NAME
bt_input - input/parsing functions in btparse library
SYNOPSIS
void bt_set_stringopts (bt_metatype_t metatype, btshort options);
AST * bt_parse_entry_s (char * entry_text,
char * filename,
int line,
btshort options,
boolean * status);
AST * bt_parse_entry (FILE * infile,
char * filename,
btshort options,
boolean * status);
AST * bt_parse_file (char * filename,
btshort options,
boolean * overall_status);
DESCRIPTION
The functions described here are used to read and parse BibTeX data, converting it from raw text to abstract-syntax trees (ASTs).
- bt_set_stringopts ()
-
void bt_set_stringopts (bt_metatype_t metatype, btshort options);
Set the string-processing options for a particular entry metatype. This affects the entry post-processing done by
bt_parse_entry_s()
,bt_parse_entry()
, andbt_parse_file()
. Ifbt_set_stringopts()
is never called, the four metatypes default to the following sets of string options:BTE_REGULAR BTO_CONVERT | BTO_EXPAND | BTO_PASTE | BTO_COLLAPSE BTE_COMMENT 0 BTE_PREAMBLE 0 BTE_MACRODEF BTO_CONVERT | BTO_EXPAND | BTO_PASTE
For example,
bt_set_stringopts (BTE_COMMENT, BTO_COLLAPSE);
will cause the library to collapse whitespace in the value from all comment entries; the AST returned by one of the
bt_parse_*
functions will reflect this change. - bt_parse_entry ()
-
AST * bt_parse_entry (FILE * infile, char * filename, btshort options, boolean * status);
Scans and parses the next BibTeX entry in
infile
. You should supplyfilename
to help btparse generate accurate error messages; the library keeps track ofinfile
's current line number internally, so you don't need to pass that in.options
should be a bitmap of non-string-processing options (currently,BTO_NOSTORE
to disable storing macro expansions is the only such option).*status
will be set toTRUE
if the entry parsed successfully or with only minor warnings, andFALSE
if there were any serious lexical or syntactic errors. Ifstatus
isNULL
, then the parse status will be unavailable to you. Both minor warnings and serious errors are reported onstderr
.Returns a pointer to the abstract-syntax tree (AST) describing the entry just parsed, or
NULL
if no more entries were found ininfile
(this will leaveinfile
at end-of-file). Do not attempt to second guessbt_parse_entry()
by detecting end-of-file yourself; it must be allowed to determine this on its own so it can clean up some static data that is preserved between calls on the same file.bt_parse_entry()
has two important restrictions that you should know about. First, you should let btparse manage all the input on the file; this is for reasons both superficial (so the library knows the current line number in order to generate accurate error messages) and fundamental (the library must be allowed to detect end-of-file in order to cleanup certain static variables and allow you to parse another file). Second, you cannot interleave the parsing of two different files; attempting to do so will result in a fatal error that will crash your program. This is a direct result of the static state maintained between calls ofbt_parse_entry()
.Because of two distinct "failures" possible for
bt_parse_entry()
(end-of-file, which is expected but means to stop processing the current file; and error-in-input, which is not expected but allows you to continue processing the same file), you should usually call it like this:while (entry = bt_parse_entry (file, filename, options, &ok)) { if (ok) { /* ... process entry ... */ } }
At the end of this loop,
feof (file)
will be true. - bt_parse_entry_s ()
-
AST * bt_parse_entry_s (char * entry_text, char * filename, int line, btshort options, boolean * status)
Scans and parses a single complete BibTeX entry contained in a string,
entry_text
. If you read this string from a file, you should help btparse generate accurate error messages by supplying the name of the file asfilename
and the line number of the beginning of the entry asline
; otherwise, setfilename
toNULL
andline
to1
.options
andstatus
are the same as forbt_parse_entry()
.Returns a pointer to the abstract-syntax tree (AST) describing the entry just parsed, and
NULL
if no entries were found inentry_text
or ifentry_text
wasNULL
.You should call
bt_parse_entry_s()
once more than the total number of entries you wish to parse; on the final call, setentry_text
toNULL
so the function knows there's no more text to parse. This final call allows it to clean up some structures allocated on the first call. Thus,bt_parse_entry_s()
is usually used like this:char * entry_text; btshort options = 0; boolean ok; AST * entry_ast; while (entry_text = get_more_text ()) { entry_ast = bt_parse_entry_s (entry_text, NULL, 1, options, &ok); if (ok) { /* ... process entry ... */ } } bt_parse_entry_s (NULL, NULL, 1, options, NULL); /* cleanup */
assuming that
get_more_text()
returns a pointer to the text of an entry to parse, orNULL
if there's no more text available. - bt_parse_file ()
-
AST * bt_parse_file (char * filename, btshort options, boolean * status)
Scans and parses an entire BibTeX file. If
filename
isNULL
or"-"
, thenstdin
will be read; otherwise, attempts to open the named file. If this attempt fails, prints an error message tostderr
and returnsNULL
.options
andstatus
are the same as forbt_parse_entry()
---note that*status
will beFALSE
if there were any errors in the entire file; for finer granularity of error-checking, you should usebt_parse_entry()
.Returns a pointer to a linked list of ASTs representing the entries in the file, or
NULL
if no entries were found in the file. This list can be traversed withbt_next_entry()
, and the individual entries then traversed as usual (see bt_traversal).
SEE ALSO
btparse, bt_postprocess, bt_traversal
AUTHOR
Greg Ward <gward@python.net>