Nasal Hello World: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{Nasal Navigation}} == Hello world == A simple hello world example in Nasal would be: <syntaxhighlight lang="php"> # hello.nas print('Hello World!'); </syntaxhighlight>...")
 
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== Hello world ==
== Hello world ==


A simple hello world example in Nasal would be:
A simple hello world example in Nasal would be (to be saved in $FG_ROOT/Nasal):


<syntaxhighlight lang="php">
<syntaxhighlight lang="php">
  # hello.nas
  # $FG_ROOT/Nasal/hello.nas
  print('Hello World!');
  print('Hello World!');
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>

Revision as of 18:39, 18 August 2012


Hello world

A simple hello world example in Nasal would be (to be saved in $FG_ROOT/Nasal):

 # $FG_ROOT/Nasal/hello.nas
 print('Hello World!');

This will show the "Hello World" string during startup in the console window. The hash sign (#) just introduces comments (i.e. will be ignored by the interpreter).

Note: Script-specific symbols such as global variables (or functions) will be put into a scope (namespace) based on the script's name, scripts embedded via aircraft-set.xml files can separately specify a corresponding module name (see Howto: Make an aircraft for details).

Strings in Nasal can also use double quotes which support escaping:

 # hello.nas
 print("Hello\nWorld!");

Double quotes support typical escape sequences:

  • \n Newline
  • \t Horizontal Tab
  • \v Vertical Tab
  • \b Backspace
  • \r Carriage Return
  • \f Form feed
  • \a Audible Alert (bell)
  • \\ Backslash
  • \? Question mark
  • \' Single quote
  • \" Double quote

For example, to print a new line, use:

print ("\n");

To print a quoted string, use:

print ("\"quoted string\"");

and so on.

Single quotes treat everything as literal except for embedded single quotes (including embedded whitespace like newlines).

Nasal strings are always arrays of bytes (never characters: see the utf8 library if you want character-based equivalents of substr() et. al.). They can be indexed just like in C (although note that there is no nul termination -- get the length with size()):