This is a little trick which detects record access and replace them
with a simple var. The var itself is the validator handler name,
though since it contains dots, it cannot be referred to by users
explicitly. Yet fundamentally, it is semantically equivalent to just
calling the function by its name.
Note that this commit also removes the weird backdoor for allowing
importing validators in modules starting with `tests`. Allowing
validators handler to be used in importable module requires more work
and is arguably useful; so we will wait until someone complain and
reconsider the proper way to do it.
Unfortunately, as documented in:
https://github.com/IntersectMBO/cardano-ledger/issues/4571
Some Option fields in the script context certificates are going to
remain set to None, at least until the next Hard fork. There's a risk
that people permanently lock their funds if they expect deposits on
registration credentials to ever be `Some`.
So, we introduce a special type that emulate an `Option` that can only
ever be `None`. We call it `Never` and it is the first type of this
kind (i.e. with constructors indexes not starting at 0).
This isn't sufficient however, as the 'assignment' helper handling
code generation doesn't perform any check when patterns are vars. This
is curious, and need to be investigated further.
- Doesn't allow pattern-matching on G1/G2 elements and strings,
because the use cases for those is unclear and it adds complexity to
the feature.
- We still _parse_ patterns on G1/G2 elements and strings, but emit an
error in those cases.
- The syntax is the same as for bytearray literals (i.e. supports hex,
utf-8 strings or plain arrays of bytes).
There are currently two zero-arg builtins:
- mkNilData
- mkNilPairData
And while they have strictly speaking no arguments, the VM still
requires that they are called with an extra unit argument applied.
While this builtin is readily available through the Aiken syntax
`[head, ..tail]`, there's no reason to not support its builtin form
even though we may not encourage its usage. For completeness and to
avoid bad surprises, it is now supported.
Fixes#964.
The original goal for this commit was to allow casting from Data on
patterns without annotation. For example, given some custom type
'OrderDatum':
```
expect OrderDatum { requested_handle, destination, .. }: OrderDatum = datum
```
would work fine, but:
```
expect OrderDatum { requested_handle, destination, .. } = datum
```
Yet, the annotation feels unnecessary at this point because type can
be inferred from the pattern itself. So this commit allows, whenever
possible (ie when the pattern is neither a discard nor a var), to
infer the type from a pattern.
Along the way, I also found a couple of weird behaviours surrounding
this kind of assignments, in particular in combination with let. I'll
highlight those in the next PR (#979).
Actually, this has been a bug for a long time it seems. Calling any
prelude functions using a qualified import would result in a codegen
crash. Whoopsie.
This is now fixed as shown by the regression test.
While we agree on the idea of having some ways of emitting events, the
design hasn't been completely fleshed out and it is unclear whether
events should have a well-defined format independent of the framework
/ compiler and what this format should be.
So we need more time discussing and agreeing about what use case we
are actually trying to solve with that.
Irrespective of that, some cleanup was also needed on the UPLC side
anyway since the PR introduced a lot of needless duplications.