1CTWILL(1) General Commands Manual CTWILL(1)
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6 ctwill, ctwill-refsort, ctwill-twinx – translate CWEB to TeX
7 with mini-indexes per spread or per section
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10 ctwill [options] webfile[.w] [{changefile[.ch]|-} [outfile[.tex]]]
11 ctwill-refsort < indexfile.ref > indexfile.sref
12 ctwill-twinx outfile.tex [outfile.tex ...] > index.tex
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15 The ctwill program converts a CWEB source document into a TeX file that
16 may be formatted and printed in the usual way. It takes appropriate
17 care of typographic details like page layout and the use of indenta‐
18 tion, italics, boldface, etc., and it supplies extensive cross-index
19 information that it gathers automatically.
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21 CWEB allows you to prepare a single document containing all the infor‐
22 mation that is needed both to produce a compilable C/C++ program and to
23 produce a well-formatted document describing the program in as much de‐
24 tail as the writer may desire. The user of CWEB ought to be familiar
25 with TeX as well as C/C++.
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28 The command line should have one, two, or three names on it. The first
29 is taken as the CWEB input file (and .w is added if there is no exten‐
30 sion). If there is a second name, it is a change file (and .ch is
31 added if there is no extension). The change file overrides parts of
32 the CWEB file, as described in the documentation. If there is a third
33 name, it overrides the default name of the output file, which is ordi‐
34 narily the same as the name of the input file (but on the current di‐
35 rectory) with the extension .tex. If you just want to change the out‐
36 put file name, but don’t have a change file to apply, you can use `-'
37 as the second argument.
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39 ctwill is exactly like cweave except that it produces much better docu‐
40 mentation, for which you must work harder. You should run ctwill
41 twice, once to prime the pump and once to get decent answers. More‐
42 over, you must run the output twice through TeX.
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44 After tex foo you will have output that looks like final pages except
45 that the entries of mini-indexes won’t be alphabetized. The first run
46 produces a weird file called foo.ref. Say ctwill-refsort < foo.ref >
47 foo.sref and then another tex foo will produce alphabetized output.
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49 The ctwill-twinx program compiles a master index for a set of related
50 programs that have been processed by ctwill. The individual programs
51 should define their names with a line of the form \def\title{NAME}.
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53 The mini-indexes list identifiers that are used but not defined on each
54 two-page spread. At the end of each section, ctwill gives TeX a list
55 of identifiers used in that section and information about where they
56 are defined.
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58 The current meaning of every identifier is initially \uninitialized.
59 Then ctwill reads the .aux file for your job, if any.
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61 Before reading the .aux file, ctwill actually looks for a file called
62 system.bux, which will be read if present. And after foo.aux, a third
63 possibility is foo.bux. The general convention is to put definitions
64 of system procedures such as printf into system.bux, and to put defini‐
65 tions found in specifically foo-ish header files into foo.bux. Like
66 the .aux files, .bux files should contain only @$ specifications.
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68 The meaning specified by @$...@> generally has four components: an
69 identifier (followed by space), a program name (enclosed in braces), a
70 section number (followed by space), and a TeX part.
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72 A special proofmode is provided so that you can check ctwill’s conclu‐
73 sions about cross-references. Run ctwill with the flag +P, and TeX
74 will produce a specially formatted document (without mini-indexes) in
75 which you can check that your specifications are correct.
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77 More details how to use ctwill can be found in the first sections of
78 its source code, respectively the change file cweav-twill.ch applicable
79 to the cweave.w source. A complete example with all bells and whistles
80 is described in Mini-Indexes for Literate Programs, pages 225–245 of
81 Knuth’s Digital Typography.
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84 The present incarnation of ctwill and its utilities tries hard to be a
85 drop-in replacement for the original package. There are, however, a
86 few differences worth noting:
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88 · This version is based on the most recent version of CWEB (3.64c).
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90 · In TeX Live the utility programs are prefixed with ctwill- and the
91 macro files with ct for technical reasons.
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93 · Options --help, --quiet, --verbose, --version, and flags -i, -o, and
94 +lX are new in CWEBbin and TeX Live.
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96 · Option +lX is accompanied by example wrapper files for ctwimac.tex
97 and ctproofmac.tex with translated captions for German (+ld).
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99 · ctwill in TeX Live operates silently by default; use the --verbose
100 option to get the original behavior.
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102 · File lookup with the environment variable CWEBINPUTS is extended to
103 permit several, colon-separated, paths.
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105 · If properly configured, the main program ctwill is localized with the
106 “GNU gettext utilities”.
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109 Options on the command line may be either turned off with `-' (if they
110 are on by default) or turned on with `+' (if they are off by default).
111 In fact, the options are processed from left to right, so a sequence
112 like --verbose -h will only show the banner line (+b) and the progress
113 report (+p), but leave out the happy message (-h).
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115 · +b: print banner line on terminal
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117 · +h: print success message on completion
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119 · +p: print progress report messages
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121 · +q/-q: shortcut for -bhp; also --quiet (default)
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123 · +v/-v: shortcut for +bhp; also --verbose
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125 · -e: do not enclose C/C++ material in \PB{...}
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127 · -f: do not force a newline after every C/C++ statement in output
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129 · -i: suppress indentation of parameter declarations
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131 · -o: suppress separation of declarations and statements
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133 · -x: omit indices, section names, table of contents
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135 · +P: \input ctproofmac.tex instead of ctwimac.tex
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137 · +lX/-lX: use macros for language X as of X{ctwimac|ctproofmac}.tex
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139 · +s: print usage statistics
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141 · --help: display help message and exit
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143 · --version: output version information and exit
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146 The environment variable CWEBINPUTS is used to search for the input
147 files, or the system default if CWEBINPUTS is not set. See tex(1) for
148 the details of the searching.
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150 If prepared for NLS support, ctwill like ctangle and cweave uses the
151 environment variable TEXMFLOCALEDIR to configure the parent directory
152 where the “GNU gettext utilities” search for translation catalogs.
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154 These variables are preconfigured in TeX Live’s texmf.cnf.
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157 The location of the files mentioned below varies from system to system.
158 Use the kpsewhich utility to find their locations.
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160 · ctwimac.tex: The default TeX macros \input in the first line of the
161 output file.
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163 · ctproofmac.tex: If ctwill is invoked with the +P option, it will
164 change the first line of the output file to \input ctproofmac.tex.
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166 In both cases you can request some prefix X with the +lX option, e.g.,
167 +ld will \input dctwimac.tex and +Pld will \input dctproofmac.tex.
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169 · webfile.bux: Reference definitions to resolve from other modules.
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171 · system.bux: Reference definitions to resolve from C/C++ standard li‐
172 brary header files like <stdio.h>.
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174 Other auxiliary files with references are created automatically by
175 ctwill and the actual index files are created by TeX.
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177 · cwebman.tex: The CWEB user manual, available in PDF from CTAN
178 (https://ctan.org/pkg/cweb).
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181 · The CWEB System of Structured Documentation: by Donald E. Knuth and
182 Silvio Levy (hardcopy version of cwebman.tex and the source code
183 listings of common.w, ctangle.w, and cweave.w).
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185 · Digital Typography: by D. E. Knuth.
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187 · Literate Programming: by D. E. Knuth.
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189 · Weaving a Program: by Wayne Sewell.
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191 cweb(1), tex(1), cc(1)
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194 Don Knuth wrote ctwill based on cweave by Silvio Levy and Knuth.
195 As of 2019, ctwill and its utilities ctwill-refsort and ctwill-twinx
196 have been fully integrated with the extended CWEBbin system that serves
197 as the basis for CWEB in TeX Live; see the project page
198 (https://github.com/ascherer/cwebbin).
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202Web2c 2019 March 10, 2019 CTWILL(1)