% This is the cweb file sjisconv.w of the CJK Package Ver. 4.5.1 17-Jun-2002 % % To print this CWEB file you should (but not must) use the CWEAVE of the % c2cweb-package (found at the CTAN archives, e.g. ftp.dante.de) and then say % % cweave +a sjisconv.w % % This (fully compatible) CWEAVE can transform CWEB-files with alternative % output rules (look at the position of braces below!) the author (it's me % too :-) prefer. Otherwise this file will be formatted traditionally. \def\title{sjisconv (CJK Version 4.5.1)} \def\topofcontents{ \null\vfill \centerline{\titlefont The {\ttitlefont sjisconv} program} \vskip 20pt \centerline{(CJK Version 4.5.1)} \vfill} \def\botofcontents{ \vfill \noindent Copyright \copyright\ 1996, 1998 by Werner Lemberg \bigskip\noindent Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this document provided that the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. \smallskip\noindent Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this document under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one.} \pageno=\contentspagenumber \advance\pageno by 1 \let\maybe=\iftrue \fullpageheight=240mm \pageheight=223mm \pagewidth=158mm \setpage \frenchspacing \noinx \nosecs \nocon @* Function and Use. This small program will convert SJIS encoded Japanese characters into a `preprocessed' form. The need of this program arises from the fact that this encoding uses the characters `\.{\\}', `\.{\{}', and `\.{\}}' which have special meanings in \TeX. Use this program as a filter: \hskip 2em \.{sjisconv < input\_file > output\_file} @* The program. The only function of this program is to replace all occurrences of SJIS encoded two byte characters \.{XY} with \.{\char94 \char94 7fX\char94 \char94 7fZZZ\char94 \char94 7f} (\.{X} and \.{Y} are the first and the second byte of the character; \.{ZZZ} represents the second byte as a decimal number). Additionally we define a \TeX\ macro at the very beginning to signal a preprocessed file. The following code is very simple. No error detection is done because \TeX\ which will see the output of \.{sjisconv} complains loudly if something is wrong. @d banner "sjisconv (CJK ver. 4.5.1)" @c #include #include @# int main(argc, argv) int argc; char *argv[]; {int ch; fprintf(stdout, "\\def\\CJKpreproc{%s}", banner);@# ch = fgetc(stdin);@# while(!feof(stdin)) {if((ch >= 0x81 && ch <= 0x9F) || (ch >= 0xE0 && ch <= 0xEF)) {fprintf(stdout, "\177%c\177", ch);@# ch = fgetc(stdin); if(!feof(stdin)) fprintf(stdout, "%d\177", ch); } else fputc(ch, stdout);@# ch = fgetc(stdin); } exit(EXIT_SUCCESS); return 0; /* never reached */ }