1textutil(n)       Text and string utilities, macro processing      textutil(n)
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3
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5______________________________________________________________________________
6

NAME

8       textutil - Procedures to manipulate texts and strings.
9

SYNOPSIS

11       package require Tcl  8.2
12
13       package require textutil  ?0.7.1?
14
15       ::textutil::adjust string args
16
17       ::textutil::adjust::readPatterns filename
18
19       ::textutil::adjust::listPredefined
20
21       ::textutil::adjust::getPredefined filename
22
23       ::textutil::indent string prefix ?skip?
24
25       ::textutil::undent string
26
27       ::textutil::splitn string ?len?
28
29       ::textutil::splitx string ?regexp?
30
31       ::textutil::tabify string ?num?
32
33       ::textutil::tabify2 string ?num?
34
35       ::textutil::trim string ?regexp?
36
37       ::textutil::trimleft string ?regexp?
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39       ::textutil::trimright string ?regexp?
40
41       ::textutil::trimPrefix string prefix
42
43       ::textutil::trimEmptyHeading string
44
45       ::textutil::untabify string ?num?
46
47       ::textutil::untabify2 string ?num?
48
49       ::textutil::strRepeat text num
50
51       ::textutil::blank num
52
53       ::textutil::chop string
54
55       ::textutil::tail string
56
57       ::textutil::cap string
58
59       ::textutil::uncap string
60
61       ::textutil::longestCommonPrefixList list
62
63       ::textutil::longestCommonPrefix ?string...?
64
65_________________________________________________________________
66

DESCRIPTION

68       The package textutil provides commands that manipulate strings or texts
69       (a.k.a. long strings or string with embedded newlines  or  paragraphs).
70       It is actually a bundle providing the commands of the six packages
71
72       textutil::adjust
73
74       textutil::repeat
75
76       textutil::split
77
78       textutil::string
79
80       textutil::tabify
81
82       textutil::trim
83
84       in the namespace textutil.
85
86       The bundle is deprecated, and it will be removed in a future release of
87       Tcllib, after the next release. It is recommended to use  the  relevant
88       sub  packages instead for whatever functionality is needed by the using
89       package or application.
90
91       The complete set of procedures is described below.
92
93       ::textutil::adjust string args
94              Do a justification on the string according to args.  The  string
95              is  taken as one big paragraph, ignoring any newlines.  Then the
96              line is formatted according to the options used, and the command
97              return  a new string with enough lines to contain all the print‐
98              able chars in the input string. A line is a set of chars between
99              the  beginning  of  the  string and a newline, or between 2 new‐
100              lines, or between a newline and the end of the  string.  If  the
101              input  string is small enough, the returned string won't contain
102              any newlines.
103
104              Together with ::textutil::indent it is possible to create  prop‐
105              erly wrapped paragraphs with arbitrary indentations.
106
107              By  default,  any  occurrence of spaces characters or tabulation
108              are replaced by a single space so each word in a line  is  sepa‐
109              rated  from  the  next  one  by exactly one space char, and this
110              forms a real line. Each real line is placed in a  logical  line,
111              which  have  exactly  a given length (see -length option below).
112              The real line may have a lesser length. Again  by  default,  any
113              trailing  spaces  are  ignored  before returning the string (see
114              -full option below). The following options may be used after the
115              string  parameter,  and  change the way the command place a real
116              line in a logical line.
117
118              -full boolean
119                     If set to false, any trailing  space  chars  are  deleted
120                     before returning the string. If set to true, any trailing
121                     space chars are left in the string. Default to false.
122
123              -hyphenate boolean
124                     if set to false, no hyphenation will be done. If  set  to
125                     true,  the last word of a line is tried to be hyphenated.
126                     Defaults to false. Note:  hyphenation  patterns  must  be
127                     loaded prior, using the command ::textutil::adjust::read‐
128                     Patterns.
129
130              -justify center|left|plain|right
131                     Set the justification of the returned string  to  center,
132                     left, plain or right. By default, it is set to left.  The
133                     justification means that any line in the returned  string
134                     but  the last one is build according to the value. If the
135                     justification is set to plain and the number of printable
136                     chars  in the last line is less than 90% of the length of
137                     a line (see -length), then this line  is  justified  with
138                     the  left value, avoiding the expansion of this line when
139                     it is too small. The meaning of each value is:
140
141                     center The real line is centered in the logical line.  If
142                            needed, a set of space characters are added at the
143                            beginning (half of the needed set) and at the  end
144                            (half  of  the needed set) of the line if required
145                            (see the option -full).
146
147                     left   The real line is set on the left  of  the  logical
148                            line.  It  means  that there are no space chars at
149                            the beginning  of  this  line.  If  required,  all
150                            needed  space  chars  are  added at the end of the
151                            line (see the option -full).
152
153                     plain  The real line is exactly set in the logical  line.
154                            It  means  that  there  are no leading or trailing
155                            space chars. All the needed space chars are  added
156                            in the real line, between 2 (or more) words.
157
158                     right  The  real  line is set on the right of the logical
159                            line. It means that there are no  space  chars  at
160                            the  end of this line, and there may be some space
161                            chars at  the  beginning,  despite  of  the  -full
162                            option.
163
164              -length integer
165                     Set the length of the logical line in the string to inte‐
166                     ger.  integer must be a positive integer value.  Defaults
167                     to 72.
168
169              -strictlength boolean
170                     If  set to false, a line can exceed the specified -length
171                     if a single word is longer than -length. If set to  true,
172                     words  that  are longer than -length are split so that no
173                     line exceeds the specified -length. Defaults to false.
174
175       ::textutil::adjust::readPatterns filename
176              Loads the internal storage for  hyphenation  patterns  with  the
177              contents  of  the  file  filename.  This has to be done prior to
178              calling command ::textutil::adjust with  "-hyphenate  true",  or
179              the hyphenation process will not work correctly.
180
181              The package comes with a number of predefined pattern files, and
182              the command ::textutil::adjust::listPredefined can  be  used  to
183              find out their names.
184
185       ::textutil::adjust::listPredefined
186              This  command returns a list containing the names of the hyphen‐
187              ation files coming with this package.
188
189       ::textutil::adjust::getPredefined filename
190              Use this command to query the package for the full path name  of
191              the  hyphenation file filename coming with the package. Only the
192              filenames   found   in   the   list   returned    by    ::textu‐
193              til::adjust::listPredefined  are  legal  arguments for this com‐
194              mand.
195
196       ::textutil::indent string prefix ?skip?
197              Each line in the string indented by adding the string prefix  at
198              its  beginning. The modified string is returned as the result of
199              the command.
200
201              If skip is specified the first skip lines  are  left  untouched.
202              The  default  for  skip  is  0,  causing the modification of all
203              lines. Negative values for skip are treated  like  0.  In  other
204              words, skip > 0 creates a hanging indentation.
205
206              Together  with ::textutil::adjust it is possible to create prop‐
207              erly wrapped paragraphs with arbitrary indentations.
208
209       ::textutil::undent string
210              The command computes the common prefix for all lines  in  string
211              consisting solely out of whitespace, removes this from each line
212              and returns the modified string.
213
214              Lines containing only whitespace  are  always  reduced  to  com‐
215              pletely  empty lines. They and empty lines are also ignored when
216              computing the prefix to remove.
217
218              Together with ::textutil::adjust it is possible to create  prop‐
219              erly wrapped paragraphs with arbitrary indentations.
220
221       ::textutil::splitn string ?len?
222              This  command splits the given string into chunks of len charac‐
223              ters and returns a list containing these  chunks.  The  argument
224              len defaults to 1 if none is specified. A negative length is not
225              allowed and will cause the command to throw an error.  Providing
226              an  empty  string  as  input  is  allowed, the command will then
227              return an empty list. If the length of  the  string  is  not  an
228              entire  multiple of the chunk length, then the last chunk in the
229              generated list will be shorter than len.
230
231       ::textutil::splitx string ?regexp?
232              Split the string and return a list. The string is split  accord‐
233              ing to the regular expression regexp instead of a simple list of
234              chars. Note that if you add parenthesis  into  the  regexp,  the
235              parentheses  part of separator would be added into list as addi‐
236              tional element. If the string is empty the result is  the  empty
237              list,  like for split. If regexp is empty the string is split at
238              every character, like split does.  The regular expression regexp
239              defaults to "[\\t \\r\\n]+".
240
241       ::textutil::tabify string ?num?
242              Tabify  the string by replacing any substring of num space chars
243              by a tabulation and return the  result  as  a  new  string.  num
244              defaults to 8.
245
246       ::textutil::tabify2 string ?num?
247              Similar  to  ::textutil::tabify this command tabifies the string
248              and returns the result as a new string. A different algorithm is
249              used  however.  Instead of replacing any substring of num spaces
250              this command works more like an editor. num defaults to 8.
251
252              Each line of the text in string is treated as if there are  tab‐
253              stops every num columns. Only sequences of space characters con‐
254              taining more than one  space  character  and  found  immediately
255              before a tabstop are replaced with tabs.
256
257       ::textutil::trim string ?regexp?
258              Remove in string any leading and trailing substring according to
259              the regular expression regexp and return the  result  as  a  new
260              string.   This apply on any line in the string, that is any sub‐
261              string between 2 newline chars, or between the beginning of  the
262              string  and  a  newline, or between a newline and the end of the
263              string, or, if the string contain no newline, between the begin‐
264              ning  and  the end of the string.  The regular expression regexp
265              defaults to "[ \\t]+".
266
267       ::textutil::trimleft string ?regexp?
268              Remove in string any leading substring according to the  regular
269              expression  regexp  and  return the result as a new string. This
270              apply on any line in the string, that is any substring between 2
271              newline chars, or between the beginning of the string and a new‐
272              line, or between a newline and the end of the string, or, if the
273              string  contain no newline, between the beginning and the end of
274              the string.   The  regular  expression  regexp  defaults  to  "[
275              \\t]+".
276
277       ::textutil::trimright string ?regexp?
278              Remove in string any trailing substring according to the regular
279              expression regexp and return the result as a  new  string.  This
280              apply on any line in the string, that is any substring between 2
281              newline chars, or between the beginning of the string and a new‐
282              line, or between a newline and the end of the string, or, if the
283              string contain no newline, between the beginning and the end  of
284              the  string.   The  regular  expression  regexp  defaults  to "[
285              \\t]+".
286
287       ::textutil::trimPrefix string prefix
288              Removes the prefix from the beginning of string and returns  the
289              result.  The  string is left unchanged if it doesn't have prefix
290              at its beginning.
291
292       ::textutil::trimEmptyHeading string
293              Looks for empty lines (including lines consisting of only white‐
294              space)  at the beginning of the string and removes it. The modi‐
295              fied string is returned as the result of the command.
296
297       ::textutil::untabify string ?num?
298              Untabify the string by replacing any tabulation char by  a  sub‐
299              string of num space chars and return the result as a new string.
300              num defaults to 8.
301
302       ::textutil::untabify2 string ?num?
303              Untabify the string by replacing any tabulation char by  a  sub‐
304              string of at most num space chars and return the result as a new
305              string. Unlike textutil::untabify each tab is not replaced by  a
306              fixed  number  of  space  characters.  The command overlays each
307              line in the string with tabstops every num columns  instead  and
308              replaces  tabs  with  just  enough space characters to reach the
309              next tabstop. This is the complement of  the  actions  taken  by
310              ::textutil::tabify2. num defaults to 8.
311
312              There is one asymmetry though: A tab can be replaced with a sin‐
313              gle space, but not the other way around.
314
315       ::textutil::strRepeat text num
316              The implementation depends on the core  executing  the  package.
317              Used  string  repeat if it is present, or a fast tcl implementa‐
318              tion if it is not. Returns a string containing the text repeated
319              num times. The repetitions are joined without characters between
320              them. A value of num <= 0 causes the command to return an  empty
321              string.
322
323       ::textutil::blank num
324              A convenience command. Returns a string of num spaces.
325
326       ::textutil::chop string
327              A  convenience command. Removes the last character of string and
328              returns the shortened string.
329
330       ::textutil::tail string
331              A convenience command. Removes the first character of string and
332              returns the shortened string.
333
334       ::textutil::cap string
335              Capitalizes  the first character of string and returns the modi‐
336              fied string.
337
338       ::textutil::uncap string
339              The complementary operation to ::textutil::cap. Forces the first
340              character  of  string  to  lower  case  and returns the modified
341              string.
342
343       ::textutil::longestCommonPrefixList list
344
345       ::textutil::longestCommonPrefix ?string...?
346              Computes the longest common prefix for either the strings  given
347              to the command, or the strings specified in the single list, and
348              returns it as the result of the command.
349
350              If no strings were specified the result is the empty string.  If
351              only one string was specified, the string itself is returned, as
352              it is its own longest common prefix.
353

BUGS, IDEAS, FEEDBACK

355       This document, and the package it describes, will  undoubtedly  contain
356       bugs  and  other problems.  Please report such in the category textutil
357       of       the       Tcllib       SF       Trackers       [http://source
358       forge.net/tracker/?group_id=12883].   Please  also report any ideas for
359       enhancements you may have for either package and/or documentation.
360

SEE ALSO

362       regexp(n), split(n), string(n)
363

KEYWORDS

365       TeX, formatting, hyphenation, indenting, paragraph, regular expression,
366       string, trimming
367
368
369
370textutil                             0.7.1                         textutil(n)
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