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========
whichbas
========
----------------------------------------------------------
Determine BASIC variant of a tokenized Atari 8-bit program
----------------------------------------------------------
.. include:: manhdr.rst
SYNOPSIS
========
whichbas [-v] *input-file* [*input-file* ...]
DESCRIPTION
===========
**whichbas** reads tokenized Atari 8-bit BASIC, Turbo BASIC,
BASIC XL, BASIC XE, BASIC/A+, or Atari Microsoft BASIC programs and attempts to
discover which BASIC is required to run each one.
*input-file*\s must be actual files. **whichbas** can't read from
standard input, because it seeks in the input file.
With multiple *input-file*\s, the output is one line per file,
with the filename, a tab, and the detected BASIC. With only one
*input-file*, the filename and tab are not printed.
OPTIONS
=======
*Note*\: none of the options **-s** **-k** **-v** are allowed
when checking multiple files; they only work if there's just one
*input-file* argument.
Detection Options
-----------------
**-s**
Script (or silent) mode. Instead of printing a human-readable
name like "Turbo BASIC XL" or "OSS BASIC XE" to stdout, **whichbas**
will print nothing on standard output, but will exit with a status
indicating what it detected. The caller can check the return status
(e.g. the **$?** variable in Bourne/POSIX shells, or **ERRORLEVEL**
in MS-DOS or Windows). See **EXIT STATUS**, below.
**-k**
Keep going. The default is to stop looking at the program if the
BASIC type gets narrowed down to either Turbo BASIC or BASIC XE.
This option also enables **-v** (verbose). It's really only useful
for testing, if you're hacking on **whichbas** itself.
.. include:: genopts.rst
NOTES
=====
Atari BASIC programs are detected *almost* 100% reliably. See **BUGS**, below,
for the gory details.
Turbo BASIC, BASIC XL, and BASIC XE are all supersets of Atari BASIC.
If you wrote a program using one of them, but didn't use any of the
extra commands or functions, the result is still an Atari BASIC program.
Likewise, if you wrote a program using BASIC XE, but only used the
commands/functions it has in common with BASIC XL, it would be
detected as BASIC XL.
There are two types of BASIC XE programs: regular and *EXTEND*\ed. The
extended type is detected 100% reliably, because the first byte of the
file changes from **$00** to **$DD**. Non-extended programs are only
identified as BASIC XE if they use any of the extra commands BASIC XE
adds to those found in BASIC XL.
Detection of Turbo vs. BXL/BXE isn't 100% reliable, and probably
never will be. There's too much overlap between the sets of extra
tokens added by each. Programs that don't use very many of the extra
functions provided by Turbo/BXL/BXE may show up as "Either Turbo BASIC XL
or OSS BASIC XL".
Atari Microsoft BASIC is detected by checking that:
- the first byte of the file is **$00**\.
- the next 2 bytes (LSB/MSB) are the same as the actual file length minus 3.
- the last 3 bytes of the file are zero.
This may result in false positives (files that aren't BASIC programs at
all might show up as Microsoft). Also, no distinction is made between
Atari MS BASIC 1.0 and 2.0.
OSS BASIC/A+ is an extended form of Atari BASIC. It's source
compatible with Atari BASIC, but not token-compatible because it uses
different token numbers for the regular BASIC commands and operators.
Example: SAVE is token **$19** in Atari BASIC (also Turbo/BXL/BXE),
but in A+ it's token **$1D**. Detection should be 100% reliable, but
since there aren't many BASIC/A+ programs in the wild, it hasn't been
thoroughly tested.
Various non-BASIC files are detected (including Mac/65 source,
ELF binaries, etc) as a convenience, but I wouldn't rely on
**whichbas**\'s non-BASIC file type detection if I were you.
If you need the **file**\(1) command, use it.
**whichbas** knows nothing about other BASICs such as Frost BASIC or
Altirra BASIC.
When using multiple *input-file* arguments, a separate instance of
**whichbas** is spawned for each file. This isn't the most efficient
approach, but it shouldn't cause problems on reasonably modern
systems.
BUGS
====
Misdetection
------------
It's possible to get a BASIC XL/XE program to misdetect as Atari BASIC
by writing a program that does these things:
- Dimension a string array with a number of elements that isn't just a
numeric constant or numeric variable (e.g. *DIM A$(2+2,10)* or
*DIM A$(I*2,10)*). The code that detects a string array *DIM* command
can only handle simple cases like *DIM A$(10,10)* or *DIM A$(I,10)*.
It doesn't actually matter if the 2nd argument is a fancy expression,
though.
- Does *not* actually *use* the string array variable by assigning to
it or reading a value from it. String array accesses in BASIC XL/XE
are reliably detected because they require a semicolon after the
first number, even if there isn't a 2nd number. Example: *? A$(2;)*
prints the 2nd element of the *A$* string array. If it were written
as *? A$(2)*, but *A$* is a string array (not a regular string),
BASIC XL/XE would give an *Error 40* (string type mismatch) at
runtime.
The good news is, such a program will still work fine in Atari BASIC.
Atari BASIC will dimension it as a regular string variable and ignore
the 2nd dimension. Since it's not actually used elsewhere in the program,
it doesn't hurt anything.
EXIT STATUS
===========
Without the **-s** option, exit status is 0 for success, non-zero for
failure.
With the **-s** option, the exit status is:
**0**
Not used with **-s**.
**1** or **2**
Error reading file. Error message will be printed on standard error.
**3**
Atari BASIC detected.
**4**
Turbo BASIC detected.
**5**
OSS BASIC XL detected.
**6**
Non-EXTENDed OSS BASIC XE detected.
**7**
Turbo BASIC or BASIC XL (undecided which).
**8**
Turbo BASIC or non-EXTENDed BASIC XE (undecided which).
**9**
Turbo BASIC, BASIC XL, or non-EXTENDed BASIC XE (undecided which).
**10**
Unknown Atari BASIC derivative (not Atari BASIC, but not
Turbo/BXL/BXE/A+ either).
**11**
Atari Microsoft BASIC detected.
**12**
EXTENDed OSS BASIC XE detected.
**13**
Compiled Turbo BASIC detected.
**14**
OSS BASIC/A+ detected.
**64**
None of the above; not BASIC.
In the future, more exit codes may be defined (in the range **15** to
**63**), but the existing ones will not change.
.. include:: manftr.rst
|