gcc/libstdc++-v3/docs/html/makedoc.awk

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# Take apart bits of HTML and puts them back together again in new and
# fascinating ways. Copyright (C) 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
# Contributed by Phil Edwards <pme@gcc.gnu.org>. Simple two-state automaton
# inspired by Richard Henderson's gcc/mkmap-symver.awk.
# 'file' is the name of the file on stdin
# 'title' is the text to print at the start of the list
BEGIN {
state = "looking";
entries = 0;
printf (" <li>%s\n", title);
printf (" <ul>\n");
}
# Searching for the little table of contents at the top.
state == "looking" && /^<h1>Contents/ {
state = "entries";
next;
}
# Ignore everything else up to that point.
state == "looking" {
next;
}
# An entry in the table of contents. Pull that line apart.
state == "entries" && /<li>/ {
extract_info($0);
next;
}
# End of the list. Don't bother reading the rest of the file. (It could
# also contain more <li>'s, so that would be incorrect as well as wasteful.)
state == "entries" && /^<\/ul>/ {
exit;
}
END {
for (i = 0; i < entries; i++)
printf (" %s\n", entry[i]);
printf (" </ul>\n </li>\n\n");
}
function extract_info(line) {
# thistarget will be things like "#5" or "elsewhere.html"
match(line,"href=\".*\"");
thistarget = substr(line,RSTART+6,RLENGTH-7);
# take apart the filename
split(file,X,"/");
if (thistarget ~ /^#/) {
# local name, use directory and filename
target = file thistarget
} else {
# different file, only use directory
target = X[1] "/" thistarget
}
# visible text
gsub("</a></li>","",line);
start = index(line,"\">") + 2;
thistext = substr(line,start);
# Assemble and store the HTML for later output.
entry[entries++] = "<li><a href=\"" target "\">" thistext "</a></li>"
}
# vim:sw=2