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- .TH FLEX 1 "November 1993" "Version 2.4"
- .SH NAME
- flex \- fast lexical analyzer generator
- .SH SYNOPSIS
- .B flex
- .B [\-bcdfhilnpstvwBFILTV78+ \-C[aefFmr] \-Pprefix \-Sskeleton]
- .I [filename ...]
- .SH DESCRIPTION
- .I flex
- is a tool for generating
- .I scanners:
- programs which recognized lexical patterns in text.
- .I 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
- .I rules. flex
- generates as output a C source file,
- .B lex.yy.c,
- which defines a routine
- .B yylex().
- This file is compiled and linked with the
- .B \-lfl
- library to produce an executable. When the executable is run,
- it analyzes its input for occurrences
- of the regular expressions. Whenever it finds one, it executes
- the corresponding C code.
- .PP
- For full documentation, see
- .B flexdoc(1).
- This manual entry is intended for use as a quick reference.
- .SH OPTIONS
- .I flex
- has the following options:
- .TP
- .B \-b
- generate backing-up information to
- .I 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
- .B \-Cf
- or
- .B \-CF
- is used, the generated scanner will run faster.
- .TP
- .B \-c
- is a do-nothing, deprecated option included for POSIX compliance.
- .IP
- .B NOTE:
- in previous releases of
- .I flex
- .B \-c
- specified table-compression options. This functionality is
- now given by the
- .B \-C
- flag. To ease the the impact of this change, when
- .I flex
- encounters
- .B \-c,
- it currently issues a warning message and assumes that
- .B \-C
- was desired instead. In the future this "promotion" of
- .B \-c
- to
- .B \-C
- will go away in the name of full POSIX compliance (unless
- the POSIX meaning is removed first).
- .TP
- .B \-d
- makes the generated scanner run in
- .I debug
- mode. Whenever a pattern is recognized and the global
- .B yy_flex_debug
- is non-zero (which is the default), the scanner will
- write to
- .I stderr
- a line of the form:
- .nf
-
- --accepting rule at line 53 ("the matched text")
-
- .fi
- 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; the two look the same as far as the scanner's concerned),
- or reaches an end-of-file.
- .TP
- .B \-f
- specifies
- .I fast scanner.
- No table compression is done and stdio is bypassed.
- The result is large but fast. This option is equivalent to
- .B \-Cfr
- (see below).
- .TP
- .B \-h
- generates a "help" summary of
- .I flex's
- options to
- .I stderr
- and then exits.
- .TP
- .B \-i
- instructs
- .I flex
- to generate a
- .I case-insensitive
- scanner. The case of letters given in the
- .I flex
- input patterns will
- be ignored, and tokens in the input will be matched regardless of case. The
- matched text given in
- .I yytext
- will have the preserved case (i.e., it will not be folded).
- .TP
- .B \-l
- turns on maximum compatibility with the original AT&T lex implementation,
- at a considerable performance cost. This option is incompatible with
- .B \-+, \-f, \-F, \-Cf,
- or
- .B \-CF.
- See
- .I flexdoc(1)
- for details.
- .TP
- .B \-n
- is another do-nothing, deprecated option included only for
- POSIX compliance.
- .TP
- .B \-p
- generates a performance report to stderr. The report
- consists of comments regarding features of the
- .I flex
- input file which will cause a 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.
- .TP
- .B \-s
- causes the
- .I default rule
- (that unmatched scanner input is echoed to
- .I stdout)
- to be suppressed. If the scanner encounters input that does not
- match any of its rules, it aborts with an error.
- .TP
- .B \-t
- instructs
- .I flex
- to write the scanner it generates to standard output instead
- of
- .B lex.yy.c.
- .TP
- .B \-v
- specifies that
- .I flex
- should write to
- .I stderr
- a summary of statistics regarding the scanner it generates.
- .TP
- .B \-w
- suppresses warning messages.
- .TP
- .B \-B
- instructs
- .I flex
- to generate a
- .I batch
- scanner instead of an
- .I interactive
- scanner (see
- .B \-I
- below). See
- .I flexdoc(1)
- for details. Scanners using
- .B \-Cf
- or
- .B \-CF
- compression options automatically specify this option, too.
- .TP
- .B \-F
- specifies that the
- .ul
- fast
- scanner table representation should be used (and stdio bypassed).
- This representation is about as fast as the full table representation
- .B (-f),
- and for some sets of patterns will be considerably smaller (and for
- others, larger). It cannot be used with the
- .B \-+
- option. See
- .B flexdoc(1)
- for more details.
- .IP
- This option is equivalent to
- .B \-CFr
- (see below).
- .TP
- .B \-I
- instructs
- .I flex
- to generate an
- .I interactive
- scanner, that is, a scanner which stops immediately rather than
- looking ahead if it knows
- that the currently scanned text cannot be part of a longer rule's match.
- This is the opposite of
- .I batch
- scanners (see
- .B \-B
- above). See
- .B flexdoc(1)
- for details.
- .IP
- Note,
- .B \-I
- cannot be used in conjunction with
- .I full
- or
- .I fast tables,
- i.e., the
- .B \-f, \-F, \-Cf,
- or
- .B \-CF
- flags. For other table compression options,
- .B \-I
- is the default.
- .TP
- .B \-L
- instructs
- .I flex
- not to generate
- .B #line
- directives in
- .B lex.yy.c.
- The default is to generate such directives so error
- messages in the actions will be correctly
- located with respect to the original
- .I flex
- input file, and not to
- the fairly meaningless line numbers of
- .B lex.yy.c.
- .TP
- .B \-T
- makes
- .I flex
- run in
- .I trace
- mode. It will generate a lot of messages to
- .I stderr
- concerning
- the form of the input and the resultant non-deterministic and deterministic
- finite automata. This option is mostly for use in maintaining
- .I flex.
- .TP
- .B \-V
- prints the version number to
- .I stderr
- and exits.
- .TP
- .B \-7
- instructs
- .I flex
- to generate a 7-bit scanner, which can save considerable table space,
- especially when using
- .B \-Cf
- or
- .B \-CF
- (and, at most sites,
- .B \-7
- is on by default for these options. To see if this is the case, use the
- .B -v
- verbose flag and check the flag summary it reports).
- .TP
- .B \-8
- instructs
- .I flex
- to generate an 8-bit scanner. This is the default except for the
- .B \-Cf
- and
- .B \-CF
- compression options, for which the default is site-dependent, and
- can be checked by inspecting the flag summary generated by the
- .B \-v
- option.
- .TP
- .B \-+
- specifies that you want flex to generate a C++
- scanner class. See the section on Generating C++ Scanners in
- .I flexdoc(1)
- for details.
- .TP
- .B \-C[aefFmr]
- controls the degree of table compression and scanner optimization.
- .IP
- .B \-Ca
- trade off larger tables in the generated scanner for faster performance
- because the elements of the tables are better aligned for memory access
- and computation. This option can double the size of the tables used by
- your scanner.
- .IP
- .B \-Ce
- directs
- .I flex
- to construct
- .I equivalence classes,
- i.e., sets of characters
- which have identical lexical properties.
- Equivalence classes usually give
- dramatic reductions in the final table/object file sizes (typically
- a factor of 2-5) and are pretty cheap performance-wise (one array
- look-up per character scanned).
- .IP
- .B \-Cf
- specifies that the
- .I full
- scanner tables should be generated -
- .I flex
- should not compress the
- tables by taking advantages of similar transition functions for
- different states.
- .IP
- .B \-CF
- specifies that the alternate fast scanner representation (described in
- .B flexdoc(1))
- should be used. This option cannot be used with
- .B \-+.
- .IP
- .B \-Cm
- directs
- .I flex
- to construct
- .I meta-equivalence classes,
- which are sets of equivalence classes (or characters, if equivalence
- classes are not being used) that are commonly used together. Meta-equivalence
- classes are often a big win when using compressed tables, but they
- have a moderate performance impact (one or two "if" tests and one
- array look-up per character scanned).
- .IP
- .B \-Cr
- causes the generated scanner to
- .I bypass
- using stdio for input. In general this option results in a minor
- performance gain only worthwhile if used in conjunction with
- .B \-Cf
- or
- .B \-CF.
- It can cause surprising behavior if you use stdio yourself to
- read from
- .I yyin
- prior to calling the scanner.
- .IP
- A lone
- .B \-C
- specifies that the scanner tables should be compressed but neither
- equivalence classes nor meta-equivalence classes should be used.
- .IP
- The options
- .B \-Cf
- or
- .B \-CF
- and
- .B \-Cm
- do not make sense together - there is no opportunity for meta-equivalence
- classes if the table is not being compressed. Otherwise the options
- may be freely mixed.
- .IP
- The default setting is
- .B \-Cem,
- which specifies that
- .I 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:
- .nf
-
- slowest & smallest
- -Cem
- -Cm
- -Ce
- -C
- -C{f,F}e
- -C{f,F}
- -C{f,F}a
- fastest & largest
-
- .fi
- .IP
- .B \-C
- options are cumulative.
- .TP
- .B \-Pprefix
- changes the default
- .I "yy"
- prefix used by
- .I flex
- to be
- .I prefix
- instead. See
- .I flexdoc(1)
- for a description of all the global variables and file names that
- this affects.
- .TP
- .B \-Sskeleton_file
- overrides the default skeleton file from which
- .I flex
- constructs its scanners. You'll never need this option unless you are doing
- .I flex
- maintenance or development.
- .SH SUMMARY OF FLEX REGULAR EXPRESSIONS
- The patterns in the input are written using an extended set of regular
- expressions. These are:
- .nf
-
- x match the character 'x'
- . any character 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 '*')
- \\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
- s is not part of the matched text. This type
- of pattern is called as "trailing context".
- ^r an r, but only at the beginning of a line
- r$ an r, but only at the end of a line. Equivalent
- to "r/\\n".
-
-
- <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
-
- .fi
- The regular expressions listed above are grouped according to
- precedence, from highest precedence at the top to lowest at the bottom.
- Those grouped together have equal precedence.
- .PP
- Some notes on patterns:
- .IP -
- Negated character classes
- .I match newlines
- unless "\\n" (or an equivalent escape sequence) is one of the
- characters explicitly present in the negated character class
- (e.g., "[^A-Z\\n]").
- .IP -
- 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. The following are all illegal:
- .nf
-
- foo/bar$
- foo|(bar$)
- foo|^bar
- <sc1>foo<sc2>bar
-
- .fi
- .SH SUMMARY OF SPECIAL ACTIONS
- In addition to arbitrary C code, the following can appear in actions:
- .IP -
- .B ECHO
- copies yytext to the scanner's output.
- .IP -
- .B BEGIN
- followed by the name of a start condition places the scanner in the
- corresponding start condition.
- .IP -
- .B REJECT
- directs the scanner to proceed on to the "second best" rule which matched the
- input (or a prefix of the input).
- .B yytext
- and
- .B yyleng
- are set up appropriately. Note that
- .B REJECT
- is a particularly expensive feature in terms scanner performance;
- if it is used in
- .I any
- of the scanner's actions it will slow down
- .I all
- of the scanner's matching. Furthermore,
- .B REJECT
- cannot be used with the
- .B \-f
- or
- .B \-F
- options.
- .IP
- Note also that unlike the other special actions,
- .B REJECT
- is a
- .I branch;
- code immediately following it in the action will
- .I not
- be executed.
- .IP -
- .B yymore()
- tells the scanner that the next time it matches a rule, the corresponding
- token should be
- .I appended
- onto the current value of
- .B yytext
- rather than replacing it.
- .IP -
- .B yyless(n)
- returns all but the first
- .I n
- characters of the current token back to the input stream, where they
- will be rescanned when the scanner looks for the next match.
- .B yytext
- and
- .B yyleng
- are adjusted appropriately (e.g.,
- .B yyleng
- will now be equal to
- .I n
- ).
- .IP -
- .B unput(c)
- puts the character
- .I c
- back onto the input stream. It will be the next character scanned.
- .IP -
- .B input()
- reads the next character from the input stream (this routine is called
- .B yyinput()
- if the scanner is compiled using
- .B C++).
- .IP -
- .B 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".
- .IP
- By default,
- .B yyterminate()
- is also called when an end-of-file is encountered. It is a macro and
- may be redefined.
- .IP -
- .B YY_NEW_FILE
- is an action available only in <<EOF>> rules. It means "Okay, I've
- set up a new input file, continue scanning". It is no longer required;
- you can just assign
- .I yyin
- to point to a new file in the <<EOF>> action.
- .IP -
- .B yy_create_buffer( file, size )
- takes a
- .I FILE
- pointer and an integer
- .I size.
- It returns a YY_BUFFER_STATE
- handle to a new input buffer large enough to accomodate
- .I size
- characters and associated with the given file. When in doubt, use
- .B YY_BUF_SIZE
- for the size.
- .IP -
- .B yy_switch_to_buffer( new_buffer )
- switches the scanner's processing to scan for tokens from
- the given buffer, which must be a YY_BUFFER_STATE.
- .IP -
- .B yy_delete_buffer( buffer )
- deletes the given buffer.
- .SH VALUES AVAILABLE TO THE USER
- .IP -
- .B char *yytext
- holds the text of the current token. It may be modified but not lengthened
- (you cannot append characters to the end). Modifying the last character
- may affect the activity of rules anchored using '^' during the next scan;
- see
- .B flexdoc(1)
- for details.
- .IP
- If the special directive
- .B %array
- appears in the first section of the scanner description, then
- .B yytext
- is instead declared
- .B char yytext[YYLMAX],
- where
- .B YYLMAX
- is a macro definition that you can redefine in the first section
- if you don't like the default value (generally 8KB). Using
- .B %array
- results in somewhat slower scanners, but the value of
- .B yytext
- becomes immune to calls to
- .I input()
- and
- .I unput(),
- which potentially destroy its value when
- .B yytext
- is a character pointer. The opposite of
- .B %array
- is
- .B %pointer,
- which is the default.
- .IP
- You cannot use
- .B %array
- when generating C++ scanner classes
- (the
- .B \-+
- flag).
- .IP -
- .B int yyleng
- holds the length of the current token.
- .IP -
- .B FILE *yyin
- is the file which by default
- .I 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
- .I flex
- buffers its input; use
- .B yyrestart()
- instead.
- Once scanning terminates because an end-of-file
- has been seen,
- .B
- you can assign
- .I yyin
- at the new input file and then call the scanner again to continue scanning.
- .IP -
- .B void yyrestart( FILE *new_file )
- may be called to point
- .I 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
- .B yyrestart()
- with
- .I yyin
- as an argument thus throws away the current input buffer and continues
- scanning the same input file.
- .IP -
- .B FILE *yyout
- is the file to which
- .B ECHO
- actions are done. It can be reassigned by the user.
- .IP -
- .B YY_CURRENT_BUFFER
- returns a
- .B YY_BUFFER_STATE
- handle to the current buffer.
- .IP -
- .B YY_START
- returns an integer value corresponding to the current start
- condition. You can subsequently use this value with
- .B BEGIN
- to return to that start condition.
- .SH MACROS AND FUNCTIONS YOU CAN REDEFINE
- .IP -
- .B YY_DECL
- controls how the scanning routine is declared.
- By default, it is "int yylex()", or, if prototypes are being
- used, "int yylex(void)". This definition may be changed by redefining
- the "YY_DECL" macro. Note that
- if you give arguments to the scanning routine using a
- K&R-style/non-prototyped function declaration, you must terminate
- the definition with a semi-colon (;).
- .IP -
- The nature of how the scanner
- gets its input can be controlled by redefining the
- .B YY_INPUT
- macro.
- YY_INPUT's calling sequence is "YY_INPUT(buf,result,max_size)". Its
- action is to place up to
- .I max_size
- characters in the character array
- .I buf
- and return in the integer variable
- .I result
- either the
- number of characters read or the constant YY_NULL (0 on Unix systems)
- to indicate EOF. The default YY_INPUT reads from the
- global file-pointer "yyin".
- A sample redefinition of YY_INPUT (in the definitions
- section of the input file):
- .nf
-
- %{
- #undef YY_INPUT
- #define YY_INPUT(buf,result,max_size) \\
- { \\
- int c = getchar(); \\
- result = (c == EOF) ? YY_NULL : (buf[0] = c, 1); \\
- }
- %}
-
- .fi
- .IP -
- When the scanner receives an end-of-file indication from YY_INPUT,
- it then checks the function
- .B yywrap()
- function. If
- .B yywrap()
- returns false (zero), then it is assumed that the
- function has gone ahead and set up
- .I 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.
- .IP
- The default
- .B yywrap()
- always returns 1.
- .IP -
- YY_USER_ACTION
- can be redefined to provide an action
- which is always executed prior to the matched rule's action.
- .IP -
- The macro
- .B YY_USER_INIT
- may be redefined to provide an action which is always executed before
- the first scan.
- .IP -
- In the generated scanner, the actions are all gathered in one large
- switch statement and separated using
- .B YY_BREAK,
- which may be redefined. By default, it is simply a "break", to separate
- each rule's action from the following rule's.
- .SH FILES
- .TP
- .B \-lfl
- library with which to link scanners to obtain the default versions
- of
- .I yywrap()
- and/or
- .I main().
- .TP
- .I lex.yy.c
- generated scanner (called
- .I lexyy.c
- on some systems).
- .TP
- .I lex.yy.cc
- generated C++ scanner class, when using
- .B -+.
- .TP
- .I <FlexLexer.h>
- header file defining the C++ scanner base class,
- .B FlexLexer,
- and its derived class,
- .B yyFlexLexer.
- .TP
- .I flex.skl
- skeleton scanner. This file is only used when building flex, not when
- flex executes.
- .TP
- .I lex.backup
- backing-up information for
- .B \-b
- flag (called
- .I lex.bck
- on some systems).
- .SH "SEE ALSO"
- .PP
- flexdoc(1), lex(1), yacc(1), sed(1), awk(1).
- .PP
- M. E. Lesk and E. Schmidt,
- .I LEX \- Lexical Analyzer Generator
- .SH DIAGNOSTICS
- .PP
- .I reject_used_but_not_detected undefined
- or
- .PP
- .I yymore_used_but_not_detected undefined -
- These errors can occur at compile time. They indicate that the
- scanner uses
- .B REJECT
- or
- .B yymore()
- but that
- .I flex
- failed to notice the fact, meaning that
- .I 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). Make an explicit reference to the action in your
- .I flex
- input file. (Note that previously
- .I flex
- supported a
- .B %used/%unused
- mechanism for dealing with this problem; this feature is still supported
- but now deprecated, and will go away soon unless the author hears from
- people who can argue compellingly that they need it.)
- .PP
- .I flex scanner jammed -
- a scanner compiled with
- .B \-s
- has encountered an input string which wasn't matched by
- any of its rules.
- .PP
- .I 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. See
- .I flexdoc(1)
- for an example.
- .PP
- .I warning,
- .B \-s
- .I
- 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
- .PP
- .I scanner input buffer overflowed -
- a scanner rule matched more text than the available dynamic memory.
- .PP
- .I token too large, exceeds YYLMAX -
- your scanner uses
- .B %array
- and one of its rules matched a string longer than the
- .B YYLMAX
- constant (8K bytes by default). You can increase the value by
- #define'ing
- .B YYLMAX
- in the definitions section of your
- .I flex
- input.
- .PP
- .I scanner requires \-8 flag to
- .I use the character 'x' -
- Your scanner specification includes recognizing the 8-bit character
- .I 'x'
- and you did not specify the \-8 flag, and your scanner defaulted to 7-bit
- because you used the
- .B \-Cf
- or
- .B \-CF
- table compression options.
- .PP
- .I flex scanner push-back overflow -
- you used
- .B 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
- .B yytext.
- Ideally the scanner should dynamically resize the buffer in this case, but at
- present it does not.
- .PP
- .I
- input buffer overflow, can't enlarge buffer because scanner 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
- .B
- REJECT.
- .PP
- .I
- 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 activation frame. Before
- reentering the scanner, use:
- .nf
-
- yyrestart( yyin );
-
- .fi
- or use C++ scanner classes (the
- .B \-+
- option), which are fully reentrant.
- .SH AUTHOR
- Vern Paxson, with the help of many ideas and much inspiration from
- Van Jacobson. Original version by Jef Poskanzer.
- .PP
- See flexdoc(1) for additional credits and the address to send comments to.
- .SH DEFICIENCIES / BUGS
- .PP
- Some trailing context
- patterns cannot be properly matched and generate
- warning messages ("dangerous trailing context"). 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.)
- .PP
- 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.
- .PP
- Combining trailing context with the special '|' action can result in
- .I fixed
- trailing context being turned into the more expensive
- .I variable
- trailing context. For example, in the following:
- .nf
-
- %%
- abc |
- xyz/def
-
- .fi
- .PP
- Use of
- .B unput()
- or
- .B input()
- invalidates yytext and yyleng, unless the
- .B %array
- directive
- or the
- .B \-l
- option has been used.
- .PP
- Use of unput() to push back more text than was matched can
- result in the pushed-back text matching a beginning-of-line ('^')
- rule even though it didn't come at the beginning of the line
- (though this is rare!).
- .PP
- Pattern-matching of NUL's is substantially slower than matching other
- characters.
- .PP
- Dynamic resizing of the input buffer is slow, as it entails rescanning
- all the text matched so far by the current (generally huge) token.
- .PP
- .I flex
- does not generate correct #line directives for code internal
- to the scanner; thus, bugs in
- .I flex.skl
- yield bogus line numbers.
- .PP
- Due to both buffering of input and read-ahead, you cannot intermix
- calls to <stdio.h> routines, such as, for example,
- .B getchar(),
- with
- .I flex
- rules and expect it to work. Call
- .B input()
- instead.
- .PP
- The total table entries listed by the
- .B \-v
- flag excludes the number of table entries needed to determine
- what rule has been matched. The number of entries is equal
- to the number of DFA states if the scanner does not use
- .B REJECT,
- and somewhat greater than the number of states if it does.
- .PP
- .B REJECT
- cannot be used with the
- .B \-f
- or
- .B \-F
- options.
- .PP
- The
- .I flex
- internal algorithms need documentation.
-