8c5a117c82
* fix: Handle unit members correctly in array templates Units may be used as members in arrays just like any other type, however, the array templates (which are specific to arrays) hadn't been updated to handle this. This commit makes the necessary updates and adds some utility functions in efforts to make using templates in the compiler easier. After this commit, the following functions should work correctly on (Array Unit): - endo-map - endo-filter - copy - aset! - aset-uninitialized! - aset - pop-back! - pop-back - push-back - push-back! Just like other types with Unit members, the only value that is stored in the resulting type is the terminal value of Unit `()` or unit. Any side effects are run during evaluation of arguments and emitted prior to any structure manipulations. Because Unit is a terminal type (contains a single value) it makes `endo-filter` an interesting case to consider. A filter on such an array can only either retain all elements or drop all elements since there's no way to predicate over the single terminal object Unit: ``` (endo-filter &(fn [_] false) [() ()]) => [] (endo-filter &(fn [_] true) [() ()]) => [() ()] ``` While arrays of units aren't very meaningful in terms of their contents, their lengths will be expanded and contracted appropriately, so they can be used for their length: ``` (defn iterate [] (let-do [x [() () ()]] (while (> (Array.length &x) 0) (do (println* "foo") (Array.pop-back! &x))))) (iterate) Compiled to 'out/Untitled' (executable) foo foo foo => 0 ``` * chore: remove debugging trace * refactor: make endo-filter template dryer |
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.github | ||
app | ||
bench | ||
core | ||
docs | ||
examples | ||
headerparse | ||
resources | ||
scripts | ||
src | ||
test | ||
.build.yml | ||
.clang-format | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
CarpHask.cabal | ||
default.nix | ||
LICENSE | ||
LUA_LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
Setup.hs | ||
stack.yaml |
Carp
WARNING! This is a research project and a lot of information here might become outdated and misleading without any explanation. Don't use it for anything important just yet!
Version 0.4 of the language is out!
About
Carp is a programming language designed to work well for interactive and performance sensitive use cases like games, sound synthesis and visualizations.
The key features of Carp are the following:
- Automatic and deterministic memory management (no garbage collector or VM)
- Inferred static types for great speed and reliability
- Ownership tracking enables a functional programming style while still using mutation of cache-friendly data structures under the hood
- No hidden performance penalties – allocation and copying are explicit
- Straightforward integration with existing C code
- Lisp macros, compile time scripting and a helpful REPL
Learn more
- The Compiler Manual - how to install and use the compiler
- Carp Language Guide - syntax and semantics of the language
- Core Docs - documentation for our standard library
A Very Small Example
(load-and-use SDL)
(defn tick [state]
(+ state 10))
(defn draw [app rend state]
(bg rend &(rgb (/ @state 2) (/ @state 3) (/ @state 4))))
(defn main []
(let [app (SDLApp.create "The Minimalistic Color Generator" 400 300)
state 0]
(SDLApp.run-with-callbacks &app SDLApp.quit-on-esc tick draw state)))
For instructions on how to run Carp code, see this document.
For more examples, check out the examples directory.
Maintainers
Contributing
Thanks to all the awesome people who have contributed to Carp over the years!
We are always looking for more help – check out the contributing guide to get started.
License
Copyright 2016 - 2020 Erik Svedäng
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.
The regular expression implementation as found in src/carp_regex.h are Copyright (C) 1994-2017 Lua.org, PUC-Rio under the terms of the MIT license. Details can be found in the License file LUA_LICENSE.