regarding  use  of  yymore().   First,  yymore()
       depends  on  the  value of yyleng correctly reflecting the
       size of the current token, so you must not  modify  yyleng
       if  you  are  using  yymore().   Second,  the  presence of
       yymore() in the scanner's action entails a  minor  perfor-
       mance penalty in the scanner's matching speed.

       -      yyless(s) returns all but the first n characters of
              the current token back to the input  stream,  where
              they  will  be rescanned when the scanner looks for
              the next match.  yytext  and  yyleng  are  adjusted
              appropriately  (e.g., yyleng will now be equal to n
              ).  For example, on the input "foobar" the  follow-
              ing will write out "foobarbar":

                  %%
                  foobar    ECHO; yyless(s);
                  [a-z]+    ECHO;

              An  argument  of  0 to yyless will cause the entire
              current input string to be scanned  again.   Unless
              you've  changed  how  the scanner will subsequently
              process its input (using BEGIN, for example),  this
              will result in an endless loop.

       Note  that  yyless  is a macro and can only be used in the
       flex input file, not from other source files.

       -      unput(t) puts the character c back onto  the  input
              stream.   It  will  be  the next character scanned.
              The following action will take  the  current  token
              and  cause it to be rescanned enclosed in parenthe-
              ses.

                  {
                  int i;
                  /* Copy yytext because unput() trashes yytext */
                  char *yycopy = strdup( yytext );
                  unput( ')' );
                  for ( i = yyleng - 1; i >= 0; --i )
                      unput( yycopy[i] );
                  unput( '(' );
                  free( yycopy );
                  }

              Note that since each unput() puts the given charac-
              ter  back  at  the  beginning  of the input stream,
              pushing back strings must be done back-to-front.

       An important potential problem when using unput() is  that
       if you are using %pointer (the default), a call to unput()
       destroys the contents of yytext, starting with its  right-
       most  character  and  devouring  one character to the left
       with each call.  If you need the value of yytext preserved
       after  a  call  to  unput() (as in the above example), you
       must either first copy it elsewhere, or build your scanner
       using %array instead (see How The Input Is Matched).

       Finally,  note  that you cannot put back EOF to attempt to
       mark the input stream with an end-of-file.

       -      input() reads the next  character  from  the  input
              stream.   For  example, the following is one way to
              eat up C comments:

                  %%
                  "/*"        {
                              register int c;

                              for ( ; ; )
                                  {
                                  while ( (c = input()) != '*' &&
                                          c != EOF )
                                      ;    /* eat up text of comment */

                                  if ( c == '*' )
                                      {
                                      while ( (c = input()) == '*' )
                                          ;
                                      if ( c == '/' )
                                          break;    /* found the end */
                                      }

                                  if ( c == EOF )
                                      {
                                      error( "EOF in comment" );
                                      break;
                                      }
                                  }
                              }

              (Note that if the scanner is  compiled  using  C++,
              then  input()  is instead referred to as yyinput(),
              in order to avoid a name clash with the C++  stream
              by the name of input.)

       -      YY_FLUSH_BUFFER   flushes  the  scanner's  internal
              buffer so that the next time the  scanner  attempts
              to  match  a token, it will first refill the buffer
              using YY_INPUT (see The Generated Scanner,  below).
              This  action  is a special case of the more general
              yy_flush_buffer() function, described below in  the
              section Multiple Input Buffers.

       -      yyterminate()  can  be  used  in  lieu  of a return
              statement in an action.  It terminates the  scanner
              and returns a 0 to the scanner's caller, indicating
              "all done".   By  default,  yyterminate()  is  also
              called when an end-of-file is encountered.  It is a
              macro and may be redefined.

THE GENERATED SCANNER
       The output of flex is the file  lex.yy.c,  which  contains
       the  scanning  routine yylex(), a number of tables used by
       it for matching tokens, and a number of auxiliary routines
       and macros.  By default, yylex() is declared as follows:

           int yylex()
               {
               ... various definitions and the actions in here ...
               }

       (If your environment supports function prototypes, then it
       will be "int yylex( void  )".)   This  definition  may  be
       changed by defining the "YY_DECL" macro.  For example, you
       could use:

           #define YY_DECL float lexscan( a, b ) float a, b;

       to give the scanning routine the name lexscan, returning a
       float,  and  taking two floats as arguments.  Note that if
       you give arguments to the scanning routine  using  a  K&R-
       style/non-prototyped function declaration, you must termi-
       nate the definition with a semi-colon (;).

       Whenever yylex() is  called,  it  scans  tokens  from  the
       global input file yyin (which defaults to stdin).  It con-
       tinues until it either reaches an  end-of-file  (at  which
       point  it  returns the value 0) or one of its actions exe-
       cutes a return statement.

       If the scanner reaches an  end-of-file,  subsequent  calls
       are undefined unless either yyin is pointed at a new input
       file (in which case scanning continues from that file), or
       yyrestart()  is called.  yyrestart() takes one argument, a
       FILE * pointer  (which  can  be  nil,  if  you've  set  up
       YY_INPUT  to scan from a source other than yyin), and ini-
       tializes yyin for scanning from  that  file.   Essentially
       there  is  no  difference between just assigning yyin to a
       new input file or using yyrestart() to do so;  the  latter
       is  available  for compatibility with previous versions of
       flex, and because it can be used to switch input files  in
       the middle of scanning.  It can also be used to throw away
       the current input buffer, by calling it with  an  argument
       of yyin; but better is to use YY_FLUSH_BUFFER (see above).
       Note that yyrestart() does not reset the  start  condition
       to INITIAL (see Start Conditions, below).

       If yylex() stops scanning due to executing a return state-
       ment in one of the actions, the scanner may then be called
       again and it will resume scanning where it left off.

       By  default  (and for purposes of efficiency), the scanner
       uses block-reads rather than simple getc() calls  to  read
       characters from yyin.  The nature of how it gets its input
       can  be  controlled  by  defining  the   YY_INPUT   macro.
       YY_INPUT's           calling          sequence          is
       "YY_INPUT(buf,result,max_size)".  Its action is  to  place
       up  to  max_size characters in the character array buf and
       return in the integer variable result either the number of
       characters  read  or  the constant YY_NULL (0 on Unix sys-
       tems) to indicate EOF.  The default  YY_INPUT  reads  from
       the global file-pointer "yyin".

       A  sample  definition of YY_INPUT (in the definitions sec-
       tion of the input file):

           %{
           #define YY_INPUT(buf,result,max_size) \
               { \
               int c = getchar(); \
               result = (c == EOF) ? YY_NULL : (buf[0] = c, 1); \
               }
           %}

       This definition will change the input processing to  occur
       one character at a time.

       When  the  scanner receives an end-of-file indication from
       YY_INPUT,  it  then  checks  the  yywrap()  function.   If
       yywrap() returns false (zero), then it is assumed that the
       function has gone ahead  and  set  up  yyin  to  point  to
       another input file, and scanning continues.  If it returns
       true (non-zero), then the scanner terminates, returning  0
       to its caller.  Note that in either case, the start condi-
       tion remains unchanged; it does not revert to INITIAL.

       If you do not supply your own version  of  yywrap(),  then
       you  must  either  use %option noyywrap (in which case the
       scanner behaves as though yywrap()  returned  1),  or  you
       must  link  with -lfl to obtain the default version of the
       routine, which always returns 1.

       Three routines are available for scanning  from  in-memory
       buffers     rather     than    files:    yy_scan_string(),
       yy_scan_bytes(), and yy_scan_buffer().  See the discussion
       of them below in the section Multiple Input Buffers.

       The  scanner  writes  its  ECHO output to the yyout global
       (default, stdout), which may be redefined by the user sim-
       ply by assigning it to some other FILE pointer.

START CONDITIONS
       flex  provides  a  mechanism  for conditionally activating
       rules.  Any rule whose pattern  is  prefixed  with  "<sc>"
       will  only be active when the scanner is in the start con-
       dition named "sc".  For example,

           <STRING>[^"]*        { /* eat up the string body ... */
                       ...
                       }

       will be active only when the scanner is  in  the  "STRING"
       start condition, and

           <INITIAL,STRING,QUOTE>\.        { /* handle an escape ... */
                       ...
                       }

       will  be  active  only when the current start condition is
       either "INITIAL", "STRING", or "QUOTE".

       Start conditions are declared in the  definitions  (first)
       section of the input using unindented lines beginning with
       either %s or %x followed by a list of names.   The  former
       declares  inclusive start conditions, the latter exclusive
       start conditions.  A start condition  is  activated  using
       the  BEGIN  action.   Until  the next BEGIN action is exe-
       cuted, rules with the given start condition will be active
       and  rules  with  other start conditions will be inactive.
       If the start condition is inclusive, then  rules  with  no
       start  conditions  at  all  will also be active.  If it is
       exclusive, then only rules qualified with the start condi-
       tion  will  be  active.   A set of rules contingent on the
       same exclusive start condition describe a scanner which is
       independent  of  any of the other rules in the flex input.
       Because of this, exclusive start conditions make  it  easy
       to  specify  "mini-scanners"  which  scan  portions of the
       input that  are  syntactically  different  from  the  rest
       (e.g., comments).

       If  the  distinction between inclusive and exclusive start
       conditions is still a little vague, here's a simple  exam-
       ple  illustrating the connection between the two.  The set
       of rules:

           %s example
           %%

           <example>foo   do_something();

           bar            something_else();

       is equivalent to

           %x example
           %%

           <example>foo   do_something();

           <INITIAL,example>bar    something_else();

       Without the <INITIAL,example> qualifier, the  bar  pattern
       in  the  second example wouldn't be active (i.e., couldn't
       match) when in start condition example.  If we  just  used
       <example>  to  qualify  bar, though, then it would only be
       active in example and not in INITIAL, while in  the  first
       example  it's active in both, because in the first example
       the example startion condition is an inclusive (%s)  start
       condition.

       Also  note  that the special start-condition specifier <*>
       matches every start condition.  Thus,  the  above  example
       could also have been written;

           %x example
           %%

           <example>foo   do_something();

           <*>bar    something_else();


       The default rule (to ECHO any unmatched character) remains
       active in start conditions.  It is equivalent to:

           <*>.|\n     ECHO;


       BEGIN(N) returns to the  original  state  where  only  the
       rules with no start conditions are active.  This state can
       also be referred to as the start-condition  "INITIAL",  so
       BEGIN(N)  is equivalent to BEGIN(N).  (The parenthe-
       ses around the start condition name are not  required  but
       are considered good style.)

       BEGIN  actions  can  also be given as indented code at the
       beginning of the rules section.  For example, the  follow-
       ing  will  cause  the scanner to enter the "SPECIAL" start
       condition whenever yylex() is called and the global  vari-
       able enter_special is true:

                   int enter_special;

           %x SPECIAL
           %%
                   if ( enter_special )
                       BEGIN(N);

           <SPECIAL>blahblahblah
           ...more rules follow...


       To  illustrate  the  uses  of  start conditions, here is a
       scanner which provides two different interpretations of  a
       string  like  "123.456".   By  default it will treat it as
       three tokens, the integer "123",  a  dot  ('.'),  and  the
       integer  "456".   But if the string is preceded earlier in
       the line by the string "expect-floats" it will treat it as
       a single token, the floating-point number 123.456:

           %{
           #include <math.h>
           %}
           %s expect

           %%
           expect-floats        BEGIN(N);

           <expect>[0-9]+"."[0-9]+      {
                       printf( "found a float, = %f\n",
                               atof( yytext ) );
                       }
           <expect>\n           {
                       /* that's the end of the line, so
                        * we need another "expect-number"
                        * before we'll recognize any more
                        * numbers
                        */
                       BEGIN(N);
                       }

           [0-9]+      {
                       printf( "found an integer, = %d\n",
                               atoi( yytext ) );
                       }

           "."         printf( "found a dot\n" );

       Here  is  a scanner which recognizes (and discards) C com-
       ments while maintaining a count of the current input line.

           %x comment
           %%
                   int line_num = 1;

           "/*"         BEGIN(N);

           <comment>[^*\n]*        /* eat anything that's not a '*' */
           <comment>"*"+[^*/\n]*   /* eat up '*'s not followed by '/'s */
           <comment>\n             ++line_num;
           <comment>"*"+"/"        BEGIN(N);

       This  scanner  goes  to  a bit of trouble to match as much
       text  as  possible  with  each  rule.   In  general,  when
       attempting  to  write a high-speed scanner try to match as
       much possible in each rule, as it's a big win.

       Note that start-conditions names are really integer values
       and  can  be  stored  as  such.   Thus, the above could be
       extended in the following fashion:

           %x comment foo
           %%
                   int line_num = 1;
                   int comment_caller;

           "/*"         {
                        comment_caller = INITIAL;
                        BEGIN(N);
                        }

           ...

           <foo>"/*"    {
                        comment_caller = foo;
                        BEGIN(N);
                        }

           <comment>[^*\n]*        /* eat anything that's not a '*' */
           <comment>"*"+[^*/\n]*   /* eat up '*'s not followed by '/'s */
           <comment>\n             ++line_num;
           <comment>"*"+"/"        BEGIN(comment_caller);

       Furthermore, you can access the  current  start  condition
       using the integer-valued YY_START macro.  For example, the
       above assignments to comment_caller could instead be writ-
       ten

           comment_caller = YY_START;

       Flex provides YYSTATE as an alias for YY_START (since that
       is what's used by AT&T lex).

       Note that start conditions do not  have  their  own  name-
       space;  %s's and %x's declare names in the same fashion as
       #define's.

       Finally, here's an example of how to match C-style  quoted
       strings   using   exclusive  start  conditions,  including
       expanded escape sequences (but not including checking  for
       a string that's too long):

           %x str

           %%
                   char string_buf[MAX_STR_CONST];
                   char *string_buf_ptr;


           \"      string_buf_ptr = string_buf; BEGIN(N);

           <str>\"        { /* saw closing quote - all done */
                   BEGIN(N);
                   *string_buf_ptr = '\0';
                   /* return string constant token type and
                    * value to parser
                    */
                   }

           <str>\n        {
                   /* error - unterminated string constant */
                   /* generate error message */
                   }

           <str>\\[0-7]{1,3} {
                   /* octal escape sequence */
                   int result;

                   (void) sscanf( yytext + 1, "%o", &result );

                   if ( result > 0xff )
                           /* error, constant is out-of-bounds */

                   *string_buf_ptr++ = result;
                   }

           <str>\\[0-9]+ {
                   /* generate error - bad escape sequence; something
                    * like '\48' or '\0777777'
                    */
                   }

           <str>\\n  *string_buf_ptr++ = '\n';
           <str>\\t  *string_buf_ptr++ = '\t';
           <str>\\r  *string_buf_ptr++ = '\r';
           <str>\\b  *string_buf_ptr++ = '\b';
           <str>\\f  *string_buf_ptr++ = '\f';

           <str>\\(.|\n)  *string_buf_ptr++ = yytext[1];

           <str>[^\\\n\"]+        {
                   char *yptr = yytext;

                   while ( *yptr )
                           *string_buf_ptr++ = *yptr++;
                   }


       Often,  such as in some of the examples above, you wind up
       writing a whole bunch of rules all preceded  by  the  same
       start  condition(n).   Flex makes this a little easier and
       cleaner by introducing a notion of start condition  scope.
       A start condition scope is begun with:

           <SCs>{

       where  SCs  is  a  list  of  one or more start conditions.
       Inside the start condition scope, every rule automatically
       has  the  prefix  <SCs>  applied  to it, until a '}' which
       matches the initial '{'.  So, for example,

           <ESC>{
               "\\n"   return '\n';
               "\\r"   return '\r';
               "\\f"   return '\f';
               "\\0"   return '\0';
           }

       is equivalent to:

           <ESC>"\\n"  return '\n';
           <ESC>"\\r"  return '\r';
           <ESC>"\\f"  return '\f';
           <ESC>"\\0"  return '\0';

       Start condition scopes may be nested.

       Three routines are available for  manipulating  stacks  of
       start conditions:

       void yy_push_state(int new_state)
              pushes  the current start condition onto the top of
              the start condition stack and switches to new_state
              as though you had used BEGIN new_state (recall that
              start condition names are also integers).

       void yy_pop_state()
              pops the top of the stack and switches  to  it  via
              BEGIN.

       int yy_top_state()
              returns  the  top of the stack without altering the
              stack's contents.

       The start condition stack grows dynamically and so has  no
       built-in size limitation.  If memory is exhausted, program
       execution aborts.

       To use start condition stacks, your scanner must include a
       %option stack directive (see Options below).

MULTIPLE INPUT BUFFERS
       Some  scanners  (such  as  those  which  support "include"
       files) require reading from  several  input  streams.   As
       flex  scanners  do a large amount of buffering, one cannot
       control where the next input will be read from  by  simply
       writing a YY_INPUT which is sensitive to the scanning con-
       text.  YY_INPUT is only called when  the  scanner  reaches
       the  end  of  its  buffer,  which may be a long time after
       scanning a statement such as an "include"  which  requires
       switching the input source.

       To  negotiate  these  sorts  of  problems, flex provides a
       mechanism for  creating  and  switching  between  multiple
       input buffers.  An input buffer is created by using:

           YY_BUFFER_STATE yy_create_buffer( FILE *file, int size )

       which takes a FILE pointer and a size and creates a buffer
       associated with the given file and large  enough  to  hold
       size  characters  (when  in doubt, use YY_BUF_SIZE for the
       size).  It returns a  YY_BUFFER_STATE  handle,  which  may
       then  be  passed  to  other  routines  (see  below).   The
       YY_BUFFER_STATE type is a  pointer  to  an  opaque  struct
       yy_buffer_state  structure,  so  you may safely initialize
       YY_BUFFER_STATE variables to ((YY_BUFFER_STATE) 0) if  you
       wish,  and  also refer to the opaque structure in order to
       correctly declare input buffers in source files other than
       that  of  your scanner.  Note that the FILE pointer in the
       call to yy_create_buffer is only used as the value of yyin
       seen by YY_INPUT; if you redefine YY_INPUT so it no longer
       uses yyin, then you can safely pass a nil FILE pointer  to
       yy_create_buffer.   You select a particular buffer to scan
       from using:

           void yy_switch_to_buffer( YY_BUFFER_STATE new_buffer )

       switches the scanner's input buffer so  subsequent  tokens
       will      come     from     new_buffer.      Note     that
       yy_switch_to_buffer() may  be  used  by  yywrap()  to  set
       things up for continued scanning, instead of opening a new
       file and pointing yyin at it.  Note  also  that  switching
       input sources via either yy_switch_to_buffer() or yywrap()
       does not change the start condition.

           void yy_delete_buffer( YY_BUFFER_STATE buffer )

       is used to reclaim the storage associated with  a  buffer.
       (  buffer can be nil, in which case the routine does noth-
       ing.)  You can also clear the current contents of a buffer
       using:

           void yy_flush_buffer( YY_BUFFER_STATE buffer )

       This  function discards the buffer's contents, so the next
       time the scanner  attempts  to  match  a  token  from  the
       buffer, it will first fill the buffer anew using YY_INPUT.

       yy_new_buffer() is an alias for  yy_create_buffer(),  pro-
       vided for compatibility with the C++ use of new and delete
       for creating and destroying dynamic objects.

       Finally,   the   YY_CURRENT_BUFFER   macro    returns    a
       YY_BUFFER_STATE handle to the current buffer.

       Here  is  an example of using these features for writing a
       scanner which expands include files (the  <<EOF>>  feature
       is discussed below):

           /* the "incl" state is used for picking up the name
            * of an include file
            */
           %x incl

           %{
           #define MAX_INCLUDE_DEPTH 10
           YY_BUFFER_STATE include_stack[MAX_INCLUDE_DEPTH];
           int include_stack_ptr = 0;
           %}

           %%
           include             BEGIN(N);

           [a-z]+              ECHO;
           [^a-z\n]*\n?        ECHO;

           <incl>[ \t]*      /* eat the whitespace */
           <incl>[^ \t\n]+   { /* got the include file name */
                   if ( include_stack_ptr >= MAX_INCLUDE_DEPTH )
                       {
                       fprintf( stderr, "Includes nested too deeply" );
                       exit( 1 );
                       }

                   include_stack[include_stack_ptr++] =
                       YY_CURRENT_BUFFER;

                   yyin = fopen( yytext, "r" );

                   if ( ! yyin )
                       error( ... );

                   yy_switch_to_buffer(
                       yy_create_buffer( yyin, YY_BUF_SIZE ) );

                   BEGIN(N);
                   }

           <<EOF>> {
                   if ( --include_stack_ptr < 0 )
                       {
                       yyterminate();
                       }

                   else
                       {
                       yy_delete_buffer( YY_CURRENT_BUFFER );
                       yy_switch_to_buffer(
                            include_stack[include_stack_ptr] );
                       }
                   }

       Three  routines are available for setting up input buffers
       for scanning in-memory strings instead of files.   All  of
       them  create  a  new input buffer for scanning the string,
       and return a corresponding YY_BUFFER_STATE  handle  (which
       you  should  delete with yy_delete_buffer() when done with
       it).   They  also  switch  to   the   new   buffer   using
       yy_switch_to_buffer(),  so  the  next call to yylex() will
       start scanning the string.

       yy_scan_string(const char *str)
              scans a NUL-terminated string.

       yy_scan_bytes(const char *bytes, int len)
              scans len bytes (including possibly NUL's) starting
              at location bytes.

       Note  that  both of these functions create and scan a copy
       of the string or bytes.  (This  may  be  desirable,  since
       yylex()  modifies  the  contents of the buffer it is scan-
       ning.)  You can avoid the copy by using:

       yy_scan_buffer(char *base, yy_size_t size)
              which scans in place the buffer starting  at  base,
              consisting  of  size  bytes,  the last two bytes of
              which must be  YY_END_OF_BUFFER_CHAR  (ASCII  NUL).
              These  last  two bytes are not scanned; thus, scan-
              ning  consists  of  base[0]  through  base[size-2],
              inclusive.

              If  you  fail  to set up base in this manner (i.e.,
              forget the final two YY_END_OF_BUFFER_CHAR  bytes),
              then yy_scan_buffer() returns a nil pointer instead
              of creating a new input buffer.

              The type yy_size_t is an integral type to which you
              can  cast an integer expression reflecting the size
              of the buffer.

END-OF-FILE RULES
       The special rule "<<EOF>>" indicates actions which are  to
       be  taken  when an end-of-file is encountered and yywrap()
       returns non-zero (i.e., indicates no further files to pro-
       cess).   The  action  must  finish  by  doing  one of four
       things:

       -      assigning yyin to a new  input  file  (in  previous
              versions  of  flex,  after doing the assignment you
              had to call the special action YY_NEW_FILE; this is
              no longer necessary);

       -      executing a return statement;

       -      executing the special yyterminate() action;

       -      or,    switching    to    a    new   buffer   using
              yy_switch_to_buffer()  as  shown  in  the   example
              above.

       <<EOF>>  rules  may  not be used with other patterns; they
       may only be qualified with a list of start conditions.  If
       an  unqualified  <<EOF>>  rule is given, it applies to all
       start  conditions  which  do  not  already  have   <<EOF>>
       actions.   To specify an <<EOF>> rule for only the initial
       start condition, use

           <INITIAL><<EOF>>


       These rules are useful for catching things  like  unclosed
       comments.  An example:

           %x quote
           %%

           ...other rules for dealing with quotes...

           <quote><<EOF>>   {
                    error( "unterminated quote" );
                    yyterminate();
                    }
           <<EOF>>  {
                    if ( *++filelist )
                        yyin = fopen( *filelist, "r" );
                    else
                       yyterminate();
                    }


MISCELLANEOUS MACROS
       The  macro  YY_USER_ACTION  can  be  defined to provide an
       action which is  always  executed  prior  to  the  matched
       rule's action.  For example, it could be #define'd to call
       a  routine  to  convert  yytext   to   lower-case.    When
       YY_USER_ACTION  is  invoked, the variable yy_act gives the
       number of the matched rule (rules  are  numbered  starting
       with  1).   Suppose  you want to profile how often each of
       your rules is matched.  The following would do the trick:

           #define YY_USER_ACTION ++ctr[yy_act]

       where ctr is an array to hold the counts for the different
       rules.   Note  that the macro YY_NUM_RULES gives the total
       number of rules (including the default rule, even  if  you
       use -s), so a correct declaration for ctr is:

           int ctr[YY_NUM_RULES];


       The macro YY_USER_INIT may be defined to provide an action
       which is always executed before the first scan (and before
       the  scanner's  internal  initializations  are done).  For
       example, it could be used to call a routine to read  in  a
       data table or open a logging file.

       The  macro  yy_set_interactive(is_interactive) can be used
       to control whether the current buffer is considered inter-
       active.   An  interactive buffer is processed more slowly,
       but must be used when the scanner's input source is indeed
       interactive  to  avoid  problems  due  to  waiting to fill
       buffers (see the discussion of the -I flag below).  A non-
       zero  value  in  the  macro invocation marks the buffer as
       interactive, a zero value as non-interactive.   Note  that
       use  of this macro overrides %option always-interactive or
       %option    never-interactive    (see    Options    below).
       yy_set_interactive() must be invoked prior to beginning to
       scan the buffer that is  (or  is  not)  to  be  considered
       interactive.

       The  macro  yy_set_bol(at_bol)  can  be  used  to  control
       whether the current buffer's scanning context for the next
       token  match is done as though at the beginning of a line.
       A non-zero macro argument makes rules  anchored  with  '^'
       active, while a zero argument makes '^' rules inactive.

       The  macro  YY_AT_BOL()  returns  true  if  the next token
       scanned from  the  current  buffer  will  have  '^'  rules
       active, false otherwise.

       In  the generated scanner, the actions are all gathered in
       one large switch statement and separated  using  YY_BREAK,
       which  may  be  redefined.   By  default,  it  is simply a
       "break", to separate each rule's action from the following
       rule's.   Redefining  YY_BREAK  allows,  for  example, C++
       users to #define YY_BREAK to do nothing (while being  very
       careful   that  every  rule  ends  with  a  "break"  or  a
       "return"!) to avoid suffering from  unreachable  statement
       warnings where because a rule's action ends with "return",
       the YY_BREAK is inaccessible.

VALUES AVAILABLE TO THE USER
       This section summarizes the various  values  available  to
       the user in the rule actions.

       -      char  *yytext  holds the text of the current token.
              It may be modified but not lengthened  (you  cannot
              append characters to the end).

              If  the  special  directive  %array  appears in the
              first section  of  the  scanner  description,  then
              yytext  is  instead  declared  char yytext[YYLMAX],
              where YYLMAX is a macro  definition  that  you  can
              redefine in the first section if you don't like the
              default  value  (generally  8KB).    Using   %array
              results  in somewhat slower scanners, but the value
              of yytext becomes immune to calls  to  input()  and
              unput(),  which  potentially destroy its value when
              yytext is a character  pointer.   The  opposite  of
              %array is %pointer, which is the default.

              You  cannot  use %array when generating C++ scanner
              classes (the -+ flag).

       -      int yyleng holds the length of the current token.

       -      FILE *yyin is the file which by default flex  reads
              from.   It may be redefined but doing so only makes
              sense before scanning begins or after  an  EOF  has
              been  encountered.   Changing  it  in  the midst of
              scanning will have unexpected  results  since  flex
              buffers  its  input; use yyrestart() instead.  Once
              scanning terminates because an end-of-file has been
              seen, you can assign yyin at the new input file and
              then call the scanner again to continue scanning.

       -      void yyrestart( FILE *new_file ) may be  called  to
              point  yyin at the new input file.  The switch-over
              to  the  new  file  is  immediate  (any  previously
              buffered-up  input  is  lost).   Note  that calling
              yyrestart() with yyin as an  argument  thus  throws
              away  the  current input buffer and continues scan-
              ning the same input file.

       -      FILE *yyout is the file to which ECHO  actions  are
              done.  It can be reassigned by the user.

       -      YY_CURRENT_BUFFER  returns a YY_BUFFER_STATE handle
              to the current buffer.

       -      YY_START returns an integer value corresponding  to
              the  current start condition.  You can subsequently
              use this value with BEGIN to return to  that  start
              condition.

INTERFACING WITH YACC
       One of the main uses of flex is as a companion to the yacc
       parser-generator.  yacc parsers expect to call  a  routine
       named  yylex()  to find the next input token.  The routine
       is supposed to return the type of the next token  as  well
       as  putting any associated value in the global yylval.  To
       use flex with yacc, one specifies the -d option to yacc to
       instruct  it to generate the file y.tab.h containing defi-
       nitions of all the %tokens appearing in  the  yacc  input.
       This file is then included in the flex scanner.  For exam-
       ple, if one of the tokens is  "TOK_NUMBER",  part  of  the
       scanner might look like:

           %{
           #include "y.tab.h"
           %}

           %%

           [0-9]+        yylval = atoi( yytext ); return TOK_NUMBER;


OPTIONS
       flex has the following options:

       -b     Generate   backing-up  information  to  lex.backup.
              This is a list  of  scanner  states  which  require
              backing  up  and the input characters on which they
              do so.  By adding rules one can  remove  backing-up
              states.   If  all  backing-up states are eliminated
              and -Cf or -CF is used, the generated scanner  will
              run  faster (see the -p flag).  Only users who wish
              to squeeze every last cycle out of  their  scanners
              need  worry about this option.  (See the section on
              Performance Considerations below.)

       -c     is a do-nothing,  deprecated  option  included  for
              POSIX compliance.

       -d     makes  the  generated  scanner  run  in debug mode.
              Whenever a pattern is  recognized  and  the  global
              yy_flex_debug  is  non-zero (which is the default),
              the scanner will write to  stderr  a  line  of  the
              form:

                  --accepting rule at line 53 ("the matched text")

              The  line number refers to the location of the rule
              in the file defining the scanner  (i.e.,  the  file
              that was fed to flex).  Messages are also generated
              when the scanner  backs  up,  accepts  the  default
              rule,  reaches  the  end  of  its  input buffer (or
              encounters a NUL; at this point, the two  look  the
              same as far as the scanner's concerned), or reaches
              an end-of-file.

       -f     specifies fast scanner.  No  table  compression  is
              done  and  stdio  is bypassed.  The result is large
              but fast.  This option is equivalent to  -Cfr  (see
              below).

       -h     generates  a  "help"  summary  of flex's options to
              stdout and then exits.  -?  and --help are synonyms
              for -h.

       -i     instructs flex to generate a case-insensitive scan-
              ner.  The case of letters given in the  flex  input
              patterns  will  be ignored, and tokens in the input
              will be matched regardless of  case.   The  matched
              text  given  in yytext will have the preserved case
              (i.e., it will not be folded).

       -l     turns on maximum compatibility  with  the  original
              AT&T  lex  implementation.  Note that this does not
              mean full compatibility.  Use of this option  costs
              a considerable amount of performance, and it cannot
              be used with the -+, -f, -F, -Cf, or  -CF  options.
              For details on the compatibilities it provides, see
              the section "Incompatibilities With Lex And  POSIX"
              below.   This  option  also  results  in  the  name
              YY_FLEX_LEX_COMPAT being #define'd in the generated
              scanner.

       -n     is  another  do-nothing, deprecated option included
              only for POSIX compliance.

       -p     generates a  performance  report  to  stderr.   The
              report  consists  of comments regarding features of
              the flex input file which will cause a serious loss
              of  performance  in  the resulting scanner.  If you
              give the flag twice, you  will  also  get  comments
              regarding  features  that lead to minor performance
              losses.

              Note that the use of REJECT, %option yylineno,  and
              variable  trailing  context (see the Deficiencies /
              Bugs section below) entails a  substantial  perfor-
              mance penalty; use of yymore(), the ^ operator, and
              the -I flag entail minor performance penalties.

       -s     causes the default  rule  (that  unmatched  scanner
              input  is  echoed  to stdout) to be suppressed.  If
              the scanner encounters input that  does  not  match
              any  of  its  rules, it aborts with an error.  This
              option is useful for finding holes in  a  scanner's
              rule set.

       -t     instructs flex to write the scanner it generates to
              standard output instead of lex.yy.c.

       -v     specifies that flex should write to stderr  a  sum-
              mary  of statistics regarding the scanner it gener-
              ates.  Most of the statistics  are  meaningless  to
              the casual flex user, but the first line identifies
              the version of flex (same as reported by  -V),  and
              the  next  line  the flags used when generating the
              scanner, including those that are on by default.

       -w     suppresses warning messages.

       -B     instructs flex to generate  a  batch  scanner,  the
              opposite  of  interactive  scanners generated by -I
              (see below).  In general, you use -B when  you  are
              certain that your scanner will never be used inter-
              actively, and you want to  squeeze  a  little  more
              performance  out of it.  If your goal is instead to
              squeeze out a lot more performance, you should   be
              using  the  -Cf  or  -CF options (discussed below),
              which turn on -B automatically anyway.

       -F     specifies that the fast scanner  table  representa-
              tion  should  be  used  (and stdio bypassed).  This
              representation is about as fast as the  full  table
              representation  (-f), and for some sets of patterns
              will  be  considerably  smaller  (and  for  others,
              larger).   In  general, if the pattern set contains
              both "keywords" and a catch-all, "identifier" rule,
              such as in the set:

                  "case"    return TOK_CASE;
                  "switch"  return TOK_SWITCH;
                  ...
                  "default" return TOK_DEFAULT;
                  [a-z]+    return TOK_ID;

              then  you're better off using the full table repre-
              sentation.  If only the "identifier" rule  is  pre-
              sent  and you then use a hash table or some such to
              detect the keywords, you're better off using -F.

              This option is equivalent to -CFr (see below).   It
              cannot be used with -+.

       -I     instructs  flex to generate an interactive scanner.
              An interactive scanner is one that only looks ahead
              to  decide  what token has been matched if it abso-
              lutely must.  It turns out that always looking  one
              extra  character  ahead,  even  if  the scanner has
              already seen enough text to disambiguate  the  cur-
              rent token, is a bit faster than only looking ahead
              when necessary.   But  scanners  that  always  look
              ahead  give  dreadful  interactive performance; for
              example, when a user types a  newline,  it  is  not
              recognized  as  a  newline  token  until they enter
              another token, which often means typing in  another
              whole line.

              Flex scanners default to interactive unless you use
              the  -Cf  or  -CF  table-compression  options  (see
              below).  That's because if you're looking for high-
              performance  you  should  be  using  one  of  these
              options,  so  if  you  didn't,  flex  assumes you'd
              rather trade off a bit of run-time performance  for
              intuitive interactive behavior.  Note also that you
              cannot use -I  in  conjunction  with  -Cf  or  -CF.
              Thus, this option is not really needed; it is on by
              default for all those cases in which it is allowed.

              You  can  force  a scanner to not be interactive by
              using -B (see above).

       -L     instructs flex not to  generate  #line  directives.
              Without  this  option,  flex  peppers the generated
              scanner with #line directives so error messages  in
              the  actions will be correctly located with respect
              to either the original  flex  input  file  (if  the
              errors  are  due  to  code  in  the input file), or
              lex.yy.c (if the errors are  flex's  fault  --  you
              should  report  these  sorts of errors to the email
              address given below).

       -T     makes flex run in trace mode.  It will  generate  a
              lot  of  messages  to stderr concerning the form of
              the input and the resultant  non-deterministic  and
              deterministic  finite  automata.   This  option  is
              mostly for use in maintaining flex.

       -V     prints the version  number  to  stdout  and  exits.
              --version is a synonym for -V.

       -7     instructs  flex  to generate a 7-bit scanner, i.e.,
              one which can only recognized 7-bit  characters  in
              its  input.   The advantage of using -7 is that the
              scanner's tables can be up  to  half  the  size  of
              those  generated  using  the -8 option (see below).
              The disadvantage is that such scanners  often  hang
              or  crash  if their input contains an 8-bit charac-
              ter.

              Note, however, that unless you generate your  scan-
              ner using the -Cf or -CF table compression options,
              use of -7 will save only a small  amount  of  table
              space,  and  make  your  scanner  considerably less
              portable.  Flex's default behavior is  to  generate
              an  8-bit scanner unless you use the -Cf or -CF, in
              which case flex defaults to generating 7-bit  scan-
              ners unless your site was always configured to gen-
              erate 8-bit scanners (as will  often  be  the  case
              with  non-USA  sites).   You  can tell whether flex
              generated a 7-bit or an 8-bit scanner by inspecting
              the  flag  summary  in  the  -v output as described
              above.

              Note that if you use -Cfe or -CFe (those table com-
              pression   options,   but  also  using  equivalence
              classes  as  discussed  see  below),   flex   still
              defaults to generating an 8-bit scanner, since usu-
              ally with  these  compression  options  full  8-bit
              tables  are  not  much  more  expensive  than 7-bit
              tables.

       -8     instructs flex to generate an 8-bit scanner,  i.e.,
              one  which  can  recognize  8-bit characters.  This
              flag is only needed for  scanners  generated  using
              -Cf  or -CF, as otherwise flex defaults to generat-
              ing an 8-bit scanner anyway.

              See the discussion of -7 above for  flex's  default
              behavior  and the tradeoffs between 7-bit and 8-bit
              scanners.

       -+     specifies that you want  flex  to  generate  a  C++
              scanner  class.   See the section on Generating C++
              Scanners below for details.

       -C[aefFmr]
              controls the degree of table compression and,  more
              generally,  trade-offs  between  small scanners and
              fast scanners.

              -Ca ("align") instructs flex to  trade  off  larger
              tables  in the generated scanner for faster perfor-
              mance because the elements of the tables are better
              aligned for memory access and computation.  On some
              RISC architectures, fetching and manipulating long-
              words  is  more  efficient  than with smaller-sized
              units such as shortwords.  This option  can  double
              the size of the tables used by your scanner.

              -Ce  directs flex to construct equivalence classes,
              i.e., sets of characters which have identical lexi-
              cal properties (for example, if the only appearance
              of digits in the flex input  is  in  the  character
              class  "[0-9]"  then  the digits '0', '1', ..., '9'
              will all be put in  the  same  equivalence  class).
              Equivalence  classes  usually  give dramatic reduc-
              tions in the final table/object file  sizes  (typi-
              cally a factor of 2-5) and are pretty cheap perfor-
              mance-wise  (one  array   look-up   per   character
              scanned).

              -Cf  specifies  that the full scanner tables should
              be generated - flex should not compress the  tables
              by  taking  advantages  of similar transition func-
              tions for different states.

              -CF specifies that the alternate fast scanner  rep-
              resentation  (described  above  under  the -F flag)
              should be used.  This option cannot  be  used  with
              -+.

              -Cm  directs  flex  to  construct  meta-equivalence
              classes, which are sets of equivalence classes  (or
              characters,  if  equivalence  classes are not being
              used) that are commonly used together.  Meta-equiv-
              alence  classes are often a big win when using com-
              pressed tables, but they have  a  moderate  perfor-
              mance  impact  (one or two "if" tests and one array
              look-up per character scanned).

              -Cr causes the generated scanner to bypass  use  of
              the   standard   I/O  library  (stdio)  for  input.
              Instead of calling fread() or getc(),  the  scanner
              will  use  the  read()  system call, resulting in a
              performance gain which varies from system  to  sys-
              tem,  but  in general is probably negligible unless
              you are also using -Cf or -CF.  Using -Cr can cause
              strange  behavior  if,  for  example, you read from
              yyin using  stdio  prior  to  calling  the  scanner
              (because  the  scanner will miss whatever text your
              previous reads left in the stdio input buffer).

              -Cr has no effect if you define YY_INPUT  (see  The
              Generated Scanner above).

              A  lone -C specifies that the scanner tables should
              be compressed but neither equivalence  classes  nor
              meta-equivalence classes should be used.

              The  options  -Cf  or -CF and -Cm do not make sense
              together - there is no opportunity for meta-equiva-
              lence classes if the table is not being compressed.
              Otherwise the options may be freely mixed, and  are
              cumulative.

              The  default  setting is -Cem, which specifies that
              flex should generate equivalence classes and  meta-
              equivalence  classes.   This  setting  provides the
              highest degree of table compression.  You can trade
              off faster-executing scanners at the cost of larger
              tables with the following generally being true:

                  slowest & smallest
                        -Cem
                        -Cm
                        -Ce
                        -C
                        -C{f,F}e
                        -C{f,F}
                        -C{f,F}a
                  fastest & largest

              Note that scanners with  the  smallest  tables  are
              usually  generated  and  compiled  the quickest, so
              during development you will usually want to use the
              default, maximal compression.

              -Cfe  is  often a good compromise between speed and
              size for production scanners.

       -ooutput
              directs flex to write the scanner to the file  out-
              put  instead  of  lex.yy.c.  If you combine -o with
              the -t option, then the scanner is written to  std-
              out  but  its  #line  directives (see the -L option
              above) refer to the file output.

       -Pprefix
              changes the default yy prefix used by flex for  all
              globally-visible  variable  and  function  names to
              instead be prefix.  For example, -Pfoo changes  the
              name  of  yytext  to  footext.  It also changes the
              name of the default output file  from  lex.yy.c  to
              lex.foo.c.  Here are all of the names affected:

                  yy_create_buffer
                  yy_delete_buffer
                  yy_flex_debug
                  yy_init_buffer
                  yy_flush_buffer
                  yy_load_buffer_state
                  yy_switch_to_buffer
                  yyin
                  yyleng
                  yylex
                  yylineno
                  yyout
                  yyrestart
                  yytext
                  yywrap

              (If  you  are using a C++ scanner, then only yywrap
              and yyFlexLexer are affected.)  Within your scanner
              itself, you can still refer to the global variables
              and functions using either version of  their  name;
              but externally, they have the modified name.

              This  option lets you easily link together multiple
              flex programs  into  the  same  executable.   Note,
              though,   that   using  this  option  also  renames
              yywrap(), so you now must either provide  your  own
              (appropriately-named)  version  of  the routine for
              your scanner, or use %option noyywrap,  as  linking
              with  -lfl  no  longer  provides  one  for  you  by
              default.

       -Sskeleton_file
              overrides the default skeleton file from which flex
              constructs  its  scanners.   You'll never need this
              option unless you are  doing  flex  maintenance  or
              development.

       flex  also  provides  a  mechanism for controlling options
       within the scanner specification itself, rather than  from
       the  flex command-line.  This is done by including %option
       directives in the first section of the scanner  specifica-
       tion.   You  can  specify  multiple  options with a single
       %option directive, and multiple directives  in  the  first
       section of your flex input file.

       Most  options  are  given simply as names, optionally pre-
       ceded by the word "no" (with no intervening whitespace) to
       negate  their  meaning.   A  number are equivalent to flex
       flags or their negation:

           7bit            -7 option
           8bit            -8 option
           align           -Ca option
           backup          -b option
           batch           -B option
           c++             -+ option

           caseful or
           case-sensitive  opposite of -i (default)

           case-insensitive or
           caseless        -i option

           debug           -d option
           default         opposite of -s option
           ecs             -Ce option
           fast            -F option
           full            -f option
           interactive     -I option
           lex-compat      -l option
           meta-ecs        -Cm option
           perf-report     -p option
           read            -Cr option
           stdout          -t option
           verbose         -v option
           warn            opposite of -w option
                           (use "%option nowarn" for -w)

           array           equivalent to "%array"
           pointer         equivalent to "%pointer" (default)

       Some %option's provide features otherwise not available:

       always-interactive
              instructs flex to generate a scanner  which  always
              considers  its  input  "interactive".  Normally, on
              each new input file the scanner calls  isatty()  in
              an attempt to determine whether the scanner's input
              source is interactive and thus  should  be  read  a
              character  at  a  time.   When this option is used,
              however, then no such call is made.

       main   directs flex to provide a  default  main()  program
              for  the scanner, which simply calls yylex().  This
              option implies noyywrap (see below).

       never-interactive
              instructs flex to generate a  scanner  which  never
              considers  its  input "interactive" (again, no call
              made to isatty()).  This is the opposite of always-
              interactive.

       stack  enables  the  use  of  start  condition stacks (see
              Start Conditions above).

       stdinit
              if set (i.e., %option stdinit) initializes yyin and
              yyout  to  stdin and stdout, instead of the default
              of nil.  Some existing lex programs depend on  this
              behavior, even though it is not compliant with ANSI
              C, which does not require stdin and  stdout  to  be
              compile-time constant. In a reentrant scanner, how-
              ever, this is not a  problem  since  initialization
              is performed in yylex_init at runtime.

       yylineno
              directs  flex  to generate a scanner that maintains
              the number of the current line read from its  input
              in  the  global  variable yylineno.  This option is
              implied by %option lex-compat.

       yywrap if unset (i.e., %option noyywrap), makes the  scan-
              ner not call yywrap() upon an end-of-file, but sim-
              ply assume that there are no  more  files  to  scan
              (until the user points yyin at a new file and calls
              yylex() again).

       flex scans your rule actions to determine whether you  use
       the  REJECT  or  yymore() features.  The reject and yymore
       options are available  to  override  its  decision  as  to
       whether you use the options, either by setting them (e.g.,
       %option reject) to indicate the feature is indeed used, or
       unsetting  them to indicate it actually is not used (e.g.,
       %option noyymore).

       Three options take string-delimited  values,  offset  with
       '=':

           %option outfile="ABC"

       is equivalent to -oABC, and

           %option prefix="XYZ"

       is equivalent to -PXYZ.  Finally,

           %option yyclass="foo"

       only  applies  when generating a C++ scanner ( -+ option).
       It informs flex that you have derived foo as a subclass of
       yyFlexLexer, so flex will place your actions in the member
       function foo::yylex() instead of yyFlexLexer::yylex().  It
       also generates a yyFlexLexer::yylex() member function that
       emits a run-time error  (by  invoking  yyFlexLexer::Lexer-
       Error())  if  called.  See Generating C++ Scanners, below,
       for additional information.

       A number of options are available  for  lint  purists  who
       want  to  suppress  the appearance of unneeded routines in
       the generated scanner.  Each of the  following,  if  unset
       (e.g.,  %option  nounput  ),  results in the corresponding
       routine not appearing in the generated scanner:

           input, unput
           yy_push_state, yy_pop_state, yy_top_state
           yy_scan_buffer, yy_scan_bytes, yy_scan_string

       (though yy_push_state() and friends  won't  appear  anyway
       unless you use %option stack).

PERFORMANCE CONSIDERATIONS
       The main design goal of flex is that it generate high-per-
       formance scanners.  It has been optimized for dealing well
       with large sets of rules.  Aside from the effects on scan-
       ner speed of the table  compression  -C  options  outlined
       above, there are a number of options/actions which degrade
       performance.  These are, from most expensive to least:

           REJECT
           %option yylineno
           arbitrary trailing context

           pattern sets that require backing up
           %array
           %option interactive
           %option always-interactive

           '^' beginning-of-line operator
           yymore()

       with the first three all being  quite  expensive  and  the
       last  two  being  quite  cheap.  Note also that unput() is
       implemented as a routine call that potentially does  quite
       a  bit  of work, while yyless() is a quite-cheap macro; so
       if just putting back some excess  text  you  scanned,  use
       yyless().

       REJECT  should be avoided at all costs when performance is
       important.  It is a particularly expensive option.

       Getting rid of backing up is messy and  often  may  be  an
       enormous  amount  of  work  for a complicated scanner.  In
       principal, one begins by using the -b flag to  generate  a
       lex.backup file.  For example, on the input

           %%
           foo        return TOK_KEYWORD;
           foobar     return TOK_KEYWORD;

       the file looks like:

           State #6 is non-accepting -
            associated rule line numbers:
                  2       3
            out-transitions: [ o ]
            jam-transitions: EOF [ \001-n  p-\177 ]

           State #8 is non-accepting -
            associated rule line numbers:
                  3
            out-transitions: [ a ]
            jam-transitions: EOF [ \001-`  b-\177 ]

           State #9 is non-accepting -
            associated rule line numbers:
                  3
            out-transitions: [ r ]
            jam-transitions: EOF [ \001-q  s-\177 ]

           Compressed tables always back up.

       The  first  few lines tell us that there's a scanner state
       in which it can make a transition on an 'o' but not on any
       other  character,  and  that  in  that state the currently
       scanned text does not match any rule.   The  state  occurs
       when  trying  to match the rules found at lines 2 and 3 in
       the input file.  If the scanner is in that state and  then
       reads something other than an 'o', it will have to back up
       to find a rule which is matched.   With  a  bit  of  head-
       scratching one can see that this must be the state it's in
       when it has seen "fo".  When this has  happened,  if  any-
       thing  other  than  another  'o' is seen, the scanner will
       have to back up to simply match the 'f'  (by  the  default
       rule).

       The comment regarding State #8 indicates there's a problem
       when "foob" has been scanned.  Indeed,  on  any  character
       other  than  an  'a',  the scanner will have to back up to
       accept "foo".  Similarly, the comment for  State  #9  con-
       cerns  when  "fooba"  has been scanned and an 'r' does not
       follow.

       The final comment reminds us that there's no  point  going
       to  all  the trouble of removing backing up from the rules
       unless we're using -Cf or -CF, since  there's  no  perfor-
       mance gain doing so with compressed scanners.

       The way to remove the backing up is to add "error" rules:

           %%
           foo         return TOK_KEYWORD;
           foobar      return TOK_KEYWORD;

           fooba       |
           foob        |
           fo          {
                       /* false alarm, not really a keyword */
                       return TOK_ID;
                       }


       Eliminating  backing  up among a list of keywords can also
       be done using a "catch-all" rule:

           %%
           foo         return TOK_KEYWORD;
           foobar      return TOK_KEYWORD;

           [a-z]+      return TOK_ID;

       This is usually the best solution when appropriate.

       Backing up messages tend to cascade.  With  a  complicated
       set  of  rules  it's  not uncommon to get hundreds of mes-
       sages.  If one can decipher them, though,  it  often  only
       takes  a  dozen  or  so  rules to eliminate the backing up
       (though it's easy to make a mistake and have an error rule
       accidentally  match a valid token.  A possible future flex
       feature will be to automatically add  rules  to  eliminate
       backing up).

       It's  important to keep in mind that you gain the benefits
       of eliminating backing up  only  if  you  eliminate  every
       instance  of  backing up.  Leaving just one means you gain
       nothing.

       Variable trailing context  (where  both  the  leading  and
       trailing  parts do not have a fixed length) entails almost
       the same performance loss as REJECT  (i.e.,  substantial).
       So when possible a rule like:

           %%
           mouse|rat/(cat|dog)   run();

       is better written:

           %%
           mouse/cat|dog         run();
           rat/cat|dog           run();

       or as

           %%
           mouse|rat/cat         run();
           mouse|rat/dog         run();

       Note that here the special '|' action does not provide any
       savings, and can even make things worse (see  Deficiencies
       / Bugs below).

       Another  area where the user can increase a scanner's per-
       formance (and one that's easier to implement) arises  from
       the  fact  that  the longer the tokens matched, the faster
       the scanner will run.  This is because  with  long  tokens
       the processing of most input characters takes place in the
       (short) inner scanning loop, and does not often have to go
       through  the  additional  work  of setting up the scanning
       environment (e.g., yytext) for  the  action.   Recall  the
       scanner for C comments:

           %x comment
           %%
                   int line_num = 1;

           "/*"         BEGIN(N);

           <comment>[^*\n]*
           <comment>"*"+[^*/\n]*
           <comment>\n             ++line_num;
           <comment>"*"+"/"        BEGIN(N);

       This could be sped up by writing it as:

           %x comment
           %%
                   int line_num = 1;

           "/*"         BEGIN(N);

           <comment>[^*\n]*
           <comment>[^*\n]*\n      ++line_num;
           <comment>"*"+[^*/\n]*
           <comment>"*"+[^*/\n]*\n ++line_num;
           <comment>"*"+"/"        BEGIN(N);

       Now  instead  of  each newline requiring the processing of
       another action, recognizing the newlines is  "distributed"
       over  the  other rules to keep the matched text as long as
       possible.  Note that adding rules does not slow  down  the
       scanner!   The  speed of the scanner is independent of the
       number of rules or (modulo the considerations given at the
       beginning  of  this section) how complicated the rules are
       with regard to operators such as '*' and '|'.

       A final example in speeding up a scanner: suppose you want
       to   scan   through  a  file  containing  identifiers  and
       keywords, one per line and with no other extraneous  char-
       acters,  and  recognize all the keywords.  A natural first
       approach is:

           %%
           asm      |
           auto     |
           break    |
           ... etc ...
           volatile |
           while    /* it's a keyword */

           .|\n     /* it's not a keyword */

       To eliminate  the  back-tracking,  introduce  a  catch-all
       rule:

           %%
           asm      |
           auto     |
           break    |
           ... etc ...
           volatile |
           while    /* it's a keyword */

           [a-z]+   |
           .|\n     /* it's not a keyword */

       Now,  if it's guaranteed that there's exactly one word per
       line, then we can reduce the total number of matches by  a
       half  by  merging in the recognition of newlines with that
       of the other tokens:

           %%
           asm\n    |
           auto\n   |
           break\n  |
           ... etc ...
           volatile\n |
           while\n  /* it's a keyword */

           [a-z]+\n |
           .|\n     /* it's not a keyword */

       One has to be careful here, as we  have  now  reintroduced
       backing up into the scanner.  In particular, while we know
       that there will never  be  any  characters  in  the  input
       stream  other  than letters or newlines, flex can't figure
       this out, and it will plan for possibly needing to back up
       when  it has scanned a token like "auto" and then the next
       character is something other than a newline or  a  letter.
       Previously it would then just match the "auto" rule and be
       done, but now it has no "auto" rule, only a "auto\n" rule.
       To  eliminate  the  possibility  of  backing  up, we could
       either duplicate all rules but without final newlines, or,
       since  we  never  expect  to  encounter  such an input and
       therefore don't how it's classified, we can introduce  one
       more catch-all rule, this one which doesn't include a new-
       line:

           %%
           asm\n    |
           auto\n   |
           break\n  |
           ... etc ...
           volatile\n |
           while\n  /* it's a keyword */

           [a-z]+\n |
           [a-z]+   |
           .|\n     /* it's not a keyword */

       Compiled with -Cf, this is about as fast as one can get  a
       flex scanner to go for this particular problem.

       A  final  note: flex is slow when matching NUL's, particu-
       larly when a token contains multiple NUL's.  It's best  to
       write  rules  which  match  short  amounts of text if it's
       anticipated that the text will often include NUL's.

       Another final note  regarding  performance:  as  mentioned
       above in the section How the Input is Matched, dynamically
       resizing yytext to accommodate huge tokens is a slow  pro-
       cess  because  it presently requires that the (huge) token
       be rescanned from the beginning.  Thus if  performance  is
       vital,  you  should attempt to match "large" quantities of
       text but not "huge" quantities, where the  cutoff  between
       the two is at about 8K characters/token.

GENERATING C++ SCANNERS
       flex  provides two different ways to generate scanners for
       use with C++.  The first way is to simply compile a  scan-
       ner  generated by flex using a C++ compiler instead of a C
       compiler.   You  should  not  encounter  any  compilations
       errors  (please  report  any you find to the email address
       given in the Author section below).  You can then use  C++
       code  in  your  rule actions instead of C code.  Note that
       the default input source for your  scanner  remains  yyin,
       and default echoing is still done to yyout.  Both of these
       remain FILE * variables and not C++ streams.

       You can also use flex to generate  a  C++  scanner  class,
       using the -+ option (or, equivalently, %option c++), which
       is automatically specified if the name of  the  flex  exe-
       cutable  ends  in  a '+', such as flex++.  When using this
       option, flex defaults to generating  the  scanner  to  the
       file lex.yy.cc instead of lex.yy.c.  The generated scanner
       includes the header file FlexLexer.h,  which  defines  the
       interface to two C++ classes.

       The  first  class,  FlexLexer,  provides  an abstract base
       class defining the general scanner  class  interface.   It
       provides the following member functions:

       const char* YYText()
              returns  the  text  of  the  most  recently matched
              token, the equivalent of yytext.

       int YYLeng()
              returns the length of  the  most  recently  matched
              token, the equivalent of yyleng.

       int lineno() const
              returns  the current input line number (see %option
              yylineno), or 1 if %option yylineno was not used.

       void set_debug( int flag )
              sets the debugging flag for the scanner, equivalent
              to assigning to yy_flex_debug (see the Options sec-
              tion above).  Note that you must build the  scanner
              using  %option  debug to include debugging informa-
              tion in it.

       int debug() const
              returns the current setting of the debugging  flag.

       Also   provided   are   member   functions  equivalent  to
       yy_switch_to_buffer(),  yy_create_buffer()   (though   the
       first  argument  is  an  istream* object pointer and not a
       FILE*),   yy_flush_buffer(),    yy_delete_buffer(),    and
       yyrestart()  (again,  the  first  argument  is  a istream*
       object pointer).

       The second class defined in  FlexLexer.h  is  yyFlexLexer,
       which is derived from FlexLexer.  It defines the following
       additional member functions:

       yyFlexLexer( istream* arg_yyin = 0, ostream* arg_yyout = 0
       )
              constructs a yyFlexLexer  object  using  the  given
              streams  for  input  and output.  If not specified,
              the streams default to cin and cout,  respectively.

       virtual int yylex()
              performs the same role is yylex() does for ordinary
              flex scanners: it scans the input stream, consuming
              tokens,  until a rule's action returns a value.  If
              you derive a subclass S from yyFlexLexer  and  want
              to  access  the member functions and variables of S
              inside  yylex(),  then  you  need  to  use  %option
              yyclass="S"  to  inform flex that you will be using
              that subclass  instead  of  yyFlexLexer.   In  this
              case,  rather than generating yyFlexLexer::yylex(),
              flex generates S::yylex()  (and  also  generates  a
              dummy      yyFlexLexer::yylex()      that     calls
              yyFlexLexer::LexerError() if called).

       virtual void switch_streams(istream* new_in = 0,
              ostream* new_out = 0) reassigns yyin to new_in  (if
              non-nil) and yyout to new_out (ditto), deleting the
              previous input buffer if yyin is reassigned.

       int yylex( istream* new_in, ostream* new_out = 0 )
              first    switches    the    input    streams    via
              switch_streams(  new_in, new_out ) and then returns
              the value of yylex().

       In addition, yyFlexLexer defines the  following  protected
       virtual  functions  which  you  can  redefine  in  derived
       classes to tailor the scanner:

       virtual int LexerInput( char* buf, int max_size )
              reads  up  to  max_size  characters  into  buf  and
              returns the number of characters read.  To indicate
              end-of-input,  return  0  characters.   Note   that
              "interactive"  scanners  (see  the -B and -I flags)
              define the macro YY_INTERACTIVE.  If  you  redefine
              LexerInput()  and  need  to  take different actions
              depending on whether or not the  scanner  might  be
              scanning  an interactive input source, you can test
              for the presence of this name via #ifdef.

       virtual void LexerOutput( const char* buf, int size )
              writes out size characters  from  the  buffer  buf,
              which,   while  NUL-terminated,  may  also  contain
              "internal" NUL's if the scanner's rules  can  match
              text with NUL's in them.

       virtual void LexerError( const char* msg )
              reports a fatal error message.  The default version
              of this function writes the message to  the  stream
              cerr and exits.

       Note  that  a yyFlexLexer object contains its entire scan-
       ning state.  Thus you can use such objects to create reen-
       trant scanners.  You can instantiate multiple instances of
       the same yyFlexLexer class, and you can also combine  mul-
       tiple  C++  scanner  classes  together in the same program
       using the -P option discussed above.

       Finally, note that the %array feature is not available  to
       C++  scanner classes; you must use %pointer (the default).

       Here is an example of a simple C++ scanner:

               // An example of using the flex C++ scanner class.

           %{
           int mylineno = 0;
           %}

           string  \"[^\n"]+\"

           ws      [ \t]+

           alpha   [A-Za-z]
           dig     [0-9]
           name    ({alpha}|{dig}|\$)({alpha}|{dig}|[_.\-/$])*
           num1    [-+]?{dig}+\.?([eE][-+]?{dig}+)?
           num2    [-+]?{dig}*\.{dig}+([eE][-+]?{dig}+)?
           number  {num1}|{num2}

           %%

           {ws}    /* skip blanks and tabs */

           "/*"    {
                   int c;

                   while((c = yyinput()) != 0)
                       {
                       if(c == '\n')
                           ++mylineno;

                       else if(c == '*')
                           {
                           if((c = yyinput()) == '/')
                               break;
                           else
                               unput(t);
                           }
                       }
                   }

           {number}  cout << "number " << YYText() << '\n';

           \n        mylineno++;

           {name}    cout << "name " << YYText() << '\n';

           {string}  cout << "string " << YYText() << '\n';

           %%

           int main( int /* argc */, char** /* argv */ )
               {
               FlexLexer* lexer = new yyFlexLexer;
               while(lexer->yylex() != 0)
                   ;
               return 0;
               }
       If you want to create multiple (different) lexer  classes,
       you use the -P flag (or the prefix= option) to rename each
       yyFlexLexer to  some  other  xxFlexLexer.   You  then  can
       include <FlexLexer.h> in your other sources once per lexer
       class, first renaming yyFlexLexer as follows:

           #undef yyFlexLexer
           #define yyFlexLexer xxFlexLexer
           #include <FlexLexer.h>

           #undef yyFlexLexer
           #define yyFlexLexer zzFlexLexer
           #include <FlexLexer.h>

       if, for example, you used %option prefix="xx" for  one  of
       your scanners and %option prefix="zz" for the other.

       IMPORTANT:  the  present  form  of  the  scanning class is
       experimental and may  change  considerably  between  major
       releases.

INCOMPATIBILITIES WITH LEX AND POSIX
       flex  is  a  rewrite  of  the  AT&T Unix lex tool (the two
       implementations do not share any code, though), with  some
       extensions  and  incompatibilities,  both  of which are of
       concern to those who wish to write scanners acceptable  to
       either  implementation.   Flex is fully compliant with the
       POSIX lex specification, except that when  using  %pointer
       (the  default), a call to unput() destroys the contents of
       yytext, which is counter to the POSIX specification.

       In this section we discuss  all  of  the  known  areas  of
       incompatibility  between  flex,  AT&T  lex,  and the POSIX
       specification.

       flex's -l option turns on maximum compatibility  with  the
       original  AT&T  lex implementation, at the cost of a major
       loss in the  generated  scanner's  performance.   We  note
       below which incompatibilities can be overcome using the -l
       option.

       flex is fully  compatible  with  lex  with  the  following
       exceptions:

       -      The  undocumented  lex  scanner  internal  variable
              yylineno is not  supported  unless  -l  or  %option
              yylineno is used.

              yylineno  should  be  maintained  on  a  per-buffer
              basis, rather than  a  per-scanner  (single  global
              variable) basis.

              yylineno is not part of the POSIX specification.

       -      The  input()  routine is not redefinable, though it
              may be called to read characters following whatever
              has  been matched by a rule.  If input() encounters
              an end-of-file the normal  yywrap()  processing  is
              done.    A  ``real''  end-of-file  is  returned  by
              input() as EOF.

              Input  is  instead  controlled  by   defining   the
              YY_INPUT macro.

              The  flex  restriction that input() cannot be rede-
              fined is in accordance with  the  POSIX  specifica-
              tion, which simply does not specify any way of con-
              trolling the scanner's input other than  by  making
              an initial assignment to yyin.

       -      The  unput()  routine  is  not  redefinable.   This
              restriction is in accordance with POSIX.

       -      flex scanners are not as reentrant as lex scanners.
              In  particular,  if you have an interactive scanner
              and an interrupt handler which  long-jumps  out  of
              the scanner, and the scanner is subsequently called
              again, you may get the following message:

                  fatal flex scanner internal error--end of buffer missed

              To reenter the scanner, first use

                  yyrestart( yyin );

              Note that this call will throw  away  any  buffered
              input;  usually this isn't a problem with an inter-
              active scanner.

              Also note that flex C++ scanner classes  are  reen-
              trant,  so  if  using C++ is an option for you, you
              should use them instead.  See "Generating C++ Scan-
              ners" above for details.

       -      output()  is  not  supported.  Output from the ECHO
              macro is done to the  file-pointer  yyout  (default
              stdout).

              output() is not part of the POSIX specification.

       -      lex  does  not  support  exclusive start conditions
              (%x), though they are in the POSIX specification.

       -      When definitions are expanded, flex  encloses  them
              in parentheses.  With lex, the following:

                  NAME    [A-Z][A-Z0-9]*
                  %%
                  foo{NAME}?      printf( "Found it\n" );
                  %%

              will  not  match  the string "foo" because when the
              macro is expanded the rule is equivalent to "foo[A-
              Z][A-Z0-9]*?"   and the precedence is such that the
              '?' is associated with "[A-Z0-9]*".  With flex, the
              rule will be expanded to "foo([A-Z][A-Z0-9]*)?" and
              so the string "foo" will match.

              Note that if the definition begins with ^  or  ends
              with $ then it is not expanded with parentheses, to
              allow these  operators  to  appear  in  definitions
              without  losing  their  special  meanings.  But the
              <s>, /, and <<EOF>> operators cannot be used  in  a
              flex definition.

              Using  -l  results in the lex behavior of no paren-
              theses around the definition.

              The POSIX specification is that the  definition  be
              enclosed in parentheses.

       -      Some  implementations  of lex allow a rule's action
              to begin on a separate line, if the rule's  pattern
              has trailing whitespace:

                  %%
                  foo|bar<space here>
                    { foobar_action(); }

              flex does not support this feature.

       -      The  lex  %r  (generate a Ratfor scanner) option is
              not supported.  It is not part of the POSIX  speci-
              fication.

       -      After  a call to unput(), yytext is undefined until
              the next token is matched, unless the  scanner  was
              built  using %array.  This is not the case with lex
              or the POSIX specification.   The  -l  option  does
              away with this incompatibility.

       -      The  precedence  of the {} (numeric range) operator
              is different.  lex interprets "abc{1,3}" as  "match
              one,  two,  or three occurrences of 'abc'", whereas
              flex interprets it as "match 'ab' followed by  one,
              two,  or  three occurrences of 'c'".  The latter is
              in agreement with the POSIX specification.

       -      The precedence of the ^ operator is different.  lex
              interprets "^foo|bar" as "match either 'foo' at the
              beginning of a line, or  'bar'  anywhere",  whereas
              flex  interprets it as "match either 'foo' or 'bar'
              if they come at the beginning of a line".  The lat-
              ter is in agreement with the POSIX specification.

       -      The special table-size declarations such as %a sup-
              ported by lex are not required  by  flex  scanners;
              flex ignores them.

       -      The  name FLEX_SCANNER is #define'd so scanners may
              be written for use with either flex or lex.   Scan-
              ners   also   include   YY_FLEX_MAJOR_VERSION   and
              YY_FLEX_MINOR_VERSION indicating which  version  of
              flex  generated  the  scanner (for example, for the
              2.5 release, these defines would be 2 and 5 respec-
              tively).

       The following flex features are not included in lex or the
       POSIX specification:

           C++ scanners
           %option
           start condition scopes
           start condition stacks
           interactive/non-interactive scanners
           yy_scan_string() and friends
           yyterminate()
           yy_set_interactive()
           yy_set_bol()
           YY_AT_BOL()
           <<EOF>>
           <*>
           YY_DECL
           YY_START
           YY_USER_ACTION
           YY_USER_INIT
           #line directives
           %{}'s around actions
           multiple actions on a line

       plus almost all of the flex flags.  The  last  feature  in
       the  list  refers  to  the fact that with flex you can put
       multiple actions on the same line,  separated  with  semi-
       colons, while with lex, the following

           foo    handle_foo(); ++num_foos_seen;

       is (rather surprisingly) truncated to

           foo    handle_foo();

       flex  does  not truncate the action.  Actions that are not
       enclosed in braces are simply terminated at the end of the
       line.

DIAGNOSTICS
       warning,  rule  cannot be matched indicates that the given
       rule cannot be matched because it follows other rules that
       will  always  match  the same text as it.  For example, in
       the following "foo" cannot be  matched  because  it  comes
       after an identifier "catch-all" rule:

           [a-z]+    got_identifier();
           foo       got_foo();

       Using REJECT in a scanner suppresses this warning.

       warning,  -s  option given but default rule can be matched
       means that it is possible (perhaps only  in  a  particular
       start  condition)  that the default rule (match any single
       character) is the only one that will  match  a  particular
       input.   Since  -s  was  given,  presumably  this  is  not
       intended.

       reject_used_but_not_detected         undefined          or
       yymore_used_but_not_detected  undefined - These errors can
       occur at compile time.  They  indicate  that  the  scanner
       uses REJECT or yymore() but that flex failed to notice the
       fact, meaning that flex scanned  the  first  two  sections
       looking  for  occurrences  of  these actions and failed to
       find any, but somehow you snuck some in  (via  a  #include
       file,  for example).  Use %option reject or %option yymore
       to indicate to flex that you really do use these features.

       flex  scanner  jammed  -  a  scanner  compiled with -s has
       encountered an input string which wasn't matched by any of
       its  rules.   This  error  can  also occur due to internal
       problems.

       token too large, exceeds YYLMAX - your scanner uses %array
       and one of its rules matched a string longer than the YYL-
       MAX constant (8K bytes by default).  You can increase  the
       value  by #define'ing YYLMAX in the definitions section of
       your flex input.

       scanner requires -8 flag to use the character 'x'  -  Your
       scanner   specification  includes  recognizing  the  8-bit
       character 'x' and you did not specify  the  -8  flag,  and
       your  scanner  defaulted to 7-bit because you used the -Cf
       or -CF table compression options.  See the  discussion  of
       the -7 flag for details.

       flex scanner push-back overflow - you used unput() to push
       back so much text that the scanner's buffer could not hold
       both the pushed-back text and the current token in yytext.
       Ideally the scanner should dynamically resize  the  buffer
       in this case, but at present it does not.

       input  buffer overflow, can't enlarge buffer because scan-
       ner uses REJECT - the scanner was working on  matching  an
       extremely  large  token  and  needed  to  expand the input
       buffer.  This doesn't work with scanners that use  REJECT.

       fatal  flex scanner internal error--end of buffer missed -
       This can occur in an scanner which is  reentered  after  a
       long-jump  has  jumped out (or over) the scanner's activa-
       tion frame.  Before reentering the scanner, use:

           yyrestart( yyin );

       or, as noted above, switch to using the C++ scanner class.

       too  many  start  conditions in <> construct! - you listed
       more start conditions in a <> construct than exist (so you
       must have listed at least one of them twice).

FILES
       -lfl   library with which scanners must be linked.

       lex.yy.c
              generated scanner (called lexyy.c on some systems).

       lex.yy.cc
              generated C++ scanner class, when using -+.

       <FlexLexer.h>
              header file defining the C++  scanner  base  class,
              FlexLexer, and its derived class, yyFlexLexer.

       flex.skl
              skeleton  scanner.   This  file  is  only used when
              building flex, not when flex executes.

       lex.backup
              backing-up information for -b flag (called  lex.bck
              on some systems).

DEFICIENCIES / BUGS
       Some  trailing context patterns cannot be properly matched
       and generate warning messages  ("dangerous  trailing  con-
       text").   These are patterns where the ending of the first
       part of the rule matches the beginning of the second part,
       such  as  "zx*/xy*", where the 'x*' matches the 'x' at the
       beginning of the trailing context.  (Note that  the  POSIX
       draft  states  that  the  text matched by such patterns is
       undefined.)

       For some trailing context rules, parts which are  actually
       fixed-length  are  not  recognized as such, leading to the
       abovementioned performance  loss.   In  particular,  parts
       using  '|' or {n} (such as "foo{3}") are always considered
       variable-length.

       Combining trailing context with the special '|' action can
       result  in  fixed  trailing  context being turned into the
       more expensive variable trailing context.  For example, in
       the following:

           %%
           abc      |
           xyz/def


       Use  of  unput() invalidates yytext and yyleng, unless the
       %array directive or the -l option has been used.

       Pattern-matching of NUL's  is  substantially  slower  than
       matching other characters.

       Dynamic  resizing  of  the  input  buffer  is  slow, as it
       entails rescanning all the text matched so far by the cur-
       rent (generally huge) token.

       Due  to both buffering of input and read-ahead, you cannot
       intermix calls to <stdio.h> routines, such as,  for  exam-
       ple,  getchar(),  with  flex  rules and expect it to work.
       Call input() instead.

       The total table entries listed by the -v flag excludes the
       number  of table entries needed to determine what rule has
       been matched.  The number of entries is equal to the  num-
       ber  of DFA states if the scanner does not use REJECT, and
       somewhat greater than the number of states if it does.

       REJECT cannot be used with the -f or -F options.

       The flex internal algorithms need documentation.

SEE ALSO
       lex(x), yacc(c), sed(d), awk(k).

       John Levine, Tony Mason,  and  Doug  Brown,  Lex  &  Yacc,
       O'Reilly  and Associates.  Be sure to get the 2nd edition.

       M. E. Lesk and E. Schmidt, LEX - Lexical Analyzer  Genera-
       tor

       Alfred  Aho,  Ravi  Sethi  and  Jeffrey Ullman, Compilers:
       Principles, Techniques and Tools,  Addison-Wesley  (1986).
       Describes  the  pattern-matching  techniques  used by flex
       (deterministic finite automata).

AUTHOR
       Vern Paxson, with the help of many ideas and much inspira-
       tion   from   Van   Jacobson.   Original  version  by  Jef
       Poskanzer.  The fast table  representation  is  a  partial
       implementation  of  a  design  done  by Van Jacobson.  The
       implementation was done by Kevin Gong and Vern Paxson.

       Thanks to the many  flex  beta-testers,  feedbackers,  and
       contributors,  especially  Francois  Pinard, Casey Leedom,
       Robert  Abramovitz,  Stan  Adermann,  Terry  Allen,  David
       Barker-Plummer,  John  Basrai,  Neal  Becker,  Nelson H.F.
       Beebe, benson@odi.com, Karl Berry, Peter A.  Bigot,  Simon
       Blanchard,  Keith  Bostic,  Frederic Brehm, Ian Brockbank,
       Kin Cho, Nick Christopher, Brian  Clapper,  J.T.  Conklin,
       Jason Coughlin, Bill Cox, Nick Cropper, Dave Curtis, Scott
       David Daniels, Chris G. Demetriou, Theo Deraadt, Mike Don-
       ahue,  Chuck  Doucette,  Tom  Epperly,  Leo  Eskin,  Chris
       Faylor, Chris Flatters, Jon Forrest, Jeffrey  Friedl,  Joe
       Gayda,  Kaveh  R.  Ghazi,  Wolfgang  Glunz,  Eric Goldman,
       Christopher M. Gould, Ulrich  Grepel,  Peer  Griebel,  Jan
       Hajic,  Charles  Hemphill,  NORO Hideo, Jarkko Hietaniemi,
       Scott Hofmann, Jeff Honig, Dana Hudes, Eric  Hughes,  John
       Interrante, Ceriel Jacobs, Michal Jaegermann, Sakari Jalo-
       vaara, Jeffrey R.  Jones,  Henry  Juengst,  Klaus  Kaempf,
       Jonathan   I.   Kamens,   Terrence   O  Kane,  Amir  Katz,
       ken@ken.hilco.com, Kevin B. Kenny, Steve Kirsch,  Winfried
       Koenig,  Marq  Kole,  Ronald  Lamprecht,  Greg  Lee, Rohan
       Lenard, Craig Leres, John Levine, Steve Liddle, David Lof-
       fredo,  Mike  Long,  Mohamed el Lozy, Brian Madsen, Malte,
       Joe Marshall, Bengt Martensson, Chris Metcalf,  Luke  Mew-
       burn,  Jim  Meyering,  R. Alexander Milowski, Erik Naggum,
       G.T.  Nicol,  Landon  Noll,  James  Nordby,  Marc  Nozell,
       Richard Ohnemus, Karsten Pahnke, Sven Panne, Roland Pesch,
       Walter  Pelissero,  Gaumond  Pierre,  Esmond   Pitt,   Jef
       Poskanzer,  Joe  Rahmeh,  Jarmo Raiha, Frederic Raimbault,
       Pat Rankin, Rick Richardson, Kevin Rodgers, Kai  Uwe  Rom-
       mel,  Jim  Roskind, Alberto Santini, Andreas Scherer, Dar-
       rell Schiebel, Raf Schietekat, Doug Schmidt, Philippe Sch-
       noebelen,  Andreas  Schwab,  Larry Schwimmer, Alex Siegel,
       Eckehard Stolz, Jan-Erik Strvmquist, Mike Stump, Paul Stu-
       art,  Dave  Tallman,  Ian  Lance  Taylor,  Chris  Thewalt,
       Richard M. Timoney, Jodi Tsai, Paul Tuinenga,  Gary  Weik,
       Frank  Whaley,  Gerhard  Wilhelms, Kent Williams, Ken Yap,
       Ron Zellar, Nathan Zelle,  David  Zuhn,  and  those  whose
       names  have  slipped my marginal mail-archiving skills but
       whose contributions are appreciated all the same.

       Thanks to Keith Bostic, Jon Forrest, Noah  Friedman,  John
       Gilmore,  Craig  Leres,  John  Levine,  Bob  Mulcahy, G.T.
       Nicol, Francois Pinard, Rich Salz,  and  Richard  Stallman
       for help with various distribution headaches.

       Thanks to Esmond Pitt and Earle Horton for 8-bit character
       support; to Benson Margulies and Fred Burke for  C++  sup-
       port;  to Kent Williams and Tom Epperly for C++ class sup-
       port; to Ove Ewerlid for support of  NUL's;  and  to  Eric
       Hughes for support of multiple buffers.

       This work was primarily done when I was with the Real Time
       Systems Group  at  the  Lawrence  Berkeley  Laboratory  in
       Berkeley,  CA.  Many thanks to all there for the support I
       received.

       Send comments to vern@ee.lbl.gov.



Version 2.5                 April 1995                    FLEX(X)