shithub: spread

Download patch

ref: af8848cfc823ec9fb1590bb16a2804bc6e1a714d
parent: 44f313b017b58d39731b1c2d034973bd67575376
author: sirjofri <sirjofri@sirjofri.de>
date: Fri Jul 5 10:26:46 EDT 2024

moves README to README.md for better visualization in supporting tools

--- a/README
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,104 +1,0 @@
-Spreadsheet Editor
-
-This program builds around hoc(1).
-
-
-# Spreadsheet files
-
-They are divided into two blocks, separated by a line containing three `%`:
-
-1. hoc script. Loaded verbatim to hoc. Use this to add functionality.
-2. cells and cell contents.
-
-A sample file could look like this:
-
-	func t(a) {
-		print a
-	}
-	%%%
-	A1=3
-	A2;hello
-	A3=5
-	A4=A1()+A3()
-
-The general syntax of cells should be quite obvious, but it's worth noting
-that cells divided by an `=` sign will end up being calculation functions,
-while cells divided by a `;` sign are string literals. Both will end up
-being hoc functions.
-
-# Usage
-
-	spread [-di] file
-
-- `file` will be loaded as a spreadsheet
-- `-d` enables extra debug output
-- `-i` opens spread in CLI mode (see below)
-
-# Modes
-
-## GUI mode
-
-### Mouse control
-
-- RMB click on a cell to edit it
-- Math cells that refer to other empty math cells generate those
-  cells automatically, with a default value of `0`. This will
-  overwrite existing text cells!
-
-### Keyboard control
-
-- Use the arrow keys (←↑↓→) to scroll
-- Use `q` or `DEL` to quit
-- Every other key input [A-Za-z0-9] opens the command line
-
-### Command line
-
-- `w [file]` - save to file (without file: save to original file)
-- `s addr` - open the edit dialog for cell addr (addr be like: B5)
-- `gg` - go to A1
-- `g addr` - go to addr. This scrolls so that addr is in the top left corner
-- `m` - toggle math mode. Math mode displays non-math cells in a greyed out state
-
-### Edit dialog
-
-This is a simple text entry box for the specified cell.
-
-- To enter a function, start the line with an `=` sign.
-- To enter a string/text, don't start the line with an `=` sign.
-
-Simple as that.
-
-## CLI mode
-
-For now, this opens a direct channel to hoc. All commands entered will
-be forwarded to the hoc process unchanged.
-
-Example session for previous example program:
-
-	A4()
-	→ 8
-	A1()
-	→ 3
-	A1()*A3()
-	→ 15
-	A1()+2*A3()
-	→ 13
-
-# Open questions
-
-## Hoc limitations
-
-- Range support. Since hoc doesn't support something like `eval`,
-  it is impossible to support ranges (`A3()..A5()`) out of the box.
-  If we need ranges we need to find a good solution or at least a
-  solid workaround, like building a list dynamically.
-  At the moment, I'm thinking about implementing a preprocessor that
-  transforms snippets like `[A1()+A5()]` to `A1()+A2()+A3()+A4()+A5()`.
-  Same should work for `[A1()*A5()]` etc.
-
-## Bugs
-
-Sure, there are many. Known issues are:
-
-- Cyclic dependencies are not allowed, I added come rudimentary check
-  that could leak some memory.
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -1,0 +1,104 @@
+Spreadsheet Editor
+
+This program builds around hoc(1).
+
+
+# Spreadsheet files
+
+They are divided into two blocks, separated by a line containing three `%`:
+
+1. hoc script. Loaded verbatim to hoc. Use this to add functionality.
+2. cells and cell contents.
+
+A sample file could look like this:
+
+	func t(a) {
+		print a
+	}
+	%%%
+	A1=3
+	A2;hello
+	A3=5
+	A4=A1()+A3()
+
+The general syntax of cells should be quite obvious, but it's worth noting
+that cells divided by an `=` sign will end up being calculation functions,
+while cells divided by a `;` sign are string literals. Both will end up
+being hoc functions.
+
+# Usage
+
+	spread [-di] file
+
+- `file` will be loaded as a spreadsheet
+- `-d` enables extra debug output
+- `-i` opens spread in CLI mode (see below)
+
+# Modes
+
+## GUI mode
+
+### Mouse control
+
+- RMB click on a cell to edit it
+- Math cells that refer to other empty math cells generate those
+  cells automatically, with a default value of `0`. This will
+  overwrite existing text cells!
+
+### Keyboard control
+
+- Use the arrow keys (←↑↓→) to scroll
+- Use `q` or `DEL` to quit
+- Every other key input [A-Za-z0-9] opens the command line
+
+### Command line
+
+- `w [file]` - save to file (without file: save to original file)
+- `s addr` - open the edit dialog for cell addr (addr be like: B5)
+- `gg` - go to A1
+- `g addr` - go to addr. This scrolls so that addr is in the top left corner
+- `m` - toggle math mode. Math mode displays non-math cells in a greyed out state
+
+### Edit dialog
+
+This is a simple text entry box for the specified cell.
+
+- To enter a function, start the line with an `=` sign.
+- To enter a string/text, don't start the line with an `=` sign.
+
+Simple as that.
+
+## CLI mode
+
+For now, this opens a direct channel to hoc. All commands entered will
+be forwarded to the hoc process unchanged.
+
+Example session for previous example program:
+
+	A4()
+	→ 8
+	A1()
+	→ 3
+	A1()*A3()
+	→ 15
+	A1()+2*A3()
+	→ 13
+
+# Open questions
+
+## Hoc limitations
+
+- Range support. Since hoc doesn't support something like `eval`,
+  it is impossible to support ranges (`A3()..A5()`) out of the box.
+  If we need ranges we need to find a good solution or at least a
+  solid workaround, like building a list dynamically.
+  At the moment, I'm thinking about implementing a preprocessor that
+  transforms snippets like `[A1()+A5()]` to `A1()+A2()+A3()+A4()+A5()`.
+  Same should work for `[A1()*A5()]` etc.
+
+## Bugs
+
+Sure, there are many. Known issues are:
+
+- Cyclic dependencies are not allowed, I added come rudimentary check
+  that could leak some memory.