2021-01-14 18:31:15 +03:00
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---
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layout: developer-doc
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title: Standard Libraries
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category: distribution
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tags: [distribution, stdlib]
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2021-01-15 18:26:51 +03:00
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order: 8
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2021-01-14 18:31:15 +03:00
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---
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# Standard Libraries
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At the current stage, Enso ships with a small set of libraries that compose the
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language's "standard library". This document provides a brief explanation of
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these libraries, as well as notes on how they should be used.
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<!-- MarkdownTOC levels="2,3" autolink="true" indent=" " -->
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- [Base](#base)
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- [Builtins](#builtins)
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- [Table](#table)
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- [Test](#test)
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- [Documentation](#documentation)
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- [General Libraries Notes](#general-libraries-notes)
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<!-- /MarkdownTOC -->
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## Base
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`Base` is the core library of Enso. It contains core types and data structures,
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as well as basic functionality for interacting with the outside world. It can be
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found in
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[`distribution/std-lib/Base`](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/tree/main/distribution/std-lib/Base).
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`Base` is intended to be imported unqualified at the top of the file:
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`from Base import all`. Items not included in this unqualified import are
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considered to be more specialist or internal, and should be intentionally
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imported by users.
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### Builtins
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In addition to the functionalities exposed in the standard library source, the
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interpreter also contains a set of definitions that are considered "primitive"
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and are hence built into the interpreter.
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For the purposes of documentation, there is a
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[`Builtins.enso`](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/tree/main/engine/runtime/src/main/resources/Builtins.enso)
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file that provides stub definitions for these builtin functions. It is used for
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documentation purposes, and must be kept up to date as the builtins change.
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> #### Note: Shadow Definitions
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>
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> In time this file will be replaced by true shadow definitions for the language
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> builtins. It is only a stop-gap measure to allow documenting this
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> functionality at this point in time.
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## Table
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`Table` is Enso's dataframes library, providing functionality for loading and
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analysing tabular data. It is a core data-science toolkit, that integrates
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deeply with Enso and its IDE. It can be found in
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[`distribution/std-lib/Table`](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/tree/main/distribution/std-lib/Table).
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`Table` is designed to be imported unqualified: `from Table import all`. Items
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not included in this unqualified import are considered to be more specialist or
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internal, and should be intentionally imported by users.
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## Test
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`Test` is a library for testing and benchmarking Enso code. At this point in
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time it is _very_ rudimentary, and needs significant improvement before we can
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consider it an "official" part of the Enso standard libraries. It can be found
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in
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[`distribution/std-lib/Test`](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/tree/main/distribution/std-lib/Test).
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`Test` is intended to be imported qualified: `import Test`. This ensures that
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there aren't spurious name clashes between user-defined functionality and the
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testing library.
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## Documentation
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These libraries are comprehensively documented, with all functionality
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accompanied by comprehensive documentation comments. These are located _above_
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each definition, for example:
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```
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## Sort the Vector.
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Arguments:
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- `on`: A projection from the element type to the value of that element
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being sorted on.
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- `by`: A function that compares the result of applying `on` to two
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elements, returning an Ordering to compare them.
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- `order`: The order in which the vector elements are sorted.
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By default, elements are sorted in ascending order, using the comparator
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`compare_to`. A custom comparator may be passed to the sort function.
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This is a stable sort, meaning that items that compare the same will not
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have their order changed by the sorting process.
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The complexities for this sort are:
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- *Worst-Case Time:* `O(n * log n)`
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- *Best-Case Time:* `O(n)`
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- *Average Time:* `O(n * log n)`
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- *Worst-Case Space:* `O(n)` additional
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? Implementation Note
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The sort implementation is based upon an adaptive, iterative mergesort
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that requires far fewer than `n * log(n)` comparisons when the vector
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is partially sorted. When the vector is randomly ordered, the
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performance is equivalent to a standard mergesort.
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It takes equal advantage of ascending and descending runs in the array,
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making it much simpler to merge two or more sorted arrays: simply
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concatenate them and sort.
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> Example
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Sorting a vector of numbers.
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[5, 2, 3, 45, 15].sort == [2, 3, 5, 15, 45]
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> Example
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Sorting a vector of `Pair`s on the first element, descending.
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[Pair 1 2, Pair -1 8].sort (_.first) (order = Sort_Order.Descending)
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sort : (Any -> Any) -> (Any -> Any -> Ordering) -> Sort_Order -> Vector
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sort (on = x -> x) (by = (_.compare_to _)) (order = Sort_Order.Ascending) = ...
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```
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Such documentation blocks describe:
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- **Summary:** A basic summary of the behaviour of the method.
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- **Arguments:** Descriptions of each of the arguments to the function.
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- **Additional Information:** Additional exposition about the method.
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- **Note (Optional):** Optional notes containing potentially important
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information for more experienced users.
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- **Examples:** Examples of the method's usage, with descriptions.
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In addition, a function will have a type signature that describes the expected
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types of the function arguments. It may also have defaults for its arguments,
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which will be shown in the
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## General Libraries Notes
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Some notes on the general structure of these libraries.
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- All of these libraries are considered to be WIP as they are missing many
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pieces of functionality that they should have.
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- As the language doesn't currently have built-in support for access modifiers
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(e.g. `private`), so we instead use `PRIVATE` annotations at the top of
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documentation blocks. Any functionality annotated in such a form is not for
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public consumption.
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- The `Base.Meta` functionality is considered to be unstable as it is inherently
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tied to the internals of the compiler and the interpreter.
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