Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
krasimir
1e0d7be4f4 added all orthographic primitives 2015-05-11 13:01:39 +00:00
hallgren
2b8fe8ea7a PGF.Haskell: adding operators for selections from tables 2015-02-12 16:09:33 +00:00
hallgren
8e4e8da105 Translating linearization functions to Haskell: support for variants
By adding the flag -haskell=variants to the command line, GF will now generate
linearization functions in Haskell that support variants. Variants are
represented as lists in Haskell.

Variants inside pre { ... } expressions are still ignored.

TODO: apply some monad laws to generate more compact code (using an
intermediate representation of the generated Haskell code, instead of
pretty printing directly from the GF code).
2015-02-09 16:24:33 +00:00
hallgren
7e1120d271 Translating linearization functions to Haskell: move a common record type to PGF.Haskell
Move the Haskell representation of the common linearization type {s:T} to the
shared module PGF.Haskell, so that the same overloaded projection function
proj_s can be used for all concrete syntaxes.
2015-01-19 12:43:32 +00:00
hallgren
20b271a238 Translating linearization functions to Haskell: better treatment of special tokens
Common code has been lifted out from the generated Haskell modules to
an auxiliary module PGF.Haskell, which is currently included in the
regular PGF library, although it is independent of it and probably belongs
in a separate library.

The type Str used by linearization functions is now based on a token
type Tok, which is defined in PGF.Haskell.

PGF.Haskell.Tok is similar to the type GF.Data.Str.Tok, but it has
constructors for the special tokens BIND, SOFT_BIND and CAPIT, and there is
a function

	fromStr :: Str -> String

that computes the effects of these special tokens.
2015-01-14 14:35:39 +00:00