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fpc-src / usr / share / fpcsrc / 3.0.0 / utils / data2inc.exm
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# Please compile this file with data2inc (e.g. data2inc data2inc.exm demo.inc)
#
# This demo file should show all possibilities of the data2inc program.
# (comment chars are %;#, empty lines are ignored)

# First, the standard purpose of data2inc.

# FPC (before 0.99.12) allowed only textual constants of up to 255 bytes.
# The main use of data2inc is to circumvent this by defining a constant of
# type ARRAY OF BYTE in an include file.
#
# Some of my utils have a small screen of text to show when wrong or no
# commandline parameters are passed. The below example is for ../demo/crtolf.pp
# I use an extremely small procedure in EFIO (EFIO.WrArrChar) to display such
# constants.

#
# CrToLf Usage text.
#
# First, a '!' to indictate a new record (constant in the include file). This
# also defines the type of the constant. The record ends at the next line
# starting with '!' or at the end of the file.
#
#  !name  is an array of char type constant
#  !$name is an array of byte type constant.

# This is an array of char, named UsageCrtolf

!UsageCrtolf

# Now the contents of the type. Empty lines are deleted, so we have to put
# some constant to indicate an empty line. To ease this, \xxx octal character
# codes are allowed. (The \015's below translate to CHR(13) which is CR).
# In data2inc, all characters (and I mean all, even #0 #13 etc) are allowed
# as long as unprintable characters are noted as with octal code.
# Beware that a single \ has to be escaped as \\ !!!!!!!!

Usage:   CrToLf <FileName1> [FileName2] [Switches]\015
 Default all separators are translated to CrLf, spaces are tabbed\015
 with a default tablength of 8\015
  Switches:\015
  /C        : Lineseparator always Cr\015
  /L        : Lineseparator always Lf\015
  /B        : Lineseparator always CrLf(default)\015
  /T        : Convert spaces to hardtabs, default the otherway around\015
  /S:<Nr>   : Use tabsize <Nr> (default:8)\015
\015
  /W[:size] : word wrap the file to a width of 80 (default) or <size>\015
              characters if /W is used, tabbing is off\015
\015
  /P        : (only together with /W) Strip multiple points too (.... becomes .)\015
  /R        : (Ignored with /W): Never write more than one linefeed.\015
  /D        : ROT 13 file (not together with /w)\015
  /M        : Clean up MAN pages linux\015\015

# Now we define a new constant, the same principle as above, but we let it
# translate to an ARRAY OF BYTE typed constant.

#
# indexer usage text, translate to array of byte. (The dollarsign after the
#  exclamation mark).
#

!$usageindexer
Usage: Indexer <directory>\015
Creates indexes and Files.bbs from descript.ion, recursing directories.\015
Usage : Indexer <Starting-Directory>\015
   E.g. Indexer c:..\\source\015\015


#
# Now we are moving up to the more advanced possibilities. Everywhere in
# a record you can add data by placing keyword DATA on a new line, and
# put your data after it, which works pretty much like the BASIC data command
#
# After the DATA keyword, you should put a space, and then several fields
# with either (integer)nummerical or textual constants.
#
# Textual constants are similar to TP textual constants except that you can also
# use double quotes instead of single, and you can use single quotes inside
# double quotes. Also #xxx character codes are allowed, and '+' characters
# which indicate concatenation of strings under BP.
#
# Nummerical integer constants come in quite much flavours.
# $123 , 0x123 , 123h and 123H are equivalent to hexadecimal 123 (= 291 decimal)
# \666 , 666o and 666O         are equivalent to octal 666       (=438 decimal)
# 123  , 123d and 123D         is plain decimal 123
# %010 , 010b and 010B         are equivalent to binary 010      (= 4 decimal)
#
#
# The only problem with integer constants is that 123 is NOT equal to 0123 or
#  000123
# 123    will occupy 1 byte
# 0123   will occupy 2 bytes.
# 000123 will occupy 4 bytes
#
# Same for hexadecimal constants (and the others)
#
# FFh     will occupy 1 byte
# 0FFh    will occupy 2 bytes.
# 000FFh  will occupy 4 bytes
#

# First define a new record, ARRAY OF BYTE style
# If you want to verify DATA, try removing the '$' in the line below and
# view the ARRAY OF CHAR data.

!$weirddata

This line is just text

# now a data statement
#       textual                       , rest nummerical

DATA 'Hello :'#12+"another 'hello'"#39,123,$123,0x456,789d,776o

Again normal text.

DATA \666,12d,13h,%10101010

# Be carefull with statements as below. Data2inc syntax isn't entirely basic.
# If you do define lines like the one below, you can't tell one,two,three apart.

DATA 'one','two','three'

# A solution would be:

DATA 'one'#0,'two'#0,'three'#0,0

#
# A demonstration line for the difference between $FF, $0FF and $000FF
#

DATA $FF,$00FF,$000FF

#
# Everything between the !$weirddata line and this line will be added to
# the constant weirddata. The empty and comment lines are of course not added.