NAME
m4 - macro processor

SYNOPSIS
m4 [ files ]

DESCRIPTION
M4 is a macro processor intended as a front end for Ratfor, C, and
other languages. Each of the argument files is processed in order;
if there are no arguments, or if an argument is ‘-’, the standard
input is read. The processed text is written on the standard
output.

Macro calls have the form

name(arg1,arg2, . . . , argn)

The ‘(’ must immediately follow the name of the macro. If a
defined macro name is not followed by a ‘(’, it is deemed to have
no arguments. Leading unquoted blanks, tabs, and newlines are
ignored while collecting arguments. Potential macro names consist
of alphabetic letters, digits, and underscore ‘_’, where the first
character is not a digit.

Left and right single quotes (‘’) are used to quote strings. The
value of a quoted string is the string stripped of the quotes.

When a macro name is recognized, its arguments are collected by
searching for a matching right parenthesis. Macro evaluation
proceeds normally during the collection of the arguments, and any
commas or right parentheses which happen to turn up within the
value of a nested call are as effective as those in the original
input text. After argument collection, the value of the macro is
pushed back onto the input stream and rescanned.

M4 makes available the following built-in macros. They may be
redefined, but once this is done the original meaning is lost.
Their values are null unless otherwise stated.

define The second argument is installed as the value of the
macro whose name is the first argument. Each occurrence
of $n in the replacement text, where n is a digit, is
replaced by the n-th argument. Argument 0 is the name of
the macro; missing arguments are replaced by the null
string.

undefine removes the definition of the macro named in its
argument.

ifdef If the first argument is defined, the value is the second
argument, otherwise the third. If there is no third
argument, the value is null. The word unix is predefined
on UNIX versions of m4.

changequote
Change quote characters to the first and second
arguments. Changequote without arguments restores the
original values (i.e., ‘’).

divert M4 maintains 10 output streams, numbered 0-9. The final
output is the concatenation of the streams in numerical
order; initially stream 0 is the current stream. The
divert macro changes the current output stream to its
(digit-string) argument. Output diverted to a stream
other than 0 through 9 is discarded.

undivert causes immediate output of text from diversions named as
arguments, or all diversions if no argument. Text may be
undiverted into another diversion. Undiverting discards
the diverted text.

divnum returns the value of the current output stream.

dnl reads and discards characters up to and including the
next newline.

ifelse has three or more arguments. If the first argument is
the same string as the second, then the value is the
third argument. If not, and if there are more than four
arguments, the process is repeated with arguments 4, 5, 6
and 7. Otherwise, the value is either the fourth string,
or, if it is not present, null.

incr returns the value of its argument incremented by 1. The
value of the argument is calculated by interpreting an
initial digit-string as a decimal number.

eval evaluates its argument as an arithmetic expression, using
32-bit arithmetic. Operators include +, -, *, /, %, ^
(exponentiation); relationals; parentheses.

len returns the number of characters in its argument.

index returns the position in its first argument where the
second argument begins (zero origin), or -1 if the second
argument does not occur.

substr returns a substring of its first argument. The second
argument is a zero origin number selecting the first
character; the third argument indicates the length of the
substring. A missing third argument is taken to be large
enough to extend to the end of the first string.

translit transliterates the characters in its first argument from
the set given by the second argument to the set given by
the third. No abbreviations are permitted.

include returns the contents of the file named in the argument.

sinclude is identical to include, except that it says nothing if
the file is inaccessible.

syscmd executes the UNIX command given in the first argument.
No value is returned.

maketemp fills in a string of XXXXX in its argument with the
current process id.

errprint prints its argument on the diagnostic output file.

dumpdef prints current names and definitions, for the named
items, or for all if no arguments are given.

SEE ALSO
B. W. Kernighan and D. M. Ritchie, The M4 Macro Processor