| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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At the lowest level I'm reluctantly starting to see the need for errors
that stop the program in its tracks. Only way to avoid memory corruption
and security issues. But beyond that core I still want to be as lenient
as possible at higher levels of abstraction.
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Always show recipe name where error occurred. But don't show internal
'interactive' name for sandboxes, that's just confusing.
What started out as warnings are now ossifying into errors that halt all
execution. Is this how things went with C and Unix as well?
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Front-loads it a bit more than I'd like, but the payoff is that other
recipes will now be able to describe the type checks right next to their
operation.
I'm also introducing a new use of /raw with literals to indicate unsafe
typecasts.
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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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We won't bother supporting names for globals, for now.
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