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<TITLE>LUA man page</TITLE>
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<H1>NAME</H1>
lua - Lua interpreter
<H1>SYNOPSIS</H1>
<B>lua</B>
[
<I>options</I>
]
[
<I>script</I>
[
<I>args</I>
]
]
<H1>DESCRIPTION</H1>
<B>lua</B>
is the stand-alone Lua interpreter.
It loads and executes Lua programs,
either in textual source form or
in precompiled binary form.
(Precompiled binaries are output by
<B>luac</B>,
the Lua compiler.)
<B>lua</B>
can be used as a batch interpreter and also interactively.
<P>
The given
<I>options</I>
(see below)
are executed and then
the Lua program in file
<I>script</I>
is loaded and executed.
The given
<I>args</I>
are available to
<I>script</I>
as strings in a global table named
<B>arg</B>.
If these arguments contain spaces or other characters special to the shell,
then they should be quoted
(but note that the quotes will be removed by the shell).
The arguments in
<B>arg</B>
start at 0,
which contains the string
`<I>script</I>'.
The index of the last argument is stored in
<B>"arg.n"</B>.
The arguments given in the command line before
<I>script</I>,
including the name of the interpreter,
are available in negative indices in
<B>arg</B>.
<P>
At the very start,
before even handling the command line,
<B>lua</B>
executes the contents of the environment variable
<B>LUA_INIT</B>,
if it is defined.
If the value of
<B>LUA_INIT</B>
is of the form
`@<I>filename</I>',
then
<I>filename</I>
is executed.
Otherwise, the string is assumed to be a Lua statement and is executed.
<P>
Options start with
<B>-</B>
and are described below.
You can use
<B>"--"</B>
to signal the end of options.
<P>
If no arguments are given,
then
<B>"-v -i"</B>
is assumed when the standard input is a terminal;
otherwise,
<B>"-"</B>
is assumed.
<P>
In interactive mode,
<B>lua</B>
prompts the user,
reads lines from the standard input,
and executes them as they are read.
If a line does not contain a complete statement,
then a secondary prompt is displayed and
lines are read until a complete statement is formed or
a syntax error is found.
So, one way to interrupt the reading of an incomplete statement is
to force a syntax error:
adding a
<B>`;' </B>
in the middle of a statement is a sure way of forcing a syntax error
(except inside multiline strings and comments; these must be closed explicitly).
If a line starts with
<B>`='</B>,
then
<B>lua</B>
displays the values of all the expressions in the remainder of the
line. The expressions must be separated by commas.
The primary prompt is the value of the global variable
<B>_PROMPT</B>,
if this value is a string;
otherwise, the default prompt is used.
Similarly, the secondary prompt is the value of the global variable
<B>_PROMPT2</B>.
So,
to change the prompts,
set the corresponding variable to a string of your choice.
You can do that after calling the interpreter
or on the command line with
<B>"_PROMPT" "=\'lua: \'"</B>,
for example.
(Note the need for quotes, because the string contains a space.)
The default prompts are ``> '' and ``>> ''.
<H1>OPTIONS</H1>
<P>
<B>-</B>
load and execute the standard input as a file,
that is,
not interactively,
even when the standard input is a terminal.
<P>
<B>-e "</B><I>stat"</I>
execute statement
<I>stat</I>.
You need to quote
<I>stat </I>
if it contains spaces, quotes,
or other characters special to the shell.
<P>
<B>-i</B>
enter interactive mode after
<I>script</I>
is executed.
<P>
<B>-l "</B><I>file"</I>
call
<B>require( file</B><I>)</I>
before executing
<I></I>script.
Typically used to load libraries
(hence the letter
<I>l</I>).
<P>
<B>-v</B>
show version information.
<H1>SEE ALSO</H1>
<B>luac</B>(1)
<BR>
<A HREF="http://www.lua.org/">http://www.lua.org/</A>
<H1>DIAGNOSTICS</H1>
Error messages should be self explanatory.
<H1>AUTHORS</H1>
R. Ierusalimschy,
L. H. de Figueiredo,
and
W. Celes
(<A HREF="mailto:lua-NO-SPAM-THANKS@tecgraf.puc-rio.br">lua AT tecgraf.puc-rio.br</A>)
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