catala/examples
2022-01-12 15:00:53 +01:00
..
allocations_familiales Unit tests for examples now use clerk 2022-01-11 10:42:12 +01:00
code_general_impots refactor(parser): add the new catala-metadata markup 2021-10-01 10:01:25 +02:00
droit_successions Unit tests for examples now use clerk 2022-01-11 10:42:12 +01:00
hawaii_lfo refactor(parser): add the new catala-metadata markup 2021-10-01 10:01:25 +02:00
polish_taxes Unit tests for examples now use clerk 2022-01-11 10:42:12 +01:00
tutorial_en Unit tests for examples now use clerk 2022-01-11 10:42:12 +01:00
tutoriel_fr Unit tests for examples now use clerk 2022-01-11 10:42:12 +01:00
us_tax_code Unit tests for examples now use clerk 2022-01-11 10:42:12 +01:00
Makefile Fix Makefiles and relative paths [skip ci] 2022-01-12 15:00:53 +01:00
Makefile.common.mk examples: add a %.spellok helper to check spelling 2021-10-10 15:56:07 +01:00
README.md Test folders, nice doc and messages 2022-01-11 12:51:34 +01:00
whitelist.en examples: add a %.spellok helper to check spelling 2021-10-10 15:56:07 +01:00
whitelist.fr examples: add a %.spellok helper to check spelling 2021-10-10 15:56:07 +01:00

Catala examples

This directory contains examples of Catala programs. It is highly recommended to locate your own Catala programs in this directory, since programs in this directory will receive first-class support during the alpha and beta stage of the Catala programming language development.

Browse examples online »

List of examples

  • allocations_familiales/: computation of the French family benefits, based on the Code de la sécurité sociale. This case study is the biggest and most ambitious for Catala so far.
  • code_general_impots/: computation of the French income tax, based on the Code général des impôts. Currently, there are only stubs of program.
  • tutorial/: Catala language tutorial for developers of tech-savvy lawyers. The tutorial is written like a piece of legislation that gets annotated by Catala snippets.
  • us_tax_code/: contains the Catala formalization of several sections of the US Tax Code.

Building and running examples

Building and running examples is done via Makefiles. Each example directory contains its own Makefile, which includes Makefile.common.mk. This common Makefiles defines a list of targets that call the Catala compiler with the right options. Each of these targers can be called from the root of the repository with:

    make -C examples/<directory of example> <name of target>

The <name of target> can be replaced with the following (we assume an example file examples/foo/foo.catala_en) list.

  • foo.run: interprets the Catala program contained in foo.catala_en. Note that you have to pass in the scope that you want to interpret via the SCOPE Makefile variable (SCOPE=FooScope make -C examples/foo foo.run).
  • foo.tex: builds the LaTeX literate programming output from the Catala program
  • foo.pdf: compiles foo.tex using latexmk
  • foo.html: builds the HTML literate programming output from the Catala program
  • foo.spell.ok: runs aspell on the file, given the whitelist.<language> files.

When invoking any of these targets, additional options to the Catala compiler can be passed using the CATALA_OPTS Makefile variable.

Remark: don't forget to run make pygments before generating LaTex or PDF files.

Testing examples

Unit testing is important, and we encourage Catala developers to write lots of tests for their programs. Again, the Makefile system provides a way to collect tests into a regression test suite.

In order to enjoy the benefits of this system, you have to create a tests/ directory in your examples directory, for instance examples/foo/tests. Then, create a test file foo_tests.catala_en inside that directory.

Inside foo_tests.catala_en, declare one ore more test scopes. Then, you can provide the expected output for the interpretation of these scopes or the compilation of the whole program using the standard expected by clerk test: enter make help_clerk from the root of the Catala repository to know more.

Once your tests are written, then will automatically be added to the regression suite executed using

make -C examples tests

You can isolate a part of the regression suite by invoking:

make -C examples foo/tests/foo_tests.catala_en

Adding an example

This section describes what to do to setup a working directory for a new Catala example, as well as the development cycle. Let us suppose that you want to create a new example named foo.

First, follow the instructions of the installation readme to get the compiler up and working up to make build. You can also set up the syntax highlighting for your editor.

Then, create the directory examples/foo. In there, create a master source file foo.catala_en (or foo.catala_fr, etc. depending on your language) that will be the root of your Catala program. You can then start programming in foo.catala_en, or split up your example into multiple files. In the later case, foo.catala_en must only contain something like this:

# Master file

> Include: bar.catala_en

where examples/bar.catala_en is another source file containing code for your example. Make sure you start by including some content in the source files, like

Hello, world!

To build and run the example, create a Makefile in foo/ with the following contents:

CATALA_LANG=en # or fr/pl if your source code is in French/Polish
SRC=foo.catala_en

include ../Makefile.common.mk

The include creates automatically all the targets you will need for your example. For instance, after making sure the compiler is built, you can launch

make -C examples/foo foo.tex

from the repository root to create the LaTeX weaving output of your source program. Hello, world! should appear in examples/foo/foo.tex.

Finally, please add a rule for your example in the repository root Makefile in the section "Examples-related rules", following the pattern for other examples. This will ensure that your example is built every time the compiler is modified; if a change in the compiler breaks your example, the authors will be notified and find a solution.