Mavscript start parameters
The call java -jar mavscript*.jar --help
displays a list of the available start parameters. This output is
shown below.
Welcome to Mavscript
Copyright (c) A. Vontobel, 2004-2016
Version 2.0
Usage:
java -jar mavscript*.jar [OPTIONS] [-A] [-D ControlChar]
[-y | -b | -j | -p Port [-s Server]]
[-z Name_in_ZIP] [-i InitFile]
[-o OutputFile]
[TemplateFile]
-v, --verbose Verbose output
-q, --quiet No messages to stdout
-l, --language Language (i.e. en)
-h, --help Usage information; this help screen
-V, --version Display version
-y, --yacas Yacas algebra (Standard)
-b, --beanshell BeanShell java interpreter
-j, --jasymca Jasymca (Octave mode)
-p, --port Port Port (i.e. 9734)
-s, --server Server Server name (default: 127.0.0.1)
-z, --name_in_zip Name File name within ZIP
-i --init InitFile First processes the commands of this file.
-H, --HTML Accepts HTML special characters (like >)
-L, --leavetags Does not remove xml tags in office files.
-A, --ascii Converts unicode chars to a ascii representation.
-C, --charset Encoding Charset name (default: UTF-8)
examples: ISO-8859-1, system
-D, --controlchar §-repl. Sets the control character(s) (default: §).
-x, --extract Writes the commands to the OutputFile.
No calculation is done.
-o --outfile OutputFile OutputFile name (default: out-InputFileName)
Output to stdout: -
TemplateFile TemplateFile. If omitted reads from stdin.
OpenOffice-Writer files (suffix .odt) are detected automatically.
The option "-H -z content.xml" therefore can be omitted.
The standard engine is the computer-algebra-system Yacas. The java-
interpreter BeanShell or Jasymca may be used instead. The last option is
to connect to a port (on localhost or on a remote server).
Examples:
java -jar mavscript*.jar template.txt Writes the file out-template.txt
java -jar mavscript*.jar template.odt Writes the file out-template.odt
java -jar mavscript*.jar -D$ oldTemplate.txt
java -jar mavscript*.jar --init StdFunctions.ys template.odt
java -jar mavscript*.jar -o result.odt template.odt
Instead of typing java -jar
mavscript*.jar (the * stands for the version number) you
can type mavscript (Windows) resp.
./mavscript (Linux, Mac). Example:
mavscript --help .
Below the parameters are explained in detail.
--verbose, -v
Makes the program verbose: While
mavscript is running, information is displayed telling what the
program is actually doing. In particular each math command read
from the input file is shown. Immediately after the command, the
answer coming from the computer-algebra-system is shown. This
mode is useful when the input file in not processed as
expected.
--quiet, -q
If this option is called, Mavscript will not write messages to standard output (stdout). The option is
selected automatically if the result will be written to stdout.-- language, -l
Example: --language en
--yacas, -y
If this option is called, Mavscript will use
the built-in Computer-Algebra-System Yacas. This is the
default behaviour.
--beanshell, -b
If this option is called, Mavscript will
use the built-in java interpreter BeanShell.
--jasymca, -j
If this option is called, Mavscript will
use the built-in Computer-Algebra-System Jasymca (Octave mode).
--port, -p
Example: --port 9734
If this option is called, Mavscript will use an external
application to evaluate the mathematical expression. The
connection between mavscript and the computer-algebra-system is
done using a port, similar to a
connection to the internet. Mavscript sends the commands as text
and receives the answers as text.
Both programs must use the same port number. The external
application (on localhost or on a remote computer) must listen to
the port when you run Mavscript.
Example: Start the C-Version of Yacas using the command
yacas --server 9734 , then run
mavscript --port 9734 ./vorlage.txt
--server, -s
Example: --server localhost
If not specified: --server 127.0.0.1
The computer-algebra-system does not need to run on the local
computer. Mavscript can connect to the server (the algebra
program) on a remote computer using its internet address.
--name_in_zip, -z
Example: --name_in_zip content.xml
Mavscript can process input files that are packed (and
compressed) in a zip-archive. The archive may contain more than
one file, therefore the name of the input file within the archive
must be specified. Mavscript then creates a new zip-archive that
contains the processed input file and all the other files that
are packed in the input archive.
An important example are OpenOffice-Writer files (suffix .sxw or
.odt). They are normal zip files containing the text (in the file
content.xml) and other files: embedded pictures, format
information, etc. Because of the fact that this is a convenient
format to use together with mavscript, mavscript recognizes it
automatically. Therefore the option -z
content.xml can be omitted.
--init, -i
Example: --init lib/init.ys
This option is useful when some functions are used all the time.
The functions can be saved i a separate InitFile and mavscript
then can be called using the option --init
InitFile .
The commands of the InitFile get executed before the template is
processed. The InitFile remains unchanged.
If Mavscript runs in --yacas (default), --beanshell or --jasymca mode, then
the InitFile is loaded by Yacas / BeanShell / Jasymca itself. The syntax
therefore is the one of the interpreter. Mavscript control
characters (§m, §i, etc.) must not be used.
If Mavscript runs in --port mode, it sends the commands contained
in this InitFile to the computer-algebra-system. In the InitFile
each line is a command. Mavscript control characters (§m, §i,
etc.) are not used. Lines starting with the characters #, // or
/* are comments and will not be sent to the algebra program.
Empty lines are allowed.
--HTML, -H
This option tells Mavscript to convert some
HTML special characters (like > < "
&) in their real equivalent (> < " &) before
sending the command to the computer-algebra-system. The option is
selected automatically for template files with the suffix .odt ,
.sxw and .html .
--leavetags, -L
Does not remove xml tags in office files. (Behaviour until version 0.17.)
Useful in combination with --extract.
--ascii, -A
This option allows the use of Unicode chars
(i.e. Greek letters) inside commands, even if the
computer-algebra-system (like Yacas until 1.3.6) limits input to ASCII chars.
It is not needed if the engine supports unicode, as BeanShell
does.
It tells Mavscript to convert Non-ASCII chars inside commands to
a hexadecimal format (i.e. ω to escu03c9) before being sent to
the Computer-Algebra-System. The answer will be converted back
when inserted in the text.
--charset, -C
Example: --charset ISO-8859-1
If not specified: --charset UTF-8
The standard charset is Unicode UTF-8. If some characters like
Greek letters are displayed wrongly, the charset may be changed.
Mavscript uses the same charset for reading and writing,
therefore even a wrong charset may work, i.e. ISO-8889-1 (western
European) instead of CP1253 (Greek). Setting the parameter
--charset system the system's default
charset will be used.
This setting has no direct influence on the communication between
mavscript and the computer-algebra-system.
--controlchar, -D
Example: --controlchar %
If not specified: --controlchar §
Mavscript finds commands for the computer-algebra-system, if they
are placed between the control characters §m and §i, §io or §n.
Instead of the §-sign, an other sign (or a character string) may
be used. The parameter -D % tells
Mavscript to expect the control characters %m, %i, %io, %o and
%n.
--extract, -x
If this option is set, the commands of the
template are extracted and written to the OutputFile. No
calculation is done. This is useful for debugging.
If the option --outfile is not specified, the OutputFile will be
out-TemplateFileName.ys (mode --yacas), out-TemplateFileName.bsh
(mode --beanshell), out-TemplateFileName.m (mode --jasymca) or out-TemplateFileName.txt
--outfile, -o
Example: --outfile result.odt
If not specified: --outfile
out-TemplateFileName
The option --outfile - writes to
standard output (stdout). If input comes from standard input (stdin)
and no other indication is given, output is written to standard output.
Example: cat TemplateFile.txt | mavscript > output.txt