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Several options control the overall operation of m4:
--helpPrint a help summary on standard output, then immediately exit
m4 without reading any input files or performing any other
actions.
--versionPrint the version number of the program on standard output, then
immediately exit m4 without reading any input files or
performing any other actions.
-E--fatal-warningsControls the effect of warnings. If unspecified, then execution continues and exit status is unaffected when a warning is printed. If specified exactly once, warnings become fatal; when one is issued, execution continues, but the exit status will be non-zero. If specified multiple times, then execution halts with non-zero status the first time a warning is issued. The introduction of behavior levels is new to M4 1.4.9; for behavior consistent with earlier versions, you should specify -E twice.
-i--interactive-eMakes this invocation of m4 interactive. This means that all
output will be unbuffered, and interrupts will be ignored. The
spelling -e exists for compatibility with other m4
implementations, and issues a warning because it may be withdrawn in a
future version of GNU M4.
-P--prefix-builtinsInternally modify all builtin macro names so they all start with the prefix ‘m4_’. For example, using this option, one should write ‘m4_define’ instead of ‘define’, and ‘m4___file__’ instead of ‘__file__’. This option has no effect if -R is also specified.
-Q--quiet--silentSuppress warnings, such as missing or superfluous arguments in macro calls, or treating the empty string as zero.
--warn-macro-sequence[=regexp]Issue a warning if the regular expression regexp has a non-empty
match in any macro definition (either by define or
pushdef). Empty matches are ignored; therefore, supplying the
empty string as regexp disables any warning. If the optional
regexp is not supplied, then the default regular expression is
‘\$\({[^}]*}\|[0-9][0-9]+\)’ (a literal ‘$’ followed by
multiple digits or by an open brace), since these sequences will
change semantics in the default operation of GNU M4 2.0 (due
to a change in how more than 9 arguments in a macro definition will be
handled, see Arguments). Providing an alternate regular
expression can provide a useful reverse lookup feature of finding
where a macro is defined to have a given definition.
-W regexp--word-regexp=regexpUse regexp as an alternative syntax for macro names. This
experimental option will not be present in all GNU m4
implementations (see Changeword).
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