Scanf.Scanning
The notion of input channel for the Scanf
module: those channels provide all the machinery necessary to read from any source of characters, including a Stdlib.in_channel
value. A Scanf.Scanning.in_channel value is also called a formatted input channel or equivalently a scanning buffer. The type Scanning.scanbuf
below is an alias for Scanning.in_channel
.
type scanbuf = in_channel;
The type of scanning buffers. A scanning buffer is the source from which a formatted input function gets characters. The scanning buffer holds the current state of the scan, plus a function to get the next char from the input, and a token buffer to store the string matched so far.
Note: a scanning action may often require to examine one character in advance; when this 'lookahead' character does not belong to the token read, it is stored back in the scanning buffer and becomes the next character yet to be read.
let stdin: in_channel;
The standard input notion for the Scanf
module. Scanning.stdin
is the Scanning.in_channel
formatted input channel attached to Stdlib.stdin
.
Note: in the interactive system, when input is read from Stdlib.stdin
, the newline character that triggers evaluation is part of the input; thus, the scanning specifications must properly skip this additional newline character (for instance, simply add a '\n'
as the last character of the format string).
let open_in: file_name => in_channel;
Scanning.open_in fname
returns a Scanning.in_channel
formatted input channel for bufferized reading in text mode from file fname
.
Note: open_in
returns a formatted input channel that efficiently reads characters in large chunks; in contrast, from_channel
below returns formatted input channels that must read one character at a time, leading to a much slower scanning rate.
let open_in_bin: file_name => in_channel;
Scanning.open_in_bin fname
returns a Scanning.in_channel
formatted input channel for bufferized reading in binary mode from file fname
.
let close_in: in_channel => unit;
Closes the Stdlib.in_channel
associated with the given Scanning.in_channel
formatted input channel.
let from_file: file_name => in_channel;
An alias for Scanning.open_in
above.
let from_file_bin: string => in_channel;
An alias for Scanning.open_in_bin
above.
let from_string: string => in_channel;
Scanning.from_string s
returns a Scanning.in_channel
formatted input channel which reads from the given string. Reading starts from the first character in the string. The end-of-input condition is set when the end of the string is reached.
let from_function: (unit => char) => in_channel;
Scanning.from_function f
returns a Scanning.in_channel
formatted input channel with the given function as its reading method.
When scanning needs one more character, the given function is called.
When the function has no more character to provide, it must signal an end-of-input condition by raising the exception End_of_file
.
let from_channel: in_channel => in_channel;
Scanning.from_channel ic
returns a Scanning.in_channel
formatted input channel which reads from the regular Stdlib.in_channel
input channel ic
argument. Reading starts at current reading position of ic
.
let end_of_input: in_channel => bool;
Scanning.end_of_input ic
tests the end-of-input condition of the given Scanning.in_channel
formatted input channel.
let beginning_of_input: in_channel => bool;
Scanning.beginning_of_input ic
tests the beginning of input condition of the given Scanning.in_channel
formatted input channel.
let name_of_input: in_channel => string;
Scanning.name_of_input ic
returns the name of the character source for the given Scanning.in_channel
formatted input channel.
let stdib: in_channel;
A deprecated alias for Scanning.stdin
, the scanning buffer reading from Stdlib.stdin
.