All those who wander are not lost.

Tag: coding

Run MultiMarkdown in Terminal

I found this script. I think I could substitute the PHP version of MultiMarkdown here.



#!/bin/bash

#******************************************#
# This script runs the multimarkdown       #
# script on specified file, redirects      #
# output to html file, and opens resulting #
# file in web browser.                     #
#******************************************#

# gets complete filename of file 
srcfile="`eval echo $1`"    

# gets the filename without .txt
FILENOEXTENSION="`echo $srcfile | sed -e 's/\..*$//'`"  

# Runs perl script and creates .html file
~/MultiMarkdown/bin/multimarkdown2XHTML.pl $srcfile > $FILENOEXTENSION.html 

# opens it up
firefox $FILENOEXTENSION.html


Teach Yourself to Program in/with Scheme

The good folks at MIT and MIT Press have made the influential computer-science text Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs available on-line with sample code and the instructor’s manual. It’s all here.

Hanging Indent in Plain Text

Hanging Indent

I’ve got a list that looks like this:

  1. The job of a writer is to discover what series of events best illustrates an idea or an emotion.
  2. Just like the actor, your job is one of translation, the most difficult part which is that it all comes down to this: you have to write something that a person can do in front of a camera.

and I want it to look like this:

1.    The job of a writer is to discover what series of events best illustrates
      an idea or an emotion.

That required the insertion of a hard return at the end of the line and then an insertion of three spaces in addition to the existing single space in order to make it four spaces and to line up with the tab.

  1. Just like the actor, your job is one of translation, the most difficult part which is that it all comes down to this: you have to write something that a person can do in front of a camera.

Okay, that’s consistent:

Go to end of line.

Insert hard return

Go to beginning of next line (or advance one character)

Insert three spaces.

Continue until you get to a pre-existing hard return.

Oniguruma Regular Expressions

Version 5.3.0 2006/11/20

syntax: ONIG_SYNTAX_RUBY (default)

  1. Syntax elements

\ escape (enable or disable meta character meaning) | alternation (…) group […] character class

  1. Characters

\t horizontal tab (0x09) \v vertical tab (0x0B) \n newline (0x0A) \r return (0x0D) \b back space (0x08) \f form feed (0x0C) \a bell (0x07) \e escape (0x1B) \nnn octal char (encoded byte value) \xHH hexadecimal char (encoded byte value) \x{7HHHHHHH} wide hexadecimal char (character code point value) \cx control char (character code point value) \C-x control char (character code point value) \M-x meta (x|0x80) (character code point value) \M-\C-x meta control char (character code point value)

(* \b is effective in character class […] only)

  1. Character types

. any character (except newline)

\w word character

       Not Unicode:
         alphanumeric, "_" and multibyte char. 

       Unicode:
         General_Category -- (Letter|Mark|Number|Connector_Punctuation)

\W non word char

\s whitespace char

       Not Unicode:
         \t, \n, \v, \f, \r, \x20

       Unicode:
         0009, 000A, 000B, 000C, 000D, 0085(NEL), 
         General_Category -- Line_Separator
                          -- Paragraph_Separator
                          -- Space_Separator

\S non whitespace char

\d decimal digit char

       Unicode: General_Category -- Decimal_Number

\D non decimal digit char

\h hexadecimal digit char [0-9a-fA-F]

\H non hexadecimal digit char

Character Property

* \p{property-name}
* \p{^property-name}    (negative)
* \P{property-name}     (negative)

property-name:

 + works on all encodings
   Alnum, Alpha, Blank, Cntrl, Digit, Graph, Lower,
   Print, Punct, Space, Upper, XDigit, Word, ASCII,

 + works on EUC_JP, Shift_JIS
   Hiragana, Katakana

 + works on UTF8, UTF16, UTF32
   Any, Assigned, C, Cc, Cf, Cn, Co, Cs, L, Ll, Lm, Lo, Lt, Lu,
   M, Mc, Me, Mn, N, Nd, Nl, No, P, Pc, Pd, Pe, Pf, Pi, Po, Ps,
   S, Sc, Sk, Sm, So, Z, Zl, Zp, Zs, 
   Arabic, Armenian, Bengali, Bopomofo, Braille, Buginese,
   Buhid, Canadian_Aboriginal, Cherokee, Common, Coptic,
   Cypriot, Cyrillic, Deseret, Devanagari, Ethiopic, Georgian,
   Glagolitic, Gothic, Greek, Gujarati, Gurmukhi, Han, Hangul,
   Hanunoo, Hebrew, Hiragana, Inherited, Kannada, Katakana,
   Kharoshthi, Khmer, Lao, Latin, Limbu, Linear_B, Malayalam,
   Mongolian, Myanmar, New_Tai_Lue, Ogham, Old_Italic, Old_Persian,
   Oriya, Osmanya, Runic, Shavian, Sinhala, Syloti_Nagri, Syriac,
   Tagalog, Tagbanwa, Tai_Le, Tamil, Telugu, Thaana, Thai, Tibetan,
   Tifinagh, Ugaritic, Yi
  1. Quantifier

greedy

?       1 or 0 times
*       0 or more times
+       1 or more times
{n,m}   at least n but not more than m times
{n,}    at least n times
{,n}    at least 0 but not more than n times ({0,n})
{n}     n times

reluctant

??      1 or 0 times
*?      0 or more times
+?      1 or more times
{n,m}?  at least n but not more than m times  
{n,}?   at least n times
{,n}?   at least 0 but not more than n times (== {0,n}?)

possessive (greedy and does not backtrack after repeated)

?+      1 or 0 times
*+      0 or more times
++      1 or more times

({n,m}+, {n,}+, {n}+ are possessive op. in ONIG_SYNTAX_JAVA only)

ex. /a*+/ === /(?>a*)/
  1. Anchors

^ beginning of the line $ end of the line \b word boundary \B not word boundary \A beginning of string \Z end of string, or before newline at the end \z end of string \G matching start position

  1. Character class

^… negative class (lowest precedence operator) x-y range from x to y […] set (character class in character class) ..&&.. intersection (low precedence at the next of ^)

ex. [a-w&&[^c-g]z] ==> ([a-w] AND ([^c-g] OR z)) ==> [abh-w]
  • If you want to use ‘[‘, ‘-‘, ‘]’ as a normal character in a character class, you should escape these characters by ‘\’.

POSIX bracket ([:xxxxx:], negate [:^xxxxx:])

Not Unicode Case:

  alnum    alphabet or digit char
  alpha    alphabet
  ascii    code value: [0 - 127]
  blank    \t, \x20
  cntrl
  digit    0-9
  graph    include all of multibyte encoded characters
  lower
  print    include all of multibyte encoded characters
  punct
  space    \t, \n, \v, \f, \r, \x20
  upper
  xdigit   0-9, a-f, A-F
  word     alphanumeric, "_" and multibyte characters

Unicode Case:

  alnum    Letter | Mark | Decimal_Number
  alpha    Letter | Mark
  ascii    0000 - 007F
  blank    Space_Separator | 0009
  cntrl    Control | Format | Unassigned | Private_Use | Surrogate
  digit    Decimal_Number
  graph    [[:^space:]] && ^Control && ^Unassigned && ^Surrogate
  lower    Lowercase_Letter
  print    [[:graph:]] | [[:space:]]
  punct    Connector_Punctuation | Dash_Punctuation | Close_Punctuation |
           Final_Punctuation | Initial_Punctuation | Other_Punctuation |
           Open_Punctuation
  space    Space_Separator | Line_Separator | Paragraph_Separator |
           0009 | 000A | 000B | 000C | 000D | 0085
  upper    Uppercase_Letter
  xdigit   0030 - 0039 | 0041 - 0046 | 0061 - 0066
           (0-9, a-f, A-F)
  word     Letter | Mark | Decimal_Number | Connector_Punctuation
  1. Extended groups

(?#…) comment

(?imx-imx) option on/off i: ignore case m: multi-line (dot(.) match newline) x: extended form (?imx-imx:subexp) option on/off for subexp

(?:subexp) not captured group (subexp) captured group

(?=subexp) look-ahead (?!subexp) negative look-ahead (?<=subexp) look-behind (?<!subexp) negative look-behind

                 Subexp of look-behind must be fixed character length.
                 But different character length is allowed in top level
                 alternatives only.
                 ex. (?<=a|bc) is OK. (?<=aaa(?:b|cd)) is not allowed.

                 In negative-look-behind, captured group isn't allowed, 
                 but shy group(?:) is allowed.

(?>subexp) atomic group don’t backtrack in subexp.

(?

subexp) define named group (All characters of the name must be a word character.) Not only a name but a number is assigned like a captured group. Assigning the same name as two or more subexps is allowed. In this case, a subexp call can not be performed although the back reference is possible. 8. Back reference \n back reference by group number (n >= 1) \k back reference by group name In the back reference by the multiplex definition name, a subexp with a large number is referred to preferentially. (When not matched, a group of the small number is referred to.) * Back reference by group number is forbidden if named group is defined in the pattern and ONIG_OPTION_CAPTURE_GROUP is not setted. back reference with nest level \k n: 0, 1, 2, … \k n: 0, 1, 2, … Destinate relative nest level from back reference position. ex 1. /\A(? |.|(?:(?.)\g\k))\z/.match(“reer”) ex 2. r = Regexp.compile( \g \g* \g ){0} (? \s* > ){0} (? [a-zA-Z_:]+ ){0} (? [^ | [^ \k >){0} \g __REGEXP__ p r.match(‘ fbbbf’).captures 9. Subexp call (“Tanaka Akira special”) \g call by group name \g call by group number (n >= 1) * left-most recursive call is not allowed. ex. (? a|\gb) => error (? a|b\gc) => OK * Call by group number is forbidden if named group is defined in the pattern and ONIG_OPTION_CAPTURE_GROUP is not setted. * If the option status of called group is different from calling position then the group’s option is effective. ex. (?-i:\g )(?i:(?a)){0} match to “A” 10. Captured group Behavior of the no-named group (…) changes with the following conditions. (But named group is not changed.) case 1. /…/ (named group is not used, no option) (…) is treated as a captured group. case 2. /…/g (named group is not used, ‘g’ option) (…) is treated as a no-captured group (?:…). case 3. /..(? ..)../ (named group is used, no option) (…) is treated as a no-captured group (?:…). numbered-backref/call is not allowed. case 4. /..(? ..)../G (named group is used, ‘G’ option) (…) is treated as a captured group. numbered-backref/call is allowed. where g: ONIG_OPTION_DONT_CAPTURE_GROUP G: ONIG_OPTION_CAPTURE_GROUP (‘g’ and ‘G’ options are argued in ruby-dev ML) —————————– A-1. Syntax depend options + ONIG_SYNTAX_RUBY (?m): dot(.) match newline + ONIG_SYNTAX_PERL and ONIG_SYNTAX_JAVA (?s): dot(.) match newline (?m): ^ match after newline, $ match before newline A-2. Original extensions + hexadecimal digit char type \h, \H + named group (? …) + named backref \k + subexp call \g , \g A-3. Lacked features compare with perl 5.8.0 + \N{name} + \l,\u,\L,\U, \X, \C + (?{code}) + (??{code}) + (?(condition)yes-pat|no-pat) * \Q…\E This is effective on ONIG_SYNTAX_PERL and ONIG_SYNTAX_JAVA. A-4. Differences with Japanized GNU regex(version 0.12) of Ruby 1.8 + add character property (\p{property}, \P{property}) + add hexadecimal digit char type (\h, \H) + add look-behind (?>]/ in EUC-JP encoding. + effect range of isolated option is to next ‘)’. ex. (?:(?i)a|b) is interpreted as (?:(?i:a|b)), not (?:(?i:a)|b). + isolated option is not transparent to previous pattern. ex. a(?i)* is a syntax error pattern. + allowed incompleted left brace as an usual string. ex. /{/, /({)/, /a{2,3/ etc… + negative POSIX bracket [:^xxxx:] is supported. + POSIX bracket [:ascii:] is added. + repeat of look-ahead is not allowed. ex. /(?=a)*/, /(?!b){5}/ + Ignore case option is effective to numbered character. ex. /\x61/i =~ “A” + In the range quantifier, the number of the minimum is omissible. /a{,n}/ == /a{0,n}/ The simultanious abbreviation of the number of times of the minimum and the maximum is not allowed. (/a{,}/) + /a{n}?/ is not a non-greedy operator. /a{n}?/ == /(?:a{n})?/ + invalid back reference is checked and cause error. /\1/, /(a)\2/ + Zero-length match in infinite repeat stops the repeat, then changes of the capture group status are checked as stop condition. /(?:()|())*\1\2/ =~ “” /(?:\1a|())*/ =~ “a” A-5. Disabled functions by default syntax + capture history (?@…) and (?@ …) ex. /(?@a)*/.match(“aaa”) ==> [, , ] see sample/listcap.c file. A-6. Problems + Invalid encoding byte sequence is not checked in UTF-8. * Invalid first byte is treated as a character. /./u =~ “\xa3” * Incomplete byte sequence is not checked. /\w+/ =~ “a\xf3\x8ec” // END

© John Laudun