Rexx
A programming language used for scripting, application macros and application development From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rexx (restructured extended executor) is a high-level programming language developed at IBM by Mike Cowlishaw.[6][7] Both proprietary and open source Rexx interpreters exist for a wide range of computing platforms, and compilers exist for IBM mainframe computers.[8] Rexx is used for scripting, application macros and application development. As a general purpose scripting language, Rexx is considered a precursor to Tcl and Python.
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Paradigm | multiparadigm: procedural, structured |
---|---|
Designed by | Mike Cowlishaw |
Developer | Mike Cowlishaw, IBM |
First appeared | 1979 |
Stable release | ANSI X3.274
/ 1996 |
Typing discipline | Dynamic |
Filename extensions | .cmd, .bat, .exec, .rexx, .rex, EXEC |
Major implementations | |
VM/SP R3,[1] TSO/E V2,[2] SAAREXX,[3][4] ARexx, BREXX, Regina,[5] Personal REXX, REXX/imc | |
Dialects | |
NetRexx, Object REXX, now ooREXX, KEXX | |
Influenced by | |
PL/I, ALGOL, EXEC, EXEC 2 | |
Influenced | |
NetRexx, Object REXX | |
|
Rexx is supported in a variety of environments. It is the primary scripting language in some operating systems including OS/2, MVS, VM, AmigaOS and is used for macros in some software including SPF/PC, KEDIT, THE and ZOC. With an engine installed, Rexx can be used for scripting and macros in programs that use a Windows Scripting Host ActiveX scripting engine (such as VBScript or JScript). Rexx is supplied with VM/SP Release 3 on up, TSO/E Version 2 on up, OS/2 (1.3 and later, where it is officially named Procedures Language/2), AmigaOS Version 2 on up, PC DOS (7.0 or 2000), ArcaOS,[9] and Windows NT 4.0 (Resource Kit: Regina). In the late 1980s, Rexx became the common scripting language for IBM Systems Application Architecture, where it was renamed "SAA Procedure Language REXX".
A script is associated with a Rexx interpreter at runtime in various ways based on context. In mainframe computing, a Rexx script or command is sometimes referred to as an EXEC since that is the name of the file type used for similar CMS EXEC,[10] and EXEC 2[11] scripts and for Rexx scripts on VM/SP R3 through z/VM. The first line of a script specifies the use of a Rexx interpreter in a comment either by identifying the code as Rexx language or by file path via EXTPROC
. On MVS, Rexx scripts may[a] be recognized by the low level qualifier "EXEC" or if the first line fetched from SYSPROC is a comment containing "REXX" then it is treated as Rexx (rather than CLIST), and a script fetched from SYSEXEC must be Rexx. On OS/2, Rexx scripts share the filename extension ".cmd" with other scripting languages, and the first line of the script specifies the interpreter to use. On Linux, Rexx scripts generally begin with a shebang. Rexx macros for Rexx-aware applications use extensions determined by the application.
Name
Originally, the language was called REX, short for Reformed Executor, but an extra "X" was added to avoid confusion with other products. The name was originally all uppercase because that was the only way to represent it in mainframe code at the time. Both editions of Mike Cowlishaw's first book on the language use all-caps, REXX, although the cover graphic uses mixed case. His book on NetRexx uses mixed case but all caps in the cover graphic with large and small caps, NETREXX. An expansion that matches the abbreviation, REstructured eXtended eXecutor, was used for the system product in 1984.[12] The name Rexx (mixed case) is used in this article, and is commonly used elsewhere.
Attributes
Summarize
Perspective
Objective and subjective attributes of Rexx include:
- Simple syntax
- Ability to route commands to multiple environments
- Ability to support functions, procedures and commands associated with a specific invoking environment.
- Built-in stack with the ability to interoperate with the host stack if there is one
- Small instruction set
- Free-form syntax; indentation is optional but can help readability
- Case-insensitive tokens, including variable names
- Character string basis
- Dynamic data typing; no declarations
- No reserved keywords, except in local context
- No include file facility
- Arbitrary-precision arithmetic
- Decimal arithmetic, floating-point
- Rich selection of built-in functions, especially string and word processing
- Automatic storage management
- Crash protection
- Content addressable data structures
- Associative array
- Straightforward access to system commands and facilities
- Simple error-handling, and built-in tracing and debugger
- Few artificial limitations
- Simplified I/O facilities
- Unconventional operators
- Only partly supports Unix style command line parameters, except specific implementations
- Provides no basic terminal control as part of the language, except specific implementations
- Provides no generic way to include functions and subroutines from external libraries, except specific implementations
Some claim that Rexx is a relatively simple language. With only 23 instructions (such as call
, parse
, and select
), it has a relatively small instruction set. Rexx has limited punctuation and formatting requirements. Rexx has only one data type, the character string. Some claim that such simplicities make Rexx relatively easy to debug.
Some claim that Rexx code looks similar to PL/I code, but has fewer notations. With fewer notations, it tends to be is harder to parse via a translator, but is easier to write. Simplifying coding was intentional as noted by the Rexx design goal of the principle of least astonishment.[12]
History
Summarize
Perspective
pre–1990
On his own time, Mike Cowlishaw developed the language and an interpreter for it in assembly language between 20 March 1979 and mid-1982 with the intent to replace the languages EXEC and EXEC 2.[6] Mike also intended Rexx to be a simplified and easier to learn version of PL/I, but some claim that Rexx has problematic differences from PL/I.
Rexx was first described in public at the SHARE 56 conference in Houston, Texas, in 1981,[13] where customer reaction, championed by Ted Johnston of SLAC, led to it being shipped as an IBM product in 1982.
Over the years IBM included Rexx in almost all of its operating systems (VM/CMS, MVS TSO/E, IBM OS/400, VSE/ESA, AIX, PC DOS, and OS/2), and has made versions available for Novell NetWare, Windows, Java, and Linux.
The first non-IBM version was written for PC DOS by Charles Daney in 1984/5[7] and marketed by the Mansfield Software Group (founded by Kevin J. Kearney in 1986).[6] The first Rexx compiler appeared in 1987, written for CMS by Lundin and Woodruff.[14] Other versions have also been developed for Atari, AmigaOS, Unix (many variants), Solaris, DEC, Windows, Windows CE, Pocket PC, DOS, Palm OS, QNX, OS/2, Linux, BeOS, EPOC32/Symbian, AtheOS, OpenVMS,[15]: p.309 Apple Macintosh, and Mac OS X.[16]
ARexx, a Rexx interpreter for Amiga, was included with AmigaOS 2 onwards and was popular for scripting and application control. Many Amiga applications have an "ARexx port" which allows control of the application via a Rexx script. Notably, a Rexx script can switch between Rexx ports to control multiple applications.
1990 to present
In 1990, Cathie Dager of SLAC organized the first independent Rexx symposium, which led to the forming of the Rexx Language Association. Symposia are held annually.
Several freeware versions of Rexx are available. In 1992, the two most widely used open-source ports appeared: Ian Collier's REXX/imc for Unix and Anders Christensen's Regina[5] (later adopted by Mark Hessling) for Windows and Unix. BREXX is well known for WinCE and Pocket PC platforms, and has been "back-ported" to VM/370 and MVS.
OS/2 has a visual development system from Watcom VX-REXX. Another dialect was VisPro REXX from Hockware.
Portable Rexx by Kilowatt and Personal Rexx by Quercus are two Rexx interpreters designed for DOS and can be run under Windows as well using a command prompt. Since the mid-1990s, two newer variants of Rexx have appeared:
- NetRexx: compiles to Java byte-code via Java source code; this has no reserved keywords at all, and uses the Java object model, and is therefore not generally upwards-compatible with 'classic' Rexx.
- Object REXX: an object-oriented generally upwards-compatible version of Rexx.
In 1996 American National Standards Institute (ANSI) published a standard for Rexx: ANSI X3.274–1996 "Information Technology – Programming Language REXX".[17] More than two dozen books on Rexx have been published since 1985.
Rexx marked its 25th anniversary on 20 March 2004, which was celebrated at the Rexx Language Association's 15th International REXX Symposium in Böblingen, Germany, in May 2004.
On October 12, 2004, IBM announced their plan to release their Object REXX implementation's sources under the Common Public License. Recent releases of Object REXX contain an ActiveX Windows Scripting Host (WSH) scripting engine implementing this version of the Rexx language.
On February 22, 2005, the first public release of Open Object Rexx (ooRexx) was announced. This product contains a WSH scripting engine which allows for programming of the Windows operating system and applications with Rexx in the same fashion in which Visual Basic and JScript are implemented by the default WSH installation and Perl, Tcl, Python third-party scripting engines.
As of January 2017[update] Rexx was listed in the TIOBE index as one of the fifty languages in its top 100 not belonging to the top 50.[18]
In 2019, the 30th Rexx Language Association Symposium marked the 40th anniversary of Rexx. The symposium was held in Hursley, England, where Rexx was first designed and implemented.[19]
Toolkits
RexxUtil – a package of file and directory functions, windowed I/O, and functions to access system services such as WAIT and POST – is available for most Rexx environments.[20][21][22]
Rexx/Tk – a toolkit for graphics to be used in Rexx programmes in the same fashion as Tcl/Tk – is widely available.
RxxxEd – an integrated development environment (IDE) for Rexx – was developed for Windows.[15][citation needed] RxSock for network communication as well as other add-ons to and implementations of Regina Rexx have been developed, and a Rexx interpreter for the Windows command line is supplied in most resource kits for various versions of Windows and works in DOS as well.
Syntax
Summarize
Perspective
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Types of statement
Rexx has three types of statement
- Assignment statement
- Evauate an expression and assign its value to a simple or compound variable
- Expression
- Evaluate the expression and treat the value as a command in the default environment[23]
address foo /* set default environment for bare expression */ bar /* equivalent to address foo bar */
- Keyword instruction
- Begins with a specific word
DO blocks
The language provides do
blocks for two purposes:
- To treat a group of instructions within an
if
orselect
statement as a unit for purposes of flow control. - For loop control, similar to many other languages. A single do block may optionally contain repetitor phrases, conditional phrases, or both, with termination whenever any of them is satisfied.
A do
block begins with do
and ends with end
. A single block may serve both purposes. In the related ooRexx and NetRexx, there is both a do
and a loop
keyword, with almost identical semantics; they differ in that a simple do
is equivalent to do 1
while a simple loop
is equivalent to loop forever
.
Unlike the begin statement in ALGOL 60 and PL/I, a do block has no effect on the Scope of variables.
An iteration of a do
block may be terminated with an iterate
statement and the entire block may be terminated with a leave
statement.
Simple do
Although it is valid anywhere, a simple do is specifically useful inside conditional statements:
if foo = bar then do i=1 j=3 end else do i=2 j=4 end
Conditional loop
The language supports testing a condition either before (do while
) or after (do until
) executing a block of code via syntax:
do while [condition] [instructions] end
do until [condition] [instructions] end
Simple repetitive loop
The language permits counted loops, where an expression is computed at the start of the loop and the instructions within the loop are executed that many times:
do expression [instructions] end
Controlled Repetitive Loops
A loop can increment a variable and stop when a limit is reached.
do index = start [to limit] [by increment] [for count] [instructions] end
The increment value is 1 if the by
clause is omitted. The loop continues forever if the limit to
clause is omitted, unless terminated earlier by another clause or by a leave
statement.
Unconditional loop
The language supports an unconditional loop via forever
that continues until the loop is aborted or the program is terminated.
do forever [instructions] end
Combined loop
Like PL/I, Rexx allows both conditional and repetitive elements to be combined in the same loop:[24]
do index = start [to limit] [by increment] [for count] [while condition] [instructions] end
do expression [until condition] [instructions] end
Conditional
The language provides for conditional execution via if
, then
and else
for a block delimited by do
and end
.
if [condition] then do [instructions] end else do [instructions] end
For a single instruction block, do
and end
can be omitted.
if [condition] then [instruction] else [instruction]
Multiple condition branching
The language provides multiple condition branching via select
which derives from the SELECT;
form of the PL/I SELECT
statement
[b]. Like similar constructs in other dynamic languages, Rexx's when
clauses specify full conditions – not equality tests of a single value for the statement as some languages do. In that, they are more like cascading if-then-else
code than like the C or Java switch
statement.
select when [condition] then [instruction or nop] when [condition] then do [instructions or nop] end otherwise [instructions or nop] end
The nop
instruction is required if no action is associated with a when
condition.
The otherwise
clause is optional. If omitted and no when
conditions are met, then the syntax
condition is raised.
Variable
Typing system
Variables are typeless and initially are evaluated as their names in upper case. Thus a variable's type can vary with its use in the program:
say hello /* => HELLO */
hello = 25
say hello /* => 25 */
hello = "say 5 + 3"
say hello /* => say 5 + 3 */
interpret hello /* => 8 */
drop hello
say hello /* => HELLO */
Evaluation
If no novalue
condition handler is configured, then an undefined variable evaluates to its name, in upper case. The built-in function SYMBOL
returns "VAR" for a defined variable and does not trigger novalue
even if not defined. The VALUE
function gets the value of a variable without triggering a novalue
condition, but its main purpose is to read and set environment variables, similar to POSIX getenv
and putenv
.
Compound variable
The language provides the compound variable construct which supports adding fields (called tails) to a variable (called a stem in this context) to support data structures such as lists, arrays, n-dimensional arrays, sparse or dense arrays, balanced or unbalanced trees and records.
The language does not provide special support for numeric array indexing like many other languages do. Instead, a compound variable with numeric tails produce a similar effect.[25]
The following code defines variables stem.1 = 9, stem.2 = 8, stem.3 = 7
...
do i = 1 to 10
stem.i = 10 - i
end
Unlike a typical array, a tail (index) need not identify (be named) an integer value. For example, the following code is valid:
i = 'Monday'
stem.i = 2
A default value can be assigned to a stem via .
but no tail.
stem. = 'Unknown'
stem.1 = 'USA'
stem.44 = 'UK'
stem.33 = 'France'
In this case stem.3
, for example, evaluates to the default value, 'Unknown'
.
The whole stem (including any default value) can be erased with the drop
statement.
drop stem.
By convention (not part of the language) the compound stem.0
is often used to keep track of how many items are in a stem, for example a procedure to add a word to a list might be coded like this:
add_word: procedure expose dictionary.
parse arg w
n = dictionary.0 + 1
dictionary.n = w
dictionary.0 = n
return
A stem can have multiple tails. For example:
m = 'July'
d = 15
y = 2005
day.y.m.d = 'Friday'
Multiple numerical tail elements can be used to provide the effect of a multi-dimensional array.
Features similar to the compound variable are found in other languages including associative arrays in AWK, hashes in Perl and hash tables in Java, dynamic objects in JavaScript. Most of these languages provide a mechanism to iterate over the keys (tails) of such a construct, but this is lacking in classic Rexx. Instead, it is necessary to store additional information. For example, the following procedure might be used to count each occurrence of a word.
add_word: procedure expose count. word_list
parse arg w .
count.w = count.w + 1 /* assume count. has been set to 0 */
if count.w = 1 then word_list = word_list w
return
and then later:
do i = 1 to words(word_list)
w = word(word_list,i)
say w count.w
end
More recent Rexx variants, including Object REXX and ooRexx, provide a construct to iterate over the tails of a stem.
do i over stem.
say i '-->' stem.i
end
Parse
The parse
instruction provides string-handling via syntax:
parse [upper] origin [template]
If upper
is included then the input is converted to upper case before parsing.
origin describes the input as one of the following:
arg
– arguments, at top level tail of command linelinein
– standard input, e.g. keyboardpull
– Rexx data queue or standard inputsource
– info on how program was executedvalue
expressionwith
–with
indicates the end of the expressionvar
– a variableversion
– version/release number
template can be a combination of variables, literal delimiters, and column number delimiters.
Examples
Using a list of variables as template:
myVar = "John Smith"
parse var myVar firstName lastName
say "First name is:" firstName
say "Last name is:" lastName
displays:
First name is: John
Last name is: Smith
Using column number delimiters:
myVar = "(202) 123-1234"
parse var MyVar 2 AreaCode 5 7 SubNumber
say "Area code is:" AreaCode
say "Subscriber number is:" SubNumber
displays:
Area code is: 202
Subscriber number is: 123-1234
Interpret
The interpret
instruction evaluates its argument as a Rexx statement allowing for evaluation of code formatted at runtime. Uses include passing a function as a parameter, arbitrary precision arithmetic, use of the parse
statement with programmatic templates, stemmed arrays, and sparse arrays.[how?] The following example displays 16 and exits.
X = 'square'
interpret 'say' X || '(4) ; exit'
SQUARE: return arg(1)**2
The Valour software package relied upon Rexx's interpretive ability to implement an OOP environment.[citation needed] Another use was found in an unreleased Westinghouse product called Time Machine that was able to fully recover following an otherwise fatal error.[citation needed]
Numeric
say digits() fuzz() form() /* => 9 0 SCIENTIFIC */
say 999999999+1 /* => 1.000000000E+9 */
numeric digits 10 /* only limited by available memory */
say 999999999+1 /* => 1000000000 */
say 0.9999999999=1 /* => 0 (false) */
numeric fuzz 3
say 0.99999999=1 /* => 1 (true) */
say 0.99999999==1 /* => 0 (false) */
say 100*123456789 /* => 1.23456789E+10 */
numeric form engineering
say 100*123456789 /* => 12.34567890E+9 */
say 53 // 7 /* => 4 (rest of division)*/
- Calculate √2
numeric digits 50
n=2
r=1
do forever /* Newton's method */
rr=(n/r+r)/2
if r=rr then leave
r=rr
end
say "sqrt" n ' = ' r
sqrt 2 = 1.414213562373095048801688724209698078569671875377
- Calculate e
numeric digits 50
e=2.5
f=0.5
do n=3
f=f/n
ee=e+f
if e=ee then leave
e=ee
end
say "e =" e
e = 2.7182818284590452353602874713526624977572470936998
Error handling
The signal
instruction configures the runtime to run custom code to handle a system condition if triggered. Conditions include:
error
– Positive return code from a system commandfailure
– Negative return code from a system command (e.g. command doesn't exist)halt
– Abnormal terminationnovalue
– A variable name was used but the variable is not definednotready
– Input or output error (e.g. read attempts beyond end of file)syntax
– Invalid program syntax, or some other error conditionlostdigits
– Significant digits were lost (ANSI Rexx, not in TRL second edition)
The following fragment prints a message when the user terminates (halts) it:
signal on halt;
do a = 1
say a
do 100000 /* a delay */
end
end
halt:
say "The program was stopped by the user"
exit
Since Rexx version 4, a handler can be named. In the following example, the handler ChangeCodePage.Trap
is configured to handle a syntax
condition.
ChangeCodePage: procedure
signal on syntax name ChangeCodePage.Trap
return SysQueryProcessCodePage()
ChangeCodePage.Trap: return 1004
When a condition is handled (as configured via signal on
), the condition can be analyzed via RC
which indicates the last error code and SIGL
which indicates the line number of the code that triggered the condition.
See also
Notes
References
Further reading
External links
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