A general-purpose macro processor or general purpose preprocessor is a macro processor that is not tied to or integrated with a particular language or piece of software.

A macro processor is a program that copies a stream of text from one place to another, making a systematic set of replacements as it does so. Macro processors are often embedded in other programs, such as assemblers and compilers. Sometimes they are standalone programs that can be used to process any kind of text.

Macro processors have been used for language expansion (defining new language constructs that can be expressed in terms of existing language components), for systematic text replacements that require decision making, and for text reformatting (e.g. conditional extraction of material from an HTML file).

Examples of general purpose macro processors

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Name Year Description
GPM 1960s One of the earliest macro processors was GPM (the General Purpose Macrogenerator).[1] This was developed at the University of Cambridge, UK, in the mid-1960s, under the direction of Christopher Strachey.
ML/I 1960s One particularly important general purpose macro processor was (and still is) ML/I (Macro Language One). This was developed as part of PhD research by a Cambridge postgraduate, Peter J. Brown. ML/I operates on a character stream, and requires no special format for its input, nor any special flag characters to introduce macros.
STAGE2 1960s A contemporary of ML/I was STAGE2,[2] part of William Waite's Mobile Programming System.[3] This too is a general purpose macro processor, but it processes input a line at a time, matching each line against specified patterns; it is notable in that it is independent of character set, requiring only that the digits 0-9 are contiguous and in that order (a condition not met by some of the 6-bit and BCD character codes of the era).
M6 1960s Early macro processor developed at AT&T Bell Laboratories by Douglas McIlroy, Robert Morris and Andrew Hall. It was influenced by GPM and TRAC. Implemented in FORTRAN IV,[4] it was ported to Version 2 Unix.
SNOBOL 1960s SNOBOL is a string processing language which is capable of doing most of the pre-processing which can be done by a macro processor.
XPOP XPOP was another attempt at a general macro processing language by Mark Halpern at IBM in the 1960s.
TTM 1968 TTM is a recursive, interpretive language designed primarily for string manipulation, text editing, macro definition and expansion, and other applications generally classified as systems programming. It was developed in 1968 by Steven Caine and E. Kent Gordon at the California Institute of Technology. It is derived, primarily, from GAP[5] and GPM.[1]
GMP 1970s Another attempt was the GMP (General Macro Processor) developed in the mid-1970s by M Boule in the DLB/GC department of the CII Company along ideas from R.J. Chevance. Tested in association with the Bordeaux I University the first version ran the SIRIS8/IRIS80 System. It was ported to mini6 systems and was the main component involved in the system generation for this family of computers. The GMP processor used C2-Chomsky grammars to define the syntax of macros and used an imperative language to execute computations and proceed to macro expansion.
M4 1977 m4 was designed and written in C for Unix by Dennis Ritchie and converted to Ratfor by Brian Kernighan.[6]
ELENA Software: Practice and Experience, Vol. 14, pp. 519–531, Jun. 1984
gema 1995 gema is a contextual macro processor based on pattern matching, written by David N. Gray. It replaces/enhances the concept of regular expressions by contexts. Contexts roughly corresponds to named sets of patterns. As a consequence, macros in gema closely resemble an EBNF description.[7]
GPP 1996 gpp is another general macro processor written by Denis Auroux. It resembles a C preprocessor, but has more general semantics and allows for customized syntax (for instance, TeX, XHTML, and Prolog-like scripts are definable).[8]
M5 1999 m5 is a general-purpose macro processor written by William A. Ward Jr. Unlike many macroprocessors, m5 does not directly interpret its input. Instead it uses a two-pass approach in which the first pass translates the input to an awk program, and the second pass executes the awk program to produce the final output.
pyexpander 2011 pyexpander is a general-purpose macro processor based on the Python programming language. In addition to simple macro replacement it allows evaluation of arbitrary Python expressions and execution of python code.
Text Assembler 2014 Text Assembler is a general-purpose text/macro processor based on the JavaScript programming language. Beyond simple macro replacement, it allows evaluating arbitrary JavaScript expressions and executing JavaScript code. It can also load JSON data models for more complex data-driven text processing tasks.[9]
PP 2016 PP is a text preprocessor designed for Pandoc (and more generally Markdown and reStructuredText). PP implements: Macros, literate programming, GraphViz, PlantUML and ditaa diagrams, Bash, Cmd, PowerShell, Python and Haskell scripts.[10]
minimac minimac is a minimalist general purpose macro processor. It operates as a character stream filter, recursively expanding macros as they are encountered. It is unusual for a macro processor in that it uses an explicit argument stack, and user functions are defined by concatenation (similar to the Forth language).[11]
aa_macro 2017 aa_macro is an open-source character-stream-based text processing language written in Python. Text is processed in a left-to-right, inside-to-outside manner. A selection of pre-defined built-in functions provide fundamental processing mechanisms that may be used directly or as elements of user-defined styles. The language is user extensible, and wtfm, an open-source web-based document preparation wrapper for the language, is available.[12][13]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Strachey, Christopher (October 1965). "A General Purpose Macrogenerator". Computer Journal. 8 (3): 225–241. doi:10.1093/comjnl/8.3.225.
  2. ^ Waite, William M. (July 1970). "The mobile programming system: STAGE2". Communications of the ACM. 13 (7). New York, NY, USA: ACM: 415–421. doi:10.1145/362686.362691.
  3. ^ Britten, Charles Randyl (2020-06-26). "Translation of 8080 Code to 8086 - Microsoft Translation of 8080 Code to 8086 and Other 16-Bit Processors". Archived from the original on 2021-07-23. Retrieved 2021-11-28. Stage2 was created by Prof William Waite at the University of Colorado in the late sixties as a major component of his mobile programming system, MPS. Stage2 uses a pattern matching algorithm to match input lines of text against a set of templates. Each template is the first line of a macro and when a match is recognized the code body of that macro is processed to produce output text, error messages, or create a constructed line that is submitted for further template matching. So the process is fully recursive and quite powerful in its capabilities for text transformation. In fact, it can be used to implement a programming language compiler.
  4. ^ Cole, A. J. (1981). Macro Processors (2nd, revised ed.). CUP Archive. p. 254.
  5. ^ Farber, D. J., 635 Assembly System - GAP. Bell Telephone Laboratories Computation Center (1964).
  6. ^ Kernighan, Brian W.; Plauger, P. J. (1976). Software Tools. Reading, Massachusetts: Addison-Wesley. p. 283. ISBN 0-201-03669-X.
  7. ^ "Gema". gema.sourceforge.net. Retrieved 2017-04-21.
  8. ^ "GPP". logological.org/gpp. Retrieved April 21, 2017.
  9. ^ "akiwi - Text Assembler". www.akiwi.co.uk. Retrieved 2017-04-21.
  10. ^ Delord, Christophe. "PP - A generic Preprocessor (with Pandoc in mind)". cdsoft.fr. Retrieved 2017-10-17.
  11. ^ "minimac". freshmeat.net. Retrieved 2017-04-21.
  12. ^ "aa_macro". Retrieved 2017-11-24.
  13. ^ "wtfm". Retrieved 2017-11-24.

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