| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Turns out the default format for printing floating point numbers is
neither 'scientific' nor 'fixed' even though those are the only two
options offered. Reading the C++ standard I found out that the default
(modulo locale changes) is basically the same as the printf "%g" format.
And "%g" is basically the shorter of:
a) %f with trailing zeros trimmed
b) %e
So we'll just do %f and trim trailing zeros.
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Finally terminate the experiment of keeping debug prints around. I'm
also going to give up on maintaining counts.
What we really need is two kinds of tracing:
a) For tests, just the domain-specific facts, organized by labels.
b) For debugging, just transient dumps to stdout.
b) only works if stdout is clean by default.
Hmm, I think this means 'stash' should be the transient kind of trace.
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Traces were changing based on whether I was loading a .mu file with
'main' or not.
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Not strictly necessary, but it might help me stage the introduction of
arrays and 'new'.
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Turns out it is indeed useful to insert code at multiple duplicate
labels within a single (long) recipe. Like handle-keyboard-event in
edit.mu.
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Also, turns out I haven't been building 999spaces.cc in my default
build. Now fixed.
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Very rudimentary ability to read/write from file+version control. No
control over name.
Recipes now saved. But what to do about sandboxes?
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Profiling shows the bulk of time is spent in read_memory, canonize,
absolutize. But I'm not sure how to optimize those places.
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Quick hack for demo at balisp meetup today.
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It comes up pretty early in the codebase, but hopefully won't come up
in the mu level until we get to higher-order recipes. Potentially
intimidating name, but such prime real estate with no confusing
overloadings in other projects!
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Make it possible to check multi-line string literals in the trace.
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More concise traces for literal strings.
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Implement warnings for types without definitions without constraining
where type definitions must appear.
We also eliminate the anti-pattern where a change in layer 10 had its
test in layer 11 (commit 1383).
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Since '3.14159:literal' looks ugly, we'll just say '3.14159'. It's not
like non-integers can be confused for anything but literals.
Once I tried to turn reagent values into doubles, I uncovered a bug:
arithmetic using signed integers is busted; if either operand of
subtraction is unsigned the result is unsigned as well. If it needs to
be negative: ka-boom. It was only masked because I was eventually
storing the result in a long long int, where it was out of range, and so
overflowing into the correct signed value. Once I switched to doubles
the unsigned value would indeed fit without overflowing. Ka-boom.
Yet another reminder that unsigned integers suck. I started using them
mostly to avoid warnings in loops when comparing with .size(), which is
usually a size_t.
Who knows what other crap lurks here. Just use signed integers
everywhere. (And avoid bitwise operators.)
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This bit me in the last commit for the first time.
Layer 010vm.cc is starting to look weird. It has references to stuff
that gets implemented much later, like containers and exclusive
containers. Its helpers are getting an increasing amount of logic. And
it has no tests.
I'm still inclined to think it's useful to have major data structures in
one place, even if they aren't used for a bit. But those helpers should
perhaps move out somehow or get some tests in the same layer.
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..now that we support non-integers.
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This is a far cleaner way to provide *some* floating-point support. We
can only represent signed integers up to 2^51 rather than 2^63. But in
exchange we don't have to worry about it elsewhere, and it's probably
faster than checking tag bits in every operation.
Hmm, yeah, surprised how easy this was. I think I'll give up on the
other approach.
I still don't have non-integer literals. But we won't bother with those
until we need them. `3.14159:literal` seems ugly.
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Useful check:
$ grep "[^ '\"]\[[^\"]" *.cc \
|perl -pwe 's/\Wargv\[|\WTests\[|\Wframe\[|\WMemory\[|\WName\[|\WSurrounding_space\[|\WRecipe\[|\WType\[|\WRecipe_number\[|\WType_number\[|\WBefore_fragments\[|\WAfter_fragments\[//g' \
|perl -pwe 's/\Wargv\[|\WTests\[|\Wframe\[|\WMemory\[|\WName\[|\WSurrounding_space\[|\WRecipe\[|\WType\[|\WRecipe_number\[|\WType_number\[|\WBefore_fragments\[|\WAfter_fragments\[//g' \
|grep '[^ ]\['
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I've tried to update the Readme, but there are at least a couple of issues.
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