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PROGRAM:
NAME
cpphs - liberalised cpp-a-like preprocessor for Haskell
SYNOPSIS
cpphs [FILENAME|OPTION]...
DESCRIPTION
cpphs is a liberalised re-implementation of cpp (1), the C pre-processor, in and for
Haskell.
Why re-implement cpp? Rightly or wrongly, the C pre-processor is widely used in Haskell
source code. It enables conditional compilation for different compilers, different
versions of the same compiler, and different OS platforms. It is also occasionally used
for its macro language, which can enable certain forms of platform-specific detail-
filling, such as the tedious boilerplate generation of instance definitions and FFI
declarations. However, there are two problems with cpp, aside from the obvious aesthetic
ones:
For some Haskell systems, notably Hugs on Windows, a true cpp is not available by
default.
Even for the other Haskell systems, the common cpp provided by the gcc 3.x series
is changing subtly in ways that are incompatible with Haskell's syntax. There have
always been problems with, for instance, string gaps, and prime characters in
identifiers. These problems are only going to get worse.
So, it seemed right to attempt to provide an alternative to cpp, both more compatible with
Haskell, and itself written in Haskell so that it can be distributed with compilers.
cpphs is pretty-much feature-complete, and compatible with the -traditional style of cpp.
It has two modes:
conditional compilation only (--nomacro),
and full macro-expansion (default).
In --nomacro mode, cpphs performs only conditional compilation actions, i.e. #include's,
#if's, and #ifdef's are processed according to text-replacement definitions (both command-
line and internal), but no parameterised macro expansion is performed. In full
compatibility mode (the default), textual replacements and macro expansions are also
processed in the remaining body of non-cpp text.
Working Features:
#ifdef simple conditional compilation
#if the full boolean language of defined(), &&, ||, ==, etc.
#elif chained conditionals
#define
in-line definitions (text replacements and macros)
#undef in-line revocation of definitions
#include
file inclusion
#line line number directives
\n line continuations within all # directives
/**/ token catenation within a macro definition
## ANSI-style token catenation
# ANSI-style token stringisation
__FILE__
special text replacement for DIY error messages
__LINE__
special text replacement for DIY error messages
__DATE__
special text replacement
__TIME__
special text replacement
Macro expansion is recursive. Redefinition of a macro name does not generate a warning.
Macros can be defined on the command-line with -D just like textual replacements. Macro
names are permitted to be Haskell identifiers e.g. with the prime ` and backtick ยด
characters, which is slightly looser than in C, but they still may not include operator
symbols.
Numbering of lines in the output is preserved so that any later processor can give
meaningful error messages. When a file is #include'd, cpphs inserts #line directives for
the same reason. Numbering should be correct even in the presence of line continuations.
If you don't want #line directives in the final output, use the --noline option.
Any syntax errors in cpp directives gives a message to stderr and halts the program.
Failure to find a #include'd file produces a warning to stderr, but processing continues.
You can give any number of filenames on the command-line. The results are catenated on
standard output.
-Dsym define a textual replacement (default value is 1)
-Dsym=val
define a textual replacement with a specific value
-Ipath add a directory to the search path for #include's
-Ofile specify a file for output (default is stdout)
--nomacro
only process #ifdef's and #include's,
do not expand macros
--noline
remove #line droppings from the output
--strip
convert C-style comments to whitespace, even outside
cpp directives
--hashes
recognise the ANSI # stringise operator, and ## for
token catenation, within macros
--text treat the input as plain text, not Haskell code
--layout
preserve newlines within macro expansions
--unlit
remove literate-style comments
--version
report version number of cpphs and stop
There are NO textual replacements defined by default. (Normal cpp usually has definitions
for machine, OS, etc. These could easily be added to the cpphs source code if you wish.)
The search path is searched in order of the -I options, except that the directory of the
calling file, then the current directory, are always searched first. Again, there is no
default search path (and again, this could easily be changed).
DIFFERENCES FROM CPP
In general, cpphs is based on the -traditional behaviour, not ANSI C, and has the
following main differences from the standard cpp.
General
The # that introduces any cpp directive must be in the first column of a line (whereas
ANSI permits whitespace before the # ).
Generates the #line n "filename" syntax, not the # n "filename" variant.
C comments are only removed from within cpp directives. They are not stripped from other
text. Consider for instance that in Haskell, all of the following are valid operator
symbols: /* */ */* However, you can turn on C-comment removal with the --strip option.
Macro language
Accepts /**/ for token-pasting in a macro definition. However, /* */ (with any text
between the open/close comment) inserts whitespace.
The ANSI ## token-pasting operator is available with the --hashes flag. This is to avoid
misinterpreting any valid Haskell operator of the same name.
Replaces a macro formal parameter with the actual, even inside a string (double or single
quoted). This is -traditional behaviour, not supported in ANSI.
Recognises the # stringisation operator in a macro definition only if you use the --hashes
option. (It is an ANSI addition, only needed because quoted stringisation (above) is
prohibited by ANSI.)
Preserves whitespace within a textual replacement definition exactly (modulo newlines),
but leading and trailing space is eliminated.
Preserves whitespace within a macro definition (and trailing it) exactly (modulo
newlines), but leading space is eliminated.
Preserves whitespace within macro call arguments exactly (including newlines), but leading
and trailing space is eliminated.
With the --layout option, line continuations in a textual replacement or macro definition
are preserved as line-breaks in the macro call. (Useful for layout-sensitive code in
Haskell.)
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