Mostly copied from Blodwen and brought up to date (more or less).
2.9 KiB
Compiler Directives
There are a number of directives (instructions to the compiler, beginning with
a %
symbol) which are not part of the Idris 2 language, but nevertheless
provide useful information to the compiler. Mostly these will be useful for
library (especially Prelude) authors. They are ordered here approximately
by "likelihood of being useful to most programmers".
Language directives
%name
Syntax: %name <name> <name_list>
For interactive editing purposes, use <name_list>
as the preferred names
for variables with type <name>
.
%hide
Syntax: %hide <name>
Throughout the rest of the file, consider the <name>
to be private to its
own namespace.
%auto_lazy
Syntax: %auto_lazy <on | off>
Turn the automatic insertion of laziness annotations on or off. Default is
on
as long as %lazy
names have been defined (see below).
%runElab
Syntax: %runElab <expr>
NOT YET IMPLEMENTED
Run the elaborator reflection expression <expr>
, which must be of type
Elab a
. Note that this is only minimally implemented at the moment.
%pair
Syntax: %pair <pair_type> <fst_name> <snd_name>
Use the given names in auto
implicit search for projecting from pair types.
%rewrite
Syntax: %rewrite <rewrite_name>
Use the given name as the default rewriting function in the rewrite
syntax.
%integerLit
Syntax: %integerLit <fromInteger_name>
Apply the given function to all integer literals when elaborating.
The default Prelude sets this to fromInteger
.
%stringLit
Syntax: %stringLit <fromString_name>
Apply the given function to all string literals when elaborating. The default Prelude does not set this.
%charLit
Syntax: %charLit <fromChar_name>
Apply the given function to all character literals when elaborating. The default Prelude does not set this.
%allow_overloads
Syntax: %allow_overloads <name>
This is primarily for compatibility with the Idris 1 notion of name overloading
which allows in particular (>>=)
and fromInteger
to be overloaded in an
ad-hoc fashion as well as via the Monad
and Num
interfaces respectively.
It effect is: If <name>
is one of the possibilities in an ambiguous
application, and one of the other possibilities is immediately resolvable by
return type, remove <name>
from the list of possibilities.
If this sounds quite hacky, it's because it is. It's probably better not to
use it other than for the specific cases where we need it for compatibility.
It might be removed, if we can find a better way to resolve ambiguities with
(>>=)
and fromInteger
in particular!
Implementation/debugging directives
%logging
Syntax: %logging <level>
Set the logging level. In general 1
tells you which top level declaration
the elaborator is working on, up to 5
gives you more specific details of
each stage of the elaboration, and up to 10
gives you full details of
type checking including progress on unification problems