Module Stdlib.Scanf
Contents
Instructions: Use this module in your project
In the IDE (CLion, Visual Studio Code, Xcode, etc.) you use for your DkSDK project:
Add the following to your project's
dependencies/CMakeLists.txt
:DkSDKProject_DeclareAvailable(ocaml CONSTRAINT "= 4.14.0" FINDLIBS str unix runtime_events threads dynlink) DkSDKProject_MakeAvailable(ocaml)
Add the
Findlib::ocaml
library to any desired targets insrc/*/CMakeLists.txt
:target_link_libraries(YourPackage_YourLibraryName # ... existing libraries, if any ... Findlib::ocaml)
Click your IDE's
Build
button
Not using DkSDK?
FIRST, do one or all of the following:
Run:
opam install ocaml.4.14.0
Edit your
dune-project
and add:(package (name YourExistingPackage) (depends ; ... existing dependenices ... (ocaml (>= 4.14.0))))
Then run:
dune build *.opam # if this fails, run: dune build
Edit your
<package>.opam
file and add:depends: [ # ... existing dependencies ... "ocaml" {>= "4.14.0"} ]
Then run:
opam install . --deps-only
FINALLY, add the library to any desired
(library)
and/or (executable)
targets in your **/dune
files:
(library
(name YourLibrary)
; ... existing library options ...
(libraries
; ... existing libraries ...
))
(executable
(name YourExecutable)
; ... existing executable options ...
(libraries
; ... existing libraries ...
))
Introduction
Functional input with format strings
The module Scanf
provides formatted input functions or
scanners.
The formatted input functions can read from any kind of input, including
strings, files, or anything that can return characters. The more general
source of characters is named a formatted input channel (or scanning
buffer) and has type
Scanning.in_channel
. The
more general formatted input function reads from any scanning buffer and
is named bscanf
.
Generally speaking, the formatted input functions have 3 arguments:
- the first argument is a source of characters for the input,
- the second argument is a format string that specifies the values to read,
- the third argument is a receiver function that is applied to the values read.
Hence, a typical call to the formatted input function
Scanf.bscanf
is bscanf ic fmt f
, where:
-
ic
is a source of characters (typically a formatted input channel with typeScanning.in_channel
), -
fmt
is a format string (the same format strings as those used to print material with modulePrintf
orFormat
), -
f
is a function that has as many arguments as the number of values to read in the input according tofmt
.
A simple example
As suggested above, the expression bscanf ic "%d" f
reads a decimal
integer n
from the source of characters ic
and returns f n
.
For instance,
-
if we use
stdin
as the source of characters (Scanning.stdin
is the predefined formatted input channel that reads from standard input), -
if we define the receiver
f
aslet f x = x + 1
,
then bscanf Scanning.stdin "%d" f
reads an integer n
from the
standard input and returns f n
(that is n + 1
). Thus, if we evaluate
bscanf stdin "%d" f
, and then enter 41
at the keyboard, the result
we get is 42
.
Formatted input as a functional feature
The OCaml scanning facility is reminiscent of the corresponding C feature. However, it is also largely different, simpler, and yet more powerful: the formatted input functions are higher-order functionals and the parameter passing mechanism is just the regular function application not the variable assignment based mechanism which is typical for formatted input in imperative languages; the OCaml format strings also feature useful additions to easily define complex tokens; as expected within a functional programming language, the formatted input functions also support polymorphism, in particular arbitrary interaction with polymorphic user-defined scanners. Furthermore, the OCaml formatted input facility is fully type-checked at compile time.
Formatted input channel
module
Scanning
:
sig
...
end
Type of formatted input functions
type
``('a, 'b, 'c, 'd) scanner`` = ``(
'a
,
Scanning.in_channel
,
'b
,
'c
,
'a
->
'd
,
'd
)``
format6
->
'c
The type of formatted input scanners: ('a, 'b, 'c, 'd) scanner
is the
type of a formatted input function that reads from some formatted input
channel according to some format string; more precisely, if scan
is
some formatted input function, then scan ic fmt f
applies f
to all
the arguments specified by format string fmt
, when scan
has read
those arguments from the
Scanning.in_channel
formatted input channel ic
.
For instance, the Scanf.scanf
function below has type
('a, 'b, 'c, 'd) scanner
, since it is a formatted input function that
reads from Scanning.stdin
:
scanf fmt f
applies f
to the arguments specified by fmt
, reading
those arguments from Stdlib.stdin
as
expected.
If the format fmt
has some %r
indications, the corresponding
formatted input functions must be provided before receiver function
f
. For instance, if read_elem
is an input function for values of
type t
, then bscanf ic "%r;" read_elem f
reads a value v
of type
t
followed by a ';'
character, and returns f v
.
- since 3.10.0
exception
Scan_failure
of
string
When the input can not be read according to the format string
specification, formatted input functions typically raise exception
Scan_failure
.
The general formatted input function
val
bscanf :
Scanning.in_channel
->
``(
'a
,
'b
,
'c
,
'd
)``
scanner
bscanf ic fmt r1 ... rN f
reads characters from the
Scanning.in_channel
formatted input channel ic
and converts them to values according to
format string fmt
. As a final step, receiver function f
is applied
to the values read and gives the result of the bscanf
call.
For instance, if f
is the function fun s i -> i + 1
, then
Scanf.sscanf "x= 1" "%s = %i" f
returns 2
.
Arguments r1
to rN
are user-defined input functions that read the
argument corresponding to the %r
conversions specified in the format
string.
Format string description
The format string is a character string which contains three types of objects:
- plain characters, which are simply matched with the characters of the
input (with a special case for space and line feed, see
space
), - conversion specifications, each of which causes reading and conversion
of one argument for the function
f
(seeconversion
), - scanning indications to specify boundaries of tokens (see scanning
indication
).
The space character in format strings
As mentioned above, a plain character in the format string is just
matched with the next character of the input; however, two characters
are special exceptions to this rule: the space character (' '
or ASCII
code 32) and the line feed character ('\n'
or ASCII code 10). A space
does not match a single space character, but any amount of 'whitespace'
in the input. More precisely, a space inside the format string matches
any number of tab, space, line feed and carriage return characters.
Similarly, a line feed character in the format string matches either a
single line feed or a carriage return followed by a line feed.
Matching any amount of whitespace, a space in the format string also
matches no amount of whitespace at all; hence, the call
bscanf ib "Price = %d $" (fun p -> p)
succeeds and returns 1
when
reading an input with various whitespace in it, such as Price = 1 $
,
Price = 1 $
, or even Price=1$
.
Conversion specifications in format strings
Conversion specifications consist in the %
character, followed by an
optional flag, an optional field width, and followed by one or two
conversion characters.
The conversion characters and their meanings are:
-
d
: reads an optionally signed decimal integer (0-9
+). -
i
: reads an optionally signed integer (usual input conventions for decimal (0-9
+), hexadecimal (0x[0-9a-f]+
and0X[0-9A-F]+
), octal (0o[0-7]+
), and binary (0b[0-1]+
) notations are understood). -
u
: reads an unsigned decimal integer. -
x
orX
: reads an unsigned hexadecimal integer ([0-9a-fA-F]+
). -
o
: reads an unsigned octal integer ([0-7]+
). -
s
: reads a string argument that spreads as much as possible, until the following bounding condition holds:- a whitespace has been found (see
space
), - a scanning indication (see scanning
indication
) has been encountered, - the end-of-input has been reached.
Hence, this conversion always succeeds: it returns an empty string if the bounding condition holds when the scan begins.
- a whitespace has been found (see
-
S
: reads a delimited string argument (delimiters and special escaped characters follow the lexical conventions of OCaml). -
c
: reads a single character. To test the current input character without reading it, specify a null field width, i.e. use specification%0c
. RaiseInvalid_argument
, if the field width specification is greater than 1. -
C
: reads a single delimited character (delimiters and special escaped characters follow the lexical conventions of OCaml). -
f
,e
,E
,g
,G
: reads an optionally signed floating-point number in decimal notation, in the styledddd.ddd e/E+-dd
. -
h
,H
: reads an optionally signed floating-point number in hexadecimal notation. -
F
: reads a floating point number according to the lexical conventions of OCaml (hence the decimal point is mandatory if the exponent part is not mentioned). -
B
: reads a boolean argument (true
orfalse
). -
b
: reads a boolean argument (for backward compatibility; do not use in new programs). -
ld
,li
,lu
,lx
,lX
,lo
: reads anint32
argument to the format specified by the second letter for regular integers. -
nd
,ni
,nu
,nx
,nX
,no
: reads anativeint
argument to the format specified by the second letter for regular integers. -
Ld
,Li
,Lu
,Lx
,LX
,Lo
: reads anint64
argument to the format specified by the second letter for regular integers. -
[ range ]
: reads characters that matches one of the characters mentioned in the range of charactersrange
(or not mentioned in it, if the range starts with^
). Reads astring
that can be empty, if the next input character does not match the range. The set of characters fromc1
toc2
(inclusively) is denoted byc1-c2
. Hence,%[0-9]
returns a string representing a decimal number or an empty string if no decimal digit is found; similarly,%[0-9a-f]
returns a string of hexadecimal digits. If a closing bracket appears in a range, it must occur as the first character of the range (or just after the^
in case of range negation); hence[]]
matches a]
character and[^]]
matches any character that is not]
. Use%%
and%@
to include a%
or a@
in a range. -
r
: user-defined reader. Takes the nextri
formatted input function and applies it to the scanning bufferib
to read the next argument. The input functionri
must therefore have typeScanning.in_channel -> 'a
and the argument read has type'a
. -
{ fmt %}
: reads a format string argument. The format string read must have the same type as the format string specificationfmt
. For instance,"%{ %i %}"
reads any format string that can read a value of typeint
; hence, ifs
is the string"fmt:\"number is %u\""
, thenScanf.sscanf s "fmt: %{%i%}"
succeeds and returns the format string"number is %u"
. -
( fmt %)
: scanning sub-format substitution. Reads a format stringrf
in the input, then goes on scanning withrf
instead of scanning withfmt
. The format stringrf
must have the same type as the format string specificationfmt
that it replaces. For instance,"%( %i %)"
reads any format string that can read a value of typeint
. The conversion returns the format string readrf
, and then a value read usingrf
. Hence, ifs
is the string"\"%4d\"1234.00"
, thenScanf.sscanf s "%(%i%)" (fun fmt i -> fmt, i)
evaluates to("%4d", 1234)
. This behaviour is not mere format substitution, since the conversion returns the format string read as additional argument. If you need pure format substitution, use special flag_
to discard the extraneous argument: conversion%_( fmt %)
reads a format stringrf
and then behaves the same as format stringrf
. Hence, ifs
is the string"\"%4d\"1234.00"
, thenScanf.sscanf s "%_(%i%)"
is simply equivalent toScanf.sscanf "1234.00" "%4d"
. -
l
: returns the number of lines read so far. -
n
: returns the number of characters read so far. -
N
orL
: returns the number of tokens read so far. -
!
: matches the end of input condition. -
%
: matches one%
character in the input. -
@
: matches one@
character in the input. -
,
: does nothing.
Following the %
character that introduces a conversion, there may be
the special flag _
: the conversion that follows occurs as usual, but
the resulting value is discarded. For instance, if f
is the function
fun i -> i + 1
, and s
is the string "x = 1"
, then
Scanf.sscanf s "%_s = %i" f
returns 2
.
The field width is composed of an optional integer literal indicating
the maximal width of the token to read. For instance, %6d
reads an
integer, having at most 6 decimal digits; %4f
reads a float with at
most 4 characters; and %8[\000-\255]
returns the next 8 characters (or
all the characters still available, if fewer than 8 characters are
available in the input).
Notes:
-
as mentioned above, a
%s
conversion always succeeds, even if there is nothing to read in the input: in this case, it simply returns""
. -
in addition to the relevant digits,
'_'
characters may appear inside numbers (this is reminiscent to the usual OCaml lexical conventions). If stricter scanning is desired, use the range conversion facility instead of the number conversions. -
the
scanf
facility is not intended for heavy duty lexical analysis and parsing. If it appears not expressive enough for your needs, several alternative exists: regular expressions (moduleStr
), stream parsers,ocamllex
-generated lexers,ocamlyacc
-generated parsers.
Scanning indications in format strings
Scanning indications appear just after the string conversions %s
and
%[ range ]
to delimit the end of the token. A scanning indication is
introduced by a @
character, followed by some plain character c
. It
means that the string token should end just before the next matching c
(which is skipped). If no c
character is encountered, the string token
spreads as much as possible. For instance, "%s@\t"
reads a string up
to the next tab character or to the end of input. If a @
character
appears anywhere else in the format string, it is treated as a plain
character.
Note:
- As usual in format strings,
%
and@
characters must be escaped using%%
and%@
; this rule still holds within range specifications and scanning indications. For instance, format"%s@%%"
reads a string up to the next%
character, and format"%s@%@"
reads a string up to the next@
. - The scanning indications introduce slight differences in the syntax of
Scanf
format strings, compared to those used for thePrintf
module. However, the scanning indications are similar to those used in theFormat
module; hence, when producing formatted text to be scanned byScanf.bscanf
, it is wise to use printing functions from theFormat
module (or, if you need to use functions fromPrintf
, banish or carefully double check the format strings that contain'@'
characters).
Exceptions during scanning
Scanners may raise the following exceptions when the input cannot be read according to the format string:
-
Raise
Scanf.Scan_failure
if the input does not match the format. -
Raise
Failure
if a conversion to a number is not possible. -
Raise
End_of_file
if the end of input is encountered while some more characters are needed to read the current conversion specification. -
Raise
Invalid_argument
if the format string is invalid.
Note:
- as a consequence, scanning a
%s
conversion never raises exceptionEnd_of_file
: if the end of input is reached the conversion succeeds and simply returns the characters read so far, or""
if none were ever read.
Specialised formatted input functions
val
sscanf : ``string
->
``(
'a
,
'b
,
'c
,
'd
)``
scanner
Same as Scanf.bscanf
, but reads from the given string.
val
scanf : ``(
'a
,
'b
,
'c
,
'd
)``
scanner
Same as Scanf.bscanf
, but reads from the predefined
formatted input channel
Scanf.Scanning.stdin
that is
connected to Stdlib.stdin
.
val
kscanf :
Scanning.in_channel
->
``(
Scanning.in_channel
->
``exn
->
'd
)``
->
``(
'a
,
'b
,
'c
,
'd
)``
scanner
Same as Scanf.bscanf
, but takes an additional function
argument ef
that is called in case of error: if the scanning process
or some conversion fails, the scanning function aborts and calls the
error handling function ef
with the formatted input channel and the
exception that aborted the scanning process as arguments.
val
ksscanf : ``string
->
``(
Scanning.in_channel
->
``exn
->
'd
)``
->
``(
'a
,
'b
,
'c
,
'd
)``
scanner
Same as Scanf.kscanf
but reads from the given string.
- since 4.02.0
Reading format strings from input
val
bscanf_format :
Scanning.in_channel
->
``(
'a
,
'b
,
'c
,
'd
,
'e
,
'f
)``
format6
->
``(``(
'a
,
'b
,
'c
,
'd
,
'e
,
'f
)``
format6
->
'g
)``
->
'g
bscanf_format ic fmt f
reads a format string token from the formatted
input channel ic
, according to the given format string fmt
, and
applies f
to the resulting format string value.
-
raises Scan_failure
if the format string value read does not have the same type as
fmt
. -
since 3.09.0
val
sscanf_format : ``string
->
``(
'a
,
'b
,
'c
,
'd
,
'e
,
'f
)``
format6
->
``(``(
'a
,
'b
,
'c
,
'd
,
'e
,
'f
)``
format6
->
'g
)``
->
'g
Same as Scanf.bscanf_format
, but reads from the
given string.
- since 3.09.0
val
format_from_string : ``string
->
``(
'a
,
'b
,
'c
,
'd
,
'e
,
'f
)``
format6
->
``(
'a
,
'b
,
'c
,
'd
,
'e
,
'f
)``
format6
format_from_string s fmt
converts a string argument to a format
string, according to the given format string fmt
.
-
raises Scan_failure
if
s
, considered as a format string, does not have the same type asfmt
. -
since 3.10.0
val
unescaped : ``string
->
string
unescaped s
return a copy of s
with escape sequences (according to
the lexical conventions of OCaml) replaced by their corresponding
special characters. More precisely, Scanf.unescaped
has the following
property: for all string s
, Scanf.unescaped (String.escaped s) = s
.
Always return a copy of the argument, even if there is no escape sequence in the argument.
-
raises Scan_failure
if
s
is not properly escaped (i.e.s
has invalid escape sequences or special characters that are not properly escaped). For instance,Scanf.unescaped "\""
will fail. -
since 4.00.0
Deprecated
val
fscanf :
in_channel
->
``(
'a
,
'b
,
'c
,
'd
)``
scanner
-
deprecated
Scanf.fscanf
is error prone and deprecated since 4.03.0.This function violates the following invariant of the
Scanf
module: To preserve scanning semantics, all scanning functions defined inScanf
must read from a user definedScanning.in_channel
formatted input channel.If you need to read from a
Stdlib.in_channel
input channelic
, simply define aScanning.in_channel
formatted input channel as inlet ib = Scanning.from_channel ic
, then useScanf.bscanf ib
as usual.
val
kfscanf :
in_channel
->
``(
Scanning.in_channel
->
``exn
->
'd
)``
->
``(
'a
,
'b
,
'c
,
'd
)``
scanner
-
deprecated
Scanf.kfscanf
is error prone and deprecated since 4.03.0.