As part of making tuples first-class citizens, expliciting the arity upon
function application was needed (so that a function of two args can
transparently -- in the surface language -- be applied to either two arguments
or a pair).
It was decided to actually explicit the whole type of arguments because the cost
is the same, and this is consistent with lambda definitions.
A related change done here is the replacement of the `EOp` node for operators by
an "operator application" `EAppOp` node, enforcing a pervasive invariant that
operators are always directly applied. This makes matches terser, and highlights
the fact that the treatment of operator application is almost always different
from function application in practice.
Two interdependent changes here:
1. Enforce all instances of Shared_ast.gexpr to use the generic type for marks.
This makes the interfaces a tad simpler to manipulate: you now write
`('a, 'm) gexpr` rather than `('a, 'm mark) gexpr`.
2. Define a polymorphic `Custom` mark case for use by pass-specific annotations.
And leverage this in the typing module
A module without mli is ok as long as it only contains types
Here we already stretch it a bit with some functor applications, but having
toplevel values defeats the expectation that you can safely `open` this module.
This is just a bunch of `sed` calls:
```shell
sed -i 's/ScopeSet/ScopeName.Set/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/ScopeMap/ScopeName.Map/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/StructMap/StructName.Map/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/StructSet/StructName.Set/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/EnumMap/EnumName.Map/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/EnumSet/EnumName.Set/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/StructFieldName/StructField/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/StructFieldMap/StructField.Map/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/StructFieldSet/StructField.Set/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/EnumConstructorMap/EnumConstructor.Map/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/EnumConstructorSet/EnumConstructor.Set/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/RuleMap/RuleName.Map/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/RuleSet/RuleName.Set/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/LabelMap/LabelName.Map/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/LabelSet/LabelName.Set/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/ScopeVarMap/ScopeVar.Map/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/ScopeVarSet/ScopeVar.Set/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/SubScopeNameMap/SubScopeName.Map/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
sed -i 's/SubScopeNameSet/SubScopeName.Set/g' compiler/**/*.ml*
```
... and reformat
Many changes got bundled in here and would be too tedious to separate.
Closes#330
See changes in `shared_ast/definitions.ml` to check the main point.
- the biggest change is a modification of the struct and enum types in
expressions: they are now stored as `Map`s throughout passes, and no longer
converted to indexed lists after scopelang. Their accessors are also changed,
and tuples only exist in Lcalc (they're used for closure conversion).
This implied adding some more information in the contexts, to keep the mapping
between struct fields and scope output variables. It should also be much more
robust (no longer relying on assumptions upon different orderings).
- another very pervasive change is more cosmetic: the rewrite of the main AST to
use inline records, labelling individual subfields.
- moved the checks for correct definitions and accesses of structures from
`Scope_to_dcalc` to `Typing`
- defining some new shallow iterators in module `Shared_ast.Expr`, and
factorising a few same-pass rewriting functions accordingly (closure
conversion, optimisations, etc.)
- some smaller style improvements (ensuring we use the proper compare/equal
functions instead of `=` in a few `when` closes, for example)
This was the only reasonable solution I found to the issue raised
[here](https://github.com/CatalaLang/catala/pull/334#discussion_r987175884).
This was a pretty tedious rewrite, but it should now ensure we are doing things
correctly. As a bonus, the "smart" expression constructors are now used
everywhere to build expressions (so another refactoring like this one should be
much easier) and this makes the code overall feel more
straightforward (`Bindlib.box_apply` or `let+` no longer need to be visible!)
---
Basically, we were using values of type `gexpr box = naked_gexpr marked box`
throughout when (re-)building expressions. This was done 99% of the time by
using `Bindlib.box_apply add_mark naked_e` right after building `naked_e`. In
lots of places, we needed to recover the annotation of this expression later on,
typically to build its parent term (to inherit the position, or build the type).
Since it wasn't always possible to wrap these uses within `box_apply` (esp. as
bindlib boxes aren't a monad), here and there we had to call `Bindlib.unbox`,
just to recover the position or type. This had the very unpleasant effect of
forcing the resolution of the whole box (including applying any stored closures)
to reach the top-level annotation which isn't even dependant on specific
variable bindings. Then, generally, throwing away the result.
Therefore, the change proposed here transforms
- `naked_gexpr marked Bindlib.box` into
- `naked_gexpr Bindlib.box marked` (aliased to `boxed_gexpr` or `gexpr boxed` for
convenience)
This means only
1. not fitting the mark into the box right away when building, and
2. accessing the top-level mark directly without unboxing
The functions for building terms from module `Shared_ast.Expr` could be changed
easily. But then they needed to be consistently used throughout, without
manually building terms through `Bindlib.apply_box` -- which covers most of the
changes in this patch.
`Expr.Box.inj` is provided to swap back to a box, before binding for example.
Additionally, this gives a 40% speedup on `make -C examples pass_all_tests`,
which hints at the amount of unnecessary work we were doing --'
Also add some safeguards against bad propagation of types (e.g. checking the
arrow type of functions upon application); partly disabled at the moment since
they don't pass yet but that'll be further work.
The huge benefit of this approach is that almost no changes are needed and we get compatible types between dcalc and lcalc, allowing to deduplicate a few functions.
It might not be the best in the long run: there are still benefits in factorising small parts of the AST as suggested in #157, and this forces a central AST definition that makes the nanopass-like approach a bit less legible.
Still, I think it's a step in the right direction and it doesn't really lock us in keeping to use the big GADT (as the minimal cascade of changes show).
It's not expected to stay that way forever, but some additional effort will be required for them to preserve (or restore) types; until then, be safe and don't forward possibly incorrect information.
The AST structures track annotations (e.g., at the moment, source code
position information) in a lot of places. This patch tidies up a bit and
removes some duplication, ensuring a single level of annotation wrapping
at each AST recursion level.
This will be important when adding type information in these
annotations, because there will be consitency constraints to be ensured
and duplication is a likely source of mistakes.
this patch is just a bunch of `sed` commands
```shell
cd compiler
sed -i 's/Pos.marked/Marked.pos/g' *.ml* **/*.ml*
sed -i 's/Pos.unmark/Marked.unmark/g' *.ml* **/*.ml*
sed -i 's/Pos\.get_position/Marked.get_mark/g' *.ml* **/*.ml*
sed -i 's/Pos\.same_pos_as/Marked.same_mark_as/g' *.ml* **/*.ml*
sed -i 's/Pos\.map_under_mark/Marked.map_under_mark/g' *.ml* **/*.ml*
sed -i 's/Pos\.mark/Marked.mark/g' *.ml* **/*.ml*
sed -i 's/Pos\.compare_marked/Marked.compare/g' *.ml* **/*.ml*
```