@page @node Guile Scripting @chapter Guile Scripting Like AWK, Perl, or any shell, Guile can interpret script files. A Guile script is simply a file of Scheme code with some extra information at the beginning which tells the operating system how to invoke Guile, and then tells Guile how to handle the Scheme code. @menu * Invoking Guile:: How to start a Guile script. * The Meta Switch:: Passing complex argument lists to Guile from shell scripts. @end menu @node Invoking Guile @section Invoking Guile Here we describe Guile's command-line processing in detail. Guile processes its arguments from left to right, recognizing the switches described below. For examples, see @ref{Scripting Examples}. @table @code @item -s @var{script} @var{arg...} Read and evaluate Scheme source code from the file @var{script}, as the @code{load} function would. After loading @var{script}, exit. Any command-line arguments @var{arg...} following @var{script} become the script's arguments; the @code{command-line} function returns a list of strings of the form @code{(@var{script} @var{arg...})}. @item -c @var{expr} @var{arg...} Evaluate @var{expr} as Scheme code, and then exit. Any command-line arguments @var{arg...} following @var{expr} become command-line arguments; the @code{command-line} function returns a list of strings of the form @code{(@var{guile} @var{arg...})}, where @var{guile} is the path of the Guile executable. @item -- @var{arg...} Run interactively, prompting the user for expressions and evaluating them. Any command-line arguments @var{arg...} following the @code{--} become command-line arguments for the interactive session; the @code{command-line} function returns a list of strings of the form @code{(@var{guile} @var{arg...})}, where @var{guile} is the path of the Guile executable. @item -l @var{file} Load Scheme source code from @var{file}, and continue processing the command line. @item -e @var{function} Make @var{function} the @dfn{entry point} of the script. After loading the script file (with @code{-s}) or evaluating the expression (with @code{-c}), apply @var{function} to a list containing the program name and the command-line arguments --- the list provided by the @code{command-line} function. A @code{-e} switch can appear anywhere in the argument list, but Guile always invokes the @var{function} as the @emph{last} action it performs. This is weird, but because of the way script invocation works under POSIX, the @code{-s} option must always come last in the list. @xref{Scripting Examples}. @item -ds Treat a final @code{-s} option as if it occurred at this point in the command line; load the script here. This switch is necessary because, although the POSIX script invocation mechanism effectively requires the @code{-s} option to appear last, the programmer may well want to run the script before other actions requested on the command line. For examples, see @ref{Scripting Examples}. @item \ Read more command-line arguments, starting from the second line of the script file. @xref{The Meta Switch}. @item --emacs Assume Guile is running as an inferior process of Emacs, and use a special protocol to communicate with Emacs's Guile interaction mode. This switch sets the global variable use-emacs-interface to @code{#t}. This switch is still experimental. @item --use-srfi=@var{list} The option @code{--use-srfi} expects a comma-separated list of numbers, each representing a SRFI number to be loaded into the interpreter before starting evaluating a script file or the REPL. Additionally, the feature identifier for the loaded SRFIs is recognized by `cond-expand' when using this option. @example guile --use-srfi=8,13 @end example @item --debug Start with the debugging evaluator and enable backtraces. Using the debugging evaluator will give you better error messages but it will slow down execution. By default, the debugging evaluator is only used when entering an interactive session. When executing a script with @code{-s} or @code{-c}, the normal, faster evaluator is used by default. @vnew{1.8} @item --no-debug Do not use the debugging evaluator, even when entering an interactive session. @item -h@r{, }--help Display help on invoking Guile, and then exit. @item -v@r{, }--version Display the current version of Guile, and then exit. @end table @node The Meta Switch @section The Meta Switch Guile's command-line switches allow the programmer to describe reasonably complicated actions in scripts. Unfortunately, the POSIX script invocation mechanism only allows one argument to appear on the @samp{#!} line after the path to the Guile executable, and imposes arbitrary limits on that argument's length. Suppose you wrote a script starting like this: @example #!/usr/local/bin/guile -e main -s !# (define (main args) (map (lambda (arg) (display arg) (display " ")) (cdr args)) (newline)) @end example The intended meaning is clear: load the file, and then call @code{main} on the command-line arguments. However, the system will treat everything after the Guile path as a single argument --- the string @code{"-e main -s"} --- which is not what we want. As a workaround, the meta switch @code{\} allows the Guile programmer to specify an arbitrary number of options without patching the kernel. If the first argument to Guile is @code{\}, Guile will open the script file whose name follows the @code{\}, parse arguments starting from the file's second line (according to rules described below), and substitute them for the @code{\} switch. Working in concert with the meta switch, Guile treats the characters @samp{#!} as the beginning of a comment which extends through the next line containing only the characters @samp{!#}. This sort of comment may appear anywhere in a Guile program, but it is most useful at the top of a file, meshing magically with the POSIX script invocation mechanism. Thus, consider a script named @file{/u/jimb/ekko} which starts like this: @example #!/usr/local/bin/guile \ -e main -s !# (define (main args) (map (lambda (arg) (display arg) (display " ")) (cdr args)) (newline)) @end example Suppose a user invokes this script as follows: @example $ /u/jimb/ekko a b c @end example Here's what happens: @itemize @bullet @item the operating system recognizes the @samp{#!} token at the top of the file, and rewrites the command line to: @example /usr/local/bin/guile \ /u/jimb/ekko a b c @end example This is the usual behavior, prescribed by POSIX. @item When Guile sees the first two arguments, @code{\ /u/jimb/ekko}, it opens @file{/u/jimb/ekko}, parses the three arguments @code{-e}, @code{main}, and @code{-s} from it, and substitutes them for the @code{\} switch. Thus, Guile's command line now reads: @example /usr/local/bin/guile -e main -s /u/jimb/ekko a b c @end example @item Guile then processes these switches: it loads @file{/u/jimb/ekko} as a file of Scheme code (treating the first three lines as a comment), and then performs the application @code{(main "/u/jimb/ekko" "a" "b" "c")}. @end itemize When Guile sees the meta switch @code{\}, it parses command-line argument from the script file according to the following rules: @itemize @bullet @item Each space character terminates an argument. This means that two spaces in a row introduce an argument @code{""}. @item The tab character is not permitted (unless you quote it with the backslash character, as described below), to avoid confusion. @item The newline character terminates the sequence of arguments, and will also terminate a final non-empty argument. (However, a newline following a space will not introduce a final empty-string argument; it only terminates the argument list.) @item The backslash character is the escape character. It escapes backslash, space, tab, and newline. The ANSI C escape sequences like @code{\n} and @code{\t} are also supported. These produce argument constituents; the two-character combination @code{\n} doesn't act like a terminating newline. The escape sequence @code{\@var{NNN}} for exactly three octal digits reads as the character whose ASCII code is @var{NNN}. As above, characters produced this way are argument constituents. Backslash followed by other characters is not allowed. @end itemize