bitmatch 1.3 (Default branch)


 
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Old 05-25-2008
bitmatch 1.3 (Default branch)

Bitmatch is a powerful language extension for OCaml which adds native parsing of arbitrary bitstrings, in the style of Erlang. Bitmatch can be used to parse and generate binary file formats and binary protocols. License: GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) Changes:
Many examples have been added, including a tcpdump file printer and GIF and ELF header display.Image

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OCAMLLEX(1)						      General Commands Manual						       OCAMLLEX(1)

NAME
ocamllex - The OCaml lexer generator SYNOPSIS
ocamllex [ -o output-file ] [ -ml ] filename.mll DESCRIPTION
The ocamllex(1) command generates OCaml lexers from a set of regular expressions with associated semantic actions, in the style of lex(1). Running ocamllex(1) on the input file lexer.mll produces OCaml code for a lexical analyzer in file lexer.ml. This file defines one lexing function per entry point in the lexer definition. These functions have the same names as the entry points. Lexing functions take as argument a lexer buffer, and return the semantic attribute of the corresponding entry point. Lexer buffers are an abstract data type implemented in the standard library module Lexing. The functions Lexing.from_channel, Lex- ing.from_string and Lexing.from_function create lexer buffers that read from an input channel, a character string, or any reading function, respectively. When used in conjunction with a parser generated by ocamlyacc(1), the semantic actions compute a value belonging to the type token defined by the generated parsing module. OPTIONS
The ocamllex(1) command recognizes the following options: -ml Output code that does not use OCaml's built-in automata interpreter. Instead, the automaton is encoded by OCaml functions. This option is mainly useful for debugging ocamllex(1), using it for production lexers is not recommended. -o output-file Specify the name of the output file produced by ocamllex(1). The default is the input file name, with its extension replaced by .ml. -q Quiet mode. ocamllex(1) normally outputs informational messages to standard output. They are suppressed if option -q is used. -v or -version Print version string and exit. -vnum Print short version number and exit. -help or --help Display a short usage summary and exit. SEE ALSO
ocamlyacc(1). The OCaml user's manual, chapter "Lexer and parser generators". OCAMLLEX(1)