This however enforces that the argument unifies to a `String`. So this
is more flexible than the previous form, but does fundamentally the
same thing.
Fixes#378.
Not sure what this special case was trying to achieve, but it's not right. There's no need to handle function call with a single argument differently than the others.
List Clauses patterns handle var cases
Fixed Tuple Clauses issue with last clause not being a tuple
Redid how zero arg functions and dependencies are handled. Tough one lol
And also return a structured output as JSON, so it's more easily used
by other tools.
```
Parsing script context
Simulating 78ec148ea647cf9969446891af31939c5d57b275a2455706782c6183ef0b62f1
Redeemer Spend → 0
{"mem":151993,"cpu":58180696}
```
The current implementation assumed that ALL withdrawals present in a
transaction had to be locked by a script and failed otherwise. But a
transaction can actually be composed of both. So instead of failing,
we should rather just ignore withdrawals that can't be referenced by
redeemers.
There's arguably no use case ever for that in the context of on-chain
Plutus. Strings are really just meant to be used for tracing. They
aren't meant to be manipulated as heavily as in classic programming
languages.
Before that commit, the type-checker would allow unsafe list patterns
such as:
```
let [x] = xs
when xs is {
[x] -> ...
[x, ..] -> ...
}
```
This is quite unsafe and can lead to confusing situations. Now at
least the compiler warns about this. It isn't perfect though,
especially in the presence of clause guards. But that's a start.
Whoopsie... || and && were treated with the same precedence, causing very surprising behavior down the line.
I noticed this because of the auto-formatter adding parenthesis where it really shouldn't. The problem came actually from the parser and how it constructed the AST.
fix conversion from inner opaque type for when and assignment
This fixes Clause being used in cases where ListClause or TupleClause should be used
Reset defined and zero arg functions between each code gen
Fixes for optimizations when encountering shadowed variables
This is still a bit clunky as the interface is expecting parameters in UPLC form and we don't do any kind of verification. So it is easy to shoot oneself in the foot at the moment (for example, to apply an integer into something that should have received a data). To be improved later.
Without that, we have no way to distinguish between fully applied
validators and those that still require some hard-coded parameters.
Next steps is to make it easier to apply parameters to those, as well
as forbid the creation of addresses of validators that aren't fully
qualified.
* fix assert on pattern Var
* fix tuple index unwrapping closes#334
* allow wrapping when casting with let
* allow wrapping when casting via function call
I decided to invert how I'm doing it. I'm passing
in a new argument to unify in environment called
allow_cast: bool and essentially at various
unification sites I can control whether or not I
want to allow casting to even occur. So we can
assume it's false by default always and then we
turn it on in a few places vs. just opening the
flood gates and locking it down at various sites
as they come up# Please enter the commit message
for your changes. Lines starting
* you cannot cast FROM Data with a `let`
* you cannot cast FROM Data by passing
Data to none Data when calling a function
* you MUST use `assert` to cast from data
* you can cast INTO Data with a `let`
* you can cast INTO Data by passing none Data
to Data when calling a function
* You cannot assert cast Data without an
annotation