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Macro bodies may manipulate syntax using macro functions. Macro functions accept tokens as arguments and expand to sequences of characters.
The arguments to macro functions have a restricted form. They may only be a single token (such as an identifier or a string), a macro argument, or a call to a macro function. Thus, the following are valid macro arguments:
x 5.0 x !1 "5 + 6" !CONCAT(x,y)
and the following are not:
x y 5+6
Macro functions expand to sequences of characters. When these
character strings are processed further as character strings, e.g.
with !LENGTH
, any character string is valid. When they are
interpreted as PSPP syntax, e.g. when the expansion becomes part of
a command, they need to be valid for that purpose. For example,
!UNQUOTE("It's")
will yield an error if the expansion
It's
becomes part of a PSPP command, because it contains
unbalanced single quotes, but !LENGTH(!UNQUOTE("It's"))
expands
to 4.
The following macro functions are available. Each function’s
documentation includes examples in the form call
→ expansion
.
Expands to count unquoted spaces, where count is a
nonnegative integer. Outside quotes, any positive number of spaces
are equivalent; for a quoted string of spaces, use
!QUOTE(!BLANKS(count))
.
In the examples below, ‘_’ stands in for a space to make the results visible.
!BLANKS(0) → empty
!BLANKS(1) → _
!BLANKS(2) → __
!QUOTE(!BLANKS(5)) → '_____'
Expands to the concatenation of all of the arguments. Before
concatenation, each quoted string argument is unquoted, as if
!UNQUOTE
were applied. This allows for “token pasting”,
combining two (or more) tokens into a single one:
!CONCAT(x, y) → xy !CONCAT('x', 'y') → xy !CONCAT(12, 34) → 1234 !CONCAT(!NULL, 123) → 123
!CONCAT
is often used for constructing a series of similar
variable names from a prefix followed by a number and perhaps a
suffix. For example:
!CONCAT(x, 0) → x0 !CONCAT(x, 0, y) → x0y
An identifier token must begin with a letter (or ‘#’ or ‘@’), which means that attempting to use a number as the first part of an identifier will produce a pair of distinct tokens rather than a single one. For example:
!CONCAT(0, x) → 0 x !CONCAT(0, x, y) → 0 xy
Expands macro calls in arg. This is especially useful if arg is the name of a macro or a macro argument that expands to one, because arguments to macro functions are not expanded by default (see Controlling Macro Expansion).
The following examples assume that !vars
is a macro that
expands to a b c
:
!vars → a b c !QUOTE(!vars) → '!vars' !EVAL(!vars) → a b c !QUOTE(!EVAL(!vars)) → 'a b c'
These examples additionally assume that argument !1
has value
!vars
:
!1 → a b c !QUOTE(!1) → '!vars' !EVAL(!1) → a b c !QUOTE(!EVAL(!1)) → 'a b c'
!HEAD
expands to just the first token in an unquoted version of
arg, and !TAIL
to all the tokens after the first.
!HEAD('a b c') → a !HEAD('a') → a !HEAD(!NULL) → empty !HEAD('') → empty !TAIL('a b c') → b c !TAIL('a') → empty !TAIL(!NULL) → empty !TAIL('') → empty
Looks for needle in haystack. If it is present, expands to the 1-based index of its first occurrence; if not, expands to 0.
!INDEX(banana, an) → 2 !INDEX(banana, nan) → 3 !INDEX(banana, apple) → 0 !INDEX("banana", nan) → 4 !INDEX("banana", "nan") → 0 !INDEX(!UNQUOTE("banana"), !UNQUOTE("nan")) → 3
Expands to a number token representing the number of characters in arg.
!LENGTH(123) → 3 !LENGTH(123.00) → 6 !LENGTH( 123 ) → 3 !LENGTH("123") → 5 !LENGTH(xyzzy) → 5 !LENGTH("xyzzy") → 7 !LENGTH("xy""zzy") → 9 !LENGTH(!UNQUOTE("xyzzy")) → 5 !LENGTH(!UNQUOTE("xy""zzy")) → 6 !LENGTH(!1) → 5 if !1 is a b c !LENGTH(!1) → 0 if !1 is empty !LENGTH(!NULL) → 0
Expands to an empty character sequence.
!NULL → empty
!QUOTE(!NULL) → ''
The !QUOTE
function expands to its argument surrounded by
apostrophes, doubling any apostrophes inside the argument to make sure
that it is valid PSPP syntax for a string. If the argument was
already a quoted string, !QUOTE
expands to it unchanged.
Given a quoted string argument, the !UNQUOTED
function expands
to the string’s contents, with the quotes removed and any doubled
quote marks reduced to singletons. If the argument was not a quoted
string, !UNQUOTE
expands to the argument unchanged.
!QUOTE(123.0) → '123.0' !QUOTE( 123 ) → '123' !QUOTE('a b c') → 'a b c' !QUOTE("a b c") → "a b c" !QUOTE(!1) → 'a ''b'' c' if !1 is a 'b' c !UNQUOTE(123.0) → 123.0 !UNQUOTE( 123 ) → 123 !UNQUOTE('a b c') → a b c !UNQUOTE("a b c") → a b c !UNQUOTE(!1) → a 'b' c if !1 is a 'b' c !QUOTE(!UNQUOTE(123.0)) → '123.0' !QUOTE(!UNQUOTE( 123 )) → '123' !QUOTE(!UNQUOTE('a b c')) → 'a b c' !QUOTE(!UNQUOTE("a b c")) → 'a b c' !QUOTE(!UNQUOTE(!1)) → 'a ''b'' c' if !1 is a 'b' c
Expands to a substring of arg starting from 1-based position start. If count is given, it limits the number of characters in the expansion; if it is omitted, then the expansion extends to the end of arg.
!SUBSTR(banana, 3) → nana
!SUBSTR(banana, 3, 3) → nan
!SUBSTR("banana", 1, 3) → error ("ba
is not a valid token)
!SUBSTR(!UNQUOTE("banana"), 3) → nana
!SUBSTR("banana", 3, 3) → ana
!SUBSTR(banana, 3, 0) → empty
!SUBSTR(banana, 3, 10) → nana
!SUBSTR(banana, 10, 3) → empty
Expands to an unquoted version of arg with all letters converted to uppercase.
!UPCASE(freckle) → FRECKLE !UPCASE('freckle') → FRECKLE !UPCASE('a b c') → A B C !UPCASE('A B C') → A B C
Next: Macro Expressions, Previous: Controlling Macro Expansion, Up: DEFINE [Contents][Index]