| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Clean up a few superficial things in Caleb's commit.
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Yet another bugfix, this time in just the sandbox/ app:
open sandbox/ with empty lesson/ directory
type 'a'
press backspace
cursor was not moving left
Now fixed.
Turns out the sandbox/ app hadn't been working right since commit 3854.
(Which ironically was a revert but clearly didn't revert enough; the last
truly good commit was 3823, and we're still clawing our way back to the
sunlight.)
The issue in this case was that commit 3853 disabled update-cursor in some
situations when it shouldn't have. To be safe, just always update-cursor
one very event. I should probably reorganize this in edit/ as well, but
it's not necessary for this particular bug.
---
Incidentally, as part of my git bisecting I realized that the bug fixed
in the trace browser as part of commit 3862 was very old:
press '/'
press some key
press ctrl-u to erase
press some key
= out of bounds string access
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To achieve this we have to switch to a model of the screen in termbox that
is closer to the underlying terminal.
Before:
a screen is a grid of characters
writing out of bounds does nothing
After:
a screen is a scrolling raster of characters
writing out of bounds wraps to next line and scrolls if necessary
To move to the new model, it was essential that I migrate my fake screen
at the same time to mimic it. This is why the first attempt (commit 3824)
failed (commit 3858). This is also why this commit can't be split into
smaller pieces.
The fake screen now 'scrolls' by rotating screen lines from top to bottom.
There's still no notion of a scrollback buffer.
The newer model is richer; it permits repl-like apps that upstream termbox
can't do easily. It also permits us to simply use `printf` or `cout` to
write to the screen, and everything mostly works as you would expect. Exceptions:
a) '\n' won't do what you expect. You need to explicitly print both '\n'
and '\r'.
b) backspace won't do what you expect. It only moves the cursor back,
without erasing the previous character. It does not wrap.
Both behaviors exactly mimic my existing terminal's emulation of vt100.
The catch: it's easy to accidentally scroll in apps. Out-of-bounds prints
didn't matter before, but they're bugs now. To help track them down, use
the `save-top-idx`, `assert-no-scroll` pair of helpers.
An important trick is to wrap the cursor before rather after printing
a character. Otherwise we end up scrolling every time we print to the
bottom-right character. This means that the cursor position can be invalid
at the start of a print, and we need to handle that.
In the process we also lose the ability to hide and show the screen. We
have to show the prints happening. Seems apt for a "white-box" platform
like Mu.
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Bugfix on commit 3853: clear `render-all-on-no-more-events` once you've
actually run the `render-all`.
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Revert commits 3824, 3850 and 3852. We'll redo them more carefully.
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Bring back commit 3844, albeit in simplified form. I'd forgotten that the
one place where we still need to buffer rendering is when people hold down
up/down arrow keys.
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Bugfix of commit 3850 for the sandbox/ app. I'd hoped to just quickly move
past this ugly approach, but a cleaner way is more involved than I thought.
This way is ugly partly because I'm introducing a bunch of conditionals
without testing them. One or more of my additions may well be hiding bugs.
Or I may need to add them in a few other places.
The clean way is to update the fake screen model to accurately mimic the
new real screen, where out of bounds prints aren't silently ignored, and
where scrolling is a fact of life.
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Once I start optimizing most events to not repaint everything there's no
need to be smart about queued-up events.
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Fix CI.
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Now it's much more apparent why things are slow. You can see each repaint
happening. Already I fixed one performance bug -- in clear-rest-of-screen.
Since this subverts Mu's fake screen there may be bugs.
Another salubrious side effect: I've finally internalized that switching
to raw mode doesn't have to clear the screen. That was just an artifact
of how termbox abstracted operations. Now I can conceive of using termbox
to build a repl as well.
(I was inspired to poke into termbox internals by
http://viewsourcecode.org/snaptoken/kilo and
https://github.com/antirez/linenoise)
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Standardize the order of some common blocks in `render`, `render-text`
and `render-code`. This is preparation for trying to reorganize them to
reduce duplicate code.
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Fix a _very_ misleading comment.
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Move 'render-code' to the layer where it's used.
Thanks Caleb Couch for finding this bit of ugliness.
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Don't try to snapshot in scenarios.
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I accidentally got rid of git snapshotting of lessons back when I switched
to testable file primitives last December (commit 3705).
>:-(
Bringing it back now, hopefully better. The improvement is that there's
now at most one commit every time we hit F4.
This change adds yet another reason that running `mu` from a different
directory is just not supported.
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Bitrot in main when loading just layer 1 of the edit/ and sandbox/ apps.
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Reorder products of some functions in the edit/ and sandbox/ apps. My
recent realization: always return 'real' products before ones that just
indicate an ingredient is mutable.
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Delete some obsolete /same-as-ingredient attributes. We should always
let Mu deduce those at this point.
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Update sandbox/ with recent changes to edit/ (commit 3695 onwards).
[Incidentally, this is the first commit to be made while running on
OpenBSD. Simulated and host systems are going to blur together from now
on.]
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Periodic cleanup to replace 'reply' with 'return' everywhere in the
repo.
I use 'reply' for students to help reinforce the metaphor of function
calls as being like messages through a pipe. But that causes 'reply' to
get into my muscle memory when writing Mu code for myself, and I worry
that that makes Mu seem unnecessarily alien to anybody reading on
Github.
Perhaps I should just give it up? I'll try using 'return' with my next
student.
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Cleaning up the console interfaces before we start changing the socket
interfaces to look like them. Reading from sockets need to be
non-blocking just like reading from the console.
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Stop requiring jump instructions to explicitly provide a ':label' type
for jump targets.
This has been a source of repeated confusion for my students:
a) They'd add the ':label' to the label definition rather than the
jump target (label use)
b) They'd spend time thinking about whether the initial '+' prefix was
part of the label name.
In the process I cleaned up a couple of things:
- the space of names is more cleanly partitioned into labels and
non-labels (clarifying that '_' and '-' are non-label prefixes)
- you can't use label names as regular variables anymore
- you can infer the type of a label just from its name
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Redo commit 3457.
Basically there were 3 unicode characters we changed back then:
solid horizontal line: 9473 -> 9472
fuzzy horizontal line: 9480 -> 9548
fuzzy vertical line: 9482 -> 9550
The solid horizontal line has no issues, so we just redo it here.
For the other two, we'll perform the substitution only when rendering
html. That gives us the best of both worlds: the scenario screens render
right in html, and alt-tabbing continues to be snappy when running the
edit/ app.
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Revert commit 3457, where I switched the unicode characters used in the
edit/ app to something that doesn't render double-wide in html. It turns
out that the new unicode characters made iTerm2 sluggish in alt-tabbing
between windows. (Commit 3488 only fixed the screen-clearing issue.)
I haven't reverted the html files. I'm going to redo commit 3457 next so
the html files continue to render like they do now.
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Switch around some unicode characters in the edit/ app so that it
renders more cleanly in html (with monospace fonts).
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Ugly that we didn't need 'screen' to provide a type in scenarios
(because assume-screen expands to a definition of 'screen') but we did
need a type for 'console'. Just never require types for special names in
scenarios.
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A long-standing problem has been that I couldn't spread code across
'run' blocks because they were separate scopes, so I've ended up making
them effectively comments. Running code inside a 'run' block is
identical in every way to simply running the code directly. The 'run'
block is merely a visual aid to separate setup from the component under
test.
In the process I've also standardized all Mu scenarios to always run in
a local scope, and only use (raw) numeric addresses for values they want
to check later.
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Well, almost. I can't use them in some places in C++ where I'm just
creating a temporary reagent without passing it through transforms. Like
in some unit tests. I can't use them in memory-should-contain.
And there's one remaining bug: I can't use abbreviations in a couple of
places in 075channel.mu.
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Fix some tests and make them less fragile.
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Done using 'text' type abbreviation everywhere.
There's still a problem. If we define a function with a type
abbreviation and then redefine it without, I think we end up creating
separate variants. That seems wrong. Let's isolate a scenario for that
next.
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Process type abbreviations in function headers.
Still a couple of places where doing this causes strange errors. We'll
track those down next.
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Process type abbreviations in container definitions.
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