Next: Krunching Method, Previous: About gnatkr, Up: File Name Krunching with gnatkr [Contents][Index]
The gnatkr command has the form:
$ gnatkr `name` [`length`]
name is the uncrunched file name, derived from the name of the unit
in the standard manner described in the previous section (i.e., in particular
all dots are replaced by hyphens). The file name may or may not have an
extension (defined as a suffix of the form period followed by arbitrary
characters other than period). If an extension is present then it will
be preserved in the output. For example, when krunching hellofile.ads
to eight characters, the result will be hellofil.ads.
Note: for compatibility with previous versions of gnatkr dots may
appear in the name instead of hyphens, but the last dot will always be
taken as the start of an extension. So if gnatkr is given an argument
such as Hello.World.adb
it will be treated exactly as if the first
period had been a hyphen, and for example krunching to eight characters
gives the result hellworl.adb
.
Note that the result is always all lower case. Characters of the other case are folded as required.
length represents the length of the krunched name. The default when no argument is given is 8 characters. A length of zero stands for unlimited, in other words do not chop except for system files where the implied crunching length is always eight characters.
The output is the krunched name. The output has an extension only if the original argument was a file name with an extension.
Next: Krunching Method, Previous: About gnatkr, Up: File Name Krunching with gnatkr [Contents][Index]