============= Nimrod Manual ============= :Author: Andreas Rumpf :Version: |nimrodversion| .. contents:: About this document =================== This document describes the lexis, the syntax, and the semantics of Nimrod. The language constructs are explained using an extended BNF, in which ``(a)*`` means 0 or more ``a``'s, ``a+`` means 1 or more ``a``'s, and ``(a)?`` means an optional *a*; an alternative spelling for optional parts is ``[a]``. The ``|`` symbol is used to mark alternatives and has the lowest precedence. Parentheses may be used to group elements. Non-terminals are in lowercase, terminal symbols (including keywords) are in UPPERCASE. An example:: if_stmt ::= IF expr COLON stmts (ELIF expr COLON stmts)* [ELSE stmts] Other parts of Nimrod - like scoping rules or runtime semantics are only described in an informal manner. The reason is that formal semantics are difficult to write and understand. However, there is only one Nimrod implementation, so one may consider it as the formal specification; especially since the compiler's code is pretty clean (well, some parts of it). Definitions =========== A Nimrod program specifies a computation that acts on a memory consisting of components called `locations`:idx:. A variable is basically a name for a location. Each variable and location is of a certain `type`:idx:. The variable's type is called `static type`:idx:, the location's type is called `dynamic type`:idx:. If the static type is not the same as the dynamic type, it is a supertype of the dynamic type. An `identifier`:idx: is a symbol declared as a name for a variable, type, procedure, etc. The region of the program over which a declaration applies is called the `scope`:idx: of the declaration. Scopes can be nested. The meaning of an identifier is determined by the smallest enclosing scope in which the identifier is declared. An expression specifies a computation that produces a value or location. Expressions that produce locations are called `l-values`:idx:. An l-value can denote either a location or the value the location contains, depending on the context. Expressions whose values can be determined statically are called `constant expressions`:idx:; they are never l-values. A `static error`:idx: is an error that the implementation detects before program execution. Unless explicitly classified, an error is a static error. A `checked runtime error`:idx: is an error that the implementation detects and reports at runtime. The method for reporting such errors is via *raising exceptions*. However, the implementation provides a means to disable these runtime checks. See the section pragmas_ for details. An `unchecked runtime error`:idx: is an error that is not guaranteed to be detected, and can cause the subsequent behavior of the computation to be arbitrary. Unchecked runtime errors cannot occur if only `safe`:idx: language features are used. Lexical Analysis ================ Encoding -------- All Nimrod source files are in the UTF-8 encoding (or its ASCII subset). Other encodings are not supported. Any of the standard platform line termination sequences can be used - the Unix form using ASCII LF (linefeed), the Windows form using the ASCII sequence CR LF (return followed by linefeed), or the old Macintosh form using the ASCII CR (return) character. All of these forms can be used equally, regardless of platform. Indentation ----------- Nimrod's standard grammar describes an `indentation sensitive`:idx: language. This means that all the control structures are recognized by indentation. Indentation consists only of spaces; tabulators are not allowed. The terminals ``IND`` (indentation), ``DED`` (dedentation) and ``SAD`` (same indentation) are generated by the scanner, denoting an indentation. These terminals are only generated for lines that are not empty or contain only whitespace and comments. The parser and the scanner communicate over a stack which indentation terminal should be generated: The stack consists of integers counting the spaces. The stack is initialized with a zero on its top. The scanner reads from the stack: If the current indentation token consists of more spaces than the entry at the top of the stack, a ``IND`` token is generated, else if it consists of the same number of spaces, a ``SAD`` token is generated. If it consists of fewer spaces, a ``DED`` token is generated for any item on the stack that is greater than the current. These items are then popped from the stack by the scanner. At the end of the file, a ``DED`` token is generated for each number remaining on the stack that is larger than zero. Because the grammar contains some optional ``IND`` tokens, the scanner cannot push new indentation levels. This has to be done by the parser. The symbol ``indPush`` indicates that an ``IND`` token is expected; the current number of leading spaces is pushed onto the stack by the parser. Comments -------- `Comments`:idx: start anywhere outside a string or character literal with the hash character ``#``. Comments consist of a concatenation of `comment pieces`:idx:. A comment piece starts with ``#`` and runs until the end of the line. The end of line characters belong to the piece. If the next line only consists of a comment piece which is aligned to the preceding one, it does not start a new comment: .. code-block:: nimrod i = 0 # This is a single comment over multiple lines belonging to the # assignment statement. The scanner merges these two pieces. # This is a new comment belonging to the current block, but to no particular # statement. i = i + 1 # This a new comment that is NOT echo(i) # continued here, because this comment refers to the echo statement Comments are tokens; they are only allowed at certain places in the input file as they belong to the syntax tree! This feature enables perfect source-to-source transformations (such as pretty-printing) and superior documentation generators. A side-effect is that the human reader of the code always knows exactly which code snippet the comment refers to. Identifiers & Keywords ---------------------- `Identifiers`:idx: in Nimrod can be any string of letters, digits and underscores, beginning with a letter. Two immediate following underscores ``__`` are not allowed:: letter ::= 'A'..'Z' | 'a'..'z' | '\x80'..'\xff' digit ::= '0'..'9' IDENTIFIER ::= letter ( ['_'] letter | digit )* The following `keywords`:idx: are reserved and cannot be used as identifiers: .. code-block:: nimrod :file: ../data/keywords.txt Some keywords are unused; they are reserved for future developments of the language. Nimrod is a `style-insensitive`:idx: language. This means that it is not case-sensitive and even underscores are ignored: **type** is a reserved word, and so is **TYPE** or **T_Y_P_E**. The idea behind this is that this allows programmers to use their own prefered spelling style and libraries written by different programmers cannot use incompatible conventions. The editors or IDE can show the identifiers as preferred. Another advantage is that it frees the programmer from remembering the exact spelling of an identifier. Literal strings --------------- `Literal strings`:idx: can be delimited by matching double quotes, and can contain the following `escape sequences`:idx:\ : ================== =================================================== Escape sequence Meaning ================== =================================================== ``\n`` `newline`:idx: ``\r`` `carriage return`:idx: ``\l`` `line feed`:idx: ``\f`` `form feed`:idx: ``\t`` `tabulator`:idx: ``\v`` `vertical tabulator`:idx: ``\\`` `backslash`:idx: ``\"`` `quotation mark`:idx: ``\'`` `apostrophe`:idx: ``\d+`` `character with decimal value d`:idx:; all decimal digits directly following are used for the character ``\a`` `alert`:idx: ``\b`` `backspace`:idx: ``\e`` `escape`:idx: `[ESC]`:idx: ``\xHH`` `character with hex value HH`:idx:; exactly two hex digits are allowed ================== =================================================== Strings in Nimrod may contain any 8-bit value, except embedded zeros which are not allowed for compability with `C`:idx:. Literal strings can also be delimited by three double squotes ``"""`` ... ``"""``. Literals in this form may run for several lines, may contain ``"`` and do not interpret any escape sequences. For convenience, when the opening ``"""`` is immediately followed by a newline, the newline is not included in the string. There are also `raw string literals` that are preceded with the letter ``r`` (or ``R``) and are delimited by matching double quotes (just like ordinary string literals) and do not interpret the escape sequences. This is especially convenient for regular expressions or Windows paths: .. code-block:: nimrod var f = openFile(r"C:\texts\text.txt") # a raw string, so ``\t`` is no tab Literal characters ------------------ Character literals are enclosed in single quotes ``''`` and can contain the same escape sequences as strings - with one exception: ``\n`` is not allowed as it may be wider than one character (often it is the pair CR/LF for example). A character is not an Unicode character but a single byte. The reason for this is efficiency: For the overwhelming majority of use-cases, the resulting programs will still handle UTF-8 properly as UTF-8 was specially designed for this. Another reason is that Nimrod can thus support ``array[char, int]`` or ``set[char]`` efficiently as many algorithms rely on this feature. Numerical constants ------------------- `Numerical constants`:idx: are of a single type and have the form:: hexdigit ::= digit | 'A'..'F' | 'a'..'f' octdigit ::= '0'..'7' bindigit ::= '0'..'1' INT_LIT ::= digit ( ['_'] digit )* | '0' ('x' | 'X' ) hexdigit ( ['_'] hexdigit )* | '0o' octdigit ( ['_'] octdigit )* | '0' ('b' | 'B' ) bindigit ( ['_'] bindigit )* INT8_LIT ::= INT_LIT '\'' ('i' | 'I' ) '8' INT16_LIT ::= INT_LIT '\'' ('i' | 'I' ) '16' INT32_LIT ::= INT_LIT '\'' ('i' | 'I' ) '32' INT64_LIT ::= INT_LIT '\'' ('i' | 'I' ) '64' exponent ::= ('e' | 'E' ) ['+' | '-'] digit ( ['_'] digit )* FLOAT_LIT ::= digit (['_'] digit)* ('.' (['_'] digit)* [exponent] |exponent) FLOAT32_LIT ::= ( FLOAT_LIT | INT_LIT ) '\'' ('f' | 'F') '32' FLOAT64_LIT ::= ( FLOAT_LIT | INT_LIT ) '\'' ('f' | 'F') '64' As can be seen in the productions, numerical constants can contain unterscores for readability. Integer and floating point literals may be given in decimal (no prefix), binary (prefix ``0b``), octal (prefix ``0o``) and hexadecimal (prefix ``0x``) notation. There exists a literal for each numerical type that is defined. The suffix starting with an apostophe ('\'') is called a `type suffix`:idx:. Literals without a type prefix are of the type ``int``, unless the literal contains a dot or an ``E`` in which case it is of type ``float``. The following table specifies type suffixes: ================= ========================= Type Suffix Resulting type of literal ================= ========================= ``'i8`` int8 ``'i16`` int16 ``'i32`` int32 ``'i64`` int64 ``'f32`` float32 ``'f64`` float64 ================= ========================= Floating point literals may also be in binary, octal or hexadecimal notation: ``0B0_10001110100_0000101001000111101011101111111011000101001101001001'f64`` is approximately 1.72826e35 according to the IEEE floating point standard. Other tokens ------------ The following strings denote other tokens:: ( ) { } [ ] , ; [. .] {. .} (. .) : = ^ .. ` `..`:tok: takes precedence over other tokens that contain a dot: `{..}`:tok: are the three tokens `{`:tok:, `..`:tok:, `}`:tok: and not the two tokens `{.`:tok:, `.}`:tok:. In Nimrod one can define his own operators. An `operator`:idx: is any combination of the following characters that are not listed above:: + - * / < > = @ $ ~ & % ! ? ^ . | These keywords are also operators: ``and or not xor shl shr div mod in notin is isnot``. Syntax ====== This section lists Nimrod's standard syntax in ENBF. How the parser receives indentation tokens is already described in the Lexical Analysis section. Nimrod allows user-definable operators. Binary operators have 8 different levels of precedence. For user-defined operators, the precedence depends on the first character the operator consists of. All binary operators are left-associative. ================ ============================================== ================== =============== Precedence level Operators First characters Terminal symbol ================ ============================================== ================== =============== 7 (highest) ``$`` OP7 6 ``* / div mod shl shr %`` ``* % \ /`` OP6 5 ``+ -`` ``+ ~ |`` OP5 4 ``&`` ``&`` OP4 3 ``== <= < >= > != in not_in is isnot`` ``= < > !`` OP3 2 ``and`` OP2 1 ``or xor`` OP1 0 (lowest) ``? @ ^ ` : .`` OP0 ================ ============================================== ================== =============== The grammar's start symbol is ``module``. The grammar is LL(1) and therefore not ambigious. .. include:: grammar.txt :literal: Semantics ========= Constants --------- `Constants`:idx: are symbols which are bound to a value. The constant's value cannot change. The compiler must be able to evaluate the expression in a constant declaration at compile time. .. Nimrod contains a sophisticated compile-time evaluator, so procedures declared with the ``{.noSideEffect.}`` pragma can be used in constant expressions: .. code-block:: nimrod from strutils import findSubStr const x = findSubStr('a', "hallo") # x is 1; this is computed at compile time! Types ----- All expressions have a `type`:idx: which is known at compile time. Nimrod is statically typed. One can declare new types, which is in essence defining an identifier that can be used to denote this custom type. These are the major type classes: * ordinal types (consist of integer, bool, character, enumeration (and subranges thereof) types) * floating point types * string type * structured types * reference (pointer) type * procedural type * generic type Ordinal types ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ `Ordinal types`:idx: have the following characteristics: - Ordinal types are countable and ordered. This property allows the operation of functions as ``Inc``, ``Ord``, ``Dec`` on ordinal types to be defined. - Ordinal values have a smallest possible value. Trying to count further down than the smallest value gives a checked runtime or static error. - Ordinal values have a largest possible value. Trying to count further than the largest value gives a checked runtime or static error. Integers, bool, characters and enumeration types (and subrange of these types) belong to ordinal types. Pre-defined numerical types ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ These integer types are pre-defined: ``int`` the generic signed integer type; its size is platform dependant (the compiler chooses the processor's fastest integer type) this type should be used in general. An integer literal that has no type suffix is of this type. intXX additional signed integer types of XX bits use this naming scheme (example: int16 is a 16 bit wide integer). The current implementation supports ``int8``, ``int16``, ``int32``, ``int64``. Literals of these types have the suffix 'iXX. There are no `unsigned integer`:idx: types, only `unsigned operations`:idx: that treat their arguments as unsigned. Unsigned operations all wrap around; they may not lead to over- or underflow errors. Unsigned operations use the ``%`` postfix as convention: ====================== ====================================================== operation meaning ====================== ====================================================== ``a +% b`` unsigned integer addition ``a -% b`` unsigned integer substraction ``a *% b`` unsigned integer multiplication ``a /% b`` unsigned integer division ``a %% b`` unsigned integer modulo operation ``a <% b`` treat ``a`` and ``b`` as unsigned and compare ``a <=% b`` treat ``a`` and ``b`` as unsigned and compare ``ze(a)`` extends the bits of ``a`` with zeros until it has the width of the ``int`` type ``toU8(a)`` treats ``a`` as unsigned and converts it to an unsigned integer of 8 bits (but still the ``int8`` type) ``toU16(a)`` treats ``a`` as unsigned and converts it to an unsigned integer of 16 bits (but still the ``int16`` type) ``toU32(a)`` treats ``a`` as unsigned and converts it to an unsigned integer of 32 bits (but still the ``int32`` type) ====================== ====================================================== The following floating point types are pre-defined: ``float`` the generic floating point type; its size is platform dependant (the compiler chooses the processor's fastest floating point type) this type should be used in general floatXX an implementation may define additional floating point types of XX bits using this naming scheme (example: float64 is a 64 bit wide float). The current implementation supports ``float32`` and ``float64``. Literals of these types have the suffix 'fXX. `Automatic type conversion`:idx: is performed in expressions where different kinds of integer types are used. However, if the type conversion loses information, the `EOutOfRange`:idx: exception is raised (if the error cannot be detected at compile time). Automatic type conversion in expressions with different kinds of floating point types is performed: The smaller type is converted to the larger. Arithmetic performed on floating point types follows the IEEE standard. Integer types are not converted to floating point types automatically and vice versa. Boolean type ~~~~~~~~~~~~ The `boolean`:idx: type is named ``bool`` in Nimrod and can be one of the two pre-defined values ``true`` and ``false``. Conditions in while, if, elif, when statements need to be of type bool. This condition holds:: ord(false) == 0 and ord(true) == 1 The operators ``not, and, or, xor, <, <=, >, >=, !=, ==`` are defined for the bool type. The ``and`` and ``or`` operators perform short-cut evaluation. Example: .. code-block:: nimrod while p != nil and p.name != "xyz": # p.name is not evaluated if p == nil p = p.next The size of the bool type is one byte. Character type ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The `character type`:idx: is named ``char`` in Nimrod. Its size is one byte. Thus it cannot represent an UTF-8 character, but a part of it. The reason for this is efficiency: For the overwhelming majority of use-cases, the resulting programs will still handle UTF-8 properly as UTF-8 was specially designed for this. Another reason is that Nimrod can support ``array[char, int]`` or ``set[char]`` efficiently as many algorithms rely on this feature. The `TUniChar` type is used for Unicode characters, it can represent any Unicode character. ``TUniChar`` is declared the ``unicode`` standard module. Enumeration types ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ `Enumeration`:idx: types define a new type whose values consist only of the ones specified. The values are ordered by the order in enum's declaration. Example: .. code-block:: nimrod type TDirection = enum north, east, south, west Now the following holds:: ord(north) == 0 ord(east) == 1 ord(south) == 2 ord(west) == 3 Thus, north < east < south < west. The comparison operators can be used with enumeration types. For better interfacing to other programming languages, the fields of enum types can be assigned an explicit ordinal value. However, the ordinal values have to be in ascending order. A field whose ordinal value that is not explicitly given, is assigned the value of the previous field + 1. An explicit ordered enum can have *wholes*: .. code-block:: nimrod type TTokenType = enum a = 2, b = 4, c = 89 # wholes are valid However, it is then not an ordinal anymore, so it is not possible to use these enums as an index type for arrays. The procedures ``inc``, ``dec``, ``succ`` and ``pred`` are not available for them either. Subrange types ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A `subrange`:idx: type is a range of values from an ordinal type (the host type). To define a subrange type, one must specify it's limiting values: the highest and lowest value of the type: .. code-block:: nimrod type TSubrange = range[0..5] ``TSubrange`` is a subrange of an integer which can only hold the values 0 to 5. Assigning any other value to a variable of type ``TSubrange`` is a checked runtime error (or static error if it can be statically determined). Assignments from the base type to one of its subrange types (and vice versa) are allowed. A subrange type has the same size as its base type (``int`` in the example). String type ~~~~~~~~~~~ All string literals are of the type `string`:idx:. A string in Nimrod is very similar to a sequence of characters. However, strings in Nimrod both are zero-terminated and have a length field. One can retrieve the length with the builtin ``len`` procedure; the length never counts the terminating zero. The assignment operator for strings always copies the string. Strings are compared by their lexicographical order. All comparison operators are available. Strings can be indexed like arrays (lower bound is 0). Unlike arrays, they can be used in case statements: .. code-block:: nimrod case paramStr(i) of "-v": incl(options, optVerbose) of "-h", "-?": incl(options, optHelp) else: write(stdout, "invalid command line option!\n") Per convention, all strings are UTF-8 strings, but this is not enforced. For example, when reading strings from binary files, they are merely a sequence of bytes. The index operation ``s[i]`` means the i-th *char* of ``s``, not the i-th *unichar*. The iterator ``unichars`` from the ``unicode`` standard module can be used for iteration over all unicode characters. Structured types ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A variable of a `structured type`:idx: can hold multiple values at the same time. Stuctured types can be nested to unlimited levels. Arrays, sequences, tuples, objects and sets belong to the structured types. Array and sequence types ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ `Arrays`:idx: are a homogenous type, meaning that each element in the array has the same type. Arrays always have a fixed length which is specified at compile time (except for open arrays). They can be indexed by any ordinal type. A parameter ``A`` may be an *open array*, in which case it is indexed by integers from 0 to ``len(A)-1``. An array expression may be constructed by the array constructor ``[]``. `Sequences`:idx: are similar to arrays but of dynamic length which may change during runtime (like strings). A sequence ``S`` is always indexed by integers from 0 to ``len(S)-1`` and its bounds are checked. Sequences can be constructed by the array constructor ``[]`` in conjunction with the array to sequence operator ``@``. Another way to allocate space for a sequence is to call the built-in ``newSeq`` procedure. A sequence may be passed to a parameter that is of type *open array*, but not to a multi-dimensional open array, because it is impossible to do so in an efficient manner. Example: .. code-block:: nimrod type TIntArray = array[0..5, int] # an array that is indexed with 0..5 TIntSeq = seq[int] # a sequence of integers var x: TIntArray y: TIntSeq x = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] # [] this is the array constructor y = @[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] # the @ turns the array into a sequence The lower bound of an array or sequence may be received by the built-in proc ``low()``, the higher bound by ``high()``. The length may be received by ``len()``. ``low()`` for a sequence or an open array always returns 0, as this is the first valid index. The notation ``x[i]`` can be used to access the i-th element of ``x``. Arrays are always bounds checked (at compile-time or at runtime). These checks can be disabled via pragmas or invoking the compiler with the ``--bound_checks:off`` command line switch. Tuples and object types ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A variable of a `tuple`:idx: or `object`:idx: type is a heterogenous storage container. A tuple or object defines various named *fields* of a type. A tuple also defines an *order* of the fields. Tuples are meant for heterogenous storage types with no overhead and few abstraction possibilities. The constructor ``()`` can be used to construct tuples. The order of the fields in the constructor must match the order of the tuple's definition. Different tuple-types are *equivalent* if they specify the same fields of the same type in the same order. The assignment operator for tuples copies each component. The default assignment operator for objects copies each component. Overloading of the assignment operator for objects is not possible, but this may change in future versions of the compiler. .. code-block:: nimrod type TPerson = tuple[name: string, age: int] # type representing a person # a person consists of a name # and an age var person: TPerson person = (name: "Peter", age: 30) # the same, but less readable: person = ("Peter", 30) The implementation aligns the fields for best access performance. The alignment is compatible with the way the C compiler does it. Objects provide many features that tuples do not. Object provide inheritance and information hiding. Objects have access to their type at runtime, so that the ``is`` operator can be used to determine the object's type. .. code-block:: nimrod type TPerson = object name*: string # the * means that `name` is accessible from other modules age: int # no * means that the field is hidden TStudent = object of TPerson # a student is a person id: int # with an id field var student: TStudent person: TPerson assert(student is TStudent) # is true Object fields that should be visible outside from the defining module, have to marked by ``*``. In contrast to tuples, different object types are never *equivalent*. Object variants ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Often an object hierarchy is overkill in certain situations where simple `variant`:idx: types are needed. An example: .. code-block:: nimrod # This is an example how an abstract syntax tree could be modelled in Nimrod type TNodeKind = enum # the different node types nkInt, # a leaf with an integer value nkFloat, # a leaf with a float value nkString, # a leaf with a string value nkAdd, # an addition nkSub, # a subtraction nkIf # an if statement PNode = ref TNode TNode = object case kind: TNodeKind # the ``kind`` field is the discriminator of nkInt: intVal: int of nkFloat: floavVal: float of nkString: strVal: string of nkAdd, nkSub: leftOp, rightOp: PNode of nkIf: condition, thenPart, elsePart: PNode var n: PNode new(n) # creates a new node n.kind = nkFloat n.floatVal = 0.0 # valid, because ``n.kind==nkFloat``, so that it fits # the following statement raises an `EInvalidField` exception, because # n.kind's value does not fit: n.strVal = "" As can been seen from the example, an advantage to an object hierarchy is that no casting between different object types is needed. Yet, access to invalid object fields raises an exception. Set type ~~~~~~~~ The `set type`:idx: models the mathematical notion of a set. The set's basetype can only be an ordinal type. The reason is that sets are implemented as high performance bit vectors. Sets can be constructed via the set constructor: ``{}`` is the empty set. The empty set is type combatible with any special set type. The constructor can also be used to include elements (and ranges of elements) in the set: .. code-block:: nimrod {'a'..'z', '0'..'9'} # This constructs a set that conains the # letters from 'a' to 'z' and the digits # from '0' to '9' These operations are supported by sets: ================== ======================================================== operation meaning ================== ======================================================== ``A + B`` union of two sets ``A * B`` intersection of two sets ``A - B`` difference of two sets (A without B's elements) ``A == B`` set equality ``A <= B`` subset relation (A is subset of B or equal to B) ``A < B`` strong subset relation (A is a real subset of B) ``e in A`` set membership (A contains element e) ``A -+- B`` symmetric set difference (= (A - B) + (B - A)) ``card(A)`` the cardinality of A (number of elements in A) ``incl(A, elem)`` same as A = A + {elem} ``excl(A, elem)`` same as A = A - {elem} ================== ======================================================== Reference and pointer types ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ References (similiar to `pointers`:idx: in other programming languages) are a way to introduce many-to-one relationships. This means different references can point to and modify the same location in memory. Nimrod distinguishes between `traced`:idx: and `untraced`:idx: references. Untraced references are also called *pointers*. Traced references point to objects of a garbage collected heap, untraced references point to manually allocated objects or to objects somewhere else in memory. Thus untraced references are *unsafe*. However for certain low-level operations (accessing the hardware) untraced references are unavoidable. Traced references are declared with the **ref** keyword, untraced references are declared with the **ptr** keyword. The ``^`` operator can be used to derefer a reference, the ``addr`` procedure returns the address of an item. An address is always an untraced reference. Thus the usage of ``addr`` is an *unsafe* feature. The ``.`` (access a tuple/object field operator) and ``[]`` (array/string/sequence index operator) operators perform implicit dereferencing operations for reference types: .. code-block:: nimrod type PNode = ref TNode TNode = object le, ri: PNode data: int var n: PNode new(n) n.data = 9 # no need to write n^ .data To allocate a new traced object, the built-in procedure ``new`` has to be used. To deal with untraced memory, the procedures ``alloc``, ``dealloc`` and ``realloc`` can be used. The documentation of the system module contains further information. If a reference points to *nothing*, it has the value ``nil``. Special care has to be taken if an untraced object contains traced objects like traced references, strings or sequences: In order to free everything properly, the built-in procedure ``GCunref`` has to be called before freeing the untraced memory manually! .. XXX finalizers for traced objects Procedural type ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A `procedural type`:idx: is internally a pointer to a procedure. ``nil`` is an allowed value for variables of a procedural type. Nimrod uses procedural types to achieve `functional`:idx: programming techniques. Dynamic dispatch for OOP constructs can also be implemented with procedural types. Example: .. code-block:: nimrod type TCallback = proc (x: int) {.cdecl.} proc printItem(x: Int) = ... proc forEach(c: TCallback) = ... forEach(printItem) # this will NOT work because calling conventions differ A subtle issue with procedural types is that the calling convention of the procedure influences the type compability: Procedural types are only compatible if they have the same calling convention. Nimrod supports these `calling conventions`:idx:, which are all incompatible to each other: `stdcall`:idx: This the stdcall convention as specified by Microsoft. The generated C procedure is declared with the ``__stdcall`` keyword. `cdecl`:idx: The cdecl convention means that a procedure shall use the same convention as the C compiler. Under windows the generated C procedure is declared with the ``__cdecl`` keyword. `safecall`:idx: This is the safecall convention as specified by Microsoft. The generated C procedure is declared with the ``__safecall`` keyword. The word *safe* refers to the fact that all hardware registers shall be pushed to the hardware stack. `inline`:idx: The inline convention means the the caller should not call the procedure, but inline its code directly. Note that Nimrod does not inline, but leaves this to the C compiler. Thus it generates ``__inline`` procedures. This is only a hint for the compiler: It may completely ignore it and it may inline procedures that are not marked as ``inline``. `fastcall`:idx: Fastcall means different things to different C compilers. One gets whatever the C ``__fastcall`` means. `nimcall`:idx: Nimcall is the default convention used for Nimrod procedures. It is the same as ``fastcall``, but only for C compilers that support ``fastcall``. `closure`:idx: indicates that the procedure expects a context, a closure that needs to be passed to the procedure. The implementation is the same as ``cdecl``, but with a hidden pointer parameter (the *closure*). The hidden parameter is always the last one. `syscall`:idx: The syscall convention is the same as ``__syscall`` in C. It is used for interrupts. `noconv`:idx: The generated C code will not have any explicit calling convention and thus use the C compiler's default calling convention. This is needed because Nimrod's default calling convention for procedures is ``fastcall`` to improve speed. This is unlikely to be needed by the user. Most calling conventions exist only for the Windows 32-bit platform. Statements ---------- Nimrod uses the common statement/expression paradigma: `Statements`:idx: do not produce a value in contrast to expressions. Call expressions are statements. If the called procedure returns a value, it is not a valid statement as statements do not produce values. To evaluate an expression for side-effects and throwing its value away, one can use the ``discard`` statement. Statements are separated into `simple statements`:idx: and `complex statements`:idx:. Simple statements are statements that cannot contain other statements like assignments, calls or the ``return`` statement; complex statements can contain other statements. To avoid the `dangling else problem`:idx:, complex statements always have to be intended:: simpleStmt ::= returnStmt | yieldStmt | discardStmt | raiseStmt | breakStmt | continueStmt | pragma | importStmt | fromStmt | includeStmt | exprStmt complexStmt ::= ifStmt | whileStmt | caseStmt | tryStmt | forStmt | blockStmt | asmStmt | procDecl | iteratorDecl | macroDecl | templateDecl | constSection | typeSection | whenStmt | varSection Discard statement ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Syntax:: discardStmt ::= DISCARD expr Example: .. code-block:: nimrod discard proc_call("arg1", "arg2") # discard the return value of `proc_call` The `discard`:idx: statement evaluates its expression for side-effects and throws the expression's resulting value away. If the expression has no side-effects, this generates a static error. Ignoring the return value of a procedure without using a discard statement is not allowed. Var statement ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Syntax:: colonOrEquals ::= COLON typeDesc [EQUALS expr] | EQUALS expr varField ::= symbol ["*"] [pragma] varPart ::= symbol (comma symbol)* [comma] colonOrEquals [COMMENT | IND COMMENT] varSection ::= VAR (varPart | indPush (COMMENT|varPart) (SAD (COMMENT|varPart))* DED) `Var`:idx: statements declare new local and global variables and initialize them. A comma seperated list of variables can be used to specify variables of the same type: .. code-block:: nimrod var a: int = 0 x, y, z: int If an initializer is given the type can be omitted: The variable is of the same type as the initializing expression. Variables are always initialized with a default value if there is no initializing expression. The default value depends on the type and is always a zero in binary. ============================ ============================================== Type default value ============================ ============================================== any integer type 0 any float 0.0 char '\0' bool false ref or pointer type nil procedural type nil sequence nil string nil (**not** "") tuple[x: A, y: B, ...] (default(A), default(B), ...) (analogous for objects) array[0..., T] [default(T), ...] range[T] default(T); this may be out of the valid range T = enum cast[T](0); this may be an invalid value ============================ ============================================== Const section ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Syntax:: colonAndEquals ::= [COLON typeDesc] EQUALS expr constDecl ::= CONST indPush symbol ["*"] [pragma] colonAndEquals (SAD symbol ["*"] [pragma] colonAndEquals)* DED Example: .. code-block:: nimrod const MyFilename = "/home/my/file.txt" debugMode: bool = false The `const`:idx: section declares symbolic constants. A symbolic constant is a name for a constant expression. Symbolic constants only allow read-access. If statement ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Syntax:: ifStmt ::= IF expr COLON stmt (ELIF expr COLON stmt)* [ELSE COLON stmt] Example: .. code-block:: nimrod var name = readLine(stdin) if name == "Andreas": echo("What a nice name!") elif name == "": echo("Don't you have a name?") else: echo("Boring name...") The `if`:idx: statement is a simple way to make a branch in the control flow: The expression after the keyword ``if`` is evaluated, if it is true the corresponding statements after the ``:`` are executed. Otherwise the expression after the ``elif`` is evaluated (if there is an ``elif`` branch), if it is true the corresponding statements after the ``:`` are executed. This goes on until the last ``elif``. If all conditions fail, the ``else`` part is executed. If there is no ``else`` part, execution continues with the statement after the ``if`` statement. Case statement ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Syntax:: caseStmt ::= CASE expr (OF sliceList COLON stmt)* (ELIF expr COLON stmt)* [ELSE COLON stmt] Example: .. code-block:: nimrod case readline(stdin) of "delete-everything", "restart-computer": echo("permission denied") of "go-for-a-walk": echo("please yourself") else: echo("unknown command") The `case`:idx: statement is similar to the if statement, but it represents a multi-branch selection. The expression after the keyword ``case`` is evaluated and if its value is in a *vallist* the corresponding statements (after the ``of`` keyword) are executed. If the value is not in any given *slicelist* the ``else`` part is executed. If there is no ``else`` part and not all possible values that ``expr`` can hold occur in a ``vallist``, a static error is given. This holds only for expressions of ordinal types. If the expression is not of an ordinal type, and no ``else`` part is given, control just passes after the ``case`` statement. To suppress the static error in the ordinal case the programmer needs to write an ``else`` part with a ``nil`` statement. When statement ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Syntax:: whenStmt ::= WHEN expr COLON stmt (ELIF expr COLON stmt)* [ELSE COLON stmt] Example: .. code-block:: nimrod when sizeof(int) == 2: echo("running on a 16 bit system!") elif sizeof(int) == 4: echo("running on a 32 bit system!") elif sizeof(int) == 8: echo("running on a 64 bit system!") else: echo("cannot happen!") The `when`:idx: statement is almost identical to the ``if`` statement with some exceptions: * Each ``expr`` has to be a constant expression (of type ``bool``). * The statements do not open a new scope if they introduce new identifiers. * The statements that belong to the expression that evaluated to true are translated by the compiler, the other statements are not checked for syntax or semantics at all! This holds also for any ``expr`` coming after the expression that evaluated to true. The ``when`` statement enables conditional compilation techniques. As a special syntatic extension, the ``when`` construct is also available within ``object`` definitions. Raise statement ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Syntax:: raiseStmt ::= RAISE [expr] Example: .. code-block:: nimrod raise newEOS("operating system failed") Apart from built-in operations like array indexing, memory allocation, etc. the ``raise`` statement is the only way to raise an exception. .. XXX document this better! If no exception name is given, the current exception is `re-raised`:idx:. The `ENoExceptionToReraise`:idx: exception is raised if there is no exception to re-raise. It follows that the ``raise`` statement *always* raises an exception. Try statement ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Syntax:: exceptList ::= [qualifiedIdent (comma qualifiedIdent)* [comma]] tryStmt ::= TRY COLON stmt (EXCEPT exceptList COLON stmt)* [FINALLY COLON stmt] Example: .. code-block:: nimrod # read the first two lines of a text file that should contain numbers # and tries to add them var f: TFile if openFile(f, "numbers.txt"): try: var a = readLine(f) var b = readLine(f) echo("sum: " & $(parseInt(a) + parseInt(b))) except EOverflow: echo("overflow!") except EInvalidValue: echo("could not convert string to integer") except EIO: echo("IO error!") finally: closeFile(f) The statements after the `try`:idx: are executed in sequential order unless an exception ``e`` is raised. If the exception type of ``e`` matches any of the list ``exceptlist`` the corresponding statements are executed. The statements following the ``except`` clauses are called `exception handlers`:idx:. The empty `except`:idx: clause is executed if there is an exception that is in no list. It is similiar to an ``else`` clause in ``if`` statements. If there is a `finally`:idx: clause, it is always executed after the exception handlers. The exception is *consumed* in an exception handler. However, an exception handler may raise another exception. If the exception is not handled, it is propagated through the call stack. This means that often the rest of the procedure - that is not within a ``finally`` clause - is not executed (if an exception occurs). Return statement ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Syntax:: returnStmt ::= RETURN [expr] Example: .. code-block:: nimrod return 40+2 The `return`:idx: statement ends the execution of the current procedure. It is only allowed in procedures. If there is an ``expr``, this is syntactic sugar for: .. code-block:: nimrod result = expr return result ``return`` without an expression is a short notation for ``return result`` if the proc has a return type. The `result`:idx: variable is always the return value of the procedure. It is automatically declared by the compiler. As all variables, ``result`` is initialized to (binary) zero:: .. code-block:: nimrod proc returnZero(): int = nil # implicitely returns 0 Yield statement ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Syntax:: yieldStmt ::= YIELD expr Example: .. code-block:: nimrod yield (1, 2, 3) The `yield`:idx: statement is used instead of the ``return`` statement in iterators. It is only valid in iterators. Execution is returned to the body of the for loop that called the iterator. Yield does not end the iteration process, but execution is passed back to the iterator if the next iteration starts. See the section about iterators (`Iterators and the for statement`_) for further information. Block statement ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Syntax:: blockStmt ::= BLOCK [symbol] COLON stmt Example: .. code-block:: nimrod var found = false block myblock: for i in 0..3: for j in 0..3: if a[j][i] == 7: found = true break myblock # leave the block, in this case both for-loops echo(found) The block statement is a means to group statements to a (named) `block`:idx:. Inside the block, the ``break`` statement is allowed to leave the block immediately. A ``break`` statement can contain a name of a surrounding block to specify which block is to leave. Break statement ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Syntax:: breakStmt ::= BREAK [symbol] Example: .. code-block:: nimrod break The `break`:idx: statement is used to leave a block immediately. If ``symbol`` is given, it is the name of the enclosing block that is to leave. If it is absent, the innermost block is left. While statement ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Syntax:: whileStmt ::= WHILE expr COLON stmt Example: .. code-block:: nimrod echo("Please tell me your password: \n") var pw = readLine(stdin) while pw != "12345": echo("Wrong password! Next try: \n") pw = readLine(stdin) The `while`:idx: statement is executed until the ``expr`` evaluates to false. Endless loops are no error. ``while`` statements open an `implicit block`, so that they can be leaved with a ``break`` statement. Continue statement ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Syntax:: continueStmt ::= CONTINUE A `continue`:idx: statement leads to the immediate next iteration of the surrounding loop construct. It is only allowed within a loop. A continue statement is syntactic sugar for a nested block: .. code-block:: nimrod while expr1: stmt1 continue stmt2 # is equivalent to: while expr1: block myBlockName: stmt1 break myBlockName stmt2 Assembler statement ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Syntax:: asmStmt ::= ASM [pragma] (STR_LIT | RSTR_LIT | TRIPLESTR_LIT) The direct embedding of `assembler`:idx: code into Nimrod code is supported by the unsafe ``asm`` statement. Identifiers in the assembler code that refer to Nimrod identifiers shall be enclosed in a special character which can be specified in the statement's pragmas. The default special character is ``'`'``. Procedures ~~~~~~~~~~ What most programming languages call `methods`:idx: or `funtions`:idx: are called `procedures`:idx: in Nimrod (which is the correct terminology). A procedure declaration defines an identifier and associates it with a block of code. A procedure may call itself recursively. The syntax is:: param ::= symbol (comma symbol)* [comma] COLON typeDesc paramList ::= [PAR_LE [param (comma param)* [comma]] PAR_RI] [COLON typeDesc] genericParams ::= BRACKET_LE (symbol [EQUALS typeDesc] )* BRACKET_RI procDecl ::= PROC symbol ["*"] [genericParams] paramList [pragma] [EQUALS stmt] If the ``EQUALS stmt`` part is missing, it is a `forward`:idx: declaration. If the proc returns a value, the procedure body can access an implicit declared variable named `result`:idx: that represents the return value. Procs can be overloaded. The overloading resolution algorithm tries to find the proc that is the best match for the arguments. A parameter may be given a default value that is used if the caller does not provide a value for this parameter. Example: .. code-block:: nimrod proc toLower(c: Char): Char = # toLower for characters if c in {'A'..'Z'}: result = chr(ord(c) + (ord('a') - ord('A'))) else: result = c proc toLower(s: string): string = # toLower for strings result = newString(len(s)) for i in 0..len(s) - 1: result[i] = toLower(s[i]) # calls toLower for characters; no recursion! `Operators`:idx: are procedures with a special operator symbol as identifier: .. code-block:: nimrod proc `$` (x: int): string = # converts an integer to a string; this is a prefix operator. return intToStr(x) Calling a procedure can be done in many different ways: .. code-block:: nimrod proc callme(x, y: int, s: string = "", c: char, b: bool = false) = ... # call with positional arguments# parameter bindings: callme(0, 1, "abc", '\t', true) # (x=0, y=1, s="abc", c='\t', b=true) # call with named and positional arguments: callme(y=1, x=0, "abd", '\t') # (x=0, y=1, s="abd", c='\t', b=false) # call with named arguments (order is not relevant): callme(c='\t', y=1, x=0) # (x=0, y=1, s="", c='\t', b=false) # call as a command statement: no () needed: callme 0, 1, "abc", '\t' Iterators and the for statement ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Syntax:: forStmt ::= FOR symbol (comma symbol)* [comma] IN expr [DOTDOT expr] COLON stmt param ::= symbol (comma symbol)* [comma] COLON typeDesc paramList ::= [PAR_LE [param (comma param)* [comma]] PAR_RI] [COLON typeDesc] genericParams ::= BRACKET_LE (symbol [EQUALS typeDesc] )* BRACKET_RI iteratorDecl ::= ITERATOR symbol ["*"] [genericParams] paramList [pragma] [EQUALS stmt] The `for`:idx: statement is an abstract mechanism to iterate over the elements of a container. It relies on an `iterator`:idx: to do so. Like ``while`` statements, ``for`` statements open an `implicit block`:idx:, so that they can be leaved with a ``break`` statement. The ``for`` loop declares iteration variables (``x`` in the example) - their scope reaches until the end of the loop body. The iteration variables' types are inferred by the return type of the iterator. An iterator is similar to a procedure, except that it is always called in the context of a ``for`` loop. Iterators provide a way to specify the iteration over an abstract type. A key role in the execution of a ``for`` loop plays the ``yield`` statement in the called iterator. Whenever a ``yield`` statement is reached the data is bound to the ``for`` loop variables and control continues in the body of the ``for`` loop. The iterator's local variables and execution state are automatically saved between calls. Example: .. code-block:: nimrod # this definition exists in the system module iterator items*(a: string): char {.inline.} = var i = 0 while i < len(a): yield a[i] inc(i) for ch in items("hello world"): # `ch` is an iteration variable echo(ch) The compiler generates code as if the programmer would have written this: .. code-block:: nimrod var i = 0 while i < len(a): var ch = a[i] echo(ch) inc(i) The current implementation always inlines the iterator code leading to zero overhead for the abstraction. But this may increase the code size. Later versions of the compiler will only inline iterators which have the calling convention ``inline``. If the iterator yields a tuple, there have to be as many iteration variables as there are components in the tuple. The i'th iteration variable's type is the one of the i'th component. Type sections ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Syntax:: typeDef ::= typeDesc | objectDef | enumDef genericParams ::= BRACKET_LE (symbol [EQUALS typeDesc] )* BRACKET_RI typeDecl ::= TYPE indPush symbol ["*"] [genericParams] [EQUALS typeDef] (SAD symbol ["*"] [genericParams] [EQUALS typeDef])* DED Example: .. code-block:: nimrod type # example demonstrates mutually recursive types PNode = ref TNode # a traced pointer to a TNode TNode = object le, ri: PNode # left and right subtrees sym: ref TSym # leaves contain a reference to a TSym TSym = object # a symbol name: string # the symbol's name line: int # the line the symbol was declared in code: PNode # the symbol's abstract syntax tree A `type`:idx: section begins with the ``type`` keyword. It contains multiple type definitions. A type definition binds a type to a name. Type definitions can be recursive or even mutually recursive. Mutually recursive types are only possible within a single ``type`` section. Generics ~~~~~~~~ Example: .. code-block:: nimrod type TBinaryTree[T] = object # TBinaryTree is a generic type with # with generic param ``T`` le, ri: ref TBinaryTree[T] # left and right subtrees; may be nil data: T # the data stored in a node PBinaryTree[T] = ref TBinaryTree[T] # a shorthand for notational convenience proc newNode[T](data: T): PBinaryTree[T] = # constructor for a node new(result) result.dat = data proc add[T](root: var PBinaryTree[T], n: PBinaryTree[T]) = if root == nil: root = n else: var it = root while it != nil: var c = cmp(it.data, n.data) # compare the data items; uses # the generic ``cmd`` proc that works for # any type that has a ``==`` and ``<`` # operator if c < 0: if it.le == nil: it.le = n return it = it.le else: if it.ri == nil: it.ri = n return it = it.ri iterator inorder[T](root: PBinaryTree[T]): T = # inorder traversal of a binary tree # recursive iterators are not yet implemented, so this does not work in # the current compiler! if root.le != nil: yield inorder(root.le) yield root.data if root.ri != nil: yield inorder(root.ri) var root: PBinaryTree[string] # instantiate a PBinaryTree with the type string add(root, newNode("hallo")) # instantiates generic procs ``newNode`` and add(root, newNode("world")) # ``add`` for str in inorder(root): writeln(stdout, str) `Generics`:idx: are Nimrod's means to parametrize procs, iterators or types with `type parameters`:idx:. Depending on context, the brackets are used either to introduce type parameters or to instantiate a generic proc, iterator or type. Templates ~~~~~~~~~ A `template`:idx: is a simple form of a macro. It operates on parse trees and is processed in the semantic pass of the compiler. So they integrate well with the rest of the language and share none of C's preprocessor macros flaws. However, they may lead to code that is harder to understand and maintain. So one ought to use them sparingly. The usage of ordinary procs, iterators or generics is preferred to the usage of templates. Example: .. code-block:: nimrod template `!=` (a, b: expr): expr = # this definition exists in the System module not (a == b) writeln(5 != 6) # the compiler rewrites that to: writeln(not (5 == 6)) Macros ~~~~~~ `Macros`:idx: are the most powerful feature of Nimrod. They should be used only to implement `domain specific languages`:idx:. They may lead to code that is harder to understand and maintain. So one ought to use them sparingly. The usage of ordinary procs, iterators or generics is preferred to the usage of macros. Modules ------- Nimrod supports splitting a program into pieces by a `module`:idx: concept. Each module needs to be in its own file. Modules enable `information hiding`:idx: and `separate compilation`:idx:. A module may gain access to symbols of another module by the `import`:idx: statement. `Recursive module dependancies`:idx: are allowed, but slightly subtle. Only top-level symbols that are marked with an asterisk (``*``) are exported. The algorithm for compiling modules is: - Compile the whole module as usual, following import statements recursively - if there is a cycle only import the already parsed symbols (that are exported); if an unknown identifier occurs then abort This is best illustrated by an example: .. code-block:: nimrod # Module A type T1* = int # Module A exports the type ``T1`` import B # the compiler starts parsing B proc main() = var i = p(3) # works because B has been parsed completely here main() # Module B import A # A is not parsed here! Only the already known symbols # of A are imported here. proc p*(x: A.T1): A.T1 # this works because the compiler has already # added T1 to A's interface symbol table proc p(x: A.T1): A.T1 = return x + 1 Scope rules ----------- Identifiers are valid from the point of their declaration until the end of the block in which the declaration occurred. The range where the identifier is known is the `scope`:idx: of the identifier. The exact scope of an identifier depends on the way it was declared. Block scope ~~~~~~~~~~~ The *scope* of a variable declared in the declaration part of a block is valid from the point of declaration until the end of the block. If a block contains a second block, in which the identifier is redeclared, then inside this block, the second declaration will be valid. Upon leaving the inner block, the first declaration is valid again. An identifier cannot be redefined in the same block, except if valid for procedure or iterator overloading purposes. Tuple or object scope ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The field identifiers inside a tuple or object definition are valid in the following places: * To the end of the tuple/object definition * Field designators of a variable of the given tuple/object type. * In all descendent types of the object type. Module scope ~~~~~~~~~~~~ All identifiers in the interface part of a module are valid from the point of declaration, until the end of the module. Furthermore, the identifiers are known in other modules that import the module. Identifiers from indirectly dependent modules are *not* available. The `system`:idx: module is automatically imported in all other modules. If a module imports an identifier by two different modules, each occurance of the identifier has to be qualified, unless it is an overloaded procedure or iterator in which case the overloading resolution takes place: .. code-block:: nimrod # Module A var x*: string # Module B var x*: int # Module C import A, B write(stdout, x) # error: x is ambigious write(sdtout, A.x) # no error: qualifier used var x = 4 write(stdout, x) # not ambigious: uses the module C's x Messages ======== The Nimrod compiler emits different kinds of messages: `hint`:idx:, `warning`:idx:, and `error`:idx: messages. An *error* message is emitted if the compiler encounters any static error. Pragmas ======= Syntax:: colonExpr ::= expr [COLON expr] colonExprList ::= [ colonExpr (comma colonExpr)* [comma] ] pragma ::= CURLYDOT_LE colonExprList (CURLYDOT_RI | CURLY_RI) Pragmas are Nimrod's method to give the compiler additional information/ commands without introducing a massive number of new keywords. Pragmas are processed on the fly during parsing. Pragmas are always enclosed in the special ``{.`` and ``.}`` curly brackets. define pragma ------------- The `define`:idx: pragma defines a conditional symbol. This symbol may only be used in other pragmas and in the ``defined`` expression and not in ordinary Nimrod source code. The conditional symbols go into a special symbol table. The compiler defines the target processor and the target operating system as conditional symbols. Warning: The ``define`` pragma is deprecated as it conflicts with separate compilation! One should use boolean constants as a replacement - this is cleaner anyway. undef pragma ------------ The `undef`:idx: pragma the counterpart to the define pragma. It undefines a conditional symbol. Warning: The ``undef`` pragma is deprecated as it conflicts with separate compilation! error pragma ------------ The `error`:idx: pragma is used to make the compiler output an error message with the given content. Compilation currently aborts after an error, but this may be changed in later versions. fatal pragma ------------ The `fatal`:idx: pragma is used to make the compiler output an error message with the given content. In contrast to the ``error`` pragma, compilation is guaranteed to be aborted by this pragma. warning pragma -------------- The `warning`:idx: pragma is used to make the compiler output a warning message with the given content. Compilation continues after the warning. hint pragma ----------- The `hint`:idx: pragma is used to make the compiler output a hint message with the given content. Compilation continues after the hint. compilation option pragmas -------------------------- The listed pragmas here can be used to override the code generation options for a section of code. :: "{." pragma: val {pragma: val} ".}" The implementation currently provides the following possible options (later various others may be added). =============== =============== ============================================ pragma allowed values description =============== =============== ============================================ checks on|off Turns the code generation for all runtime checks on or off. bound_checks on|off Turns the code generation for array bound checks on or off. overflow_checks on|off Turns the code generation for over- or underflow checks on or off. nil_checks on|off Turns the code generation for nil pointer checks on or off. assertions on|off Turns the code generation for assertions on or off. warnings on|off Turns the warning messages of the compiler on or off. hints on|off Turns the hint messages of the compiler on or off. optimization none|speed|size Optimize the code for speed or size, or disable optimization. For non-optimizing compilers this option has no effect. callconv cdecl|... Specifies the default calling convention for all procedures (and procedure types) that follow. =============== =============== ============================================ Example: .. code-block:: nimrod {.checks: off, optimization: speed.} # compile without runtime checks and optimize for speed push and pop pragmas -------------------- The `push/pop`:idx: pragmas are very similar to the option directive, but are used to override the settings temporarily. Example: .. code-block:: nimrod {.push checks: off.} # compile this section without runtime checks as it is # speed critical # ... some code ... {.pop.} # restore old settings