1.2. Creating New Macros
1.2.1. Using Event Processing
SDF's event processing feature makes it easy to create a new macro from an existing one. For example, the following line makes image an alias for the import macro:
!on macro 'image';; $name='import'
The new macro can then be used as follows:
!image 'mylogo'
1.2.2. Using !macro and !endmacro
The macro and endmacro macros are useful for creating simple macros. For example, if you have a block of text which is regularly repeated, you can make it a macro like this:
!macro RealSoonNow Note: This feature will be implemented real soon now. The documentation below is the proposed design. Any feedback on the design should be forwarded to {{EMAIL:bill}} as soon as possible. !endmacro
See the stdlib/macros.sdm file within the SDF distribution for more examples of macro definitions.
1.2.3. Using Perl
For complicated macros including those requiring arguments, Perl subroutines can be used to implement the logic and build the SDF text to be inserted, if any.
An SDF macro called xxx is mapped to a Perl subroutine called xxx_Macro within the SDF_USER package. The subroutine has the following interface:
@text = xxx_Macro(%arg);
where:
- @text is the SDF to be inserted when this macro is called
- %arg is the set of arguments (name-value pairs).
For example, a Perl implementation of the RealSoonNow macro is:
!block script sub RealSoonNow_Macro { local(%arg) = @_; local(@text); @text = ( 'Note: This feature will be implemented real soon now.', 'The documentation below is the proposed design.', 'Any feedback on the design should be forwarded to', '{{EMAIL:bill}} as soon as possible.'); return @text; } !endblock
Note: The script filter makes it easy to embed Perl code within an SDF document. (The code is executed within the SDF_USER package.)
The perllib/sdf/macros.pl file within the SDF distribution contains lots of examples of macros implemented as Perl subroutines.
1.2.4. Adding Arguments
If a macro is implemented as a Perl subroutine, arguments can be declared in a Perl array called _xxx_MacroArgs. The array is a table in TBL format which contains the following fields:
Field | Description |
Name | The argument name |
Type | The argument type |
Default | The default value, if any |
Rule | The argument validation rule, if any |
For example, the RealSoonNow macro can be generalised so that the person to contact is an optional argument.
!block script @_RealSoonNow_MacroArgs = ( 'Name Type Default Rule', 'contact string bill', ); sub RealSoonNow_Macro { local(%arg) = @_; local(@text); @text = ( 'Note: This feature will be implemented real soon now.', 'The documentation below is the proposed design.', 'Any feedback on the design should be forwarded to', '{{EMAIL:' . $arg{'contact'} . '}} as soon as possible.'); return @text; } !endblock
1.2.5. Argument Types
The supported set of argument types are:
Type | Description |
Common: | |
string | a string |
integer | an integer |
boolean | either 1 or 0 |
Special: | |
symbol | a symbolic name |
filter | a filter name |
rest | the rest of the arguments |
eventid | an event tag |
condition | a logical expression |
The special types are needed for some of SDF's built-in macros including define, include, on and if - they are rarely needed for normal macros.
1.2.6. Default Values
For default values within argument tables:
- the empty string means there is no default
- the symbol _NULL_ means the default is the empty string.
For example, the arguments for the include macros are declared as shown below:
@_include_MacroArgs = ( 'Name Type Default Rule', 'filename string', 'filter filter sdf', 'params rest _NULL_', );
1.2.7. Rules
If you wish, arguments can be validated using a rule. Rules are either:
1.2.8. Patterns
A pattern is a Perl regular expression which the argument value is matched against. Patterns are enclosed in angle brackets to differentiate them from normal Perl expressions. Typical patterns are given in the table below.
Pattern | Explanation |
<\w+> | one or more characters in A-Z, a-z, 0-9 and '_' |
<\d{4}> | a 4 digit number |
<on|off> | a string which is either "on" or "off" |
<XMIT-.*> | a string which begins with "XMIT-" |
1.2.9. General Perl Expressions
More complex rules are required when:
- the regular expression does not apply to the whole value
- the regular expression is case-insensitive.
In these cases, a general Perl expression can be used as the rule. Within the expression, $_ is the value of the argument. Examples are:
Expression | Explanation |
/\d/ | a digit exists somewhere in the string |
/^(on|off)$/i | value is either "on" or "off" (case insensitive) |
Note: A pattern is simply a short-hand notation for the general Perl expression below:
/^(pattern)$/
Pattern notation is provided as it makes rules easier to read and write. (Pattern-style validation typically covers 80% or more of validation rules so improving the readability of patterns has a large impact on the overall readability.)