NAME
bt_traversal - AST traversal/query functions in btparse library
SYNOPSIS
AST * bt_next_entry (AST * entry_list,
AST * prev_entry)
AST * bt_next_field (AST * entry, AST * prev, char ** name)
AST * bt_next_value (AST * head,
AST * prev,
bt_nodetype_t * nodetype,
char ** text)
bt_metatype_t bt_entry_metatype (AST * entry)
char * bt_entry_type (AST * entry)
char * bt_entry_key (AST * entry)
char * bt_get_text (AST * node)
DESCRIPTION
The functions described here are all used to traverse and query the abstract-syntax trees (ASTs) returned by the input functions described in bt_input. The three "bt_next" functions (bt_next_entry()
, bt_next_field()
, and bt_next_value()
) are used respectively to traverse a list of entries, the list of fields within a particular entry, and the list of simple values associated with a particular field. The other functions are just used to query various nodes in the tree for the useful information contained in them.
Traversal functions
- bt_next_entry()
-
AST * bt_next_entry (AST * entry_list, AST * prev_entry)
Used to traverse the linked list of entries returned by
bt_parse_file()
(see bt_input). On the first call, you should supplyNULL
forprev_entry
, and a pointer to the head of the list will be returned. On subsequent calls, pass the previous return value asprev_entry
; the function returns the next entry in the list, orNULL
if there are no more entries. Also returnsNULL
if eitherentry_list
orprev_entry
are improper.For example (ignoring error handling and variable declarations):
entries = bt_parse_file (filename, options, &status); entry = NULL; while (entry = bt_next_entry (entries, entry)) { /* process entry */ }
- bt_next_field()
-
AST * bt_next_field (AST * entry, AST * prev, char ** name)
Used to traverse the list of fields in a regular or macro definition entry. (You should call
bt_entry_metatype()
to determine if you have the right kind of entry before callingbt_next_field()
.)entry
should be a pointer to the AST for a single entry, as returned bybt_parse_entry()
,bt_parse_entry_s()
, orbt_next_entry()
. On the first call, supplyNULL
forprev
;bt_next_field()
will return a pointer to the first field inentry
, orNULL
ifentry
has no fields (for instance, if it's a comment or preamble entry). On subsequent calls, pass the previous return value asprev
;bt_next_field()
will keep returning pointers to field sub-ASTs as long as it makes sense. These pointers can then be passed tobt_next_value()
orbt_get_text()
to get the field's value.For example, the loop body in the previous example could be:
field = NULL; while (field = bt_next_field (entry, field)) { /* process field */ }
- bt_next_value()
-
AST * bt_next_value (AST * head, AST * prev, bt_nodetype_t * nodetype, char ** text)
Traverses the list of simple values that make up the value of a single field. (Recall that a simple value is either a quoted string, a macro invocation, or a number. A compound value is a list of these separated by
'#'
in the original input. Depending on the string post-processing options used when the data was parsed, the "list of simple values" nature of the original data may be preserved in the AST that you're traversing, in which case you'll need abt_next_value()
loop.bt_next_value()
works much likebt_next_entry()
andbt_next_field()
: on the first call, you supplyNULL
forprev
, and on subsequent calls you supply the previous return value. ReturnsNULL
when there are no more simple values to return. Also sets*nodetype
and*text
to the corresponding information from the simple value node.*nodetype
will be one ofBTAST_STRING
,BTAST_MACRO
, orBTAST_NUMBER
;*text
will point to the same string as the AST node does (it is not copied for you), so don't mess with it.For example, the loop body in the
bt_next_field()
example could be replaced with:value = NULL; while (value = bt_next_field (field, value, &nodetype, &text)) { switch (nodetype) { case BTAST_STRING: /* process the string */ case BTAST_MACRO: /* process the macro */ case BTAST_NUMBER: /* process the number */ } }
See also "bt_get_text".
Query functions
- bt_entry_metatype()
-
bt_metatype_t bt_entry_metatype (AST * entry)
Returns the metatype of an entry. (Recall that the metatype is an enumerated type whose values are derived from the specific type of an entry; for instance, an
@comment
entry has type"comment"
and metatypeBTE_COMMENT
. The type-metatype relationship is similarly obvious forBTE_PREAMBLE
;BTE_MACRODEF
corresponds to@string
entries; andBTE_REGULAR
corresponds to any other type.)Returns
BTE_UNKNOWN
ifentry
is invalid (i.e.,NULL
or not a pointer to an entry AST). - bt_entry_type()
-
char * bt_entry_type (AST * entry)
Returns the type of an entry. Recall that the type is the name that appears after the
'@'
character in the original input. ReturnsNULL
ifentry
is invalid (i.e.,NULL
or not a pointer to an entry AST). - bt_entry_key()
-
char * bt_entry_key (AST * entry)
Returns the citation key of a regular entry. (The citation key is the name that appears after the entry-open delimiter in a regular entry.) Returns
NULL
ifentry
is invalid (i.e.,NULL
or not a pointer to the AST for a regular entry). - bt_get_text()
-
char * bt_get_text (AST * node)
Performs all string post-processing (macro expansion, concatenation of simple values, and whitespace collapsing) of a compound value and returns the string that results. Can be called either on a field for a regular or macro definition entry (as returned by
bt_next_field()
), or on a comment or preamble entry. ReturnsNULL
if called on an invalid AST node.