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Here are some functions that operate on strings:
$(subst from,to,text)
Performs a textual replacement on the text text: each occurrence of from is replaced by to. The result is substituted for the function call. For example,
$(subst ee,EE,feet on the street) |
substitutes the string ‘fEEt on the strEEt’.
$(patsubst pattern,replacement,text)
Finds whitespace-separated words in text that match pattern and replaces them with replacement. Here pattern may contain a ‘%’ which acts as a wildcard, matching any number of any characters within a word. If replacement also contains a ‘%’, the ‘%’ is replaced by the text that matched the ‘%’ in pattern. Only the first ‘%’ in the pattern and replacement is treated this way; any subsequent ‘%’ is unchanged.
‘%’ characters in patsubst
function invocations can be
quoted with preceding backslashes (‘\’). Backslashes that would
otherwise quote ‘%’ characters can be quoted with more backslashes.
Backslashes that quote ‘%’ characters or other backslashes are
removed from the pattern before it is compared file names or has a stem
substituted into it. Backslashes that are not in danger of quoting
‘%’ characters go unmolested. For example, the pattern
‘the\%weird\\%pattern\\’ has ‘the%weird\’ preceding the
operative ‘%’ character, and ‘pattern\\’ following it. The
final two backslashes are left alone because they cannot affect any
‘%’ character.
Whitespace between words is folded into single space characters; leading and trailing whitespace is discarded.
For example,
$(patsubst %.c,%.o,x.c.c bar.c) |
produces the value ‘x.c.o bar.o’.
Substitution references (see section Substitution References) are a simpler way to get the effect of the patsubst
function:
$(var:pattern=replacement) |
is equivalent to
$(patsubst pattern,replacement,$(var)) |
The second shorthand simplifies one of the most common uses of
patsubst
: replacing the suffix at the end of file names.
$(var:suffix=replacement) |
is equivalent to
$(patsubst %suffix,%replacement,$(var)) |
For example, you might have a list of object files:
objects = foo.o bar.o baz.o |
To get the list of corresponding source files, you could simply write:
$(objects:.o=.c) |
instead of using the general form:
$(patsubst %.o,%.c,$(objects)) |
$(strip string)
Removes leading and trailing whitespace from string and replaces each internal sequence of one or more whitespace characters with a single space. Thus, ‘$(strip a b c )’ results in ‘a b c’.
The function strip
can be very useful when used in conjunction
with conditionals. When comparing something with the empty string
‘’ using ifeq
or ifneq
, you usually want a string of
just whitespace to match the empty string (see section Conditional Parts of Makefiles).
Thus, the following may fail to have the desired results:
.PHONY: all ifneq "$(needs_made)" "" all: $(needs_made) else all:;@echo 'Nothing to make!' endif |
Replacing the variable reference ‘$(needs_made)’ with the
function call ‘$(strip $(needs_made))’ in the ifneq
directive would make it more robust.
$(findstring find,in)
Searches in for an occurrence of find. If it occurs, the value is find; otherwise, the value is empty. You can use this function in a conditional to test for the presence of a specific substring in a given string. Thus, the two examples,
$(findstring a,a b c) $(findstring a,b c) |
produce the values ‘a’ and ‘’ (the empty string),
respectively. See section Conditionals that Test Flags, for a practical application of
findstring
.
$(filter pattern…,text)
Returns all whitespace-separated words in text that do match
any of the pattern words, removing any words that do not
match. The patterns are written using ‘%’, just like the patterns
used in the patsubst
function above.
The filter
function can be used to separate out different types
of strings (such as file names) in a variable. For example:
sources := foo.c bar.c baz.s ugh.h foo: $(sources) cc $(filter %.c %.s,$(sources)) -o foo |
says that ‘foo’ depends of ‘foo.c’, ‘bar.c’, ‘baz.s’ and ‘ugh.h’ but only ‘foo.c’, ‘bar.c’ and ‘baz.s’ should be specified in the command to the compiler.
$(filter-out pattern…,text)
Returns all whitespace-separated words in text that do not
match any of the pattern words, removing the words that do
match one or more. This is the exact opposite of the filter
function.
For example, given:
objects=main1.o foo.o main2.o bar.o mains=main1.o main2.o |
the following generates a list which contains all the object files not in ‘mains’:
$(filter-out $(mains),$(objects)) |
$(sort list)
Sorts the words of list in lexical order, removing duplicate words. The output is a list of words separated by single spaces. Thus,
$(sort foo bar lose) |
returns the value ‘bar foo lose’.
Incidentally, since sort
removes duplicate words, you can use
it for this purpose even if you don’t care about the sort order.
$(word n,text)
Returns the nth word of text. The legitimate values of n start from 1. If n is bigger than the number of words in text, the value is empty. For example,
$(word 2, foo bar baz) |
returns ‘bar’.
$(wordlist s,e,text)
Returns the list of words in text starting with word s and ending with word e (inclusive). The legitimate values of s start from 1; e may start from 0. If s is bigger than the number of words in text, the value is empty. If e is bigger than the number of words in text, words up to the end of text are returned. If s is greater than e, nothing is returned. For example,
$(wordlist 2, 3, foo bar baz) |
returns ‘bar baz’.
$(words text)
Returns the number of words in text.
Thus, the last word of text is
$(word $(words text),text)
.
$(firstword names…)
The argument names is regarded as a series of names, separated by whitespace. The value is the first name in the series. The rest of the names are ignored.
For example,
$(firstword foo bar) |
produces the result ‘foo’. Although $(firstword
text)
is the same as $(word 1,text)
, the
firstword
function is retained for its simplicity.
$(lastword names…)
The argument names is regarded as a series of names, separated by whitespace. The value is the last name in the series.
For example,
$(lastword foo bar) |
produces the result ‘bar’. Although $(lastword
text)
is the same as $(word $(words text),text)
,
the lastword
function was added for its simplicity and better
performance.
Here is a realistic example of the use of subst
and
patsubst
. Suppose that a makefile uses the VPATH
variable
to specify a list of directories that make
should search for
prerequisite files
(see section VPATH
Search Path for All Prerequisites).
This example shows how to
tell the C compiler to search for header files in the same list of
directories.
The value of VPATH
is a list of directories separated by colons,
such as ‘src:../headers’. First, the subst
function is used to
change the colons to spaces:
$(subst :, ,$(VPATH)) |
This produces ‘src ../headers’. Then patsubst
is used to turn
each directory name into a ‘-I’ flag. These can be added to the
value of the variable CFLAGS
, which is passed automatically to the C
compiler, like this:
override CFLAGS += $(patsubst %,-I%,$(subst :, ,$(VPATH))) |
The effect is to append the text ‘-Isrc -I../headers’ to the
previously given value of CFLAGS
. The override
directive is
used so that the new value is assigned even if the previous value of
CFLAGS
was specified with a command argument (see section The override
Directive).
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