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53 lines
2.3 KiB
Markdown
53 lines
2.3 KiB
Markdown
# Leo RFC 008: Built-in Declarations
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## Authors
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The Aleo Team.
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## Status
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IMPLEMENTED
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## Summary
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This RFC proposes a framework for making certain (top-level) declarations (e.g. type aliases) available in every Leo program without the need to write those declarations explicitly. These may be hardwired into the language or provided by standard libraries/packages; in the latter case, the libraries may be implicitly imported or required to be explicitly imported.
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## Motivation
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It is common for programming languages to provide predefined types, functions, etc.
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that can be readily used in programs. The initial motivation for this in Leo was to have a type alias `string` for character arrays of unspecified sizes (array types of unspecified sizes and type aliases are discussed in separate RFCs), but the feature is clearly more general.
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## Design
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Leo supports five kinds of top-level declarations:
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- Import declarations.
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- Function declarations.
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- Circuit type declarations.
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- Global constant declarations.
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- Type alias declarations. (Proposed in a separate RFC.)
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Leaving import declarations aside for the moment since they are "meta" in some sense
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(as they bring in names of entities declared elsewhere),
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it may make sense for any of the four kinds of declarations above to have built-in instances, i.e., we could have some built-in functions, circuit types, global constants, and type aliases. These features are why this RFC talks of built-in declarations, more broadly than just built-in type aliases that inspired it.
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The built-in status of the envisioned declarations will be done through explicitly declared standard library(stdlib) files. Then these stdlib files must expressly be imported, except the files found in stdlib/prelude/*. The ones found in the prelude are features determined to be helpful enough in standard programs and are auto-imported.
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## Drawbacks
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This does not seem to bring any drawbacks.
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## Effect on Ecosystem
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This change may interact with libraries and packages in some way.
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But it should not be much different from standard libraries/packages.
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## Alternatives
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Some alternative approaches are:
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1. Having all stdlib imports auto included.
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2. Require that all stdlib imports are explicitly imported.
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The differences between the two above approaches and the chosen one are just how many imports are imported explicitly.
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