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The old approach with '&' and '@' modifiers turned out to be a bad idea
because it introduces notions of precedence. Worse, it turns out you
want different precedence rules at different times as the old test
alluded:
x:@number:3 # we want this to mean (address number 3)
x:address:@number # we want this to mean (address array number)
Instead we'll give up and focus on a single extensible mechanism that
allows us to say this instead:
x:@:number:3
x:address:@:number
In addition it allows us to shorten other types as well:
x:&:@:num
type board = &:@:&:@:char # for tic-tac-toe
Hmm, that last example reminds me that we don't handle abbreviations
inside type abbreviation definitions so far..
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