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FLEX(1)			    General Commands Manual		       FLEX(1)

NAME
       flex, lex - fast	lexical	analyzer generator

SYNOPSIS
       flex [-bcdfhilnpstvwBFILTV78+? -C[aefFmr] -ooutput -Pprefix -Sskeleton]
       [--help --version] [filename ...]

OVERVIEW
       This manual describes flex, a tool for generating programs that perform
       pattern-matching	on text.  The manual includes both tutorial and	refer-
       ence sections:

	   Description
	       a brief overview	of the tool

	   Some	Simple Examples

	   Format Of The Input File

	   Patterns
	       the extended regular expressions	used by	flex

	   How The Input Is Matched
	       the rules for determining what has been matched

	   Actions
	       how to specify what to do when a	pattern	is matched

	   The Generated Scanner
	       details regarding the scanner that flex produces;
	       how to control the input	source

	   Start Conditions
	       introducing context into	your scanners, and
	       managing	"mini-scanners"

	   Multiple Input Buffers
	       how to manipulate multiple input	sources; how to
	       scan from strings instead of files

	   End-of-file Rules
	       special rules for matching the end of the input

	   Miscellaneous Macros
	       a summary of macros available to	the actions

	   Values Available To The User
	       a summary of values available to	the actions

	   Interfacing With Yacc
	       connecting flex scanners	together with yacc parsers

	   Options
	       flex command-line options, and the "%option"
	       directive

	   Performance Considerations
	       how to make your	scanner	go as fast as possible

	   Generating C++ Scanners
	       the (experimental) facility for generating C++
	       scanner classes

	   Incompatibilities With Lex And POSIX
	       how flex	differs	from AT&T lex and the POSIX lex
	       standard

	   Diagnostics
	       those error messages produced by	flex (or scanners
	       it generates) whose meanings might not be apparent

	   Files
	       files used by flex

	   Deficiencies	/ Bugs
	       known problems with flex

	   See Also
	       other documentation, related tools

	   Author
	       includes	contact	information

DESCRIPTION
       flex  is	a tool for generating scanners:	programs which recognize lexi-
       cal patterns in text.  flex reads the given input files,	or  its	 stan-
       dard  input  if no file names are given,	for a description of a scanner
       to generate.  The description is	in the form of pairs  of  regular  ex-
       pressions  and  C  code,	 called	 rules.	  flex generates as output a C
       source file, lex.yy.c, which defines a routine yylex().	This  file  is
       compiled	 and  linked  with  the	 -ll library to	produce	an executable.
       When the	executable is run, it analyzes its input  for  occurrences  of
       the regular expressions.	 Whenever it finds one,	it executes the	corre-
       sponding	C code.

SOME SIMPLE EXAMPLES
       First some simple examples to get the flavor of how one uses flex.  The
       following  flex	input specifies	a scanner which	whenever it encounters
       the string "username" will replace it with the user's login name:

	   %%
	   username    printf( "%s", getlogin()	);

       By default, any text not	matched	by a flex scanner  is  copied  to  the
       output,	so the net effect of this scanner is to	copy its input file to
       its output with each occurrence of "username" expanded.	In this	input,
       there is	just one rule.	"username" is the pattern and the "printf"  is
       the action.  The	"%%" marks the beginning of the	rules.

       Here's another simple example:

	   %{
		   int num_lines = 0, num_chars	= 0;
	   %}

	   %%
	   \n	   ++num_lines;	++num_chars;
	   .	   ++num_chars;

	   %%
	   main()
		   {
		   yylex();
		   printf( "# of lines = %d, # of chars	= %d\n",
			   num_lines, num_chars	);
		   }

       This scanner counts the number of characters and	the number of lines in
       its  input  (it	produces  no output other than the final report	on the
       counts).	  The  first  line  declares  two  globals,  "num_lines"   and
       "num_chars", which are accessible both inside yylex() and in the	main()
       routine declared	after the second "%%".	There are two rules, one which
       matches	a  newline  ("\n")  and	increments both	the line count and the
       character count,	and one	which matches any character other than a  new-
       line (indicated by the "." regular expression).

       A somewhat more complicated example:

	   /* scanner for a toy	Pascal-like language */

	   %{
	   /* need this	for the	call to	atof() below */
	   #include <math.h>
	   %}

	   DIGIT    [0-9]
	   ID	    [a-z][a-z0-9]*

	   %%

	   {DIGIT}+    {
		       printf( "An integer: %s (%d)\n",	yytext,
			       atoi( yytext ) );
		       }

	   {DIGIT}+"."{DIGIT}*	      {
		       printf( "A float: %s (%g)\n", yytext,
			       atof( yytext ) );
		       }

	   if|then|begin|end|procedure|function	       {
		       printf( "A keyword: %s\n", yytext );
		       }

	   {ID}	       printf( "An identifier: %s\n", yytext );

	   "+"|"-"|"*"|"/"   printf( "An operator: %s\n", yytext );

	   "{"[^}\n]*"}"     /*	eat up one-line	comments */

	   [ \t\n]+	     /*	eat up whitespace */

	   .	       printf( "Unrecognized character:	%s\n", yytext );

	   %%

	   main( argc, argv )
	   int argc;
	   char	**argv;
	       {
	       ++argv, --argc;	/* skip	over program name */
	       if ( argc > 0 )
		       yyin = fopen( argv[0], "r" );
	       else
		       yyin = stdin;

	       yylex();
	       }

       This  is	the beginnings of a simple scanner for a language like Pascal.
       It identifies different types of	tokens and  reports  on	 what  it  has
       seen.

       The  details  of	 this  example will be explained in the	following sec-
       tions.

FORMAT OF THE INPUT FILE
       The flex	input file consists of three sections,	separated  by  a  line
       with just %% in it:

	   definitions
	   %%
	   rules
	   %%
	   user	code

       The  definitions	 section  contains declarations	of simple name defini-
       tions to	simplify the scanner specification, and	declarations of	 start
       conditions, which are explained in a later section.

       Name definitions	have the form:

	   name	definition

       The  "name"  is	a  word	beginning with a letter	or an underscore ('_')
       followed	by zero	or more	letters, digits, '_', or '-' (dash).  The def-
       inition is taken	to begin at the	first non-white-space  character  fol-
       lowing  the name	and continuing to the end of the line.	The definition
       can subsequently	be referred to using "{name}", which  will  expand  to
       "(definition)".	For example,

	   DIGIT    [0-9]
	   ID	    [a-z][a-z0-9]*

       defines	"DIGIT"	 to  be	 a  regular  expression	which matches a	single
       digit, and "ID" to be a regular expression which	matches	a letter  fol-
       lowed by	zero-or-more letters-or-digits.	 A subsequent reference	to

	   {DIGIT}+"."{DIGIT}*

       is identical to

	   ([0-9])+"."([0-9])*

       and  matches  one-or-more digits	followed by a '.' followed by zero-or-
       more digits.

       The rules section of the	flex input contains a series of	rules  of  the
       form:

	   pattern   action

       where  the  pattern must	be unindented and the action must begin	on the
       same line.

       See below for a further description of patterns and actions.

       Finally,	the user code section is simply	copied to  lex.yy.c  verbatim.
       It is used for companion	routines which call or are called by the scan-
       ner.   The  presence of this section is optional; if it is missing, the
       second %% in the	input file may be skipped, too.

       In the definitions and rules sections, any indented text	 or  text  en-
       closed  in  %{  and %} is copied	verbatim to the	output (with the %{}'s
       removed).  The %{}'s must appear	unindented on lines by themselves.

       In the rules section, any indented or %{}  text	appearing  before  the
       first  rule  may	 be  used  to declare variables	which are local	to the
       scanning	routine	and (after the declarations) code which	is to be  exe-
       cuted  whenever the scanning routine is entered.	 Other indented	or %{}
       text in the rule	section	is still copied	to the output, but its meaning
       is not well-defined and it may well  cause  compile-time	 errors	 (this
       feature	is present for POSIX compliance; see below for other such fea-
       tures).

       In the definitions section (but not in the  rules  section),  an	 unin-
       dented comment (i.e., a line beginning with "/*") is also copied	verba-
       tim to the output up to the next	"*/".

PATTERNS
       The  patterns in	the input are written using an extended	set of regular
       expressions.  These are:

	   x	      match the	character 'x'
	   .	      any character (byte) except newline
	   [xyz]      a	"character class"; in this case, the pattern
			matches	either an 'x', a 'y', or a 'z'
	   [abj-oZ]   a	"character class" with a range in it; matches
			an 'a',	a 'b', any letter from 'j' through 'o',
			or a 'Z'
	   [^A-Z]     a	"negated character class", i.e., any character
			but those in the class.	 In this case, any
			character EXCEPT an uppercase letter.
	   [^A-Z\n]   any character EXCEPT an uppercase	letter or
			a newline
	   r*	      zero or more r's,	where r	is any regular expression
	   r+	      one or more r's
	   r?	      zero or one r's (that is,	"an optional r")
	   r{2,5}     anywhere from two	to five	r's
	   r{2,}      two or more r's
	   r{4}	      exactly 4	r's
	   {name}     the expansion of the "name" definition
		      (see above)
	   "[xyz]\"foo"
		      the literal string: [xyz]"foo
	   \X	      if X is an 'a', 'b', 'f',	'n', 'r', 't', or 'v',
			then the ANSI-C	interpretation of \x.
			Otherwise, a literal 'X' (used to escape
			operators such as '*')
	   \0	      a	NUL character (ASCII code 0)
	   \123	      the character with octal value 123
	   \x2a	      the character with hexadecimal value 2a
	   (r)	      match an r; parentheses are used to override
			precedence (see	below)

	   rs	      the regular expression r followed	by the
			regular	expression s; called "concatenation"

	   r|s	      either an	r or an	s

	   r/s	      an r but only if it is followed by an s.	The
			text matched by	s is included when determining
			whether	this rule is the "longest match",
			but is then returned to	the input before
			the action is executed.	 So the	action only
			sees the text matched by r.  This type
			of pattern is called trailing context".
			(There are some	combinations of	r/s that flex
			cannot match correctly;	see notes in the
			Deficiencies / Bugs section below regarding
			"dangerous trailing context".)
	   ^r	      an r, but	only at	the beginning of a line	(i.e.,
			when just starting to scan, or right after a
			newline	has been scanned).
	   r$	      an r, but	only at	the end	of a line (i.e., just
			before a newline).  Equivalent to "r/\n".

		      Note that	flex's notion of "newline" is exactly
		      whatever the C compiler used to compile flex
		      interprets '\n' as; in particular, on some DOS
		      systems you must either filter out \r's in the
		      input yourself, or explicitly use	r/\r\n for "r$".

	   <s>r	      an r, but	only in	start condition	s (see
			below for discussion of	start conditions)
	   <s1,s2,s3>r
		      same, but	in any of start	conditions s1,
			s2, or s3
	   <*>r	      an r in any start	condition, even	an exclusive one.

	   <<EOF>>    an end-of-file
	   <s1,s2><<EOF>>
		      an end-of-file when in start condition s1	or s2

       Note that inside	of a character class, all regular expression operators
       lose their special meaning except escape	('\') and the character	 class
       operators, '-', ']', and, at the	beginning of the class,	'^'.

       The  regular  expressions  listed above are grouped according to	prece-
       dence, from highest precedence at the top  to  lowest  at  the  bottom.
       Those grouped together have equal precedence.  For example,

	   foo|bar*

       is the same as

	   (foo)|(ba(r*))

       since  the  '*'	operator has higher precedence than concatenation, and
       concatenation higher than alternation ('|').   This  pattern  therefore
       matches either the string "foo" or the string "ba" followed by zero-or-
       more r's.  To match "foo" or zero-or-more "bar"'s, use:

	   foo|(bar)*

       and to match zero-or-more "foo"'s-or-"bar"'s:

	   (foo|bar)*

       In  addition  to	characters and ranges of characters, character classes
       can also	contain	character class	expressions.   These  are  expressions
       enclosed	 inside	[: and :] delimiters (which themselves must appear be-
       tween the '[' and ']' of	the character class; other elements may	 occur
       inside the character class, too).  The valid expressions	are:

	   [:alnum:] [:alpha:] [:blank:]
	   [:cntrl:] [:digit:] [:graph:]
	   [:lower:] [:print:] [:punct:]
	   [:space:] [:upper:] [:xdigit:]

       These  expressions  all designate a set of characters equivalent	to the
       corresponding standard C	isXXX function.	 For example, [:alnum:]	desig-
       nates those characters for which	isalnum() returns true - i.e., any al-
       phabetic	or numeric.  Some systems don't	provide	isblank(), so flex de-
       fines [:blank:] as a blank or a tab.

       For example, the	following character classes are	all equivalent:

	   [[:alnum:]]
	   [[:alpha:][:digit:]]
	   [[:alpha:]0-9]
	   [a-zA-Z0-9]

       If your scanner is case-insensitive (the	-i flag), then	[:upper:]  and
       [:lower:] are equivalent	to [:alpha:].

       Some notes on patterns:

       -      A	 negated  character  class  such as the	example	"[^A-Z]" above
	      will match a newline unless "\n" (or an  equivalent  escape  se-
	      quence)  is  one	of  the	 characters  explicitly	present	in the
	      negated character	class (e.g., "[^A-Z\n]").  This	is unlike  how
	      many  other  regular  expression	tools  treat negated character
	      classes, but unfortunately the inconsistency is historically en-
	      trenched.	 Matching newlines means that a	pattern	like [^"]* can
	      match the	entire input unless there's another quote in  the  in-
	      put.

       -      A	 rule  can  have at most one instance of trailing context (the
	      '/' operator or the '$' operator).  The  start  condition,  '^',
	      and "<<EOF>>" patterns can only occur at the beginning of	a pat-
	      tern, and, as well as with '/' and '$', cannot be	grouped	inside
	      parentheses.   A	'^' which does not occur at the	beginning of a
	      rule or a	'$' which does not occur at the	end of	a  rule	 loses
	      its special properties and is treated as a normal	character.

	      The following are	illegal:

		  foo/bar$
		  <sc1>foo<sc2>bar

	      Note that	the first of these, can	be written "foo/bar\n".

	      The  following will result in '$'	or '^' being treated as	a nor-
	      mal character:

		  foo|(bar$)
		  foo|^bar

	      If what's	wanted is a "foo" or a bar-followed-by-a-newline,  the
	      following	could be used (the special '|' action is explained be-
	      low):

		  foo	   |
		  bar$	   /* action goes here */

	      A	similar	trick will work	for matching a foo or a	bar-at-the-be-
	      ginning-of-a-line.

HOW THE	INPUT IS MATCHED
       When  the  generated  scanner is	run, it	analyzes its input looking for
       strings which match any of its patterns.	 If it	finds  more  than  one
       match,  it  takes  the one matching the most text (for trailing context
       rules, this includes the	length of the trailing part,  even  though  it
       will  then  be returned to the input).  If it finds two or more matches
       of the same length, the rule listed first in the	 flex  input  file  is
       chosen.

       Once  the  match	 is  determined,  the  text corresponding to the match
       (called the token) is made available in the  global  character  pointer
       yytext, and its length in the global integer yyleng.  The action	corre-
       sponding	 to  the matched pattern is then executed (a more detailed de-
       scription of actions follows), and then the remaining input is  scanned
       for another match.

       If no match is found, then the default rule is executed:	the next char-
       acter  in  the  input  is considered matched and	copied to the standard
       output.	Thus, the simplest legal flex input is:

	   %%

       which generates a scanner that simply copies its	input  (one  character
       at a time) to its output.

       Note  that  yytext  can	be  defined in two different ways: either as a
       character pointer or as a character array.  You can control which defi-
       nition flex uses	by including one of the	special	directives %pointer or
       %array in the first (definitions) section of your flex input.  The  de-
       fault  is  %pointer, unless you use the -l lex compatibility option, in
       which case yytext will be an array.  The	advantage of using %pointer is
       substantially faster scanning and no buffer overflow when matching very
       large tokens (unless you	run out	of dynamic memory).  The  disadvantage
       is  that	 you are restricted in how your	actions	can modify yytext (see
       the next	section), and calls  to	 the  unput()  function	 destroys  the
       present	contents  of  yytext,  which  can  be  a  considerable porting
       headache	when moving between different lex versions.

       The advantage of	%array is that you can	then  modify  yytext  to  your
       heart's	content,  and  calls to	unput()	do not destroy yytext (see be-
       low).  Furthermore, existing lex	programs sometimes access  yytext  ex-
       ternally	using declarations of the form:
	   extern char yytext[];
       This  definition	 is erroneous when used	with %pointer, but correct for
       %array.

       %array defines yytext to	be an array of YYLMAX  characters,  which  de-
       faults to a fairly large	value.	You can	change the size	by simply #de-
       fine'ing	 YYLMAX	to a different value in	the first section of your flex
       input.  As mentioned above, with	%pointer yytext	grows  dynamically  to
       accommodate  large  tokens.  While this means your %pointer scanner can
       accommodate very	large tokens (such as matching entire blocks  of  com-
       ments),	bear  in mind that each	time the scanner must resize yytext it
       also must rescan	the entire token from the beginning, so	matching  such
       tokens can prove	slow.  yytext presently	does not dynamically grow if a
       call  to	unput()	results	in too much text being pushed back; instead, a
       run-time	error results.

       Also note that you cannot use %array with C++ scanner classes (the  c++
       option; see below).

ACTIONS
       Each pattern in a rule has a corresponding action, which	can be any ar-
       bitrary	C statement.  The pattern ends at the first non-escaped	white-
       space character;	the remainder of the line is its action.  If  the  ac-
       tion is empty, then when	the pattern is matched the input token is sim-
       ply  discarded.	 For  example, here is the specification for a program
       which deletes all occurrences of	"zap me" from its input:

	   %%
	   "zap	me"

       (It will	copy all other characters in the input	to  the	 output	 since
       they will be matched by the default rule.)

       Here  is	 a program which compresses multiple blanks and	tabs down to a
       single blank, and throws	away whitespace	found at the end of a line:

	   %%
	   [ \t]+	 putchar( ' ' );
	   [ \t]+$	 /* ignore this	token */

       If the action contains a	'{', then the action spans till	the  balancing
       '}'  is	found,	and  the  action may cross multiple lines.  flex knows
       about C strings and comments and	won't be fooled	by braces found	within
       them, but also allows actions to	begin with %{ and  will	 consider  the
       action  to  be  all  the	text up	to the next %} (regardless of ordinary
       braces inside the action).

       An action consisting solely of a	vertical bar ('|') means "same as  the
       action for the next rule."  See below for an illustration.

       Actions	can  include  arbitrary	C code,	including return statements to
       return a	value to whatever routine called yylex().  Each	 time  yylex()
       is  called  it  continues processing tokens from	where it last left off
       until it	either reaches the end of the file or executes a return.

       Actions are free	to modify yytext except	 for  lengthening  it  (adding
       characters to its end--these will overwrite later characters in the in-
       put  stream).   This  however  does  not	 apply	when using %array (see
       above); in that case, yytext may	be freely modified in any way.

       Actions are free	to modify yyleng except	they should not	do so  if  the
       action also includes use	of yymore() (see below).

       There  are  a number of special directives which	can be included	within
       an action:

       -      ECHO copies yytext to the	scanner's output.

       -      BEGIN followed by	the name of a start condition places the scan-
	      ner in the corresponding start condition (see below).

       -      REJECT directs the scanner to proceed on to  the	"second	 best"
	      rule  which  matched  the	input (or a prefix of the input).  The
	      rule is chosen as	described above	in "How	the Input is Matched",
	      and yytext and yyleng set	up appropriately.  It  may  either  be
	      one which	matched	as much	text as	the originally chosen rule but
	      came  later  in  the  flex input file, or	one which matched less
	      text.  For example, the following	will both count	the  words  in
	      the  input  and  call  the  routine special() whenever "frob" is
	      seen:

			  int word_count = 0;
		  %%

		  frob	      special(); REJECT;
		  [^ \t\n]+   ++word_count;

	      Without the REJECT, any "frob"'s	in  the	 input	would  not  be
	      counted  as  words, since	the scanner normally executes only one
	      action per token.	 Multiple REJECT's are allowed,	each one find-
	      ing the next best	choice to the currently	active rule.  For  ex-
	      ample,  when  the	 following  scanner scans the token "abcd", it
	      will write "abcdabcaba" to the output:

		  %%
		  a	   |
		  ab	   |
		  abc	   |
		  abcd	   ECHO; REJECT;
		  .|\n	   /* eat up any unmatched character */

	      (The first three rules share the fourth's	action since they  use
	      the  special  '|'	 action.)   REJECT is a	particularly expensive
	      feature in terms of scanner performance; if it is	used in	any of
	      the scanner's actions it will slow down  all  of	the  scanner's
	      matching.	  Furthermore,	REJECT	cannot be used with the	-Cf or
	      -CF options (see below).

	      Note also	that unlike the	other special  actions,	 REJECT	 is  a
	      branch;  code immediately	following it in	the action will	not be
	      executed.

       -      yymore() tells the scanner that the next time it matches a rule,
	      the corresponding	token should  be  appended  onto  the  current
	      value  of	 yytext	 rather	than replacing it.  For	example, given
	      the input	"mega-kludge" the  following  will  write  "mega-mega-
	      kludge" to the output:

		  %%
		  mega-	   ECHO; yymore();
		  kludge   ECHO;

	      First  "mega-"  is  matched  and	echoed	to  the	 output.  Then
	      "kludge" is matched, but the previous "mega-" is	still  hanging
	      around  at  the beginning	of yytext so the ECHO for the "kludge"
	      rule will	actually write "mega-kludge".

       Two notes regarding use of yymore().  First, yymore()  depends  on  the
       value  of yyleng	correctly reflecting the size of the current token, so
       you must	not modify yyleng if you  are  using  yymore().	  Second,  the
       presence	 of  yymore()  in the scanner's	action entails a minor perfor-
       mance penalty in	the scanner's matching speed.

       -      yyless(n)	returns	all but	the first n characters of the  current
	      token  back  to  the  input stream, where	they will be rescanned
	      when the scanner looks for the next match.   yytext  and	yyleng
	      are  adjusted appropriately (e.g., yyleng	will now be equal to n
	      ).  For example, on the input "foobar" the following will	 write
	      out "foobarbar":

		  %%
		  foobar    ECHO; yyless(3);
		  [a-z]+    ECHO;

	      An  argument  of 0 to yyless will	cause the entire current input
	      string to	be scanned again.  Unless you've changed how the scan-
	      ner will subsequently process its	input (using BEGIN, for	 exam-
	      ple), this will result in	an endless loop.

       Note  that  yyless  is  a  macro	and can	only be	used in	the flex input
       file, not from other source files.

       -      unput(c) puts the	character c back onto the  input  stream.   It
	      will  be	the next character scanned.  The following action will
	      take the current token and cause it to be	rescanned enclosed  in
	      parentheses.

		  {
		  int i;
		  /* Copy yytext because unput() trashes yytext	*/
		  char *yycopy = strdup( yytext	);
		  unput( ')' );
		  for (	i = yyleng - 1;	i >= 0;	--i )
		      unput( yycopy[i] );
		  unput( '(' );
		  free(	yycopy );
		  }

	      Note  that  since	 each unput() puts the given character back at
	      the beginning of the input stream, pushing back strings must  be
	      done back-to-front.

       An  important  potential	 problem when using unput() is that if you are
       using %pointer (the default), a call to unput() destroys	 the  contents
       of  yytext,  starting  with  its	 rightmost character and devouring one
       character to the	left with each call.  If you need the value of	yytext
       preserved  after	 a call	to unput() (as in the above example), you must
       either first copy it elsewhere, or build	your scanner using %array  in-
       stead (see How The Input	Is Matched).

       Finally,	note that you cannot put back EOF to attempt to	mark the input
       stream with an end-of-file.

       -      input() reads the	next character from the	input stream.  For ex-
	      ample, the following is one way to eat up	C comments:

		  %%
		  "/*"	      {
			      int c;

			      for ( ; ;	)
				  {
				  while	( (c = input())	!= '*' &&
					  c != EOF )
				      ;	   /* eat up text of comment */

				  if ( c == '*'	)
				      {
				      while ( (c = input()) == '*' )
					  ;
				      if ( c ==	'/' )
					  break;    /* found the end */
				      }

				  if ( c == EOF	)
				      {
				      error( "EOF in comment" );
				      break;
				      }
				  }
			      }

	      (Note that if the	scanner	is compiled using C++, then input() is
	      instead referred to as yyinput(),	in order to avoid a name clash
	      with the C++ stream by the name of input.)

       -      YY_FLUSH_BUFFER  flushes	the  scanner's internal	buffer so that
	      the next time the	scanner	attempts to match  a  token,  it  will
	      first  refill the	buffer using YY_INPUT (see The Generated Scan-
	      ner, below).  This action	is a special case of the more  general
	      yy_flush_buffer()	 function, described below in the section Mul-
	      tiple Input Buffers.

       -      yyterminate() can	be used	in lieu	of a return  statement	in  an
	      action.	It terminates the scanner and returns a	0 to the scan-
	      ner's caller, indicating "all done".  By default,	 yyterminate()
	      is  also	called	when  an  end-of-file is encountered.  It is a
	      macro and	may be redefined.

THE GENERATED SCANNER
       The output of flex is the file lex.yy.c,	which  contains	 the  scanning
       routine yylex(),	a number of tables used	by it for matching tokens, and
       a  number of auxiliary routines and macros.  By default,	yylex()	is de-
       clared as follows:

	   int yylex()
	       {
	       ... various definitions and the actions in here ...
	       }

       (If your	environment supports function prototypes, then it will be "int
       yylex( void )".)	 This  definition  may	be  changed  by	 defining  the
       "YY_DECL" macro.	 For example, you could	use:

	   #define YY_DECL float lexscan( a, b ) float a, b;

       to  give	 the scanning routine the name lexscan,	returning a float, and
       taking two floats as arguments.	Note that if you give arguments	to the
       scanning	routine	using a	K&R-style/non-prototyped function declaration,
       you must	terminate the definition with a	semi-colon (;).

       Whenever	yylex()	is called, it scans tokens from	the global input  file
       yyin  (which  defaults to stdin).  It continues until it	either reaches
       an end-of-file (at which	point it returns the value 0) or  one  of  its
       actions executes	a return statement.

       If  the	scanner	reaches	an end-of-file,	subsequent calls are undefined
       unless either yyin is pointed at	a new input file (in which case	 scan-
       ning  continues from that file),	or yyrestart() is called.  yyrestart()
       takes one argument, a FILE * pointer (which can be nil, if  you've  set
       up  YY_INPUT  to	 scan  from a source other than	yyin), and initializes
       yyin for	scanning from that file.  Essentially there is	no  difference
       between just assigning yyin to a	new input file or using	yyrestart() to
       do so; the latter is available for compatibility	with previous versions
       of flex,	and because it can be used to switch input files in the	middle
       of  scanning.   It  can	also  be  used to throw	away the current input
       buffer, by calling it with an argument of yyin; but better  is  to  use
       YY_FLUSH_BUFFER	(see above).  Note that	yyrestart() does not reset the
       start condition to INITIAL (see Start Conditions, below).

       If yylex() stops	scanning due to	executing a return statement in	one of
       the actions, the	scanner	may then be called again and  it  will	resume
       scanning	where it left off.

       By  default  (and  for purposes of efficiency), the scanner uses	block-
       reads rather than simple	getc() calls to	 read  characters  from	 yyin.
       The  nature  of how it gets its input can be controlled by defining the
       YY_INPUT	 macro.	  YY_INPUT's  calling  sequence	 is  "YY_INPUT(buf,re-
       sult,max_size)".	  Its  action is to place up to	max_size characters in
       the character array buf and return in the integer variable  result  ei-
       ther  the  number of characters read or the constant YY_NULL (0 on Unix
       systems)	to indicate EOF.  The default YY_INPUT reads from  the	global
       file-pointer "yyin".

       A  sample definition of YY_INPUT	(in the	definitions section of the in-
       put file):

	   %{
	   #define YY_INPUT(buf,result,max_size) \
	       { \
	       int c = getchar(); \
	       result =	(c == EOF) ? YY_NULL : (buf[0] = c, 1);	\
	       }
	   %}

       This definition will change the input processing	to occur one character
       at a time.

       When the	scanner	receives an end-of-file	indication from	 YY_INPUT,  it
       then  checks  the yywrap() function.  If	yywrap() returns false (zero),
       then it is assumed that the function has	gone ahead and set up yyin  to
       point  to  another  input  file,	and scanning continues.	 If it returns
       true (non-zero),	then  the  scanner  terminates,	 returning  0  to  its
       caller.	 Note  that  in	 either	 case, the start condition remains un-
       changed;	it does	not revert to INITIAL.

       If you do not supply your own version of	yywrap(), then you must	either
       use %option noyywrap (in	which case the scanner behaves as  though  yy-
       wrap()  returned	 1),  or  you must link	with -ll to obtain the default
       version of the routine, which always returns 1.

       Three routines are available for	scanning from in-memory	buffers	rather
       than files: yy_scan_string(),  yy_scan_bytes(),	and  yy_scan_buffer().
       See the discussion of them below	in the section Multiple	Input Buffers.

       The  scanner  writes its	ECHO output to the yyout global	(default, std-
       out), which may be redefined by the user	simply by assigning it to some
       other FILE pointer.

START CONDITIONS
       flex provides a mechanism for conditionally activating rules.  Any rule
       whose pattern is	prefixed with "<sc>" will  only	 be  active  when  the
       scanner is in the start condition named "sc".  For example,

	   <STRING>[^"]*	{ /* eat up the	string body ...	*/
		       ...
		       }

       will  be	 active	 only when the scanner is in the "STRING" start	condi-
       tion, and

	   <INITIAL,STRING,QUOTE>\.	   { /*	handle an escape ... */
		       ...
		       }

       will be active only when	the current start condition  is	 either	 "INI-
       TIAL", "STRING",	or "QUOTE".

       Start conditions	are declared in	the definitions	(first)	section	of the
       input using unindented lines beginning with either %s or	%x followed by
       a  list	of names.  The former declares inclusive start conditions, the
       latter exclusive	start conditions.  A start condition is	activated  us-
       ing  the	 BEGIN action.	Until the next BEGIN action is executed, rules
       with the	given start condition will be  active  and  rules  with	 other
       start  conditions  will	be inactive.  If the start condition is	inclu-
       sive, then rules	with no	start conditions at all	will also  be  active.
       If  it is exclusive, then only rules qualified with the start condition
       will be active.	A set of rules contingent on the same exclusive	 start
       condition  describe  a scanner which is independent of any of the other
       rules in	the flex input.	 Because of this, exclusive  start  conditions
       make  it	easy to	specify	"mini-scanners"	which scan portions of the in-
       put that	are syntactically different from the rest (e.g., comments).

       If the distinction between inclusive and	exclusive start	conditions  is
       still  a	little vague, here's a simple example illustrating the connec-
       tion between the	two.  The set of rules:

	   %s example
	   %%

	   <example>foo	  do_something();

	   bar		  something_else();

       is equivalent to

	   %x example
	   %%

	   <example>foo	  do_something();

	   <INITIAL,example>bar	   something_else();

       Without the <INITIAL,example> qualifier,	the bar	pattern	in the	second
       example	wouldn't be active (i.e., couldn't match) when in start	condi-
       tion example.  If we just used <example>	to qualify bar,	 though,  then
       it  would  only	be  active in example and not in INITIAL, while	in the
       first example it's active in both, because in the first example the ex-
       ample start condition is	an inclusive (%s) start	condition.

       Also note that the special start-condition specifier <*>	matches	 every
       start condition.	 Thus, the above example could also have been written;

	   %x example
	   %%

	   <example>foo	  do_something();

	   <*>bar    something_else();

       The  default  rule  (to ECHO any	unmatched character) remains active in
       start conditions.  It is	equivalent to:

	   <*>.|\n     ECHO;

       BEGIN(0)	returns	to the original	state where only  the  rules  with  no
       start conditions	are active.  This state	can also be referred to	as the
       start-condition "INITIAL", so BEGIN(INITIAL) is equivalent to BEGIN(0).
       (The  parentheses  around the start condition name are not required but
       are considered good style.)

       BEGIN actions can also be given as indented code	at  the	 beginning  of
       the  rules  section.  For example, the following	will cause the scanner
       to enter	the "SPECIAL" start condition whenever yylex() is  called  and
       the global variable enter_special is true:

		   int enter_special;

	   %x SPECIAL
	   %%
		   if (	enter_special )
		       BEGIN(SPECIAL);

	   <SPECIAL>blahblahblah
	   ...more rules follow...

       To  illustrate  the  uses  of start conditions, here is a scanner which
       provides	two different interpretations of a string like "123.456".   By
       default	it  will  treat	 it  as	three tokens, the integer "123", a dot
       ('.'), and the integer "456".  But if the string	is preceded earlier in
       the line	by the string "expect-floats" it will treat it as a single to-
       ken, the	floating-point number 123.456:

	   %{
	   #include <math.h>
	   %}
	   %s expect

	   %%
	   expect-floats	BEGIN(expect);

	   <expect>[0-9]+"."[0-9]+	{
		       printf( "found a	float, = %f\n",
			       atof( yytext ) );
		       }
	   <expect>\n		{
		       /* that's the end of the	line, so
			* we need another "expect-number"
			* before we'll recognize any more
			* numbers
			*/
		       BEGIN(INITIAL);
		       }

	   [0-9]+      {
		       printf( "found an integer, = %d\n",
			       atoi( yytext ) );
		       }

	   "."	       printf( "found a	dot\n" );

       Here is a scanner which recognizes  (and	 discards)  C  comments	 while
       maintaining a count of the current input	line.

	   %x comment
	   %%
		   int line_num	= 1;

	   "/*"		BEGIN(comment);

	   <comment>[^*\n]*	   /* eat anything that's not a	'*' */
	   <comment>"*"+[^*/\n]*   /* eat up '*'s not followed by '/'s */
	   <comment>\n		   ++line_num;
	   <comment>"*"+"/"	   BEGIN(INITIAL);

       This scanner goes to a bit of trouble to	match as much text as possible
       with  each  rule.   In  general,	 when attempting to write a high-speed
       scanner try to match as much possible in	each rule, as it's a big win.

       Note that start-conditions names	are really integer values and  can  be
       stored  as  such.   Thus,  the above could be extended in the following
       fashion:

	   %x comment foo
	   %%
		   int line_num	= 1;
		   int comment_caller;

	   "/*"		{
			comment_caller = INITIAL;
			BEGIN(comment);
			}

	   ...

	   <foo>"/*"	{
			comment_caller = foo;
			BEGIN(comment);
			}

	   <comment>[^*\n]*	   /* eat anything that's not a	'*' */
	   <comment>"*"+[^*/\n]*   /* eat up '*'s not followed by '/'s */
	   <comment>\n		   ++line_num;
	   <comment>"*"+"/"	   BEGIN(comment_caller);

       Furthermore, you	can access the current start condition using the inte-
       ger-valued YY_START macro.  For example,	the above assignments to  com-
       ment_caller could instead be written

	   comment_caller = YY_START;

       Flex  provides  YYSTATE	as an alias for	YY_START (since	that is	what's
       used by AT&T lex).

       Note that start conditions do not have their own	name-space;  %s's  and
       %x's declare names in the same fashion as #define's.

       Finally,	here's an example of how to match C-style quoted strings using
       exclusive  start	 conditions,  including	expanded escape	sequences (but
       not including checking for a string that's too long):

	   %x str

	   %%
		   char	string_buf[MAX_STR_CONST];
		   char	*string_buf_ptr;

	   \"	   string_buf_ptr = string_buf;	BEGIN(str);

	   <str>\"	  { /* saw closing quote - all done */
		   BEGIN(INITIAL);
		   *string_buf_ptr = '\0';
		   /* return string constant token type	and
		    * value to parser
		    */
		   }

	   <str>\n	  {
		   /* error - unterminated string constant */
		   /* generate error message */
		   }

	   <str>\\[0-7]{1,3} {
		   /* octal escape sequence */
		   int result;

		   (void) sscanf( yytext + 1, "%o", &result );

		   if (	result > 0xff )
			   /* error, constant is out-of-bounds */

		   *string_buf_ptr++ = result;
		   }

	   <str>\\[0-9]+ {
		   /* generate error - bad escape sequence; something
		    * like '\48' or '\0777777'
		    */
		   }

	   <str>\\n  *string_buf_ptr++ = '\n';
	   <str>\\t  *string_buf_ptr++ = '\t';
	   <str>\\r  *string_buf_ptr++ = '\r';
	   <str>\\b  *string_buf_ptr++ = '\b';
	   <str>\\f  *string_buf_ptr++ = '\f';

	   <str>\\(.|\n)  *string_buf_ptr++ = yytext[1];

	   <str>[^\\\n\"]+	  {
		   char	*yptr =	yytext;

		   while ( *yptr )
			   *string_buf_ptr++ = *yptr++;
		   }

       Often, such as in some of the examples above, you  wind	up  writing  a
       whole bunch of rules all	preceded by the	same start condition(s).  Flex
       makes this a little easier and cleaner by introducing a notion of start
       condition scope.	 A start condition scope is begun with:

	   <SCs>{

       where  SCs is a list of one or more start conditions.  Inside the start
       condition scope,	every rule automatically has the prefix	<SCs>  applied
       to it, until a '}' which	matches	the initial '{'.  So, for example,

	   <ESC>{
	       "\\n"   return '\n';
	       "\\r"   return '\r';
	       "\\f"   return '\f';
	       "\\0"   return '\0';
	   }

       is equivalent to:

	   <ESC>"\\n"  return '\n';
	   <ESC>"\\r"  return '\r';
	   <ESC>"\\f"  return '\f';
	   <ESC>"\\0"  return '\0';

       Start condition scopes may be nested.

       Three  routines	are  available for manipulating	stacks of start	condi-
       tions:

       void yy_push_state(int new_state)
	      pushes the current start condition onto the  top	of  the	 start
	      condition	stack and switches to new_state	as though you had used
	      BEGIN  new_state (recall that start condition names are also in-
	      tegers).

       void yy_pop_state()
	      pops the top of the stack	and switches to	it via BEGIN.

       int yy_top_state()
	      returns the top of the stack without altering the	 stack's  con-
	      tents.

       The start condition stack grows dynamically and so has no built-in size
       limitation.  If memory is exhausted, program execution aborts.

       To  use	start  condition  stacks,  your	scanner	must include a %option
       stack directive (see Options below).

MULTIPLE INPUT BUFFERS
       Some scanners (such as those which  support  "include"  files)  require
       reading from several input streams.  As flex scanners do	a large	amount
       of buffering, one cannot	control	where the next input will be read from
       by  simply  writing  a YY_INPUT which is	sensitive to the scanning con-
       text.  YY_INPUT is only called when the scanner reaches the end of  its
       buffer,	which may be a long time after scanning	a statement such as an
       "include" which requires	switching the input source.

       To negotiate these sorts	of problems, flex  provides  a	mechanism  for
       creating	and switching between multiple input buffers.  An input	buffer
       is created by using:

	   YY_BUFFER_STATE yy_create_buffer( FILE *file, int size )

       which  takes  a FILE pointer and	a size and creates a buffer associated
       with the	given file and large enough to hold size characters  (when  in
       doubt,  use  YY_BUF_SIZE	 for  the size).  It returns a YY_BUFFER_STATE
       handle, which may then be passed	to other routines  (see	 below).   The
       YY_BUFFER_STATE	type  is a pointer to an opaque	struct yy_buffer_state
       structure, so you may safely initialize	YY_BUFFER_STATE	 variables  to
       ((YY_BUFFER_STATE)  0) if you wish, and also refer to the opaque	struc-
       ture in order to	correctly declare input	buffers	in source files	 other
       than  that  of your scanner.  Note that the FILE	pointer	in the call to
       yy_create_buffer	is only	used as	the value of yyin seen by YY_INPUT; if
       you redefine YY_INPUT so	it no longer uses yyin,	then  you  can	safely
       pass  a	nil FILE pointer to yy_create_buffer.  You select a particular
       buffer to scan from using:

	   void	yy_switch_to_buffer( YY_BUFFER_STATE new_buffer	)

       switches	the scanner's input buffer so subsequent tokens	will come from
       new_buffer.  Note that yy_switch_to_buffer() may	be used	by yywrap() to
       set things up for continued scanning, instead of	opening	a new file and
       pointing	yyin at	it.  Note also that switching input sources via	either
       yy_switch_to_buffer() or	yywrap() does not change the start condition.

	   void	yy_delete_buffer( YY_BUFFER_STATE buffer )

       is used to reclaim the storage associated with a	buffer.	 ( buffer  can
       be  nil,	 in  which case	the routine does nothing.)  You	can also clear
       the current contents of a buffer	using:

	   void	yy_flush_buffer( YY_BUFFER_STATE buffer	)

       This function discards the buffer's contents,  so  the  next  time  the
       scanner	attempts  to match a token from	the buffer, it will first fill
       the buffer anew using YY_INPUT.

       yy_new_buffer() is an alias for yy_create_buffer(), provided  for  com-
       patibility with the C++ use of new and delete for creating and destroy-
       ing dynamic objects.

       Finally,	 the  YY_CURRENT_BUFFER	macro returns a	YY_BUFFER_STATE	handle
       to the current buffer.

       Here is an example of using these features for writing a	scanner	 which
       expands include files (the <<EOF>> feature is discussed below):

	   /* the "incl" state is used for picking up the name
	    * of an include file
	    */
	   %x incl

	   %{
	   #define MAX_INCLUDE_DEPTH 10
	   YY_BUFFER_STATE include_stack[MAX_INCLUDE_DEPTH];
	   int include_stack_ptr = 0;
	   %}

	   %%
	   include	       BEGIN(incl);

	   [a-z]+	       ECHO;
	   [^a-z\n]*\n?	       ECHO;

	   <incl>[ \t]*	     /*	eat the	whitespace */
	   <incl>[^ \t\n]+   { /* got the include file name */
		   if (	include_stack_ptr >= MAX_INCLUDE_DEPTH )
		       {
		       fprintf(	stderr,	"Includes nested too deeply" );
		       exit( 1 );
		       }

		   include_stack[include_stack_ptr++] =
		       YY_CURRENT_BUFFER;

		   yyin	= fopen( yytext, "r" );

		   if (	! yyin )
		       error( ... );

		   yy_switch_to_buffer(
		       yy_create_buffer( yyin, YY_BUF_SIZE ) );

		   BEGIN(INITIAL);
		   }

	   <<EOF>> {
		   if (	--include_stack_ptr < 0	)
		       {
		       yyterminate();
		       }

		   else
		       {
		       yy_delete_buffer( YY_CURRENT_BUFFER );
		       yy_switch_to_buffer(
			    include_stack[include_stack_ptr] );
		       }
		   }

       Three  routines are available for setting up input buffers for scanning
       in-memory strings instead of files.  All	of them	 create	 a  new	 input
       buffer	for   scanning	 the   string,	 and  return  a	 corresponding
       YY_BUFFER_STATE handle (which you should	delete with yy_delete_buffer()
       when done  with	it).   They  also  switch  to  the  new	 buffer	 using
       yy_switch_to_buffer(),  so the next call	to yylex() will	start scanning
       the string.

       yy_scan_string(const char *str)
	      scans a NUL-terminated string.

       yy_scan_bytes(const char	*bytes,	int len)
	      scans len	bytes (including possibly NUL's) starting at  location
	      bytes.

       Note  that both of these	functions create and scan a copy of the	string
       or bytes.  (This	may be desirable, since	yylex()	modifies the  contents
       of the buffer it	is scanning.)  You can avoid the copy by using:

       yy_scan_buffer(char *base, yy_size_t size)
	      which  scans in place the	buffer starting	at base, consisting of
	      size  bytes,   the   last	  two	bytes	of   which   must   be
	      YY_END_OF_BUFFER_CHAR (ASCII NUL).  These	last two bytes are not
	      scanned;	  thus,	  scanning   consists	of   base[0]   through
	      base[size-2], inclusive.

	      If you fail to set up base in this manner	(i.e., forget the  fi-
	      nal  two YY_END_OF_BUFFER_CHAR bytes), then yy_scan_buffer() re-
	      turns a nil pointer instead of creating a	new input buffer.

	      The type yy_size_t is an integral	type to	which you can cast  an
	      integer expression reflecting the	size of	the buffer.

END-OF-FILE RULES
       The special rule	"<<EOF>>" indicates actions which are to be taken when
       an  end-of-file is encountered and yywrap() returns non-zero (i.e., in-
       dicates no further files	to process).  The action must finish by	 doing
       one of four things:

       -      assigning	 yyin  to  a  new  input file (in previous versions of
	      flex, after doing	the assignment you had to call the special ac-
	      tion YY_NEW_FILE;	this is	no longer necessary);

       -      executing	a return statement;

       -      executing	the special yyterminate() action;

       -      or, switching to a new  buffer  using  yy_switch_to_buffer()  as
	      shown in the example above.

       <<EOF>>	rules  may  not	 be used with other patterns; they may only be
       qualified with a	list of	start conditions.  If an  unqualified  <<EOF>>
       rule  is	given, it applies to all start conditions which	do not already
       have <<EOF>> actions.  To specify an <<EOF>> rule for only the  initial
       start condition,	use

	   <INITIAL><<EOF>>

       These  rules are	useful for catching things like	unclosed comments.  An
       example:

	   %x quote
	   %%

	   ...other rules for dealing with quotes...

	   <quote><<EOF>>   {
		    error( "unterminated quote"	);
		    yyterminate();
		    }
	   <<EOF>>  {
		    if ( *++filelist )
			yyin = fopen( *filelist, "r" );
		    else
		       yyterminate();
		    }

MISCELLANEOUS MACROS
       The macro YY_USER_ACTION	can be defined to provide an action  which  is
       always  executed	 prior	to the matched rule's action.  For example, it
       could be	#define'd to call a routine to convert yytext  to  lower-case.
       When YY_USER_ACTION is invoked, the variable yy_act gives the number of
       the  matched  rule  (rules  are numbered	starting with 1).  Suppose you
       want to profile how often each of your rules is matched.	 The following
       would do	the trick:

	   #define YY_USER_ACTION ++ctr[yy_act]

       where ctr is an array to	hold the counts	for the	different rules.  Note
       that the	macro YY_NUM_RULES gives the total number of rules  (including
       the default rule, even if you use -s), so a correct declaration for ctr
       is:

	   int ctr[YY_NUM_RULES];

       The macro YY_USER_INIT may be defined to	provide	an action which	is al-
       ways  executed before the first scan (and before	the scanner's internal
       initializations are done).  For example,	it could be  used  to  call  a
       routine to read in a data table or open a logging file.

       The  macro  yy_set_interactive(is_interactive)  can  be used to control
       whether the current buffer is considered	interactive.   An  interactive
       buffer  is  processed  more slowly, but must be used when the scanner's
       input source is indeed interactive to avoid problems due	to waiting  to
       fill  buffers  (see  the	 discussion of the -I flag below).  A non-zero
       value in	the macro invocation marks the buffer as interactive,  a  zero
       value  as  non-interactive.  Note that use of this macro	overrides %op-
       tion interactive	, %option always-interactive or	%option	never-interac-
       tive (see Options below).  yy_set_interactive() must be	invoked	 prior
       to  beginning  to  scan the buffer that is (or is not) to be considered
       interactive.

       The macro yy_set_bol(at_bol) can	be used	to control whether the current
       buffer's	scanning context for the next token match is done as though at
       the beginning of	a line.	 A non-zero macro  argument  makes  rules  an-
       chored with
	'^' active, while a zero argument makes	'^' rules inactive.

       The  macro  YY_AT_BOL() returns true if the next	token scanned from the
       current buffer will have	'^' rules active, false	otherwise.

       In the generated	scanner, the actions are all  gathered	in  one	 large
       switch  statement and separated using YY_BREAK, which may be redefined.
       By default, it is simply	a "break", to separate each rule's action from
       the following rule's.  Redefining YY_BREAK  allows,  for	 example,  C++
       users  to #define YY_BREAK to do	nothing	(while being very careful that
       every rule ends with a "break" or a "return"!) to avoid suffering  from
       unreachable  statement warnings where because a rule's action ends with
       "return", the YY_BREAK is inaccessible.

VALUES AVAILABLE TO THE	USER
       This section summarizes the various values available to the user	in the
       rule actions.

       -      char *yytext holds the text of the current  token.   It  may  be
	      modified but not lengthened (you cannot append characters	to the
	      end).

	      If  the special directive	%array appears in the first section of
	      the scanner description, then yytext is  instead	declared  char
	      yytext[YYLMAX],  where YYLMAX is a macro definition that you can
	      redefine in the first section if	you  don't  like  the  default
	      value  (generally	8KB).  Using %array results in somewhat	slower
	      scanners,	but the	value of yytext	becomes	immune to calls	to in-
	      put() and	unput(), which potentially destroy its value when  yy-
	      text  is	a  character  pointer.	 The  opposite	of  %array  is
	      %pointer,	which is the default.

	      You cannot use %array when generating C++	scanner	 classes  (the
	      -+ flag).

       -      int yyleng holds the length of the current token.

       -      FILE *yyin is the	file which by default flex reads from.	It may
	      be  redefined  but doing so only makes sense before scanning be-
	      gins or after an EOF has been encountered.  Changing it  in  the
	      midst  of	 scanning  will	 have  unexpected  results  since flex
	      buffers its input; use yyrestart() instead.  Once	scanning  ter-
	      minates  because	an  end-of-file	 has been seen,	you can	assign
	      yyin at the new input file and then call the  scanner  again  to
	      continue scanning.

       -      void  yyrestart( FILE *new_file )	may be called to point yyin at
	      the new input file.  The switch-over to the new file is  immedi-
	      ate (any previously buffered-up input is lost).  Note that call-
	      ing  yyrestart()	with  yyin as an argument thus throws away the
	      current input buffer and continues scanning the same input file.

       -      FILE *yyout is the file to which ECHO actions are	done.  It  can
	      be reassigned by the user.

       -      YY_CURRENT_BUFFER	 returns  a YY_BUFFER_STATE handle to the cur-
	      rent buffer.

       -      YY_START returns an integer value	corresponding to  the  current
	      start condition.	You can	subsequently use this value with BEGIN
	      to return	to that	start condition.

INTERFACING WITH YACC
       One  of the main	uses of	flex is	as a companion to the yacc parser-gen-
       erator.	yacc parsers expect to call a routine named  yylex()  to  find
       the  next  input	 token.	 The routine is	supposed to return the type of
       the next	token as well as putting any associated	value  in  the	global
       yylval.	 To use	flex with yacc,	one specifies the -d option to yacc to
       instruct	it to generate the file	y.tab.h	containing definitions of  all
       the %tokens appearing in	the yacc input.	 This file is then included in
       the  flex  scanner.  For	example, if one	of the tokens is "TOK_NUMBER",
       part of the scanner might look like:

	   %{
	   #include "y.tab.h"
	   %}

	   %%

	   [0-9]+	 yylval	= atoi(	yytext ); return TOK_NUMBER;

OPTIONS
       flex has	the following options:

       -b, --backup
	      Generate backing-up information to lex.backup.  This is  a  list
	      of scanner states	which require backing up and the input charac-
	      ters  on which they do so.  By adding rules one can remove back-
	      ing-up states.  If all backing-up	states are eliminated and  -Cf
	      or  -CF  is used,	the generated scanner will run faster (see the
	      -p flag).	 Only users who	wish to	squeeze	every last  cycle  out
	      of  their	 scanners need worry about this	option.	 (See the sec-
	      tion on Performance Considerations below.)

       -c     is a do-nothing, deprecated option included  for	POSIX  compli-
	      ance.

       -d, --debug
	      makes  the generated scanner run in debug	mode.  Whenever	a pat-
	      tern is recognized and  the  global  yy_flex_debug  is  non-zero
	      (which  is the default), the scanner will	write to stderr	a line
	      of the form:

		  --accepting rule at line 53 ("the matched text")

	      The line number refers to	the location of	the rule in  the  file
	      defining	the  scanner  (i.e.,  the  file	that was fed to	flex).
	      Messages are also	generated when the scanner backs  up,  accepts
	      the  default  rule,  reaches the end of its input	buffer (or en-
	      counters a NUL; at this point, the two look the same as  far  as
	      the scanner's concerned),	or reaches an end-of-file.

       -f, --full
	      specifies	 fast scanner.	No table compression is	done and stdio
	      is bypassed.  The	result is large	 but  fast.   This  option  is
	      equivalent to -Cfr (see below).

       -h, --help
	      generates	 a "help" summary of flex's options to stdout and then
	      exits.  -?  and --help are synonyms for -h.

       -i, --case-insensitive
	      instructs	flex to	generate a case-insensitive scanner.  The case
	      of letters given in the flex input patterns will be ignored, and
	      tokens in	the input will be matched  regardless  of  case.   The
	      matched text given in yytext will	have the preserved case	(i.e.,
	      it will not be folded).

       -l, --lex-compat
	      turns on maximum compatibility with the original AT&T lex	imple-
	      mentation.   Note	 that  this  does not mean full	compatibility.
	      Use of this option costs a considerable amount  of  performance,
	      and  it cannot be	used with the -+, -f, -F, -Cf, or -CF options.
	      For details on the compatibilities it provides, see the  section
	      "Incompatibilities  With Lex And POSIX" below.  This option also
	      results in the name YY_FLEX_LEX_COMPAT being  #define'd  in  the
	      generated	scanner.

       -n     is another do-nothing, deprecated	option included	only for POSIX
	      compliance.

       -p, --perf-report
	      generates	 a  performance	report to stderr.  The report consists
	      of comments regarding features of	the flex input file which will
	      cause a serious loss of performance in  the  resulting  scanner.
	      If you give the flag twice, you will also	get comments regarding
	      features that lead to minor performance losses.

	      Note  that  the  use  of	REJECT,	%option	yylineno, and variable
	      trailing context (see the	Deficiencies / Bugs section below) en-
	      tails a substantial performance penalty; use of yymore(),	the  ^
	      operator,	and the	-I flag	entail minor performance penalties.

       -s, --no-default
	      causes  the default rule (that unmatched scanner input is	echoed
	      to stdout) to be suppressed.  If the  scanner  encounters	 input
	      that  does  not match any	of its rules, it aborts	with an	error.
	      This option is useful for	finding	holes in a scanner's rule set.

       -t, --stdout
	      instructs	flex to	write the scanner  it  generates  to  standard
	      output instead of	lex.yy.c.

       -v, --verbose
	      specifies	 that flex should write	to stderr a summary of statis-
	      tics regarding the scanner it generates.	Most of	the statistics
	      are meaningless to the casual flex  user,	 but  the  first  line
	      identifies the version of	flex (same as reported by -V), and the
	      next  line the flags used	when generating	the scanner, including
	      those that are on	by default.

       -w, --nowarn
	      suppresses warning messages.

       -B, --batch
	      instructs	flex to	generate a batch scanner, the opposite of  in-
	      teractive	scanners generated by -I (see below).  In general, you
	      use -B when you are certain that your scanner will never be used
	      interactively, and you want to squeeze a little more performance
	      out  of  it.   If	your goal is instead to	squeeze	out a lot more
	      performance, you should be using the -Cf or  -CF	options	 (dis-
	      cussed below), which turn	on -B automatically anyway.

       -F, --fast
	      specifies	 that  the fast	scanner	table representation should be
	      used (and	stdio bypassed).  This representation is about as fast
	      as the full table	representation (-f), and for some sets of pat-
	      terns will be considerably smaller (and for others, larger).  In
	      general, if the pattern  set  contains  both  "keywords"	and  a
	      catch-all, "identifier" rule, such as in the set:

		  "case"    return TOK_CASE;
		  "switch"  return TOK_SWITCH;
		  ...
		  "default" return TOK_DEFAULT;
		  [a-z]+    return TOK_ID;

	      then  you're better off using the	full table representation.  If
	      only the "identifier" rule is present and	you then  use  a  hash
	      table or some such to detect the keywords, you're	better off us-
	      ing -F.

	      This  option  is	equivalent  to -CFr (see below).  It cannot be
	      used with	-+.

       -I, --interactive
	      instructs	flex to	generate an interactive	scanner.  An  interac-
	      tive  scanner  is	one that only looks ahead to decide what token
	      has been matched if it absolutely	must.  It turns	out  that  al-
	      ways  looking one	extra character	ahead, even if the scanner has
	      already seen enough text to disambiguate the current token, is a
	      bit faster than only looking ahead when necessary.  But scanners
	      that always look ahead give  dreadful  interactive  performance;
	      for  example,  when a user types a newline, it is	not recognized
	      as a newline token until they enter another token,  which	 often
	      means typing in another whole line.

	      Flex  scanners  default to interactive unless you	use the	-Cf or
	      -CF table-compression options (see below).   That's  because  if
	      you're  looking  for high-performance you	should be using	one of
	      these options, so	if you didn't, flex assumes you'd rather trade
	      off a bit	of run-time performance	for intuitive interactive  be-
	      havior.	Note  also  that you cannot use	-I in conjunction with
	      -Cf or -CF.  Thus, this option is	not really needed; it is on by
	      default for all those cases in which it is allowed.

	      Note that	if isatty() returns false for the scanner input,  flex
	      will  revert  to batch mode, even	if -I was specified.  To force
	      interactive mode no matter what, use %option  always-interactive
	      (see Options below).

	      You  can	force a	scanner	to not be interactive by using -B (see
	      above).

       -L, --noline
	      instructs	flex not to generate #line directives.	 Without  this
	      option, flex peppers the generated scanner with #line directives
	      so  error	messages in the	actions	will be	correctly located with
	      respect to either	the original flex input	file  (if  the	errors
	      are  due	to code	in the input file), or lex.yy.c	(if the	errors
	      are flex's fault -- you should report these sorts	of  errors  to
	      the email	address	given below).

       -T, --trace
	      makes  flex  run	in trace mode.	It will	generate a lot of mes-
	      sages to stderr concerning the form of the input and the	resul-
	      tant  non-deterministic and deterministic	finite automata.  This
	      option is	mostly for use in maintaining flex.

       -V, --version
	      prints the version number	to stdout and exits.  --version	 is  a
	      synonym for -V.

       -7, --7bit
	      instructs	 flex to generate a 7-bit scanner, i.e., one which can
	      only recognize 7-bit characters in its input.  The advantage  of
	      using -7 is that the scanner's tables can	be up to half the size
	      of  those	generated using	the -8 option (see below).  The	disad-
	      vantage is that such scanners often hang or crash	if their input
	      contains an 8-bit	character.

	      Note, however, that unless you generate your scanner  using  the
	      -Cf or -CF table compression options, use	of -7 will save	only a
	      small  amount of table space, and	make your scanner considerably
	      less portable.  Flex's default behavior is to generate an	 8-bit
	      scanner  unless  you  use	the -Cf	or -CF,	in which case flex de-
	      faults to	generating 7-bit scanners unless your site was	always
	      configured to generate 8-bit scanners (as	will often be the case
	      with  non-USA  sites).   You  can	 tell whether flex generated a
	      7-bit or an 8-bit	scanner	by inspecting the flag summary in  the
	      -v output	as described above.

	      Note  that  if you use -Cfe or -CFe (those table compression op-
	      tions, but also using equivalence	classes	as discussed  see  be-
	      low),  flex still	defaults to generating an 8-bit	scanner, since
	      usually with these compression options full 8-bit	tables are not
	      much more	expensive than 7-bit tables.

       -8, --8bit
	      instructs	flex to	generate an 8-bit scanner, i.e., one which can
	      recognize	8-bit characters.  This	flag is	only needed for	 scan-
	      ners  generated  using -Cf or -CF, as otherwise flex defaults to
	      generating an 8-bit scanner anyway.

	      See the discussion of -7 above for flex's	default	 behavior  and
	      the tradeoffs between 7-bit and 8-bit scanners.

       -+, --c++
	      specifies	 that  you  want flex to generate a C++	scanner	class.
	      See the section on Generating C++	Scanners below for details.

       -C[aefFmr]
	      controls the degree of table compression	and,  more  generally,
	      trade-offs between small scanners	and fast scanners.

	      -Ca, --align ("align") instructs flex to trade off larger	tables
	      in the generated scanner for faster performance because the ele-
	      ments  of	 the  tables  are better aligned for memory access and
	      computation.  On some RISC architectures,	fetching  and  manipu-
	      lating longwords is more efficient than with smaller-sized units
	      such  as shortwords.  This option	can double the size of the ta-
	      bles used	by your	scanner.

	      -Ce, --ecs directs flex to construct equivalence classes,	 i.e.,
	      sets  of characters which	have identical lexical properties (for
	      example, if the only appearance of digits	in the flex  input  is
	      in  the  character  class	"[0-9]"	then the digits	'0', '1', ...,
	      '9' will all be put in the same equivalence class).  Equivalence
	      classes usually give dramatic reductions in the final  table/ob-
	      ject file	sizes (typically a factor of 2-5) and are pretty cheap
	      performance-wise (one array look-up per character	scanned).

	      -Cf specifies that the full scanner tables should	be generated -
	      flex should not compress the tables by taking advantages of sim-
	      ilar transition functions	for different states.

	      -CF  specifies  that the alternative fast	scanner	representation
	      (described above under the -F flag) should be used.  This	option
	      cannot be	used with -+.

	      -Cm,  --meta-ecs	directs	 flex  to  construct  meta-equivalence
	      classes,	which  are sets	of equivalence classes (or characters,
	      if equivalence classes are not being  used)  that	 are  commonly
	      used  together.	Meta-equivalence  classes  are often a big win
	      when using compressed tables, but	they have a  moderate  perfor-
	      mance  impact  (one  or two "if" tests and one array look-up per
	      character	scanned).

	      -Cr, --read causes the generated scanner to bypass  use  of  the
	      standard	I/O  library  (stdio)  for  input.  Instead of calling
	      fread() or getc(), the scanner will use the read() system	 call,
	      resulting	in a performance gain which varies from	system to sys-
	      tem,  but	 in general is probably	negligible unless you are also
	      using -Cf	or -CF.	 Using -Cr can cause strange behavior if,  for
	      example,	you  read  from	 yyin using stdio prior	to calling the
	      scanner (because the scanner will	miss whatever text your	previ-
	      ous reads	left in	the stdio input	buffer).

	      -Cr has no effect	if you	define	YY_INPUT  (see	The  Generated
	      Scanner above).

	      A	lone -C	specifies that the scanner tables should be compressed
	      but  neither  equivalence	 classes  nor meta-equivalence classes
	      should be	used.

	      The options -Cf or -CF and -Cm do	 not  make  sense  together  -
	      there  is	no opportunity for meta-equivalence classes if the ta-
	      ble is not being	compressed.   Otherwise	 the  options  may  be
	      freely mixed, and	are cumulative.

	      The  default  setting  is	-Cem, which specifies that flex	should
	      generate equivalence classes and meta-equivalence	classes.  This
	      setting provides the highest degree of table  compression.   You
	      can  trade  off  faster-executing	scanners at the	cost of	larger
	      tables with the following	generally being	true:

		  slowest & smallest
			-Cem
			-Cm
			-Ce
			-C
			-C{f,F}e
			-C{f,F}
			-C{f,F}a
		  fastest & largest

	      Note that	scanners with the smallest tables are  usually	gener-
	      ated  and	 compiled the quickest,	so during development you will
	      usually want to use the default, maximal compression.

	      -Cfe is often a good compromise between speed and	size for  pro-
	      duction scanners.

       -ooutput, --outputfile=FILE
	      directs  flex to write the scanner to the	file output instead of
	      lex.yy.c.	 If you	combine	-o with	the -t option, then the	 scan-
	      ner  is  written	to stdout but its #line	directives (see	the -L
	      option above) refer to the file output.

       -Pprefix, --prefix=STRING
	      changes the default yy prefix used by flex for all globally-vis-
	      ible variable and	function names to instead be prefix.  For  ex-
	      ample,  -Pfoo  changes  the  name	of yytext to footext.  It also
	      changes the name of the default output  file  from  lex.yy.c  to
	      lex.foo.c.  Here are all of the names affected:

		  yy_create_buffer
		  yy_delete_buffer
		  yy_flex_debug
		  yy_init_buffer
		  yy_flush_buffer
		  yy_load_buffer_state
		  yy_switch_to_buffer
		  yyin
		  yyleng
		  yylex
		  yylineno
		  yyout
		  yyrestart
		  yytext
		  yywrap

	      (If   you	 are  using  a	C++  scanner,  then  only  yywrap  and
	      yyFlexLexer are affected.)  Within your scanner itself, you  can
	      still  refer  to the global variables and	functions using	either
	      version of their name; but externally, they  have	 the  modified
	      name.

	      This option lets you easily link together	multiple flex programs
	      into  the	same executable.  Note,	though,	that using this	option
	      also renames yywrap(), so	you now	must either provide  your  own
	      (appropriately-named)  version  of the routine for your scanner,
	      or use %option noyywrap, as linking with -ll no longer  provides
	      one for you by default.

       -Sskeleton_file,	--skel=FILE
	      overrides	 the  default skeleton file from which flex constructs
	      its scanners.  You'll never need this option unless you are  do-
	      ing flex maintenance or development.

       -X, --posix-compat
	      maximal compatibility with POSIX lex.

       --yylineno
	      track line count in yylineno.

       --yyclass=NAME
	      name of C++ class.

       --header-file=FILE
	      create a C header	file in	addition to the	scanner.

       --tables-file[=FILE]
	      write tables to FILE.

       -Dmacro[=defn]
	      #define macro defn (default defn is '1').

       -R, --reentrant
	      generate a reentrant C scanner

       --bison-bridge
	      scanner for bison	pure parser.

       --bison-locations
	      include yylloc support.

       --stdinit
	      initialize yyin/yyout to stdin/stdout.

       --noansi-definitions old-style function definitions.

       --noansi-prototypes
	      empty parameter list in prototypes.

       --nounistd
	      do not include <unistd.h>.

       --noFUNCTION
	      do not generate a	particular FUNCTION.

       flex also provides a mechanism for controlling options within the scan-
       ner specification itself, rather	than from the flex command-line.  This
       is  done	 by  including	%option	directives in the first	section	of the
       scanner specification.  You can specify multiple	options	with a	single
       %option directive, and multiple directives in the first section of your
       flex input file.

       Most options are	given simply as	names, optionally preceded by the word
       "no"  (with no intervening whitespace) to negate	their meaning.	A num-
       ber are equivalent to flex flags	or their negation:

	   7bit		   -7 option
	   8bit		   -8 option
	   align	   -Ca option
	   backup	   -b option
	   batch	   -B option
	   c++		   -+ option

	   caseful or
	   case-sensitive  opposite of -i (default)

	   case-insensitive or
	   caseless	   -i option

	   debug	   -d option
	   default	   opposite of -s option
	   ecs		   -Ce option
	   fast		   -F option
	   full		   -f option
	   interactive	   -I option
	   lex-compat	   -l option
	   meta-ecs	   -Cm option
	   perf-report	   -p option
	   read		   -Cr option
	   stdout	   -t option
	   verbose	   -v option
	   warn		   opposite of -w option
			   (use	"%option nowarn" for -w)

	   array	   equivalent to "%array"
	   pointer	   equivalent to "%pointer" (default)

       Some %option's provide features otherwise not available:

       always-interactive
	      instructs	flex to	generate a scanner which always	considers  its
	      input "interactive".  Normally, on each new input	file the scan-
	      ner  calls isatty() in an	attempt	to determine whether the scan-
	      ner's input source is interactive	and  thus  should  be  read  a
	      character	at a time.  When this option is	used, however, then no
	      such call	is made.

       main   directs  flex  to	provide	a default main() program for the scan-
	      ner, which simply	calls yylex().	This option  implies  noyywrap
	      (see below).

       never-interactive
	      instructs	 flex  to generate a scanner which never considers its
	      input "interactive" (again, no call made to isatty()).  This  is
	      the opposite of always-interactive.

       stack  enables  the use of start	condition stacks (see Start Conditions
	      above).

       stdinit
	      if set (i.e., %option stdinit) initializes  yyin	and  yyout  to
	      stdin  and stdout, instead of the	default	of nil.	 Some existing
	      lex programs depend on this behavior, even though	it is not com-
	      pliant with ANSI C, which	does not require stdin and  stdout  to
	      be compile-time constant.

       yylineno
	      directs  flex to generate	a scanner that maintains the number of
	      the current line read from its input in the global variable  yy-
	      lineno.  This option is implied by %option lex-compat.

       yywrap if  unset	 (i.e.,	 %option noyywrap), makes the scanner not call
	      yywrap() upon an end-of-file, but	simply assume that  there  are
	      no  more files to	scan (until the	user points yyin at a new file
	      and calls	yylex()	again).

       flex scans your rule actions to determine whether you use the REJECT or
       yymore()	features.  The reject and  yymore  options  are	 available  to
       override	its decision as	to whether you use the options,	either by set-
       ting  them  (e.g.,  %option  reject)  to	indicate the feature is	indeed
       used, or	unsetting them to indicate it actually is not used (e.g., %op-
       tion noyymore).

       Three options take string-delimited values, offset with '=':

	   %option outfile="ABC"

       is equivalent to	-oABC, and

	   %option prefix="XYZ"

       is equivalent to	-PXYZ.	Finally,

	   %option yyclass="foo"

       only applies when generating a C++ scanner ( -+	option).   It  informs
       flex  that  you	have derived foo as a subclass of yyFlexLexer, so flex
       will place your actions in the member function foo::yylex() instead  of
       yyFlexLexer::yylex().   It also generates a yyFlexLexer::yylex()	member
       function	that emits a run-time error (by	 invoking  yyFlexLexer::Lexer-
       Error())	if called.  See	Generating C++ Scanners, below,	for additional
       information.

       A number	of options are available for lint purists who want to suppress
       the  appearance of unneeded routines in the generated scanner.  Each of
       the following, if unset (e.g., %option nounput ), results in the	corre-
       sponding	routine	not appearing in the generated scanner:

	   input, unput
	   yy_push_state, yy_pop_state,	yy_top_state
	   yy_scan_buffer, yy_scan_bytes, yy_scan_string

       (though yy_push_state() and friends won't appear	anyway unless you  use
       %option stack).

PERFORMANCE CONSIDERATIONS
       The main	design goal of flex is that it generate	high-performance scan-
       ners.  It has been optimized for	dealing	well with large	sets of	rules.
       Aside from the effects on scanner speed of the table compression	-C op-
       tions  outlined	above, there are a number of options/actions which de-
       grade performance.  These are, from most	expensive to least:

	   REJECT
	   %option yylineno
	   arbitrary trailing context

	   pattern sets	that require backing up
	   %array
	   %option interactive
	   %option always-interactive

	   '^' beginning-of-line operator
	   yymore()

       with the	first three all	being quite expensive and the last  two	 being
       quite  cheap.   Note also that unput() is implemented as	a routine call
       that potentially	does quite a bit of work, while	yyless() is  a	quite-
       cheap  macro; so	if just	putting	back some excess text you scanned, use
       yyless().

       REJECT should be	avoided	at all costs when  performance	is  important.
       It is a particularly expensive option.

       Getting	rid of backing up is messy and often may be an enormous	amount
       of work for a complicated scanner.  In principal, one begins  by	 using
       the -b flag to generate a lex.backup file.  For example,	on the input

	   %%
	   foo	      return TOK_KEYWORD;
	   foobar     return TOK_KEYWORD;

       the file	looks like:

	   State #6 is non-accepting -
	    associated rule line numbers:
		  2	  3
	    out-transitions: [ o ]
	    jam-transitions: EOF [ \001-n  p-\177 ]

	   State #8 is non-accepting -
	    associated rule line numbers:
		  3
	    out-transitions: [ a ]
	    jam-transitions: EOF [ \001-`  b-\177 ]

	   State #9 is non-accepting -
	    associated rule line numbers:
		  3
	    out-transitions: [ r ]
	    jam-transitions: EOF [ \001-q  s-\177 ]

	   Compressed tables always back up.

       The  first  few	lines tell us that there's a scanner state in which it
       can make	a transition on	an 'o' but not on  any	other  character,  and
       that  in	that state the currently scanned text does not match any rule.
       The state occurs	when trying to match the rules found at	lines 2	and  3
       in  the	input  file.   If  the scanner is in that state	and then reads
       something other than an 'o', it will have to back up  to	 find  a  rule
       which  is  matched.  With a bit of headscratching one can see that this
       must be the state it's in when it has seen "fo".	 When  this  has  hap-
       pened,  if  anything  other  than another 'o' is	seen, the scanner will
       have to back up to simply match the 'f' (by the default rule).

       The comment regarding State #8 indicates	there's	a problem when	"foob"
       has  been  scanned.   Indeed,  on  any character	other than an 'a', the
       scanner will have to back up to accept "foo".  Similarly,  the  comment
       for State #9 concerns when "fooba" has been scanned and an 'r' does not
       follow.

       The  final  comment  reminds  us	that there's no	point going to all the
       trouble of removing backing up from the rules unless we're using	-Cf or
       -CF, since there's no performance gain doing so with  compressed	 scan-
       ners.

       The way to remove the backing up	is to add "error" rules:

	   %%
	   foo	       return TOK_KEYWORD;
	   foobar      return TOK_KEYWORD;

	   fooba       |
	   foob	       |
	   fo	       {
		       /* false	alarm, not really a keyword */
		       return TOK_ID;
		       }

       Eliminating  backing up among a list of keywords	can also be done using
       a "catch-all" rule:

	   %%
	   foo	       return TOK_KEYWORD;
	   foobar      return TOK_KEYWORD;

	   [a-z]+      return TOK_ID;

       This is usually the best	solution when appropriate.

       Backing up messages tend	to cascade.  With a complicated	set  of	 rules
       it's  not  uncommon  to	get hundreds of	messages.  If one can decipher
       them, though, it	often only takes a dozen or so rules to	eliminate  the
       backing	up  (though it's easy to make a	mistake	and have an error rule
       accidentally match a valid token.  A possible future flex feature  will
       be to automatically add rules to	eliminate backing up).

       It's  important to keep in mind that you	gain the benefits of eliminat-
       ing backing up only if you eliminate  every  instance  of  backing  up.
       Leaving just one	means you gain nothing.

       Variable	trailing context (where	both the leading and trailing parts do
       not  have  a  fixed length) entails almost the same performance loss as
       REJECT (i.e., substantial).  So when possible a rule like:

	   %%
	   mouse|rat/(cat|dog)	 run();

       is better written:

	   %%
	   mouse/cat|dog	 run();
	   rat/cat|dog		 run();

       or as

	   %%
	   mouse|rat/cat	 run();
	   mouse|rat/dog	 run();

       Note that here the special '|' action does not provide any savings, and
       can even	make things worse (see Deficiencies / Bugs below).

       Another area where the user can increase	a scanner's  performance  (and
       one  that's  easier  to implement) arises from the fact that the	longer
       the tokens matched, the faster the scanner will run.  This  is  because
       with long tokens	the processing of most input characters	takes place in
       the  (short) inner scanning loop, and does not often have to go through
       the additional work of setting up the scanning environment  (e.g.,  yy-
       text) for the action.  Recall the scanner for C comments:

	   %x comment
	   %%
		   int line_num	= 1;

	   "/*"		BEGIN(comment);

	   <comment>[^*\n]*
	   <comment>"*"+[^*/\n]*
	   <comment>\n		   ++line_num;
	   <comment>"*"+"/"	   BEGIN(INITIAL);

       This could be sped up by	writing	it as:

	   %x comment
	   %%
		   int line_num	= 1;

	   "/*"		BEGIN(comment);

	   <comment>[^*\n]*
	   <comment>[^*\n]*\n	   ++line_num;
	   <comment>"*"+[^*/\n]*
	   <comment>"*"+[^*/\n]*\n ++line_num;
	   <comment>"*"+"/"	   BEGIN(INITIAL);

       Now instead of each newline requiring the processing of another action,
       recognizing  the	newlines is "distributed" over the other rules to keep
       the matched text	as long	as possible.  Note that	adding rules does  not
       slow  down the scanner!	The speed of the scanner is independent	of the
       number of rules or (modulo the considerations given at the beginning of
       this section) how complicated the rules are with	 regard	 to  operators
       such as '*' and '|'.

       A  final	 example  in  speeding	up a scanner: suppose you want to scan
       through a file containing identifiers and keywords, one	per  line  and
       with no other extraneous	characters, and	recognize all the keywords.  A
       natural first approach is:

	   %%
	   asm	    |
	   auto	    |
	   break    |
	   ... etc ...
	   volatile |
	   while    /* it's a keyword */

	   .|\n	    /* it's not	a keyword */

       To eliminate the	back-tracking, introduce a catch-all rule:

	   %%
	   asm	    |
	   auto	    |
	   break    |
	   ... etc ...
	   volatile |
	   while    /* it's a keyword */

	   [a-z]+   |
	   .|\n	    /* it's not	a keyword */

       Now, if it's guaranteed that there's exactly one	word per line, then we
       can  reduce  the	 total	number	of matches by a	half by	merging	in the
       recognition of newlines with that of the	other tokens:

	   %%
	   asm\n    |
	   auto\n   |
	   break\n  |
	   ... etc ...
	   volatile\n |
	   while\n  /* it's a keyword */

	   [a-z]+\n |
	   .|\n	    /* it's not	a keyword */

       One has to be careful here, as we have now reintroduced backing up into
       the scanner.  In	particular, while we know that there will never	be any
       characters in the input stream other than  letters  or  newlines,  flex
       can't figure this out, and it will plan for possibly needing to back up
       when  it	has scanned a token like "auto"	and then the next character is
       something other than a newline or a letter.  Previously it  would  then
       just  match the "auto" rule and be done,	but now	it has no "auto" rule,
       only an "auto\n"	rule.  To eliminate the	possibility of backing up,  we
       could  either duplicate all rules but without final newlines, or, since
       we never	expect to encounter such an input and therefore	don't how it's
       classified, we can introduce one	more catch-all rule,  this  one	 which
       doesn't include a newline:

	   %%
	   asm\n    |
	   auto\n   |
	   break\n  |
	   ... etc ...
	   volatile\n |
	   while\n  /* it's a keyword */

	   [a-z]+\n |
	   [a-z]+   |
	   .|\n	    /* it's not	a keyword */

       Compiled	 with -Cf, this	is about as fast as one	can get	a flex scanner
       to go for this particular problem.

       A final note: flex is slow when matching	NUL's, particularly when a to-
       ken contains multiple NUL's.  It's best	to  write  rules  which	 match
       short  amounts of text if it's anticipated that the text	will often in-
       clude NUL's.

       Another final note regarding performance: as  mentioned	above  in  the
       section How the Input is	Matched, dynamically resizing yytext to	accom-
       modate huge tokens is a slow process because it presently requires that
       the  (huge) token be rescanned from the beginning.  Thus	if performance
       is vital, you should attempt to match "large" quantities	 of  text  but
       not  "huge" quantities, where the cutoff	between	the two	is at about 8K
       characters/token.

GENERATING C++ SCANNERS
       flex provides two different ways	to generate scanners for use with C++.
       The first way is	to simply compile a scanner generated by flex using  a
       C++  compiler  instead  of  a C compiler.  You should not encounter any
       compilations errors (please report any you find to  the	email  address
       given  in the Author section below).  You can then use C++ code in your
       rule actions instead of C code.	Note that the default input source for
       your scanner remains yyin, and default echoing is still done to	yyout.
       Both of these remain FILE * variables and not C++ streams.

       You can also use	flex to	generate a C++ scanner class, using the	-+ op-
       tion  (or, equivalently,	%option	c++), which is automatically specified
       if the name of the flex executable ends in a '+', such as flex++.  When
       using this option, flex defaults	to generating the scanner to the  file
       lex.yy.cc  instead  of  lex.yy.c.   The	generated scanner includes the
       header file  FlexLexer.h,  which	 defines  the  interface  to  two  C++
       classes.

       The  first  class,  FlexLexer, provides an abstract base	class defining
       the general scanner class interface.  It	provides the following	member
       functions:

       const char* YYText()
	      returns the text of the most recently matched token, the equiva-
	      lent of yytext.

       int YYLeng()
	      returns  the  length  of	the  most  recently matched token, the
	      equivalent of yyleng.

       int lineno() const
	      returns the current input	line number (see %option yylineno), or
	      1	if %option yylineno was	not used.

       void set_debug( int flag	)
	      sets the debugging flag for the scanner, equivalent to assigning
	      to yy_flex_debug (see the	Options	section	above).	 Note that you
	      must build the scanner using %option debug to include  debugging
	      information in it.

       int debug() const
	      returns the current setting of the debugging flag.

       Also provided are member	functions equivalent to	yy_switch_to_buffer(),
       yy_create_buffer()  (though  the	first argument is an std::istream* ob-
       ject pointer and	not a FILE*),  yy_flush_buffer(),  yy_delete_buffer(),
       and  yyrestart()	 (again,  the first argument is	a std::istream*	object
       pointer).

       The second class	defined	in FlexLexer.h is yyFlexLexer,	which  is  de-
       rived from FlexLexer.  It defines the following additional member func-
       tions:

       yyFlexLexer( std::istream* arg_yyin = 0,	std::ostream* arg_yyout	= 0 )
	      constructs  a yyFlexLexer	object using the given streams for in-
	      put and output.  If not specified, the streams  default  to  cin
	      and cout,	respectively.

       virtual int yylex()
	      performs	the  same role is yylex() does for ordinary flex scan-
	      ners: it scans the  input	 stream,  consuming  tokens,  until  a
	      rule's  action returns a value.  If you derive a subclass	S from
	      yyFlexLexer and want to access the member	 functions  and	 vari-
	      ables  of	 S  inside  yylex(),  then you need to use %option yy-
	      class="S"	to inform flex that you	will be	 using	that  subclass
	      instead  of  yyFlexLexer.	  In this case,	rather than generating
	      yyFlexLexer::yylex(), flex generates S::yylex() (and also	gener-
	      ates a dummy yyFlexLexer::yylex()	that calls yyFlexLexer::Lexer-
	      Error() if called).

       virtual void switch_streams(std::istream* new_in	= 0,
	      std::ostream* new_out = 0) reassigns yyin	to new_in (if non-nil)
	      and yyout	to new_out (ditto), deleting the previous input	buffer
	      if yyin is reassigned.

       int yylex( std::istream*	new_in,	std::ostream* new_out =	0 )
	      first switches the input	streams	 via  switch_streams(  new_in,
	      new_out )	and then returns the value of yylex().

       In  addition, yyFlexLexer defines the following protected virtual func-
       tions which you can redefine in derived classes to tailor the scanner:

       virtual int LexerInput( char* buf, int max_size )
	      reads up to max_size characters into buf and returns the	number
	      of  characters read.  To indicate	end-of-input, return 0 charac-
	      ters.  Note that "interactive"  scanners	(see  the  -B  and  -I
	      flags)  define  the  macro YY_INTERACTIVE.  If you redefine Lex-
	      erInput()	and  need  to  take  different	actions	 depending  on
	      whether  or not the scanner might	be scanning an interactive in-
	      put source, you can test for  the	 presence  of  this  name  via
	      #ifdef.

       virtual void LexerOutput( const char* buf, int size )
	      writes  out  size	 characters  from the buffer buf, which, while
	      NUL-terminated, may also contain "internal" NUL's	if  the	 scan-
	      ner's rules can match text with NUL's in them.

       virtual void LexerError(	const char* msg	)
	      reports  a  fatal	 error	message.   The default version of this
	      function writes the message to the stream	cerr and exits.

       Note that a yyFlexLexer object  contains	 its  entire  scanning	state.
       Thus  you  can  use such	objects	to create reentrant scanners.  You can
       instantiate multiple instances of the same yyFlexLexer class,  and  you
       can also	combine	multiple C++ scanner classes together in the same pro-
       gram using the -P option	discussed above.

       Finally,	 note  that the	%array feature is not available	to C++ scanner
       classes;	you must use %pointer (the default).

       Here is an example of a simple C++ scanner:

	       // An example of	using the flex C++ scanner class.

	   %{
	   int mylineno	= 0;
	   %}

	   string  \"[^\n"]+\"

	   ws	   [ \t]+

	   alpha   [A-Za-z]
	   dig	   [0-9]
	   name	   ({alpha}|{dig}|\$)({alpha}|{dig}|[_.\-/$])*
	   num1	   [-+]?{dig}+\.?([eE][-+]?{dig}+)?
	   num2	   [-+]?{dig}*\.{dig}+([eE][-+]?{dig}+)?
	   number  {num1}|{num2}

	   %%

	   {ws}	   /* skip blanks and tabs */

	   "/*"	   {
		   int c;

		   while((c = yyinput()) != 0)
		       {
		       if(c == '\n')
			   ++mylineno;

		       else if(c == '*')
			   {
			   if((c = yyinput()) == '/')
			       break;
			   else
			       unput(c);
			   }
		       }
		   }

	   {number}  cout << "number " << YYText() << '\n';

	   \n	     mylineno++;

	   {name}    cout << "name " <<	YYText() << '\n';

	   {string}  cout << "string " << YYText() << '\n';

	   %%

	   int main( int /* argc */, char** /* argv */ )
	       {
	       FlexLexer* lexer	= new yyFlexLexer;
	       while(lexer->yylex() != 0)
		   ;
	       return 0;
	       }
       If you want to create multiple (different) lexer	classes, you  use  the
       -P  flag	 (or  the  prefix=  option) to rename each yyFlexLexer to some
       other xxFlexLexer.  You then can	include	<FlexLexer.h>  in  your	 other
       sources once per	lexer class, first renaming yyFlexLexer	as follows:

	   #undef yyFlexLexer
	   #define yyFlexLexer xxFlexLexer
	   #include <FlexLexer.h>

	   #undef yyFlexLexer
	   #define yyFlexLexer zzFlexLexer
	   #include <FlexLexer.h>

       if,  for	example, you used %option prefix="xx" for one of your scanners
       and %option prefix="zz" for the other.

       IMPORTANT: the present form of the scanning class is  experimental  and
       may change considerably between major releases.

INCOMPATIBILITIES WITH LEX AND POSIX
       flex is a rewrite of the	AT&T Unix lex tool (the	two implementations do
       not  share  any	code, though), with some extensions and	incompatibili-
       ties, both of which are of concern to those who wish to write  scanners
       acceptable  to either implementation.  Flex is fully compliant with the
       POSIX lex specification,	except that when using %pointer	(the default),
       a call to unput() destroys the contents of yytext, which	is counter  to
       the POSIX specification.

       In  this	 section  we discuss all of the	known areas of incompatibility
       between flex, AT&T lex, and the POSIX specification.

       flex's -l option	turns on maximum compatibility with the	original  AT&T
       lex  implementation, at the cost	of a major loss	in the generated scan-
       ner's performance.  We note below which incompatibilities can be	 over-
       come using the -l option.

       flex is fully compatible	with lex with the following exceptions:

       -      The  undocumented	 lex scanner internal variable yylineno	is not
	      supported	unless -l or %option yylineno is used.

	      yylineno should be maintained on a per-buffer basis, rather than
	      a	per-scanner (single global variable) basis.

	      yylineno is not part of the POSIX	specification.

       -      The input() routine is not redefinable, though it	may be	called
	      to  read	characters  following  whatever	 has been matched by a
	      rule.  If	input()	encounters an end-of-file the normal  yywrap()
	      processing  is  done.  A ``real''	end-of-file is returned	by in-
	      put() as EOF.

	      Input is instead controlled by defining the YY_INPUT macro.

	      The flex restriction that	input()	cannot be redefined is in  ac-
	      cordance	with  the  POSIX  specification, which simply does not
	      specify any way of controlling the scanner's input other than by
	      making an	initial	assignment to yyin.

       -      The unput() routine is not redefinable.  This restriction	is  in
	      accordance with POSIX.

       -      flex scanners are	not as reentrant as lex	scanners.  In particu-
	      lar, if you have an interactive scanner and an interrupt handler
	      which  long-jumps	 out of	the scanner, and the scanner is	subse-
	      quently called again, you	may get	the following message:

		  fatal	flex scanner internal error--end of buffer missed

	      To reenter the scanner, first use

		  yyrestart( yyin );

	      Note that	this call will throw away any buffered input;  usually
	      this isn't a problem with	an interactive scanner.

	      Also note	that flex C++ scanner classes are reentrant, so	if us-
	      ing  C++ is an option for	you, you should	use them instead.  See
	      "Generating C++ Scanners"	above for details.

       -      output() is not supported.  Output from the ECHO macro  is  done
	      to the file-pointer yyout	(default stdout).

	      output() is not part of the POSIX	specification.

       -      lex  does	 not  support  exclusive start conditions (%x),	though
	      they are in the POSIX specification.

       -      When definitions are expanded, flex encloses them	 in  parenthe-
	      ses.  With lex, the following:

		  NAME	  [A-Z][A-Z0-9]*
		  %%
		  foo{NAME}?	  printf( "Found it\n" );
		  %%

	      will  not	 match	the string "foo" because when the macro	is ex-
	      panded the rule is equivalent to "foo[A-Z][A-Z0-9]*?"   and  the
	      precedence  is such that the '?' is associated with "[A-Z0-9]*".
	      With flex, the rule will be expanded  to	"foo([A-Z][A-Z0-9]*)?"
	      and so the string	"foo" will match.

	      Note that	if the definition begins with ^	or ends	with $ then it
	      is  not  expanded	 with parentheses, to allow these operators to
	      appear in	definitions without  losing  their  special  meanings.
	      But  the	<s>, /,	and <<EOF>> operators cannot be	used in	a flex
	      definition.

	      Using -l results in the lex behavior of  no  parentheses	around
	      the definition.

	      The  POSIX  specification	 is that the definition	be enclosed in
	      parentheses.

       -      Some implementations of lex allow	a rule's action	to begin on  a
	      separate line, if	the rule's pattern has trailing	whitespace:

		  %%
		  foo|bar<space	here>
		    { foobar_action(); }

	      flex does	not support this feature.

       -      The  lex %r (generate a Ratfor scanner) option is	not supported.
	      It is not	part of	the POSIX specification.

       -      After a call to unput(), yytext is undefined until the next  to-
	      ken is matched, unless the scanner was built using %array.  This
	      is not the case with lex or the POSIX specification.  The	-l op-
	      tion does	away with this incompatibility.

       -      The  precedence of the {}	(numeric range)	operator is different.
	      lex interprets "abc{1,3}"	as "match one, two,  or	 three	occur-
	      rences of	'abc'",	whereas	flex interprets	it as "match 'ab' fol-
	      lowed  by	one, two, or three occurrences of 'c'".	 The latter is
	      in agreement with	the POSIX specification.

       -      The precedence of	the ^ operator is different.   lex  interprets
	      "^foo|bar" as "match either 'foo'	at the beginning of a line, or
	      'bar'  anywhere",	 whereas  flex	interprets it as "match	either
	      'foo' or 'bar' if	they come at the beginning of  a  line".   The
	      latter is	in agreement with the POSIX specification.

       -      The  special table-size declarations such	as %a supported	by lex
	      are not required by flex scanners; flex ignores them.

       -      The name FLEX_SCANNER is #define'd so scanners  may  be  written
	      for  use	with  either  flex  or	lex.   Scanners	 also  include
	      YY_FLEX_MAJOR_VERSION and	YY_FLEX_MINOR_VERSION indicating which
	      version of flex generated	the scanner (for example, for the  2.5
	      release, these defines would be 2	and 5 respectively).

       The following flex features are not included in lex or the POSIX	speci-
       fication:

	   C++ scanners
	   %option
	   start condition scopes
	   start condition stacks
	   interactive/non-interactive scanners
	   yy_scan_string() and	friends
	   yyterminate()
	   yy_set_interactive()
	   yy_set_bol()
	   YY_AT_BOL()
	   <<EOF>>
	   <*>
	   YY_DECL
	   YY_START
	   YY_USER_ACTION
	   YY_USER_INIT
	   #line directives
	   %{}'s around	actions
	   multiple actions on a line

       plus almost all of the flex flags.  The last feature in the list	refers
       to  the	fact  that  with flex you can put multiple actions on the same
       line, separated with semi-colons, while with lex, the following

	   foo	  handle_foo();	++num_foos_seen;

       is (rather surprisingly)	truncated to

	   foo	  handle_foo();

       flex does not truncate the action.  Actions that	are  not  enclosed  in
       braces are simply terminated at the end of the line.

DIAGNOSTICS
       warning,	rule cannot be matched indicates that the given	rule cannot be
       matched	because	it follows other rules that will always	match the same
       text as it.  For	example, in the	following "foo"	cannot be matched  be-
       cause it	comes after an identifier "catch-all" rule:

	   [a-z]+    got_identifier();
	   foo	     got_foo();

       Using REJECT in a scanner suppresses this warning.

       warning,	 -s option given but default rule can be matched means that it
       is possible (perhaps only in a particular start condition) that the de-
       fault rule (match any single character) is the only one that will match
       a particular input.  Since -s was given,	presumably  this  is  not  in-
       tended.

       reject_used_but_not_detected  undefined or yymore_used_but_not_detected
       undefined - These errors	can occur at compile time.  They indicate that
       the scanner uses	REJECT or yymore() but that flex failed	to notice  the
       fact,  meaning that flex	scanned	the first two sections looking for oc-
       currences of these actions and failed to	 find  any,  but  somehow  you
       snuck  some  in (via a #include file, for example).  Use	%option	reject
       or %option yymore to indicate to	flex that you really do	use these fea-
       tures.

       flex scanner jammed - a scanner compiled	with -s	has encountered	an in-
       put string which	wasn't matched by any of its rules.   This  error  can
       also occur due to internal problems.

       token  too  large, exceeds YYLMAX - your	scanner	uses %array and	one of
       its rules matched a string longer than the YYLMAX constant (8K bytes by
       default).  You can increase the value by	#define'ing YYLMAX in the def-
       initions	section	of your	flex input.

       scanner requires	-8 flag	to use the character 'x' - Your	scanner	speci-
       fication	includes recognizing the 8-bit character 'x' and you  did  not
       specify	the  -8	 flag, and your	scanner	defaulted to 7-bit because you
       used the	-Cf or -CF table compression options.  See the	discussion  of
       the -7 flag for details.

       flex scanner push-back overflow - you used unput() to push back so much
       text that the scanner's buffer could not	hold both the pushed-back text
       and  the	 current  token	in yytext.  Ideally the	scanner	should dynami-
       cally resize the	buffer in this case, but at present it does not.

       input buffer overflow, can't enlarge buffer because scanner uses	REJECT
       - the scanner was working on matching  an  extremely  large  token  and
       needed  to  expand  the	input buffer.  This doesn't work with scanners
       that use	REJECT.

       fatal flex scanner internal error--end of buffer	missed - This can  oc-
       cur  in	a  scanner which is reentered after a long-jump	has jumped out
       (or over) the scanner's activation frame.  Before reentering the	 scan-
       ner, use:

	   yyrestart( yyin );

       or, as noted above, switch to using the C++ scanner class.

       too many	start conditions in <> construct! - you	listed more start con-
       ditions	in a <>	construct than exist (so you must have listed at least
       one of them twice).

FILES
       -ll    library with which scanners must be linked.

       lex.yy.c
	      generated	scanner	(called	lexyy.c	on some	systems).

       lex.yy.cc
	      generated	C++ scanner class, when	using -+.

       <FlexLexer.h>
	      header file defining the C++ scanner base	class, FlexLexer,  and
	      its derived class, yyFlexLexer.

       flex.skl
	      skeleton	scanner.   This	 file is only used when	building flex,
	      not when flex executes.

       lex.backup
	      backing-up information for -b flag (called lex.bck on some  sys-
	      tems).

DEFICIENCIES / BUGS
       Some  trailing context patterns cannot be properly matched and generate
       warning messages	("dangerous trailing context").	  These	 are  patterns
       where the ending	of the first part of the rule matches the beginning of
       the  second  part, such as "zx*/xy*", where the 'x*' matches the	'x' at
       the beginning of	the trailing context.	(Note  that  the  POSIX	 draft
       states that the text matched by such patterns is	undefined.)

       For  some trailing context rules, parts which are actually fixed-length
       are not recognized as such, leading to the above	mentioned  performance
       loss.  In particular, parts using '|' or	{n} (such as "foo{3}") are al-
       ways considered variable-length.

       Combining  trailing  context  with the special '|' action can result in
       fixed trailing context being turned into	the  more  expensive  variable
       trailing	context.  For example, in the following:

	   %%
	   abc	    |
	   xyz/def

       Use  of unput() invalidates yytext and yyleng, unless the %array	direc-
       tive or the -l option has been used.

       Pattern-matching	of NUL's is substantially slower than  matching	 other
       characters.

       Dynamic	resizing of the	input buffer is	slow, as it entails rescanning
       all the text matched so far by the current (generally huge) token.

       Due to both buffering of	input  and  read-ahead,	 you  cannot  intermix
       calls to	<stdio.h> routines, such as, for example, getchar(), with flex
       rules and expect	it to work.  Call input() instead.

       The  total  table  entries listed by the	-v flag	excludes the number of
       table entries needed to determine what rule has been matched.  The num-
       ber of entries is equal to the number of	DFA states if the scanner does
       not use REJECT, and somewhat greater than the number of	states	if  it
       does.

       REJECT cannot be	used with the -f or -F options.

       The flex	internal algorithms need documentation.

SEE ALSO
       lex(1), yacc(1),	sed(1),	awk(1).

       John Levine, Tony Mason,	and Doug Brown,	Lex & Yacc, O'Reilly and Asso-
       ciates.	Be sure	to get the 2nd edition.

       M. E. Lesk and E. Schmidt, LEX -	Lexical	Analyzer Generator

       Alfred Aho, Ravi	Sethi and Jeffrey Ullman, Compilers: Principles, Tech-
       niques  and Tools, Addison-Wesley (1986).  Describes the	pattern-match-
       ing techniques used by flex (deterministic finite automata).

AUTHOR
       Vern Paxson, with the help of many ideas	and much inspiration from  Van
       Jacobson.  Original version by Jef Poskanzer.  The fast table represen-
       tation  is  a  partial implementation of	a design done by Van Jacobson.
       The implementation was done by Kevin Gong and Vern Paxson.

       Thanks to the many flex beta-testers,  feedbackers,  and	 contributors,
       especially Francois Pinard, Casey Leedom, Robert	Abramovitz, Stan Ader-
       mann, Terry Allen, David	Barker-Plummer,	John Basrai, Neal Becker, Nel-
       son H.F.	Beebe, benson@odi.com, Karl Berry, Peter A. Bigot, Simon Blan-
       chard,  Keith  Bostic,  Frederic	 Brehm,	 Ian  Brockbank, Kin Cho, Nick
       Christopher, Brian Clapper, J.T.	Conklin,  Jason	 Coughlin,  Bill  Cox,
       Nick  Cropper,  Dave  Curtis,  Scott David Daniels, Chris G. Demetriou,
       Theo de Raadt, Mike Donahue, Chuck Doucette, Tom	 Epperly,  Leo	Eskin,
       Chris  Faylor,  Chris Flatters, Jon Forrest, Jeffrey Friedl, Joe	Gayda,
       Kaveh R.	Ghazi, Wolfgang	Glunz, Eric Goldman, Christopher M. Gould, Ul-
       rich Grepel, Peer Griebel, Jan Hajic,  Charles  Hemphill,  NORO	Hideo,
       Jarkko  Hietaniemi, Scott Hofmann, Jeff Honig, Dana Hudes, Eric Hughes,
       John Interrante,	Ceriel Jacobs, Michal  Jaegermann,  Sakari  Jalovaara,
       Jeffrey R. Jones, Henry Juengst,	Klaus Kaempf, Jonathan I. Kamens, Ter-
       rence  O	 Kane,	Amir  Katz,  ken@ken.hilco.com,	 Kevin B. Kenny, Steve
       Kirsch, Winfried	Koenig,	Marq Kole, Ronald Lamprecht, Greg  Lee,	 Rohan
       Lenard,	Craig  Leres,  John Levine, Steve Liddle, David	Loffredo, Mike
       Long, Mohamed  el  Lozy,	 Brian	Madsen,	 Malte,	 Joe  Marshall,	 Bengt
       Martensson,  Chris  Metcalf,  Luke  Mewburn, Jim	Meyering, R. Alexander
       Milowski, Erik Naggum, G.T. Nicol,  Landon  Noll,  James	 Nordby,  Marc
       Nozell, Richard Ohnemus,	Karsten	Pahnke,	Sven Panne, Roland Pesch, Wal-
       ter  Pelissero, Gaumond Pierre, Esmond Pitt, Jef	Poskanzer, Joe Rahmeh,
       Jarmo Raiha, Frederic Raimbault,	Pat  Rankin,  Rick  Richardson,	 Kevin
       Rodgers,	Kai Uwe	Rommel,	Jim Roskind, Alberto Santini, Andreas Scherer,
       Darrell	Schiebel,  Raf Schietekat, Doug	Schmidt, Philippe Schnoebelen,
       Andreas Schwab, Larry Schwimmer,	Alex Siegel, Eckehard Stolz,  Jan-Erik
       Strvmquist,  Mike  Stump,  Paul Stuart, Dave Tallman, Ian Lance Taylor,
       Chris Thewalt, Richard M. Timoney, Jodi Tsai, Paul Tuinenga, Gary Weik,
       Frank Whaley, Gerhard Wilhelms, Kent Williams,  Ken  Yap,  Ron  Zellar,
       Nathan  Zelle,  David  Zuhn, and	those whose names have slipped my mar-
       ginal mail-archiving skills but whose contributions are appreciated all
       the same.

       Thanks to Keith Bostic, Jon Forrest, Noah Friedman, John	Gilmore, Craig
       Leres, John Levine, Bob Mulcahy,	G.T.   Nicol,  Francois	 Pinard,  Rich
       Salz,   and   Richard  Stallman	for  help  with	 various  distribution
       headaches.

       Thanks to Esmond	Pitt and Earle Horton for 8-bit	character support;  to
       Benson  Margulies  and Fred Burke for C++ support; to Kent Williams and
       Tom Epperly for C++ class support; to Ove Ewerlid for support of	NUL's;
       and to Eric Hughes for support of multiple buffers.

       This work was primarily done when I was	with  the  Real	 Time  Systems
       Group at	the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory in Berkeley, CA.  Many	thanks
       to all there for	the support I received.

       Send comments to	vern@ee.lbl.gov.

Version	2.6.4			  May 6, 2017			       FLEX(1)

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