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m4
not in GNU m4
The version of m4
from System V contains a few facilities that
have not been implemented in GNU m4
yet. Additionally,
POSIX requires some behaviors that GNU m4
has not
implemented yet. Relying on these behaviors is non-portable, as a
future release of GNU m4
may change.
defn
,
without any clarification on how defn
behaves when one of the
multiple arguments names a builtin. System V m4
and some other
implementations allow mixing builtins and text macros into a single
macro. GNU m4
only supports joining multiple text
arguments, although a future implementation may lift this restriction to
behave more like System V. The only portable way to join text macros
with builtins is via helper macros and implicit concatenation of macro
results.
eval
(see Eval) when an argument cannot be parsed).
m4
correctly handles multiple instances
of ‘-’ on the command line.
m4wrap
(see M4wrap) to act in FIFO
(first-in, first-out) order, but GNU m4
currently uses
LIFO order. Furthermore, POSIX states that only the first
argument to m4wrap
is saved for later evaluation, but
GNU m4
saves and processes all arguments, with output
separated by spaces.
a`'define`'b
would expand to ab
. But
GNU m4
ignores certain builtins if they have missing
arguments, giving adefineb
for the above example.
define(`f',`1')
(see Define)
by undefining the entire stack of previous definitions, and if doing
undefine(`f')
first. GNU m4
replaces just the top
definition on the stack, as if doing popdef(`f')
followed by
pushdef(`f',`1')
. POSIX allows either behavior.
syscmd
(see Syscmd) to evaluate
command output for macro expansion, but this was a mistake that is
anticipated to be corrected in the next version of POSIX.
GNU m4
follows traditional behavior in syscmd
where output is not rescanned, and provides the extension esyscmd
that does scan the output.
changequote(arg)
(see Changequote) to use newline as the close quote, but this was a
bug, and the next version of POSIX is anticipated to state
that using empty strings or just one argument is unspecified.
Meanwhile, the GNU m4
behavior of treating an empty
end-quote delimiter as ‘'’ is not portable, as Solaris treats it as
repeating the start-quote delimiter, and BSD treats it as leaving the
previous end-quote delimiter unchanged. For predictable results, never
call changequote with just one argument, or with empty strings for
arguments.
changecom(arg,)
(see Changecom) to make it impossible to end a comment, but this is
a bug, and the next version of POSIX is anticipated to state
that using empty strings is unspecified. Meanwhile, the GNU
m4
behavior of treating an empty end-comment delimiter as newline
is not portable, as BSD treats it as leaving the previous end-comment
delimiter unchanged. It is also impossible in BSD implementations to
disable comments, even though that is required by POSIX. For
predictable results, never call changecom with empty strings for
arguments.
m4
give macros a higher precedence than
comments when parsing, meaning that if the start delimiter given to
changecom
(see Changecom) starts with a macro name, comments
are effectively disabled. POSIX does not specify what the
precedence is, so this version of GNU m4
parser
recognizes comments, then macros, then quoted strings.
m4
, but
gives an error message that the end of file was encountered inside a
macro with GNU m4
. On the other hand, traditional
implementations do end of file processing for files included with
include
or sinclude
(see Include), while GNU
m4
seamlessly integrates the content of those files. Thus
include(`a.m4')include(`b.m4')
will output ‘3’ instead of
giving an error.
m4
treats traceon
(see Trace) without
arguments as a global variable, independent of named macro tracing.
Also, once a macro is undefined, named tracing of that macro is lost.
On the other hand, when GNU m4
encounters
traceon
without
arguments, it turns tracing on for all existing definitions at the time,
but does not trace future definitions; traceoff
without arguments
turns tracing off for all definitions regardless of whether they were
also traced by name; and tracing by name, such as with -tfoo at
the command line or traceon(`foo')
in the input, is an attribute
that is preserved even if the macro is currently undefined.
Additionally, while POSIX requires trace output, it makes no
demands on the formatting of that output. Parsing trace output is not
guaranteed to be reliable, even between different releases of
GNU M4; however, the intent is that any future changes in
trace output will only occur under the direction of additional
debugmode
flags (see Debug Levels).
eval
(see Eval) to treat all
operators with the same precedence as C. However, earlier versions of
GNU m4
followed the traditional behavior of other
m4
implementations, where bitwise and logical negation (‘~’
and ‘!’) have lower precedence than equality operators; and where
equality operators (‘==’ and ‘!=’) had the same precedence as
relational operators (such as ‘<’). Use explicit parentheses to
ensure proper precedence. As extensions to POSIX,
GNU m4
gives well-defined semantics to operations that
C leaves undefined, such as when overflow occurs, when shifting negative
numbers, or when performing division by zero. POSIX also
requires ‘=’ to cause an error, but many traditional
implementations allowed it as an alias for ‘==’.
translit
(see Translit) to
treat each character of the second and third arguments literally.
However, it is anticipated that the next version of POSIX will
allow the GNU m4
behavior of treating ‘-’ as a
range operator.
m4
to honor the locale environment
variables of LANG
, LC_ALL
, LC_CTYPE
,
LC_MESSAGES
, and NLSPATH
, but this has not yet been
implemented in GNU m4
.
m4
follows
tradition and ignores all leading unquoted whitespace.
POSIXLY_CORRECT
and enables the option
--gnu
by default (see Invoking m4), a
client desiring to be strictly compliant has no way to disable
GNU extensions that conflict with POSIX when
directly invoking the compiled m4
. A future version of
GNU
M4 will honor the environment variable POSIXLY_CORRECT
,
implicitly enabling --traditional if it is set, in order to
allow a strictly-compliant client. In the meantime, a client needing
strict POSIX compliance can use the workaround of invoking a
shell script wrapper, where the wrapper then adds --traditional
to the arguments passed to the compiled m4
.
Next: Other Incompatibilities, Previous: Extensions, Up: Compatibility [Contents][Index]