| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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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 we can collect all traces, just modulating the depth.
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How the heck was this working until now?
There must be redundant moves. And was I clobbering test data?
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Takes the text to render inside the editor on the commandline:
$ ./mu edit/001-editor.mu -- abcdef
Layer 1 has no interactivity. Just shows the text you pass in on the
commandline, wrapping as you would expect. Press any key to exit.
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`render-string` (and `render-code-string`; ugh) should start a new line
after, not before, like everybody else.
I've been meaning to fix this for a long time, but now I have to, to
move the warnings fields out of early layers.
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Starting on making the basic programming environment oblivious to
warnings. That should come later.
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To run just until say layer 6, say this:
$ ./mu test edit/00[0-6]*
The layers are not perfect yet; there might be a few things (like the
warning fields) that need to move to a later layer.
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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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