So I've used flex to generate a c file from my lex code, and then used gcc to create the corresponding actual parser .exe. However, I can't figure out how to get it to read from anything other than my own typed input. I am trying to get it to parse a huge dictionary file. Can anyone help?
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`program < huge-dictionary-file` will do the trick in the short term; that's input redirection. You have to set the input function so that it reads from your chosen file instead of standard input (which is a reasonable choice for the default source). I'm going to need to check on the mechanism for that...the mechanisms in Flex and Lex are different. – Jonathan Leffler Feb 02 '13 at 20:21
4 Answers
You have two ways of solving it. The first is to redirect input from standard input with the command prompt <
operation:
> parser.exe < some_file.txt
The other solution is to let the program open the file, and tell the lexer what the file is. For more information about it see the Flex manual. The important functions are yy_create_buffer
and yy_switch_to_buffer
.

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1There are a number of other relevant sections, such as the one about EOF handling and yywrap. The YY_INPUT macro is part of the answer. Nevertheless, the manual pointed to treated as a whole covers the issue. – Jonathan Leffler Feb 02 '13 at 20:33
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In my instance, Im integrating flex code into my executable and all I had to do was add a line yyin = fopen(myFile, "r") and flex read from the file with no need to use yy_create_buffer or yy_switch_to_buffer. Im assuming the previous two functions are only needed if flex is *not* integrated into a user executable? Im trying to ensure Im not being naive in assuming just because in my case "it works", that its necessarily "right". – Dean P Apr 26 '21 at 09:37
Try to add the following code to your *.l file.
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
yyin = fopen(argv[1], "r");
yylex();
fclose(yyin);
}

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Adding onto the above answer by @Eliko, while using flex with yacc/bison, you can define FILE *yyin;
in the global part of your grammar.y file. The definition in the generated lex.yy.c is an extern FILE *yyin
by default. Thus, in your grammar.y
, do something like this:
/* Some other global definitions */
FILE *yyin;
%%
/* Grammar rules*/
/* Grammar rules*/
%%
void main(int argc, char **argv) {
/* Process command line args*/
yyin = fopen("input.c", "r");
yyparse();
fclose(yyin);
return 0;
}

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In UBUNTU Position terminal in folder where is .l file then type following:
flex nameOfFile.l
then
gcc lex.yy.c
then ./a.out <nameOfFileYouWantToPass.extension
(eg. ./a.out <test.txt
)
.l file and test.txt should be in same folder

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