| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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I'm now running valgrind on my Linux server rather than my Mac laptop.
Little less convenient; let's see how it goes.
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Make it easy to skip distracting valgrind errors when debugging more
obvious errors in early layers. Just throw a 'test' at the end of
build_and_test_until commands to not run valgrind (and make it a regular
test run).
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No, 2001 is no good. Phony targets can't early-exit if everything's
built. New approach:
$ CFLAGS=-g make && ./mu test
etc.
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Region to click on to edit is now reduced to just the menu bar for the
sandbox (excluding the 'x' for deleting the sandbox). The symmetry there
might be useful, but we'll see if the relative click area is
in line with how commonly the actions are performed.
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Only core layers currently passing. Console apps are probably still
broken.
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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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