The browse command used to have a required parameter id=... and it returned
info on the given identifier only. Now, if format=json, the id=... parameter
can be omitted to get info on all identifiers at the same time. The returned
JSON structure in this case is
{cats:{...},funs:{...}}
where the inner objects contain one field per category and function,
respectively, in the same format as when you request info on one category or
function.
GF.Compile.Compute.ConcreteNew + two new modules contain a new
partial evaluator intended to solve some performance problems with the old
partial evalutator in GF.Compile.Compute.ConcreteLazy. It has been around for
a while, but is now complete enough to compile the RGL and the Phrasebook.
The old partial evaluator is still used by default. The new one can be activated
in two ways:
- by using the command line option -new-comp when invoking GF.
- by using cabal configure -fnew-comp to make -new-comp the default. In this
case you can also use the command line option -old-comp to revert to the old
partial evaluator.
In the GF shell, the cc command uses the old evaluator regardless of -new-comp
for now, but you can use "cc -new ..." to invoke the new evaluator.
With -new-comp, computations happen in GF.Compile.GeneratePMCFG instead of
GF.Compile.Optimize. This is implemented by testing the flag optNewComp in
both modules, to omit calls to the old partial evaluator from GF.Compile.Optimize
and add calls to the new partial evaluator in GF.Compile.GeneratePMCFG.
This also means that -new-comp effectively implies -noexpand.
In GF.Compile.CheckGrammar, there is a check that restricted inheritance is used
correctly. However, when -noexpand is used, this check causes unexpected errors,
so it has been converted to generate warnings, for now.
-new-comp no longer enables the new type checker in
GF.Compile.Typeckeck.ConcreteNew.
The GF version number has been bumped to 3.3.10-darcs
There was 55 lines of rather repetitive code with calls to 6 compiler passes.
They have been replaced with 19 lines that call the 6 compiler passes
plus 26 lines of helper functions.
The output from commands is represented as ([Expr],String), where the [Expr] is
used when data is piped between commands and the String is used for the final
output. The String can represent the same list of trees as the [Expr] and/or
contain diagnostic information.
Sometimes the data that is piped between commands is not a list of trees, but
e.g. a string or a list of strings. In those cases, functions like fromStrings
and toStrings are used to encode the data as a [Expr].
This patch introduces a newtype for CommandOutput and collects the functions
dealing with command output in one place to make it clearer what is going on.
It also makes it easier to change to a more direct representation of piped
data, and make pipes more "type safe", if desired.