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Command files contain poke commands.
A poke command may be a dot command, a Poke statement or a Poke
expression.
Lines starting with #
are comments will be ignored. However a
comment must start at the beginning of a line. Here is an example
of a script:
# The following two lines are dot commands .load my-pickle.pk .set obase 16 # The following line is a Poke statement dump :size 0x100#B :from 0x10#B # The following line is a Poke expression statement without any side effect. # Consequently it is valid, but rather useless. 4 == 4
A command file contains commands, not Poke code. This means it gets read line by line and commands cannot occupy more than one line. Hence the following is a valid command file:
type foo = struct {int this; int that;}
but this is not valid as a command file (although it is a valid Poke statement) and will provoke an error:
type foo = struct { int this; int that; }
Command files can be loaded at startup using the -s
command
line option (see Invoking poke).
The ~/.pokerc startup file is also an example of a poke
command file (see .pokerc).