- Added `Zone`, `Date_Time` and `Time_Of_Day` to `Standard.Base`.
- Renamed `Zone` to `Time_Zone`.
- Added `century`.
- Added `is_leap_year`.
- Added `length_of_year`.
- Added `length_of_month`.
- Added `quarter`.
- Added `day_of_year`.
- Added `Day_Of_Week` type and `day_of_week` function.
- Updated `week_of_year` to support ISO.
# Important Notes
- Had to pass locale to formatter for date/time tests to work on my PC.
- Changed default of `week_of_year` to use ISO.
Implements https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182879865
# Important Notes
Note that removing `set_at` still does not make our arrays fully immutable - `Array.copy` can still be used to mutate them.
* Builtin Date_Time, Time_Of_Day, Zone
Improved polyglot support for Date_Time (formerly Time), Time_Of_Day and
Zone. This follows the pattern introduced for Enso Date.
Minor caveat - in tests for Date, had to bend a lot for JS Date to pass.
This is because JS Date is not really only a Date, but also a Time and
Timezone, previously we just didn't consider the latter.
Also, JS Date does not deal well with setting timezones so the trick I
used is to first call foreign function returning a polyglot JS Date,
which is converted to ZonedDateTime and only then set the correct
timezone. That way none of the existing tests had to be changes or
special cased.
Additionally, JS deals with milliseconds rather than nanoseconds so
there is loss in precision, as noted in Time_Spec.
* Add tests for Java's LocalTime
* changelog
* Make date formatters in table happy
* PR review, add more tests for zone
* More tests and fixed a bug in column reader
Column reader didn't take into account timezone but that was a mistake
since then it wouldn't map to Enso's Date_Time.
Added tests that check it now.
* remove redundant conversion
* Update distribution/lib/Standard/Base/0.0.0-dev/src/Data/Time.enso
Co-authored-by: Radosław Waśko <radoslaw.wasko@enso.org>
* First round of addressing PR review
* don't leak java exceptions in Zone
* Move Date_Time to top-level module
* PR review
Co-authored-by: Radosław Waśko <radoslaw.wasko@enso.org>
Co-authored-by: Jaroslav Tulach <jaroslav.tulach@enso.org>
This change modifies the current language by requiring explicit `self` parameter declaration
for methods. Methods without `self` parameter in the first position should be treated as statics
although that is not yet part of this PR. We add an implicit self to all methods
This obviously required updating the whole stdlib and its components, tests etc but the change
is pretty straightforward in the diff.
Notice that this change **does not** change method dispatch, which was removed in the last changes.
This was done on purpose to simplify the implementation for now. We will likely still remove all
those implicit selfs to bring true statics.
Minor caveat - since `main` doesn't actually need self, already removed that which simplified
a lot of code.
More and more often I need a way to only recover a specific type of a dataflow error (in a similar manner as with panics). So the API for `Error.catch` has been amended to more closely resemble `Panic.catch`, allowing to handle only specific types of dataflow errors, passing others through unchanged. The default is `Any`, meaning all errors are caught by default, and the behaviour of `x.catch` remains unchanged.
Modified UppercaseNames to now resolve methods without an explicit `here` to point to the current module.
`here` was also often used instead of `self` which was allowed by the compiler.
Therefore UppercaseNames pass is now GlobalNames and does some extra work -
it translated method calls without an explicit target into proper applications.
# Important Notes
There was a long-standing bug in scopes usage when compiling standalone expressions.
This resulted in AliasAnalysis generating incorrect graphs and manifested itself only in unit tests
and when running `eval`, thus being a bit hard to locate.
See `runExpression` for details.
Additionally, method name resolution is now case-sensitive.
Obsolete passes like UndefinedVariables and ModuleThisToHere were removed. All tests have been adapted.
A semi-manual s/this/self appied to the whole standard library.
Related to https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182328601
In the compiler promoted to use constants instead of hardcoded
`this`/`self` whenever possible.
# Important Notes
The PR **does not** require explicit `self` parameter declaration for methods as this part
of the design is still under consideration.
- Merge the two approaches and makes them consistent
- Add warning support into Reader
# Important Notes
- Added support for JUnit format XML generation on tests. Use `ENSO_TEST_JUNIT_DIR`
This PR replaces hard-coded `@Builtin_Method` and `@Builtin_Type` nodes in Builtins with an automated solution
that a) collects metadata from such annotations b) generates `BuiltinTypes` c) registers builtin methods with corresponding
constructors.
The main differences are:
1) The owner of the builtin method does not necessarily have to be a builtin type
2) You can now mix regular methods and builtin ones in stdlib
3) No need to keep track of builtin methods and types in various places and register them by hand (a source of many typos or omissions as it found during the process of this PR)
Related to #181497846
Benchmarks also execute within the margin of error.
### Important Notes
The PR got a bit large over time as I was moving various builtin types and finding various corner cases.
Most of the changes however are rather simple c&p from Builtins.enso to the corresponding stdlib module.
Here is the list of the most crucial updates:
- `engine/runtime/src/main/java/org/enso/interpreter/runtime/builtin/Builtins.java` - the core of the changes. We no longer register individual builtin constructors and their methods by hand. Instead, the information about those is read from 2 metadata files generated by annotation processors. When the builtin method is encountered in stdlib, we do not ignore the method. Instead we lookup it up in the list of registered functions (see `getBuiltinFunction` and `IrToTruffle`)
- `engine/runtime/src/main/java/org/enso/interpreter/runtime/callable/atom/AtomConstructor.java` has now information whether it corresponds to the builtin type or not.
- `engine/runtime/src/main/scala/org/enso/compiler/codegen/RuntimeStubsGenerator.scala` - when runtime stubs generator encounters a builtin type, based on the @Builtin_Type annotation, it looks up an existing constructor for it and registers it in the provided scope, rather than creating a new one. The scope of the constructor is also changed to the one coming from stdlib, while ensuring that synthetic methods (for fields) also get assigned correctly
- `engine/runtime/src/main/scala/org/enso/compiler/codegen/IrToTruffle.scala` - when a builtin method is encountered in stdlib we don't generate a new function node for it, instead we look it up in the list of registered builtin methods. Note that Integer and Number present a bit of a challenge because they list a whole bunch of methods that don't have a corresponding method (instead delegating to small/big integer implementations).
During the translation new atom constructors get initialized but we don't want to do it for builtins which have gone through the process earlier, hence the exception
- `lib/scala/interpreter-dsl/src/main/java/org/enso/interpreter/dsl/MethodProcessor.java` - @Builtin_Method processor not only generates the actual code fpr nodes but also collects and writes the info about them (name, class, params) to a metadata file that is read during builtins initialization
- `lib/scala/interpreter-dsl/src/main/java/org/enso/interpreter/dsl/MethodProcessor.java` - @Builtin_Method processor no longer generates only (root) nodes but also collects and writes the info about them (name, class, params) to a metadata file that is read during builtins initialization
- `lib/scala/interpreter-dsl/src/main/java/org/enso/interpreter/dsl/TypeProcessor.java` - Similar to MethodProcessor but handles @Builtin_Type annotations. It doesn't, **yet**, generate any builtin objects. It also collects the names, as present in stdlib, if any, so that we can generate the names automatically (see generated `types/ConstantsGen.java`)
- `engine/runtime/src/main/java/org/enso/interpreter/node/expression/builtin` - various classes annotated with @BuiltinType to ensure that the atom constructor is always properly registered for the builitn. Note that in order to support types fields in those, annotation takes optional `params` parameter (comma separated).
- `engine/runtime/src/bench/scala/org/enso/interpreter/bench/fixtures/semantic/AtomFixtures.scala` - drop manual creation of test list which seemed to be a relict of the old design
- Added Encoding type
- Added `Text.bytes`, `Text.from_bytes` with Encoding support
- Renamed `File.read` to `File.read_text`
- Renamed `File.write` to `File.write_text`
- Added Encoding support to `File.read_text` and `File.write_text`
- Added warnings to invalid encodings
Implements https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/181805693 and finishes the basic set of features of the Aggregate component.
Still not all aggregations are supported everywhere, because for example SQLite has quite limited support for aggregations. Currently the workaround is to bring the table into memory (if possible) and perform the computation locally. Later on, we may add more complex generator features to emulate the missing aggregations with complex sub-queries.
- Added Minimum, Maximum, Longest. Shortest, Mode, Percentile
- Added first and last to Map
- Restructured Faker type more inline with FakerJS
- Created 2,500 row data set
- Tests for group_by
- Performance tests for group_by
* Add matching mode definitions
* Add stub for new method API and an initial test suite
* Fix tests, implement exact matching
* Implement Regex matching
* changelog
* Add benchmarks
* Wokraround for case insensitive regex locale support
* minor tweaks
* Unify Case_Insensitive
* Update edge cases
* Fix other affected places
* minor style change
* Add a problematic test
* Add a regex test for a similar situation
* Migrate to StringSearch:wq
* Add test cases for scharfes S edge case
* Add problematic Regex Unicode normalization test
* Document the regex accents peculiarity
* Do not apply the normalization in ASCII only mode
* cr