Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Kevin
7ce1ddc6fd
Fixed optional and required argument in signature.
This fixes issues like #1117
2019-12-26 12:29:41 -05:00
Jonathan Turner
314c3c4a97 Add missing descriptions and licenses to subcrates 2019-12-18 06:07:00 +13:00
Jonathan Turner
14817ef229 Subcrate versions 2019-12-18 05:18:10 +13:00
Jonathan Turner
98233dcec1 Subcrate versions 2019-12-18 05:09:53 +13:00
Yehuda Katz
57af9b5040 Add Range and start Signature support
This commit contains two improvements:

- Support for a Range syntax (and a corresponding Range value)
- Work towards a signature syntax

Implementing the Range syntax resulted in cleaning up how operators in
the core syntax works. There are now two kinds of infix operators

- tight operators (`.` and `..`)
- loose operators

Tight operators may not be interspersed (`$it.left..$it.right` is a
syntax error). Loose operators require whitespace on both sides of the
operator, and can be arbitrarily interspersed. Precedence is left to
right in the core syntax.

Note that delimited syntax (like `( ... )` or `[ ... ]`) is a single
token node in the core syntax. A single token node can be parsed from
beginning to end in a context-free manner.

The rule for `.` is `<token node>.<member>`. The rule for `..` is
`<token node>..<token node>`.

Loose operators all have the same syntactic rule: `<token
node><space><loose op><space><token node>`.

The second aspect of this pull request is the beginning of support for a
signature syntax. Before implementing signatures, a necessary
prerequisite is for the core syntax to support multi-line programs.

That work establishes a few things:

- `;` and newlines are handled in the core grammar, and both count as
  "separators"
- line comments begin with `#` and continue until the end of the line

In this commit, multi-token productions in the core grammar can use
separators interchangably with spaces. However, I think we will
ultimately want a different rule preventing separators from occurring
before an infix operator, so that the end of a line is always
unambiguous. This would avoid gratuitous differences between modules and
repl usage.

We already effectively have this rule, because otherwise `x<newline> |
y` would be a single pipeline, but of course that wouldn't work.
2019-12-11 16:41:07 -08:00