Starting Retro

Retro can be run for scripting or interactive use.

Interactive

To start it interactively, run: retro without any command line arguments, or with -i.

Starting the interactive system:

```
retro
```


Or:

```
retro -i
```


This should be sufficient for most uses.

Using In a Pipe

Retro will work with piped input.

E.g.,

```
echo "'lol s:put nl" | retro
```


Running A Program In A File

You can run code in a file very easily. This is simply:

```
retro filename
```


You can follow the filename with any arguments that it may need. These will be accessible to the program via the script:arguments and script:get-argument words.

Source files must be written in Unu format.

Scripting

You can use Retro to write scripts. Add a shebang:

```
#!/usr/bin/env retro
```


And make the file executable.

Source files must be written in Unu format.

Command Line Arguments

For a summary of the full command line arguments available:

Scripting Usage:

    retro filename [script arguments...]

Interactive Usage:

    retro [-h] [-i] [-f filename] [-t]

  -h           Display this help text   -i           Interactive mode (line buffered)   -f filename  Run the contents of the specified file   -t           Run tests (in ``` blocks) in any loaded files