Commit Graph

12 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
3ddce116e5 Warn when calling deprecated functions (#5447)
* Warn when calling deprecated std functions

Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>

* Refactor function values

Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>

---------

Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2025-02-22 20:16:29 +13:00
7500ef0065 Declare parts of std in KCL rather than Rust (#5147)
Declare std in KCL
2025-02-20 19:33:21 +13:00
6aa588f09f Bug: KCL formatter removes 'fn' from closures: (#4718)
# Problem

Before this PR, our formatter reformats
```
squares_out = reduce(arr, 0, fn (i, squares)  {
  return 1
})
```
to 
```
squares_out = reduce(arr, 0, (i, squares) {
  return 1
})
```
i.e. it removes the `fn` keyword from the closure. This keyword is required, so, our formatter turned working code into invalid code.

# Cause

When this closure parameter is formatted, the ExprContext is ::Decl, so `Expr::recast` skips adding the `fn` keyword. The reason it's ::Decl is because the `squares_out = ` declaration sets it, and no subsequent call sets the context to something else.

# Solution

When recasting a call expression, set the context for every argument to `ExprContext::Other`.
2024-12-09 19:13:49 -06:00
3139e18dc7 Make = and => optional in function declarations (#4577)
* Make `=` and `=>` optional in function declarations

And requires `:` for return types

Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>

* Tests

Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>

* Format types in function decls

Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>

* Require  in anon function decls

Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>

---------

Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2024-11-27 15:46:58 +13:00
66f6b741c4 Support = in record initialisation (#4519)
Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
2024-11-24 20:21:55 +00:00
986675fe89 Fix formatting for nested function returns (#4518)
Previously, this was the output of the formatter:

```
fn f = () => {
  return () => {
  return 1
}
}
```

Now the above will be reformatted as

```
fn f = () => {
  return () => {
    return 1
  }
}
```

Much better!
2024-11-20 09:23:30 -05:00
248ef8ebb3 Implement dynamic ranges (#4151)
Closes #4021

Allows array ranges (e.g., `[0..10]`) to take expression instead of just numeric literals as their start and end values. Both expressions are required (we don't support `[0..]`, etc.).

I've created a new kind of expression in the AST. The alternative was to represent the internals of an array as some kind of pattern which could initially be fully explicit or ranges. I figured the chosen version was simpler and easier to extend to open ranges, whereas the latter would be easier to extend to mixed ranges or other patterns. I chose simpler, it'll be easy enough to refactor if necessary.

Parsing is tested implicitly by the tests of execution and unparsing.

---------

Signed-off-by: Nick Cameron <nrc@ncameron.org>
Co-authored-by: Adam Chalmers <adam.chalmers@zoo.dev>
2024-10-16 06:58:04 -07:00
c84c0b0fef return errors back to user (#4075)
* Log any Errors to stderr

This isn't perfect -- in fact, this is maybe not even very good at all,
but it's better than what we have today.

Currently, when we get an Erorr back from the WebSocket, we drop it in
kcl-lib. The web-app logs these to the console (I can't find my commit
doing that off the top of my head, but I remember doing it) -- so this
is some degree of partity.

This won't be very useful at all for wasm usage, but it will fix issues
with the zoo cli silently breaking with a "WebSocket Closed" error --
which is the same issue I was solving for in the desktop app too.

In the future perhaps this can be a real Error? I'm not totally sure
yet, since we can't align to the request-id, so we can't really tie it
to a specific call (yet).

* add to responses

Signed-off-by: Jess Frazelle <github@jessfraz.com>

* A snapshot a day keeps the bugs away! 📷🐛 (OS: ubuntu-latest)

* add a test

Signed-off-by: Jess Frazelle <github@jessfraz.com>

* clippy[

Signed-off-by: Jess Frazelle <github@jessfraz.com>

* A snapshot a day keeps the bugs away! 📷🐛 (OS: ubuntu-latest)

* empty

* fix error

Signed-off-by: Jess Frazelle <github@jessfraz.com>

* updates tests

Signed-off-by: Jess Frazelle <github@jessfraz.com>

* docs

Signed-off-by: Jess Frazelle <github@jessfraz.com>

---------

Signed-off-by: Jess Frazelle <github@jessfraz.com>
Co-authored-by: Jess Frazelle <github@jessfraz.com>
Co-authored-by: github-actions[bot] <github-actions[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jess Frazelle <jessfraz@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-10-02 22:05:12 -07:00
0c478680cb KCL: No 'let' or 'const' required when declaring vars (#4063)
Previously variable declaration required a keyword, e.g.

```kcl
let x = 4
const x = 4
var x = 4
```

These were all valid, and did the exact same thing. As of this PR, they're all still valid, but the KCL formatter will change them all to just:

```kcl
x = 4
```

which is the new preferred way to declare a constant. 

But the formatter will remove the var/let/const keywords.

Closes https://github.com/KittyCAD/modeling-app/issues/3985
2024-10-02 14:19:40 -05:00
2a3693651a KCL stdlib 'map' function (#4054)
I had to revert https://github.com/KittyCAD/modeling-app/pull/4031 because it broke syntax highlighting. This is the same PR, but updated to fix syntax highlighting.

Highlighting broke because the KCL LSP could not determine how to autocomplete the `map` function. The first argument of `map` is `[KclValue]` and the LSP doesn't know any good suggestions for "any KCL value", so it error'd out. I am using the value `[0..9]` for this case now. Tested that syntax highlighting works again.
2024-10-01 08:50:23 -05:00
2a2e4a8b63 Revert "KCL stdlib 'map' function (#4031)"
It broke the KCL LSP.

This reverts commit a3c0a2b03b.
2024-09-30 21:03:50 -05:00
a3c0a2b03b KCL stdlib 'map' function (#4031)
KCL: New 'map' stdlib function.

map(f, [1, 2, ...]) == [f(1), f(2), ...]
2024-09-30 19:37:41 -05:00