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built-in variable   #current-input    

Summary String

The unconsumed part of the input currently being processed by a submit or a scan.

 

Purpose

#current-input is a built-in source which represents the unconsumed part of the input currently being processed by a submit or scan.

#current-input can be used like any other built-in source such as #main-output, so long as it is used in the context where scanning or find rule processing is in progress.

Using #current-input has the effect of consuming the remaining data from a source, unless you submit or scan #current-input, in which case the original data is consumed normally by the new scan or find rules process. If that process terminates before consuming the entire source, the original process resumes and continues until the source is completely consumed.

The following code shows what happens when #current-input is output or assigned to a variable:

  process
     submit "Mary had a little lamb."

  find "Mary" white-space+
     output #current-input

  find "lamb"
     output "Baa baa black sheep."

The program will output "had a little lamb." It will not output "Baa baa black sheep.", because after "Mary" whitespace+ is matched, the rest of the input is consumed by the line "output #current-input", so the "lamb" rule never fires.

The following code shows what happens when #current-input is scanned:

  process
     submit "Mary had a little lamb."

  find "Mary" white-space+
     output "David "
     repeat scan #current-input
        match "had" white-space+
           output "stole "
        match "a" white-space+
           output "my "
     again

  find "lamb"
     output "sheep"

This program will output "David stole my little sheep." The characters "Mary " and "little lamb." were processed by the find rules invoked by the original submit. The characters "had a " were processed by the repeat scan of #current-input. That repeat scan exited when it failed to match "little lamb.", leaving those characters unconsumed, and available for processing by the original find process.

Note that while OmniMark's other built-in sources, #main-input and #process-input are always attached at the beginning of a program (unless you declare no-default-io), #current-input is only attached in a scope created by a submit or scan.

    Related Concepts
   Pattern matching, nested
 
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