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NAME

       tcldocstrip - Tcl-based Docstrip Processor

SYNOPSIS

       tcldocstrip output ?options? input ?guards?

       tcldocstrip ?options? output (?options? input guards)...

       tcldocstrip -guards input

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DESCRIPTION

       The  application described by this document, tcldocstrip, is a relative
       of docstrip, a simple literate programming tool for LaTeX.

       tcldocstrip is based upon the package docstrip.

   USE CASES
       tcldocstrip was written with the following three use cases in mind.

       [1]    Conversion of a single input file according to the listed guards
              into the stripped output. This handles the most simple case of a
              set of guards specifying a single document  found  in  a  single
              input file.

       [2]    Stitching,  or  the  assembly  of an output from several sets of
              guards, in a specific order, and possibly from different  files.
              This is the second common case. One document spread over several
              inputs, and/or spread over different guard sets.

       [3]    Extraction and listing of all the unique guard  expressions  and
              guards  used  within  a  document to help a person which did not
              author the document in question in familiarizing itself with it.

   COMMAND LINE
       tcldocstrip output ?options? input ?guards?
              This  is  the  form for use case [1]. It converts the input file
              according to the specified guards and  options.  The  result  is
              written  to the named output file.  Usage of the string - as the
              name of the output signals that the result should be written  to
              stdout. The guards are document-specific and have to be known to
              the caller. The options will  be  explained  later,  in  section
              OPTIONS.

              path output (in)
                     This  argument  specifies  where  to  write the generated
                     document. It can be the path to a file or  directory,  or
                     -.   The  last  value causes the application to write the
                     generated documented to stdout.

                     If the output does not exist then [file dirname  $output]
                     has to exist and must be a writable directory.

              path inputfile (in)
                     This  argument specifies the path to the file to process.
                     It has  to  exist,  must  be  readable,  and  written  in
                     docstrip format.

       tcldocstrip ?options? output (?options? input guards)...
              This  is the form for use case [2]. It differs from the form for
              use case [1] by the possibility of  having  options  before  the
              output  file,  which  apply in general, and specifying more than
              one inputfile, each with its own set of input  specific  options
              and guards.

              It  extracts data from the various input files, according to the
              specified options and guards, and writes the result to the given
              output, in the order of their specification on the command line.
              Options specified before the output are global settings, whereas
              the  options specified before each input are valid only just for
              this input file. Unspecified values are taken  from  the  global
              settings,  or  defaults.  As  for form [1] using the string - as
              output causes the application to write  to  stdout.   Using  the
              string  .  for  an  input  file signals that the last input file
              should be used again. This enables the assembly  of  the  output
              from one input file using multiple and different sets of guards,
              without having to specify the full name of the file every  time.

       tcldocstrip -guards input
              This  is  the  form for use case [3].  It determines the guards,
              and unique guard expressions  used  within  the  provided  input
              document.  The  found  strings are written to stdout, one string
              per line.

   OPTIONS
       This section describes all the options available to  the  user  of  the
       application,  with the exception of the option -guards. This option was
       described already, in section COMMAND LINE.

       -metaprefix string
              This option is  inherited  from  the  command  docstrip::extract
              provided by the package docstrip.

              It   specifies  the  string  by  which  the  ’%%’  prefix  of  a
              metacomment line will be replaced. Defaults  to  ’%%’.  For  Tcl
              code this would typically be ’#’.

       -onerror mode
              This  option  is  inherited  from  the command docstrip::extract
              provided by the package docstrip.

              It controls what will be done when a format error  in  the  text
              being processed is detected. The settings are:

              ignore Just ignore the error; continue as if nothing happened.

              puts   Write   an   error   message  to  stderr,  then  continue
                     processing.

              throw  Throw an error. ::errorCode is set to a list whose  first
                     element is DOCSTRIP, second element is the type of error,
                     and third element is the line number where the  error  is
                     detected. This is the default.

       -trimlines bool
              This  option  is  inherited  from  the command docstrip::extract
              provided by the package docstrip.

              Controls whether spaces at the end of a line should  be  trimmed
              away before the line is processed. Defaults to true.

       -preamble text

       -postamble text

       -nopreamble

       -nopostamble
              The  -no*amble  options  deactivate  file  pre-  and  postambles
              altogether, whereas the -*amble options specify the user part of
              the  file  pre-  and postambles. This part can be empty, in that
              case only the standard parts are shown. This is the default.

              Preambles, when active, are written before the actual content of
              a  generated  file.  In  the  same  manner  postambles are, when
              active, written after the actual content of a generated file.

BUGS, IDEAS, FEEDBACK

       This document, and  the  application  it  describes,  will  undoubtedly
       contain  bugs  and  other problems.  Please report such in the category
       docstrip        of        the        Tcllib         SF         Trackers
       [http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=12883].   Please  also report
       any ideas for enhancements you may have for either  application  and/or
       documentation.

SEE ALSO

       docstrip

KEYWORDS

       .dtx, LaTeX, conversion, docstrip, documentation, literate programming,
       markup, source

CATEGORY

       Documentation tools

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2005 Andreas Kupries <andreas_kupries@users.sourceforge.net>