It's no longer attached to a Block. Makes access to overlays more
streamlined by removing this one indirection. Also makes it easier to
create standalone overlays without a block which might come in handy.
* Add 'expor env' dummy command
* (WIP) Abstract away module exportables as Overlay
* Switch to Overlays for use/hide
Works for decls only right now.
* Fix passing import patterns of hide to eval
* Simplify use/hide of decls
* Add ImportPattern as Expr; Add use env eval
Still no parsing of "export env" so I can't test it yet.
* Refactor export parsing; Add InternalError
* Add env var export and activation; Misc changes
Now it is possible to `use` env var that was exported from a module.
This commit also adds some new errors and other small changes.
* Add env var hiding
* Fix eval not recognizing hidden decls
Without this change, calling `hide foo`, the evaluator does not know
whether a custom command named "foo" was hidden during parsing,
therefore, it is not possible to reliably throw an error about the "foo"
name not found.
* Add use/hide/export env var tests; Cleanup; Notes
* Ignore hide env related tests for now
* Fix main branch merge mess
* Fixed multi-word export def
* Fix hiding tests on Windows
* Remove env var hiding for now
The introduction of `use <file.nu>` added the possibility of calling
`working_set.add_file()` more than once per parse pass. Some of the
logic handling the file contents offsets prevented it from working and
hopefully, this commit fixes it.
Currently, `use spam.nu` creates a module `spam`. Therefore, after the
first `use`, it is possible to call both `use spam.nu` and `use spam`
with the same effect.
In some rare cases, the global predeclarations would clash, for example:
> module spam { export def foo [] { "foo" } }; def foo [] { "bar" }
In the example, the `foo [] { "bar" }` would get predeclared first, then
the predeclaration would be overwritten and consumed by `foo [] {"foo"}`
inside the module, then when parsing the actual `foo [] { "bar" }`, it
would not find its predeclaration.