erl_format
(erl_interface)This module contains two routines: one general function for creating Erlang terms and one for pattern matching Erlang terms.
Functions
char *FormatStr;
A general function for creating Erlang terms using
a format specifier and a corresponding set of arguments, much
in the way printf()
works.
FormatStr
is a format specification string.
The valid format specifiers are as follows:
~i
- Integer~f
- Floating point~a
- Atom~s
- String~w
- Arbitrary Erlang term
For each format specifier included in FormatStr
,
there must be a corresponding argument following
FormatStr
. An Erlang term is built according to
FormatStr
with values and Erlang terms substituted
from the corresponding arguments, and according to the individual
format specifiers. For example:
erl_format("[{name,~a},{age,~i},{data,~w}]", "madonna", 21, erl_format("[{adr,~s,~i}]","E-street",42));
This creates an (ETERM *)
structure corresponding
to the Erlang term
[{name,madonna},{age,21},{data,[{adr,"E-street",42}]}]
The function returns an Erlang term, or NULL
if
FormatStr
does not describe a valid Erlang
term.
ETERM *Pattern,*Term;
This function is used to perform pattern matching similar to that done in Erlang. For matching rules and more examples, see section Pattern Matching in the Erlang Reference Manual.
Pattern
is an Erlang term, possibly containing unbound variables.Term
is an Erlang term that we wish to match againstPattern
.
Term
and Pattern
are compared
and any unbound variables in Pattern
are bound to
corresponding values in Term
.
If Term
and Pattern
can be
matched, the function returns a non-zero value and binds any unbound
variables in Pattern
. If Term
and Pattern
do
not match, 0
is returned. For example:
ETERM *term, *pattern, *pattern2; term1 = erl_format("{14,21}"); term2 = erl_format("{19,19}"); pattern1 = erl_format("{A,B}"); pattern2 = erl_format("{F,F}"); if (erl_match(pattern1, term1)) { /* match succeeds: * A gets bound to 14, * B gets bound to 21 */ ... } if (erl_match(pattern2, term1)) { /* match fails because F cannot be * bound to two separate values, 14 and 21 */ ... } if (erl_match(pattern2, term2)) { /* match succeeds and F gets bound to 19 */ ... }
erl_var_content()
can be used to retrieve the
content of any variables bound as a result of a call to
erl_match()
.