Lua 5.0 Reference Manual
by Roberto Ierusalimschy, Luiz Henrique de Figueiredo, Waldemar Celes
Copyright ©
2003 Tecgraf, PUC-Rio. All rights reserved.
The basic library provides some core functions to Lua. If you do not
include this library in your application, you should check carefully whether
you need to provide some alternative implementation for some of its facilities.
assert (v [, message])
Issues an error when the value of its argument v is nil
or false; otherwise, returns this value. message is
an error message; when absent, it defaults to "assertion failed!"
collectgarbage ([limit])
Sets the garbage-collection threshold to the given limit (in Kbytes)
and checks it against the byte counter. If the new threshold is smaller
than the byte counter, then Lua immediately runs the garbage collector
(see 2.9). If limit is absent, it defaults
to zero (thus forcing a garbage-collection cycle).
dofile (filename)
Opens the named file and executes its contents as a Lua chunk. When called
without arguments, dofile executes the contents of the standard
input (stdin). Returns any value returned by the chunk. In
case of errors, dofile propagates the error to its caller (that
is, it does not run in protected mode).
Terminates the last protected function called and returns message
as the error message. Function error never returns.
The level argument specifies where the error message points
the error. With level 1 (the default), the error position is where the
error function was called. Level 2 points the error to where
the function that called error was called; and so on.
_G
A global variable (not a function) that holds the global environment (that
is, _G._G = _G). Lua itself does not use this variable; changing
its value does not affect any environment. (Use setfenv to
change environments.)
getfenv (f)
Returns the current environment in use by the function. f can
be a Lua function or a number, which specifies the function at that stack
level: Level 1 is the function calling getfenv. If the given
function is not a Lua function, or if f is 0, getfenv
returns the global environment. The default for f is 1.
If the environment has a "__fenv" field, returns the associated
value, instead of the environment.
If the object does not have a metatable, returns nil. Otherwise,
if the object's metatable has a "__metatable" field, returns
the associated value. Otherwise, returns the metatable of the given object.
gcinfo ()
Returns two results: the number of Kbytes of dynamic memory that Lua
is using and the current garbage collector threshold (also in Kbytes).
ipairs (t)
Returns an iterator function, the table t, and 0, so that
the construction
for i,v in ipairs(t) do ... end
will iterate over the pairs (1,t[1]), (2,t[2]),
..., up to the first integer key with a nil value in the table.
loadfile (filename)
Loads a file as a Lua chunk (without running it). If there are no errors,
returns the compiled chunk as a function; otherwise, returns nil
plus the error message. The environment of the returned function is the
global environment.
loadlib (libname, funcname)
Links the program with the dynamic C library libname. Inside
this library, looks for a function funcname and returns this
function as a C function.
libname must be the complete file name of the C library,
including any eventual path and extension.
This function is not supported by ANSI C. As such, it is only available
on some platforms (Windows, Linux, Solaris, BSD, plus other Unix systems
that support the dlfcn standard).
loadstring (string [, chunkname])
Loads a string as a Lua chunk (without running it). If there are no errors,
returns the compiled chunk as a function; otherwise, returns nil
plus the error message. The environment of the returned function is the
global environment.
The optional parameter chunkname is the name to be used
in error messages and debug information.
To load and run a given string, use the idiom
assert(loadstring(s))()
next (table [, index])
Allows a program to traverse all fields of a table. Its first argument is
a table and its second argument is an index in this table. next
returns the next index of the table and the value associated with the index.
When called with nil as its second argument, next returns
the first index of the table and its associated value. When called with
the last index, or with nil in an empty table, next
returns nil. If the second argument is absent, then it is interpreted
as nil.
Lua has no declaration of fields; There is no difference between a field
not present in a table or a field with value nil. Therefore, next
only considers fields with non-nil values. The order in which the
indices are enumerated is not specified, even for numeric indices.
(To traverse a table in numeric order, use a numerical for or the
ipairs function.)
The behavior of next is undefined if, during the
traversal, you assign any value to a non-existent field in the table.
pairs (t)
Returns the next function and the table t (plus
a nil), so that the construction
for k,v in pairs(t) do ... end
will iterate over all key-value pairs of table t.
Calls function f with the given arguments in protected mode.
That means that any error inside f is not propagated;
instead, pcall catches the error and returns a status code.
Its first result is the status code (a boolean), which is true
if the call succeeds without errors. In such case, pcall
also returns all results from the call, after this first result. In case
of any error, pcall returns false plus the error message.
print (e1, e2, ...)
Receives any number of arguments, and prints their values in stdout,
using the tostring function to convert them to strings. This
function is not intended for formatted output, but only as a quick way to
show a value, typically for debugging. For formatted output, use format
(see 5.3).
rawequal (v1, v2)
Checks whether v1 is equal to v2, without invoking
any metamethod. Returns a boolean.
rawget (table, index)
Gets the real value of table[index], without invoking any metamethod.
table must be a table; index is any value different
from nil.
rawset (table, index, value)
Sets the real value of table[index] to value,
without invoking any metamethod. table must be a table, index
is any value different from nil, and value is any Lua
value.
require (packagename)
Loads the given package. The function starts by looking into the table
_LOADED to determine whether packagename is
already loaded. If it is, then require returns the value
that the package returned when it was first loaded. Otherwise, it searches
a path looking for a file to load.
If the global variable LUA_PATH is a string, this string
is the path. Otherwise, require tries the environment variable
LUA_PATH. As a last resort, it uses the predefined path "?;?.lua".
The path is a sequence of templates separated by semicolons.
For each template, require will change each interrogation
mark in the template to packagename, and then will try to
load the resulting file name. So, for instance, if the path is
"./?.lua;./?.lc;/usr/local/?/?.lua;/lasttry"
a require "mod" will try to load the files ./mod.lua,
./mod.lc, /usr/local/mod/mod.lua, and /lasttry,
in that order.
The function stops the search as soon as it can load a file, and then
it runs the file. After that, it associates, in table _LOADED,
the package name with the value that the package returned, and returns
that value. If the package returns nil (or no value), require
converts this value to true. If the package returns false,
require also returns false. However, as the mark in
table _LOADED is false, any new attempt to reload
the file will happen as if the package was not loaded (that is, the package
will be loaded again).
If there is any error loading or running the file, or if it cannot find
any file in the path, then require signals an error.
While running a file, require defines the global variable
_REQUIREDNAME with the package name. The package being loaded
always runs within the global environment.
Sets the current environment to be used by the given function. f
can be a Lua function or a number, which specifies the function at that
stack level: Level 1 is the function calling setfenv.
As a special case, when f is 0 setfenv changes
the global environment of the running thread.
If the original environment has a "__fenv" field, setfenv
raises an error.
setmetatable (table, metatable)
Sets the metatable for the given table. (You cannot change the metatable
of a userdata from Lua.) If metatable is nil, removes
the metatable of the given table. If the original metatable has a "__metatable"
field, raises an error.
tonumber (e [, base])
Tries to convert its argument to a number. If the argument is already a
number or a string convertible to a number, then tonumber returns
that number; otherwise, it returns nil.
An optional argument specifies the base to interpret the numeral. The
base may be any integer between 2 and 36, inclusive. In bases above 10,
the letter `A´ (in either upper or lower case) represents 10,
`B´ represents 11, and so forth, with `Z´
representing 35. In base 10 (the default), the number may have a decimal
part, as well as an optional exponent part (see 2.2.1).
In other bases, only unsigned integers are accepted.
tostring (e)
Receives an argument of any type and converts it to a string in a reasonable
format. For complete control of how numbers are converted, use format
(see 5.3).
If the metatable of e has a "__tostring" field,
tostring calls the corresponding value with e
as argument, and uses the result of the call as its result.
Returns the type of its only argument, coded as a string. The possible results
of this function are "nil" (a string, not the value nil),
"number", "string", "boolean, "table",
"function", "thread", and "userdata".
unpack (list)
Returns all elements from the given list. This function is equivalent to
return list[1], list[2], ..., list[n]
except that the above code can be written only for a fixed n. The
number n is the size of the list, as defined for the table.getn
function.
_VERSION
A global variable (not a function) that holds a string containing the current
interpreter version. The current content of this string is "Lua 5.0".
xpcall (f, err)
This function is similar to pcall, except that you can set
a new error handler.
xpcall calls function f in protected mode,
using err as the error handler. Any error inside f
is not propagated; instead, xpcall catches the error, calls
the err function with the original error object, and returns
a status code. Its first result is the status code (a boolean), which
is true if the call succeeds without errors. In such case, xpcall
also returns all results from the call, after this first result. In case
of any error, xpcall returns false plus the result from err.
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