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authoraarne <unknown>2005-05-17 16:16:59 +0000
committeraarne <unknown>2005-05-17 16:16:59 +0000
commitf592002e7dbf10ec6e9e2296ae6e37ca67569638 (patch)
tree2e6eb7e991b0a2b597d85d805c555aa309fb5857
parent8abf80dc4d4aa9c6a783f41346e44a5012649d03 (diff)
some doc for release
-rw-r--r--doc/gf-index.html46
-rw-r--r--doc/gf-manual.html869
-rw-r--r--doc/tutorial/gf-tutorial2.html38
-rw-r--r--src/HelpFile2
4 files changed, 937 insertions, 18 deletions
diff --git a/doc/gf-index.html b/doc/gf-index.html
index 01397554b..d4a406f4d 100644
--- a/doc/gf-index.html
+++ b/doc/gf-index.html
@@ -9,14 +9,10 @@
<h1>Grammatical Framework</h1>
-<h2>Version 2.1</h2>
+<h2>Version 2.2</h2>
-November 8, 2004.
-
-<p>
+May 17, 2005.
-<b>Version 2.2 scheduled to be released May 16, 2005!</b> See
-<a href="doc/gf2.2-highlights.html">highlights</a>.
</center>
@@ -25,11 +21,19 @@ November 8, 2004.
</p><h2>News</h2>
+<i>May 12, 2005</i>. Version 2.2 released. See
+<a href="doc/gf2.2-highlights.html">highlights</a>.
+Download from
+<a href="http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=132285">SourceForge</a>.
+
+<p>
+
<i>May 12, 2005</i>. GF now has a mailing list, to which you can register
<a href="https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gf-tools-users">here</a>.
GF also has a project page on SourceForge,
<a
-href="https://sourceforge.net/projects/gf-tools">https://sourceforge.net/projects/gf-tools</a>,
+href="https://sourceforge.net/projects/gf-tools">
+https://sourceforge.net/projects/gf-tools</a>,
but this page does not yet have much content.
<p>
@@ -68,7 +72,7 @@ Expressivity and Complexity of the Grammatical Framework</a>.
<i>November 8, 2004</i>. GF 2.1 released.
Here are the <a
href="doc/gf2-highlights.html">highlights</a>.
-Software available on the <a href="download/gf-download.html">Download
+Software available on the <a href="download/gf-download.html">GF 2.1 Download
Page</a>.
<p>
Main novelties in 2.1:
@@ -160,7 +164,7 @@ but they can also be useful for language training.
GF is available precompiled for
several platforms: Linux, Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows, and Sun OS.
-For more information, see the <a href="download/gf-download.html">Download Page</a>.
+For more information, see the <a href="http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=132285">Download Page</a> (at SourceForge).
<h2>Source code</h2>
@@ -176,8 +180,7 @@ The platform-independent graphical user interface is written in
</p><p>
-The <a href="download/gf-download.html">Download Page</a>
-gives links to source and binary packages, as well as
+The <a href="http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=132285">Download Page</a> (at SourceForge) gives links to source and binary packages, as well as
information on compiler requirements.
@@ -190,9 +193,15 @@ Highlights</a> of Version 2.0 for the main differences.
<li>
<a href="doc/javaGUImanual/javaGUImanual.htm">User's tutorial</a>
on editing in the Java interface.
-
+
+
+<li>
+ <a href="tutorial/gf-tutorial2.html">New Grammarian's Tutorial</a>,
+based on the module system (unfinished).
+More up-to-date but ess detailed than the next one.
+
</li><li>
-<a href="Tutorial/gf-tutorial.html">Grammarian's tutorial</a>
+<a href="Tutorial/gf-tutorial.html">Grammarian's Tutorial</a>
on writing GF grammars, with exercises.
</li><li>
@@ -203,11 +212,15 @@ GF in 25 Minutes</a> for programmers.
<a href="http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~aarne/articles/gf-jfp.ps.gz">Grammatical Framework: A Type-Theoretical
Grammar Formalism</a> (ps.gz). Theoretical paper on GF by A. Ranta, appeared
in <i>The Journal of Functional Programming</i>, vol. 14:2. 2004, pp. 145-189.
+Also serves as language document.
+<li> <a href="gf-modules.html">Module system document</a>, complements the
+previous paper by a description of the module system.
</li><li>
<a href="doc/gf-manual.html">
-User Manual</a> explaining the GF user interfaces and command language.
+User Manual</a> explaining the GF user interfaces and command language (slightly
+outdated).
</li><li>
<a href="doc/DocGF.pdf">
@@ -219,8 +232,8 @@ Highlights</a> of Version 2.1 and 2.0 (in comparison with version 1.2).
</li><li>
-<a href="http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~aarne/slides/gf-rocquencourt.pdf">Slides on GF theory and
-implementation</a> given
+<a href="http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~aarne/slides/gf-rocquencourt.pdf">
+Slides on GF theory and implementation</a> given
at INRIA Rocquencourt in December 2003.
</li><li>
@@ -243,6 +256,7 @@ publications on GF, as well as background literature.
</li></ul>
+
<h2>Projects and events</h2>
<a href="http://www.talk-project.org">TALK</a> = Tools for Ambient Linguistic
diff --git a/doc/gf-manual.html b/doc/gf-manual.html
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..aeff98f1f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/gf-manual.html
@@ -0,0 +1,869 @@
+<html>
+<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#000000" >
+<center>
+<IMG SRC="gf-logo.gif">
+
+
+<h1>Grammatical Framework User Manual</h1>
+
+</center>
+
+<a href="http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~aarne">
+Aarne Ranta</a>,
+May 17, 2005, for GF Version 2.2
+
+<p>
+
+Third version: June 25, 2003, for GF Version 1.2.<br>
+Second version: June 17, 2002, for GF Version 1.0.<br>
+First version: April 19, 2002.
+
+<p>
+
+This document describes
+the command language available for the user of GF.
+The GF grammar language is described in other documents.
+
+<p>
+
+There is a separate
+<a href="javaGUImanual/javaGUImanual.htm">GF Java GUI Manual</a>.
+
+
+
+
+<h2>Levels of commands</h2>
+
+<b>GF commands</b> appear on three levels:
+
+<ol>
+<li> <b>top-level shell commands</b>,
+ used for calling GF from Unix/Windows/Mac.
+
+<li> <b>internal shell commands</b>,
+ available in the shell entered by the top-level shell command <tt>gf</tt>.
+
+<li> <b>internal subshell commands</b>,
+ such as the editor commands,
+ entered by certain internal shell commands.
+</ol>
+
+By the <b>GF command language</b> we mean the internal shell
+commands, which the most part of this document is about;
+the sections describing the other levels are much shorter.
+
+
+
+<h2>Top-level shell commands</h2>
+
+The compiled GF program is invoked by a command that has the syntax
+<pre>
+ gf Option* File*
+</pre>
+The files should contain GF
+grammars, each of which is <b>imported</b> in the environment in which
+GF starts, in the same way as if GF were first started and
+the import command <tt>i</tt> then executed for each of the files.
+The currently available options are:
+<ul>
+<li> <tt>-java</tt>, which enters directly an editor session designed
+ for communicating with and external java GUI (see <tt>jgf</tt> below).
+</ul>
+
+<p>
+
+Like any program in Unix, GF can be used in a pipeline or
+a redirection. For instance,
+<pre>
+ echo "h" | gf
+</pre>
+starts GF and executes the help command.
+<pre>
+ gf &lt;script
+</pre>
+starts GF and executes the commands in the file <tt>script</tt>.
+
+<p>
+
+The Java GUI is started with the command
+<pre>
+ jgf File+
+</pre>
+which executes a simple shell script. The effect is to start
+GF, import each grammar in the files, and enter the
+Editor subshell (see below), with which the GUI then communicates.
+
+<p>
+
+If a compiled version of GF is not available, GF can be started within
+the Haskell interpreter GHCI, by the command
+<pre>
+ make ghci
+</pre>
+in the GF source directory, followed by ":l GF" in GHCI.
+Unfortunately, the standard binary of the light-weight Hugs interpreter
+has insufficient code space for GF.
+
+
+<h2>Batch mode</h2>
+
+A simple protocol has been defined to run GF in batch mode, e.g. from another
+program. The command line syntax is
+<pre>
+ gf -batch (-s) (-[flag])*
+</pre>
+It reads standard input, which is typically directed from a
+script file containing GF commands.
+Every command read by GF, GF's reply, and
+the whole run, are enclosed in XML tags:
+<ul>
+<li> tag <tt>gfcommand</tt> encloses a command in the script
+<li> tag <tt>gfreply</tt> encloses GF's reply to a command
+<li> tag <tt>gfbatch</tt> encloses the whole run of the script
+</ul>
+The DTD is the following:
+<pre>
+ &lt;!ELEMENT gfbatch ((gfcommand, gfreply)*) >
+ &lt;!ELEMENT gfcommand (#PCDATA) >
+ &lt;!ELEMENT gfreply (#PCDATA) >
+</pre>
+The optional <tt>+s</tt> (silence) flag turns off showing
+commands and the XML structure of the run; it is moreove sent
+as a global flag to the environment in which the run is
+performed, together with the other flags appearing in the
+command line.
+
+<p>
+
+Another version of the batch mode is the compiler. Thus
+<pre>
+ gf -make -s file.gf
+</pre>
+silently compiles the file <tt>file.gf</tt> (as well as
+all other files that it depends on).
+All flags to the command <tt>i</tt> are recognized.
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2>Library path</h2>
+
+(Not available in Version 2.2 for the moment - sorry.)
+
+
+<h3>Command line syntax</h3>
+
+The syntax of the individual commands is described in later sections.
+The general structure of a command line is defined by the following
+grammar:
+<pre>
+ CommandLine ::= Pipeline (";;" Pipeline)*
+ Pipeline ::= Command
+ | Command Arg ("|" Command)*
+ Command ::= CommandId (Option | Flag)* Arg*
+ Arg ::= QuotedString | Tree | File | Lang | Int
+</pre>
+Several commands can be collected on one line, separated by a double
+semicolon. The effect is that each of the commands is executed;
+the same effect is achieved in a script by putting the commands on
+consecutive lines. Thus
+<pre>
+ i LangEng.gf ;; p -cat=AP "black or green" ;; q
+</pre>
+is equivalent to
+<pre>
+ i LangEng.gf
+ p -cat=AP "black or green"
+ q
+</pre>
+The one-line variant is handy to use as an argument of the <tt>echo</tt>
+command in Unix, to define simple shell scripts using GF.
+
+<p>
+
+A <b>pipeline</b> consists of a first command with an argument,
+producing a result which is sent as argument to the next command.
+For example,
+<pre>
+ gr -cat=Phrase | l | sa
+</pre>
+generates a random Phrase, linearizes it, and speaks aloud the
+resulting string. No result is seen in the output, but the
+phrase is heard spoken.
+
+<p>
+
+The <b>trace</b> option <tt>-tr</tt> can be used to show intermediate
+results in a pipeline:
+<pre>
+ rf -tr bible.txt | p -lang=Eng -cat=Text | l -lang=Chi
+</pre>
+reads a string from the file <tt>bible.txt</tt> (displaying the result),
+parses it as an English text (without displaying the parse tree),
+and linearizes the tree into Chinese (displaying the result, as the
+last command in a pipeline always does).
+
+<p>
+
+The Unix <b>Readline</b> facility makes arrow keys, file name completions,
+etc, available in the GF shell, but only in the GHC-compiled variant.
+For instance, the up-arrow goes backwards in the command history.
+If Readline is not available,
+a command line consisting of an integer <tt>n</tt>
+repeats a command <tt>n</tt> lines back in the history.
+For instance, 0 repeats the last command, 1 the second-last, etc.
+
+
+
+
+<h3>Options and flags</h3>
+
+An <b>option</b> consist of a hyphen and an option identifier, e.g.
+<pre>
+ -retain
+</pre>
+What options belong to what commands is explained below.
+
+<p>
+
+A <b>flag</b> consists of a hyphen, a flag identifier, an equality sign,
+and a value identifier, e.g.
+<pre>
+ -lang=Eng
+</pre>
+What flags belong to what commands is explained below.
+In addition to command lines, flags can be set globally with the
+<tt>sf</tt> command (see below), as well as
+in grammars, using a <tt>flags</tt> directive, e.g.
+<pre>
+ flags lexer=code ; startcat=Exp ;
+</pre>
+either first in a file or immediately after an <tt>include</tt> directive.
+In case of conflicts arising from this, the descending order of priority is:
+command line, grammar, global.
+The global state is initialized by <b>default values</b> to
+all available flags.
+
+
+
+<h3>Environment</h3>
+
+To understand the semantics of commands in a GF session,
+one must know their dependence on and their effects to an
+<b>environment</b>. The environment consists of
+<ul>
+<li> main abstract syntax (if any) - pointer to a compiled module
+<li> main concrete syntax (if any) - pointer to a compiled module
+<li> a list of pointers to other concrete syntaxes, for the same abstract
+<li> a list of compiled modules
+<li> a list of source modules
+<li> values of flags.
+</ul>
+Normally, the main concrete syntax is the last-imported one.
+The name of this is the
+value of the flag <tt>-lang</tt>, which can be reset by the
+<tt>sf</tt> command.
+
+
+
+
+<h3>Command arguments</h3>
+
+Unlike Unix, where command arguments and values are strings,
+GF uses a primitive type system, distinguishing between
+<ul>
+<li> strings,
+<li> (lists of) terms (= syntax trees),
+<li> names of languages,
+<li> names of files,
+<li> integers,
+<li> void values (e.g. the result of speaking aloud a string),
+<li> error values.
+</ul>
+A pipeline is only meaningful among strings and terms, and
+only if the
+argument type of a command matches with the value type of the
+preceding one. For instance,
+<pre>
+ p "hello world" | l -lang=Swe
+</pre>
+sends a list of terms (the parsing result) to the linearizer,
+which expects terms, so that the types match. But
+<pre>
+ p "hello world" | p -lang=Swe
+</pre>
+tries to parse arguments which are already terms, and this is a
+type error. An error value is also displayed as a string
+(an error message), but this string is never a meaningful
+input for a command, so the pipe breaks there.
+
+
+
+
+<h3>Descriptions with the individual commands</h3>
+
+The following is a copy of the current <tt>HelpFile</tt>.
+<pre>
+i, import: i File
+ Reads a grammar from File and compiles it into a GF runtime grammar.
+ Files "include"d in File are read recursively, nubbing repetitions.
+ If a grammar with the same language name is already in the state,
+ it is overwritten - but only if compilation succeeds.
+ The grammar parser depends on the file name suffix:
+ .gf normal GF source
+ .gfc canonical GF
+ .gfr precompiled GF resource
+ .gfcm multilingual canonical GF
+ .ebnf Extended BNF format
+ .cf Context-free (BNF) format
+ options:
+ -old old: parse in GF<2.0 format (not necessary)
+ -v verbose: give lots of messages
+ -s silent: don't give error messages
+ -src source: ignore precompiled gfc and gfr files
+ -retain retain operations: read resource modules (needed in comm cc)
+ -nocf don't build context-free grammar (thus no parser)
+ -nocheckcirc don't eliminate circular rules from CF
+ -cflexer build an optimized parser with separate lexer trie
+ -noemit do not emit code (default with old grammar format)
+ -o do emit code (default with new grammar format)
+ flags:
+ -abs set the name used for abstract syntax (with -old option)
+ -cnc set the name used for concrete syntax (with -old option)
+ -res set the name used for resource (with -old option)
+ -path use the (colon-separated) search path to find modules
+ -optimize select an optimization to override file-defined flags
+ -conversion select parsing method (values strict|nondet)
+ examples:
+ i English.gf -- ordinary import of Concrete
+ i -retain german/ParadigmsGer.gf -- import of Resource to test
+
+* rl, remove_language: rl Language
+ Takes away the language from the state.
+
+e, empty: e
+ Takes away all languages and resets all global flags.
+
+sf, set_flags: sf Flag*
+ The values of the Flags are set for Language. If no language
+ is specified, the flags are set globally.
+ examples:
+ sf -nocpu -- stop showing CPU time
+ sf -lang=Swe -- make Swe the default concrete
+
+s, strip: s
+ Prune the state by removing source and resource modules.
+
+-- commands that give information about the state
+
+pg, print_grammar: pg
+ Prints the actual grammar (overridden by the -lang=X flag).
+ The -printer=X flag sets the format in which the grammar is
+ written.
+ N.B. since grammars are compiled when imported, this command
+ generally does not show the grammar in the same format as the
+ source. In particular, the -printer=latex is not supported.
+ Use the command tg -printer=latex File to print the source
+ grammar in LaTeX.
+ options:
+ -utf8 apply UTF8-encoding to the grammar
+ flags:
+ -printer
+ -lang
+ examples:
+ pg -printer=cf -- show the context-free skeleton
+
+pm, print_multigrammar: pm
+ Prints the current multilingual grammar in .gfcm form.
+ (Automatically executes the strip command (s) before doing this.)
+ options:
+ -utf8 apply UTF8 encoding to the tokens in the grammar
+ -utf8id apply UTF8 encoding to the identifiers in the grammar
+ -graph print module dependency graph in 'dot' format
+ examples:
+ pm | wf Letter.gfcm -- print the grammar into the file Letter.gfcm
+ pm -printer=graph | wf D.dot -- then do 'dot -Tps D.dot > D.ps'
+
+vg, visualize_graph: vg
+ Show the dependency graph of multilingual grammar via dot and gv.
+
+po, print_options: po
+ Print what modules there are in the state. Also
+ prints those flag values in the current state that differ from defaults.
+
+pl, print_languages: pl
+ Prints the names of currently available languages.
+
+pi, print_info: pi Ident
+ Prints information on the identifier.
+
+-- commands that execute and show the session history
+
+eh, execute_history: eh File
+ Executes commands in the file.
+
+ph, print_history; ph
+ Prints the commands issued during the GF session.
+ The result is readable by the eh command.
+ examples:
+ ph | wf foo.hist" -- save the history into a file
+
+-- linearization, parsing, translation, and computation
+
+l, linearize: l PattList? Tree
+ Shows all linearization forms of Tree by the actual grammar
+ (which is overridden by the -lang flag).
+ The pattern list has the form [P, ... ,Q] where P,...,Q follow GF
+ syntax for patterns. All those forms are generated that match with the
+ pattern list. Too short lists are filled with variables in the end.
+ Only the -table flag is available if a pattern list is specified.
+ HINT: see GF language specification for the syntax of Pattern and Term.
+ You can also copy and past parsing results.
+ options:
+ -table show parameters
+ -struct bracketed form
+ -record record, i.e. explicit GF concrete syntax term
+ -all show all forms and variants
+ -multi linearize to all languages (the other options don't work)
+ flags:
+ -lang linearize in this grammar
+ -number give this number of forms at most
+ -unlexer filter output through unlexer
+ examples:
+ l -lang=Swe -table -- show full inflection table in Swe
+
+p, parse: p String
+ Shows all Trees returned for String by the actual
+ grammar (overridden by the -lang flag), in the category S (overridden
+ by the -cat flag).
+ options:
+ -n non-strict: tolerates morphological errors
+ -ign ignore unknown words when parsing
+ -raw return context-free terms in raw form
+ -v verbose: give more information if parsing fails
+ -new use an experimental method (GF 2.0; sometimes very good)
+ -lines parse each line of input separately, ignoring empty lines
+ -all as -lines, but also parse empty lines
+ flags:
+ -cat parse in this category
+ -lang parse in this grammar
+ -lexer filter input through this lexer
+ -parser use this context-free parsing method
+ -number return this many results at most
+ examples:
+ p -cat=S -new "jag är gammal" -- parse an S with the new method
+ rf examples.txt | p -lines -- parse each non-empty line of the file
+
+tt, test_tokenizer: tt String
+ Show the token list sent to the parser when String is parsed.
+ HINT: can be useful when debugging the parser.
+ flags:
+ -lexer use this lexer
+ examples:
+ tt -lexer=codelit "2*(x + 3)" -- a favourite lexer for program code
+
+cc, compute_concrete: cc Term
+ Compute a term by concrete syntax definitions. Uses the topmost
+ resource module (the last in listing by command po) to resolve
+ constant names.
+ N.B. You need the flag -retain when importing the grammar, if you want
+ the oper definitions to be retained after compilation; otherwise this
+ command does not expand oper constants.
+ N.B.' The resulting Term is not a term in the sense of abstract syntax,
+ and hence not a valid input to a Tree-demanding command.
+ flags:
+ -res use another module than the topmost one
+ examples:
+ cc -res=ParadigmsFin (nLukko "hyppy") -- inflect "hyppy" with nLukko
+
+so, show_operations: so Type
+ Show oper operations with the given value type. Uses the topmost
+ resource module to resolve constant names.
+ N.B. You need the flag -retain when importing the grammar, if you want
+ the oper definitions to be retained after compilation; otherwise this
+ command does not find any oper constants.
+ N.B.' The value type may not be defined in a supermodule of the
+ topmost resource. In that case, use appropriate qualified name.
+ flags:
+ -res use another module than the topmost one
+ examples:
+ so -res=ParadigmsFin ResourceFin.N -- show N-paradigms in ParadigmsFin
+
+t, translate: t Lang Lang String
+ Parses String in Lang1 and linearizes the resulting Trees in Lang2.
+ flags:
+ -cat
+ -lexer
+ -parser
+ examples:
+ t Eng Swe -cat=S "every number is even or odd"
+
+gr, generate_random: gr Tree?
+ Generates a random Tree of a given category. If a Tree
+ argument is given, the command completes the Tree with values to
+ the metavariables in the tree.
+ flags:
+ -cat generate in this category
+ -lang use the abstract syntax of this grammar
+ -number generate this number of trees (not impl. with Tree argument)
+ -depth use this number of search steps at most
+ examples:
+ gr -cat=Query -- generate in category Query
+ gr (PredVP ? (NegVG ?)) -- generate a random tree of this form
+ gr -cat=S -tr | l -- gererate and linearize
+
+gt, generate_trees: gt Tree?
+ Generates all trees up to a given depth. If the depth is large,
+ a small -alts is recommended. If a Tree argument is given, the
+ command completes the Tree with values to the metavariables in
+ the tree.
+ options:
+ -metas also return trees that include metavariables
+ flags:
+ -depth generate to this depth (default 3)
+ -alts take this number of alternatives at each branch (default unlimited)
+ -cat generate in this category
+ -lang use the abstract syntax of this grammar
+ -number generate (at most) this number of trees
+ examples:
+ gt -depth=10 -cat=NP -- generate all NP's to depth 10
+ gt (PredVP ? (NegVG ?)) -- generate all trees of this form
+ gt -cat=S -tr | l -- gererate and linearize
+
+ma, morphologically_analyse: ma String
+ Runs morphological analysis on each word in String and displays
+ the results line by line.
+ options:
+ -short show analyses in bracketed words, instead of separate lines
+ flags:
+ -lang
+ examples:
+ wf Bible.txt | ma -short | wf Bible.tagged -- analyse the Bible
+
+
+-- elementary generation of Strings and Trees
+
+ps, put_string: ps String
+ Returns its argument String, like Unix echo.
+ HINT. The strength of ps comes from the possibility to receive the
+ argument from a pipeline, and altering it by the -filter flag.
+ flags:
+ -filter filter the result through this string processor
+ -length cut the string after this number of characters
+ examples:
+ gr -cat=Letter | l | ps -filter=text -- random letter as text
+
+pt, put_tree: pt Tree
+ Returns its argument Tree, like a specialized Unix echo.
+ HINT. The strength of pt comes from the possibility to receive
+ the argument from a pipeline, and altering it by the -transform flag.
+ flags:
+ -transform transform the result by this term processor
+ -number generate this number of terms at most
+ examples:
+ p "zero is even" | pt -transform=solve -- solve ?'s in parse result
+
+* st, show_tree: st Tree
+ Prints the tree as a string. Unlike pt, this command cannot be
+ used in a pipe to produce a tree, since its output is a string.
+ flags:
+ -printer show the tree in a special format (-printer=xml supported)
+
+wt, wrap_tree: wt Fun
+ Wraps the tree as the sole argument of Fun.
+ flags:
+ -c compute the resulting new tree to normal form
+
+-- subshells
+
+es, editing_session: es
+ Opens an interactive editing session.
+ N.B. Exit from a Fudget session is to the Unix shell, not to GF.
+ options:
+ -f Fudget GUI (necessary for Unicode; only available in X Window System)
+
+ts, translation_session: ts
+ Translates input lines from any of the actual languages to all other ones.
+ To exit, type a full stop (.) alone on a line.
+ N.B. Exit from a Fudget session is to the Unix shell, not to GF.
+ HINT: Set -parser and -lexer locally in each grammar.
+ options:
+ -f Fudget GUI (necessary for Unicode; only available in X Windows)
+ -lang prepend translation results with language names
+ flags:
+ -cat the parser category
+ examples:
+ ts -cat=Numeral -lang -- translate numerals, show language names
+
+tq, translation_quiz: tq Lang Lang
+ Random-generates translation exercises from Lang1 to Lang2,
+ keeping score of success.
+ To interrupt, type a full stop (.) alone on a line.
+ HINT: Set -parser and -lexer locally in each grammar.
+ flags:
+ -cat
+ examples:
+ tq -cat=NP TestResourceEng TestResourceSwe -- quiz for NPs
+
+tl, translation_list: tl Lang Lang
+ Random-generates a list of ten translation exercises from Lang1
+ to Lang2. The number can be changed by a flag.
+ HINT: use wf to save the exercises in a file.
+ flags:
+ -cat
+ -number
+ examples:
+ tl -cat=NP TestResourceEng TestResourceSwe -- quiz list for NPs
+
+mq, morphology_quiz: mq
+ Random-generates morphological exercises,
+ keeping score of success.
+ To interrupt, type a full stop (.) alone on a line.
+ HINT: use printname judgements in your grammar to
+ produce nice expressions for desired forms.
+ flags:
+ -cat
+ -lang
+ examples:
+ mq -cat=N -lang=TestResourceSwe -- quiz for Swedish nouns
+
+ml, morphology_list: ml
+ Random-generates a list of ten morphological exercises,
+ keeping score of success. The number can be changed with a flag.
+ HINT: use wf to save the exercises in a file.
+ flags:
+ -cat
+ -lang
+ -number
+ examples:
+ ml -cat=N -lang=TestResourceSwe -- quiz list for Swedish nouns
+
+
+-- IO related commands
+
+rf, read_file: rf File
+ Returns the contents of File as a String; error if File does not exist.
+
+wf, write_file: wf File String
+ Writes String into File; File is created if it does not exist.
+ N.B. the command overwrites File without a warning.
+
+af, append_file: af File
+ Writes String into the end of File; File is created if it does not exist.
+
+* tg, transform_grammar: tg File
+ Reads File, parses as a grammar,
+ but instead of compiling further, prints it.
+ The environment is not changed. When parsing the grammar, the same file
+ name suffixes are supported as in the i command.
+ HINT: use this command to print the grammar in
+ another format (the -printer flag); pipe it to wf to save this format.
+ flags:
+ -printer (only -printer=latex supported currently)
+
+* cl, convert_latex: cl File
+ Reads File, which is expected to be in LaTeX form.
+ Three environments are treated in special ways:
+ \begGF - \end{verbatim}, which contains GF judgements,
+ \begTGF - \end{verbatim}, which contains a GF expression (displayed)
+ \begInTGF - \end{verbatim}, which contains a GF expressions (inlined).
+ Moreover, certain macros should be included in the file; you can
+ get those macros by applying 'tg -printer=latex foo.gf' to any grammar
+ foo.gf. Notice that the same File can be imported as a GF grammar,
+ consisting of all the judgements in \begGF environments.
+ HINT: pipe with 'wf Foo.tex' to generate a new Latex file.
+
+sa, speak_aloud: sa String
+ Uses the Flite speech generator to produce speech for String.
+ Works for American English spelling.
+ examples:
+ h | sa -- listen to the list of commands
+ gr -cat=S | l | sa -- generate a random sentence and speak it aloud
+
+h, help: h Command?
+ Displays the paragraph concerning the command from this help file.
+ Without the argument, shows the first lines of all paragraphs.
+ options
+ -all show the whole help file
+ examples:
+ h print_grammar -- show all information on the pg command
+
+q, quit: q
+ Exits GF.
+ HINT: you can use 'ph | wf history' to save your session.
+
+!, system_command: ! String
+ Issues a system command. No value is returned to GF.
+ example:
+ ! ls
+
+
+-- Flags. The availability of flags is defined separately for each command.
+
+-cat, category in which parsing is performed.
+ The default is S.
+
+-depth, the search depth in e.g. random generation.
+ The default depends on application.
+
+-filter, operation performed on a string. The default is identity.
+ -filter=identity no change
+ -filter=erase erase the text
+ -filter=take100 show the first 100 characters
+ -filter=length show the length of the string
+ -filter=text format as text (punctuation, capitalization)
+ -filter=code format as code (spacing, indentation)
+
+-lang, grammar used when executing a grammar-dependent command.
+ The default is the last-imported grammar.
+
+-language, voice used by Festival as its --language flag in the sa command.
+ The default is system-dependent.
+
+-length, the maximum number of characters shown of a string.
+ The default is unlimited.
+
+-lexer, tokenization transforming a string into lexical units for a parser.
+ The default is words.
+ -lexer=words tokens are separated by spaces or newlines
+ -lexer=literals like words, but GF integer and string literals recognized
+ -lexer=vars like words, but "x","x_...","$...$" as vars, "?..." as meta
+ -lexer=chars each character is a token
+ -lexer=code use Haskell's lex
+ -lexer=codevars like code, but treat unknown words as variables, ?? as meta
+ -lexer=text with conventions on punctuation and capital letters
+ -lexer=codelit like code, but treat unknown words as string literals
+ -lexer=textlit like text, but treat unknown words as string literals
+ -lexer=codeC use a C-like lexer
+
+-number, the maximum number of generated items in a list.
+ The default is unlimited.
+
+-optimize, optimization on generated code.
+ The default is share for concrete, none for resource modules.
+ -optimize=share share common branches in tables
+ -optimize=parametrize first try parametrize then do share with the rest
+ -optimize=values represent tables as courses-of-values
+ -optimize=all first try parametrize then do values with the rest
+ -optimize=none no optimization
+
+-parser, Context-free parsing algorithm. Under construction.
+ The default is a chart parser via context-free approximation.
+
+-printer, format in which the grammar is printed. The default is gfc.
+ -printer=gfc GFC grammar
+ -printer=gf GF grammar
+ -printer=old old GF grammar
+ -printer=cf context-free grammar, with profiles
+ -printer=bnf context-free grammar, without profiles
+ -printer=lbnf labelled context-free grammar for BNF Converter
+ -printer=plbnf grammar for BNF Converter, with precedence levels
+ *-printer=happy source file for Happy parser generator (use lbnf!)
+ -printer=srg speech recognition grammar
+ -printer=haskell abstract syntax in Haskell, with transl to/from GF
+ -printer=morpho full-form lexicon, long format
+ *-printer=latex LaTeX file (for the tg command)
+ -printer=fullform full-form lexicon, short format
+ *-printer=xml XML: DTD for the pg command, object for st
+ -printer=old old GF: file readable by GF 1.2
+
+-startcat, like -cat, but used in grammars (to avoid clash with keyword cat)
+
+-transform, transformation performed on a syntax tree. The default is identity.
+ -transform=identity no change
+ -transform=compute compute by using definitions in the grammar
+ -transform=typecheck return the term only if it is type-correct
+ -transform=solve solve metavariables as derived refinements
+ -transform=context solve metavariables by unique refinements as variables
+ -transform=delete replace the term by metavariable
+
+-unlexer, untokenization transforming linearization output into a string.
+ The default is unwords.
+ -unlexer=unwords space-separated token list (like unwords)
+ -unlexer=text format as text: punctuation, capitals, paragraph <p>
+ -unlexer=code format as code (spacing, indentation)
+ -unlexer=textlit like text, but remove string literal quotes
+ -unlexer=codelit like code, but remove string literal quotes
+ -unlexer=concat remove all spaces
+ -unlexer=bind like identity, but bind at "&+"
+
+-- *: Commands and options marked with * are not yet implemented.
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<h2>Commands in subshells</h2>
+
+<h3>The interactive editor</h3>
+
+The command <tt>es</tt> (edit session) opens a subshell, where editing is
+commenced by selecting a new category, which initializes a syntax tree
+with a metavariable. Editing has its own <b>state</b>, expressed by a Tree
+Zipper, where the <b>current subtree</b> is marked by a star <tt>*</tt>.
+A subtree that is a <b>metavariable</b> (of form <tt>?n</tt>) is
+a <b>subgoal</b>.
+
+<p>
+
+There are currently three interfaces to the editor: a line-based GF subshell,
+a Fudget GUI, and a Java GUI. They all use the same abstract command language,
+the difference being that the subshell has a string syntax for each command,
+whereas the GUIs mostly use menus and buttons to issue commands.
+There is a separate
+<a href="javaGUImanual/javaGUImanual.htm">GF Java GUI Manual</a>.
+
+<p>
+
+The command syntax for the string-based editor is the following:
+
+<p>
+
+Start/finish editing:
+<ul>
+<li> <tt>n Cat</tt> start new goal of type Cat
+<li> <tt>t Tree</tt> start editing with Tree
+<li> <tt>q</tt> quit the editor
+</ul>
+Navigation (change current subtree):
+<ul>
+<li> <tt>&lt;&lt;</tt> go to previous metavariable
+<li> <tt>&lt; Int</tt> go Int steps back in the tree
+<li> <tt>'</tt> go to the top of the tree
+<li> <tt>> Int</tt> go Int steps ahead in the tree
+<li> <tt>>></tt> go to next metavariable
+</ul>
+Refinement and wrapping (of current subtree):
+<ul>
+<li> <tt>r (Fun | Var)</tt> refine with function Fun or variable Var
+<li> <tt>w Fun Int</tt> wrap subterm by Fun into its argument place Int
+<li> <tt>s Int</tt> select candidate nr. Int (result of ambiguous parsing)
+<li> <tt>x Var Var</tt> change (alpha convert) bound variable Var1 to Var2
+<li> <tt>d</tt> delete subtree
+<li> <tt>g Tree</tt> refine current subgoal with Tree
+<li> <tt>p String</tt> parse String as refinement of current subgoal
+<li> <tt>a</tt> aleatory: find random refinement
+<li> <tt>u</tt> undo: go back in refinement history
+<li> <tt>c Transform</tt> apply Transform (one of the -transform values) to subtree
+<li> <tt>f Filter</tt> apply Filter
+ (one of the -filter values) to linearization output
+</ul>
+Information and display:
+<ul>
+<li> <tt>m</tt> show refinement/wrapping menu
+<li> <tt>v</tt> toggle the pretty-printer view (Tree or grammar)
+<li> <tt>h</tt> show command help
+</ul>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>Translate, parse, and teach yourself sessions</h3>
+
+The system expects a string which it then tries to parse. A string consisting
+of a dot (.) serves as exit command. The graphical translation session has a
+Quit button.
+
+
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/doc/tutorial/gf-tutorial2.html b/doc/tutorial/gf-tutorial2.html
index ba96d2cae..1ef8a7f44 100644
--- a/doc/tutorial/gf-tutorial2.html
+++ b/doc/tutorial/gf-tutorial2.html
@@ -1060,6 +1060,42 @@ programming languages are syntactic sugar for table selections:
<!-- NEW -->
+<h4>Morphological analysis and morphology quiz</h4>
+
+Even though in GF morphology
+is mostly seen as an auxiliary of syntax, a morphology once defined
+can be used on its own right. The command <tt>morpho_analyse = ma</tt>
+can be used to read a text and return for each word the analyses that
+it has in the current concrete syntax.
+<pre>
+ > rf bible.txt | morpho_analyse
+</pre>
+Similarly to translation exercises, morphological exercises can
+be generated, by the command <tt>morpho_quiz = mq</tt>. Usually,
+the category is set to be something else than <tt>S</tt>. For instance,
+<pre>
+ > i lib/resource/french/VerbsFre.gf
+ > morpho_quiz -cat=V
+
+ Welcome to GF Morphology Quiz.
+ ...
+
+ réapparaître : VFin VCondit Pl P2
+ réapparaitriez
+ > No, not réapparaitriez, but
+ réapparaîtriez
+ Score 0/1
+</pre>
+Finally, a list of morphological exercises and save it in a
+file for later use, by the command <tt>translation_list = tl</tt>
+<pre>
+ > translation_list -number=25 PaleolithicEng PaleolithicIta
+</pre>
+The number flag gives the number of sentences generated.
+
+
+
+<!-- NEW -->
<h4>Parametric vs. inherent features, agreement</h4>
The rule of subject-verb agreement in English says that the verb
@@ -1170,7 +1206,7 @@ the adjectival paradigm in which the two singular forms are the same, can be def
<h2>Topics still to be written</h2>
-Morpho quiz
+Discontinuous constituents
<p>
diff --git a/src/HelpFile b/src/HelpFile
index 7d339e478..430939c1b 100644
--- a/src/HelpFile
+++ b/src/HelpFile
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
--- GF help file updated for GF 2.0, 24/3/2004.
+-- GF help file updated for GF 2.2, 17/5/2005.
-- *: Commands and options marked with * are not yet implemented.
--
-- Each command has a long and a short name, options, and zero or more