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Related Syntax | Related Concepts | ||||
control structure |
do sgml-parse |
Syntax
do sgml-parse document (with id-checking switch-expression)? (with utf-8 switch-expression)? (creating sgml-dtds{string-expression})? scan string-source-expression local-declaration* action* done do sgml-parse subdocument (with id-checking switch-expression)? (with utf-8 switch-expression)? (creating sgml-dtds{string-expression})? scan string-source-expression local-declaration* action* done do sgml-parse instance (with document-element string-expression)? with (sgml-dtds{string-expression} | current sgml-dtd) (with id-checking switch-expression)? scan string-source-expression local-declaration* action* done
do sgml-parse
is used to invoke the SGML parser. A number of activities
must occur within a do sgml-parse
block.
document
, subdocument
, or instance
.
#content
to consume the parsed markup, or a parse continuation operator
(%c
or suppress
) to initiate processing of the data by markup
rules.
The simplest use of do sgml-parse
is to process a complete SGML document:
do sgml-parse document scan file "my-sgml.sgml" output "%c" done
This assumes that the file mysgml.sgml
contains an SGML document. If the DTD and the instance
are in different files, they can be joined:
do sgml-parse document scan file "my-dtd.dtd" || file "my-sgml.sgml" output "%c" done
If the same DTD is to be used to parse several input instances, it is best to pre-compile the DTD and store
it on the built-in sgml-dtds
shelf:
do sgml-parse document creating sgml-dtds{"my-dtd"} scan file "my-dtd.dtd" suppress doneIf the instance file names are stored on a shelf my-instances, then each instance can then be processed in turn:
repeat over my-instances do sgml-parse instance with sgml-dtds{"my-dtd"} scan file my-instances output "%c" done again
A nested SGML parse can use the same DTD as an outer SGML parse to validate its own input: for instance,
process using group "one" do sgml-parse document scan "<!doctype a [" || "<!element a - - (b | #pcdata)*>" || "<!element b - - (#pcdata)>]>" || "<a><b>Hello, World!</b></a>" output "%c" done group "one" element "a" using group "b" do sgml-parse instance with current sgml-dtd scan "<a>Salut, Monde!</a>" output "%c" done output "%c" element "b" output "%c" group "b" element "a" output "%c"
In this program, the SGML parse launched in the element
rule for a
inside group
one uses the same DTD as the parse launched in the process
rule.
It is possible to parse a partial instance: a piece of data comprising an element from a DTD which is not
the
doctype
element of that DTD. In this case, the element to be used as the effective doctype
for parsing the data is specified using the document-element
argument:
do sgml-parse instance with document-element "lamb" with sgml-dtds{"my-dtd"} scan file "partinst.sgml" output "%c" doneThe element's start and end tags can be present, or they can be omitted if the element allows. SGML comments, processing instructions and even marked sections can precede and follow the element's start and end tags, but anything else (particularly other elements, data, entity references or
usemap
declarations) is an
error.
do sgml-parse
can be used to parse an SGML subdocument. Subdocument processing can only occur in the
middle of parsing another SGML document that includes the subdocument reference. The concrete syntax defined
by the document currently being processed is used to parse the subdocument. In accordance with the SGML
standard, the subdocument's text must not contain an SGML declaration.
This is an example of how to make references to SGML subdocument entities trigger parsing of the subdocument
entities. The source of the subdocument entity text in the example is assumed to be a file whose name is
either the system identifier (provided by a library
rule), the public text description portion of
the
public identifier, or the name of the entity (uppercased and with .ent
file extension appended).
external-data-entity #implied when entity is subdoc-entity local stream file-name output "subdoc depth exceeded!%n" when number of current subdocuments > 100 do when entity is system set file-name to "%eq" else when entity is in-library set file-name to "%epq" else when entity is public do scan "%pq" match (["+-"] "//")? ((lookahead ! "//") any)* "//" [ \ " "]* " " "-//"? ((lookahead ! "//") any)* => public-text-description set file-name to public-text-description done else set file-name to "%uq.ent" done do sgml-parse subdocument scan file file-name output "%c" done
Processing a subdocument increments the integer value returned by the number of current
subdocuments
(and decrements it when the action has finished), but OmniMark does not issue an error
message when the subdocument nesting level exceeds that allowed by the concrete syntax or when subdoc no
is specified by the concrete syntax.
By default, OmniMark checks all SGML idref
attributes to make sure they reference valid ID
s. This checking may not be appropriate in processing a partial instance. It also takes time. It can
be disabled using with id-checking
followed by a switch
expression. The following code will
parse the specified document without checking IDREF
s:
do sgml-parse document with id-checking false scan file "my-sgml.sgml" output "%c" done
SGML is an ASCII-based language. This means that character references greater than 127 (for example �
) have no predefined encoding method appropriate to them. The OmniMark parser
outputs character references between 128 and 255 as equivalent binary byte values. Character references
greater than 255 cause a markup error.
If the document being processed contains numerical character references greater than 127, the parser can be instructed to output them as UTF-8 byte sequences. This will allow character references above 255 to be output as UTF-8 byte encodings. This is appropriate if, and only if, your output will be encoded and interpreted as a UTF-8 document.
To turn on UTF-8 output of character references, use the with utf-8
modifier with a switch
expression that evaluates to true
:
process do sgml-parse document with utf-8 true scan file "myfile.sgml" output "%c" done
Note that actual UTF-8 encoded characters in your input data are unaffected by this setting.
Note that with utf-8
can only be used with a full document
or with a
subdocument
, but not with an instance
parse.
When parsing a document, markup rules are fired as follows (if specified in your code):
sgml-declaration-end
,
dtd-start
,
dtd-end
,
prolog-end
,
epilog-start
.
The same rules fire when parsing a subdocument, except for sgml-declaration-end
.
When compiling a DTD, markup rules are fired as follows (if specified in your code):
dtd-start
,
dtd-end
, and
prolog-end
.
When parsing an instance, the following markup rules fire:
prolog-end
,
epilog-start
.
As with subdocument
, instance
saves and resets the integer value returned by the number of current
subdocuments
and restores the saved value when the action is finished.
do sgml-parse
saves the current setting of sgml-in
and sgml-out
and
restores them at the end of the parse.
If there are errors in the SGML declaration or prolog (DTD), then prolog-in-error
rule will be
fired instead of prolog-end
and the processing of the remaining input of do
sgml-parse
will terminate. Execution resumes in the actions following the most recently executed
%c
or suppress
. However, the amount of input read is undefined in this situation.
That is, OmniMark may choose to consume the entire input source, it may stop reading the input immediately, or
it may do something in between.
Related Syntax |
Related Concepts |
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