<h1>TableGen Fundamentals</h1>
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<ul>
<li><a href="#introduction">Introduction</a>
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<h2><a name="introduction">Introduction</a></h2>
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<p>TableGen's purpose is to help a human develop and maintain records of
domain-specific information. Because there may be a large number of these
<tt>llvm/utils/emacs</tt> and <tt>llvm/utils/vim</tt> directories of your LLVM
distribution, respectively.</p>
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<h3><a name="concepts">Basic concepts</a></h3>
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<p>TableGen files consist of two key parts: 'classes' and 'definitions', both
of which are considered 'records'.</p>
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<h3><a name="example">An example record</a></h3>
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<p>With no other arguments, TableGen parses the specified file and prints out
all of the classes, then all of the definitions. This is a good way to see what
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<h3><a name="running">Running TableGen</a></h3>
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<p>TableGen runs just like any other LLVM tool. The first (optional) argument
specifies the file to read. If a filename is not specified, <tt>tblgen</tt>
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<h2><a name="syntax">TableGen syntax</a></h2>
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<p>TableGen doesn't care about the meaning of data (that is up to the backend to
define), but it does care about syntax, and it enforces a simple type system.
This section describes the syntax and the constructs allowed in a TableGen file.
</p>
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<h3><a name="primitives">TableGen primitives</a></h3>
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<h4><a name="comments">TableGen comments</a></h4>
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<p>TableGen supports BCPL style "<tt>//</tt>" comments, which run to the end of
the line, and it also supports <b>nestable</b> "<tt>/* */</tt>" comments.</p>
<a name="types">The TableGen type system</a>
</h4>
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<p>TableGen files are strongly typed, in a simple (but complete) type-system.
These types are used to perform automatic conversions, check for errors, and to
<a name="values">TableGen values and expressions</a>
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<p>TableGen allows for a pretty reasonable number of different expression forms
when building up values. These forms allow the TableGen file to be written in a
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<h3>
<a name="classesdefs">Classes and definitions</a>
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<p>As mentioned in the <a href="#concepts">intro</a>, classes and definitions
(collectively known as 'records') in TableGen are the main high-level unit of
permit the specification of default values for their subclasses, allowing the
subclasses to override them as they wish.</p>
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<h4>
<a name="valuedef">Value definitions</a>
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<p>Value definitions define named entries in records. A value must be defined
before it can be referred to as the operand for another value definition or
<a name="recordlet">'let' expressions</a>
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<p>A record-level let expression is used to change the value of a value
definition in a record. This is primarily useful when a superclass defines a
<a name="templateargs">Class template arguments</a>
</h4>
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<p>TableGen permits the definition of parameterized classes as well as normal
concrete classes. Parameterized TableGen classes specify a list of variable
<a name="multiclass">Multiclass definitions and instances</a>
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<p>
While classes with template arguments are a good way to factor commonality
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<h3>
<a name="filescope">File scope entities</a>
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<h4>
<a name="include">File inclusion</a>
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<p>TableGen supports the '<tt>include</tt>' token, which textually substitutes
the specified file in place of the include directive. The filename should be
specified as a double quoted string immediately after the '<tt>include</tt>'
<a name="globallet">'let' expressions</a>
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<p>"Let" expressions at file scope are similar to <a href="#recordlet">"let"
expressions within a record</a>, except they can specify a value binding for
</pre>
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<h2><a name="codegen">Code Generator backend info</a></h2>
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<p>Expressions used by code generator to describe instructions and isel
patterns:</p>
<h2><a name="backends">TableGen backends</a></h2>
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<p>TODO: How they work, how to write one. This section should not contain
details about any particular backend, except maybe -print-enums as an example.