% This program by D. E. Knuth is not copyrighted and can be used freely. % Version 0 was released in December, 1981. % Version 1 was released in September, 1982, with version 0 of TeX. % Slight changes were made in October, 1982, for version 0.6 of TeX. % Version 1.2 introduced {:nnn} comments, added @@= and @@\ (December, 1982). % Version 1.4 added "history" (February, 1983). % Version 1.5 conformed to TeX version 0.96 and fixed @@\ (March, 1983). % Version 1.7 introduced the new change file format (June, 1983). % Version 2.0 was released in July, 1983, with version 0.999 of TeX. % Version 2.5 was released in November, 1983, with version 1.0 of TeX. % Version 2.6 fixed a bug: force-line-break after a constant (August, 1984). % Version 2.7 fixed the definition of check_sum_prime (May, 1985). % Version 2.8 fixed a bug in change_buffer movement (August, 1985). % Version 2.9 allows nonnumeric macros before their def (December, 1988). % Version 3, for Sewell's book, fixed long-line bug in input_ln (March, 1989). % Version 4 was major change to allow 8-bit input (September, 1989). % Version 4.1 conforms to ANSI standard for-loop rules (September, 1990). % Version 4.2 fixes stat report if phase one dies (March, 1991). % Version 4.3 fixes @@ bug in verbatim, catches extra } (September, 1991). % Version 4.4 activates debug_help on errors as advertised (February, 1993). % Version 4.5 prevents modno-comments from being split across lines (Dec 2002). % Version 4.6 fixes archaic @@z logic; is again big enough for TeX (Jan 2021). % Here is TeX material that gets inserted after \input webmac \def\hang{\hangindent 3em\indent\ignorespaces} \font\ninerm=cmr9 \let\mc=\ninerm % medium caps for names like SAIL \def\PASCAL{Pascal} \def\pb{$\.|\ldots\.|$} % Pascal brackets (|...|) \def\v{\.{\char'174}} % vertical (|) in typewriter font \mathchardef\BA="3224 % double arrow \def\({} % kludge for alphabetizing certain module names \def\title{TANGLE} \def\contentspagenumber{125} % should be odd \def\topofcontents{\null\vfill \titlefalse % include headline on the contents page \def\rheader{\mainfont Appendix E\hfil \contentspagenumber} \centerline{\titlefont The {\ttitlefont TANGLE} processor} \vskip 15pt \centerline{(Version 4.6)} \vfill} \pageno=\contentspagenumber \advance\pageno by 1 @* Introduction. This program converts a \.{WEB} file to a \PASCAL\ file. It was written by D. E. Knuth in September, 1981; a somewhat similar {\mc SAIL} program had been developed in March, 1979. Since this program describes itself, a bootstrapping process involving hand-translation had to be used to get started. For large \.{WEB} files one should have a large memory, since \.{TANGLE} keeps all the \PASCAL\ text in memory (in an abbreviated form). The program uses a few features of the local \PASCAL\ compiler that may need to be changed in other installations: \yskip\item{1)} Case statements have a default. \item{2)} Input-output routines may need to be adapted for use with a particular character set and/or for printing messages on the user's terminal. \yskip\noindent These features are also present in the \PASCAL\ version of \TeX, where they are used in a similar (but more complex) way. System-dependent portions of \.{TANGLE} can be identified by looking at the entries for `system dependencies' in the index below. @!@^system dependencies@> The ``banner line'' defined here should be changed whenever \.{TANGLE} is modified. @d banner=='This is TANGLE, Version 4.6' @ The program begins with a fairly normal header, made up of pieces that @^system dependencies@> will mostly be filled in later. The \.{WEB} input comes from files |web_file| and |change_file|, the \PASCAL\ output goes to file |Pascal_file|, and the string pool output goes to file |pool|. If it is necessary to abort the job because of a fatal error, the program calls the `|jump_out|' procedure, which goes to the label |end_of_TANGLE|. @d end_of_TANGLE = 9999 {go here to wrap it up} @p @t\4@>@@/ program TANGLE(@!web_file,@!change_file,@!Pascal_file,@!pool); label end_of_TANGLE; {go here to finish} const @@/ type @@/ var @@/ @@/ procedure initialize; var @@/ begin @@/ end; @ Some of this code is optional for use when debugging only; such material is enclosed between the delimiters |debug| and $|gubed|$. Other parts, delimited by |stat| and $|tats|$, are optionally included if statistics about \.{TANGLE}'s memory usage are desired. @d debug==@{ {change this to `$\\{debug}\equiv\null$' when debugging} @d gubed==@t@>@} {change this to `$\\{gubed}\equiv\null$' when debugging} @f debug==begin @f gubed==end @# @d stat==@{ {change this to `$\\{stat}\equiv\null$' when gathering usage statistics} @d tats==@t@>@} {change this to `$\\{tats}\equiv\null$' when gathering usage statistics} @f stat==begin @f tats==end @ The \PASCAL\ compiler used to develop this system has ``compiler directives'' that can appear in comments whose first character is a dollar sign. In production versions of \.{TANGLE} these directives tell the compiler that @^system dependencies@> it is safe to avoid range checks and to leave out the extra code it inserts for the \PASCAL\ debugger's benefit, although interrupts will occur if there is arithmetic overflow. @= @{@&$C-,A+,D-@} {no range check, catch arithmetic overflow, no debug overhead} @!debug @{@&$C+,D+@}@+ gubed {but turn everything on when debugging} @ Labels are given symbolic names by the following definitions. We insert the label `|exit|:' just before the `\ignorespaces|end|\unskip' of a procedure in which we have used the `|return|' statement defined below; the label `|restart|' is occasionally used at the very beginning of a procedure; and the label `|reswitch|' is occasionally used just prior to a \&{case} statement in which some cases change the conditions and we wish to branch to the newly applicable case. Loops that are set up with the \&{loop} construction defined below are commonly exited by going to `|done|' or to `|found|' or to `|not_found|', and they are sometimes repeated by going to `|continue|'. @d exit=10 {go here to leave a procedure} @d restart=20 {go here to start a procedure again} @d reswitch=21 {go here to start a case statement again} @d continue=22 {go here to resume a loop} @d done=30 {go here to exit a loop} @d found=31 {go here when you've found it} @d not_found=32 {go here when you've found something else} @ Here are some macros for common programming idioms. @d incr(#) == #:=#+1 {increase a variable by unity} @d decr(#) == #:=#-1 {decrease a variable by unity} @d loop == @+ while true do@+ {repeat over and over until a |goto| happens} @d do_nothing == {empty statement} @d return == goto exit {terminate a procedure call} @f return == nil @f loop == xclause @ We assume that |case| statements may include a default case that applies if no matching label is found. Thus, we shall use constructions like @^system dependencies@> $$\vbox{\halign{#\hfil\cr |case x of|\cr 1: $\langle\,$code for $x=1\,\rangle$;\cr 3: $\langle\,$code for $x=3\,\rangle$;\cr |othercases| $\langle\,$code for |x<>1| and |x<>3|$\,\rangle$\cr |endcases|\cr}}$$ since most \PASCAL\ compilers have plugged this hole in the language by incorporating some sort of default mechanism. For example, the compiler used to develop \.{WEB} and \TeX\ allows `|others|:' as a default label, and other \PASCAL s allow syntaxes like `\ignorespaces|else|\unskip' or `\&{otherwise}' or `\\{otherwise}:', etc. The definitions of |othercases| and |endcases| should be changed to agree with local conventions. (Of course, if no default mechanism is available, the |case| statements of this program must be extended by listing all remaining cases. The author would have taken the trouble to modify \.{TANGLE} so that such extensions were done automatically, if he had not wanted to encourage \PASCAL\ compiler writers to make this important change in \PASCAL, where it belongs.) @d othercases == others: {default for cases not listed explicitly} @d endcases == @+end {follows the default case in an extended |case| statement} @f othercases == else @f endcases == end @ The following parameters are set big enough to handle \TeX, so they should be sufficient for most applications of \.{TANGLE}. @= @!buf_size=100; {maximum length of input line} @!max_bytes=45000; {|1/ww| times the number of bytes in identifiers, strings, and module names; must be less than 65536} @!max_toks=65000; {|1/zz| times the number of bytes in compressed \PASCAL\ code; must be less than 65536} @!max_names=4000; {number of identifiers, strings, module names; must be less than 10240} @!max_texts=2000; {number of replacement texts, must be less than 10240} @!hash_size=353; {should be prime} @!longest_name=400; {module names shouldn't be longer than this} @!line_length=72; {lines of \PASCAL\ output have at most this many characters} @!out_buf_size=144; {length of output buffer, should be twice |line_length|} @!stack_size=50; {number of simultaneous levels of macro expansion} @!max_id_length=12; {long identifiers are chopped to this length, which must not exceed |line_length|} @!unambig_length=7; {identifiers must be unique if chopped to this length} {note that 7 is more strict than \PASCAL's 8, but this can be varied} @ A global variable called |history| will contain one of four values at the end of every run: |spotless| means that no unusual messages were printed; |harmless_message| means that a message of possible interest was printed but no serious errors were detected; |error_message| means that at least one error was found; |fatal_message| means that the program terminated abnormally. The value of |history| does not influence the behavior of the program; it is simply computed for the convenience of systems that might want to use such information. @d spotless=0 {|history| value for normal jobs} @d harmless_message=1 {|history| value when non-serious info was printed} @d error_message=2 {|history| value when an error was noted} @d fatal_message=3 {|history| value when we had to stop prematurely} @# @d mark_harmless==@t@>@+if history=spotless then history:=harmless_message @d mark_error==history:=error_message @d mark_fatal==history:=fatal_message @=@!history:spotless..fatal_message; {how bad was this run?} @ @=history:=spotless; @* The character set. One of the main goals in the design of \.{WEB} has been to make it readily portable between a wide variety of computers. Yet \.{WEB} by its very nature must use a greater variety of characters than most computer programs deal with, and character encoding is one of the areas in which existing machines differ most widely from each other. To resolve this problem, all input to \.{WEAVE} and \.{TANGLE} is converted to an internal eight-bit code that is essentially standard ASCII, the ``American Standard Code for Information Interchange.'' The conversion is done immediately when each character is read in. Conversely, characters are converted from ASCII to the user's external representation just before they are output. (The original ASCII code was seven bits only; \.{WEB} now allows eight bits in an attempt to keep up with modern times.) Such an internal code is relevant to users of \.{WEB} only because it is the code used for preprocessed constants like \.{"A"}. If you are writing a program in \.{WEB} that makes use of such one-character constants, you should convert your input to ASCII form, like \.{WEAVE} and \.{TANGLE} do. Otherwise \.{WEB}'s internal coding scheme does not affect you. @^ASCII code@> Here is a table of the standard visible ASCII codes: $$\def\:{\char\count255\global\advance\count255 by 1} \count255='40 \vbox{ \hbox{\hbox to 40pt{\it\hfill0\/\hfill}% \hbox to 40pt{\it\hfill1\/\hfill}% \hbox to 40pt{\it\hfill2\/\hfill}% \hbox to 40pt{\it\hfill3\/\hfill}% \hbox to 40pt{\it\hfill4\/\hfill}% \hbox to 40pt{\it\hfill5\/\hfill}% \hbox to 40pt{\it\hfill6\/\hfill}% \hbox to 40pt{\it\hfill7\/\hfill}} \vskip 4pt \hrule \def\^{\vrule height 10.5pt depth 4.5pt} \halign{\hbox to 0pt{\hskip -24pt\O{#0}\hfill}&\^ \hbox to 40pt{\tt\hfill#\hfill\^}& &\hbox to 40pt{\tt\hfill#\hfill\^}\cr 04&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:\cr\noalign{\hrule} 05&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:\cr\noalign{\hrule} 06&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:\cr\noalign{\hrule} 07&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:\cr\noalign{\hrule} 10&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:\cr\noalign{\hrule} 11&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:\cr\noalign{\hrule} 12&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:\cr\noalign{\hrule} 13&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:\cr\noalign{\hrule} 14&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:\cr\noalign{\hrule} 15&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:\cr\noalign{\hrule} 16&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:\cr\noalign{\hrule} 17&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:&\:\cr} \hrule width 280pt}$$ (Actually, of course, code @'040 is an invisible blank space.) Code @'136 was once an upward arrow (\.{\char'13}), and code @'137 was once a left arrow (\.^^X), in olden times when the first draft of ASCII code was prepared; but \.{WEB} works with today's standard ASCII in which those codes represent circumflex and underline as shown. @= @!ASCII_code=0..255; {eight-bit numbers, a subrange of the integers} @ The original \PASCAL\ compiler was designed in the late 60s, when six-bit character sets were common, so it did not make provision for lowercase letters. Nowadays, of course, we need to deal with both capital and small letters in a convenient way, so \.{WEB} assumes that it is being used with a \PASCAL\ whose character set contains at least the characters of standard ASCII as listed above. Some \PASCAL\ compilers use the original name |char| for the data type associated with the characters in text files, while other \PASCAL s consider |char| to be a 64-element subrange of a larger data type that has some other name. In order to accommodate this difference, we shall use the name |text_char| to stand for the data type of the characters in the input and output files. We shall also assume that |text_char| consists of the elements |chr(first_text_char)| through |chr(last_text_char)|, inclusive. The following definitions should be adjusted if necessary. @^system dependencies@> @d text_char == char {the data type of characters in text files} @d first_text_char=0 {ordinal number of the smallest element of |text_char|} @d last_text_char=255 {ordinal number of the largest element of |text_char|} @= @!text_file=packed file of text_char; @ The \.{WEAVE} and \.{TANGLE} processors convert between ASCII code and the user's external character set by means of arrays |xord| and |xchr| that are analogous to \PASCAL's |ord| and |chr| functions. @= @!xord: array [text_char] of ASCII_code; {specifies conversion of input characters} @!xchr: array [ASCII_code] of text_char; {specifies conversion of output characters} @ If we assume that every system using \.{WEB} is able to read and write the visible characters of standard ASCII (although not necessarily using the ASCII codes to represent them), the following assignment statements initialize most of the |xchr| array properly, without needing any system-dependent changes. For example, the statement \.{xchr[@@\'101]:=\'A\'} that appears in the present \.{WEB} file might be encoded in, say, {\mc EBCDIC} code on the external medium on which it resides, but \.{TANGLE} will convert from this external code to ASCII and back again. Therefore the assignment statement \.{XCHR[65]:=\'A\'} will appear in the corresponding \PASCAL\ file, and \PASCAL\ will compile this statement so that |xchr[65]| receives the character \.A in the external (|char|) code. Note that it would be quite incorrect to say \.{xchr[@@\'101]:="A"}, because |"A"| is a constant of type |integer|, not |char|, and because we have $|"A"|=65$ regardless of the external character set. @= xchr[@'40]:=' '; xchr[@'41]:='!'; xchr[@'42]:='"'; xchr[@'43]:='#'; xchr[@'44]:='$'; xchr[@'45]:='%'; xchr[@'46]:='&'; xchr[@'47]:='''';@/ xchr[@'50]:='('; xchr[@'51]:=')'; xchr[@'52]:='*'; xchr[@'53]:='+'; xchr[@'54]:=','; xchr[@'55]:='-'; xchr[@'56]:='.'; xchr[@'57]:='/';@/ xchr[@'60]:='0'; xchr[@'61]:='1'; xchr[@'62]:='2'; xchr[@'63]:='3'; xchr[@'64]:='4'; xchr[@'65]:='5'; xchr[@'66]:='6'; xchr[@'67]:='7';@/ xchr[@'70]:='8'; xchr[@'71]:='9'; xchr[@'72]:=':'; xchr[@'73]:=';'; xchr[@'74]:='<'; xchr[@'75]:='='; xchr[@'76]:='>'; xchr[@'77]:='?';@/ xchr[@'100]:='@@'; xchr[@'101]:='A'; xchr[@'102]:='B'; xchr[@'103]:='C'; xchr[@'104]:='D'; xchr[@'105]:='E'; xchr[@'106]:='F'; xchr[@'107]:='G';@/ xchr[@'110]:='H'; xchr[@'111]:='I'; xchr[@'112]:='J'; xchr[@'113]:='K'; xchr[@'114]:='L'; xchr[@'115]:='M'; xchr[@'116]:='N'; xchr[@'117]:='O';@/ xchr[@'120]:='P'; xchr[@'121]:='Q'; xchr[@'122]:='R'; xchr[@'123]:='S'; xchr[@'124]:='T'; xchr[@'125]:='U'; xchr[@'126]:='V'; xchr[@'127]:='W';@/ xchr[@'130]:='X'; xchr[@'131]:='Y'; xchr[@'132]:='Z'; xchr[@'133]:='['; xchr[@'134]:='\'; xchr[@'135]:=']'; xchr[@'136]:='^'; xchr[@'137]:='_';@/ xchr[@'140]:='`'; xchr[@'141]:='a'; xchr[@'142]:='b'; xchr[@'143]:='c'; xchr[@'144]:='d'; xchr[@'145]:='e'; xchr[@'146]:='f'; xchr[@'147]:='g';@/ xchr[@'150]:='h'; xchr[@'151]:='i'; xchr[@'152]:='j'; xchr[@'153]:='k'; xchr[@'154]:='l'; xchr[@'155]:='m'; xchr[@'156]:='n'; xchr[@'157]:='o';@/ xchr[@'160]:='p'; xchr[@'161]:='q'; xchr[@'162]:='r'; xchr[@'163]:='s'; xchr[@'164]:='t'; xchr[@'165]:='u'; xchr[@'166]:='v'; xchr[@'167]:='w';@/ xchr[@'170]:='x'; xchr[@'171]:='y'; xchr[@'172]:='z'; xchr[@'173]:='{'; xchr[@'174]:='|'; xchr[@'175]:='}'; xchr[@'176]:='~';@/ xchr[0]:=' '; xchr[@'177]:=' '; {these ASCII codes are not used} @ Some of the ASCII codes below @'40 have been given symbolic names in \.{WEAVE} and \.{TANGLE} because they are used with a special meaning. @d and_sign=@'4 {equivalent to `\.{and}'} @d not_sign=@'5 {equivalent to `\.{not}'} @d set_element_sign=@'6 {equivalent to `\.{in}'} @d tab_mark=@'11 {ASCII code used as tab-skip} @d line_feed=@'12 {ASCII code thrown away at end of line} @d form_feed=@'14 {ASCII code used at end of page} @d carriage_return=@'15 {ASCII code used at end of line} @d left_arrow=@'30 {equivalent to `\.{:=}'} @d not_equal=@'32 {equivalent to `\.{<>}'} @d less_or_equal=@'34 {equivalent to `\.{<=}'} @d greater_or_equal=@'35 {equivalent to `\.{>=}'} @d equivalence_sign=@'36 {equivalent to `\.{==}'} @d or_sign=@'37 {equivalent to `\.{or}'} @ When we initialize the |xord| array and the remaining parts of |xchr|, it will be convenient to make use of an index variable, |i|. @= @!i:0..255; @ Here now is the system-dependent part of the character set. If \.{WEB} is being implemented on a garden-variety \PASCAL\ for which only standard ASCII codes will appear in the input and output files, you don't need to make any changes here. But if you have, for example, an extended character set like the one in Appendix~C of {\sl The \TeX book}, the first line of code in this module should be changed to $$\hbox{|for i:=1 to @'37 do xchr[i]:=chr(i);|}$$ \.{WEB}'s character set is essentially identical to \TeX's, even with respect to characters less than @'40. @^system dependencies@> Changes to the present module will make \.{WEB} more friendly on computers that have an extended character set, so that one can type things like \.^^Z\ instead of \.{<>}. If you have an extended set of characters that are easily incorporated into text files, you can assign codes arbitrarily here, giving an |xchr| equivalent to whatever characters the users of \.{WEB} are allowed to have in their input files, provided that unsuitable characters do not correspond to special codes like |carriage_return| that are listed above. (The present file \.{TANGLE.WEB} does not contain any of the non-ASCII characters, because it is intended to be used with all implementations of \.{WEB}. It was originally created on a Stanford system that has a convenient extended character set, then ``sanitized'' by applying another program that transliterated all of the non-standard characters into standard equivalents.) @= for i:=1 to @'37 do xchr[i]:=' '; for i:=@'200 to @'377 do xchr[i]:=' '; @ The following system-independent code makes the |xord| array contain a suitable inverse to the information in |xchr|. @= for i:=first_text_char to last_text_char do xord[chr(i)]:=" "; for i:=1 to @'377 do xord[xchr[i]]:=i; xord[' ']:=" "; @* Input and output. The input conventions of this program are intended to be very much like those of \TeX\ (except, of course, that they are much simpler, because much less needs to be done). Furthermore they are identical to those of \.{WEAVE}. Therefore people who need to make modifications to all three systems should be able to do so without too many headaches. We use the standard \PASCAL\ input/output procedures in several places that \TeX\ cannot, since \.{TANGLE} does not have to deal with files that are named dynamically by the user, and since there is no input from the terminal. @ Terminal output is done by writing on file |term_out|, which is assumed to consist of characters of type |text_char|: @^system dependencies@> @d print(#)==write(term_out,#) {`|print|' means write on the terminal} @d print_ln(#)==write_ln(term_out,#) {`|print|' and then start new line} @d new_line==write_ln(term_out) {start new line} @d print_nl(#)== {print information starting on a new line} begin new_line; print(#); end @= @!term_out:text_file; {the terminal as an output file} @ Different systems have different ways of specifying that the output on a certain file will appear on the user's terminal. Here is one way to do this on the \PASCAL\ system that was used in \.{TANGLE}'s initial development: @^system dependencies@> @= rewrite(term_out,'TTY:'); {send |term_out| output to the terminal} @ The |update_terminal| procedure is called when we want to make sure that everything we have output to the terminal so far has actually left the computer's internal buffers and been sent. @^system dependencies@> @d update_terminal == break(term_out) {empty the terminal output buffer} @ The main input comes from |web_file|; this input may be overridden by changes in |change_file|. (If |change_file| is empty, there are no changes.) @= @!web_file:text_file; {primary input} @!change_file:text_file; {updates} @ The following code opens the input files. Since these files were listed in the program header, we assume that the \PASCAL\ runtime system has already checked that suitable file names have been given; therefore no additional error checking needs to be done. @^system dependencies@> @p procedure open_input; {prepare to read |web_file| and |change_file|} begin reset(web_file); reset(change_file); end; @ The main output goes to |Pascal_file|, and string pool constants are written to the |pool| file. @= @!Pascal_file: text_file; @!pool: text_file; @ The following code opens |Pascal_file| and |pool|. Since these files were listed in the program header, we assume that the \PASCAL\ runtime system has checked that suitable external file names have been given. @^system dependencies@> @= rewrite(Pascal_file); rewrite(pool); @ Input goes into an array called |buffer|. @=@!buffer: array[0..buf_size] of ASCII_code; @ The |input_ln| procedure brings the next line of input from the specified file into the |buffer| array and returns the value |true|, unless the file has already been entirely read, in which case it returns |false|. The conventions of \TeX\ are followed; i.e., |ASCII_code| numbers representing the next line of the file are input into |buffer[0]|, |buffer[1]|, \dots, |buffer[limit-1]|; trailing blanks are ignored; and the global variable |limit| is set to the length of the @^system dependencies@> line. The value of |limit| must be strictly less than |buf_size|. We assume that none of the |ASCII_code| values of |buffer[j]| for |0<=j" " then final_limit:=limit; if limit=buf_size then begin while not eoln(f) do get(f); decr(limit); {keep |buffer[buf_size]| empty} if final_limit>limit then final_limit:=limit; print_nl('! Input line too long'); loc:=0; error; @.Input line too long@> end; end; read_ln(f); limit:=final_limit; input_ln:=true; end; end; @* Reporting errors to the user. The \.{TANGLE} processor operates in two phases: first it inputs the source file and stores a compressed representation of the program, then it produces the \PASCAL\ output from the compressed representation. The global variable |phase_one| tells whether we are in Phase I or not. @= @!phase_one: boolean; {|true| in Phase I, |false| in Phase II} @ If an error is detected while we are debugging, we usually want to look at the contents of memory. A special procedure will be declared later for this purpose. @= @!debug @+ procedure debug_help; forward;@+ gubed @ During the first phase, syntax errors are reported to the user by saying $$\hbox{`|err_print('! Error message')|'},$$ followed by `|jump_out|' if no recovery from the error is provided. This will print the error message followed by an indication of where the error was spotted in the source file. Note that no period follows the error message, since the error routine will automatically supply a period. Errors that are noticed during the second phase are reported to the user in the same fashion, but the error message will be followed by an indication of where the error was spotted in the output file. The actual error indications are provided by a procedure called |error|. @d err_print(#)==begin new_line; print(#); error; end @= procedure error; {prints '\..' and location of error message} var j: 0..out_buf_size; {index into |out_buf|} @!k,@!l: 0..buf_size; {indices into |buffer|} begin if phase_one then @ else @; update_terminal; mark_error; @!debug debug_skipped:=debug_cycle; debug_help;@+gubed end; @ The error locations during Phase I can be indicated by using the global variables |loc|, |line|, and |changing|, which tell respectively the first unlooked-at position in |buffer|, the current line number, and whether or not the current line is from |change_file| or |web_file|. This routine should be modified on systems whose standard text editor has special line-numbering conventions. @^system dependencies@> @= begin if changing then print('. (change file ')@+else print('. ('); print_ln('l.', line:1, ')'); if loc>=limit then l:=limit else l:=loc; for k:=1 to l do if buffer[k-1]=tab_mark then print(' ') else print(xchr[buffer[k-1]]); {print the characters already read} new_line; for k:=1 to l do print(' '); {space out the next line} for k:=l+1 to limit do print(xchr[buffer[k-1]]); {print the part not yet read} print(' '); {this space separates the message from future asterisks} end @ The position of errors detected during the second phase can be indicated by outputting the partially-filled output buffer, which contains |out_ptr| entries. @= begin print_ln('. (l.',line:1,')'); for j:=1 to out_ptr do print(xchr[out_buf[j-1]]); {print current partial line} print('... '); {indicate that this information is partial} end @ The |jump_out| procedure just cuts across all active procedure levels and jumps out of the program. This is the only non-local |goto| statement in \.{TANGLE}. It is used when no recovery from a particular error has been provided. Some \PASCAL\ compilers do not implement non-local |goto| statements. @^system dependencies@> In such cases the code that appears at label |end_of_TANGLE| should be copied into the |jump_out| procedure, followed by a call to a system procedure that terminates the program. @d fatal_error(#)==begin new_line; print(#); error; mark_fatal; jump_out; end @= procedure jump_out; begin goto end_of_TANGLE; end; @ Sometimes the program's behavior is far different from what it should be, and \.{TANGLE} prints an error message that is really for the \.{TANGLE} maintenance person, not the user. In such cases the program says |confusion('indication of where we are')|. @d confusion(#)==fatal_error('! This can''t happen (',#,')') @.This can't happen@> @ An overflow stop occurs if \.{TANGLE}'s tables aren't large enough. @d overflow(#)==fatal_error('! Sorry, ',#,' capacity exceeded') @.Sorry, x capacity exceeded@> @* Data structures. Most of the user's \PASCAL\ code is packed into eight-bit integers in two large arrays called |byte_mem| and |tok_mem|. The |byte_mem| array holds the names of identifiers, strings, and modules; the |tok_mem| array holds the replacement texts for macros and modules. Allocation is sequential, since things are deleted only during Phase II, and only in a last-in-first-out manner. Auxiliary arrays |byte_start| and |tok_start| are used as directories to |byte_mem| and |tok_mem|, and the |link|, |ilk|, |equiv|, and |text_link| arrays give further information about names. These auxiliary arrays consist of sixteen-bit items. @= @!eight_bits=0..255; {unsigned one-byte quantity} @!sixteen_bits=0..65535; {unsigned two-byte quantity} @ \.{TANGLE} has been designed to avoid the need for indices that are more than sixteen bits wide, so that it can be used on most computers. But there are programs that need more than 65536 tokens, and some programs even need more than 65536 bytes; \TeX\ is one of these. To get around this problem, a slight complication has been added to the data structures: |byte_mem| and |tok_mem| are two-dimensional arrays, whose first index is either 0 or 1 or 2. (For generality, the first index is actually allowed to run between 0 and |ww-1| in |byte_mem|, or between 0 and |zz-1| in |tok_mem|, where |ww| and |zz| are set to 2 and~3; the program will work for any positive values of |ww| and |zz|, and it can be simplified in obvious ways if |ww=1| or |zz=1|.) @d ww=2 {we multiply the byte capacity by approximately this amount} @d zz=3 {we multiply the token capacity by approximately this amount} @= @!byte_mem: packed array [0..ww-1,0..max_bytes] of ASCII_code; {characters of names} @!tok_mem: packed array [0..zz-1,0..max_toks] of eight_bits; {tokens} @!byte_start: array [0..max_names] of sixteen_bits; {directory into |byte_mem|} @!tok_start: array [0..max_texts] of sixteen_bits; {directory into |tok_mem|} @!link: array [0..max_names] of sixteen_bits; {hash table or tree links} @!ilk: array [0..max_names] of sixteen_bits; {type codes or tree links} @!equiv: array [0..max_names] of sixteen_bits; {info corresponding to names} @!text_link: array [0..max_texts] of sixteen_bits; {relates replacement texts} @ The names of identifiers are found by computing a hash address |h| and then looking at strings of bytes signified by |hash[h]|, |link[hash[h]]|, |link[link[hash[h]]]|, \dots, until either finding the desired name or encountering a zero. A `|name_pointer|' variable, which signifies a name, is an index into |byte_start|. The actual sequence of characters in the name pointed to by |p| appears in positions |byte_start[p]| to |byte_start[p+ww]-1|, inclusive, in the segment of |byte_mem| whose first index is |p mod ww|. Thus, when |ww=2| the even-numbered name bytes appear in |byte_mem[0,@t$*$@>]| and the odd-numbered ones appear in |byte_mem[1,@t$*$@>]|. The pointer 0 is used for undefined module names; we don't want to use it for the names of identifiers, since 0 stands for a null pointer in a linked list. Strings are treated like identifiers; the first character (a double-quote) distinguishes a string from an alphabetic name, but for \.{TANGLE}'s purposes strings behave like numeric macros. (A `string' here refers to the strings delimited by double-quotes that \.{TANGLE} processes. \PASCAL\ string constants delimited by single-quote marks are not given such special treatment; they simply appear as sequences of characters in the \PASCAL\ texts.) The total number of strings in the string pool is called |string_ptr|, and the total number of names in |byte_mem| is called |name_ptr|. The total number of bytes occupied in |byte_mem[w,@t$*$@>]| is called |byte_ptr[w]|. We usually have |byte_start[name_ptr+w]=byte_ptr[(name_ptr+w) mod ww]| for |0<=w= @!name_pointer=0..max_names; {identifies a name} @ @= @!name_ptr:name_pointer; {first unused position in |byte_start|} @!string_ptr:name_pointer; {next number to be given to a string of length |<>1|} @!byte_ptr:array [0..ww-1] of 0..max_bytes; {first unused position in |byte_mem|} @!pool_check_sum:integer; {sort of a hash for the whole string pool} @ @= @!wi: 0..ww-1; {to initialize the |byte_mem| indices} @ @= for wi:=0 to ww-1 do begin byte_start[wi]:=0; byte_ptr[wi]:=0; end; byte_start[ww]:=0; {this makes name 0 of length zero} name_ptr:=1; string_ptr:=256; pool_check_sum:=271828; @ Replacement texts are stored in |tok_mem|, using similar conventions. A `|text_pointer|' variable is an index into |tok_start|, and the replacement text that corresponds to |p| runs from positions |tok_start[p]| to |tok_start[p+zz]-1|, inclusive, in the segment of |tok_mem| whose first index is |p mod zz|. Thus, when |zz=2| the even-numbered replacement texts appear in |tok_mem[0,@t$*$@>]| and the odd-numbered ones appear in |tok_mem[1,@t$*$@>]|. Furthermore, |text_link[p]| is used to connect pieces of text that have the same name, as we shall see later. The pointer 0 is used for undefined replacement texts. The first position of |tok_mem[z,@t$*$@>]| that is unoccupied by replacement text is called |tok_ptr[z]|, and the first unused location of |tok_start| is called |text_ptr|. We usually have the identity |tok_start[text_ptr+z]=tok_ptr[(text_ptr+z) mod zz]|, for |0<=z= @!text_pointer=0..max_texts; {identifies a replacement text} @ It is convenient to maintain a variable |z| that is equal to |text_ptr mod zz|, so that we always insert tokens into segment |z| of |tok_mem|. @= @t\hskip1em@>@!text_ptr:text_pointer; {first unused position in |tok_start|} @t\hskip1em@>@!tok_ptr:array[0..zz-1] of 0..max_toks; {first unused position in a given segment of |tok_mem|} @t\hskip1em@>@!z:0..zz-1; {current segment of |tok_mem|} stat @!max_tok_ptr:array[0..zz-1] of 0..max_toks; {largest values assumed by |tok_ptr|} tats @ @= @!zi:0..zz-1; {to initialize the |tok_mem| indices} @ @= for zi:=0 to zz-1 do begin tok_start[zi]:=0; tok_ptr[zi]:=0; end; tok_start[zz]:=0; {this makes replacement text 0 of length zero} text_ptr:=1; z:=1 mod zz; @ Four types of identifiers are distinguished by their |ilk|: \yskip\hang |normal| identifiers will appear in the \PASCAL\ program as ordinary identifiers since they have not been defined to be macros; the corresponding value in the |equiv| array for such identifiers is a link in a secondary hash table that is used to check whether any two of them agree in their first |unambig_length| characters after underline symbols are removed and lowercase letters are changed to uppercase. \yskip\hang |numeric| identifiers have been defined to be numeric macros; their |equiv| value contains the corresponding numeric value plus $2^{15}$. Strings are treated as numeric macros. \yskip\hang |simple| identifiers have been defined to be simple macros; their |equiv| value points to the corresponding replacement text. \yskip\hang |parametric| identifiers have been defined to be parametric macros; like simple identifiers, their |equiv| value points to the replacement text. @d normal=0 {ordinary identifiers have |normal| ilk} @d numeric=1 {numeric macros and strings have |numeric| ilk} @d simple=2 {simple macros have |simple| ilk} @d parametric=3 {parametric macros have |parametric| ilk} @ The names of modules are stored in |byte_mem| together with the identifier names, but a hash table is not used for them because \.{TANGLE} needs to be able to recognize a module name when given a prefix of that name. A conventional binary search tree is used to retrieve module names, with fields called |llink| and |rlink| in place of |link| and |ilk|. The root of this tree is |rlink[0]|. If |p| is a pointer to a module name, |equiv[p]| points to its replacement text, just as in simple and parametric macros, unless this replacement text has not yet been defined (in which case |equiv[p]=0|). @d llink==link {left link in binary search tree for module names} @d rlink==ilk {right link in binary search tree for module names} @= rlink[0]:=0; {the binary search tree starts out with nothing in it} equiv[0]:=0; {the undefined module has no replacement text} @ Here is a little procedure that prints the text of a given name. @p procedure print_id(@!p:name_pointer); {print identifier or module name} var k:0..max_bytes; {index into |byte_mem|} @!w:0..ww-1; {segment of |byte_mem|} begin if p>=name_ptr then print('IMPOSSIBLE') else begin w:=p mod ww; for k:=byte_start[p] to byte_start[p+ww]-1 do print(xchr[byte_mem[w,k]]); end; end; @* Searching for identifiers. The hash table described above is updated by the |id_lookup| procedure, which finds a given identifier and returns a pointer to its index in |byte_start|. If the identifier was not already present, it is inserted with a given |ilk| code; and an error message is printed if the identifier is being doubly defined. Because of the way \.{TANGLE}'s scanning mechanism works, it is most convenient to let |id_lookup| search for an identifier that is present in the |buffer| array. Two other global variables specify its position in the buffer: the first character is |buffer[id_first]|, and the last is |buffer[id_loc-1]|. Furthermore, if the identifier is really a string, the global variable |double_chars| tells how many of the characters in the buffer appear twice (namely \.{@@@@} and \.{""}), since this additional information makes it easy to calculate the true length of the string. The final double-quote of the string is not included in its ``identifier,'' but the first one is, so the string length is |id_loc-id_first-double_chars-1|. We have mentioned that |normal| identifiers belong to two hash tables, one for their true names as they appear in the \.{WEB} file and the other when they have been reduced to their first |unambig_length| characters. The hash tables are kept by the method of simple chaining, where the heads of the individual lists appear in the |hash| and |chop_hash| arrays. If |h| is a hash code, the primary hash table list starts at |hash[h]| and proceeds through |link| pointers; the secondary hash table list starts at |chop_hash[h]| and proceeds through |equiv| pointers. Of course, the same identifier will probably have two different values of |h|. The |id_lookup| procedure uses an auxiliary array called |chopped_id| to contain up to |unambig_length| characters of the current identifier, if it is necessary to compute the secondary hash code. (This array could be declared local to |id_lookup|, but in general we are making all array declarations global in this program, because some compilers and some machine architectures make dynamic array allocation inefficient.) @= @!id_first:0..buf_size; {where the current identifier begins in the buffer} @!id_loc:0..buf_size; {just after the current identifier in the buffer} @!double_chars:0..buf_size; {correction to length in case of strings} @# @!hash,@!chop_hash:array [0..hash_size] of sixteen_bits; {heads of hash lists} @!chopped_id:array [0..unambig_length] of ASCII_code; {chopped identifier} @ Initially all the hash lists are empty. @= @!h:0..hash_size; {index into hash-head arrays} @ @= for h:=0 to hash_size-1 do begin hash[h]:=0; chop_hash[h]:=0; end; @ Here now is the main procedure for finding identifiers (and strings). The parameter |t| is set to |normal| except when the identifier is a macro name that is just being defined; in the latter case, |t| will be |numeric|, |simple|, or |parametric|. @p function id_lookup(@!t:eight_bits):name_pointer; {finds current identifier} label found, not_found; var c:eight_bits; {byte being chopped} @!i:0..buf_size; {index into |buffer|} @!h:0..hash_size; {hash code} @!k:0..max_bytes; {index into |byte_mem|} @!w:0..ww-1; {segment of |byte_mem|} @!l:0..buf_size; {length of the given identifier} @!p,@!q:name_pointer; {where the identifier is being sought} @!s:0..unambig_length; {index into |chopped_id|} begin l:=id_loc-id_first; {compute the length} @; @; if (p=name_ptr)or(t<>normal) then @; id_lookup:=p; end; @ A simple hash code is used: If the sequence of ASCII codes is $c_1c_2\ldots c_n$, its hash value will be $$(2^{n-1}c_1+2^{n-2}c_2+\cdots+c_n)\,\bmod\,|hash_size|.$$ @= h:=buffer[id_first]; i:=id_first+1; while i= p:=hash[h]; while p<>0 do begin if length(p)=l then @; p:=link[p]; end; p:=name_ptr; {the current identifier is new} link[p]:=hash[h]; hash[h]:=p; {insert |p| at beginning of hash list} found: @ @= begin i:=id_first; k:=byte_start[p]; w:=p mod ww; while (i= begin if ((p<>name_ptr)and(t<>normal)and(ilk[p]=normal)) or ((p=name_ptr)and(t=normal)and(buffer[id_first]<>"""")) then @; if p<>name_ptr then @ else @; end @ The following routine, which is called into play when it is necessary to look at the secondary hash table, computes the same hash function as before (but on the chopped data), and places a zero after the chopped identifier in |chopped_id| to serve as a convenient sentinel. @= begin i:=id_first; s:=0; h:=0; while (i"_" then begin if buffer[i]>="a" then chopped_id[s]:=buffer[i]-@'40 else chopped_id[s]:=buffer[i]; h:=(h+h+chopped_id[s]) mod hash_size; incr(s); end; incr(i); end; chopped_id[s]:=0; end @ If a nonnumeric macro has appeared before it was defined, \.{TANGLE} will still work all right; after all, such behavior is typical of the replacement texts for modules, which act very much like macros. However, an undefined numeric macro may not be used on the right-hand side of another numeric macro definition, so \.{TANGLE} finds it simplest to make a blanket rule that numeric macros should be defined before they are used. The following routine gives an error message and also fixes up any damage that may have been caused. @= {now |p<>name_ptr| and |t<>normal|} begin if ilk[p]=normal then begin if t=numeric then err_print('! This identifier has already appeared'); @.This identifier has already...@> @; end else err_print('! This identifier was defined before'); @.This identifier was defined...@> ilk[p]:=t; end @ When we have to remove a secondary hash entry, because a |normal| identifier is changing to another |ilk|, the hash code |h| and chopped identifier have already been computed. @= q:=chop_hash[h]; if q=p then chop_hash[h]:=equiv[p] else begin while equiv[q]<>p do q:=equiv[q]; equiv[q]:=equiv[p]; end @ The following routine could make good use of a generalized |pack| procedure that puts items into just part of a packed array instead of the whole thing. @= begin if (t=normal)and(buffer[id_first]<>"""") then @; w:=name_ptr mod ww; k:=byte_ptr[w]; if k+l>max_bytes then overflow('byte memory'); if name_ptr>max_names-ww then overflow('name'); i:=id_first; {get ready to move the identifier into |byte_mem|} while i"""" then ilk[p]:=t else @; end @ @= begin q:=chop_hash[h]; while q<>0 do begin @; q:=equiv[q]; end; equiv[p]:=chop_hash[h]; chop_hash[h]:=p; {put |p| at front of secondary list} end @ @= begin k:=byte_start[q]; s:=0; w:=q mod ww; while (k"_" then begin if c>="a" then c:=c-@'40; {merge lowercase with uppercase} if chopped_id[s]<>c then goto not_found; incr(s); end; incr(k); end; if (k=byte_start[q+ww])and(chopped_id[s]<>0) then goto not_found; print_nl('! Identifier conflict with '); @.Identifier conflict...@> for k:=byte_start[q] to byte_start[q+ww]-1 do print(xchr[byte_mem[w,k]]); error; q:=0; {only one conflict will be printed, since |equiv[0]=0|} not_found: end @ We compute the string pool check sum by working modulo a prime number that is large but not so large that overflow might occur. @d check_sum_prime==@'3777777667 {$2^{29}-73$} @^preprocessed strings@> @= begin ilk[p]:=numeric; {strings are like numeric macros} if l-double_chars=2 then {this string is for a single character} equiv[p]:=buffer[id_first+1]+@'100000 else begin equiv[p]:=string_ptr+@'100000; l:=l-double_chars-1; if l>99 then err_print('! Preprocessed string is too long'); @.Preprocessed string is too long@> incr(string_ptr); write(pool,xchr["0"+l div 10],xchr["0"+l mod 10]); {output the length} pool_check_sum:=pool_check_sum+pool_check_sum+l; while pool_check_sum>check_sum_prime do pool_check_sum:=pool_check_sum-check_sum_prime; i:=id_first+1; while icheck_sum_prime do pool_check_sum:=pool_check_sum-check_sum_prime; if (buffer[i]="""") or (buffer[i]="@@") then i:=i+2 {omit second appearance of doubled character} else incr(i); end; write_ln(pool); end; end @* Searching for module names. The |mod_lookup| procedure finds the module name |mod_text[1..l]| in the search tree, after inserting it if necessary, and returns a pointer to where it was found. @= @!mod_text:array [0..longest_name] of ASCII_code; {name being sought for} @ According to the rules of \.{WEB}, no module name should be a proper prefix of another, so a ``clean'' comparison should occur between any two names. The result of |mod_lookup| is 0 if this prefix condition is violated. An error message is printed when such violations are detected during phase two of \.{WEAVE}. @d less=0 {the first name is lexicographically less than the second} @d equal=1 {the first name is equal to the second} @d greater=2 {the first name is lexicographically greater than the second} @d prefix=3 {the first name is a proper prefix of the second} @d extension=4 {the first name is a proper extension of the second} @p function mod_lookup(@!l:sixteen_bits):name_pointer; {finds module name} label found; var c:less..extension; {comparison between two names} @!j:0..longest_name; {index into |mod_text|} @!k:0..max_bytes; {index into |byte_mem|} @!w:0..ww-1; {segment of |byte_mem|} @!p:name_pointer; {current node of the search tree} @!q:name_pointer; {father of node |p|} begin c:=greater; q:=0; p:=rlink[0]; {|rlink[0]| is the root of the tree} while p<>0 do begin @; q:=p; if c=less then p:=llink[q] else if c=greater then p:=rlink[q] else goto found; end; @; found: if c<>equal then begin err_print('! Incompatible section names'); p:=0; @.Incompatible module names@> end; mod_lookup:=p; end; @ @= w:=name_ptr mod ww; k:=byte_ptr[w]; if k+l>max_bytes then overflow('byte memory'); if name_ptr>max_names-ww then overflow('name'); p:=name_ptr; if c=less then llink[q]:=p else rlink[q]:=p; llink[p]:=0; rlink[p]:=0; c:=equal; equiv[p]:=0; for j:=1 to l do byte_mem[w,k+j-1]:=mod_text[j]; byte_ptr[w]:=k+l; byte_start[name_ptr+ww]:=k+l; incr(name_ptr); @ @= begin k:=byte_start[p]; w:=p mod ww; c:=equal; j:=1; while (kl then c:=equal else c:=extension else if j>l then c:=prefix else if mod_text[j]0 do begin @; if c=less then p:=llink[p] else if c=greater then p:=rlink[p] else begin r:=p; incr(count); q:=rlink[p]; p:=llink[p]; end; if p=0 then begin p:=q; q:=0; end; end; if count<>1 then if count=0 then err_print('! Name does not match') @.Name does not match@> else err_print('! Ambiguous prefix'); @.Ambiguous prefix@> prefix_lookup:=r; {the result will be 0 if there was no match} end; @* Tokens. Replacement texts, which represent \PASCAL\ code in a compressed format, appear in |tok_mem| as mentioned above. The codes in these texts are called `tokens'; some tokens occupy two consecutive eight-bit byte positions, and the others take just one byte. If $p>0$ points to a replacement text, |tok_start[p]| is the |tok_mem| position of the first eight-bit code of that text. If |text_link[p]=0|, this is the replacement text for a macro, otherwise it is the replacement text for a module. In the latter case |text_link[p]| is either equal to |module_flag|, which means that there is no further text for this module, or |text_link[p]| points to a continuation of this replacement text; such links are created when several modules have \PASCAL\ texts with the same name, and they also tie together all the \PASCAL\ texts of unnamed modules. The replacement text pointer for the first unnamed module appears in |text_link[0]|, and the most recent such pointer is |last_unnamed|. @d module_flag==max_texts {final |text_link| in module replacement texts} @= @!last_unnamed:text_pointer; {most recent replacement text of unnamed module} @ @= last_unnamed:=0; text_link[0]:=0; @ If the first byte of a token is less than @'200, the token occupies a single byte. Otherwise we make a sixteen-bit token by combining two consecutive bytes |a| and |b|. If |@'200<=a<@'250|, then $(a-@'200)\times2^8+b$ points to an identifier; if |@'250<=a<@'320|, then $(a-@'250)\times2^8+b$ points to a module name; otherwise, i.e., if |@'320<=a<@'400|, then $(a-@'320)\times2^8+b$ is the number of the module in which the current replacement text appears. Codes less than @'200 are 7-bit ASCII codes that represent themselves. In particular, a single-character identifier like `|x|' will be a one-byte token, while all longer identifiers will occupy two bytes. Some of the 7-bit ASCII codes will not be present, however, so we can use them for special purposes. The following symbolic names are used: \yskip\hang |param| denotes insertion of a parameter. This occurs only in the replacement texts of parametric macros, outside of single-quoted strings in those texts. \hang |begin_comment| denotes \.{@@\{}, which will become either \.{\{} or \.{[}. \hang |end_comment| denotes \.{@@\}}, which will become either \.{\}} or \.{]}. \hang |octal| denotes the \.{@@\'} that precedes an octal constant. \hang |hex| denotes the \.{@@"} that precedes a hexadecimal constant. \hang |check_sum| denotes the \.{@@\char'44} that denotes the string pool check sum. \hang |join| denotes the concatenation of adjacent items with no space or line breaks allowed between them (the \.{@@\&} operation of \.{WEB}). \hang |double_dot| denotes `\.{..}' in \PASCAL. \hang |verbatim| denotes the \.{@@=} that begins a verbatim \PASCAL\ string. The \.{@@>} at the end of such a string is also denoted by |verbatim|. \hang |force_line| denotes the \.{@@\\} that forces a new line in the \PASCAL\ output. @^ASCII code@> @d param=0 {ASCII null code will not appear} @d verbatim=@'2 {extended ASCII alpha should not appear} @d force_line=@'3 {extended ASCII beta should not appear} @d begin_comment=@'11 {ASCII tab mark will not appear} @d end_comment=@'12 {ASCII line feed will not appear} @d octal=@'14 {ASCII form feed will not appear} @d hex=@'15 {ASCII carriage return will not appear} @d double_dot=@'40 {ASCII space will not appear except in strings} @d check_sum=@'175 {will not be confused with right brace} @d join=@'177 {ASCII delete will not appear} @ The following procedure is used to enter a two-byte value into |tok_mem| when a replacement text is being generated. @p procedure store_two_bytes(@!x:sixteen_bits); {stores high byte, then low byte} begin if tok_ptr[z]+2>max_toks then overflow('token'); tok_mem[z,tok_ptr[z]]:=x div@'400; {this could be done by a shift command} tok_mem[z,tok_ptr[z]+1]:=x mod@'400; {this could be done by a logical and} tok_ptr[z]:=tok_ptr[z]+2; end; @ When \.{TANGLE} is being operated in debug mode, it has a procedure to display a replacement text in symbolic form. This procedure has not been spruced up to generate a real great format, but at least the results are not as bad as a memory dump. @p @!debug procedure print_repl(@!p:text_pointer); var k:0..max_toks; {index into |tok_mem|} @!a: sixteen_bits; {current byte(s)} @!zp: 0..zz-1; {segment of |tok_mem| being accessed} begin if p>=text_ptr then print('BAD') else begin k:=tok_start[p]; zp:=p mod zz; while k=@'200 then @ else @; incr(k); end; end; end; gubed @ @= begin incr(k); if a<@'250 then {identifier or string} begin a:=(a-@'200)*@'400+tok_mem[zp,k]; print_id(a); if byte_mem[a mod ww,byte_start[a]]="""" then print('"') else print(' '); end else if a<@'320 then {module name} begin print('@@<'); print_id((a-@'250)*@'400+tok_mem[zp,k]); print('@@>'); end else begin a:=(a-@'320)*@'400+tok_mem[zp,k]; {module number} print('@@',xchr["{"],a:1,'@@',xchr["}"]); {can't use right brace between \&{debug} and \&{gubed}} end; end @ @= case a of begin_comment: print('@@',xchr["{"]); end_comment: print('@@',xchr["}"]); {can't use right brace between \&{debug} and \&{gubed}} octal: print('@@'''); hex: print('@@"'); check_sum: print('@@$'); param: print('#'); "@@": print('@@@@'); verbatim: print('@@='); force_line: print('@@\'); othercases print(xchr[a]) endcases @* Stacks for output. Let's make sure that our data structures contain enough information to produce the entire \PASCAL\ program as desired, by working next on the algorithms that actually do produce that program. @ The output process uses a stack to keep track of what is going on at different ``levels'' as the macros are being expanded. Entries on this stack have five parts: \yskip\hang |end_field| is the |tok_mem| location where the replacement text of a particular level will end; \hang |byte_field| is the |tok_mem| location from which the next token on a particular level will be read; \hang |name_field| points to the name corresponding to a particular level; \hang |repl_field| points to the replacement text currently being read at a particular level; \hang |mod_field| is the module number, or zero if this is a macro. \yskip\noindent The current values of these five quantities are referred to quite frequently, so they are stored in a separate place instead of in the |stack| array. We call the current values |cur_end|, |cur_byte|, |cur_name|, |cur_repl|, and |cur_mod|. The global variable |stack_ptr| tells how many levels of output are currently in progress. The end of all output occurs when the stack is empty, i.e., when |stack_ptr=0|. @= @t\4@>@!output_state=record @!end_field: sixteen_bits; {ending location of replacement text} @!byte_field: sixteen_bits; {present location within replacement text} @!name_field: name_pointer; {|byte_start| index for text being output} @!repl_field: text_pointer; {|tok_start| index for text being output} @!mod_field: 0..@'27777; {module number or zero if not a module} end; @ @d cur_end==cur_state.end_field {current ending location in |tok_mem|} @d cur_byte==cur_state.byte_field {location of next output byte in |tok_mem|} @d cur_name==cur_state.name_field {pointer to current name being expanded} @d cur_repl==cur_state.repl_field {pointer to current replacement text} @d cur_mod==cur_state.mod_field {current module number being expanded} @= @!cur_state : output_state; {|cur_end|, |cur_byte|, |cur_name|, |cur_repl|, |cur_mod|} @!stack : array [1..stack_size] of output_state; {info for non-current levels} @!stack_ptr: 0..stack_size; {first unused location in the output state stack} @ It is convenient to keep a global variable |zo| equal to |cur_repl mod zz|. @= @!zo:0..zz-1; {the segment of |tok_mem| from which output is coming} @ Parameters must also be stacked. They are placed in |tok_mem| just above the other replacement texts, and dummy parameter `names' are placed in |byte_start| just after the other names. The variables |text_ptr| and |tok_ptr[z]| essentially serve as parameter stack pointers during the output phase, so there is no need for a separate data structure to handle this problem. @ There is an implicit stack corresponding to meta-comments that are output via \.{@@\{} and \.{@@\}}. But this stack need not be represented in detail, because we only need to know whether it is empty or not. A global variable |brace_level| tells how many items would be on this stack if it were present. @= @!brace_level: eight_bits; {current depth of $\.{@@\{}\ldots\.{@@\}}$ nesting} @ To get the output process started, we will perform the following initialization steps. We may assume that |text_link[0]| is nonzero, since it points to the \PASCAL\ text in the first unnamed module that generates code; if there are no such modules, there is nothing to output, and an error message will have been generated before we do any of the initialization. @= stack_ptr:=1; brace_level:=0; cur_name:=0; cur_repl:=text_link[0]; zo:=cur_repl mod zz; cur_byte:=tok_start[cur_repl]; cur_end:=tok_start[cur_repl+zz]; cur_mod:=0; @ When the replacement text for name |p| is to be inserted into the output, the following subroutine is called to save the old level of output and get the new one going. @p procedure push_level(@!p:name_pointer); {suspends the current level} begin if stack_ptr=stack_size then overflow('stack') else begin stack[stack_ptr]:=cur_state; {save |cur_end|, |cur_byte|, etc.} incr(stack_ptr); cur_name:=p; cur_repl:=equiv[p]; zo:=cur_repl mod zz; cur_byte:=tok_start[cur_repl]; cur_end:=tok_start[cur_repl+zz]; cur_mod:=0; end; end; @ When we come to the end of a replacement text, the |pop_level| subroutine does the right thing: It either moves to the continuation of this replacement text or returns the state to the most recently stacked level. Part of this subroutine, which updates the parameter stack, will be given later when we study the parameter stack in more detail. @p procedure pop_level; {do this when |cur_byte| reaches |cur_end|} label exit; begin if text_link[cur_repl]=0 then {end of macro expansion} begin if ilk[cur_name]=parametric then @; end else if text_link[cur_repl]0 then begin cur_state:=stack[stack_ptr]; zo:=cur_repl mod zz; end; exit: end; @ The heart of the output procedure is the |get_output| routine, which produces the next token of output that is not a reference to a macro. This procedure handles all the stacking and unstacking that is necessary. It returns the value |number| if the next output has a numeric value (the value of a numeric macro or string), in which case |cur_val| has been set to the number in question. The procedure also returns the value |module_number| if the next output begins or ends the replacement text of some module, in which case |cur_val| is that module's number (if beginning) or the negative of that value (if ending). And it returns the value |identifier| if the next output is an identifier of length two or more, in which case |cur_val| points to that identifier name. @d number=@'200 {code returned by |get_output| when next output is numeric} @d module_number=@'201 {code returned by |get_output| for module numbers} @d identifier=@'202 {code returned by |get_output| for identifiers} @= @!cur_val:integer; {additional information corresponding to output token} @ If |get_output| finds that no more output remains, it returns the value zero. @p function get_output:sixteen_bits; {returns next token after macro expansion} label restart, done, found; var a:sixteen_bits; {value of current byte} @!b:eight_bits; {byte being copied} @!bal:sixteen_bits; {excess of \.( versus \.) while copying a parameter} @!k:0..max_bytes; {index into |byte_mem|} @!w:0..ww-1; {segment of |byte_mem|} begin restart: if stack_ptr=0 then begin a:=0; goto found; end; if cur_byte=cur_end then begin cur_val:=-cur_mod; pop_level; if cur_val=0 then goto restart; a:=module_number; goto found; end; a:=tok_mem[zo,cur_byte]; incr(cur_byte); if a<@'200 then {one-byte token} if a=param then @ else goto found; a:=(a-@'200)*@'400+tok_mem[zo,cur_byte]; incr(cur_byte); if a<@'24000 then {|@'24000=(@'250-@'200)*@'400|} @; if a<@'50000 then {|@'50000=(@'320-@'200)*@'400|} @; cur_val:=a-@'50000; a:=module_number; cur_mod:=cur_val; found: @!debug if trouble_shooting then debug_help;@;@+gubed@/ get_output:=a; end; @ The user may have forgotten to give any \PASCAL\ text for a module name, or the \PASCAL\ text may have been associated with a different name by mistake. @= begin a:=a-@'24000; if equiv[a]<>0 then push_level(a) else if a<>0 then begin print_nl('! Not present: <'); print_id(a); print('>'); error; @.Not present:
@> end; goto restart; end @ @= begin case ilk[a] of normal: begin cur_val:=a; a:=identifier; end; numeric: begin cur_val:=equiv[a]-@'100000; a:=number; end; simple: begin push_level(a); goto restart; end; parametric: begin @; push_level(a); goto restart; end; othercases confusion('output') endcases;@/ goto found; end @ We come now to the interesting part, the job of putting a parameter on the parameter stack. First we pop the stack if necessary until getting to a level that hasn't ended. Then the next character must be a `\.('; and since parentheses are balanced on each level, the entire parameter must be present, so we can copy it without difficulty. @= while (cur_byte=cur_end)and(stack_ptr>0) do pop_level; if (stack_ptr=0)or(tok_mem[zo,cur_byte]<>"(") then begin print_nl('! No parameter given for '); print_id(a); error; @.No parameter given for macro@> goto restart; end; @; equiv[name_ptr]:=text_ptr; ilk[name_ptr]:=simple; w:=name_ptr mod ww; k:=byte_ptr[w]; @!debug if k=max_bytes then overflow('byte memory'); byte_mem[w,k]:="#"; incr(k); byte_ptr[w]:=k; gubed {this code has set the parameter identifier for debugging printouts} if name_ptr>max_names-ww then overflow('name'); byte_start[name_ptr+ww]:=k; incr(name_ptr); if text_ptr>max_texts-zz then overflow('text'); text_link[text_ptr]:=0; tok_start[text_ptr+zz]:=tok_ptr[z]; incr(text_ptr); z:=text_ptr mod zz @ The |pop_level| routine undoes the effect of parameter-pushing when a parameter macro is finished: @= begin decr(name_ptr); decr(text_ptr); z:=text_ptr mod zz; stat if tok_ptr[z]>max_tok_ptr[z] then max_tok_ptr[z]:=tok_ptr[z]; tats {the maximum value of |tok_ptr| occurs just before parameter popping} tok_ptr[z]:=tok_start[text_ptr]; @!debug decr(byte_ptr[name_ptr mod ww]);@+gubed end @ When a parameter occurs in a replacement text, we treat it as a simple macro in position (|name_ptr-1|): @= begin push_level(name_ptr-1); goto restart; end @ Similarly, a |param| token encountered as we copy a parameter is converted into a simple macro call for |name_ptr-1|. Some care is needed to handle cases like \\{macro}|(#; print('#)'))|; the \.{\#} token will have been changed to |param| outside of strings, but we still must distinguish `real' parentheses from those in strings. @d app_repl(#)==begin if tok_ptr[z]=max_toks then overflow('token'); tok_mem[z,tok_ptr[z]]:=#; incr(tok_ptr[z]); end @= bal:=1; incr(cur_byte); {skip the opening `\.('} loop@+ begin b:=tok_mem[zo,cur_byte]; incr(cur_byte); if b=param then store_two_bytes(name_ptr+@'77777) else begin if b>=@'200 then begin app_repl(b); b:=tok_mem[zo,cur_byte]; incr(cur_byte); end else case b of "(": incr(bal); ")": begin decr(bal); if bal=0 then goto done; end; "'": repeat app_repl(b); b:=tok_mem[zo,cur_byte]; incr(cur_byte); until b="'"; {copy string, don't change |bal|} othercases do_nothing endcases; app_repl(b); end; end; done: @* Producing the output. The |get_output| routine above handles most of the complexity of output generation, but there are two further considerations that have a nontrivial effect on \.{TANGLE}'s algorithms. First, we want to make sure that the output is broken into lines not exceeding |line_length| characters per line, where these breaks occur at valid places (e.g., not in the middle of a string or a constant or an identifier, not between `\.<' and `\.>', not at a `\.{@@\&}' position where quantities are being joined together). Therefore we assemble the output into a buffer before deciding where the line breaks will appear. However, we make very little attempt to make ``logical'' line breaks that would enhance the readability of the output; people are supposed to read the input of \.{TANGLE} or the \TeX ed output of \.{WEAVE}, but not the tangled-up output. The only concession to readability is that a break after a semicolon will be made if possible, since commonly used ``pretty printing'' routines give better results in such cases. Second, we want to decimalize non-decimal constants, and to combine integer quantities that are added or subtracted, because \PASCAL\ doesn't allow constant expressions in subrange types or in case labels. This means we want to have a procedure that treats a construction like \.{(E-15+17)} as equivalent to `\.{(E+2)}', while also leaving `\.{(1E-15+17)}' and `\.{(E-15+17*y)}' untouched. Consider also `\.{-15+17.5}' versus `\.{-15+17..5}'. We shall not combine integers preceding or following \.*, \./, \.{div}, \.{mod}, or \.{@@\&}. Note that if |y| has been defined to equal $-2$, we must expand `\.{x*y}' into `\.{x*(-2)}'; but `\.{x-y}' can expand into `\.{x+2}' and we can even change `\.{x - y mod z}' to @^mod@> `\.{x + 2 mod z}' because \PASCAL\ has a nonstandard \&{mod} operation! The following solution to these problems has been adopted: An array |out_buf| contains characters that have been generated but not yet output, and there are three pointers into this array. One of these, |out_ptr|, is the number of characters currently in the buffer, and we will have |1<=out_ptr<=line_length| most of the time. The second is |break_ptr|, which is the largest value |<=out_ptr| such that we are definitely entitled to end a line by outputting the characters |out_buf[1..(break_ptr-1)]|; we will always have |break_ptr<=line_length|. Finally, |semi_ptr| is either zero or the largest known value of a legal break after a semicolon or comment on the current line; we will always have |semi_ptr<=break_ptr|. @= @!out_buf: array [0..out_buf_size] of ASCII_code; {assembled characters} @!out_ptr: 0..out_buf_size; {first available place in |out_buf|} @!break_ptr: 0..out_buf_size; {last breaking place in |out_buf|} @!semi_ptr: 0..out_buf_size; {last semicolon breaking place in |out_buf|} @ Besides having those three pointers, the output process is in one of several states: \yskip\hang |num_or_id| means that the last item in the buffer is a number or identifier, hence a blank space or line break must be inserted if the next item is also a number or identifier. \yskip\hang |unbreakable| means that the last item in the buffer was followed by the \.{@@\&} operation that inhibits spaces between it and the next item. \yskip\hang |sign| means that the last item in the buffer is to be followed by \.+ or \.-, depending on whether |out_app| is positive or negative. \yskip\hang |sign_val| means that the decimal equivalent of $\vert|out_val|\vert$ should be appended to the buffer. If |out_val<0|, or if |out_val=0| and |last_sign<0|, the number should be preceded by a minus sign. Otherwise it should be preceded by the character |out_sign| unless |out_sign=0|; the |out_sign| variable is either 0 or \.{"\ "} or \.{"+"}. \yskip\hang |sign_val_sign| is like |sign_val|, but also append \.+ or \.- afterwards, depending on whether |out_app| is positive or negative. \yskip\hang |sign_val_val| is like |sign_val|, but also append the decimal equivalent of |out_app| including its sign, using |last_sign| in case |out_app=0|. \yskip\hang |misc| means none of the above. \yskip\noindent For example, the output buffer and output state run through the following sequence as we generate characters from `\.{(x-15+19-2)}': $$\vbox{\halign{$\hfil#\hfil$\quad&#\hfil&\quad\hfil#\hfil&\quad \hfil#\hfil&\quad\hfil#\hfil&\quad\hfil#\hfil\quad&\hfil#\hfil\cr output&|out_buf|&|out_state|&|out_sign|&|out_val|&|out_app|&|last_sign|\cr \noalign{\vskip 3pt} (&\.(&|misc|\cr x&\.{(x}&|num_or_id|\cr -&\.{(x}&|sign|&&&$-1$&$-1$\cr 15&\.{(x}&|sign_val|&\.{"+"}&$-15$&&$-1$\cr +&\.{(x}&|sign_val_sign|&\.{"+"}&$-15$&$+1$&$+1$\cr 19&\.{(x}&|sign_val_val|&\.{"+"}&$-15$&$+19$&$+1$\cr -&\.{(x}&|sign_val_sign|&\.{"+"}&$+4$&$-1$&$-1$\cr 2&\.{(x}&|sign_val_val|&\.{"+"}&$+4$&$-2$&$-1$\cr )&\.{(x+2)}&|misc|\cr}}$$ At each stage we have put as much into the buffer as possible without knowing what is coming next. Examples like `\.{x-0.1}' indicate why |last_sign| is needed to associate the proper sign with an output of zero. In states |num_or_id|, |unbreakable|, and |misc| the last item in the buffer lies between |break_ptr| and |out_ptr-1|, inclusive; in the other states we have |break_ptr=out_ptr|. The numeric values assigned to |num_or_id|, etc., have been chosen to shorten some of the program logic; for example, the program makes use of the fact that |sign+2=sign_val_sign|. @d misc=0 {state associated with special characters} @d num_or_id=1 {state associated with numbers and identifiers} @d sign=2 {state associated with pending \.+ or \.-} @d sign_val=num_or_id+2 {state associated with pending sign and value} @d sign_val_sign=sign+2 {|sign_val| followed by another pending sign} @d sign_val_val=sign_val+2 {|sign_val| followed by another pending value} @d unbreakable=sign_val_val+1 {state associated with \.{@@\&}} @= @!out_state:eight_bits; {current status of partial output} @!out_val,@!out_app:integer; {pending values} @!out_sign:ASCII_code; {sign to use if appending |out_val>=0|} @!last_sign:-1..+1; {sign to use if appending a zero} @ During the output process, |line| will equal the number of the next line to be output. @= out_state:=misc; out_ptr:=0; break_ptr:=0; semi_ptr:=0; out_buf[0]:=0; line:=1; @ Here is a routine that is invoked when |out_ptr>line_length| or when it is time to flush out the final line. The |flush_buffer| procedure often writes out the line up to the current |break_ptr| position, then moves the remaining information to the front of |out_buf|. However, it prefers to write only up to |semi_ptr|, if the residual line won't be too long. @d check_break==if out_ptr>line_length then flush_buffer @p procedure flush_buffer; {writes one line to output file} var k:0..out_buf_size; {index into |out_buf|} @!b:0..out_buf_size; {value of |break_ptr| upon entry} begin b:=break_ptr; if (semi_ptr<>0)and(out_ptr-semi_ptr<=line_length) then break_ptr:=semi_ptr; for k:=1 to break_ptr do write(Pascal_file,xchr[out_buf[k-1]]); write_ln(Pascal_file); incr(line); if line mod 100 = 0 then begin print('.'); if line mod 500 = 0 then print(line:1); update_terminal; {progress report} end; if break_ptrb then b:=break_ptr; end; for k:=break_ptr to out_ptr-1 do out_buf[k-break_ptr]:=out_buf[k]; end; out_ptr:=out_ptr-break_ptr; break_ptr:=b-break_ptr; semi_ptr:=0; if out_ptr>line_length then begin err_print('! Long line must be truncated'); out_ptr:=line_length; @.Long line must be truncated@> end; end; @ @= break_ptr:=out_ptr; semi_ptr:=0; flush_buffer; if brace_level<>0 then err_print('! Program ended at brace level ',brace_level:1); @.Program ended at brace level n@> @ Another simple and useful routine appends the decimal equivalent of a nonnegative integer to the output buffer. @d app(#)==begin out_buf[out_ptr]:=#; incr(out_ptr); {append a single character} end @p procedure app_val(@!v:integer); {puts |v| into buffer, assumes |v>=0|} var k:0..out_buf_size; {index into |out_buf|} begin k:=out_buf_size; {first we put the digits at the very end of |out_buf|} repeat out_buf[k]:=v mod 10; v:=v div 10; decr(k); until v=0; repeat incr(k); app(out_buf[k]+"0"); until k=out_buf_size; {then we append them, most significant first} end; @ The output states are kept up to date by the output routines, which are called |send_out|, |send_val|, and |send_sign|. The |send_out| procedure has two parameters: |t| tells the type of information being sent and |v| contains the information proper. Some information may also be passed in the array |out_contrib|. \yskip\hang If |t=misc| then |v| is a character to be output. \hang If |t=str| then |v| is the length of a string or something like `\.{<>}' in |out_contrib|. \hang If |t=ident| then |v| is the length of an identifier in |out_contrib|. \hang If |t=frac| then |v| is the length of a fraction and/or exponent in |out_contrib|. @d str=1 {|send_out| code for a string} @d ident=2 {|send_out| code for an identifier} @d frac=3 {|send_out| code for a fraction} @= @!out_contrib:array[1..line_length] of ASCII_code; {a contribution to |out_buf|} @ A slightly subtle point in the following code is that the user may ask for a |join| operation (i.e., \.{@@\&}) following whatever is being sent out. We will see later that |join| is implemented in part by calling |send_out(frac,0)|. @p procedure send_out(@!t:eight_bits; @!v:sixteen_bits); {outputs |v| of type |t|} label restart; var k: 0..line_length; {index into |out_contrib|} begin @; if t<>misc then for k:=1 to v do app(out_contrib[k]) else app(v); check_break; if (t=misc)and((v=";")or(v="}")) then begin semi_ptr:=out_ptr; break_ptr:=out_ptr; end; if t>=ident then out_state:=num_or_id {|t=ident| or |frac|} else out_state:=misc {|t=str| or |misc|} end; @ Here is where the buffer states for signs and values collapse into simpler states, because we are about to append something that doesn't combine with the previous integer constants. We use an ASCII-code trick: Since |","-1="+"| and |","+1="-"|, we have |","-c=@t sign of $c$@>|, when $\vert c\vert=1$. @= restart: case out_state of num_or_id: if t<>frac then begin break_ptr:=out_ptr; if t=ident then app(" "); end; sign: begin app(","-out_app); check_break; break_ptr:=out_ptr; end; sign_val,sign_val_sign: begin @; out_state:=out_state-2; goto restart; end; sign_val_val: @; misc: if t<>frac then break_ptr:=out_ptr;@/ othercases do_nothing {this is for |unbreakable| state} endcases @ @= if (out_val<0)or((out_val=0)and(last_sign<0)) then app("-") else if out_sign>0 then app(out_sign); app_val(abs(out_val)); check_break; @ @= begin if (t=frac)or(@) then begin @; out_sign:="+"; out_val:=out_app; end else out_val:=out_val+out_app; out_state:=sign_val; goto restart; end @ @= ((t=ident)and(v=3)and@| (((out_contrib[1]="D")and(out_contrib[2]="I")and(out_contrib[3]="V")) or@| ((out_contrib[1]="M")and(out_contrib[2]="O")and(out_contrib[3]="D")) ))or@| @^uppercase@> ((t=misc)and((v="*")or(v="/"))) @ The following routine is called with $v=\pm1$ when a plus or minus sign is appended to the output. It extends \PASCAL\ to allow repeated signs (e.g., `\.{--}' is equivalent to `\.+'), rather than to give an error message. The signs following `\.E' in real constants are treated as part of a fraction, so they are not seen by this routine. @p procedure send_sign(@!v:integer); begin case out_state of sign, sign_val_sign: out_app:=out_app*v; sign_val:begin out_app:=v; out_state:=sign_val_sign; end; sign_val_val: begin out_val:=out_val+out_app; out_app:=v; out_state:=sign_val_sign; end; othercases begin break_ptr:=out_ptr; out_app:=v; out_state:=sign; end endcases;@/ last_sign:=out_app; end; @ When a (signed) integer value is to be output, we call |send_val|. @d bad_case=666 {this is a label used below} @p procedure send_val(@!v:integer); {output the (signed) value |v|} label bad_case, {go here if we can't keep |v| in the output state} exit; begin case out_state of num_or_id: begin @; out_sign:=" "; out_state:=sign_val; out_val:=v; break_ptr:=out_ptr; last_sign:=+1; end; misc: begin @; out_sign:=0; out_state:=sign_val; out_val:=v; break_ptr:=out_ptr; last_sign:=+1; end; @t\4@>@@; othercases goto bad_case endcases;@/ return; bad_case: @; exit: end; @ @= sign: begin out_sign:="+"; out_state:=sign_val; out_val:=out_app*v; end; sign_val: begin out_state:=sign_val_val; out_app:=v; err_print('! Two numbers occurred without a sign between them'); end; sign_val_sign: begin out_state:=sign_val_val; out_app:=out_app*v; end; sign_val_val: begin out_val:=out_val+out_app; out_app:=v; err_print('! Two numbers occurred without a sign between them'); @.Two numbers occurred...@> end; @ @= if (out_ptr=break_ptr+1)and((out_buf[break_ptr]="*")or(out_buf[break_ptr]="/")) then goto bad_case @ @= if (out_ptr=break_ptr+3)or ((out_ptr=break_ptr+4)and(out_buf[break_ptr]=" ")) then @^uppercase@> if ((out_buf[out_ptr-3]="D")and(out_buf[out_ptr-2]="I")and (out_buf[out_ptr-1]="V"))or @/ ((out_buf[out_ptr-3]="M")and(out_buf[out_ptr-2]="O")and (out_buf[out_ptr-1]="D")) then@/ goto bad_case @ @= if v>=0 then begin if out_state=num_or_id then begin break_ptr:=out_ptr; app(" "); end; app_val(v); check_break; out_state:=num_or_id; end else begin app("("); app("-"); app_val(-v); app(")"); check_break; out_state:=misc; end @* The big output switch. To complete the output process, we need a routine that takes the results of |get_output| and feeds them to |send_out|, |send_val|, or |send_sign|. This procedure `|send_the_output|' will be invoked just once, as follows: @= if text_link[0]=0 then begin print_nl('! No output was specified.'); mark_harmless; @.No output was specified@> end else begin print_nl('Writing the output file'); update_terminal;@/ @; @; send_the_output;@/ @; print_nl('Done.'); end @ A many-way switch is used to send the output: @d get_fraction=2 {this label is used below} @p procedure send_the_output; label get_fraction, {go here to finish scanning a real constant} reswitch, continue; var cur_char:eight_bits; {the latest character received} @!k:0..line_length; {index into |out_contrib|} @!j:0..max_bytes; {index into |byte_mem|} @!w:0..ww-1; {segment of |byte_mem|} @!n:integer; {number being scanned} begin while stack_ptr>0 do begin cur_char:=get_output; reswitch: case cur_char of 0: do_nothing; {this case might arise if output ends unexpectedly} @t\4@>@@; @t\4@>@@; "+","-": send_sign(","-cur_char); @t\4@>@} and \.{:=}@>@; "'": @; @: send_out(misc,cur_char); @t\4@>@@; join: begin send_out(frac,0); out_state:=unbreakable; end; verbatim: @; force_line: @; othercases err_print('! Can''t output ASCII code ',cur_char:1) @.Can't output ASCII code n@> endcases;@/ goto continue; get_fraction: @; continue: end; end; @ @}...@>= and_sign: begin out_contrib[1]:="A"; out_contrib[2]:="N"; out_contrib[3]:="D"; @^uppercase@> send_out(ident,3); end; not_sign: begin out_contrib[1]:="N"; out_contrib[2]:="O"; out_contrib[3]:="T"; send_out(ident,3); end; set_element_sign: begin out_contrib[1]:="I"; out_contrib[2]:="N"; send_out(ident,2); end; or_sign: begin out_contrib[1]:="O"; out_contrib[2]:="R"; send_out(ident,2); end; left_arrow: begin out_contrib[1]:=":"; out_contrib[2]:="="; send_out(str,2); end; not_equal: begin out_contrib[1]:="<"; out_contrib[2]:=">"; send_out(str,2); end; less_or_equal: begin out_contrib[1]:="<"; out_contrib[2]:="="; send_out(str,2); end; greater_or_equal: begin out_contrib[1]:=">"; out_contrib[2]:="="; send_out(str,2); end; equivalence_sign: begin out_contrib[1]:="="; out_contrib[2]:="="; send_out(str,2); end; double_dot: begin out_contrib[1]:="."; out_contrib[2]:="."; send_out(str,2); end; @ Please don't ask how all of the following characters can actually get through \.{TANGLE} outside of strings. It seems that |""""| and |"{"| cannot actually occur at this point of the program, but they have been included just in case \.{TANGLE} changes. If \.{TANGLE} is producing code for a \PASCAL\ compiler that uses `\.{(.}' and `\.{.)}' instead of square brackets (e.g., on machines with {\mc EBCDIC} code), one should remove |"["| and |"]"| from this list and put them into the preceding module in the appropriate way. Similarly, some compilers want `\.\^' to be converted to `\.{@@}'. @^system dependencies@>@^EBCDIC@> @= "!","""","#","$","%","&","(",")","*",",","/",":",";","<","=",">","?", "@@","[","\","]","^","_","`","{","|" @ Single-character identifiers represent themselves, while longer ones appear in |byte_mem|. All must be converted to uppercase, with underlines removed. Extremely long identifiers must be chopped. (Some \PASCAL\ compilers work with lowercase letters instead of uppercase. If this module of \.{TANGLE} is changed, it's also necessary to change from uppercase to lowercase in the modules that are listed in the index under ``uppercase''.) @^system dependencies@> @^uppercase@> @d up_to(#)==#-24,#-23,#-22,#-21,#-20,#-19,#-18,#-17,#-16,#-15,#-14, #-13,#-12,#-11,#-10,#-9,#-8,#-7,#-6,#-5,#-4,#-3,#-2,#-1,# @= "A",up_to("Z"): begin out_contrib[1]:=cur_char; send_out(ident,1); end; "a",up_to("z"): begin out_contrib[1]:=cur_char-@'40; send_out(ident,1); end; identifier: begin k:=0; j:=byte_start[cur_val]; w:=cur_val mod ww; while (k="a" then out_contrib[k]:=out_contrib[k]-@'40 else if out_contrib[k]="_" then decr(k); end; send_out(ident,k); end; @ After sending a string, we need to look ahead at the next character, in order to see if there were two consecutive single-quote marks. Afterwards we go to |reswitch| to process the next character. @= begin k:=1; out_contrib[1]:="'"; repeat if k send_out(str,k); cur_char:=get_output; if cur_char="'" then out_state:=unbreakable; goto reswitch; end @ Sending a verbatim string is similar, but we don't have to look ahead. @= begin k:=0; repeat if k send_out(str,k-1); end @ In order to encourage portable software, \.{TANGLE} complains if the constants get dangerously close to the largest value representable on a 32-bit computer ($2^{31}-1$). @d digits=="0","1","2","3","4","5","6","7","8","9" @= digits: begin n:=0; repeat cur_char:=cur_char-"0"; if n>=@'1463146314 then err_print('! Constant too big') @.Constant too big@> else n:=10*n+cur_char; cur_char:=get_output; until (cur_char>"9")or(cur_char<"0"); send_val(n); k:=0; if cur_char="e" then cur_char:="E"; @^uppercase@> if cur_char="E" then goto get_fraction else goto reswitch; end; check_sum: send_val(pool_check_sum); octal: begin n:=0; cur_char:="0"; repeat cur_char:=cur_char-"0"; if n>=@'2000000000 then err_print('! Constant too big') else n:=8*n+cur_char; cur_char:=get_output; until (cur_char>"7")or(cur_char<"0"); send_val(n); goto reswitch; end; hex: begin n:=0; cur_char:="0"; repeat if cur_char>="A" then cur_char:=cur_char+10-"A" else cur_char:=cur_char-"0"; if n>=@"8000000 then err_print('! Constant too big') else n:=16*n+cur_char; cur_char:=get_output; until (cur_char>"F")or(cur_char<"0")or@| ((cur_char>"9")and(cur_char<"A")); send_val(n); goto reswitch; end; number: send_val(cur_val); ".": begin k:=1; out_contrib[1]:="."; cur_char:=get_output; if cur_char="." then begin out_contrib[2]:="."; send_out(str,2); end else if (cur_char>="0")and(cur_char<="9") then goto get_fraction else begin send_out(misc,"."); goto reswitch; end; end; @ The following code appears at label `|get_fraction|', when we want to scan to the end of a real constant. The first |k| characters of a fraction have already been placed in |out_contrib|, and |cur_char| is the next character. @= repeat if k begin if k"E")and((cur_char<"0")or(cur_char>"9")); if k=line_length then err_print('! Fraction too long'); @.Fraction too long@> send_out(frac,k); goto reswitch @ Some \PASCAL\ compilers do not recognize comments in braces, so the comments must be delimited by `\.{(*}' and `\.{*)}'. @^system dependencies@> In such cases the statement `|out_contrib[1]:="{"|' that appears here should be replaced by `\ignorespaces|begin out_contrib[1]:="("; out_contrib[2]:="*"; incr(k); end|', and a similar change should be made to `|out_contrib[k]:="}"|'. @= begin_comment: begin if brace_level=0 then send_out(misc,"{") else send_out(misc,"["); incr(brace_level); end; end_comment: if brace_level>0 then begin decr(brace_level); if brace_level=0 then send_out(misc,"}") else send_out(misc,"]"); end else err_print('! Extra @@}'); @.Extra \AT!\}@> module_number: begin k:=2; if brace_level=0 then out_contrib[1]:="{" else out_contrib[1]:="["; if cur_val<0 then begin out_contrib[k]:=":"; cur_val:=-cur_val; incr(k); end; n:=10; while cur_val>=n do n:=10*n; repeat n:=n div 10; out_contrib[k]:="0"+(cur_val div n); cur_val:=cur_val mod n; incr(k); until n=1; if out_contrib[2]<>":" then begin out_contrib[k]:=":"; incr(k); end; if brace_level=0 then out_contrib[k]:="}" else out_contrib[k]:="]"; send_out(str,k); end; @ @= begin send_out(str,0); {normalize the buffer} while out_ptr>0 do begin if out_ptr<=line_length then break_ptr:=out_ptr; flush_buffer; end; out_state:=misc; end @* Introduction to the input phase. We have now seen that \.{TANGLE} will be able to output the full \PASCAL\ program, if we can only get that program into the byte memory in the proper format. The input process is something like the output process in reverse, since we compress the text as we read it in and we expand it as we write it out. There are three main input routines. The most interesting is the one that gets the next token of a \PASCAL\ text; the other two are used to scan rapidly past \TeX\ text in the \.{WEB} source code. One of the latter routines will jump to the next token that starts with `\.{@@}', and the other skips to the end of a \PASCAL\ comment. @ But first we need to consider the low-level routine |get_line| that takes care of merging |change_file| into |web_file|. The |get_line| procedure also updates the line numbers for error messages. @= @!ii:integer; {general purpose |for| loop variable in the outer block} @!line:integer; {the number of the current line in the current file} @!other_line:integer; {the number of the current line in the input file that is not currently being read} @!temp_line:integer; {used when interchanging |line| with |other_line|} @!limit:0..buf_size; {the last character position occupied in the buffer} @!loc:0..buf_size; {the next character position to be read from the buffer} @!input_has_ended: boolean; {if |true|, there is no more input} @!changing: boolean; {if |true|, the current line is from |change_file|} @ As we change |changing| from |true| to |false| and back again, we must remember to swap the values of |line| and |other_line| so that the |err_print| routine will be sure to report the correct line number. @d change_changing== changing := not changing; temp_line:=other_line; other_line:=line; line:=temp_line {|line @t$\null\BA\null$@> other_line|} @ When |changing| is |false|, the next line of |change_file| is kept in |change_buffer[0..change_limit]|, for purposes of comparison with the next line of |web_file|. After the change file has been completely input, we set |change_limit:=0|, so that no further matches will be made. @= @!change_buffer:array[0..buf_size] of ASCII_code; @!change_limit:0..buf_size; {the last position occupied in |change_buffer|} @ Here's a simple function that checks if the two buffers are different. @p function lines_dont_match:boolean; label exit; var k:0..buf_size; {index into the buffers} begin lines_dont_match:=true; if change_limit<>limit then return; if limit>0 then for k:=0 to limit-1 do if change_buffer[k]<>buffer[k] then return; lines_dont_match:=false; exit: end; @ Procedure |prime_the_change_buffer| sets |change_buffer| in preparation for the next matching operation. Since blank lines in the change file are not used for matching, we have |(change_limit=0)and not changing| if and only if the change file is exhausted. This procedure is called only when |changing| is true; hence error messages will be reported correctly. @p procedure prime_the_change_buffer; label continue, done, exit; var k:0..buf_size; {index into the buffers} begin change_limit:=0; {this value will be used if the change file ends} @; @; @; exit: end; @ While looking for a line that begins with \.{@@x} in the change file, we allow lines that begin with \.{@@}, as long as they don't begin with \.{@@y} or \.{@@z} (which would probably indicate that the change file is fouled up). @= loop@+ begin incr(line); if not input_ln(change_file) then return; if limit<2 then goto continue; if buffer[0]<>"@@" then goto continue; if (buffer[1]>="X")and(buffer[1]<="Z") then buffer[1]:=buffer[1]+"z"-"Z"; {lowercasify} if buffer[1]="x" then goto done; if (buffer[1]="y")or(buffer[1]="z") then begin loc:=2; err_print('! Where is the matching @@x?'); @.Where is the match...@> end; continue: end; done: @ Here we are looking at lines following the \.{@@x}. @= repeat incr(line); if not input_ln(change_file) then begin err_print('! Change file ended after @@x'); @.Change file ended...@> return; end; until limit>0; @ @= begin change_limit:=limit; if limit>0 then for k:=0 to limit-1 do change_buffer[k]:=buffer[k]; end @ The following procedure is used to see if the next change entry should go into effect; it is called only when |changing| is false. The idea is to test whether or not the current contents of |buffer| matches the current contents of |change_buffer|. If not, there's nothing more to do; but if so, a change is called for: All of the text down to the \.{@@y} is supposed to match. An error message is issued if any discrepancy is found. Then the procedure prepares to read the next line from |change_file|. @p procedure check_change; {switches to |change_file| if the buffers match} label exit; var n:integer; {the number of discrepancies found} @!k:0..buf_size; {index into the buffers} begin if lines_dont_match then return; n:=0; loop@+ begin change_changing; {now it's |true|} incr(line); if not input_ln(change_file) then begin err_print('! Change file ended before @@y'); @.Change file ended...@> change_limit:=0; change_changing; {|false| again} return; end; @; @; change_changing; {now it's |false|} incr(line); if not input_ln(web_file) then begin err_print('! WEB file ended during a change'); @.WEB file ended...@> input_has_ended:=true; return; end; if lines_dont_match then incr(n); end; exit: end; @ @= if limit>1 then if buffer[0]="@@" then begin if (buffer[1]>="X")and(buffer[1]<="Z") then buffer[1]:=buffer[1]+"z"-"Z"; {lowercasify} if (buffer[1]="x")or(buffer[1]="z") then begin loc:=2; err_print('! Where is the matching @@y?'); @.Where is the match...@> end else if buffer[1]="y" then begin if n>0 then begin loc:=2; err_print('! Hmm... ',n:1, ' of the preceding lines failed to match'); @.Hmm... n of the preceding...@> end; return; end; end @ @= open_input; line:=0; other_line:=0;@/ changing:=true; prime_the_change_buffer; change_changing;@/ limit:=0; loc:=1; buffer[0]:=" "; input_has_ended:=false; @ The |get_line| procedure is called when |loc>limit|; it puts the next line of merged input into the buffer and updates the other variables appropriately. A space is placed at the right end of the line. @p procedure get_line; {inputs the next line} label restart; begin restart: if changing then @; if not changing then begin @; if changing then goto restart; end; loc:=0; buffer[limit]:=" "; end; @ @= begin incr(line); if not input_ln(web_file) then input_has_ended:=true else if change_limit>0 then check_change; end @ @= begin incr(line); if not input_ln(change_file) then begin err_print('! Change file ended without @@z'); @.Change file ended...@> buffer[0]:="@@"; buffer[1]:="z"; limit:=2; end; if limit>1 then {check if the change has ended} if buffer[0]="@@" then begin if (buffer[1]>="X")and(buffer[1]<="Z") then buffer[1]:=buffer[1]+"z"-"Z"; {lowercasify} if (buffer[1]="x")or(buffer[1]="y") then begin loc:=2; err_print('! Where is the matching @@z?'); @.Where is the match...@> end else if buffer[1]="z" then begin prime_the_change_buffer; change_changing; end; end; end @ At the end of the program, we will tell the user if the change file had a line that didn't match any relevant line in |web_file|. @= if change_limit<>0 then {|changing| is false} begin for ii:=0 to change_limit-1 do buffer[ii]:=change_buffer[ii]; limit:=change_limit; changing:=true; line:=other_line; loc:=change_limit; err_print('! Change file entry did not match'); @.Change file entry did not match@> end @ Important milestones are reached during the input phase when certain control codes are sensed. Control codes in \.{WEB} begin with `\.{@@}', and the next character identifies the code. Some of these are of interest only to \.{WEAVE}, so \.{TANGLE} ignores them; the others are converted by \.{TANGLE} into internal code numbers by the |control_code| function below. The ordering of these internal code numbers has been chosen to simplify the program logic; larger numbers are given to the control codes that denote more significant milestones. @d ignore=0 {control code of no interest to \.{TANGLE}} @d control_text=@'203 {control code for `\.{@@t}', `\.{@@\^}', etc.} @d format=@'204 {control code for `\.{@@f}'} @d definition=@'205 {control code for `\.{@@d}'} @d begin_Pascal=@'206 {control code for `\.{@@p}'} @d module_name=@'207 {control code for `\.{@@<}'} @d new_module=@'210 {control code for `\.{@@\ }' and `\.{@@*}'} @p function control_code(@!c:ASCII_code):eight_bits; {convert |c| after \.{@@}} begin case c of "@@": control_code:="@@"; {`quoted' at sign} "'": control_code:=octal; {precedes octal constant} """": control_code:=hex; {precedes hexadecimal constant} "$": control_code:=check_sum; {string pool check sum} " ",tab_mark: control_code:=new_module; {beginning of a new module} "*": begin print('*',module_count+1:1); update_terminal; {print a progress report} control_code:=new_module; {beginning of a new module} end; "D","d": control_code:=definition; {macro definition} "F","f": control_code:=format; {format definition} "{": control_code:=begin_comment; {begin-comment delimiter} "}": control_code:=end_comment; {end-comment delimiter} "P","p": control_code:=begin_Pascal; {\PASCAL\ text in unnamed module} "T","t","^",".",":": control_code:=control_text; {control text to be ignored} "&": control_code:=join; {concatenate two tokens} "<": control_code:=module_name; {beginning of a module name} "=": control_code:=verbatim; {beginning of \PASCAL\ verbatim mode} "\": control_code:=force_line; {force a new line in \PASCAL\ output} othercases control_code:=ignore {ignore all other cases} endcases; end; @ The |skip_ahead| procedure reads through the input at fairly high speed until finding the next non-ignorable control code, which it returns. @p function skip_ahead:eight_bits; {skip to next control code} label done; var c:eight_bits; {control code found} begin loop begin if loc>limit then begin get_line; if input_has_ended then begin c:=new_module; goto done; end; end; buffer[limit+1]:="@@"; while buffer[loc]<>"@@" do incr(loc); if loc<=limit then begin loc:=loc+2; c:=control_code(buffer[loc-1]); if (c<>ignore)or(buffer[loc-1]=">") then goto done; end; end; done: skip_ahead:=c; end; @ The |skip_comment| procedure reads through the input at somewhat high speed until finding the first unmatched right brace or until coming to the end of the file. It ignores characters following `\.\\' characters, since all braces that aren't nested are supposed to be hidden in that way. For example, consider the process of skipping the first comment below, where the string containing the right brace has been typed as \.{\`\\.\\\}\'} in the \.{WEB} file. @p procedure skip_comment; {skips to next unmatched `\.\}'} label exit; var bal:eight_bits; {excess of left braces} @!c:ASCII_code; {current character} begin bal:=0; loop@+ begin if loc>limit then begin get_line; if input_has_ended then begin err_print('! Input ended in mid-comment'); @.Input ended in mid-comment@> return; end; end; c:=buffer[loc]; incr(loc); @; end; exit:end; @ @= if c="@@" then begin c:=buffer[loc]; if (c<>" ")and(c<>tab_mark)and(c<>"*") then incr(loc) else begin err_print('! Section ended in mid-comment'); @.Section ended in mid-comment@> decr(loc); return; end end else if (c="\")and(buffer[loc]<>"@@") then incr(loc) else if c="{" then incr(bal) else if c="}" then begin if bal=0 then return; decr(bal); end @* Inputting the next token. As stated above, \.{TANGLE}'s most interesting input procedure is the |get_next| routine that inputs the next token. However, the procedure isn't especially difficult. In most cases the tokens output by |get_next| have the form used in replacement texts, except that two-byte tokens are not produced. An identifier that isn't one letter long is represented by the output `|identifier|', and in such a case the global variables |id_first| and |id_loc| will have been set to the appropriate values needed by the |id_lookup| procedure. A string that begins with a double-quote is also considered an |identifier|, and in such a case the global variable |double_chars| will also have been set appropriately. Control codes produce the corresponding output of the |control_code| function above; and if that code is |module_name|, the value of |cur_module| will point to the |byte_start| entry for that module name. Another global variable, |scanning_hex|, is |true| during the time that the letters \.A through \.F should be treated as if they were digits. @= @!cur_module: name_pointer; {name of module just scanned} @!scanning_hex: boolean; {are we scanning a hexadecimal constant?} @ @= scanning_hex:=false; @ At the top level, |get_next| is a multi-way switch based on the next character in the input buffer. A |new_module| code is inserted at the very end of the input file. @p function get_next:eight_bits; {produces the next input token} label restart,done,found; var c:eight_bits; {the current character} @!d:eight_bits; {the next character} @!j,@!k:0..longest_name; {indices into |mod_text|} begin restart: if loc>limit then begin get_line; if input_has_ended then begin c:=new_module; goto found; end; end; c:=buffer[loc]; incr(loc); if scanning_hex then @; case c of "A",up_to("Z"),"a",up_to("z"): @; """": @; "@@": @; @t\4@>@@; " ",tab_mark: goto restart; {ignore spaces and tabs} "{": begin skip_comment; goto restart; end; "}": begin err_print('! Extra }'); goto restart; @.Extra \}@> end; othercases if c>=128 then goto restart {ignore nonstandard characters} else do_nothing endcases; found:@!debug if trouble_shooting then debug_help;@;@+gubed@/ get_next:=c; end; @ @= if ((c>="0")and(c<="9"))or((c>="A")and(c<="F")) then goto found else scanning_hex:=false @ Note that the following code substitutes \.{@@\{} and \.{@@\}} for the respective combinations `\.{(*}' and `\.{*)}'. Explicit braces should be used for \TeX\ comments in \PASCAL\ text. @d compress(#)==begin if loc<=limit then begin c:=#; incr(loc); end; end @= ".": if buffer[loc]="." then compress(double_dot) else if buffer[loc]=")" then compress("]"); ":": if buffer[loc]="=" then compress(left_arrow); "=": if buffer[loc]="=" then compress(equivalence_sign); ">": if buffer[loc]="=" then compress(greater_or_equal); "<": if buffer[loc]="=" then compress(less_or_equal) else if buffer[loc]=">" then compress(not_equal); "(": if buffer[loc]="*" then compress(begin_comment) else if buffer[loc]="." then compress("["); "*": if buffer[loc]=")" then compress(end_comment); @ We have to look at the preceding character to make sure this isn't part of a real constant, before trying to find an identifier starting with `\.e' or `\.E'. @= begin if ((c="e")or(c="E"))and(loc>1) then if (buffer[loc-2]<="9")and(buffer[loc-2]>="0") then c:=0; if c<>0 then begin decr(loc); id_first:=loc; repeat incr(loc); d:=buffer[loc]; until ((d<"0")or((d>"9")and(d<"A"))or((d>"Z")and(d<"a"))or(d>"z")) and (d<>"_"); if loc>id_first+1 then begin c:=identifier; id_loc:=loc; end; end else c:="E"; {exponent of a real constant} end @ A string that starts and ends with double-quote marks is converted into an identifier that behaves like a numeric macro by means of the following piece of the program. @^preprocessed strings@> @= begin double_chars:=0; id_first:=loc-1; repeat d:=buffer[loc]; incr(loc); if (d="""")or(d="@@") then if buffer[loc]=d then begin incr(loc); d:=0; incr(double_chars); end else begin if d="@@" then err_print('! Double @@ sign missing') @.Double \AT! sign missing@> end else if loc>limit then begin err_print('! String constant didn''t end'); d:=""""; @.String constant didn't end@> end; until d=""""; id_loc:=loc-1; c:=identifier; end @ After an \.{@@} sign has been scanned, the next character tells us whether there is more work to do. @= begin c:=control_code(buffer[loc]); incr(loc); if c=ignore then goto restart else if c=hex then scanning_hex:=true else if c=module_name then @ else if c=control_text then begin repeat c:=skip_ahead; until c<>"@@"; if buffer[loc-1]<>">" then err_print('! Improper @@ within control text'); @.Improper \AT! within control text@> goto restart; end; end @ @= begin @; if k>3 then begin if (mod_text[k]=".")and(mod_text[k-1]=".")and(mod_text[k-2]=".") then cur_module:=prefix_lookup(k-3) else cur_module:=mod_lookup(k); end else cur_module:=mod_lookup(k); end @ Module names are placed into the |mod_text| array with consecutive spaces, tabs, and carriage-returns replaced by single spaces. There will be no spaces at the beginning or the end. (We set |mod_text[0]:=" "| to facilitate this, since the |mod_lookup| routine uses |mod_text[1]| as the first character of the name.) @=mod_text[0]:=" "; @ @= k:=0; loop@+ begin if loc>limit then begin get_line; if input_has_ended then begin err_print('! Input ended in section name'); @.Input ended in section name@> goto done; end; end; d:=buffer[loc]; @; incr(loc); if k; if (mod_text[k]=" ")and(k>0) then decr(k); @ @= if d="@@" then begin d:=buffer[loc+1]; if d=">" then begin loc:=loc+2; goto done; end; if (d=" ")or(d=tab_mark)or(d="*") then begin err_print('! Section name didn''t end'); goto done; @.Section name didn't end@> end; incr(k); mod_text[k]:="@@"; incr(loc); {now |d=buffer[loc]| again} end @ @= if k>=longest_name-2 then begin print_nl('! Section name too long: '); @.Section name too long@> for j:=1 to 25 do print(xchr[mod_text[j]]); print('...'); mark_harmless; end @* Scanning a numeric definition. When \.{TANGLE} looks at the \PASCAL\ text following the `\.=' of a numeric macro definition, it calls on the procedure |scan_numeric(p)|, where |p| points to the name that is to be defined. This procedure evaluates the right-hand side, which must consist entirely of integer constants and defined numeric macros connected with \.+ and \.- signs (no parentheses). It also sets the global variable |next_control| to the control code that terminated this definition. A definition ends with the control codes |definition|, |format|, |module_name|, |begin_Pascal|, and |new_module|, all of which can be recognized by the fact that they are the largest values |get_next| can return. @d end_of_definition(#)==(#>=format) {is |#| a control code ending a definition?} @= @!next_control:eight_bits; {control code waiting to be acted upon} @ The evaluation of a numeric expression makes use of two variables called the |accumulator| and the |next_sign|. At the beginning, |accumulator| is zero and |next_sign| is $+1$. When a \.+ or \.- is scanned, |next_sign| is multiplied by the value of that sign. When a numeric value is scanned, it is multiplied by |next_sign| and added to the |accumulator|, then |next_sign| is reset to $+1$. @d add_in(#)==begin accumulator:=accumulator+next_sign*(#); next_sign:=+1; end @p procedure scan_numeric(@!p:name_pointer); {defines numeric macros} label reswitch, done; var accumulator:integer; {accumulates sums} @!next_sign:-1..+1; {sign to attach to next value} @!q:name_pointer; {points to identifiers being evaluated} @!val:integer; {constants being evaluated} begin @; if abs(accumulator)>=@'100000 then begin err_print('! Value too big: ',accumulator:1); accumulator:=0; @.Value too big@> end; equiv[p]:=accumulator+@'100000; {name |p| now is defined to equal |accumulator|} end; @ @= accumulator:=0; next_sign:=+1; loop@+ begin next_control:=get_next; reswitch: case next_control of digits: begin @; add_in(val); goto reswitch; end; octal: begin @; add_in(val); goto reswitch; end; hex: begin @; add_in(val); goto reswitch; end; identifier: begin q:=id_lookup(normal); if ilk[q]<>numeric then begin next_control:="*"; goto reswitch; {leads to error} end; add_in(equiv[q]-@'100000); end; "+": do_nothing; "-": next_sign:=-next_sign; format, definition, module_name, begin_Pascal, new_module: goto done; ";": err_print('! Omit semicolon in numeric definition'); @.Omit semicolon in numeric def...@> othercases @ endcases; end; done: @ @= begin err_print('! Improper numeric definition will be flushed'); @.Improper numeric definition...@> repeat next_control:=skip_ahead until end_of_definition(next_control); if next_control=module_name then begin {we want to scan the module name too} loc:=loc-2; next_control:=get_next; end; accumulator:=0; goto done; end @ @= val:=0; repeat val:=10*val+next_control-"0"; next_control:=get_next; until (next_control>"9")or(next_control<"0") @ @= val:=0; next_control:="0"; repeat val:=8*val+next_control-"0"; next_control:=get_next; until (next_control>"7")or(next_control<"0") @ @= val:=0; next_control:="0"; repeat if next_control>="A" then next_control:=next_control+"0"+10-"A"; val:=16*val+next_control-"0"; next_control:=get_next; until (next_control>"F")or(next_control<"0")or@| ((next_control>"9")and(next_control<"A")) @* Scanning a macro definition. The rules for generating the replacement texts corresponding to simple macros, parametric macros, and \PASCAL\ texts of a module are almost identical, so a single procedure is used for all three cases. The differences are that \yskip\item{a)} The sign |#| denotes a parameter only when it appears outside of strings in a parametric macro; otherwise it stands for the ASCII character |#|. (This is not used in standard \PASCAL, but some \PASCAL s allow, for example, `\.{/\#}' after a certain kind of file name.) \item{b)}Module names are not allowed in simple macros or parametric macros; in fact, the appearance of a module name terminates such macros and denotes the name of the current module. \item{c)}The symbols \.{@@d} and \.{@@f} and \.{@@p} are not allowed after module names, while they terminate macro definitions. @ Therefore there is a procedure |scan_repl| whose parameter |t| specifies either |simple| or |parametric| or |module_name|. After |scan_repl| has acted, |cur_repl_text| will point to the replacement text just generated, and |next_control| will contain the control code that terminated the activity. @= @!cur_repl_text:text_pointer; {replacement text formed by |scan_repl|} @ @p procedure scan_repl(@!t:eight_bits); {creates a replacement text} label continue, done, found, reswitch; var a:sixteen_bits; {the current token} @!b:ASCII_code; {a character from the buffer} @!bal:eight_bits; {left parentheses minus right parentheses} begin bal:=0; loop@+ begin continue: a:=get_next; case a of "(": incr(bal); ")": if bal=0 then err_print('! Extra )') @.Extra )@> else decr(bal); "'": @; "#": if t=parametric then a:=param; @t\4@>@@; othercases do_nothing endcases;@/ app_repl(a); {store |a| in |tok_mem|} end; done: next_control:=a; @; if text_ptr>max_texts-zz then overflow('text'); cur_repl_text:=text_ptr; tok_start[text_ptr+zz]:=tok_ptr[z]; incr(text_ptr); if z=zz-1 then z:=0@+else incr(z); end; @ @= if bal>0 then begin if bal=1 then err_print('! Missing )') else err_print('! Missing ',bal:1,' )''s'); @.Missing n )@> while bal>0 do begin app_repl(")"); decr(bal); end; end @ @= identifier: begin a:=id_lookup(normal); app_repl((a div @'400)+@'200); a:=a mod @'400; end; module_name: if t<>module_name then goto done else begin app_repl((cur_module div @'400)+@'250); a:=cur_module mod @'400; end; verbatim: @; definition, format, begin_Pascal: if t<>module_name then goto done else begin err_print('! @@',xchr[buffer[loc-1]], @.\AT!p is ignored in Pascal text@> @.\AT!d is ignored in Pascal text@> @.\AT!f is ignored in Pascal text@> ' is ignored in Pascal text'); goto continue; end; new_module: goto done; @ @= begin b:="'"; loop@+ begin app_repl(b); if b="@@" then if buffer[loc]="@@" then incr(loc) {store only one \.{@@}} else err_print('! You should double @@ signs in strings'); @.You should double \AT! signs@> if loc=limit then begin err_print('! String didn''t end'); @.String didn't end@> buffer[loc]:="'"; buffer[loc+1]:=0; end; b:=buffer[loc]; incr(loc); if b="'" then begin if buffer[loc]<>"'" then goto found else begin incr(loc); app_repl("'"); end; end; end; found: end {now |a| holds the final |"'"| that will be stored} @ @= begin app_repl(verbatim); buffer[limit+1]:="@@"; reswitch: if buffer[loc]="@@" then begin if loc=limit then err_print('! Verbatim string didn''t end') @.Verbatim string didn't end@> else if buffer[loc+1]<>">" then err_print('! You should double @@ signs in verbatim strings'); @.You should double \AT! signs@> loc:=loc+2; end {another |verbatim| byte will be stored, since |a=verbatim|} @ The following procedure is used to define a simple or parametric macro, just after the `\.{==}' of its definition has been scanned. @p procedure define_macro(@!t:eight_bits); var p:name_pointer; {the identifier being defined} begin p:=id_lookup(t); scan_repl(t);@/ equiv[p]:=cur_repl_text; text_link[cur_repl_text]:=0; end; @* Scanning a module. The |scan_module| procedure starts when `\.{@@\ }' or `\.{@@*}' has been sensed in the input, and it proceeds until the end of that module. It uses |module_count| to keep track of the current module number; with luck, \.{WEAVE} and \.{TANGLE} will both assign the same numbers to modules. @= @!module_count:0..@'27777; {the current module number} @ The top level of |scan_module| is trivial. @p procedure scan_module; label continue, done, exit; var p:name_pointer; {module name for the current module} begin incr(module_count); @; @; exit: end; @ @= next_control:=0; loop@+ begin continue: while next_control<=format do begin next_control:=skip_ahead; if next_control=module_name then begin {we want to scan the module name too} loc:=loc-2; next_control:=get_next; end; end; if next_control<>definition then goto done; next_control:=get_next; {get identifier name} if next_control<>identifier then begin err_print('! Definition flushed, must start with ', @.Definition flushed...@> 'identifier of length > 1'); goto continue; end; next_control:=get_next; {get token after the identifier} if next_control="=" then begin scan_numeric(id_lookup(numeric)); goto continue; end else if next_control=equivalence_sign then begin define_macro(simple); goto continue; end else @; err_print('! Definition flushed since it starts badly'); @.Definition flushed...@> end; done: @ @= if next_control="(" then begin next_control:=get_next; if next_control="#" then begin next_control:=get_next; if next_control=")" then begin next_control:=get_next; if next_control="=" then begin err_print('! Use == for macros'); @.Use == for macros@> next_control:=equivalence_sign; end; if next_control=equivalence_sign then begin define_macro(parametric); goto continue; end; end; end; end; @ @= case next_control of begin_Pascal:p:=0; module_name: begin p:=cur_module; @; end; othercases return endcases;@/ @; scan_repl(module_name); {now |cur_repl_text| points to the replacement text} @; @ @= repeat next_control:=get_next; until next_control<>"+"; {allow optional `\.{+=}'} if (next_control<>"=")and(next_control<>equivalence_sign) then begin err_print('! Pascal text flushed, = sign is missing'); @.Pascal text flushed...@> repeat next_control:=skip_ahead; until next_control=new_module; return; end @ @= store_two_bytes(@'150000+module_count); {|@'150000=@'320*@'400|} @ @= if p=0 then {unnamed module} begin text_link[last_unnamed]:=cur_repl_text; last_unnamed:=cur_repl_text; end else if equiv[p]=0 then equiv[p]:=cur_repl_text {first module of this name} else begin p:=equiv[p]; while text_link[p]1|, the program stops only every |debug_cycle| times |debug_help| is called; however, any error stop will set |debug_cycle| to zero. @= @!debug@!trouble_shooting:boolean; {is |debug_help| wanted?} @!ddt:integer; {operation code for the |debug_help| routine} @!dd:integer; {operand in procedures performed by |debug_help|} @!debug_cycle:integer; {threshold for |debug_help| stopping} @!debug_skipped:integer; {we have skipped this many |debug_help| calls} @!term_in:text_file; {the user's terminal as an input file} gubed @ The debugging routine needs to read from the user's terminal. @^system dependencies@> @= @!debug trouble_shooting:=true; debug_cycle:=1; debug_skipped:=0;@/ trouble_shooting:=false; debug_cycle:=99999; {use these when it almost works} reset(term_in,'TTY:','/I'); {open |term_in| as the terminal, don't do a |get|} gubed @ @d breakpoint=888 {place where a breakpoint is desirable} @^system dependencies@> @p @!debug procedure debug_help; {routine to display various things} label breakpoint,exit; var k:integer; {index into various arrays} begin incr(debug_skipped); if debug_skipped @p begin initialize; @; print_ln(banner); {print a ``banner line''} @; stat for ii:=0 to zz-1 do max_tok_ptr[ii]:=tok_ptr[ii];@+tats@;@/ @; end_of_TANGLE: if string_ptr>256 then @; stat @;@+tats@;@/ @t\4\4@>{here files should be closed if the operating system requires it} @; end. @ @= phase_one:=true; module_count:=0; repeat next_control:=skip_ahead; until next_control=new_module; while not input_has_ended do scan_module; @; phase_one:=false; @ @= begin print_nl(string_ptr-256:1, ' strings written to string pool file.'); write(pool,'*'); for ii:=1 to 9 do begin out_buf[ii]:=pool_check_sum mod 10; pool_check_sum:=pool_check_sum div 10; end; for ii:=9 downto 1 do write(pool,xchr["0"+out_buf[ii]]); write_ln(pool); end @ @= stat @!wo:0..ww-1; {segment of memory for which statistics are being printed} tats @ @= print_nl('Memory usage statistics:'); print_nl(name_ptr:1, ' names, ', text_ptr:1, ' replacement texts;'); print_nl(byte_ptr[0]:1); for wo:=1 to ww-1 do print('+',byte_ptr[wo]:1); if phase_one then for ii:=0 to zz-1 do max_tok_ptr[ii]:=tok_ptr[ii]; print(' bytes, ', max_tok_ptr[0]:1); for ii:=1 to zz-1 do print('+',max_tok_ptr[ii]:1); print(' tokens.'); @ Some implementations may wish to pass the |history| value to the operating system so that it can be used to govern whether or not other programs are started. Here we simply report the history to the user. @^system dependencies@> @= case history of spotless: print_nl('(No errors were found.)'); harmless_message: print_nl('(Did you see the warning message above?)'); error_message: print_nl('(Pardon me, but I think I spotted something wrong.)'); fatal_message: print_nl('(That was a fatal error, my friend.)'); end {there are no other cases} @* System-dependent changes. This module should be replaced, if necessary, by changes to the program that are necessary to make \.{TANGLE} work at a particular installation. It is usually best to design your change file so that all changes to previous modules preserve the module numbering; then everybody's version will be consistent with the printed program. More extensive changes, which introduce new modules, can be inserted here; then only the index itself will get a new module number. @^system dependencies@> @* Index. Here is a cross-reference table for the \.{TANGLE} processor. All modules in which an identifier is used are listed with that identifier, except that reserved words are indexed only when they appear in format definitions, and the appearances of identifiers in module names are not indexed. Underlined entries correspond to where the identifier was declared. Error messages and a few other things like ``ASCII code'' are indexed here too.