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gf-core/src/HelpFile
2004-04-30 19:52:34 +00:00

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-- GF help file updated for GF 2.0, 24/3/2004.
-- *: Commands and options marked with * are not yet implemented.
--
-- Each command has a long and a short name, options, and zero or more
-- arguments. Commands are sorted by functionality. The short name is
-- given first.
-- Type "h -all" for full help file, "h <CommandName>" for full help on a command.
-- commands that change the state
i, import: i File
Reads a grammar from File and compiles it into a GF runtime grammar.
Files "include"d in File are read recursively, nubbing repetitions.
If a grammar with the same language name is already in the state,
it is overwritten - but only if compilation succeeds.
The grammar parser depends on the file name suffix:
.gf normal GF source
.gfc canonical GF
.gfr precompiled GF resource
.gfcm multilingual canonical GF
.ebnf Extended BNF format
.cf Context-free (BNF) format
options:
-old old: parse in GF<2.0 format (not necessary)
-v verbose: give lots of messages
-s silent: don't give error messages
-opt perform branch-sharing optimization
-src source: ignore precompiled gfc and gfr files
-retain retain operations: read resource modules (needed in comm cc)
-nocf don't build context-free grammar (thus no parser)
-nocheckcirc don't eliminate circular rules from CF
-cflexer build an optimized parser with separate lexer trie
flags:
-abs set the name used for abstract syntax (with -old option)
-cnc set the name used for concrete syntax (with -old option)
-res set the name used for resource (with -old option)
* rl, remove_language: rl Language
Takes away the language from the state.
e, empty: e
Takes away all languages and resets all global flags.
sf, set_flags: sf Language? Flag*
The values of the Flags are set for Language. If no language
is specified, the flags are set globally.
s, strip: s
Prune the state by removing source and resource modules.
-- commands that give information about the state
pg, print_grammar: pg
Prints the actual grammar (overridden by the -lang=X flag).
The -printer=X flag sets the format in which the grammar is
written.
N.B. since grammars are compiled when imported, this command
generally does not show the grammar in the same format as the
source. In particular, the -printer=latex is not supported.
Use the command tg -printer=latex File to print the source
grammar in LaTeX.
options:
-utf8 apply UTF8-encoding to the grammar
flags:
-printer
-lang
pm, print_multigrammar: pm
Prints the current multilingual grammar into a .gfcm file.
(Automatically executes the strip command (s) before doing this.)
po, print_options: po
Print what modules there are in the state. Also
prints those flag values in the current state that differ from defaults.
pl, print_languages: pl
Prints the names of currently available languages.
pi, print_info: pi Ident
Prints information on the identifier.
-- commands that execute and show the session history
eh, execute_history: eh File
Executes commands in the file.
ph, print_history; ph
Prints the commands issued during the GF session.
The result is readable by the eh command.
HINT: write "ph | wf foo.hist" to save the history.
-- linearization, parsing, translation, and computation
l, linearize: l PattList? Tree
Shows all linearization forms of Tree by the actual grammar
(which is overridden by the -lang flag).
The pattern list has the form [P, ... ,Q] where P,...,Q follow GF
syntax for patterns. All those forms are generated that match with the
pattern list. Too short lists are filled with variables in the end.
Only the -table flag is available if a pattern list is specified.
HINT: see GF language specification for the syntax of Pattern and Term.
You can also copy and past parsing results.
options:
-table show parameters
-struct bracketed form
-record record, i.e. explicit GF concrete syntax term
flags:
-lang linearize in this grammar
-number give this number of forms at most
-unlexer filter output through unlexer
p, parse: p String
Shows all Trees returned for String by the actual
grammar (overridden by the -lang flag), in the category S (overridden
by the -cat flag).
options:
-n non-strict: tolerates morphological errors
-ign ignore unknown words when parsing
-raw return context-free terms in raw form
-v verbose: give more information if parsing fails
flags:
-cat parse in this category
-lang parse in this grammar
-lexer filter input through this lexer
-parser use this context-free parsing method
-number return this many results at most
tt, test_tokenizer: tt String
Show the token list sent to the parser when String is parsed.
HINT: can be useful when debugging the parser.
flags:
-lexer use this lexer
cc, compute_concrete: cc Term
Compute a term by concrete syntax definitions. Uses the topmost
resource module (the last in listing by command po) to resolve
constant names.
N.B. You need the flag -retain when importing the grammar, if you want
the oper definitions to be retained after compilation; otherwise this
command does not expand oper constants.
N.B.' The resulting Term is not a term in the sense of abstract syntax,
and hence not a valid input to a Tree-demanding command.
flags:
-res use another module than the topmost one
t, translate: t Lang Lang String
Parses String in Lang1 and linearizes the resulting Trees in Lang2.
flags:
-cat
-lexer
-parser
gr, generate_random: gr Tree?
Generates a random Tree of a given category. If a Tree
argument is given, the command completes the Tree with values to
the metavariables in the tree.
flags:
-cat generate in this category
-lang use the abstract syntax of this grammar
-number generate this number of trees (not impl. with Tree argument)
-depth use this number of search steps at most
gt, generate_trees: gt
Generates all trees up to a given depth. If the depth is large,
a small -alts is recommended
flags:
-depth generate to this depth (default 3)
-alts take this number of alternatives at each branch (default unlimited)
-cat generate in this category
-lang use the abstract syntax of this grammar
-number generate (at most) this number of trees
ma, morphologically_analyse: ma String
Runs morphological analysis on each word in String and displays
the results line by line.
options:
-short show analyses in bracketed words, instead of separate lines
flags:
-lang
-- elementary generation of Strings and Trees
ps, put_string: ps String
Returns its argument String, like Unix echo.
HINT. The strength of ps comes from the possibility to receive the
argument from a pipeline, and altering it by the -filter flag.
flags:
-filter filter the result through this string processor
-length cut the string after this number of characters
pt, put_tree: pt Tree
Returns its argument Tree, like a specialized Unix echo.
HINT. The strength of pt comes from the possibility to receive
the argument from a pipeline, and altering it by the -transform flag.
flags:
-transform transform the result by this term processor
-number generate this number of terms at most
* st, show_tree: st Tree
Prints the tree as a string. Unlike pt, this command cannot be
used in a pipe to produce a tree, since its output is a string.
flags:
-printer show the tree in a special format (-printer=xml supported)
-- subshells
es, editing_session: es
Opens an interactive editing session.
N.B. Exit from a Fudget session is to the Unix shell, not to GF.
options:
-f Fudget GUI (necessary for Unicode; only available in X Window System)
ts, translation_session: ts
Translates input lines from any of the actual languages to any other one.
To exit, type a full stop (.) alone on a line.
N.B. Exit from a Fudget session is to the Unix shell, not to GF.
HINT: Set -parser and -lexer locally in each grammar.
options:
-f Fudget GUI (necessary for Unicode; only available in X Window System)
flags:
-cat
tq, translation_quiz: tq Lang Lang
Random-generates translation exercises from Lang1 to Lang2,
keeping score of success.
To interrupt, type a full stop (.) alone on a line.
HINT: Set -parser and -lexer locally in each grammar.
flags:
-cat
tl, translation_list: tl Lang Lang Int
Random-generates a list of Int translation exercises from Lang1 to Lang2.
HINT: use wf to save the exercises in a file.
flags:
-cat
mq, morphology_quiz: mq
Random-generates morphological exercises,
keeping score of success.
To interrupt, type a full stop (.) alone on a line.
HINT: use printname judgements in your grammar to
produce nice expressions for desired forms.
flags:
-cat
-lang
ml, morphology_list: ml Int
Random-generates a list of Int morphological exercises,
keeping score of success.
HINT: use wf to save the exercises in a file.
flags:
-cat
-lang
-- IO related commands
rf, read_file: rf File
Returns the contents of File as a String; error is File does not exist.
wf, write_file: wf File String
Writes String into File; File is created if it does not exist.
N.B. the command overwrites File without a warning.
af, append_file: af File
Writes String into the end of File; File is created if it does not exist.
* tg, transform_grammar: tg File
Reads File, parses as a grammar,
but instead of compiling further, prints it.
The environment is not changed. When parsing the grammar, the same file
name suffixes are supported as in the i command.
HINT: use this command to print the grammar in
another format (the -printer flag); pipe it to wf to save this format.
flags:
-printer (only -printer=latex supported currently)
* cl, convert_latex: cl File
Reads File, which is expected to be in LaTeX form.
Three environments are treated in special ways:
\begGF - \end{verbatim}, which contains GF judgements,
\begTGF - \end{verbatim}, which contains a GF expression (displayed)
\begInTGF - \end{verbatim}, which contains a GF expressions (inlined).
Moreover, certain macros should be included in the file; you can
get those macros by applying 'tg -printer=latex foo.gf' to any grammar
foo.gf. Notice that the same File can be imported as a GF grammar,
consisting of all the judgements in \begGF environments.
HINT: pipe with 'wf Foo.tex' to generate a new Latex file.
sa, speak_aloud: sa String
Uses the Festival speech generator to produce speech for String.
The command cupports Festival's language flag, which is sent verbatim
to Festival, e.g. -language=spanish. Omitting this flag gives the
system-dependent default voice (often British English).
flags:
-language
h, help: h Command?
Displays the paragraph concerning the command from this help file.
Without the argument, shows the first lines of all paragraphs.
options
-all show the whole help file
q, quit: q
Exits GF.
HINT: you can use 'ph | wf history' to save your session.
!, system_command: ! String
Issues a system command. No value is returned to GF.
-- Flags. The availability of flags is defined separately for each command.
-cat: category in which parsing is performed.
The default is S.
-depth: the search depth in e.g. random generation.
The default depends on application.
-filter: operation performed on a string. The default is identity.
-filter=identity no change
-filter=erase erase the text
-filter=take100 show the first 100 characters
-filter=length show the length of the string
-filter=text format as text (punctuation, capitalization)
-filter=code format as code (spacing, indentation)
-filter=latexfile embed in a LaTeX file
-lang: grammar used when executing a grammar-dependent command.
The default is the last-imported grammar.
-language: voice used by Festival as its --language flag in the sa command.
The default is system-dependent.
-length: the maximum number of characters shown of a string.
The default is unlimited.
-lexer: tokenization transforming a string into lexical units for a parser.
The default is words.
-lexer=words tokens are separated by spaces or newlines
-lexer=literals like words, but GF integer and string literals recognized
-lexer=vars like words, but "x","x_...","$...$" as vars, "?..." as meta
-lexer=chars each character is a token
-lexer=code use Haskell's lex
-lexer=text with conventions on punctuation and capital letters
-lexer=codelit like code, but treat unknown words as string literals
-lexer=textlit like text, but treat unknown words as string literals
-lexer=codeC use a C-like lexer
-number: the maximum number of generated items in a list.
The default is unlimited.
-parser: Context-free parsing algorithm. The default is chart.
-parser=earley Earley algorithm
-parser=chart bottom-up chart parser
-printer: format in which the grammar is printed. The default is gfc.
-printer=gfc GFC grammar
-printer=gf GF grammar
-printer=old old GF grammar
-printer=cf context-free grammar
*-printer=happy source file for Happy parser generator
-printer=srg speech recognition grammar
*-printer=haskell abstract syntax in Haskell, with transl to/from GF
-printer=morpho full-form lexicon, long format
*-printer=latex LaTeX file (for the tg command)
-printer=fullform full-form lexicon, short format
*-printer=xml XML: DTD for the pg command, object for st
-printer=old old GF: file readable by GF 1.2
-startcat: like -cat, but used in grammars (to avoid clash with keyword cat)
-transform: transformation performed on a syntax tree. The default is identity.
-transform=identity no change
-transform=compute compute by using definitions in the grammar
-transform=typecheck return the term only if it is type-correct
-transform=solve solve metavariables as derived refinements
-transform=context solve metavariables by unique refinements as variables
-transform=delete replace the term by metavariable
-unlexer: untokenization transforming linearization output into a string.
The default is unwords.
-unlexer=unwords space-separated token list (like unwords)
-unlexer=text format as text: punctuation, capitals, paragraph <p>
-unlexer=code format as code (spacing, indentation)
-unlexer=textlit like text, but remove string literal quotes
-unlexer=codelit like code, but remove string literal quotes
-unlexer=concat remove all spaces
-unlexer=bind like identity, but bind at "&+"
-- *: Commands and options marked with * are not yet implemented.