//// == Conditional Preprocessor Directives Included in: - User manual //// You can include or exclude lines of text in your document using one of the following conditional preprocessor directives: * ifdef * ifndef * ifeval These directives tell the processor whether to include the enclosed content based on certain conditions. The conditions are based on the presence or value of document attributes. For example, say you want to include a certain section of content only when converting to HTML. Conditional preprocessor directives make this possible. You simply check for the presence of the `basebackend-html` attribute using an `ifdef` directive. Details of this example, as well as others, are described in the following sections. === Processing Although a conditional preprocessor directive looks like a block macro, it's not a macro and therefore not processed like one. Instead, it's a _preprocessor_ directive, just like `include`. It's important to understand the distinction. A preprocessor directive is processed when the lines are read, but before the document structure is parsed. Therefore, it's _not_ aware of the surrounding document structure. A preprocessor directive merely adds lines to the reader or takes lines away. The conditional preprocessor directives determine which lines to add and which ones to take away based on the condition. If you don't want a conditional preprocessor directive to be processed, you must escape it using a backslash. \ifdef::just-an-example[] Escaping the directive is necessary _even if it appears in a verbatim block_ since it's not aware of the surrounding document structure. === ifdef Directive Content between the `ifdef` and `endif` directives gets included if the specified attribute is set: .ifdef example ---- \ifdef::env-github[] This content is for GitHub only. \endif::[] ---- The syntax of the start directive is `ifdef::[]`, where `` is the name of an attribute. Keep in mind that the content is not limited to a single line. You can have any amount of content between the `ifdef` and `endif` directives. If you have a large amount of content inside the `ifdef` directive, you may find it more readable to use the long-form version of the directive, in which the attribute (aka condition) is referenced again in the `endif` directive. .ifdef long-form example ---- \ifdef::env-github[] This content is for GitHub only. So much content in this section, I'd get confused reading the source without the closing `ifdef` directive. It isn't necessary for short blocks, but if you are conditionally including a section it may be something worth considering. Other readers reviewing your docs source code may go cross-eyed when reading your source docs if you don't. \endif::env-github[] ---- TIP: A great example of long-form conditional formatting is the source of this user manual! We use it to show and hide entire sections when building individual content for separate guides. If you're only dealing with a single line of text, you can put the content directly inside the square brackets and drop the `endif` directive. .ifdef single line example ---- \ifdef::revnumber[This document has a version number of {revnumber}.] ---- The single-line block above is equivalent to this formal `ifdef` directive: [source] ---- \ifdef::revnumber[] This document has a version number of {revnumber}. \endif::[] ---- === ifndef Directive `ifndef` is the logical opposite of `ifdef`. Content between `ifndef` and `endif` gets included only if the specified attribute is _not_ set: .ifndef Example ---- \ifndef::env-github[] This content is not shown on GitHub. \endif::[] ---- The syntax of the start directive is `ifndef::[]`, where `` is the name of an attribute. The `ifndef` directive supports the same single-line and long-form variants as `ifdef`. === Checking multiple attributes (ifdef and ifndef only) Both the `ifdef` and `ifndef` directives accept multiple attribute names. The combinator can be "`and`" or "`or`". Any attribute (or):: Multiple comma-separated (,) directive names evaluate to true, allowing the content to be included, if one or more of the directives is defined. Otherwise the content is not included. + .Any attribute example ---- \ifdef::backend-html5,backend-docbook5[Only shown when converting to HTML5 or DocBook 5.] ---- All attributes (and):: Multiple plus-separated (+) directive names evaluate to true, allowing the content to be included, if all of the directives are defined. Otherwise the content is not included. + .All attributes example ---- \ifdef::env-github+backend-html5[Only shown when converting to HTML5 on GitHub.] ---- The `ifndef` directive negates the results of the expression. WARNING: Starting in Asciidoctor 1.5.6, the operator logic in the `ifndef` directive changed to align with the behavior of AsciiDoc Python. Specifically, when attributes are separated by commas, content is only included if none of the attributes are defined. When attributes are separated by pluses, content is included if at least one of the attributes is undefined. See https://github.com/asciidoctor/asciidoctor/issues/1983[issue #1983] to find the discussion about this behavior and the rationale for the change. === ifeval directive Content between `ifeval` and `endif` gets included if the expression inside the square brackets evaluates to true. .ifeval example ---- \ifeval::[{sectnumlevels} == 3] If the `sectnumlevels` attribute has the value 3, this sentence is included. \endif::[] ---- The `ifeval` directive does not have a single-line or long-form variant like `ifdef` and `ifndef`. ==== Anatomy The expression consists of a left-hand value and a right-hand value with an operator in between. .ifeval expression examples ---- \ifeval::[2 > 1] ... \endif::[] \ifeval::["{backend}" == "html5"] ... \endif::[] \ifeval::[{sectnumlevels} == 3] ... \endif::[] // the value of outfilesuffix includes a leading period (e.g., .html) \ifeval::["{docname}{outfilesuffix}" == "master.html"] ... \endif::[] ---- ==== Values Each expression value can reference the name of zero or more AsciiDoc attribute using the attribute reference syntax (for example, `+{backend}+`). Attribute references are resolved (substituted) first. Once attributes references have been resolved, each value is coerced to a recognized type. When the expected value is a string (i.e., a string of characters), we recommend that you enclose the expression in quotes. The following values types are recognized: number:: Either an integer or floating-point value. quoted string:: Enclosed in either single (') or double (") quotes. boolean:: Literal value of `true` or `false`. ===== How value type coercion works If a value is enclosed in quotes, the characters between the quotes are preserved and coerced to a string. If a value is not enclosed in quotes, it is subject to the following type coercion rules: * an empty value becomes nil (aka null). * a value of `true` or `false` becomes a boolean value. * a value of only repeating whitespace becomes a single whitespace string. * a value containing a period becomes a floating-point number. * any other value is coerced to an integer value. ==== Operators The value on each side is compared using the operator to derive an outcome. `==`:: Checks if the two values are equal. `!=`:: Checks if the two values are not equal. `<`:: Checks whether the left-hand side is less than the right-hand side. `+<=+`:: Checks whether the left-hand side is less than or equal to the right-hand side. `>`:: Checks whether the left-hand side is greater than the right-hand side. `+>=+`:: Checks whether the left-hand side is greater than or equal to the right-hand side. NOTE: The operators follow the same rules as operators in Ruby.