Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Edwin Brady
dbdf7dab3d Back to HasIO, remove MonadIO
Following a fairly detailed discussion on slack, the feeling is
generally that it's better to have a single interface. While precision
is nice, it doesn't appear to buy us anything here. If that turns out to
be wrong, or limiting somehow, we can revisit it later. Also:

- it's easier for backend authors if the type of IO operations is
  slightly less restrictive. For example, if it's in HasIO, that limits
  alternative implementations, which might be awkward for some
  alternative back ends.
- it's one less extra detail to learn. This is minor, but there needs to
  be a clear advantage if there's more detail to learn.
- It is difficult to think of an underlying type that can't have a Monad
  instance (I have personally never encountered one - if they turns out
  to exist, again, we can revisit!)
2020-06-21 19:21:22 +01:00
Edwin Brady
28855088c2 Split HasIO into HasIO and MonadIO
For things which don't require (>>=), HasIO is fine, otherwise MonadIO
gives access to the monad interface.
2020-06-21 14:46:14 +01:00
Edwin Brady
d12487f529 HasIO interface for IO actions
Also updates the Prelude and some base libraries to use HasIO rather
than using IO directly.
2020-06-21 01:18:43 +01:00
Niklas Larsson
630e4219fc Fix unsetenv
implement Windows support
2020-06-16 12:09:22 +02:00
Edwin Brady
c88bf7af8d Fix import loading
This was taking too long, and adding too many things, because it was
going too deep in the name of having everything accessible at the REPL
and for the compiler. So, it's done a bit differently now, only chasing
everything on a "full" load (i.e., final load at the REPL)

This has some effects:
+ As systems get bigger, load time gets better (on my machine, checking
  Idris.Main now takes 52s from scratch, down from 76s)
+ You might find import errors that you didn't previously get, because
  things were being imported that shouldn't have been. The new way is
  correct!

An unfortunate effect is that sometimes you end up getting "undefined
name" errors even if you didn't explicitly use the name, because
sometimes a module uses a name from another module in a type, which then
gets exported, and eventually needs to be reduced. This mostly happens
because there is a compile time check that should be done which I
haven't implemented yet. That is, public export definitions should only
be allowed to use names that are also public export. I'll get to this
soon.
2020-05-27 15:49:03 +01:00
Edwin Brady
dec7dff622 Add libraries 2020-05-18 14:00:08 +01:00