| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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..unless you explicitly ignore the found? result.
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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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Now we can make use of all the depths from 1 to 99.
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http://250bpm.com/blog:57
Funnily, the new idea I finally came up with in 'read' was already
mirrored above in recipe 'write'.
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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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The recent session makes me weary of deleting comment counts from inside
strings, and the newlines everywhere take up vertical space. Considered
println like pascal/ruby, but I'd like something I can add/remove at the
end of existing prints. So this hack for $print.
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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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Turns out to not affect memory utilization or run-time. At all.
But still looks nicer and requires less fudging on our part.
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But we really should test the top-level integration with
'run-interactive'.
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Just figured out why a first keystroke of backspace was sending me out
for a spin: run_interactive needs all early exits that don't actually
run anything to increment the current_step_index(). FML, this is lousy..
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Doesn't actually work interactively yet; for some reason it prints in
color, enter doesn't work, etc.
It'll be interesting to try to add color and history as separate
'layers' using before/after.
I'll also likely have to delete traces for its tests at some point as
they inevitably explode in size.
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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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Delete comment-out marker from inside mu strings. Have to do this
manually for now.
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..now that we support non-integers.
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I added one test to check that divide can return a float, then hacked at
the rippling failures across the entire entire codebase until all tests
pass. Now I need to look at the changes I made and see if there's a
system to them, identify other places that I missed, and figure out the
best way to cover all cases. I also need to show real rather than
encoded values in the traces, but I can't use value() inside reagent
methods because of the name clash with the member variable. So let's
take a snapshot before we attempt any refactoring. This was non-trivial
to get right.
Even if I convince myself that I've gotten it right, I might back this
all out if I can't easily *persuade others* that I've gotten it right.
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All primitives now always write to all their products. If a product is
not used that's fine, but if an instruction seems to expect too many
products mu will complain.
In the process, many primitives can operate on more than two ingredients
where it seems intuitive. You can add or divide more than two numbers
together, copy or negate multiple corresponding locations, etc.
There's one remaining bit of ugliness. Some instructions like
get/get-address, index/index-address, wait-for-location, these can
unnecessarily load values from memory when they don't need to.
Useful vim commands:
%s/ingredients\[\([^\]]*\)\]/ingredients.at(\1)/gc
%s/products\[\([^\]]*\)\]/products.at(\1)/gc
.,$s/\[\(.\)]/.at(\1)/gc
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I've tried to update the Readme, but there are at least a couple of issues.
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