Pairs are 2-tuples of values that are constructed and matched with the `::`
operator. They can also be matched with a `:` operator, the LHS is an
expression then, the pair will then only match, if the LHS matches the
result of that expression.
Pairs should be useful to do something similar what sum types / tagged
unions do in statically typed languages, e.g. you could write something
like:
some := (symbol) # Somthing that creates a unique value
filter-map := {
_ [] -> []
f [x ~xs] ->
{
some:y -> [y ~(filter-map f xs)]
nil -> filter-map f xs
} (f x)
}
filter-map {
x?even -> some :: (* x 10)
_ -> nil
} some-list
We're now first building a standalone bytecode compiler `apflc` that will
compile `globals.apfl` into bytecode and write it out as a C source file.
When initializing a new context, that embedded bytecode will then get
evaluated and the global scope will be populated from the dictionary
returned by that bytecode.
This will match all arguments and discard them. This makes the bytecode
for simple functions easier and will make it easier to construct simple
function programmatically.
It's now possible to assign to a key of a dictionary and even to a nested
key path.
This patch changes the way matchers work a bit:
First, a function call stack frame now has a stack of matchers that are
manipulateable instead of a single matcher.
Second, the matcher is now in charge of setting the matched values to the
variables (previously the caller of the matcher needed to extract the
matched values and assign them itself). This change simplifies code
generation, especially for chained assignments and dictionary key paths.
This removes the last usage of APFL_ERR_NOT_IMPLEMENTED :)
A function can now have multiple subfunctions with their own parameter
list. These parameters are now no longer constrained to variables and
blanks only, but can also be consts and list destructurings (predicates
are also already compiled but don't get evaluated yet). The first
subfunction that matches the argument list gets evaluated.
This allows the destructuring of lists into individual values.
We can have arbitrarily nested lists, can check for constant values and can
have up to one '~'-prefixed variable per list, that will capture the
remaining elements of the list.
It is implemented as a second set of bytecode instructions, which define a
matcher. These matchers should also enable us to implement the same pattern
matching capabiities for function parameters.
Not all matching features are implemented yet, predicate matching and
matching into a dictionary key is not implemented yet.
We can now define and call functions. Lexical closure scopes are also
working :).
It's limited to simple functions or complex functions with a single
argument list of only variable names for now.
Instead of the previous refcount base garbage collection, we're now using
a basic tri-color mark&sweep collector. This is done to support cyclical
value relationships in the future (functions can form cycles, all values
implemented up to this point can not).
The collector maintains a set of roots and a set of objects (grouped into
blocks). The GC enabled objects are no longer allocated manually, but will
be allocated by the GC. The GC also wraps an allocator, this way the GC
knows, if we ran out of memory and will try to get out of this situation by
performing a full collection cycle.
The tri-color abstraction was chosen for two reasons:
- We don't have to maintain a list of objects that need to be marked, we
can simply grab the next grey one.
- It should allow us to later implement incremental collection (right now
we only do a stop-the-world collection).
This also switches to a bytecode based evaluation of the code: We no longer
directly evaluate the AST, but first compile it into a series of
instructions, that are evaluated in a separate step. This was done in
preparation for inplementing functions: We only need to turn a function
body into instructions instead of evaluating the node again with each call
of the function. Also, since an instruction list is implemented as a GC
object, this then removes manual memory management of the function body and
it's child nodes. Since the GC and the bytecode go hand in hand, this was
done in one (giant) commit.
As a downside, we've now lost the ability do do list matching on
assignments. I've already started to work on implementing this in the new
architecture, but left it out of this commit, as it's already quite a large
commit :)