| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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In the process I've uncover a couple of situations we don't support type
abbreviations yet. They're next.
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Now that we no longer have non-shared addresses, we can just always
track refcounts for all addresses.
Phew!
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Phew!
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I'm dropping all mention of 'recipe' terminology from the Readme. That
way I hope to avoid further bike-shedding discussions while I very
slowly decide on the right terminology with my students.
I could be smarter in my error messages and use 'recipe' when code uses
it and 'function' otherwise. But what about other words like ingredient?
It would all add complexity that I'm not yet sure is worthwhile. But I
do want separate experiences for veteran programmers reading about Mu on
github and for people learning programming using Mu.
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Thanks Nicolas Léveillé for running up against this bug:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=11094837
(Also noticed and fixed several subsidiary issues. This whole aspect
doesn't seem fully baked yet.)
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Moving back to wrapped line was overflowing the right margin.
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This is the one major refinement on the C programming model I'm planning
to introduce in mu. Instead of Rust's menagerie of pointer types and
static checking, I want to introduce just one new type, and use it to
perform ref-counting at runtime.
So far all we're doing is updating new's interface. The actual
ref-counting implementation is next.
One implication: I might sometimes need duplicate implementations for a
recipe with allocated vs vanilla addresses of the same type. So far it
seems I can get away with just always passing in allocated addresses;
the situations when you want to pass an unallocated address to a recipe
should be few and far between.
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Still can't print non-integer numbers, so this is a bit hacky.
The big consequence is that you can't print literal characters anymore
because of our rules about how we pick which variant to statically
dispatch to. You have to save to a character variable first.
Maybe I can add an annotation to literals..
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Now I complain before running if a call somewhere doesn't line up with
its ingredients, or if no specialization can be made to match it.
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Great that it just worked after the previous commit.
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Thanks Caleb Couch. This one's been on my list for 2 weeks.
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Fix that stray issue with a better phase ordering.
Another thing I'm not testing.
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One nice consequence of all my deduction of reply ingredients is that I
can insert the same fragment into recipes with different headers, and
everything works as long as reply instructions are implicitly deduced.
One thing I had to fix to make this work was to move reply-deduction out
of rewrite rules and turn it into a first-class transform, so that it
happens after tangling.
I'm glad to see the back of that hack inside <scroll-down>.
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Now you can bring up the programming environment by saying:
$ mu edit
The files under edit aren't yet *layers*, though, they have a few
dependencies that we need to clean up.
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