enso/docs/syntax/literals.md

Ignoring revisions in .git-blame-ignore-revs. Click here to bypass and see the normal blame view.

179 lines
7.0 KiB
Markdown
Raw Permalink Normal View History

---
layout: developer-doc
title: Literals
category: syntax
tags: [syntax, literals]
order: 5
---
# Literals
2020-07-21 15:59:40 +03:00
Enso supports a small set of literals that allow the expression of some common
types in literal form in the source code.
<!-- MarkdownTOC levels="2,3" autolink="true" -->
- [Numeric Literals](#numeric-literals)
- [Text Literals](#text-literals)
- [Inline Text Literals](#inline-text-literals)
- [Text Block Literals](#text-block-literals)
- [Inline Block Literals](#inline-block-literals)
- [Escape Sequences](#escape-sequences)
- [Vector Literals](#vector-literals)
<!-- /MarkdownTOC -->
## Numeric Literals
2020-07-21 15:59:40 +03:00
Enso provides rich support for numeric literals, including literals that use
different numeric bases. It does, of course, support floating point numerals as
well.
A numeric literal takes the form:
```ebnf
digit = "0" | "1" | "2" | "3" | "4" | "5" | "6" | "7" | "8" | "9" ;
hex = "a" | "b" | "c" | "d" | "e" | "f";
number-digit = digit | hex;
decimal-point = ".";
float-digit = number-digit | decimal-point;
base-specifier = { digit };
numeric-literal = [base-specifier, "_"], { number-digit };
```
If no base is specified, it is inferred to be a standard base-10 numeral.
Some examples of numeric literals follow:
```ruby
decimal = 12345.39
decimal_explicit = 10_1029301
octal = 8_122137
hex = 16_ae2f14
binary = 2_10011101010
```
> Actionables for this section are:
>
> - Think about whether we want to support explicit fractional and complex
> literals, or whether these should be relegated to type constructors.
## Text Literals
2020-07-21 15:59:40 +03:00
Enso provides rich support for textual literals in the language, supporting both
raw and interpolated strings natively.
- **Raw Strings:** Raw strings are delimited using the standard double-quote
character (`"`). Raw strings don't support any escape sequences.
```ruby
raw_string = "Hello, world!"
```
- **Interpolated Strings:** Interpolated strings support the splicing of
executable Enso expressions into the string. Such strings are delimited using
the single-quote (`'`) character, and splices are delimited using the backtick
(`` ` ``) character. Splices are run, and then the result is converted to a
string using `show`. These strings also have support for all kinds of
[escape sequences](#escape-sequences).
```ruby
fmt_string = 'Hello, my age is `time.now.year - person.birthday.year`'
```
### Inline Text Literals
2020-07-21 15:59:40 +03:00
In Enso, inline text literals are opened and closed using the corresponding
quote type for the literal. They may contain escape sequences but may _not_ be
broken across lines.
```ruby
inline_raw = "Foo bar baz"
inline_interpolated = 'Foo `bar` baz'
```
### Text Block Literals
2020-07-21 15:59:40 +03:00
In Enso, text block literals rely on _layout_ to determine the end of the block,
allowing users to only _open_ the literal. Block literals are opened with three
of the relevant quote type, and the contents of the block are determined by the
following layout rules:
- The first child line of the block sets the baseline left margin for the block.
Any indentation up to this margin will be removed.
- Any indentation further than this baseline will be retained as part of the
text literal.
- The literal is _closed_ by the first line with a _lower_ level of indentation
than the first child line and will not contain the final blank line.
```
block_raw = '''
part of the string
still part of the string
also part of the string
not_string_expr = foo bar
```
### Inline Block Literals
In order to easily transition between using text blocks and single-line
literals, we allow for defining an inline block literal. This is a literal that
uses the same start delimiter as a block literal (see above), but rather than
ending the literal through de-indenting from the block's level of indentation,
the literal is ended upon the line ending.
```
inline_block =
"""this is all part of the literal
but_this_is_not
```
### Escape Sequences
Format literals in Enso support many kinds of escape sequence. These are
described below.
| Name | Escape Sequence | Unicode | Notes |
| :----------- | :-------------: | :--------: | :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Byte Escape | `\x##` | `U+00##` | 8-bit character specification. |
| U16 Escape | `\u####` | `U+####` | 16-bit unicode character, where each `#` is a hex digit. |
| U21 Escape | `\u{######}` | `U+######` | 21-bit unicode character, where `######` is 1-6 hex digits. |
| U32 Escape | `\U########` | `U+######` | 32-bit unicode character, where each `#` is a hex digit and the first two bytes are `00`. |
| Null | `\0` | `U+0000` | The null character. |
| Alert | `\a` | `U+0007` | The bell/alert character. |
| Backspace | `\b` | `U+0008` | The backspace character. |
| Form Feed | `\f` | `U+000C` | The form-feed character. |
| LF | `\n` | `U+000A` | The line-feed character (newline on unix systems). |
| CR | `\r` | `U+000D` | The carriage return character (part of newline on windows systems). |
| Tab | `\t` | `U+0009` | The horizontal tab character. |
| Vertical Tab | `\v` | `U+000B` | The vertical tab character. |
| Backslash | `\\` | `U+005C` | A literal backslash character. |
| Double Quote | `\"` | `U+0022` | A literal double quote character. |
| Single Quote | `\'` | `U+0027` | A literal single quote character. |
| Backtick | `` \` `` | `U+0060` | A literal backtick character. |
The only one of the above escape sequences that is supported in a raw text
literal is `\"`. All other occurrences of `\` in such literals are treated as a
literal backslash.
## Vector Literals
2020-07-21 15:59:40 +03:00
Enso also supports vector literals, which allow users to create literal vectors
of elements.
```ruby
literal = [elem_1, elem_2, elem_3, ...]
```
A vector literal works as follows:
- It is begun by the `[` character.
- It is ended by the `]` character.
- Elements in vector literals are concatenated using the `,` operator, which
acts as `cons` on vectors.