+wail, for overwriting part of a stub, starting at the given index,
extending it using the specified character if the index is past the end
of the stub.
+pact, for merging sequential stub sections with identical style.
State before: in chrono:userlib, there were second-resolution
@da-to-unix and unix-to-@da functions. In en/dejs:format, there were
millisecond-resolution @da-to-unix and unix-to-@da functions. The
@da-to-unix path in time:enjs confusingly rounded to the nearest
millisecond, meaning millisecond n was a label for [n-0.5, n+0.5) rather
than [n, n+1).
This adds a millisecond-resolution @da-to-unix and unix-to-@da to
chrono:userlib, and a second-resolution conversion to en/dejs:format.
It makes use of the chrono:userlib functions in en/dejs, and doesn't do
any rounding.
Backwards-incompatible changes:
- made unt:chrono:userlib take a @da rather than @.
styx and stub are both defined in lull. Having functions for dealing
with them in zuse rather than userspace is fitting.
While not a _common_ format per se, it still seems best at home in
+format, instead of on its own.
* jb/motion:
pill: solid
zuse: remove %crud from vane-task
arvo: full vane names in $sign
aqua: build again (still broken)
arvo: reform of the scry reform
* na-release/candidate:
kh: use Word8 for Tint true color values
arvo: remove unused app files, libraries, and imports
webterm: improve line-spacing in certain browsers
vere: avoid +scot call for color value rendering
kh: support 24-bit %klr colors
vere: support 24-bit %klr colors
webterm: update mar and js to support 24-bit color
tests: fix ames tests
pill: update ivory pill
dojo: correct mark conversion scry path
pill: solid
aqua/ph: fix comet test
ames: flat packet format
hoon, dill: Add 24-bit true color
+riff-any is all clay requests except "backfill" requests. Change to
`$%` from `$^`, which was used to distinguish originally non-versioned
requests.
+fill is backfill requests and had no version number, so we add one.
We do not have version numbers on responses since those are implied by
the request. If someone requests at version `n` and you're at `n+1`,
you must respond in the format of `n`.
If someone requests at version `n+1` and you're at `n`, you crash;
though possibly you should be able to respond with message "I only know
up to `n`", in which case they may be able to re-request at `n`. In
either case, the version of the response is dictated by the request.