summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/tests
Commit message (Collapse)AuthorAgeFilesLines
* matcher: compile the test cases.Kaz Kylheku2021-04-221-6/+13
| | | | | | | | * tests/011/patmatch.tl: Wrap one test with compile-only and eval-only so that the compiler ignores it. Add a form at the end of the file, similarly ignored by the compiler to compile the file. This compiles and executes all the test cases.
* matcher: defmatch: useful :env parameter.Kaz Kylheku2021-04-211-0/+15
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (compile-match): Pattern macro expanders now have an environment parameter. We turn the list of variables that have been bound so far into a fake macro-time lexical environment, the parent of which is the surrounding environment. The pattern macro can query this using the lexical-var-p function to determine whether a given variable already has a binding, either in the pattern, or in the surrounding lexical environment. (defmatch): Generate a two-argument lambda, and use the new mac-env-param-bind to make the environment object available to the user-defined expansion. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: New test cases for this environment mechanism, and also for defmatch itself. * txr.1: Document role of :env under defmatch.
* compile/eval: new operator, mac-env-param-bind.Kaz Kylheku2021-04-211-0/+5
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | mac-env-param-bind is like mac-param-bind but also allows the value for the :env parameter to be specified. * eval.c (op_mac_env_param_bind_s): New sy mbol variable. (op_mac_env_param_bind): New static function. (do_expand): Handle mac_env_param_bind_s. (eval_init): Initialize symbol variable and register macro. * share/txr/stdlib/compiler.tl (compiler compile): Add case for mac-env-param-bind. (compiler comp-mac-env-param-bind): New method. * share/txr/stdlib/doc-syms.tl: Updated with new hashes for tree-bind and mac-param-bind, and inclusion of mac-env-param-bind. * tests/012/binding.tl: New file. * txr.1: Documented.
* matcher: new pattern operator @(end)Kaz Kylheku2021-04-201-0/+7
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * share/txr/stdlib/doc-syms.tl: New entry for end. * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (check, check-end, check-sym, loosen, pat-len): New functions, taken from original local functions of sme macro. (sme): Refactored by hoisting local functions out. Some local variable renaming. (end): New pattern macro. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: New test for end. * txr.1: Documented.
* tests: disable some UTF-8 tests on 16 bit wchar_t.Kaz Kylheku2021-04-201-8/+9
| | | | | * tests/012/parse.tl: All the tests in this file blow up on systems that don't have a full-blown character type.
* openbsd: fix tests.Kaz Kylheku2021-04-205-32/+34
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * tests/014/socket-basic.tl (%iters%): Also reduce to 2000 on OpenBSD, to avoid the default limit on UDP datagram size. * tests/017/glob-carray.tl: Use the BSD-style struct glob-t on OpenBSD also. * tests/017/glob-zarray.tl: Likewise. * tests/018/chmod.tl (os): New global variable. (test-sticky): s-isvtx not allowed for non-root user on OpenBSD, so we falsify this variable. * tests/common.tl (os-symbol): Add OpenBSD case, producing :openbsd keyword symbol. (libc): Let's just use (dlopen nil) for any platform that isn't Cygwin or Cygnal.
* matcher: first pattern macro, sme.Kaz Kylheku2021-04-191-0/+37
| | | | | | | | | | | | * lisplib.c (match_instantiate): Intern sme symbol. * share/txr/stdlib/doc-syms.tl: Update with sme entry. * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (sme): New defmatch macro. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: New tests for sme. * txr.1: Documented.
* compile/eval: print compiler error on *stderr*.Kaz Kylheku2021-04-192-1/+9
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * share/txr/stdlib/error.tl (compile-error): Print the error message on *stderr*, like we do with warnings. This allows the programming environment to pick up the error message and navigate to that line accordingly. The error message is also output by the unhandled exception logic but with a prefix that prevents parsing by the tooling. To avoid sending double error messages to the interactive user, we only issue the *stderr* message if *load-recursive* is true. * tests/common.tl (macro-time-let): New macro. This lets us bind special variables around the macro-expansion of the body, which is useful when expansion-time logic reacts to values of special variables. * tests/012/ifa.tl: Use macro-time-let to suppress *stderr* around the expansion of the erroneous ifa form. We now needs this because the error situation spits out a message on *stderr*, in addition to throwing.
* tests: use fixed regsub in compile test.Kaz Kylheku2021-04-131-1/+1
| | | | * tests/012/compile.tl: Simplify code with regsub.
* tests: implicitly generate empty .expected files.Kaz Kylheku2021-04-1228-2/+4
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Makefile (%.expected): New implicit rule. Whenever a test requires a .expected file, if it is missing, we create an empty one. This file will be treated as an intermediate by GNU Make, which means that it will be deleted when make terminates. * tests/012/compile.tl: Some of the .tl files no longer have an .expected file, so we have to test for that in the catenating logic. * tests/008/call-2.expected, * tests/008/no-stdin-hang.expected, * tests/011/macros-3.expected, * tests/011/patmatch.expected, * tests/012/aseq.expected, * tests/012/ashwin.expected, * tests/012/compile.tl, * tests/012/cont.expected, * tests/012/defset.expected, * tests/012/ifa.expected, * tests/012/oop-seq.expected, * tests/012/parse.expected, * tests/012/quasi.expected, * tests/012/quine.expected, * tests/012/seq.expected, * tests/012/struct.expected, * tests/012/stslot.expected, * tests/014/dgram-stream.expected, * tests/014/in6addr-str.expected, * tests/014/inaddr-str.expected, * tests/014/socket-basic.expected, * tests/015/awk-fconv.expected, * tests/015/split.expected, * tests/015/trim.expected, * tests/016/arith.expected, * tests/016/ud-arith.expected, * tests/017/ffi-misc.expected, * tests/018/chmod.expected: Empty file deleted.
* compiler: new test case.Kaz Kylheku2021-04-111-0/+12
| | | | | | | | * tests/012/compile.tl (new-file): Compiles a select set of .tl files in the same directory. The compile.expected file is dynamically created from catenating the .expected files corresponding to those .tl files; the output is expected to be the same from compiling those files as from interpreting them.
* parser: allow non-UTF-8 bytes in literals and regexes.Kaz Kylheku2021-04-081-0/+6
| | | | | | | | | | * parser.l (grammar): Just like we do in SREGEX, allow an arbitrary byte in REGEX, mapping it to the DCxx range. Do the same inside string literals of all types. * lex.yy.c.shipped: Updated. * tests/012/parse.tl: New tests.
* parser: allow funny UTF-8 in regexes and literals.Kaz Kylheku2021-04-082-0/+7
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The main idea in this commit is to change a behavior of the lexer, and take advantage of it in the parser. Currently, the lexer recognizes a {UANYN} pattern in two places. That pattern matches a UTF-8 character. The lexeme is passed to the decoder, which is expected to produce exactly one wide character. If the UTF-8 is bad (for instance, a code in the surrogate pair range U+DCxx) then the decoder will produce multiple characters. In that case, these rules return ERRTOK instead of a LITCHAR or REGCHAR. The idea is: why don't we just return those characters as a TEXT token? Then we can just incorporate that into the literal or regex. * parser.l (grammar): If a UANYN lexeme decodes to multiple characters instead of the expected one, then produce a TEXT token instead of complaining about invalid UTF-8 bytes. * parser.y (regterm): Recognize a TEXT item as a regterm, converting its string value to a compound node in the regex AST, so it will be correctly treated as a fixed pattern. (chrlit): If a hash-backslash is followed by a TEXT token, which can happen now, that is invalid; we diagnose that as invalid UTF-8. (quasi_item): Remove TEXT rule, because the litchars constituent not generates TEXT. (litchars, restlistchar): Recognize TEXT item, similarly to regterm. * tests/012/parse.tl: New file. * tests/012/parse.expected: Likewise.
* utf8: fix backtracking bugs in buffer decoder.Kaz Kylheku2021-04-071-0/+7
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * utf8.c (utf8_from_buffer): Fix incorrect backtracking logic for handling bad UTF-8 bytes. Firstly, we are not backtracking to the correct byte. Because src is incremented at the top of the loop, the backtrack pointer must be set to src - 1 to point to the possibly bad byte. Secondly, when we backtrack, we are neglecting to rewinding nbytes! Thus after backtracking, we will not scan the entire input. Let's avoid using nbytes, and guard the loop based on whether we hit the end of the buffer; then we don't have any nbytes state to backtrack. * tests/017/ffi-misc.tl: New test case converting a three-byte UTF-8 encoding of U+DC01: an invalid character in the surrogate range. We test that the buffer decoder turns this into three characters, exactly like the stream decoder. Another test case for invalid bytes following a valid sequence start.
* MacOS: adjust socket-basic test for dgram size.Kaz Kylheku2021-03-241-4/+7
| | | | | | | | | * tests/014/socket-basic.tl (%iters%): New variable. 2000 on MacOS, 5000 elsewhere. (client, server): Use %iters% instead of hard-coded 5000. (test): Rename to sock-test, since it clashes with the test macro coming from common.tl, which we neeed to for the os-symbol function.
* txr: bugfix: give @(call) same semantics as direct call.Kaz Kylheku2021-02-222-0/+6
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The @(call) directive is buggy in the following ways, which cause an indirect call to behave differently from a direct call. It creates a new context, and so if the opening of a data source is deferred into the indirectly called function, that data source is lost when the indirect call terminates. Furthermore, if a data source is already established, there is no progress through the data: two consecutive @(call ...) directives operate on the same data. It also fails to implement vertical to horizontal fallback; if a function is not vertically defined, the directive fails. * match.c (v_call): Rewrite the core logic in the following way: we rewrite the indirect @(call) syntax into direct call syntax, substitute that into c->spec, and then just call v_fun. * tests/008/call-2.expected: New file. * tests/008/call-2.txr: New file. Test fails before this commit because both calls are matching against the same "A" element of the list.
* txr: pattern function calls are non-matching.Kaz Kylheku2021-02-212-0/+5
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This patch causes TXR to treat calls to verticatl functions, as well as the @(call) directive to be considered non-matching directives, so that opening the data source is deferred. This allows included .txr files to call the funtions that they define, without the side effect of standard input being read. * match.c (open_data_source): Function refactored to reduce duplication. c->data is checked first, and if it is not t, nothing is done, making the function cheaper in the frequent case. The non_matching_dir condition changes. We now check that the first element of the first spec is a non-nil symbol. If it has a function binding as a vertical function, then that is considered non_matching. (dir_tables_init): Treat @(call) as a non-matching directive. * Makefile (tst/tests/008/no-stdin-hang.ok): Add -n argument for non-interactive, which will cause stdin to be read in that test case if there is a regression in this change. If make tests is run in a terminal, this will hang make tests. * tests/no-stdin-hang.txr: New file. * tests/no-stdin-hang.expected: New file.
* @(call): bugfix: matching doesn't continue.Kaz Kylheku2021-02-172-0/+15
| | | | | | | | | | | * match.c (v_call): This function must propagate the next_spec_k return value, rather than return a short-circuiting match object, which causes the parent to immediately succeed. * tests/008/call.txr: New test case, from Frank Schwidom. * tests/008/call.expected: Likewise.
* struct: changing meaning of obj.[fun ...] syntax.Kaz Kylheku2021-02-092-6/+6
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Until now, the obj.[fun ...] syntax has uselessly denoted exactly the same thing as [obj.fun ...]. This latter syntax is what should be used for that meaning. The new meaning of obj.[fun ...] will be that it performs method dispatch, where obj is passed to obj.fun as the leftmost argument: obj.[fun ...] is [obj.fun obj ...], with obj evaluated once. * share/txr/stdlib/struct.tl (qref): Expansion change done here, with backward compat switch. * share/txr/stdlib/termios.tl (termios (go-raw, go-cbreak)): Some a.[b c] turned to [a.b c] here. * tests/012/oop.tl (animal print): Likewise. * tests/012/struct.tl: Likewise, and some expansion tests updated to reflect the new expansion. * txr.1: Documentation revised in multiple places and compat note added.
* matcher: add @(or) test involving existing variables.Kaz Kylheku2021-02-081-0/+5
| | | | | | | * tests/011/patmatch.tl: New test case showing that existing variables that don't match in an @(or) retain their values; they do not become nil, unlike freshly bound variables in non-matching or-clauses.
* matcher: @(and) back-referencing test.Kaz Kylheku2021-02-081-0/+3
| | | | | | * tests/011/patmatch.tl: back-referencing between the expressions in an @(and) patter has recently been introduced, and needs some coverage.
* matcher: fix backreferencing in predicate.Kaz Kylheku2021-02-081-0/+6
| | | | | | | | | * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (compile-predicate-match): Always allocate res-var as a gensym; do not use resvar. Otherwise we will freshly bind resvar as a local, failing to back-reference. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: Add test cases, the second of which fails before this change.
* matcher: test for dotted variable in predicate.Kaz Kylheku2021-02-081-0/+4
| | | | * tests/011/patmatch.tl: New test case.
* matcher: remove @(op ...) pattern.Kaz Kylheku2021-02-061-2/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | All he typical uses of this are better served by the new predicate match. If op is really needed, it can be used with the DWIM form of the predicate, as in @[(op ...) ...]. * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (compile-op-match): Function removed. (compile-match): Remove op case. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: Keep op test cases by converting them to predicate test cases. * txr.1: Documentation removed.
* matcher: redesign predicate pattern.Kaz Kylheku2021-02-061-13/+10
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (compile-dwim-predicate-match): Function removed. There is no more special @(dwim ...) or @[...] pattern. (compile-predicate-match): Function rewritten, providing different syntax and semantics. (compile-match): dwim dispatch removed. (non-triv-pat-p): Replaced @(op ...) calls with new-style predicate syntax. (var-pat-p): Likewise, and upgraded one instance of old-style predicate syntax to new. * share/txr/stdlib/compiler.tl (reduce-or): Adjust predicate pattern to new style. * share/txr/stdlib/optimize.tl (dedup-labels): Likewise. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: All test cases with predicate syntax are updated to new style. One test case removed; some added. * txr.1: Predicate patterns re-documented. All examples involving predicate patterns updated.
* matcher: back-reference Lisp variables.Kaz Kylheku2021-02-051-0/+21
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (struct var-list): New slot, menv. (var-list exists): Method now falls back on lexical scope and dynamic variables. (get-var-list): New function. (when-match, if-match, match-case, when-exprs-match): Capture macro environment and use get-vars-list to convert to a vars object which carries it as the menv slot. With this, the compiler framework has access to the lexical environment. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: Test cases of back-referencing with Lisp lexicals. * txr.1: Documented.
* matcher: rearrange match order of @(with).Kaz Kylheku2021-02-051-2/+7
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The @(with side-pat expr main-pat) syntax becomes @(with main-pat side-pat expr), which is more useful. Also, the main-pat can be omitted. * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (compile-with-match): Recognize two forms of the syntax: two argument form with main-pat omitted and the full form. In the full form, main-pat is on the left now and processed first, so we have to rearrange the compilation and integration order. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: Existing tests updated. Two-argument test added. * txr.1: Updated.
* matcher: lambda-match: redoc, bugfix, test-casesKaz Kylheku2021-02-041-0/+50
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (expand-lambda-match): In a case that takes the maximum number of fixed args and no dotted pattern, in a function that is variadic, we must assert that the rest parameter is nil: there are no additional arguments. In the lambda args, we must generate the colon that separates the optional arguments. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: basic test cases for lambda-match and defun-match. * txr.1: lambda-match and defun-match redocumented, with examples.
* matcher: new failing backreferencing test case.Kaz Kylheku2021-02-021-0/+4
| | | | | | | | | | * tests/011/patmatch.tl: New test cases that break. The (copy var-list) logic in the handling of and and or is incomplete. The bifurcated vars must be merged together into the original vars. Without this, it looks as if the operator didn't bind any variables, and they can be repeated again without backreferencing. In the broken examples, variable a is taking on the value 2 instead of mismatching the previous value of 1.
* matcher: new @(with) operator.Kaz Kylheku2021-02-011-0/+8
| | | | | | | | | | | | * lisplib.c (match_instantiate): Ensure usr:with is interned. * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (compile-with-match): New function. (compile-match): Wire in with operator. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: Test cases. * txr.1: Documented.
* matcher: rename @(let) to @(as).Kaz Kylheku2021-02-011-6/+6
| | | | | | | | | | | | | * lisplib.c (match_instantiate): Ensure usr:as is interned. * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (compile-let-match): Rename to compile-as-match. (compile-match): Remove handling of let symbol; route as symbol to compile-as-match. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: Update all uses of let to as. * txr.1: Updated.
* matcher: adding test case for @(or) regression.Kaz Kylheku2021-02-011-0/+3
| | | | | | | * tests/011/patmatch.tl: New test case showing that @(or) no longer nulls out the variables from previous clauses like it used to. (2 2 nil) is returned, showing a is not set to nil when b matches.
* matcher: bugfix: bad stray code in @[...] matcher.Kaz Kylheku2021-02-011-0/+4
| | | | | | | | | | * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (compile-dwim-predicate-match): In he one-argument case, there is stray code referencing var-match.test-expr, which blows up. This is hit by exactly the one example in the documentation that was not added as a test case. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: Add test case from doc.
* @(rebind): bugfix: don't clobber right side variable.Kaz Kylheku2021-01-302-0/+11
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * Makefile (tst/tests/000/binding.ok): Pass -B to txr for this new test. * match.c (v_rebind): Fix gaping copy-and-paste bug here, which causes rebind to take on the behavior of local/forget; it takes all symbols that appear as its arguments from the environment and produces an environment in which they don't exist. What we want is to remove the left variables from the environment, and since that is a nested pattern, the right way to do that is to flatten it. Bug reported by Frank Schwidom. * tests/000/binding.txr: New file. * tests/000/binding.expected: New file. * txr.1: Improve documentation of @(rebind), also making improvements in @(set) documentation.
* matcher: bugfix: @nil isn't trivial.Kaz Kylheku2021-01-291-0/+1
| | | | | | | | | | | | | * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (non-triv-pat-p): Extend sys:var match so (sys:var nil) is identified as trivial. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: Add broken test case fixed by this. This doesn't show up when @nil is used as the only match. It also doesn't show up if @nil is used in a vector or list in a mixture with other operators, because those other ones identify the overall list pattern as non-trivial. None of the occurrences of @nil in the existing test suite, like (@nil @nil @x) tickle the bug.
* matcher: restructuring to fix new broken case.Kaz Kylheku2021-01-281-0/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This one test case requires restructuring. The handling for the @(or ...) operator is now very different. To support @(or ...), there is now a new variant of the match-guard object called guard disjunction, which contains multiple match-guard chains. Furthermore, the separation between both guard-chain lists and compiled-match having a test expression and variables is being obliterated. For now, what we do is in a :postinit handler on compiled-match, we immediately convert the test-expr, vars and var-exprs slots into a match-guard object, which is placed into the guard-chain, and then we clear these slots. They are now vestigial only and will be removed. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: New test case which shows that (@(or foo bar) ...) does not short immediately short circuit to a failure when the corresponding element is neither foo nor bar. Matching proceeds to the right, wasting cycles and possibly causing errors. * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (*match-var*): Move to top, above structs. There are some methods which refer to this variable now for throwing internal errors. (guard-disjunction): New object that is compatible with a match-guard, and placed into guard-lists as if it were a match-guard. This handles the bifurcation logic of an OR match. (compiled-match): New :postinit handler converts local vars, var-exprs and test-expr into a match-guard placed into the chain, and then clears these values. The compilation of code is done purely from the guard-chain. (compiled-match get-vars): This method is now complicated due to the guard-disjunction objects, and so uses a helper function called get-guard-values. (compiled-match get-var-exprs): New method accompanying get-vars to get the accompanying init expressions. (compiled-match wrap-guards): Two changes are going on here. One is that the funccion takes on more of the responsibility which was previously carried out by the callers. The callers were interpolating the test-expr and vars from a compiled-match into a piece of code, which was then passed to wrap-guards. Hence the naming: the job was just to wrap some guards. Now, wrap-guards is called just with the body forms, and does all of the work. Secondly, wrap-guards is complicated due to the handling of the guard-disjunction items. Also, there is some case handling to generate better code; we avoid generating an empty (let () ...) and (alet () ...). (compiled-match add-guard-pre, compiled-match add-guards-pre, compiled-match add-guards-post): New methods for adding guards after construction. These interfaces replace hacks of pushing new variables, tweaking the test-expr, or explicitly pushing guards onto the list. (get-guard-values): New function for iterating over a guard-chain, including match-guard and guard-disjunction items, retrieving a particular list-valued slot from each one using the fun argument, and returning a list of all those lists catenated together. (compile-struct-match, compile-vec-match, compile-range-match): Eliminate test-expr, replacing it with the harmless t. (compile-op-match): We don't try to extend the test-expr of the compiled var. Rather we add our guard expressin using the add-guard-pre interface. (compile-dwim-predicate-match): Likewise, and also, we do not calculate the test-expr for the output compiled-match from the constituent match test-exprs. We ignore those and just set the test-expr pat-match.obj-var. The constituent test-exprs have been converted to guard-chain items already, so there is no point in referring to them. (compile-predicate-match): Use add-guard-pre method to add guard instead of pushing it on list. (compile-cons-structure): Eliminate test-expr being calculated from constituent test-exprs, and just stub it out to t. (compile-require-match): Use add-guards-post to push match-guard onto compiled child mach, instead of tweaking its test-expr. (compile-let-match): Oblierate calculation of test-expr from child test-exprs, replacing with t stub. (compile-loop-match): Call wrap-guards in the new way, without generating assignments or test-expr. (compile-parallel-match): This method is removed; there are now separate compile-or-match and compile-and-match methods. (compile-or-match): New method: compiles consitituent expressions, and converts them into multiple guard-chains for a guard-disjunction object. Then wrap-guards will finish the job of emitting the or logic out of those chains. (compile-and-match): This shares some common logic with compile-or-match, but is substantially simpler. Pattern matching is implicitly AND-based: in a pattern, all the sub-patterns have to match. So there isn't much to do beyond just evaluating all the patterns against the same object. They can all be thrown into one combined flat guard chain. (compile-not-match): Adjust to new wrap-guards interface. Nothing left to do here but pass the expression t to it. (copmile-hash-mach): The post-constructon manipulations of the child compiled matches are done with the appropriate add-guards-pre. The test-expr is eliminated, replaced with t. (compile-match): Wire or and and to the new separate methods compile-or-match and compile-and-match. (when-match, if-match, match-case): Simplified due to when-match interface change. The macros depend on a lot less implementation detail now: they bind the required vars and generate the code.
* mather: new bad (@(predicate) @(all ...)) test case.Kaz Kylheku2021-01-271-0/+2
| | | | | * tests/011/patmatch.tl: Predicates must also be tested earlier, as guard conditions.
* matcher: new broken test case: bad order of checks.Kaz Kylheku2021-01-271-0/+2
| | | | | | | * tests/011/patmatch.tl: Even though bar mismatches foo, the second element @(all) is processed and tries to collect the list. This results in an error due to the list being improper.
* matcher: add failing @(or @(and ...)) test.Kaz Kylheku2021-01-271-0/+2
| | | | | | * tests/011/patmatch.tl: It looks like there is still a problem with scoping. An inner x is assigned the correct value, leaving the outer x nil.
* matcher: add failing @(all (@or ...)) test.Kaz Kylheku2021-01-271-0/+3
| | | | | The matcher has a bug: the loop patterns are not collecting the variables from enclosed parallel patterns.
* matcher: allow pat/var argument: @[expr var pat]Kaz Kylheku2021-01-261-0/+8
| | | | | | | | | | | | * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (compile-dwim-predicate-match): Drop redundant bindable check of sym, since compile-var-match checks this. Support third argument which gives a pattern or variable which captures the value from the predicate function, which might be interesting (not just true/false). * tests/011/patmatch.tl: New tests. * txr.1: Documented.
* lazy-sub-str: bugfix: invalid substructure sharing.Kaz Kylheku2021-01-252-0/+46
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This addresses a bug manifesting itself as a regression in the behavior of @(freeform), which was reported by Frank Schwidom. The sub_str operation calls lazy_subs_str for a lazy string. But lazy_sub_str again relies on sub_str for extracting part of the lazy string prefix. But sub_str can potentially return the whole object rather than a copy of a substring of it. In this case, lazy_sub_str produces a new lazy string object which shares the prefix string object with the original lazy string. This is incorrect because the lazy string data type destructively manipulates the prefix. It means that operations one one lazy string are mucking with the prefix of another lazy string. * lib.c (lazy_sub_str): When creating the new lazy string object, make a copy of the prefix string pulled from the original. We do the carefully: the copy of the prefix is made before the make_obj call which allocates the new lazy string, otherwise we create a wrong-way assignment from the perspective of generational GC. * tests/006/freeform-4.txr: New test case, from Frank. * tests/006/freeform-4.expected: Expected output of test case.
* doc: add back discussion about (rcons ...) pattern.Kaz Kylheku2021-01-241-0/+3
| | | | | | | * txr.1: Add anote that a pattern a..b matches rcons syntax, and add examples. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: new examples from doc added as tests.
* matcher: rescind support for @(rcons ...) patterns.Kaz Kylheku2021-01-241-0/+9
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | There is no longer any way to write a @(rcons ...) pattern using the range syntax, so there is no point in supporting that operator. The silly syntax @@a..@b which previously worked was actually due to a mistaken requirement in the parser. * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (compile-range-match): Function moved closer to compile-atom-match, below compile-vec-match. The argument is now a range object containing patterns, so we pull it apart with from and to. (compile-atom-match): Pass range directly to compile-range-match; no need to construct (rcons ...) syntax. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: Add range tests from documentation and a few others. * txr.1: References to @(rcons ...) pattern scrubbed. One wrong #R pattern example corrected.
* matcher: add optimized special case to hash pattern.Kaz Kylheku2021-01-221-0/+3
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This change causes a key-value pattern like (@a @b) to be treated specially when @a already has a binding from a previous pattern. In this case, it behaves like the trivial key case: the value of @a is looked up to try to find a single value. If @a is not bound, then the exhaustive search takes place, using equal equality. * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (compile-hash-match): Implement special case. (var-pat-p): New function. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: Existing test case now changes value. New test case added. * txr.1: Documented.
* matcher: document hash and some fixes.Kaz Kylheku2021-01-221-0/+3
| | | | | | | | | | | | | * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (compile-hash-match): Follow rename of is-pattern function to non-triv-pat-p. (is-pattern): Renamed to non-triv-pat-p, to follow terminology in the reference manual. A bug is fixed here: we must recognize cons patterns with operators and variables in the dotted position as non-trivial. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: New hash test case, from doc. * txr.1: Documented hash pattern operator.
* matcher: existing variables in @(all) now backref.Kaz Kylheku2021-01-221-0/+4
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This commit fixes the inadequacy that all variables occurring in a pattern under @(all ...) or @(coll ...) are blindly collated into lists, ignoring the fact that they may be previously bound variables that must back-reference and not be colleced into lists (just like in the TXR Pattern language!) * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (compile-loop-match): Calculate the subset of variables in the pattern that have been freshly bound. Only generate the collection gensyms for those variables and only collect and nreverse those variables. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: Some test cases that backreference into an @(all). * txr.1: Documented.
* matcher: new @(coll) operator.Kaz Kylheku2021-01-211-0/+4
| | | | | | | | | | | | | * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (compile-loop-match): Implement coll semantics. coll fails if it collects nothing, which uses common logic with all*. We just have to move the flipping of the loop-iterated-var into the match, and not do it unconditionally for every iteration. (compile-match): Hook in the coll operator. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: Test case copied from doc example. * txr.1: Documented.
* matcher: more test cases.Kaz Kylheku2021-01-211-0/+29
| | | | | | * tests/011/patmatch.tl: Add test case matching with two structures in circular relationship, and a loop around match case for various cases involving backreference.
* matcher: matcher: fix broken @(let @a @(some @a)).Kaz Kylheku2021-01-211-0/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | * share/txr/stdlib/match.tl (compile-parallel-match): Just like what was done in compile-loop-match in the prior commit, we fix the situation here. guard1's guard-expr, in which the matching logic actually happens, becomes the main test-expr. Thus guard1 disappears and guard0 is renamed to the one and only guard. * tests/011/patmatch.tl: Added test case which is fixed by this.