| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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This can happen if 'canonize' fails. Make sure it doesn't kill mu.
Thanks Caleb Couch.
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More friendly way to 'stash' stuff in the trace so that you can toggle
lines of code to see their stashed traces.
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Still iterating on the right way to handle incorrect number of
ingredients. My first idea of creating null results doesn't really work
once they're used in later instructions. Just add a warning at one place
in the run loop, but otherwise only add products when there's something
to save in them.
Undoes some work around commit 1886.
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For example:
x:number <- index y:address:array:number, 3
(forgetting to do a lookup)
Thanks Caleb Couch.
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Should be a little bit more mnemonic.
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First step to reducing typing burden. Next step: inferring types.
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Also standardized warnings.
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More verbose, but it saves trouble when debugging; there's never
something you thought should be traced but just never came out the other
end.
Also got rid of fatal errors entirely. Everything's a warning now, and
code after a warning isn't guaranteed to run.
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Things I figured out:
- 'row' in render-screen doesn't perfectly track cursor-row in screen
- proximal cause was forgetting to add left:number to stop-printing
- trying to print to screen outside bounds was silently succeeding and
corrupting simulated memory
- if we silently ignore prints outside bounds things are fine
But why are prints outside screen bounds working? We should be accessing
screen data using 'index', and that's checking its bounds.
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I keep forgetting about it. Until, that is, I run gprof. Even if I think
I need a memory profile, a cpu profile is a pretty good proxy.
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But still no difference in either memory footprint or in running time.
This will teach me -- for the umpteenth time -- to optimize before
measuring.
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Now we can reclaim allocated space. But the API's suspect. I still want
to provide some sort of tree of allocations. For now we'll use this only
to reclaim default-spaces. That's next.
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