It appears that we were always adding builtin methods to the scope of the module and the builtin type that shared the same name.
This resulted in some methods being accidentally available even though they shouldn't.
This change treats differently builtins of types and modules and introduces auto-registration feature for builtins.
By default all builtin methods are registered with a type, unless explicitly defined in the annotation property.
Builtin methods that are auto-registered do not have to be explicitly defined and are registered with the underlying type.
Registration correctly infers the right type, depending whether we deal with static or instance methods.
Builtin methods that are not auto-registered have to be explicitly defined **always**. Modules' builtin methods are the prime example.
# Important Notes
Builtins now carry information whether they are static or not (inferred from the lack of `self` parameter).
They also carry a `autoRegister` property to determine if a builtin method should be automatically registered with the type.
Libraries: Revert changes that were necessitated by a new rule we have decided not to introduce.
Parser:
- Support mixed constructors/bindings in types.
- Disallow zero-length hex sequences in character escapes: `\x`, `\u`, `\u{}`, `\U`, `\U{}` are no longer legal synonyms for `\0` (matches old parser behavior).
This change adds support for Version Controlled projects in language server.
Version Control supports operations:
- `init` - initialize VCS for a project
- `save` - commit all changes to the project in VCS
- `restore` - ability to restore project to some past `save`
- `status` - show the status of the project from VCS' perspective
- `list` - show a list of requested saves
# Important Notes
Behind the scenes, Enso's VCS uses git (or rather [jGit](https://www.eclipse.org/jgit/)) but nothing stops us from using a different implementation as long as it conforms to the establish API.
Computing length of a text takes time. Let's cache it after first computation.
# Important Notes
Wrote `StringBenchmarks` that sums lengths of (the same) `Text` present many time in a `Vector`. Initially it took `383.673 ms` per operation. Then it took `0.031 ms/op`. Looks like the `length` calls are returning instantly as they get cached.
Ensure all tokens from the input are represented in trees resulting from invalid inputs--tests now cover every reachable code line that creates an `Invalid` node. (Also implemented stricter validation, mainly of `import`/`export` statements.)
See: https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/183405907
Another set of improvements extracted from #3611. This time it includes a fix to the Rust part of the parser.
# Important Notes
After digging into metadata parsing I realized the positions used to query the BTree data structure are wrong. This PR tries to address that by re-arranging the order of serialized fields and passing `startCode` and `endCode` locations in.
Originally I though I need changes on the Rust side to support `in` operator. Turned out I can do that just with changes on the Java side.
Qualified names in imports were missing UUIDs. Fixed now.
Split `HasOutputTypeLabel::output_type_label` method implementation non-generic part into a separate function. This significantly reduces compile time without risking any performance regressions. That function is currently only used for debug network visualization using graphviz, but still contributed a significant compilation time.
I've made a single attempt to profile the compiler itself, and it turned out that the compiler spent a significant amount of time trying to resolve `Pattern` implementation for closures in that method. Each of those also had to separately go through codegen and optimization. That happened for each node type in the codebase, per crate. Moving that into separate non-inline function removed all those unnecessary duplicates from. I also took this opportunity to rewrite that small piece of parsing to make it a bit cleaner.
The method of measurement is explained here: https://blog.rust-lang.org/inside-rust/2020/02/25/intro-rustc-self-profile.html
In this specific case, I've used `self-profile` to generate a profile for all crates, then used `crox` and [perfetto](https://ui.perfetto.dev/) to analyze the output.
This also shows a pattern to be aware of - using closures in generic context forces the compiler to make a separate closure type per each instantiation, even if that closure doesn't close on anything and could be a static function. This in effect forces even more instantiations or unnecessary type resolutions for all code paths that touch that closure. Using static functions or separating the non-generic part away in those cases would likely continue to help with compile times and file size.
## Comparison
The measurement was done on same machine under same environment, cleaning the build artifacts inbetween runs.
| | before | after |
|-|-|-|
|total build time|5m 5.5s|3m 59.0s|
| `ide-view-graph-editor` crate build time| 85.68s | 49.73s |
| `ide-view-component-list-panel-grid` crate build time | 49.88s | 32.07s |
| `ide-view` crate build time | 29.05s | 17.5s |
| `enso_gui.wasm` file size before wasm-opt | 83.6 MB | 80.9 MB |
| `enso_gui.wasm` file size after wasm-opt | 67.3 MB | 65.3 MB |
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/919491/199633193-64dada16-eb22-4020-8d31-3f24661497aa.png)
Make sure `libenso_parser.so`, `.dll` or `.dylib` are packaged and included when `sbt buildEngineDistribution`.
# Important Notes
There was [a discussion](https://discord.com/channels/401396655599124480/1036562819644141598) about proper location of the library. It was concluded that _"there's no functional difference between a dylib and a jar."_ and as such the library is placed in `component` folder.
Currently the old parser is still used for parsing. This PR just integrates the build system changes and makes us ready for smooth flipping of the parser in the future as part of #3611.
Wrap big and commonly copied `Application` struct into `Rc` to avoid large structure sizes for all widgets.
The `Application` struct by itself takes 704 bytes, measured by `size_of::<Application>()`. This structure is very often directly copied into components and widgets. Most notably, the generic `Widget` struct contains it. There are also cases, where structs (especially various `Model`s) contain multiple other child widgets directly, and end up indirectly copying the application multiple times.
All of `Application` clones are logical references (via `CloneRef`), so wrapping it into extra `Rc` doesn't change semantics in any way, but makes all structs that clone it way smaller. This reduces the amount of `memcpy`s and overall volume of allocated memory.
Measurement of a few example structs:
Before change:
```
size_of Application: 704 B
size_of Scrollbar: 712 B
size_of Scrollbar Model: 1576 B
```
After change:
```
size_of Application: 4 B
size_of ApplicationData: 704 B
size_of Scrollbar: 12 B
size_of Scrollbar Model: 176 B
```
Ideally we would not need to clone application reference into each component, but that's out of scope of this PR since it requires a lot more effort.
Fix bugs in `TreeToIr` (rewrite) and parser. Implement more undocumented features in parser. Emulate some old parser bugs and quirks for compatibility.
Changes in libs:
- Fix some bugs.
- Clean up some odd syntaxes that the old parser translates idiosyncratically.
- Constructors are now required to precede methods.
# Important Notes
Out of 221 files:
- 215 match the old parser
- 6 contain complex types the old parser is known not to handle correctly
So, compared to the old parser, the new parser parses 103% of files correctly.
1. Changes how we do monadic state – rather than a haskelly solution, we now have an implicit env with mutable data inside. It's better for the JVM. It also opens the possibility to have state ratained on exceptions (previously not possible) – both can now be implemented.
2. Introduces permission check system for IO actions.
Fixes https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182926584
[Task link](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/183426449)
This PR fixes an IDE freeze introduced by https://github.com/enso-org/enso/pull/3732 and reimplements reverting edited nodes to their previous state.
The cause of the IDE freeze is quite interesting. A detailed investigation is available [here](https://gist.github.com/vitvakatu/785e34881368b8cfda61715d7543cbd0).
The graph editor needs to update the Presenter state only if the user is editing the node. Before this PR, the graph editor notified the Presenter with a visual representation of the node content instead of code expression. It caused inconsistency between the states of the controller and Presenter and caused severe performance issues.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/6566674/195831224-6d6e8258-e347-48b4-890a-d89c7300bc39.mp4
# Important Notes
- ~~There is a more complex alternative solution – it requires refactoring of the `component::node::input::area` module. The Presenter can be notified with `expression.code` changes, not `expression.viz_code`. I found a simpler solution (`.gate(&edit_mode)`), which has the same effect but does not require additional refactoring.~~ Said solution is implemented in a separate commit
We've had an old attempt at integrating a Rust parser with our Scala/Java projects. It seems to have been abandoned and is not used anywhere - it is also superseded by the new integration of the Rust parser. I think it was used as an experiment to see how to approach such an integration.
Since it is not used anymore - it make sense to remove it, because it only adds some (slight, but non-zero) maintenance effort. We can always bring it back from git history if necessary.
When hovering the mouse pointer over the Marketplace button on the left bar of the Component Browser, show a caption informing that the Marketplace will be available soon.
https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182613789
#### Visuals
The video below demonstrates the caption shown when hovering the Marketplace button on the left bar of the Component Browser. It shows the caption disappearing after a hardcoded time, or when the mouse pointer is moved away from the button.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/273837/196195809-45a712e1-ad86-47d8-99ff-1475a0b74c6e.mov
# Important Notes
- The "Label" visual component was fixed. Previously, the width calculation of the background was not synchronized correctly with the text width. As a result, a zero-width background was displayed when a Label was shown for the first time.
There is one place in code, where we can potentially panic on double borrow, because the drop routine is done while having data borrowed.
# Important Notes
The issue was easily reproducible on @Frizi machine.
Another part of #3611 ready for integration into `develop` branch.
# Important Notes
Test `org.enso.compiler.EnsoCompilerTest.testTestGroup` is ignored as it has problems with source offsets - identifiers don't have the appropriate names due to `Tree.codeRepr()` being _off_.
- Special precedence rules for case-of so that `:` operator works without parens or nospace-grouping.
- Support an old-lambda syntax: `x->x-> x`. According to the usual rules, the first nospace group would be parsed as an operator section. The expression now parses as a lambda that contains a lambda.
- Match old parser treatment of # in doc comments.
- Tweak precedence so (a : B = c) works.
- Documented constructors.
- Reimplement the `Duration` type to a built-in type.
- `Duration` is an interop type.
- Allow Enso method dispatch on `Duration` interop coming from different languages.
# Important Notes
- The older `Duration` type should now be split into new `Duration` builtin type and a `Period` type.
- This PR does not implement `Period` type, so all the `Period`-related functionality is currently not working, e.g., `Date - Period`.
- This PR removes `Integer.milliseconds`, `Integer.seconds`, ..., `Integer.years` extension methods.
This PR introduced an overhauled Component List Panel implementation, making use of the efficient EnsoGL grid view component. Also, it delivers a couple of new features:
* A part of the new design: there are no more section headers in grid, instead groups are "glued" together. The local scope section is under "popular" (old "favorites").
* The keyboard management inside grid works.
* there is a mouse hover highlight
* selecting the lowest entry in section when jumping with navigation bar.
* accepting input as-is with cmd/ctrl + Enter.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3919101/194561890-fffb9b41-2f0d-4357-8d9a-5038a6bcb023.mp4
### Important Notes
**What is not implemented:**
* [Focus management between panels.](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/180872763) The grid is always focused. To accept the current input, use ctrl+Enter shortcut.
* [Proper handling of selection when having empty space on the right and pressing right arrow.](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/183487880)
* When entering a module, its name is not added to the input as described in the design doc. Will be a part of [this User Story](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/181058321).
**Known issues**
* [the selection, especially in the local scope section, has sometimes an undesirable offset](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/183487730). The cause is known, but not so easy to fix.
* The inserted nodes are often producing errors. The Browser's inherits the outdated understanding of the language from old Node Searcher, and it does not include new form of imports, static methods etc. Those all will be fixed as a part of [this User Story](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/181058321).
* The performance is improved, but still not ideal, due to problems in [text areas](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/183406745).
* To scroll the documentation panel, you must first click on it.
- Implement macro-contexts-lite (`from` is now only a keyword at the beginning of a line)
- Support special nospace-group handling for old lambdas (so expressions like this work: `x-> y-> x + y`)
- Fix a text-escape incompatibility
# Important Notes
- There is now an `OperatorFunction`, which is like a `Function` but has an operator for a name, and likewise an `OperatorTypeSignature`.
[ci no changelog needed]
[Task link](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182675703)
This PR implements the actual integration of the breadcrumbs panel with the component list panel. A special breadcrumbs controller (`controller::searcher::breadcrumbs`) is tracking the currently opened module with a list of its parents. The searcher presenter uses the API of the controller to sync the displayed list of breadcrumbs with the controller state.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/6566674/193064122-7d3fc4d6-9148-4ded-a73e-767ac9ac83f8.mp4
# Important Notes
- There is an `All` breadcrumb displayed at all times at the beginning of the list. It will be replaced with a section name as part of [Section Title on Component Browser's Breadcrumbs Panel](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182610561) task.
- I changed the implementation of `project::main_module_id`, `project::QualifiedName::main_module`, and `API::main_module` so that they are logically connected which each other.
- I adjusted the Breadcrumbs View to avoid "appearance" animation glitches when opening new modules. `set_entries` was replaced with the `set_entries_from` endpoint.
When running the profiling run-graph and flamegraph demo scenes, if a profile file is not found in the directory served over http, fall back to generating demo data.
This PR disables the wasm-opt optimization in the crates that can be used as WASM entry points. Unfortunately, wasm-pack does not allow for disabling wasm-opt through a command line flag, so we have to disable it by setting an appropriate flag in each Cargo.toml.
Use an `ArraySlice` to slice `Vector`.
Avoids memory copying for the slice function.
# Important Notes
| Test | Ref | New |
| --- | --- | --- |
| New Vector | 71.9 | 71.0 |
| Append Single | 26.0 | 27.7 |
| Append Large | 15.1 | 14.9 |
| Sum | 156.4 | 165.8 |
| Drop First 20 and Sum | 171.2 | 165.3 |
| Drop Last 20 and Sum | 170.7 | 163.0 |
| Filter | 76.9 | 76.9 |
| Filter With Index | 166.3 | 168.3 |
| Partition | 278.5 | 273.8 |
| Partition With Index | 392.0 | 393.7 |
| Each | 101.9 | 102.7 |
- Note: the performance of New and Append has got slower from previous tests.
This PR adds a possibility to generate native-image for engine-runner.
Note that due to on-demand loading of stdlib, programs that make use of it are currently not yet supported
(that will be resolved at a later point).
The purpose of this PR is only to make sure that we can generate a bare minimum runner because due to lack TruffleBoundaries or misconfiguration in reflection config, this can get broken very easily.
To generate a native image simply execute:
```
sbt> engine-runner-native/buildNativeImage
... (wait a few minutes)
```
The executable is called `runner` and can be tested via a simple test that is in the resources. To illustrate the benefits
see the timings difference between the non-native and native one:
```
>time built-distribution/enso-engine-0.0.0-dev-linux-amd64/enso-0.0.0-dev/bin/enso --no-ir-caches --in-project test/Tests/ --run engine/runner-native/src/test/resources/Factorial.enso 6
720
real 0m4.503s
user 0m9.248s
sys 0m1.494s
> time ./runner --run engine/runner-native/src/test/resources/Factorial.enso 6
720
real 0m0.176s
user 0m0.042s
sys 0m0.038s
```
# Important Notes
Notice that due to a [bug in GraalVM](https://github.com/oracle/graal/issues/4200), which is already fixed in 22.x, and us still being on 21.x for the time being, I had to add a workaround to our sbt build to build a different fat jar for native image. To workaround it I had to exclude sqlite jar. Hence native image task is on `engine-runner-native` and not on `engine-runner`.
Will need to add the above command to CI.
When a GridView is navigated using the keyboard, scroll it to display the newly selected entry.
https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182593635
#### Visuals
See below for a video demonstrating automatic scrolling of the GridView when arrow keys are pressed on the keyboard. The first video below shows the default scrolling behavior in a GridView without headers.
Note:
- When the Grid View is scrolled, the mouse hover highlight moves away from the mouse position. This is not a new regression, the behavior is the same in the `develop` branch (e.g. when scrolling using the mouse).
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/273837/190183984-91f7808c-3606-43f8-bcda-ac4d5f84e00f.mov
The video below shows the behavior in a GridView with headers when the GridView is first scrolled to its top-left corner. The following guidance from the Design Doc is enabled and showcased:
> Users can change the selected component by pressing the arrow keys. The Focus does not move up if it does not have to (in most cases, the focus is located in the second row from the bottom). Instead, the component list scrolls down if there are enough entries.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/273837/189151546-e50aaf22-6f4d-41cb-809f-60038305745f.mov
The next video shows the behavior in the same GridView as in the previous example when the GridView is first scrolled away from any of its boundary entries. Notably, scrolling happens only when the selection is moved using the keyboard arrow keys, not when changing the selection using the mouse. This behavior is based on a discussion with @wdanilo on Discord.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/273837/189151974-d992be93-f61f-4e9f-9f4c-dfe260bbec5b.mov
This PR contains an entry definition for Grid View to be used inside Component List Panel View. The Example grid view with the entry definition may be seen on new_component_list_panel_view debug scene.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3919101/190663278-23c35ab0-f426-4001-8128-df7147aafb9e.mp4
# Important Notes
* The styling is not detailed yet due to time constraints (I want to move to integration this grid view to Component Panel List ASAP) and the fact that I could not get new mplus1 font working with text Area.
* Implementing this required adding a "contour offset" feature to the Grid View.
[ci no changelog needed]
[Task link](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/181445628).
This PR implements a Breadcrumbs panel for the new component browser.
The Breadcrumbs is a horizontal list of text labels separated by a special icon and has an optional ellipsis icon at the end.
It is implemented using the new GridView component.
Video:
Demo of adding new breadcrumbs, scrolling behavior, and selecting breadcrumbs with the mouse.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/6566674/189199432-77807cef-00dc-4abe-b95c-b17a536f59f6.mp4
Demo of selecting breadcrumbs with keyboard shortcuts:
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/6566674/189199603-53e55335-73ba-4ed7-8291-4455144c06aa.mp4
# Important Notes
- This PR implements an old interaction of the design of the component browser. The new design of the breadcrumbs can not be easily integrated into the current look of the component browser, so we would need to update styles later. It should be a relatively simple task. *The implementation uses color from the new design though. (but not fonts and sizes)*
- I found a bug in the grid view implementation that causes panics at runtime in some conditions. The reason is triggering FRP endpoints while constructing new entries. This issue is fixed in the PR.
Add support for moving the selection in a Grid View using the keyboard.
https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182585789
#### Visuals
See below for videos showcasing GridView selection keyboard navigation in the `grid_view` debug scene. In the videos, messages in the Developer Console can be observed. When a keypress would result in the selection being moved out of the GridView, the selection is not moved and a message is emitted in the Developer Console instead, showcasing an FRP output signal emitted on such event. Please note that the videos are recorded with the tracing level changed to `DEBUG`. In a default build, the tracing level is set to `WARN`, and the messages visible in the videos are not displayed in the Developer Console.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/273837/188483972-89d79f7b-1303-457b-869f-282e0809a755.movhttps://user-images.githubusercontent.com/273837/188484294-e9b6461c-a84f-4817-9447-d792f2ebdbb5.mov
The following video shows moving the selection between "regular" entries and header entries. It also shows a current usability limitation of the selection keyboard navigation feature, such that the Grid is not scrolled when the selection leaves the visible part of the Grid, and the selection may thus disappear from view.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/273837/188485238-29a82b27-de2f-4cf8-a2e7-ff8c3f41478d.mov
# Important Notes
- Keyboard navigation only works when a GridView has focus.
- Selection keyboard navigation only works if the selection was already set to some entry beforehand.
- If keyboard navigation would move selection outside of the grid, the selection movement is canceled and an FRP event is emitted.
`Vector` type is now a builtin type. This requires a bunch of additional builtin methods for its creation:
- Use `Vector.from_array` to convert any array-like structure into a `Vector` [by copy](f628b28f5f)
- Use (already existing) `Vector.from_polyglot_array` to convert any array-like structure into a `Vector` **without** copying
- Use (already existing) `Vector.fill 1 item` to create a singleton `Vector`
Additional, for pattern matching purposes, we had to implement a `VectorBranchNode`. Use following to match on `x` being an instance of `Vector` type:
```
import Standard.Base.Data.Vector
size = case x of
Vector.Vector -> x.length
_ -> 0
```
Finally, `VectorLiterals` pass that transforms `[1,2,3]` to (roughly)
```
a1 = 1
a2 = 2
a3 = 3
Vector (Array (a1,a2, a3))
```
had to be modified to generate
```
a1 = 1
a2 = 2
a3 = 3
Vector.from_array (Array (a1, a2, a3))
```
instead to accomodate to the API changes. As of 025acaa676 all the known CI checks passes. Let's start the review.
# Important Notes
Matching in `case` statement is currently done via `Vector_Data`. Use:
```
case x of
Vector.Vector_Data -> True
```
until a better alternative is found.
Parse text literals. See: https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182496940
# Important Notes
- The left-trimming algorithm (https://github.com/enso-org/design/blob/wip/wd/enso-spec/epics/enso-spec-1.0/04.%20Expressions.md#inline-and-block-text-literals) requires two passes over the sequence of text segments. This implementation performs one pass while parsing (identifying the correct amount of trim). The other pass (applying the trim) can be done when building the value of the quoted string: Trim the amount of whitespace identified by the `trim` field off of the whitespace of each `TextSection` (the value will not exceed the amount of whitespace found in the tokens' offsets, except for tokens with 0 offset, in which case no trimming is necessary/possible).
Implements:
- UUIDs: https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182931137
- Comments: https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182981779
- Type annotations and signatures: https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182497454
- Fix getter names (https://github.com/enso-org/enso/pull/3627#discussion_r940887460).
# Important Notes
- I can't fully test UUIDs; I have tested that the data obtained in Rust matches my understanding of how the format is supposed to work. What remains to be tested is that the data in Java matches the way the old parser handles the format. So @JaroslavTulach, let me know if you see any cases where I'm not returning the same values.
- This implementation of type annotations and signatures accepts any expression in type context. It would probably be nice to narrow this down at some point, but for now I have no design info on what specifically should be allowed in type expressions; this implementation should be at least an incremental improvement.
This is a step towards the new language spec. The `type` keyword now means something. So we now have
```
type Maybe a
Some (from_some : a)
None
```
as a thing one may write. Also `Some` and `None` are not standalone types now – only `Maybe` is.
This halfway to static methods – we still allow for things like `Number + Number` for backwards compatibility. It will disappear in the next PR.
The concept of a type is now used for method dispatch – with great impact on interpreter code density.
Some APIs in the STDLIB may require re-thinking. I take this is going to be up to the libraries team – some choices are not as good with a semantically different language. I've strived to update stdlib with minimal changes – to make sure it still works as it did.
It is worth mentioning the conflicting constructor name convention I've used: if `Foo` only has one constructor, previously named `Foo`, we now have:
```
type Foo
Foo_Data f1 f2 f3
```
This is now necessary, because we still don't have proper statics. When they arrive, this can be changed (quite easily, with SED) to use them, and figure out the actual convention then.
I have also reworked large parts of the builtins system, because it did not work at all with the new concepts.
It also exposes the type variants in SuggestionBuilder, that was the original tiny PR this was based on.
PS I'm so sorry for the size of this. No idea how this could have been smaller. It's a breaking language change after all.
- 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.
* 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>
[ci no changelog needed]
[Task link](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182955595)
This PR implements variable column widths in the new Grid View component. We need this feature to quickly implement various parts of the UI, including the breadcrumbs panel of the component browser.
There are two ways to change the width of the specific column:
1. "From the outside", using the `set_column_width` endpoint of the Grid View
2. "From the inside", using the `override_column_width` endpoint of the EntryFrp.
Both ways work similarly, but the latter is helpful for our breadcrumbs implementation, as it allows for entry to decide on the width of the column by its content.
See the screencast with three grid views. The top-left one has every even column shrunk by GridView API. Every grid view has a second column extended by EntryFrp API.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/6566674/185060985-7b7df076-c659-41fa-977a-22875493f8d4.mp4
[ci no changelog needed]
[Task link](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/181870555)
This PR changes the relative position of the edited node in such a way that it is left-aligned to the component browser window. This change reflects the most recent version of the [design doc](https://github.com/enso-org/design/blob/main/epics/component-browser/design.md#overview)
<img width="1157" alt="Screenshot 2022-08-08 at 19 15 47" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/6566674/183454192-81960e0a-ab69-43a4-b7df-d13320a9d16d.png">
As an additional change, the FRP implementation of the `Camera2d` was extended with a new output (screen dimensions) and fixed. With the old implementation, there was a possibility of panic at runtime because of non-exclusive borrows of `RefCell`. The FRP event for camera position was emited inside the scope with a mutable `RefCell` borrow. Any attempt to borrow the camera one more time (e.g., by calling one of the getters, such as `zoom()`) caused panic at runtime.
Importing individual methods didn't work as advertised because parser
would allow them but later drop that information. This slipped by because we never had mixed atoms and methods in stdlib.
# Important Notes
Added some basic tests but we need to ensure that the new parser allows for this.
@jdunkerley will be adding some changes to stdlib that will be testing this functionality as well.
Based on usage; I believe this handles every case in current `.enso` files.
# Important Notes
- `import` is a built-in macro, so an import statement parses as a `MultiSegmentApp`.
- Every `import` syntax will have a segment whose leading keyword is `import`; however `import` macros can be identified more efficiently by looking at only the first keyword. A `MultiSegmentApp` is an import if and only if its first keyword is in the set { "polyglot", "from", "import" }.
Show custom icons in Component Browser for entries that have a non-empty `Icon` section in their docs with the section's body containing a name of a predefined icon.
https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182584336
#### Visuals
A screenshot of a couple custom icons in the Component Browser:
<img width="346" alt="Screenshot 2022-07-27 at 15 55 33" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/273837/181265249-d57f861f-8095-4933-9ef6-e62644e11da3.png">
# Important Notes
- The PR assigns icon names to four items in the standard library, but only three of them are shown in the Component Browser because of [a parsing bug in the Engine](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182781673).
- Icon names are assigned only to four items in the standard library because only two currently predefined icons match entries in the currently defined Virtual Component Groups. Adjusting the definitions of icons and Virtual Component Groups is covered by [a different task](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182584311).
- A bug in the documentation of the Enso protocol message `DocSection` is fixed. A `text` field in the `Tag` interface is renamed to `body` (this is the field name used in Engine).
This PR adds a new variant of selection, where the mouse-hovered entry is highlighted and may be selected by clicking.
In the video below, we have three grid views with slightly different settings:
* In the left-top corner, both hover and selection highlight is just a shape under the label. Such a grid view does not require additional layers (when compared to non-selectable grid view).
* In the left-bottom corner the hover is normal shape, but selection is a _masked layer_ which allows us to have different text color. This setting requires three more layers to render.
* In the right-top corner, both hover and selection are displayed in the masked layer, creating 6 additional layers.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3919101/181514178-f243bfeb-f2dd-4507-adc3-5344ae0579b7.mp4
This change allows for importing modules using a qualified name and deals with any conflicts on the way.
Given a module C defined at `A/B/C.enso` with
```
type C
type C a
```
it is now possible to import it as
```
import project.A
...
val x = A.B.C 10
```
Given a module located at `A/B/C/D.enso`, we will generate
intermediate, synthetic, modules that only import and export the successor module along the path.
For example, the contents of a synthetic module B will look like
```
import <namespace>.<pkg-name>.A.B.C
export <namespace>.<pkg-name>.A.B.C
```
If module B is defined already by the developer, the compiler will _inject_ the above statements to the IR.
Also removed the last elements of some lowercase name resolution that managed to survive recent
changes (`Meta.Enso_Project` would now be ambiguous with `enso_project` method).
Finally, added a pass that detects shadowing of the synthetic module by the type defined along the path.
We print a warning in such a situation.
Related to https://www.pivotaltracker.com/n/projects/2539304
# Important Notes
There was an additional request to fix the annoying problem with `from` imports that would always bring
the module into the scope. The changes in stdlib demonstrate how it is now possible to avoid the workaround of
```
from X.Y.Z as Z_Module import A, B
```
(i.e. `as Z_Module` part is almost always unnecessary).
Fixes random timeout failures on CI.
```
INFO ide_ci::program::command: sbtℹ️ up to date, audited 98 packages in 3s
```
`npm install` takes 3s of test time doing unnecessary package auditing. On CI the command is executed once before running the tests and redundant `npm install` calls can be omitted.
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.
Provide a JNI dynamic-library interface to `enso_parser`.
# Important Notes
- The library can be built with: `cargo build -p enso-parser-jni`.
- A new `org.enso.syntax2.Parser` API is implemented on top of the JNI interface provided by `enso-parser-jni`.
- We are using the `jni` crate, since apparently Java cannot just call C-ABI functions. The crate is not well-maintained. I came across an obviously-unsound `safe` function, and found it was reported over a year ago, with a PR to fix: jni-rs/jni-rs#303. However our needs are simple. We can't trust any safety guarantees they imply, but I think we are unlikely to encounter any logic bugs using the basic bindings.
Significantly improves the polyglot Date support (as introduced by #3374). It enhances the `Date_Spec` to run it in four flavors:
- with Enso Date (as of now)
- with JavaScript Date
- with JavaScript Date wrapped in (JavaScript) array
- with Java LocalDate allocated directly
The code is then improved by necessary modifications to make the `Date_Spec` pass.
# Important Notes
James has requested in [#181755990](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/n/projects/2539304/stories/181755990) - e.g. _Review and improve InMemory Table support for Dates, Times, DateTimes, BigIntegers_ the following program to work:
```
foreign js dateArr = """
return [1, new Date(), 7]
main =
IO.println <| (dateArr.at 1).week_of_year
```
the program works with here in provided changes and prints `27` as of today.
@jdunkerley has provided tests for proper behavior of date in `Table` and `Column`. Those tests are working as of [f16d07e](f16d07e640). One just needs to accept `List<Value>` and then query `Value` for `isDate()` when needed.
Last round of changes is related to **exception handling**. 8b686b12bd makes sure `makePolyglotError` accepts only polyglot values. Then it wraps plain Java exceptions into `WrapPlainException` with `has_type` method - 60da5e70ed - the remaining changes in the PR are only trying to get all tests working in the new setup.
The support for `Time` isn't part of this PR yet.
**Note**: This PR also contains content of previous Grid View PR. We decided to discard the previous, because this one did some refactoring of old one, and it's not a big addition.
Added a scrollable::GridView component, which just embeds the GridView in ScrollArea. Also, re-worked the idea of text layers.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3919101/179020359-512ee127-c333-4f86-bff5-f1cb4154e03c.mp4
This PR contains all work for finishing integration of first Component List Panel in the IDE:
* It adds a stub for the whole Component Browser View. The documentation panel is re-used from the old searcher.
* It has the presenter implementation, integrating the view with Hierarchical Component List from the controller.
* It extends the View API, so the integration is possible, making use of Component Group Set wrapper.
* The selection integration was also merged into this PR, because it depended on the API extension mentioned above. However, we should avoid such practice in the future.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3919101/177816427-8c4285b4-8941-4048-a400-52f4acf77a9f.mp4
# Important Notes
There are some known issues, to-be-fixed in the future.
* The performance is bad. It should be improved with new text::Area, and the decent one shall come with [GridView inside component browser](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182561072)
* There is no keyboard navigation. It should also be delivered with [GridView](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182561072).
* The Favorites section is not [filtered out by node source type](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182661634).
implement simple variable assignments and function definitions.
This implements:
- https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182497122
- https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/182497144 (the code blocks are not created yet, but the function declaration is recognized.)
# Important Notes
- Introduced S-expression-based tests, and pretty-printing-roundtrip testing.
- Started writing tests for TypeDef based on the examples in the issue. None of them parse successfully.
- Fixed Number tokenizing.
- Moved most contents of parser's `main.rs` to `lib.rs` (fixes a warning).
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.
Implement generation of Java AST types from the Rust AST type definitions, with support for deserializing in Java syntax trees created in Rust.
### New Libraries
#### `enso-reflect`
Implements a `#[derive(Reflect)]` macro to enable runtime analysis of datatypes. Macro interface includes helper attributes; **the Rust types and the `reflect` attributes applied to them fully determine the Java types** ultimately produced (by `enso-metamodel`). This is the most important API, as it is used in the subject crates (`enso-parser`, and dependencies with types used in the AST). [Module docs](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/blob/wip/kw/parser/ast-transpiler/lib/rust/reflect/macros/src/lib.rs).
#### `enso-metamodel`
Provides data models for data models in Rust/Java/Meta (a highly-abstracted language-independent model--I have referred to it before as the "generic representation", but that was an overloaded term).
The high-level interface consists of operations on data models, and between them. For example, the only operations needed by [the binary that drives datatype transpilation](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/blob/wip/kw/parser/ast-transpiler/lib/rust/parser/generate-java/src/main.rs) are: `rust::to_meta`, `java::from_meta`, `java::transform::optional_to_null`, `java::to_syntax`.
The low-level interface consists of direct usage of the datatypes; this is used by [the module that implements some serialization overrides](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/blob/wip/kw/parser/ast-transpiler/lib/rust/parser/generate-java/src/serialization.rs) (so that the Java interface to `Code` references can produce `String`s on demand based on serialized offset/length pairs). The serialization override mechanism is based on customizing, not replacing, the generated deserialization methods, so as to be as robust as possible to changes in the Rust source or in the transpilation process.
### Important Notes
- Rust/Java serialization is exhaustively tested for structural compatibility. A function [`metamodel::meta::serialization::testcases`](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/blob/wip/kw/parser/ast-transpiler/lib/rust/metamodel/src/meta/serialization.rs) uses `reflect`-derived data to generate serialized representations of ASTs to use as test cases. Its should-accept cases cover every type a tree can contain; it also produces a representative set of should-reject cases. A Rust `#[test]` confirms that these cases are accepted/rejected as expected, and generated Java tests (see Binaries below) check the generated Java deserialization code against the same test cases.
- Deserializing `Code` is untested. The mechanism is in place (in Rust, we serialize only the offset/length of the `Cow`; in Java, during deserialization we obtain a context object holding a buffer for all string data; the accessor generated in Java uses the buffer and the offset/length to return `String`s), but it will be easier to test once we have implemented actually parsing something and instantiating the `Cow`s with source code.
- `#[tagged_enum]` [now supports](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/blob/wip/kw/parser/ast-transpiler/lib/rust/shapely/macros/src/tagged_enum.rs#L36-L51) control over what is done with container-level attributes; they can be applied to the container and variants (default), only to the container, or only to variants.
- Generation of `sealed` classes is supported, but currently disabled by `TARGET_VERSION` in `metamodel::java::syntax` so that tests don't require Java 15 to run. (The same logic is run either way; there is a shallow difference in output.)
### Binaries
The `enso-parser-generate-java` crate defines several binaries:
- `enso-parser-generate-java`: Performs the transpilation; after integration, this will be invoked by the build script.
- `java-tests`: Generates the Java code that tests format deserialization; after integration this command will be invoked by the build script, and its Java output compiled and run during testing.
- `graph-rust`/`graph-meta`/`graph-java`: Produce GraphViz representations of data models in different typesystems; these are for developing and understanding model transformations.
Until integration, a **script regenerates the Java and runs the format tests: `./tools/parser_generate_java.sh`**. The generated code can be browsed in `target/generated_java`.
If a node created by the user gets placed off-screen, the screen's camera is panned to make the node visible.
https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/181188687
#### Visuals
A screencast showing a number of node creation scenarios when the camera is panned to the newly created node, including when zoomed out.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/273837/177169716-50a12b0a-c742-4b01-9766-56206e7938b9.mov
# Important Notes
- Camera is panned also if the node is only partially visible, or if there's not enough free space visible around the node. The specific amount of free space that needs to be visible around a newly created node is configured in the theme.
- If the screen area is so small that the node cannot be fully fit in it (either horizontally or vertically), showing the left and top boundaries of the node's area takes priority over showing the corresponding opposite edges.