Provided by: nickle_2.97build2_amd64 bug

NAME

       nickle - a desk calculator language

SYNOPSIS

       nickle [--help|--usage] [-f file] [-l library] [-e expr] [ script ] [--] [arg ...]

DESCRIPTION

       Nickle  is  a  desk  calculator  language  with  powerful programming and scripting capabilities.  Nickle
       supports a variety of datatypes, especially arbitrary precision integers, rationals, and imprecise reals.
       The input language vaguely resembles C.  Some things in C which do not translate  easily  are  different,
       some design choices have been made differently, and a very few features are simply missing.

USAGE

       An  un-flagged  argument  is  treated  as  a  Nickle  script, and replaces standard input.  Any remaining
       arguments following the script are placed in the Nickle string array argv  for  programmatic  inspection.
       When  invoked  without  an expression or script argument, Nickle reads from standard input, and writes to
       standard output.

       Options are as follows:

       --help,--usage
              Print a help/usage message and exit.  This is a built-in feature of Nickle's ParseArgs module, and
              thus will also be true of Nickle scripts that use this library.

       -f,--file file
              Load file into Nickle before beginning execution.

       -l,--library library
              Load library into Nickle before beginning execution.  See below for a description of  the  library
              facility.

       -e,--expr expr
              Evaluate expr before beginning execution.

       --     Quit parsing arguments and pass the remainder, unevaluated, to argv.

SYNTAX

       To  make  the input language more useful in an interactive setting, newline only terminates statements at
       ``reasonable'' times.  Newline terminates either expressions or single statements typed by the user (with
       the exception of a few statements which require lookahead:  notably  if()  and  twixt(),  which  have  an
       optional  else part). Inside compound statements or function definitions, only a ; terminates statements.
       This approach is convenient and does not appear to cause problems in normal use.

       The syntax of Nickle programs is as follows.  In this description, name denotes any sequence of  letters,
       digits and _ characters not starting with a digit; E denotes any expression; S denotes any statement; and
       T  denotes  any  type.   The  syntax  X,X,...,X  denotes one or more comma-separated Xs, unless otherwise
       indicated.

       Comments:

       C-style comments are enclosed in /* and */, and shell-style comments are denoted by a leading  #  at  the
       start of a line.

       Operands:

       real number
              Can include exponent, need not include decimal point or sign.  Will be treated as exact rationals.
              If  a  trailing decimal part contains an opening curly brace, the brace is silently ignored; if it
              contains a curly-bracketed trailing portion, it is treated  as  a  repeating  decimal.   `Floating
              point'' constants are currently represented internally as rationals: for floating constants with a
              given  precision  (and  an  infinite-precision  exponent),  use  the  imprecise() builtin function
              described below.

       octal number
              Start with a 0 (e.g., 014 is the same as 12).

       hexidecimal number
              Start with "0x" (e.g., 0x1a is the same as 26).

       string As in C.  String constants are surrounded by  double-quotes.   Backslashed  characters  (including
              double-quotes)  stand  for  themselves,  except "\n" stands for newline, "\r" for carriage return,
              "\b" for backspace, "\t" for tab and "\f" for formfeed.

       name   A variable reference.

       name() name(E,E,...,E)
              A function call with zero or more  arguments.   Functions  are  fully  call-by-value:  arrays  and
              structures are copied rather than being referenced as in C.

       desc name  T name = value
              Definition  expressions:  a new name is made available, with the value of the definition being the
              value of the initializer in the second form, and uninitialized in the first form.  The  descriptor
              desc is not optional: it consists of any combination of visibility, storage class or type (in that
              order).   See  QUALIFIERS  immediately  below for a description of these qualifiers.  A structured
              value expression is also possible: see VALUES below.

              In addition to being able  to  initialize  a  definition  with  a  Nickle  value,  C-style  array,
              structure, and union definitions are also allowed: For example, the following
                int[*,*] name = {{0,1},{2,3}}
                int[2,2] name = {{0...}...}
              are  permitted  with the obvious semantics.  This is the context in which the dimensions in a type
              may be expressions: see the discussion of array types above.  See  the  discussion  of  array  and
              structure values for array and structure initializer syntax.

QUALIFIERS

       A  declaration  or  definition  may  be qualified, as in C, to indicate details of programmatic behavior.
       Unlike in C, these qualifiers, while optional, must appear in the given order.

       Visibility:

       public Any definition expression (function definition,  variable  definition,  type  definition)  can  be
              qualified  with  public  to  indicate  that  the  name being defined should be visible outside the
              current namespace, and should be automatically imported.  See Namespaces below for further info.

       protected
              Any definition expression (function definition,  variable  definition,  type  definition)  can  be
              qualified  with  protected  to  indicate that the name being defined should be visible outside the
              current namespace, but should not be made available by import declarations.  See Namespaces  below
              for further info.

       Lifetime:

       auto   An  auto  object  is  local  to  a particular block: its lifetime is at least the lifetime of that
              block.  An auto object with an initializer will be re-initialized each time it is evaluated.  This
              is the default lifetime for local objects.

       static A static object is local to a particular  function  definition:  its  lifetime  is  at  least  the
              lifetime of that definition.  A new static object will be created each time its enclosing function
              definition is evaluated.

              In  Nickle,  the  keyword  static  has  to  do only with lifetime (like the use of static inside C
              functions), not with visibility (which is handled by separate qualifiers as described  above,  not
              like the use of static in global scope in C).

       global A  global  object is global to the entire program: its lifetime is the lifetime of the program.  A
              global object will be created and initialized when its definition is  first  seen.   This  is  the
              default lifetime for global objects.

              The  distinction  between  static  and  global  lifetime in Nickle is not possible in C, because C
              functions are not first class objects with nested scope.  When deciding which to use in  a  Nickle
              program, think about what should happen if a definition is re-evaluated.

OPERATORS

       Here are the basic Nickle operators, grouped in order of decreasing precedence:

       A[E,E,...,E]
              Refers  to  the E'th element of the array expression A, or the E1'th/E2'th/etc element of a multi-
              dimensional array.  Both arrays of arrays ala C and multidimensional arrays ala NAWK are possible.

       struct.tag
              Structure dereference.

       struct->tag
              Structure pointer dereference ala C.

       =============

       ++ --  Unary increment/decrement. May be either postfix or prefix.

       -      Unary negate

       ! E    Logical negation.

       E !    Factorial.  Requires a non-negative integer argument.

       * E    Pointer dereference.

       & E    Reference construction.

       =============

       (U) E  Construct a value of union type with tag U and value E.

       =============

       **     Exponentiation. Both operands may be fractional.  The left operand must be non-negative unless the
              right operand is integer.  The result type is the type of the left operand if the right operand is
              integer, and real otherwise.

              This is the only known type-unsound feature of Nickle: an expression like 2 ** -3 will  statically
              be  of  type  integer,  but dynamically will generate a rational result.  This may cause a runtime
              type error later on: consider
                int x = 2 ** -3;

       =============

       * / // %
              Times, divide, integer divide, and remainder.  The right operand of the last three operators  must
              be nonzero.  The result type of the division operator will always be at least rational: the result
              type  of  the  integer  division operator will always be int.  This is a notable departure from C,
              where integer division is implied by integer operands.  Integer division is defined by
                x // y == y > 0 ? floor (x / y) : ceil(x / y)
              The remainder is always non-negative and is defined by: by
                x % y = x - (x // y) * y

       =============

       + -    Addition and subtraction.

       =============

       << >>  Bitwise left and right shift with integer operands.  Negative right  operands  work  as  expected.
              These operators are defined by
                x << y = x * 2 ** y
                x >> y = x // 2 ** y
              Another  way  to  look  at this is that negative left operands are considered to be in an infinite
              twos-complement representation (i.e., sign-extended to infinity), with right shift  sign-extending
              its left operand.

       =============

       <= >= < >
              Relational operators.

       =============

       == !=  Equality operators.

       =============
              Finally, in order of decreasing precedence:

       &      Bitwise AND.  Negative operands are considered to be in an infinite twos-complement representation
              (i.e., sign-extended to infinity).

       ^      Bitwise XOR.  Negative operands as in bitwise AND.

       |      Bitwise OR.  Negative operands as in bitwise AND.

       &&     Short-circuit logical AND.

       ||     Short-circuit logical OR.

       E ? E : E
              Conditional  expression:  if  first  expression  is logical true, value is second expression, else
              third.

       fork E Create (and return) a thread.  See Thread below for details.

       = += -= *= /= //= %= **= <<= >>= ^= &= |=
              Assignment operators.  Left-hand-side must be assignable.  x <op>= y is equivalent to x = x <op> y

       E , E  Returns right-hand expression.

TYPES

       The type declaration syntax of Nickle more strongly resembles the ``left'' variant  of  the  Java  syntax
       than the C syntax.  Essentially, a type consists of:

       poly integer rational real string continuation void
              A  base  type  of  the  language.   Type void is actually only usable in certain contexts, notably
              function returns.  It is currently implemented as a ``unit'' type ala ML, and  thus  has  slightly
              different behavior than in C.  Type poly is the supertype of all other types (i.e., it can be used
              to inhibit static type checking), and is the default type in most situations where a type need not
              appear.

       file semaphore thread
              Also builtin base types, but integral to the File and Thread ADTs: see below.

       More About Types:

       Nickle supports polymorphic data: As an expression is evaluated, a data type is chosen to fit the result.
       Any  Nickle  object may be statically typed, in which case bounds violations will be flagged as errors at
       compile time.  Polymorphic variables and functions do not place restrictions on the assigned  data  type;
       this is the default type for all objects.

       poly   This describes the union of all datatypes.  A variable with this type can contain any data value.

       int    Arbitrary precision integers.

       rational
              Arbitrary precision rational numbers.

       real   Arbitrary  exponent  precision floating point numbers.  As many computations cannot be carried out
              exactly as rational numbers, Nickle implements  non-precise  arithmetic  using  its  own  machine-
              independent  representation  for  floating  point  numbers.   The  builtin  function  imprecise(n)
              generates a real number with 256 bits  of  precision  from  the  number  n,  while  imprecise(n,p)
              generates a real number with p bits of precision.

       T[]    An array of type T, of one or more dimensions.  There are no zero-dimensional arrays in Nickle.

       T[*]   A  one-dimensional  array  of type T.  Unlike in C, the dimension of an array is never part of its
              type in Nickle.  Further, arrays and pointers are unrelated types in Nickle.

       T[*,*,...,*]
              A two or more dimensional array of type T.  The stars ``*'' are not  optional.   As  the  previous
              paragraphs make clear, ``T[]'' is not a zero-dimensional array.

       T[E,E,...,E]
              In definition contexts, integer values may be given for each dimension of an array context.  These
              are  strictly  for  value-creation  purposes,  and  are  not  part  of the type.  An array type is
              determined only by the base type and number of dimensions of the array.

       T0() T0(T,T,...,T)
              A function returning type T0.  A function accepts 0 or more arguments.

       T0() T0(T,T,...,T ...)
              A function accepting zero or more  required  arguments,  plus  an  arbitrary  number  of  optional
              arguments.   The  second  sequence  of  three  dots  (ellipsis) is syntax, not metasyntax: see the
              description of varargs functions for details.

       *T     A pointer to a location of type T.  Pointer arithmetic in Nickle operates only  upon  pointers  to
              arrays: the pointer must be of the correct type, and may never stray out of bounds.  A pointer may
              either  point to some location or be null (0).  As in C, the precedence of ``*'' is lower than the
              precedence of ``[]'' or ``()'': use parenthesis as needed.

       struct {T name; T name; ...}
              A structure with fields of the given name and type.  The types T are optional: in  their  absence,
              the type of the field is poly.

       union {T name; T name; ...}
              A  ``disjoint  union'' of the given types.  This is more like the variant record type of Pascal or
              the datatype of ML than the C union type: the names are tags of the given  type,  exactly  one  of
              which applies to a given value at a given time.

       (T)    Parentheses for grouping.

       Typedef:

       As in C, new type names may be created with the typedef statement.  The syntax is
         typedef T typename;
       where T is a Nickle type.  The resulting typename may be used anywhere a type is expected.

VALUES

       Values  of the base types of Nickle are as expected.  See the syntax for constants above.  Values of type
       file, semaphore, and continuation may currently be created only by calls to builtin functions: no  Nickle
       constants of these types exist.

       As  noted  in TYPES above, Nickle has several kinds of ``structured value'': arrays, functions, pointers,
       structures and disjoint unions.  All of these have some common properties.   When  created,  all  of  the
       component  values are uninitialized (unless otherwise specified).  Attempts to use an uninitialized value
       will result in either a compile-time error or a runtime exception.

       Arrays:

       [E]    creates a (zero-based) array with E elements.  E must be non-negative.

       [E]{V,V,...,V}
              Creates an array with E elements, initialized to the Vs.   If  there  are  too  few  initializers,
              remaining elements will remain uninitialized.

       [E]{V,V,...,V...}
              The second ellipsis (three dots) is syntax, not metasyntax.  Create an array with E elements.  The
              first  elements  in the array will be initialized according to the Vs, with any remaining elements
              receiving the same value as the last V.  This syntax may be used in the obvious fashion  with  any
              of the array initializers below.

       [*]{V,V,...,V}
              Creates  an  initialized  array  with  exactly as many elements as initializers.  There must be at
              least one initializer.

       [E,E,...,E] [*,*,...,*]
              Creates multidimensional arrays.  Integer  expressions   and  "*"  cannot  be  mixed:  an  array's
              dimensions  are entirely either specified or unspecified by the definition.  These arrays may also
              be created initialized: see next paragraph for initializer syntax.

       (T[E]) (T[E,E,...,E]) (T[E]){E,E,...,E}

       (T[E,E,...,E]){{E,...},...,{E,...}}
              Alternate syntax for creating arrays of type T.  The initializers, in curly braces, are  optional.
              The  number  of  initializers  must  be less than or equal to the given number of elements in each
              dimension.  For multidimensional arrays, the extra curly braces per dimension in  the  initializer
              are required; this is unlike C, where they are optional.

       (T[*]){E,E,...,E} (T[*,*,...,*]){{E,...},...,{E,...}}
              Creates  arrays  of type T, with each dimension's size given by the maximum number of initializers
              in any subarray in that dimension.

       Pointers:

       0      The null pointer, in contexts where a pointer is required.

       &V &A[E,E,...,E] &S.N
              Creates a pointer to the given variable, array element, or structure  member.   The  type  of  the
              pointer will be *T, where T is the type of the object pointed to.

       *P     The value pointed to by pointer P.  This can be viewed or modified as in C.

       Functions:

       (T func(){S;S;...S;}) (T func(T name,T name,...T name){S;S;...S;})
              Function expression: denotes a function of zero or more formal parameters with the given types and
              names,  returning  the  given result type.  The function body is given by the curly-brace-enclosed
              statement list.  All types are optional, and default to  poly.   As  noted  above,  functions  are
              strictly call-by-value: in particular, arrays and structures are copied rather than referenced.

       T function name(T name,T name,...,T name){S;S;...S;}
              Defines a function of zero or more arguments.  Syntactic sugar for
                T(T,T,...T) name = (T func(T name,T name,...T name){S;S;...S;});

       T function name(T name, T name ...)
              The ellipsis here is syntax, not metasyntax: if the last formal argument to a function is followed
              by  three  dots, the function may be called with more actuals than formals.  All ``extra'' actuals
              are packaged into the array formal of the given name, and typechecked against the optional type  T
              of the last argument (default poly).

       Structures:

       (struct { T name; T name; ...T name; }){name = E; name = E; ...name=E;}
              Create  a  value  of a structured type. The named fields are initialized to the given values, with
              the remainder uninitialized.  As indicated, initialization is by label rather than  positional  as
              in C.

       Unions:

       (union { T name; T name; ...T name; }.name) E
              Create  a  value of the given union type, the variant given by .name, and the value given by E.  E
              must be type-compatible with name.

STATEMENTS

       The statement syntax very closely resembles that of C.  Some additional syntax has been added to  support
       Nickle's additional functionality.

       E;     Evaluates the expression.

       {S ... S}
              Executes the enclosed statements in order.

       if (E) S
              Basic conditional.

       if (E) S
              Conditional execution.

       else S Else  is  allowed,  with the usual syntax and semantics.  In particular, an else binds to the most
              recent applicable if() or twixt().

       while (E) S
              C-style while loop.

       do S while (E);
              C-style do loop.

       for (opt-E; opt-E; opt-E) S
              C-style for loop.

       switch (E) { case E: S-list  case E: S-list ... default: S-list }
              C-style case statement.  The case expressions are not required to be constant expressions, but may
              be arbitrary.  The first case evaluating to the switch argument is  taken,  else  the  default  if
              present, else the switch body is skipped.

       twixt(opt-E; opt-E) S

       twixt(opt-E; opt-E) S else S
              If  first  argument  expression  evaluates  to  true,  the body of the twixt() and then the second
              argument expression will be evaluated.  If the first argument expression evaluates to  false,  the
              else  statement  will  be  executed  if  present.  Otherwise, the entire twixt() statement will be
              skipped.

       The twixt() statement guarantees that all of these events will happen in the specified  order  regardless
       of  the  manner  in  which  the  twixt()  is  entered  (from  outside)  or  exited, including exceptions,
       continuations, and break.  (Compare with Java's ``finally'' clause.)

       try S;

       try S catch name (T name, ...) { S; ... };

       try S catch name (T name, ...) { S; ... } ... ;
              Execute the first statement S.  If an exception is raised during execution, and the  name  matches
              the  name in a catch block, bind the formal parameters in the catch block to the actual parameters
              of the exception, and execute the body of the catch block.  There may be multiple catch blocks per
              try.  Zero catches, while legal, is relatively  useless.   After  completion  of  a  catch  block,
              execution  continues  after  the  try  clause.   As  with  else,  a catch binds to the most recent
              applicable try-catch block.

       raise name(name, name, ..., name)
              Raise the named exception with zero or more arguments.

       ;      The null statement

       break; Discontinue execution of the nearest enclosing  for/do/while/switch/twixt  statement.   The  leave
              expression will be executed as the twixt statement is exited.

       continue;
              Branch directly to the conditional test of the nearest enclosing for/do/while statement.

       return E;
              Return value E from the nearest enclosing function.

       Namespaces:

       Like  Java  and  C++  Nickle  has  a notion of namespace, a collection of names with partially restricted
       visibility.  In Nickle, namespaces are created with the namespace command.

       opt-P namespace N { S ... }
              Places all names defined in the statements S into a namespace named N.  The optional  qualifier  P
              may  be  the  keyword  public, but beware: this merely indicates that the name N itself is visible
              elsewhere in the current scope, and has nothing to do with the  visibility  of  items  inside  the
              namespace.

       extend namespace N { S ... }
              Reopen  the  given  namespace  N,  and  extend  it  with  the names defined as public in the given
              statements S.

              Names defined inside the namespace are invisible outside the namespace unless they  are  qualified
              with the keyword public.  Public names may be referred to using a path notation:
                namespace::namespace::...::namespace::name
              refers  to  the given name as defined inside the given set of namespaces.  The double-colon syntax
              is unfortunate, as it is slightly different in meaning than in C++, but all the good symbols  were
              taken,  and it is believed to be a feature that the namespace separator is syntactically different
              than the structure operator. In Java, for example, the phrase
                name.name.name
              is syntactically ambiguous: the middle name may be either a structure or a namespace.

       import N;
              The name N must refer to a namespace: all public names in this  namespace  are  brought  into  the
              current scope (scoping out conflicting names).

BUILTINS

       Nickle  has  a  collection  of standard functions built in.  Some of these are written in C, but many are
       written in Nickle.  Several collections of functions have associated builtin datatypes: their namespaces,
       together with their types, should be viewed as ADTs.

       Top-Level Builtins:

       int printf(string fmt, poly args...)
              Calls File::fprintf(stdout, fmt, args ...) and returns its result.

       string function gets ()
              Calls File::fgets(stdin) and returns its result.

       string function scanf (string fmt, *poly args...)
              Calls File::vfscanf(stdin, fmt, args) and returns its result.

       string function vscanf (string fmt, (*poly)[*] args)
              Calls File::vfscanf(stdin, fmt, args) and returns its result.

       real imprecise(rational value)
              See the discussion of type real above.

       real imprecise(rational value, int prec)
              See the discussion of type real above.

       int string_to_integer(string s)

       int atoi(string s)
              The argument s is a signed digit string, and the result is the  integer  it  represents.   If  the
              string  s is syntactically a hexadecimal, octal, binary, or explicit base-10 constant, treat it as
              such.

       int string_to_integer(string s, int base)

       int atoi(string s, int base)
              Treat s as a string of digits in the given base.  A base of 0  acts  as  with  no  base  argument.
              Otherwise, base specification syntax in the string is ignored.

       int putchar(int c)
              Place  the  given  character  on  the  standard output using File::putc(c, stdout), and return its
              result.

       int sleep(int msecs)
              Try to suspend the current thread for at least msecs milliseconds.  Return 1 on early return,  and
              0 otherwise.

       int exit(int status)
              Exit Nickle with the given status code.  Do not return anything.

       int dim(poly[*] a)
              Given a one-dimensional array a, dim() returns the number of elements of a.

       int[] dims(poly[] a)
              Given  an arbitrary array a, dims() returns an array of integers giving the size of each dimension
              of a.  Thus, dim(dims(a)) is the number of dimensions of a.

       *poly reference(poly v)
              Given an arbitrary value v, ``box'' that value into storage and return a pointer to the box.

       rational string_to_real(string s)

       rational atof(string s)
              Convert the real constant string s into its associated real number.

       number abs(real v)
              Return the absolute value of v.  The result type chosen will match the given context.

       int floor(real v)
              Return the largest integer less than or equal to v.  This will  fail  if  v  is  a  real  and  the
              precision is too low.

       int ceil(real v)
              Return  the  smallest  integer  greater than or equal to v.  This will fail if v is a real and the
              precision is too low.

       int exponent(real v)
              Return the exponent of the imprecise real v.

       rational mantissa(real v)
              Return the mantissa of the imprecise real v, as a rational m with 0 <= m <= 0.5 .

       int numerator(rational v)
              Return the numerator of the rational number v: i.e., if v = n/d in reduced form, return n.

       int denominator(rational v)
              Return the denominator of the rational number v: i.e., if v = n/d in reduced form, return d.

       int precision(real v)
              Return the number of bits of precision of the mantissa of the imprecise real number v.

       int sign(real v)
              Return -1 or 1 as v is negative or nonnegative.

       int bit_width(int v)
              Return the number of bits required to represent abs(v) internally.

       int is_int(poly v)
              Type predicate.

       int is_rational(poly v)
              Numeric type predicates are inclusive: e.g., is_rational(1) returns 1.

       int is_number(poly v)
              Type predicate.

       int is_string(poly v)
              Type predicate.

       int is_file(poly v)
              Type predicate.

       int is_thread(poly v)
              Type predicate.

       int is_semaphore(poly v)
              Type predicate.

       int is_continuation(poly v)
              Type predicate.

       int is_array(poly v)
              Type predicate.

       int is_ref(poly v)
              Type predicate: checks for pointer type.  This is arguably a misfeature, and may change.

       int is_struct(poly v)
              Type predicate.

       int is_func(poly v)
              Type predicate.

       int is_void(poly v)
              Type predicate.

       int gcd(int p, int q)
              Return the GCD of p and q.  The result is always positive.

       int xor(int a, int b)
              Return a ^ b .  This is mostly a holdover from before Nickle had an xor operator.

       poly setjmp(continuation *c, poly retval)
              The setjmp() and longjmp() primitives together with the continuation type form an ADT  useful  for
              nearly arbitrary transfers of flow-of-control.  The setjmp() and longjmp() builtins are like those
              of C, except that the restriction that longjmp() always jump upwards is removed(!): a continuation
              saved via setjmp() never becomes invalid during the program lifetime.

              The  setjmp()  builtin  saves  the  current  location  and  context  into its continuation pointer
              argument, and then returns its second argument.

       void longjmp(continuation c, poly retval)
              The longjmp() builtin never returns to the call site, but instead returns from the  setjmp()  that
              created the continuation, with return value equal to the second argument of longjmp().

       string prompt
              The  prompt printed during interactive use when at top-level.  Default "> ".  when waiting for the
              rest of a statement or expression, and when debugging, respectively.  Default values are "> ",  "+
              ", and "- ".

       string prompt2
              The  prompt printed during interactive use when waiting for the rest of a statement or expression.
              Default "+ ".

       string prompt3
              The prompt printed during interactive use when debugging.  Default "- ".

       string format
              The printf() format for printing top-level values.  Default "%g".

       string version
              The version number of the Nickle implementation currently being executed.

       string build
              The build date of the Nickle implementation currently being executed, in the form "yyyy/mm/dd", or
              "?" if the build date is unknown for some reason.

       file stdin
              Bound to the standard input stream.

       file stdout
              Bound to the standard output stream.

       file stderr
              Bound to the standard error stream.

       Exceptions:

       A few standard exceptions are predeclared and used internally by Nickle.

       exception uninitialized_value(string msg)
              Attempt to use an uninitialized value.

       exception invalid_argument(string msg, int arg, poly val)
              The arg-th argument to a builtin function had invalid value val.

       exception readonly_box(string msg, poly val)
              Attempt to change the value of a read-only quantity to val.

       exception invalid_array_bounds(string msg, poly a, poly i)
              Attempt to access array a at index i is out of bounds.

       exception divide_by_zero(string msg, real num, real den)
              Attempt to divide num by den with den == 0.

       exception invalid_struct_member(string msg, poly struct, string name)
              Attempt to refer to member name of the object struct, which does not exist.

       exception invalid_binop_values(string msg, poly arg1, poly arg2)
              Attempt to evaluate a binary operator with args arg1 and arg2, where at least one of these  values
              is invalid.

       exception invalid_unop_values(string msg, poly arg)
              Attempt to evaluate a unary operator with invalid argument arg.

       Builtin Namespaces:

       Math   The  math  functions  available  in the Math namespace are implemented in a fashion intended to be
              compatible with the C library.  Please consult the appropriate manuals for further details.

       real pi
              Imprecise constant giving the value of the circumference/diameter  ratio  of  the  circle  to  the
              default precision of 256 bits.

       protected real e
              Imprecise  constant giving the value of the base of natural logarithms to the default precision of
              256 bits.  Since e is protected, it must be referenced via Math::e, in  order  to  avoid  problems
              with using the fifth letter of the alphabet at top level.

       real function sqrt(real v)
              Returns the square root of v.

       real function cbrt(real v)
              Returns the cube root of v.

       real function exp(real v)
              Returns e**v.

       real function log(real a)
              Returns v such that e**v == a.  Throws an invalid_argument exception if a is non-positive.

       real function log10(real a)
              Returns v such that 10**v == a.  Throws an invalid_argument exception if a is non-positive.

       real function log2(real a)
              Returns v such that 2**v == a.  Throws an invalid_argument exception if a is non-positive.

       real function pi_value(int prec)
              Returns the ratio of the circumference of a circle to the diameter, with prec bits of precision.

       real function sin(real a)
              Returns  the ratio of the opposite side to the hypotenuse of angle a of a right triangle, given in
              radians.

       real function cos(real a)
              Returns the ratio of the adjacent side to the hypotenuse of angle a of a right triangle, given  in
              radians.

       void function sin_cos(real a, *real sinp, *real cosp)
              Returns  with  sin(a) and cos(a) stored in the locations pointed to by sinp and cosp respectively.
              If either pointer is 0, do not store into that location.  May be slightly faster than calling both
              trig functions independently.

       real function tan(real a)
              Returns the ratio of the opposite side to the adjacent side of angle a of a right triangle,  given
              in  radians.   Note  that  tan(pi/2) is not currently an error: it will return a very large number
              dependent on the precision of its input.

       real function asin(real v)
              Returns a such that sin(a) == v.

       real function acos(real v)
              Returns a such that cos(a) == v.

       real function atan(real v)
              Returns a such that tan(a) == v.

       real function atan2(real x, y)
              Returns a such that tan(a) == x / y.  Deals correctly with y == 0.

       real function pow(real a, real b)
              The implementation of the ** operator.

       File   The namespace File provides operations on file values.

       int function fprintf(file f, string s, ....)
              Print formatted values to a file, as with UNIX stdio library fprintf().   fprintf()  and  printf()
              accept  a reasonable sub-set of the stdio library version:  %c, %d, %e, %x, %o, %f, %s, %g work as
              expected, as does %v to smart-print a value.  Format modifiers may be placed between the  percent-
              sign  and  the  format  letter to modify formatting.  There are a lot of known bugs with input and
              output formatting.

              Format Letters:

              %c     Requires a small integer argument (0..255), and formats as an ASCII character.

              %d     Requires an integer argument, and formats as an integer.

              %x     Requires an integer argument, and formats as a base-16 (hexadecimal) integer.

              %o     Requires an integer argument, and formats as a base-8 (octal) integer.

              %e     Requires a number argument, and formats in scientific notation.

              %f     Requires a number argument, and formats in fixed-point notation.

              %s     Requires a string argument, and emits the string literally.

              %g     Requires a number, and tries to pick a precise and readable representation to format it.

              Format Modifiers:

              digits All format characters will take an integer format modifier indicating the number of  blanks
                     in  the  format  field  for  the  data  to  be formatted.  The value will be printed right-
                     justified in this space.

              digits.digits
                     The real formats will take a pair of integer format modifiers indicating  the  field  width
                     and precision (number of chars after decimal point) of the formatted value.  Either integer
                     may be omitted.

              -      A precision value indicating infinite precision.

              *      The next argument to fprintf() is an integer indicating the field width or precision of the
                     formatted value.

       file function string_write()
              Return a file which collects written values into a string.

       int function close(file f)
              Close file f and return an indication of success.

       int function flush(file f)
              Flush the buffers of file f and return an indication of success.

       int function getc(file f)
              Get the next character from file f and return it.

       int function end(file f)
              Returns true if file f is at EOF, else false.

       int function error(file f)
              Returns true if an error is pending on file f, else false.

       int function clear_error(file f)
              Clears pending errors on file f, and returns an indication of success.

       file function string_read(string s)
              Returns a virtual file whose contents are the string s.

       string function string_string(file f)
              Return  the  string  previously  written  into  the  file  f,  which  should  have been created by
              string_read() or string_write().  Behavior on other files is currently undefined.

       file function open(string path, string mode)
              Open the file at the given path with the given mode string, ala UNIX stdio  fopen().   Permissible
              modes are as in stdio: "r", "w", "x", "r+", "w+" and "x+".

       integer function fputc(integer c, file f)
              Output the character c to the output file f, and return an indication of success.

       integer function ungetc(integer c, file f)
              Push the character c back onto the input file f, and return an indication of success.

       integer function setbuf(file f, integer n)
              Set the size of the buffer associated with file f to n, and return n.

       string function fgets (file f)
              Get a line of input from file f, and return the resulting string.

       file function pipe(string path, string[*] argv, string mode)
              Start up the program at the given path, returning a file which is one end of a "pipe" to the given
              process. The mode argument can be "r" to read from the pipe or "w" to write to the pipe.  The argv
              argument  is  an  array  of strings giving the arguments to be passed to the program, with argv[0]
              conventionally being the program name.

       int function print (file f, poly v, string fmt, int base, int width, int prec, string fill)
              Print value v to file f in format fmt with the given base, width, prec, and fill.  Used internally
              by File::fprintf();

       int function fscanf(file f, string fmt, *poly args...)
              Fill the locations pointed to by the array args with values taken from file f according to  string
              fmt.  The format specifiers are much as in UNIX stdio scanf(): the "%d", "%e", "%f", "%c" and "%s"
              specifiers are supported with the expected modifiers.

       int function vfscanf (file f, string fmt, (*poly)[*] args)
              Given the file f, the format fmt, and the array of arguments args, fscanf() appropriately.

       Thread The  namespace  Thread  supports  various  operations  useful  for programming with threads, which
              provide concurrent flow of control in the shared address space.  There is  one  piece  of  special
              syntax associated with threads.

              fork(E)
                     Accepts an arbitrary expression, and evaluates it in a new child thread.  The parent thread
                     receives the thread as the value of the fork expression.

              The remainder of the Thread functions are fairly standard.

       int function kill(thread list...)
              Kills  every  running  thread  in  the array list.  With no arguments, kills the currently running
              thread.  Returns the number of threads killed.

       int function trace(poly list...)
              Shows the state of every running thread in the array list.  With no arguments, traces the  default
              continuation.  Returns the number of threads traced.

       int function cont()
              Continues execution of any interrupted threads, and returns the number of continued threads.

       thread function current()
              Return the current thread.

       int function list()
              Reports the currently running thread to stdout.

       int function get_priority(thread t)
              Reports the priority of the given thread.

       thread function id_to_thread(int id)
              Returns the thread with the given id, if found, and 0 otherwise.

       poly function join(thread t)
              Waits for thread t to terminate, and returns whatever it returns.

       int function set_priority(thread t, int i)
              Attempts  to  set  the  priority  of  thread  t  to level i, and returns the new priority.  Larger
              priorities mean more runtime: a task with higher priority will  always  run  instead  of  a  lower
              priority task.  Threads of equal highest priority will be pre-emptively multitasked.

       Semaphore
              The  Semaphore  namespace  encapsulates  operations on the semaphore built-in ADT.  A semaphore is
              used for thread synchronization.  Each signal() operation on  the  semaphore  awakens  the  least-
              recent  thread  to  wait()  on  that  semaphore.  The ``count'' of waiting processes may be set at
              semaphore creation time.

       semaphore function new(int c)
              Create a new semaphore with an initial count c of waiting processes.  If c is positive,  it  means
              that  c threads may wait on the semaphore before one blocks.  If c is negative, it sets a count of
              threads which must be waiting on the semaphore before further waits will not block.

       semaphore function new()
              Call semaphore(0) and return its result.

       int signal(semaphore s)
              Increment semaphore s.  If s is non-positive, and some thread is blocked on s, release the  least-
              recently-blocked thread.  Return 1 on success.

       int wait(semaphore s)
              Decrement semaphore s.  If s is negative, block until released.  Return 1 on success.

       int test(semaphore s)
              Test  whether  wait()  on  semaphore  s would cause the current thread to block.  If so, return 0.
              Otherwise, attempt to decrement s, and return 1 if successful.

       String The String namespace contains a few basic operations on the string ADT.

       int function length(string s)
              Returns the number of characters in s.

       string function new(int c)
              Returns as a string the single character c.

       string function new(int cv[*])
              Returns a string comprised of the characters of cv.

       int function index(string t, string p)
              Returns the integer index of the pattern string p in the target string t, or -1  if  p  is  not  a
              substring of t.

       string function substr(string s, int i, int l)
              Returns  the  substring  of  string  s  starting  with  the character at offset i (zero-based) and
              continuing for a total of l  characters.   If  l  is  negative,  the  substring  will  consist  of
              characters preceding rather than succeeding i.

       PRNG   The  PRNG namespace provides pseudo-random number generation and manipulation.  The core generator
              is  the  RC4  stream  cipher  generator,  properly  bootstrapped.   This  provide  a   stream   of
              cryptographically-secure   pseudo-random   bits   at  reasonable  amortized  cost.   (But  beware,
              initialization is somewhat expensive.)

       void function srandom(int s)
              Initialize the generator, using the (arbitrarily-large) integer as a seed.

       void function dev_srandom(int nbits)
              Initialize the generator, using nbits bits  of  entropy  obtained  from  some  reasonable  entropy
              source.   On  UNIX systems, this source is /dev/urandom.  Asking for more initial entropy than the
              system has may lead either to bootstrapping (as on UNIX) or to hanging, so use cautiously.

       int function randbits(int n)
              Returns an n-bit pseudo-random number, in the range 0..(2**n)-1.  Useful for things like RSA.

       int function randint(int n)
              Returns a pseudo-random number in the range 0..n-1.

       void function shuffle(*(poly[*]) a)
              Performs an efficient in-place true shuffle (c.f. Knuth) of the array a.

       Command
              The Command namespace is  used  by  the  top-level  commands  as  described  below.   It  is  also
              occasionally useful in its own right.

       string library_path
              Contains the current library search path, a colon-separated list of directories to be searched for
              library files.

       int function undefine(string name)
              Implements  the  top-level  undefine  command.  Remove  the  name  denoted by string name from the
              namespace.  This removes all visible definitions of the name.

       int function undefine(string[*] names)
              Remove each of the names in the  array  names  from  the  namespace.   This  removes  all  visible
              definitions of each name.

       int function delete(string name)
              Attempt  to  remove  the  command  with the given string name from the top-level command list, and
              return 1 if successful.

       int function lex_file(string path)
              Attempt to make the file at the given path the current source of Nickle  code,  and  return  1  if
              successful.   Note that this effectively ``includes'' the file by pushing it onto a stack of files
              to be processed.

       int function lex_library(string filename)
              Like lex_file(), but searches the directories given by the library_path  variable  for  the  first
              file with the given filename.

       int function lex_string(string code)
              Attempt to make the Nickle code contained in the string code be the next input.

       int function edit(string[*] names)
              Implements  the  top-level  edit  command.  The  names  in the array are a path of namespace names
              leading to the symbol name, which is last.

       int function new(string name, poly func)
              Binds function func to the top-level command string name: i.e., makes it  part  of  the  top-level
              command vocabulary.

       int function new_names(string name, poly func)
              Binds  function  func  to  the top-level command string name: i.e., makes it part of the top-level
              command vocabulary.  Unlike new(), the string names given to func at  the  top  level  are  passed
              unevaluated as an array of string names or as a single string name.

       int function pretty_print(file f, string[*] names)
              Implements  the  top-level  print  command.   Each of the passed name strings is looked up and the
              corresponding code printed to file f.

       int function display(string fmt, poly val)
              Uses printf() to display the value val in format fmt.

       History
              Nickle maintains a top-level value history, useful as an  adjunct  to  command-line  editing  when
              calculating.  The History namespace contains functions to access this history.

       int function show(string fmt)
              Implements  the  history top-level command with no arguments.  Show the most recent history values
              with format fmt.

       int function show(string fmt, int count)
              Implements the history top-level command with one argument.  Show the last  count  history  values
              with format fmt.

       int function show(string fmt, int first, int last)
              Implements the history top-level command with two arguments.

       poly function insert(poly val)
              Insert val in the history list, and return it.

       Environ
              Many  operating  systems  have  some  notion  of ``environment variables.''  The Environ namespace
              contains functions to manipulate these.

       int function check(string name)
              Returns 1 if the variable with the given name is in the environment, and 0 otherwise.

       string function get(string name)
              Attempts to retrieve and return the value of the environment variable with the given name.  Throws
              an invalid_argument exception if the variable is not available.

       int function unset(string name)
              Attempts to unset the environment variable with the given  name,  and  returns  an  indication  of
              success.

       string function set(string name, string value)
              Attempts  to  set  the environment variable with the given name to the given value, and returns an
              indication of success.

COMMANDS

       Nickle has a set of commands which may be given at the top level.

       quit   Exit Nickle.

       quit E Exit Nickle with integer status code E.

       undefine NAME {,NAME}
              Remove these names from the system.

       load E Load a file given by the string name E.

       library E
              Load a library given by the string name E.  See  the  discussion  of  the  NICKLEPATH  environment
              variable in ENVIRONMENT below, and the discussion of Command::library_path above.

       E # E  Print expr1 in base expr2 .

       print NAME
              Display  a  formatted version of the object denoted by NAME.  Comments and original formatting are
              lost.  If NAME is a variable, print the type as well as the value.

       edit NAME
              Invoke $EDITOR on the named object, and re-incorporate the results of  the  edit.   This  is  most
              useful with functions.

       history
              Display  the  10 most recently printed values.  They can be accessed with $n where n is the number
              displayed to the right of the value in this list.

       history E
              Display the E most recent history values.

       history E,E
              Display history values from the first integer E through the second.

DEBUGGER

       When an unhandled exception reaches top  level  during  execution,  the  user  receives  a  dash  prompt,
       indicating  that  debug  mode is active.  In this mode, the command-line environment is that in which the
       unhandled exception was raised.  In addition a number of debugging commands are available to the user:

       trace  Get a stack backtrace showing the current state, as with the GDB where command.

       up     Move up the stack (i.e., toward the top-level expression) ala GDB.

       down   Move down the stack (i.e., toward the current context) ala GDB.

       done   Leave debugging mode, abandoning execution.

              In addition, the Debug namespace is scoped in in debugging mode.  This  is  primarily  of  use  in
              debugging Nickle itself.

       collect()
              Run the garbage collector.

       dump(function)
              Print the compiled byte code for function.

ENVIRONMENT

       EDITOR The editor used by the edit command, described in COMMANDS above.

       NICKLERC
              The  location  of  the  user's  .nicklerc  file,  which  will be loaded at the beginning of nickle
              execution if possible.

       HOME   Used to find the user's .nicklerc if NICKLERC is not set.

       NICKLEPATH
              A colon-separated path whose elements are directories containing Nickle code.  The library command
              and the -l flag, described above, search this path for a filename matching the  given  file.   The
              default library path in the absence of this variable is /usr/share/nickle.

       NICKLESTART
              The  filename  of the file that should be loaded as a bootstrap on Nickle startup.  The default in
              the absence of this variable is to load /usr/share/nickle/builtin.5c.

EXAMPLES

       An example (taken from the bc manual:

         real function exponent(real x) {
             real a = 1;
             int b = 1;
             real s = 1;
             int i = 1;
             while (1) {
                 a = a * x;
                 b = b * i;
                 real c = a / b;
                 if (abs(c) < 1e-6)
                     return s;
                 s = s + c;
                 i++;
             }
         }

       defines a function to compute an approximate value of the exponential function e ** x and

         for (i = 1; i < 10; i++)
             printf ("%g\n", exponent (i));

       prints approximate values of the exponential function of the first ten integers.

VERSION

       This document describes version 1.99.2 of nickle, as well as some newer  features.   It  was  distributed
       with version 2.97 of nickle.

BUGS

       See the discussion of the type of the exponentiation operator ** above.

       Due to a difficult-to-remove grammar ambiguity, it is not possible to use a bare assignment expression in
       an array initializer: it is confused with a structure initializer.  For example:
         > int x = 0;
         > (int[*]){x = 1}
         ->     (int[*]) { x = 1 }
       Non array initializer
       The workaround is to parenthesize the assignment expression:
         > (int[*]){(x = 1)}
         [1]{1}
       Because  this  is  so  rare, so hard to fix, and so easy to work around, this bug is unlikely to be fixed
       anytime soon.

       There are a lot of known bugs with input and output formatting.  The obvious  stuff  works,  other  stuff
       does not.

       The  semantics  of  division  are unfortunately different from those of C.  This is arguably because C is
       broken in this area: we cannot currently see any obvious fix.  C allows automatic  implicit  coercion  of
       floating to integral types, but we consider this a misfeature.

       The implementation has not been thoroughly tested.

AUTHOR

       Nickle is the work of Keith Packard <keithp@keithp.com> and Bart Massey <bart_massey@iname.com>.

       Nickle is
       Copyright 1988-2006 Keith Packard and Bart Massey.  All Rights Reserved.

       Permission  is  hereby  granted,  free  of  charge,  to  any person obtaining a copy of this software and
       associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without  restriction,  including
       without  limitation  the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
       copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to  the
       following conditions:

       The  above  copyright  notice  and  this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial
       portions of the Software.

       THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR  IMPLIED,  INCLUDING  BUT  NOT
       LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO
       EVENT  SHALL  THE  AUTHORS  BE  LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF
       CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR  OTHER
       DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

       Except  as  contained in this notice, the names of the authors or their institutions shall not be used in
       advertising or otherwise to promote the sale, use or  other  dealings  in  this  Software  without  prior
       written authorization from the authors.

                                                 @RELEASE_DATE@                                        NICKLE(1)