A few notes on the implementation:
- Any unsigned power of two integer type less than 64 bits in size is supported
as a Limb type.
- The algorithms used are kept simple for the moment. More complicated
algorithms are generally only more useful as integer sizes increase a
lot and I don't expect our current usage to be used for this purpose
just yet.
- All branches (practically) have been covered by tests.
See 986a2b3243/bench
for rough performance comparison numbers.
Closes#364.
* add `std.debug.assertError`
* `std.ArrayList` update everything to follow `self` convention
* rename `std.ArrayList.set` to `std.ArrayList.setOrError`
* add `std.ArrayList.set` which asserts
Before 1.0.0 we might remove some of this API, because you can use
`toSlice()` for everything, but it's ok to add these functions as
an experiment before then.
This hides some of the low-level parsing details from the
StreamingParser. These don't need to be known when parsing a complete
slice at once (which is we can usually do).
Also, remove `Json` from Parser names. The namespace `json` is sufficient.
* add assertion for trying to do @typeInfo on global error set
* remove TypeInfo.Slice
* add TypeInfo.Pointer.Size with possible values
- One
- Many
- Slice
See #770
* enable slicing for single-item ptr to arrays
* disable slicing for other single-item pointers
* enable indexing for single-item ptr to arrays
* disable indexing for other single-item pointers
see #770closes#386
See #770
Currently it does not have any different behavior than `*`
but it is now recommended to use `[*]` for unknown length
pointers to be future-proof.
Instead of [ * ] being separate tokens as the proposal
suggested, this commit implements `[*]` as a single token.
See #770
To help automatically translate code, see the
zig-fmt-pointer-reform-2 branch.
This will convert all & into *. Due to the syntax
ambiguity (which is why we are making this change),
even address-of & will turn into *, so you'll have
to manually fix thes instances. You will be guaranteed
to get compile errors for them - expected 'type', found 'foo'
It doesn't actually do terminal color yet because we need to add
cross platform terminal color abstractions. But it toggles between
the single line error reporting and the multiline error reporting.
See #1026