This is a bit annoying as we are forced to use #[related] here which isn't quite what we want.
Ideally, this would use #[diagnostic_source] but, there's a bug upstream. See: zkat/miette#172.
In the similar spirit to what we did for sequences. Yet, we need to handle the case of body being just an assignment -- or a trace of an assignment which is basically the same thing.
Far less verbose than defining classes by hand, plus, it allows to have everything about a single error be co-located. And finally, it allows to use 'related', 'label' and so on more easily.
While Gleam originally allowed various kinds of expressions to be discarded in a sequence, we simply do not allow expressions to be discarded implicitly. So any non-final expression in a sequence must be a let-binding. This prevents silly mistakes.
- Display function's signature next to the function name
(instead of being repeated below the function documentation).
- Same for module constants
- Display record constructors in a more concise manner, with
constructors fields next to constructors.
- Display generic parameters, if any, next to the type
- Plus some minor color and icon rework.
Somehow missed it when reworking tuples. We need to allow the new
'NewLineLeftParen' token in this situation as well. Especially because
this is what the formatter outputs.
Due to how PlutusData works it doesn't make sense
to allow user defined types to contain
functions.
```
type Foo {
bar: fn(Int) -> Int
}
```
The above definition will now return an error.
There are restrictions regarding how modules are called, but given that packages are tight to repositories anyway; there's no way someone can publish and use an aiken package on 'aiken-lang' without being part of the organization. So the restriction on the command-line is pointless. Plus, it prevents us from using 'aiken-lang' as a placeholder name for tutorials.
This makes it easier to add new dependencies, without having to
manually edit the `aiken.toml` file.
The command is accessible via two different paths:
- aiken deps add
or simply
- aiken add
for this is quite common to find at the top-level of the command-line,
and, we still want to keep commands for managing dependencies grouped
under a command sub-group and not all at the top-level. So we're
merely promoting that one for visibility.