Resolve macros eagerly. Improves performance; allows parser to handle arbitrarily-long lines (fixes#7691).
# Important Notes
- A new utility, `lib/rust/parser/debug/tools/parse_all_enso_files.sh`, supports comparing ASTs parsed with different versions of the parser. This tool has been used to verify that this refactor doesn't change the result of parsing any standard library or test file.
Fixes#7468
The fix is pretty simple: we reuse the existing functionality for importing stuff and generating expressions. It fixes issues with `Nothing` or `Report_Unmatched` types.
https://github.com/enso-org/enso/assets/6566674/4e7addf9-2175-4f2a-a571-4ef823de5cb0
While debugging, I found it easier to work with a suggestion database when exported to some external format. Hence, I implemented serde serialization support for database entries and also a new debug shortcut <kbd>ctrl</kbd>+<kbd>shift</kbd>+<kbd>u</kbd> to dump all entries to the console.
Use the new Enso Font; also change the anti-aliasing logic to be based on device pixel ratio, rather than platform. This will improve the clarity of font rendering on Windows/Linux machines with high pixel densities.
Design reference:
![image](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/assets/1047859/934ec9ac-52c3-4a81-a9f9-143378ecb658)
Tested on various combinations of DPR/platform:
OS X, `devicePixelRatio` = 2 (should look similar to how we were already rendering *mplus1* on OS X):
<img width="1440" alt="Screenshot 2023-08-07 at 5 46 11 PM" src="https://github.com/enso-org/enso/assets/1047859/2fdf251a-ba5e-426f-b6c4-194347a9cee4">
Windows, `devicePixelRatio` = 1.25 (should look similar to how we were already rendering *mplus1* on this platform/DPR):
![image](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/assets/1047859/55c4a129-4fff-4a9b-8e55-51a5d206e659)
Linux, `devicePixelRatio` = 1 (should look similar to how we were already rendering *mplus1* on this platform/DPR):
![image](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/assets/1047859/c5ac61f0-e3c5-43ca-8ee7-e1e04e84d35e)
# Important Notes
Style changes:
- Use the Enso Font for code in Rust, replacing the DejaVu fonts.
- Use the Enso Font in HTML: code in documentation, and error visualizations.
- Change SpanWidgets from Bold to Extra Bold, to match the design.
Implementation improvements:
- The new font download is cached (and Github-authenticated); this should eliminate a "rate limit" build failure I've
encountered in the past.
- Clean up DocSection HTML rendering a bit.
- Remove a CSS file that seems to have been superseded.
* Support arguments list in the doc parser
* Support new doc sections in documentation panel
* Remove headers
* Remove outer dom and place breadcrumbs
* Fix methods icon
* Use unordered list class in css
* Improve tags styles
* Remove virtual component groups docs
* Cleanup top-level css styles
* Small adjustments to headers
* Add styles for emphasized text
* Add bold font for arguments
* Self-review
* Remove redundant placeholder struct.
* Update outdated doc.
* Avoid allocation when comparing strings.
* Avoid empty paragraph.
* Reduce allocations.
* Update test to remove empty paragraph.
* Fix rebase issues.
* Improve padding and size handling in UI themes
Added padding_x and padding_y to hardcoded theme's breadcrumb settings to ensure consistent padding. Also, these padding settings and breadcrumb_height are now used directly in the Style structure, eliminating hardcoded values in the view documentation.
* Adjusted breadcrumb background dimensions calculation.
* Add support for improper arguments formatting in documenation comments
* Do not include Icon tag into the docs
* Fix documentation panel resizing
* enso-formatter
---------
Co-authored-by: Michael Mauderer <michael.mauderer@enso.org>
Fixes#7336 in a quick way.
Next to the old way of defining groups, the library can just add `GROUP` tag to some entities, and it will be added to the group specified in tag's description.
The group name may be qualified (with project name, like `Standard.Base.Input/Output`) or just name - in the latter case, IDE will assume a group defined in the same library as the entity.
Also moved some entities from "export" list in package.yaml to GROUP tag to give an example. I didn't move all of those, as I assume the library team will reorganize those groups anyway.
### Important Notes
@jdunkerley @radeusgd @GregoryTravis When you will start specifying groups in tags, remember that:
* The groups still belongs to a concrete project; if some entity outside a project wants to be added to its group, the "qualified" name should be specified. See `Table.new` example in this PR.
* If the group name does not reflect any group in package.yaml **the tag is ignored**.
* A single entity may be only in a single group. If it's specified in both package.yaml and in tag, the tag takes precedence.
---------
Co-authored-by: Ilya Bogdanov <fumlead@gmail.com>
Somebody forgot to apply `./run fmt` before committing to develop, so now we have a lot of whitespace changes in files.
# Important Notes
See https://github.com/enso-org/enso/issues/5166
Fixes#5826.
# Important Notes
- Change frontend representation of negation.
- Fix a precedence issue: The `.` operators in -1.x and -1.2 must have different precedences.
- Remove a no-longer-needed special case from backend translation.
- Add tests for this case after all translations.
Implement new Enso documentation parser; remove old Scala Enso parser.
Performance: Total time parsing documentation is now ~2ms.
# Important Notes
- Doc parsing is now done only in the frontend.
- Some engine tests had never been switched to the new parser. We should investigate tests that don't pass after the switch: #5894.
- The option to run the old searcher has been removed, as it is obsolete and was already broken before this (see #5909).
- Some interfaces used only by the old searcher have been removed.
This PR changes build script's `ide watch` and `ide start` commands, so they don't use `electron-builder` to package. Instead, they invoke `electron` directly, significantly reducing time overhead.
`ide watch` will now start Electron process, while continuously rebuilding gui and the client in the background. Changes can be puilled by reloading within the electron, or closing the electron and letting it start once again. To stop, the script should be interrupted with `Ctrl+C`.
`@` should not be legal to use as a binary operator. I accepted it in the parser because it occurred in the .enso sources, but it was actually used to create a syntax error to test error recovery.
See: https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/184054024
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).
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.
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.
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.
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.
- 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`.