Fix a minor bug in -l operation. Explain the input logic.

This commit is contained in:
Eric S. Raymond 2017-06-13 11:59:49 -04:00
parent 6166d687b9
commit 9a2618963f

59
misc.c
View file

@ -544,31 +544,17 @@ bool MAPLIN(FILE *fp)
long i, val;
bool eof;
/* Read a line of input, from the specified input source,
* translate the chars to integers in the range 0-126 and store
* them in the common array "INLINE". Integer values are as follows:
* 0 = space [ASCII CODE 40 octal, 32 decimal]
* 1-2 = !" [ASCII 41-42 octal, 33-34 decimal]
* 3-10 = '()*+,-. [ASCII 47-56 octal, 39-46 decimal]
* 11-36 = upper-case letters
* 37-62 = lower-case letters
* 63 = percent (%) [ASCII 45 octal, 37 decimal]
* 64-73 = digits, 0 through 9
* Remaining characters can be translated any way that is convenient;
* The "TYPE" routine below is used to map them back to characters when
* necessary. The above mappings are required so that certain special
* characters are known to fit in 6 bits and/or can be easily spotted.
* Array elements beyond the end of the line should be filled with 0,
* and LNLENG should be set to the index of the last character.
/* Read a line of input, from the specified input source.
* This logic is complicated partly because it has to serve
* several cases with different requirements and partly because
* of a quirk in linenoise().
*
* If the data file uses a character other than space (e.g., tab) to
* separate numbers, that character should also translate to 0.
*
* This procedure may use the map1,map2 arrays to maintain static data for
* the mapping. MAP2(1) is set to 0 when the program starts
* and is not changed thereafter unless the routines on this page choose
* to do so. */
* The quirk shows up when you feed the program a test log on stdin.
* While fgets (as expected) consumes it a line at a time, linenoise()
* returns the first line and discards the rest. Thus, there needs to
* be an editline (-s) option to fall back to fgets while still
* prompting.
*/
do {
if (!editline) {
if (prompt)
@ -599,11 +585,34 @@ bool MAPLIN(FILE *fp)
efp = stdout;
if (efp != NULL)
{
if (prompt)
if (prompt && efp == stdout)
fputs("> ", efp);
IGNORE(fputs(rawbuf, efp));
}
strcpy(INLINE+1, rawbuf);
/* translate the chars to integers in the range 0-126 and store
* them in the common array "INLINE". Integer values are as follows:
* 0 = space [ASCII CODE 40 octal, 32 decimal]
* 1-2 = !" [ASCII 41-42 octal, 33-34 decimal]
* 3-10 = '()*+,-. [ASCII 47-56 octal, 39-46 decimal]
* 11-36 = upper-case letters
* 37-62 = lower-case letters
* 63 = percent (%) [ASCII 45 octal, 37 decimal]
* 64-73 = digits, 0 through 9
* Remaining characters can be translated any way that is convenient;
* The "TYPE" routine below is used to map them back to characters when
* necessary. The above mappings are required so that certain special
* characters are known to fit in 6 bits and/or can be easily spotted.
* Array elements beyond the end of the line should be filled with 0,
* and LNLENG should be set to the index of the last character.
*
* If the data file uses a character other than space (e.g., tab) to
* separate numbers, that character should also translate to 0.
*
* This procedure may use the map1,map2 arrays to maintain static data for
* the mapping. MAP2(1) is set to 0 when the program starts
* and is not changed thereafter unless the routines on this page choose
* to do so. */
LNLENG=0;
for (i=1; i<=(long)sizeof(INLINE) && INLINE[i]!=0; i++) {
val=INLINE[i];