Instead, always act as `--no-format` option is set to `False` as
previous default.
The change seem to not affect any current formatting, so I assume it
passes the checks on testing.
Fixes#2084
# Checklist:
- [x] My code follows the style guidelines of this project
- [ ] I have made corresponding changes to the documentation
- [x] My changes generate no new warnings
* Closes#2032.
* Adds the `juvix dev core normalize` command.
* Adds the `:n` command in JuvixCore REPL.
* Adds the `--normalize` flag to `juvix dev core read` and `juvix dev
core from-concrete`.
* Adds `pipeline-normalize` which denotes pipeline steps necessary
before normalization.
* Adds normalization tests in `tests/VampIR/positive/Core`.
# Description
While working on highlight command, I noticed that after `format`
command changes the behaviour of the `highlight` command when both
`--stdin` option specified and FILENAME is provided is changed.
Instead on returning the result for the `stdin` input, it started to
return empty result.
This PR fixes that behaviour, it will now act exactly as before
introducing the changes that came with the `format` command fixes.
## Type of change
Please delete options that are not relevant.
- [x] Bug fix (non-breaking change which fixes an issue)
# Checklist:
- [x] My code follows the style guidelines of this project
- [x] I have made corresponding changes to the documentation
- [x] My changes generate no new warnings
- [x] I have added tests that prove my fix is effective or that my
feature works:
- [x] smoke test
If an import statement to a missing module occurs when parsing in a
project with no dependencies the error message has the following form:
```
The module Foo does not exist.
It should be in /Users/paul/heliax/juvix-2023/tests/negative/NoDependencies/Foo.juvix
or in one of the dependencies:
```
This PR changes this error message to the `or in one of the
dependencies:` line is omitted from the error message when there are no
dependencies in the project.
This commit also adds a negative parse error test for missing module.
This PR adds a builtin integer type to the surface language that is
compiled to the backend integer type.
## Inductive definition
The `Int` type is defined in the standard library as:
```
builtin int
type Int :=
| --- ofNat n represents the integer n
ofNat : Nat -> Int
| --- negSuc n represents the integer -(n + 1)
negSuc : Nat -> Int;
```
## New builtin functions defined in the standard library
```
intToString : Int -> String;
+ : Int -> Int -> Int;
neg : Int -> Int;
* : Int -> Int -> Int;
- : Int -> Int -> Int;
div : Int -> Int -> Int;
mod : Int -> Int -> Int;
== : Int -> Int -> Bool;
<= : Int -> Int -> Bool;
< : Int -> Int -> Bool;
```
Additional builtins required in the definition of the other builtins:
```
negNat : Nat -> Int;
intSubNat : Nat -> Nat -> Int;
nonNeg : Int -> Bool;
```
## REPL types of literals
In the REPL, non-negative integer literals have the inferred type `Nat`,
negative integer literals have the inferred type `Int`.
```
Stdlib.Prelude> :t 1
Nat
Stdlib.Prelude> :t -1
Int
:t let x : Int := 1 in x
Int
```
## The standard library Prelude
The definitions of `*`, `+`, `div` and `mod` are not exported from the
standard library prelude as these would conflict with the definitions
from `Stdlib.Data.Nat`.
Stdlib.Prelude
```
open import Stdlib.Data.Int hiding {+;*;div;mod} public;
```
* Closes https://github.com/anoma/juvix/issues/1679
* Closes https://github.com/anoma/juvix/issues/1984
---------
Co-authored-by: Lukasz Czajka <lukasz@heliax.dev>
The new `juvix dev repl` command is a copy of the `juvix repl` with the
addition of `--no-disambiguate` flag that is present on the `juvix dev
core from-concrete` command.
The `juvix repl` command now does not have the `--transforms`,
`--show-de-bruijn` flags as these are only relevant for compiler
developers. The eval transforms are always applied.
By default `juvix dev repl` uses the eval transforms. You can override
this by specifying the `-t` flag.
Also we now run `disambiguateNames` transform on the info table in the
`dev repl` (unless the `--no-disambiguate-names` flag is set). This is
so the output of the `juvix dev repl` will match that of `juvix dev core
from-concrete` and also so the output can be parsed by back the core
parser.
* Closes https://github.com/anoma/juvix/issues/1914
This PR adds support for all recent changes in GEB introduced by:
- https://github.com/anoma/geb/pull/70
- Closes#1814
Summary:
- [x] Add LeftInj, RightIng, and Absurd types in GEB language
- [x] Fix FromCore translation for the new data types and minor code
styling issues.
- [x] Fix GEB-STLC type inference and checking
- [X] Add support for evaluating typed morphism "(typed ...)" in the Geb
repl and .geb files.
- [x] Simplify a bit the Geb parser
- [x] Fix `dev geb check` command
- [x] Type check files in `tests/Geb/positive`
After this PR, we should include interval location for Geb terms to
facility debugging type-checking errors.
This PR introduces an evaluator for the Geb STLC interface/fragment and
other related commands, including a REPL to interact with his backend.
-
https://github.com/anoma/geb/blob/mariari/binaries/src/specs/lambda.lisp
We have included a REPL and support for commands such as read and eval
here. Check out:
```
juvix dev geb --help
```
- [x] Add Geb evaluator with the two basic eval strategies.
- [x] Add quasi quoter: return morphisms from typed geb values.
- [x] Add type/object inference for morphisms.
- [x] All combined: morphisms-eval-to-morphisms
- [x] Parse and pretty printer Geb values (without quoting them)
- [x] Parse files containing Geb terms:
- [x] Saved in a .lisp file according to anoma/geb example (typed
object).
- [x] Store in a .geb file simple as simple lisp expression.
- [x] Add related commands to the CLI for `dev geb`:
- [x] Subcommand: eval
- [x] Subcommand: read
- [x] Subcommand: infer
- [x] Subcommand: repl
- [x] Subcommand: check
- [x] Minor changes `hom` by `!->` in the Geb prettyprinter
- [x] Add tests for:
- [x] New subcommand (smoke tests)
- [x] Eval
Issues to solve after merging this PR:
- Add location to Geb ast for proper error location.
- Add tests for all related subcommands, e.g. check, and infer.
- Check compilation from Core to Geb: (run inferObject with the type
provided by the core node).
- [x] Update the vs code-plugin to load Geb repl and eval.
(31994c8684)
This PR adds some maintenance at different levels to the CI config, the
Make file, and formatting.
- Most of the actions used by the CI related to haskell, ormolu, hlint
and pre-commit have been updated because Github requires NodeJS 16. This
change removes all the old warnings related to nodeJs.
In the case of ormolu, the new version makes us format some files that
were not formatted before, similarly with hlint.
- The CI has been updated to use the latest version of the Smoke testing
framework, which introduced installation of the dependencies for Linux
(libicu66) and macOS (icu4c) in the CI. In the case of macOS, the CI
uses a binary for smoke. For Linux, we use stack to build smoke from the
source. The source here is in a fork of [the official Smoke
repo](https://github.com/SamirTalwar/smoke). Such includes some
features/changes that are not yet in the official repo.
- The Makefile runs the ormolu and hlint targets using as a path for the
binaries the environment variables ORMOLU and HLINT. Thus, export those
variables in your environment before running `make check,` `make format`
or `make hlint`. Otherwise, the Makefile will use the binaries provided
by `stack`.
Co-authored-by: Paul Cadman <git@paulcadman.dev>
This PR adds smoke tests using [Smoke
tool](https://github.com/SamirTalwar/smoke) for all the shell tests we
have. One reason for adopting Smoke instead of the previous tool,
`shelltestrunner`, is that tests are declared cleanly and simply using
Smoke Yaml syntax compared to shelltestrunner's syntax.
To add a new smoke test, create a file with the suffix ".smoke.yaml" in
the `tests/smoke` folder. In such a folder, you can also find examples
of how to test the CLI.