schala/TODO.md
2019-11-10 03:28:31 -08:00

5.2 KiB

Plan of attack

  1. modify visitor so it can handle scopes -this is needed both to handle import scope correctly -and also to support making FQSNs aware of function parameters

  2. Once FQSNs are aware of function parameters, most of the Rc things in eval.rs can go away

TODO items

-use 'let' sigil in patterns for variables :

  q is MyStruct(let a, Chrono::Trigga) then {

  }

General code cleanup

-parser error - should report subset of AST parsed so far

  • what if you used python 'def' syntax to define a function? what error message makes sense here?

Reduction

  • make a good type for actual language builtins to avoid string comparisons

Typechecking

  • make a type to represent types rather than relying on string comparisons

  • look at https://rickyhan.com/jekyll/update/2018/05/26/hindley-milner-tutorial-rust.html

  • cf. the notation mentioned in the cardelli paper, the debug information for the typechecking pass should print the generated type variable for every subexpression in an expression

  • think about idris-related ideas of multiple implementations of a type for an interface (+ vs * impl for monoids, for preorder/inorder/postorder for Foldable)

-should have an Idris-like cast To From function

Schala-lang syntax

-idea: the type declaration should have some kind of GADT-like syntax

  • Idea: if you have a pattern-match where one variant has a variable and the other lacks it instead of treating this as a type error, promote the bound variable to an option type

  • Include extensible scala-style html"string ${var}" string interpolations

  • A neat idea for pattern matching optimization would be if you could match on one of several things in a list ex:

 is (comp, LHSPat, RHSPat) if comp in ["==, "<"] -> ...
}```

- Schala should have both currying *and* default arguments!
```fn a(b: Int, c:Int, d:Int = 1) -> Int
    a(1,2) : Int
    a(1,2,d=2): Int
    a(_,1,3) : Int -> Int
    a(1,2, c=_): Int -> Int
    a(_,_,_) : Int -> Int -> Int -> Int
  • scoped types - be able to define a quick enum type scoped to a function or other type for something, that only is meant to be used as a quick bespoke interface between two other things

ex.

  type enum MySubVariant {
    SubVariant1, SubVariant2, etc.
    }
 Variant1(MySubVariant),
 Variant2(...),
 }```

- inclusive/exclusive range syntax like .. vs ..=

## Compilation
-look into Inkwell for rust LLVM bindings

-https://cranelift.readthedocs.io/en/latest/?badge=latest<Paste>


## Other links of note

- https://nshipster.com/never/
-consult http://gluon-lang.org/book/embedding-api.html


## Trying if-syntax again

//simple if expr
if x == 10 then "a" else "z"

//complex if expr
if x == 10 then {
  let a = 1
  let b = 2
  a + b
} else {
  55
}

// different comparison ops
if x {
 == 1 then "a"
  .isPrime() then "b"
  else "c"
}

/* for now disallow `if x == { 1 then ... }`, b/c hard to parse

//simple pattern-matching
if x is Person("Ivan", age) then age else 0

//match-block equivalent
if x {
 is Person("Ivan", _) then "Ivan"
 is Person(_, age) if age > 13 then "barmitzvah'd"
 else "foo"
 }



## (OLD) Playing around with conditional syntax ideas


- if/match playground

simple if
`if x == 1.0 { "a" } else { "b" }`

one comparison multiple targets:
`if x == { 1.0 -> "a", 2.0 -> "b", else -> "c" }`

different comparison operators/ method calls:
`if x { == 1.0 -> "a", eq NaN -> "n", .hella() -> "h", else -> "z" }`

pattern matching/introducing bindings:
`if alice { .age < 18 -> "18", is Person("Alice", age) -> "${age}", else -> "none" }`

pattern matching w/ if-let:
`if person is Person("Alice", age) { "${age}" } else { "nope" }`

-https://soc.github.io/languages/unified-condition-syntax syntax:

`if <cond-expr>" then <then-expr> else <else-expr>`
`if <half-expr> \n <rest-expr1> then <result1-expr> \n <rest-expr2> then <result-expr2> else <result3-expr>`
-and rest-exprs (or "targets") can have 'is' for pattern-matching, actually so can a full cond-expr

UNIFIED IF EXPRESSIONS FINAL WORK:

basic syntax:

`if_expr := if discriminator '{' (guard_expr)* '}'`
`guard_expr := pattern 'then' block_or_expr'`
`pattern := rhs | is_pattern`
`is_pattern := 'is' ???`
`rhs := expression | ???`


if the only two guard patterns are true and false, then the abbreviated syntax:
`'if' discriminator 'then' block_or_expr 'else' block_or_expr`
can replace `'if' discriminator '{' 'true' 'then' block_or_expr; 'false' 'then' block_or_expr '}'`