// Copyright 2010 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. package fmt import ( "errors" "io" "math" "os" "reflect" "strconv" "sync" "unicode/utf8" ) // ScanState represents the scanner state passed to custom scanners. // Scanners may do rune-at-a-time scanning or ask the ScanState // to discover the next space-delimited token. type ScanState interface { // ReadRune reads the next rune (Unicode code point) from the input. // If invoked during Scanln, Fscanln, or Sscanln, ReadRune() will // return EOF after returning the first '\n' or when reading beyond // the specified width. ReadRune() (r rune, size int, err error) // UnreadRune causes the next call to ReadRune to return the same rune. UnreadRune() error // SkipSpace skips space in the input. Newlines are treated appropriately // for the operation being performed; see the package documentation // for more information. SkipSpace() // Token skips space in the input if skipSpace is true, then returns the // run of Unicode code points c satisfying f(c). If f is nil, // !unicode.IsSpace(c) is used; that is, the token will hold non-space // characters. Newlines are treated appropriately for the operation being // performed; see the package documentation for more information. // The returned slice points to shared data that may be overwritten // by the next call to Token, a call to a Scan function using the ScanState // as input, or when the calling Scan method returns. Token(skipSpace bool, f func(rune) bool) (token []byte, err error) // Width returns the value of the width option and whether it has been set. // The unit is Unicode code points. Width() (wid int, ok bool) // Because ReadRune is implemented by the interface, Read should never be // called by the scanning routines and a valid implementation of // ScanState may choose always to return an error from Read. Read(buf []byte) (n int, err error) } // Scanner is implemented by any value that has a Scan method, which scans // the input for the representation of a value and stores the result in the // receiver, which must be a pointer to be useful. The Scan method is called // for any argument to Scan, Scanf, or Scanln that implements it. type Scanner interface { Scan(state ScanState, verb rune) error } // Scan scans text read from standard input, storing successive // space-separated values into successive arguments. Newlines count // as space. It returns the number of items successfully scanned. // If that is less than the number of arguments, err will report why. func Scan(a ...interface{}) (n int, err error) { return Fscan(os.Stdin, a...) } // Scanln is similar to Scan, but stops scanning at a newline and // after the final item there must be a newline or EOF. func Scanln(a ...interface{}) (n int, err error) { return Fscanln(os.Stdin, a...) } // Scanf scans text read from standard input, storing successive // space-separated values into successive arguments as determined by // the format. It returns the number of items successfully scanned. // If that is less than the number of arguments, err will report why. // Newlines in the input must match newlines in the format. // The one exception: the verb %c always scans the next rune in the // input, even if it is a space (or tab etc.) or newline. func Scanf(format string, a ...interface{}) (n int, err error) { return Fscanf(os.Stdin, format, a...) } type stringReader string func (r *stringReader) Read(b []byte) (n int, err error) { n = copy(b, *r) *r = (*r)[n:] if n == 0 { err = io.EOF } return } // Sscan scans the argument string, storing successive space-separated // values into successive arguments. Newlines count as space. It // returns the number of items successfully scanned. If that is less // than the number of arguments, err will report why. func Sscan(str string, a ...interface{}) (n int, err error) { return Fscan((*stringReader)(&str), a...) } // Sscanln is similar to Sscan, but stops scanning at a newline and // after the final item there must be a newline or EOF. func Sscanln(str string, a ...interface{}) (n int, err error) { return Fscanln((*stringReader)(&str), a...) } // Sscanf scans the argument string, storing successive space-separated // values into successive arguments as determined by the format. It // returns the number of items successfully parsed. // Newlines in the input must match newlines in the format. func Sscanf(str string, format string, a ...interface{}) (n int, err error) { return Fscanf((*stringReader)(&str), format, a...) } // Fscan scans text read from r, storing successive space-separated // values into successive arguments. Newlines count as space. It // returns the number of items successfully scanned. If that is less // than the number of arguments, err will report why. func Fscan(r io.Reader, a ...interface{}) (n int, err error) { s, old := newScanState(r, true, false) n, err = s.doScan(a) s.free(old) return } // Fscanln is similar to Fscan, but stops scanning at a newline and // after the final item there must be a newline or EOF. func Fscanln(r io.Reader, a ...interface{}) (n int, err error) { s, old := newScanState(r, false, true) n, err = s.doScan(a) s.free(old) return } // Fscanf scans text read from r, storing successive space-separated // values into successive arguments as determined by the format. It // returns the number of items successfully parsed. // Newlines in the input must match newlines in the format. func Fscanf(r io.Reader, format string, a ...interface{}) (n int, err error) { s, old := newScanState(r, false, false) n, err = s.doScanf(format, a) s.free(old) return } // scanError represents an error generated by the scanning software. // It's used as a unique signature to identify such errors when recovering. type scanError struct { err error } const eof = -1 // ss is the internal implementation of ScanState. type ss struct { rs io.RuneScanner // where to read input buf buffer // token accumulator count int // runes consumed so far. atEOF bool // already read EOF ssave } // ssave holds the parts of ss that need to be // saved and restored on recursive scans. type ssave struct { validSave bool // is or was a part of an actual ss. nlIsEnd bool // whether newline terminates scan nlIsSpace bool // whether newline counts as white space argLimit int // max value of ss.count for this arg; argLimit <= limit limit int // max value of ss.count. maxWid int // width of this arg. } // The Read method is only in ScanState so that ScanState // satisfies io.Reader. It will never be called when used as // intended, so there is no need to make it actually work. func (s *ss) Read(buf []byte) (n int, err error) { return 0, errors.New("ScanState's Read should not be called. Use ReadRune") } func (s *ss) ReadRune() (r rune, size int, err error) { if s.atEOF || s.count >= s.argLimit { err = io.EOF return } r, size, err = s.rs.ReadRune() if err == nil { s.count++ if s.nlIsEnd && r == '\n' { s.atEOF = true } } else if err == io.EOF { s.atEOF = true } return } func (s *ss) Width() (wid int, ok bool) { if s.maxWid == hugeWid { return 0, false } return s.maxWid, true } // The public method returns an error; this private one panics. // If getRune reaches EOF, the return value is EOF (-1). func (s *ss) getRune() (r rune) { r, _, err := s.ReadRune() if err != nil { if err == io.EOF { return eof } s.error(err) } return } // mustReadRune turns io.EOF into a panic(io.ErrUnexpectedEOF). // It is called in cases such as string scanning where an EOF is a // syntax error. func (s *ss) mustReadRune() (r rune) { r = s.getRune() if r == eof { s.error(io.ErrUnexpectedEOF) } return } func (s *ss) UnreadRune() error { s.rs.UnreadRune() s.atEOF = false s.count-- return nil } func (s *ss) error(err error) { panic(scanError{err}) } func (s *ss) errorString(err string) { panic(scanError{errors.New(err)}) } func (s *ss) Token(skipSpace bool, f func(rune) bool) (tok []byte, err error) { defer func() { if e := recover(); e != nil { if se, ok := e.(scanError); ok { err = se.err } else { panic(e) } } }() if f == nil { f = notSpace } s.buf = s.buf[:0] tok = s.token(skipSpace, f) return } // space is a copy of the unicode.White_Space ranges, // to avoid depending on package unicode. var space = [][2]uint16{ {0x0009, 0x000d}, {0x0020, 0x0020}, {0x0085, 0x0085}, {0x00a0, 0x00a0}, {0x1680, 0x1680}, {0x2000, 0x200a}, {0x2028, 0x2029}, {0x202f, 0x202f}, {0x205f, 0x205f}, {0x3000, 0x3000}, } func isSpace(r rune) bool { if r >= 1<<16 { return false } rx := uint16(r) for _, rng := range space { if rx < rng[0] { return false } if rx <= rng[1] { return true } } return false } // notSpace is the default scanning function used in Token. func notSpace(r rune) bool { return !isSpace(r) } // readRune is a structure to enable reading UTF-8 encoded code points // from an io.Reader. It is used if the Reader given to the scanner does // not already implement io.RuneScanner. type readRune struct { reader io.Reader buf [utf8.UTFMax]byte // used only inside ReadRune pending int // number of bytes in pendBuf; only >0 for bad UTF-8 pendBuf [utf8.UTFMax]byte // bytes left over peekRune rune // if >=0 next rune; when <0 is ^(previous Rune) } // readByte returns the next byte from the input, which may be // left over from a previous read if the UTF-8 was ill-formed. func (r *readRune) readByte() (b byte, err error) { if r.pending > 0 { b = r.pendBuf[0] copy(r.pendBuf[0:], r.pendBuf[1:]) r.pending-- return } n, err := io.ReadFull(r.reader, r.pendBuf[:1]) if n != 1 { return 0, err } return r.pendBuf[0], err } // ReadRune returns the next UTF-8 encoded code point from the // io.Reader inside r. func (r *readRune) ReadRune() (rr rune, size int, err error) { if r.peekRune >= 0 { rr = r.peekRune r.peekRune = ^r.peekRune size = utf8.RuneLen(rr) return } r.buf[0], err = r.readByte() if err != nil { return } if r.buf[0] < utf8.RuneSelf { // fast check for common ASCII case rr = rune(r.buf[0]) size = 1 // Known to be 1. // Flip the bits of the rune so it's available to UnreadRune. r.peekRune = ^rr return } var n int for n = 1; !utf8.FullRune(r.buf[:n]); n++ { r.buf[n], err = r.readByte() if err != nil { if err == io.EOF { err = nil break } return } } rr, size = utf8.DecodeRune(r.buf[:n]) if size < n { // an error, save the bytes for the next read copy(r.pendBuf[r.pending:], r.buf[size:n]) r.pending += n - size } // Flip the bits of the rune so it's available to UnreadRune. r.peekRune = ^rr return } func (r *readRune) UnreadRune() error { if r.peekRune >= 0 { return errors.New("fmt: scanning called UnreadRune with no rune available") } // Reverse bit flip of previously read rune to obtain valid >=0 state. r.peekRune = ^r.peekRune return nil } var ssFree = sync.Pool{ New: func() interface{} { return new(ss) }, } // newScanState allocates a new ss struct or grab a cached one. func newScanState(r io.Reader, nlIsSpace, nlIsEnd bool) (s *ss, old ssave) { s = ssFree.Get().(*ss) if rs, ok := r.(io.RuneScanner); ok { s.rs = rs } else { s.rs = &readRune{reader: r, peekRune: -1} } s.nlIsSpace = nlIsSpace s.nlIsEnd = nlIsEnd s.atEOF = false s.limit = hugeWid s.argLimit = hugeWid s.maxWid = hugeWid s.validSave = true s.count = 0 return } // free saves used ss structs in ssFree; avoid an allocation per invocation. func (s *ss) free(old ssave) { // If it was used recursively, just restore the old state. if old.validSave { s.ssave = old return } // Don't hold on to ss structs with large buffers. if cap(s.buf) > 1024 { return } s.buf = s.buf[:0] s.rs = nil ssFree.Put(s) } // SkipSpace provides Scan methods the ability to skip space and newline // characters in keeping with the current scanning mode set by format strings // and Scan/Scanln. func (s *ss) SkipSpace() { for { r := s.getRune() if r == eof { return } if r == '\r' && s.peek("\n") { continue } if r == '\n' { if s.nlIsSpace { continue } s.errorString("unexpected newline") return } if !isSpace(r) { s.UnreadRune() break } } } // token returns the next space-delimited string from the input. It // skips white space. For Scanln, it stops at newlines. For Scan, // newlines are treated as spaces. func (s *ss) token(skipSpace bool, f func(rune) bool) []byte { if skipSpace { s.SkipSpace() } // read until white space or newline for { r := s.getRune() if r == eof { break } if !f(r) { s.UnreadRune() break } s.buf.writeRune(r) } return s.buf } var complexError = errors.New("syntax error scanning complex number") var boolError = errors.New("syntax error scanning boolean") func indexRune(s string, r rune) int { for i, c := range s { if c == r { return i } } return -1 } // consume reads the next rune in the input and reports whether it is in the ok string. // If accept is true, it puts the character into the input token. func (s *ss) consume(ok string, accept bool) bool { r := s.getRune() if r == eof { return false } if indexRune(ok, r) >= 0 { if accept { s.buf.writeRune(r) } return true } if r != eof && accept { s.UnreadRune() } return false } // peek reports whether the next character is in the ok string, without consuming it. func (s *ss) peek(ok string) bool { r := s.getRune() if r != eof { s.UnreadRune() } return indexRune(ok, r) >= 0 } func (s *ss) notEOF() { // Guarantee there is data to be read. if r := s.getRune(); r == eof { panic(io.EOF) } s.UnreadRune() } // accept checks the next rune in the input. If it's a byte (sic) in the string, it puts it in the // buffer and returns true. Otherwise it return false. func (s *ss) accept(ok string) bool { return s.consume(ok, true) } // okVerb verifies that the verb is present in the list, setting s.err appropriately if not. func (s *ss) okVerb(verb rune, okVerbs, typ string) bool { for _, v := range okVerbs { if v == verb { return true } } s.errorString("bad verb '%" + string(verb) + "' for " + typ) return false } // scanBool returns the value of the boolean represented by the next token. func (s *ss) scanBool(verb rune) bool { s.SkipSpace() s.notEOF() if !s.okVerb(verb, "tv", "boolean") { return false } // Syntax-checking a boolean is annoying. We're not fastidious about case. switch s.getRune() { case '0': return false case '1': return true case 't', 'T': if s.accept("rR") && (!s.accept("uU") || !s.accept("eE")) { s.error(boolError) } return true case 'f', 'F': if s.accept("aA") && (!s.accept("lL") || !s.accept("sS") || !s.accept("eE")) { s.error(boolError) } return false } return false } // Numerical elements const ( binaryDigits = "01" octalDigits = "01234567" decimalDigits = "0123456789" hexadecimalDigits = "0123456789aAbBcCdDeEfF" sign = "+-" period = "." exponent = "eEpP" ) // getBase returns the numeric base represented by the verb and its digit string. func (s *ss) getBase(verb rune) (base int, digits string) { s.okVerb(verb, "bdoUxXv", "integer") // sets s.err base = 10 digits = decimalDigits switch verb { case 'b': base = 2 digits = binaryDigits case 'o': base = 8 digits = octalDigits case 'x', 'X', 'U': base = 16 digits = hexadecimalDigits } return } // scanNumber returns the numerical string with specified digits starting here. func (s *ss) scanNumber(digits string, haveDigits bool) string { if !haveDigits { s.notEOF() if !s.accept(digits) { s.errorString("expected integer") } } for s.accept(digits) { } return string(s.buf) } // scanRune returns the next rune value in the input. func (s *ss) scanRune(bitSize int) int64 { s.notEOF() r := int64(s.getRune()) n := uint(bitSize) x := (r << (64 - n)) >> (64 - n) if x != r { s.errorString("overflow on character value " + string(r)) } return r } // scanBasePrefix reports whether the integer begins with a base prefix // and returns the base, digit string, and whether a zero was found. // It is called only if the verb is %v. func (s *ss) scanBasePrefix() (base int, digits string, zeroFound bool) { if !s.peek("0") { return 0, decimalDigits + "_", false } s.accept("0") // Special cases for 0, 0b, 0o, 0x. switch { case s.peek("bB"): s.consume("bB", true) return 0, binaryDigits + "_", true case s.peek("oO"): s.consume("oO", true) return 0, octalDigits + "_", true case s.peek("xX"): s.consume("xX", true) return 0, hexadecimalDigits + "_", true default: return 0, octalDigits + "_", true } } // scanInt returns the value of the integer represented by the next // token, checking for overflow. Any error is stored in s.err. func (s *ss) scanInt(verb rune, bitSize int) int64 { if verb == 'c' { return s.scanRune(bitSize) } s.SkipSpace() s.notEOF() base, digits := s.getBase(verb) haveDigits := false if verb == 'U' { if !s.consume("U", false) || !s.consume("+", false) { s.errorString("bad unicode format ") } } else { s.accept(sign) // If there's a sign, it will be left in the token buffer. if verb == 'v' { base, digits, haveDigits = s.scanBasePrefix() } } tok := s.scanNumber(digits, haveDigits) i, err := strconv.ParseInt(tok, base, 64) if err != nil { s.error(err) } n := uint(bitSize) x := (i << (64 - n)) >> (64 - n) if x != i { s.errorString("integer overflow on token " + tok) } return i } // scanUint returns the value of the unsigned integer represented // by the next token, checking for overflow. Any error is stored in s.err. func (s *ss) scanUint(verb rune, bitSize int) uint64 { if verb == 'c' { return uint64(s.scanRune(bitSize)) } s.SkipSpace() s.notEOF() base, digits := s.getBase(verb) haveDigits := false if verb == 'U' { if !s.consume("U", false) || !s.consume("+", false) { s.errorString("bad unicode format ") } } else if verb == 'v' { base, digits, haveDigits = s.scanBasePrefix() } tok := s.scanNumber(digits, haveDigits) i, err := strconv.ParseUint(tok, base, 64) if err != nil { s.error(err) } n := uint(bitSize) x := (i << (64 - n)) >> (64 - n) if x != i { s.errorString("unsigned integer overflow on token " + tok) } return i } // floatToken returns the floating-point number starting here, no longer than swid // if the width is specified. It's not rigorous about syntax because it doesn't check that // we have at least some digits, but Atof will do that. func (s *ss) floatToken() string { s.buf = s.buf[:0] // NaN? if s.accept("nN") && s.accept("aA") && s.accept("nN") { return string(s.buf) } // leading sign? s.accept(sign) // Inf? if s.accept("iI") && s.accept("nN") && s.accept("fF") { return string(s.buf) } digits := decimalDigits + "_" exp := exponent if s.accept("0") && s.accept("xX") { digits = hexadecimalDigits + "_" exp = "pP" } // digits? for s.accept(digits) { } // decimal point? if s.accept(period) { // fraction? for s.accept(digits) { } } // exponent? if s.accept(exp) { // leading sign? s.accept(sign) // digits? for s.accept(decimalDigits + "_") { } } return string(s.buf) } // complexTokens returns the real and imaginary parts of the complex number starting here. // The number might be parenthesized and has the format (N+Ni) where N is a floating-point // number and there are no spaces within. func (s *ss) complexTokens() (real, imag string) { // TODO: accept N and Ni independently? parens := s.accept("(") real = s.floatToken() s.buf = s.buf[:0] // Must now have a sign. if !s.accept("+-") { s.error(complexError) } // Sign is now in buffer imagSign := string(s.buf) imag = s.floatToken() if !s.accept("i") { s.error(complexError) } if parens && !s.accept(")") { s.error(complexError) } return real, imagSign + imag } func hasX(s string) bool { for i := 0; i < len(s); i++ { if s[i] == 'x' || s[i] == 'X' { return true } } return false } // convertFloat converts the string to a float64value. func (s *ss) convertFloat(str string, n int) float64 { // strconv.ParseFloat will handle "+0x1.fp+2", // but we have to implement our non-standard // decimal+binary exponent mix (1.2p4) ourselves. if p := indexRune(str, 'p'); p >= 0 && !hasX(str) { // Atof doesn't handle power-of-2 exponents, // but they're easy to evaluate. f, err := strconv.ParseFloat(str[:p], n) if err != nil { // Put full string into error. if e, ok := err.(*strconv.NumError); ok { e.Num = str } s.error(err) } m, err := strconv.Atoi(str[p+1:]) if err != nil { // Put full string into error. if e, ok := err.(*strconv.NumError); ok { e.Num = str } s.error(err) } return math.Ldexp(f, m) } f, err := strconv.ParseFloat(str, n) if err != nil { s.error(err) } return f } // convertComplex converts the next token to a complex128 value. // The atof argument is a type-specific reader for the underlying type. // If we're reading complex64, atof will parse float32s and convert them // to float64's to avoid reproducing this code for each complex type. func (s *ss) scanComplex(verb rune, n int) complex128 { if !s.okVerb(verb, floatVerbs, "complex") { return 0 } s.SkipSpace() s.notEOF() sreal, simag := s.complexTokens() real := s.convertFloat(sreal, n/2) imag := s.convertFloat(simag, n/2) return complex(real, imag) } // convertString returns the string represented by the next input characters. // The format of the input is determined by the verb. func (s *ss) convertString(verb rune) (str string) { if !s.okVerb(verb, "svqxX", "string") { return "" } s.SkipSpace() s.notEOF() switch verb { case 'q': str = s.quotedString() case 'x', 'X': str = s.hexString() default: str = string(s.token(true, notSpace)) // %s and %v just return the next word } return } // quotedString returns the double- or back-quoted string represented by the next input characters. func (s *ss) quotedString() string { s.notEOF() quote := s.getRune() switch quote { case '`': // Back-quoted: Anything goes until EOF or back quote. for { r := s.mustReadRune() if r == quote { break } s.buf.writeRune(r) } return string(s.buf) case '"': // Double-quoted: Include the quotes and let strconv.Unquote do the backslash escapes. s.buf.writeByte('"') for { r := s.mustReadRune() s.buf.writeRune(r) if r == '\\' { // In a legal backslash escape, no matter how long, only the character // immediately after the escape can itself be a backslash or quote. // Thus we only need to protect the first character after the backslash. s.buf.writeRune(s.mustReadRune()) } else if r == '"' { break } } result, err := strconv.Unquote(string(s.buf)) if err != nil { s.error(err) } return result default: s.errorString("expected quoted string") } return "" } // hexDigit returns the value of the hexadecimal digit. func hexDigit(d rune) (int, bool) { digit := int(d) switch digit { case '0', '1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9': return digit - '0', true case 'a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f': return 10 + digit - 'a', true case 'A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'E', 'F': return 10 + digit - 'A', true } return -1, false } // hexByte returns the next hex-encoded (two-character) byte from the input. // It returns ok==false if the next bytes in the input do not encode a hex byte. // If the first byte is hex and the second is not, processing stops. func (s *ss) hexByte() (b byte, ok bool) { rune1 := s.getRune() if rune1 == eof { return } value1, ok := hexDigit(rune1) if !ok { s.UnreadRune() return } value2, ok := hexDigit(s.mustReadRune()) if !ok { s.errorString("illegal hex digit") return } return byte(value1<<4 | value2), true } // hexString returns the space-delimited hexpair-encoded string. func (s *ss) hexString() string { s.notEOF() for { b, ok := s.hexByte() if !ok { break } s.buf.writeByte(b) } if len(s.buf) == 0 { s.errorString("no hex data for %x string") return "" } return string(s.buf) } const ( floatVerbs = "beEfFgGv" hugeWid = 1 << 30 intBits = 32 << (^uint(0) >> 63) uintptrBits = 32 << (^uintptr(0) >> 63) ) // scanPercent scans a literal percent character. func (s *ss) scanPercent() { s.SkipSpace() s.notEOF() if !s.accept("%") { s.errorString("missing literal %") } } // scanOne scans a single value, deriving the scanner from the type of the argument. func (s *ss) scanOne(verb rune, arg interface{}) { s.buf = s.buf[:0] var err error // If the parameter has its own Scan method, use that. if v, ok := arg.(Scanner); ok { err = v.Scan(s, verb) if err != nil { if err == io.EOF { err = io.ErrUnexpectedEOF } s.error(err) } return } switch v := arg.(type) { case *bool: *v = s.scanBool(verb) case *complex64: *v = complex64(s.scanComplex(verb, 64)) case *complex128: *v = s.scanComplex(verb, 128) case *int: *v = int(s.scanInt(verb, intBits)) case *int8: *v = int8(s.scanInt(verb, 8)) case *int16: *v = int16(s.scanInt(verb, 16)) case *int32: *v = int32(s.scanInt(verb, 32)) case *int64: *v = s.scanInt(verb, 64) case *uint: *v = uint(s.scanUint(verb, intBits)) case *uint8: *v = uint8(s.scanUint(verb, 8)) case *uint16: *v = uint16(s.scanUint(verb, 16)) case *uint32: *v = uint32(s.scanUint(verb, 32)) case *uint64: *v = s.scanUint(verb, 64) case *uintptr: *v = uintptr(s.scanUint(verb, uintptrBits)) // Floats are tricky because you want to scan in the precision of the result, not // scan in high precision and convert, in order to preserve the correct error condition. case *float32: if s.okVerb(verb, floatVerbs, "float32") { s.SkipSpace() s.notEOF() *v = float32(s.convertFloat(s.floatToken(), 32)) } case *float64: if s.okVerb(verb, floatVerbs, "float64") { s.SkipSpace() s.notEOF() *v = s.convertFloat(s.floatToken(), 64) } case *string: *v = s.convertString(verb) case *[]byte: // We scan to string and convert so we get a copy of the data. // If we scanned to bytes, the slice would point at the buffer. *v = []byte(s.convertString(verb)) default: val := reflect.ValueOf(v) ptr := val if ptr.Kind() != reflect.Ptr { s.errorString("type not a pointer: " + val.Type().String()) return } switch v := ptr.Elem(); v.Kind() { case reflect.Bool: v.SetBool(s.scanBool(verb)) case reflect.Int, reflect.Int8, reflect.Int16, reflect.Int32, reflect.Int64: v.SetInt(s.scanInt(verb, v.Type().Bits())) case reflect.Uint, reflect.Uint8, reflect.Uint16, reflect.Uint32, reflect.Uint64, reflect.Uintptr: v.SetUint(s.scanUint(verb, v.Type().Bits())) case reflect.String: v.SetString(s.convertString(verb)) case reflect.Slice: // For now, can only handle (renamed) []byte. typ := v.Type() if typ.Elem().Kind() != reflect.Uint8 { s.errorString("can't scan type: " + val.Type().String()) } str := s.convertString(verb) v.Set(reflect.MakeSlice(typ, len(str), len(str))) for i := 0; i < len(str); i++ { v.Index(i).SetUint(uint64(str[i])) } case reflect.Float32, reflect.Float64: s.SkipSpace() s.notEOF() v.SetFloat(s.convertFloat(s.floatToken(), v.Type().Bits())) case reflect.Complex64, reflect.Complex128: v.SetComplex(s.scanComplex(verb, v.Type().Bits())) default: s.errorString("can't scan type: " + val.Type().String()) } } } // errorHandler turns local panics into error returns. func errorHandler(errp *error) { if e := recover(); e != nil { if se, ok := e.(scanError); ok { // catch local error *errp = se.err } else if eof, ok := e.(error); ok && eof == io.EOF { // out of input *errp = eof } else { panic(e) } } } // doScan does the real work for scanning without a format string. func (s *ss) doScan(a []interface{}) (numProcessed int, err error) { defer errorHandler(&err) for _, arg := range a { s.scanOne('v', arg) numProcessed++ } // Check for newline (or EOF) if required (Scanln etc.). if s.nlIsEnd { for { r := s.getRune() if r == '\n' || r == eof { break } if !isSpace(r) { s.errorString("expected newline") break } } } return } // advance determines whether the next characters in the input match // those of the format. It returns the number of bytes (sic) consumed // in the format. All runs of space characters in either input or // format behave as a single space. Newlines are special, though: // newlines in the format must match those in the input and vice versa. // This routine also handles the %% case. If the return value is zero, // either format starts with a % (with no following %) or the input // is empty. If it is negative, the input did not match the string. func (s *ss) advance(format string) (i int) { for i < len(format) { fmtc, w := utf8.DecodeRuneInString(format[i:]) // Space processing. // In the rest of this comment "space" means spaces other than newline. // Newline in the format matches input of zero or more spaces and then newline or end-of-input. // Spaces in the format before the newline are collapsed into the newline. // Spaces in the format after the newline match zero or more spaces after the corresponding input newline. // Other spaces in the format match input of one or more spaces or end-of-input. if isSpace(fmtc) { newlines := 0 trailingSpace := false for isSpace(fmtc) && i < len(format) { if fmtc == '\n' { newlines++ trailingSpace = false } else { trailingSpace = true } i += w fmtc, w = utf8.DecodeRuneInString(format[i:]) } for j := 0; j < newlines; j++ { inputc := s.getRune() for isSpace(inputc) && inputc != '\n' { inputc = s.getRune() } if inputc != '\n' && inputc != eof { s.errorString("newline in format does not match input") } } if trailingSpace { inputc := s.getRune() if newlines == 0 { // If the trailing space stood alone (did not follow a newline), // it must find at least one space to consume. if !isSpace(inputc) && inputc != eof { s.errorString("expected space in input to match format") } if inputc == '\n' { s.errorString("newline in input does not match format") } } for isSpace(inputc) && inputc != '\n' { inputc = s.getRune() } if inputc != eof { s.UnreadRune() } } continue } // Verbs. if fmtc == '%' { // % at end of string is an error. if i+w == len(format) { s.errorString("missing verb: % at end of format string") } // %% acts like a real percent nextc, _ := utf8.DecodeRuneInString(format[i+w:]) // will not match % if string is empty if nextc != '%' { return } i += w // skip the first % } // Literals. inputc := s.mustReadRune() if fmtc != inputc { s.UnreadRune() return -1 } i += w } return } // doScanf does the real work when scanning with a format string. // At the moment, it handles only pointers to basic types. func (s *ss) doScanf(format string, a []interface{}) (numProcessed int, err error) { defer errorHandler(&err) end := len(format) - 1 // We process one item per non-trivial format for i := 0; i <= end; { w := s.advance(format[i:]) if w > 0 { i += w continue } // Either we failed to advance, we have a percent character, or we ran out of input. if format[i] != '%' { // Can't advance format. Why not? if w < 0 { s.errorString("input does not match format") } // Otherwise at EOF; "too many operands" error handled below break } i++ // % is one byte // do we have 20 (width)? var widPresent bool s.maxWid, widPresent, i = parsenum(format, i, end) if !widPresent { s.maxWid = hugeWid } c, w := utf8.DecodeRuneInString(format[i:]) i += w if c != 'c' { s.SkipSpace() } if c == '%' { s.scanPercent() continue // Do not consume an argument. } s.argLimit = s.limit if f := s.count + s.maxWid; f < s.argLimit { s.argLimit = f } if numProcessed >= len(a) { // out of operands s.errorString("too few operands for format '%" + format[i-w:] + "'") break } arg := a[numProcessed] s.scanOne(c, arg) numProcessed++ s.argLimit = s.limit } if numProcessed < len(a) { s.errorString("too many operands") } return }