There's no reasons for this to be a property of only ArgName::Named to begin with. And now, with the extra indirection introduced for arg_name, it may leads to subtle issues when patterns args are used in validators.
This was somehow wrong and corrected by codegen later on, but we should be re-using the same generic id across an entire definition if the variable refers to the same element.
Temporarily using the 'specialize-dict-key' branch from the stdlib
which makes use of Pair where relevant. Once this is merged back into
'main' we should update the acceptance test toml files to keep getting
them automatically upgraded.
This commit also fixes an oversight in the reification of data-types
now properly distinguishing between pairs and 2-tuples.
Co-authored-by: Microproofs <kasey.white@cardanofoundation.org>
Before this commit, we would parse 'Pair' as a user-defined
data-types, and thus piggybacking on that whole record system. While
perhaps handy for some things, it's also semantically wrong and
induces a lot more complexity in codegen which now needs to
systematically distinguish every data-type access between pairs, and
others.
So it's better to have it as a separate expression, and handle it
similar to tuples (since it's fundamentally a 2-tuple with a special
serialization).
Before this commit, we would always show the 'declared form' of type aliases, with their generic, non-instantiated parameters. This now tries to unify the annotation with the underlying inferred type to provide even better alias pretty printing.
Using ByteArrays as vectors on-chain is a lot more efficient than relying on actul Data's list of values. From the Rust end, it doesn't change much as we were already manipulating vectors anyway.
Those end-to-end tests are useful. Both for controlling the behavior of the shrinker, but also to double check the reification of Plutus Data back into untyped expressions.
I had to work-around a few things to get opaque type and private types play nice. Also found a weird bug due to how we apply parameters after unique debruijn indexes have been also applied. A work-around is to re-intern the program.
True corresponds to Constr=1 and False corresponds to Constr=0; their position in the vector shall reflect that. Note that while this would in principle impact codegen for any other type, it doesn't for bool since we likely never looked up this type definition since it is well-known. It does now as the 'reify' function relies on this. Whoopsie.
This commit allows Data to be optionally annotated with a
phantom-type. This doesn't change anything in codegen but we can now
leverage this information to generate better blueprint schemas.
- Add support to the formatter for these doc comments
- Add a new field to `Arg` `doc: Option<String>`
- Don't attach docs immediately after typechecking a module
- instead we should do it on demand in docs, build, and lsp
- the check command doesn't need to have any docs attached
- doing it more lazily defers the computation until later making
typechecking feedback a bit faster
- Add support for function arg and validator param docs in
`attach_module_docs` methods
- Update some snapshots
- Add put_doc to Arg
closes#685
Params being unused were being incorrectly reported.
This was because params need to be initialized
at a scope above both the validator functions. This
manifested when using a multi-validator where one of
the params was not used in both validators.
The easy fix was to add a field called
`is_validator_param` to `ArgName`. Then
when infering a function we don't initialize args
that are validator params. We now handle this
in a scope that is created before in the match branch for
validator in the `infer_definition` function. In there
we call `.in_new_scope` and initialize params for usage
detection.
* move uplc::ast::builder to uplc::builder
* rename aiken_lang::uplc to aiken_lang::gen_uplc
* move aiken_lang::air and aiken_lang::builder to aiken_lang::gen_uplc
as submodules
Co-authored-by: Kasey White <kwhitemsg@gmail.com>
In an ideal world, I should have handlded that directly at the conflicting commit in the rebase, but this would have bubbled up through all commits... which I wasn't really quite keen on going through. So here's an extra ugly commit that comes and 'fix the rebase'.
This is quite something, because now we have a testing pipeline that
can also be used for testing other compiler-related stuff such as the
type-checker or the code generator.