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Author SHA1 Message Date
9a3fc3bdce Remove dead code 2025-05-02 16:08:37 -05:00
1042 changed files with 66997 additions and 126889 deletions

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@ -1,4 +1,3 @@
[codespell]
ignore-words-list: crate,everytime,inout,co-ordinate,ot,nwo,atleast,ue,afterall,ser,fromM,FromM
skip: **/target,node_modules,build,dist,./out,**/Cargo.lock,./docs/**/*.md,./e2e/playwright/lib/console-error-whitelist.ts,.package-lock.json,**/package-lock.json,./openapi/*.json,./packages/codemirror-lang-kcl/test/all.test.ts,./public/kcl-samples,./rust/kcl-lib/tests/kcl_samples,tsconfig.tsbuildinfo,./src/lib/machine-api.d.ts,./test-results,./playwright-report,./kcl-book/book
skip: **/target,node_modules,build,dist,./out,**/Cargo.lock,./docs/kcl/*.md,./e2e/playwright/lib/console-error-whitelist.ts,.package-lock.json,**/package-lock.json,./openapi/*.json,./packages/codemirror-lang-kcl/test/all.test.ts,./public/kcl-samples,./rust/kcl-lib/tests/kcl_samples,tsconfig.tsbuildinfo,./src/lib/machine-api.d.ts

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@ -1,5 +1,3 @@
# DO NOT commit secrets, overrides go in the ignored `.env.development.local`
NODE_ENV=development
DEV=true
@ -9,11 +7,7 @@ VITE_KC_SITE_BASE_URL=https://dev.zoo.dev
VITE_KC_SITE_APP_URL=https://app.dev.zoo.dev
VITE_KC_SKIP_AUTH=false
VITE_KC_CONNECTION_TIMEOUT_MS=5000
#VITE_KC_DEV_TOKEN="optional token to skip auth in the app"
#token="required token for playwright. TODO: clean up env vars in #3973"
RUST_BACKTRACE=1
PYO3_PYTHON=/usr/local/bin/python3
#KITTYCAD_API_TOKEN="required token for engine testing"
# ONLY add your token in .env.development.local if you want to skip auth, otherwise this token takes precedence!
#VITE_KC_DEV_TOKEN="your token from dev.zoo.dev should go in .env.development.local"
FAIL_ON_CONSOLE_ERRORS=true

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@ -87,14 +87,6 @@
{
"selector": "CallExpression[callee.object.name='TOML'][callee.property.name='parse']",
"message": "Do not use TOML.parse directly. Use the wrappers in test-utils instead like tomlToSettings."
},
{
"selector": "CallExpression[callee.property.name='split'] > Literal[value='/']",
"message": "Avoid using split with '/'."
},
{
"selector": "CallExpression[callee.property.name='join'] > Literal[value='/']",
"message": "Avoid using join with '/'."
}
],
"no-restricted-imports": [

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@ -1,41 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/bash
set -euo pipefail
if [ -z "${TAB_API_URL:-}" ] || [ -z "${TAB_API_KEY:-}" ]; then
exit 0
fi
project="https://github.com/KittyCAD/modeling-app"
branch="${GITHUB_HEAD_REF:-${GITHUB_REF_NAME:-}}"
commit="${CI_COMMIT_SHA:-${GITHUB_SHA:-}}"
echo "Uploading batch results"
curl --silent --request POST \
--header "X-API-Key: ${TAB_API_KEY}" \
--form "project=${project}" \
--form "branch=${branch}" \
--form "commit=${commit}" \
--form "tests=@test-results/junit.xml" \
--form "CI_COMMIT_SHA=${CI_COMMIT_SHA:-}" \
--form "CI_PR_NUMBER=${CI_PR_NUMBER:-}" \
--form "GITHUB_BASE_REF=${GITHUB_BASE_REF:-}" \
--form "GITHUB_EVENT_NAME=${GITHUB_EVENT_NAME:-}" \
--form "GITHUB_HEAD_REF=${GITHUB_HEAD_REF:-}" \
--form "GITHUB_REF_NAME=${GITHUB_REF_NAME:-}" \
--form "GITHUB_REF=${GITHUB_REF:-}" \
--form "GITHUB_SHA=${GITHUB_SHA:-}" \
--form "GITHUB_WORKFLOW=${GITHUB_WORKFLOW:-}" \
--form "RUNNER_ARCH=${RUNNER_ARCH:-}" \
${TAB_API_URL}/api/results/bulk
echo
echo "Sharing updated report"
curl --silent --request POST \
--header "Content-Type: application/json" \
--header "X-API-Key: ${TAB_API_KEY}" \
--data "{
\"project\": \"${project}\",
\"branch\": \"${branch}\",
\"commit\": \"${commit}\"
}" \
${TAB_API_URL}/api/share

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@ -7,10 +7,11 @@ on:
- main
tags:
- 'v[0-9]+.[0-9]+.[0-9]+'
- 'nightly-v[0-9]+.[0-9]+.[0-9]+'
env:
IS_RELEASE: ${{ github.ref_type == 'tag' && startsWith(github.ref_name, 'v') }}
IS_NIGHTLY: ${{ github.event_name == 'push' && github.ref == 'refs/heads/main' }}
IS_NIGHTLY: ${{ github.ref_type == 'tag' && startsWith(github.ref_name, 'nightly-v') }}
concurrency:
group: ${{ github.workflow }}-${{ github.head_ref || github.run_id }}
@ -94,9 +95,7 @@ jobs:
- name: Set nightly version, product name, release notes, and icons
if: ${{ env.IS_NIGHTLY == 'true' }}
run: |
COMMIT=$(git rev-parse --short HEAD)
DATE=$(date +'%-y.%-m.%-d')
export VERSION=$DATE-main.$COMMIT
export VERSION=${GITHUB_REF_NAME#nightly-v}
npm run files:set-version
npm run files:flip-to-nightly
@ -307,8 +306,7 @@ jobs:
runs-on: ubuntu-22.04
permissions:
contents: write
# Equivalent to IS_RELEASE || IS_NIGHTLY (but we can't access those env vars here)
if: ${{ (github.ref_type == 'tag' && startsWith(github.ref_name, 'v')) || (github.event_name == 'push' && github.ref == 'refs/heads/main') }}
if: ${{ github.ref_type == 'tag' }}
env:
VERSION_NO_V: ${{ needs.prepare-files.outputs.version }}
VERSION: ${{ format('v{0}', needs.prepare-files.outputs.version) }}
@ -414,6 +412,17 @@ jobs:
- name: List artifacts
run: "ls -R out"
- name: Set more complete nightly release notes
if: ${{ env.IS_NIGHTLY == 'true' }}
run: |
# Note: preferred going this way instead of a full clone in the checkout step,
# see https://github.com/actions/checkout/issues/1471
git fetch --prune --unshallow --tags
export TAG="nightly-${VERSION}"
export PREVIOUS_TAG=$(git tag --list --sort=-committerdate "nightly-v[0-9]*" | head -n2 | tail -n1)
export NOTES=$(./scripts/get-nightly-changelog.sh)
npm run files:set-notes
- name: Authenticate to Google Cloud
if: ${{ env.IS_NIGHTLY == 'true' }}
uses: 'google-github-actions/auth@v2.1.8'

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@ -2,6 +2,7 @@ on:
push:
branches:
- main
pull_request:
workflow_dispatch:
permissions:
@ -83,7 +84,7 @@ jobs:
run: |
set -euo pipefail
cd rust
cargo nextest run --workspace --features artifact-graph --retries=10 --no-fail-fast --profile ci simulation_tests::kcl_samples 2>&1 | tee /tmp/github-actions.log
cargo nextest run --workspace --features artifact-graph --retries=2 --no-fail-fast --profile ci simulation_tests::kcl_samples 2>&1 | tee /tmp/github-actions.log
env:
KITTYCAD_API_TOKEN: ${{secrets.KITTYCAD_API_TOKEN_DEV}}
ZOO_HOST: https://api.dev.zoo.dev
@ -98,7 +99,9 @@ jobs:
popd
git add \
rust/kcl-lib/tests \
public/kcl-samples
public/kcl-samples/manifest.json \
public/kcl-samples/README.md \
public/kcl-samples/screenshots
git config --local user.email "github-actions[bot]@users.noreply.github.com"
git config --local user.name "github-actions[bot]"
git remote set-url origin https://${{ github.actor }}:${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}@github.com/${{ github.repository }}.git
@ -128,6 +131,7 @@ jobs:
with:
name: nextest-archive
path: rust/nextest-archive.tar.zst
run-test-artifacts:
name: cargo test (shard ${{ matrix.partitionIndex}})
runs-on:
@ -175,55 +179,11 @@ jobs:
cp nextest-archive.tar.zst rust/nextest-archive.tar.zst
ls -lah
cd rust
cargo nextest run \
--retries=10 --no-fail-fast --profile=ci --archive-file nextest-archive.tar.zst \
cargo nextest run\
--retries=2 --no-fail-fast -P ci --archive-file nextest-archive.tar.zst \
--partition count:${{ matrix.partitionIndex}}/${{ matrix.partitionTotal }} \
2>&1 | tee /tmp/github-actions.log
env:
KITTYCAD_API_TOKEN: ${{secrets.KITTYCAD_API_TOKEN_DEV}}
ZOO_HOST: https://api.dev.zoo.dev
- name: Upload results
if: always()
run: .github/ci-cd-scripts/upload-results.sh
env:
TAB_API_URL: ${{ secrets.TAB_API_URL }}
TAB_API_KEY: ${{ secrets.TAB_API_KEY }}
CI_COMMIT_SHA: ${{ github.event.pull_request.head.sha }}
CI_PR_NUMBER: ${{ github.event.pull_request.number }}
run-wasm-tests:
name: Run wasm tests
strategy:
matrix:
os: [ubuntu-latest, macos-latest]
fail-fast: false
runs-on: ${{ matrix.os }}
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Use correct Rust toolchain
shell: bash
run: |
[ -e rust-toolchain.toml ] || cp rust/rust-toolchain.toml ./
- name: Install rust
uses: actions-rust-lang/setup-rust-toolchain@v1
with:
cache: false # Configured below.
- uses: taiki-e/install-action@d4635f2de61c8b8104d59cd4aede2060638378cc
with:
tool: wasm-pack
- name: Rust Cache
uses: Swatinem/rust-cache@v2
with:
workspaces: './rust'
- name: Build Wasm
shell: bash
run: |
npm install
npm run build:wasm
- name: Run wasm tests
run: |
cd rust
cd kcl-wasm-lib
#wasm-pack test --headless --chrome
env:
KITTYCAD_API_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.KITTYCAD_API_TOKEN_DEV }}
NODE_ENV: development

47
.github/workflows/check-exampleKcl.yml vendored Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,47 @@
name: Check Onboarding KCL
on:
pull_request:
types: [opened, synchronize]
paths:
- 'src/lib/exampleKcl.ts'
- 'public/kcl-samples/bracket/main.kcl'
permissions:
contents: read
issues: write
pull-requests: write
jobs:
comment:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout repository
uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Comment on PR
uses: actions/github-script@v7
with:
script: |
const message = '`public/kcl-samples/bracket/main.kcl` or `src/lib/exampleKcl.ts` has been updated in this PR, please review and update the `src/routes/onboarding`, if needed.';
const issue_number = context.payload.pull_request.number;
const owner = context.repo.owner;
const repo = context.repo.repo;
const { data: comments } = await github.rest.issues.listComments({
owner,
repo,
issue_number
});
const commentExists = comments.some(comment => comment.body === message);
if (!commentExists) {
// Post a comment on the PR
await github.rest.issues.createComment({
owner,
repo,
issue_number,
body: message,
});
}

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@ -18,13 +18,73 @@ permissions:
jobs:
prepare-wasm:
# separate job on Ubuntu to build or fetch the wasm blob once on the fastest runner
runs-on: runs-on=${{ github.run_id }}/family=i7ie.2xlarge/image=ubuntu22-full-x64
conditions:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
outputs:
significant: ${{ steps.path-changes.outputs.significant }}
should-run: ${{ steps.should-run.outputs.should-run }}
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Fetch the base branch
if: ${{ github.event_name == 'pull_request' }}
run: git fetch origin ${{ github.base_ref }} --depth=1
- name: Check for path changes
id: path-changes
shell: bash
run: |
set -euo pipefail
# Manual runs or push should run all tests.
if [[ ${{ github.event_name }} != 'pull_request' ]]; then
echo "significant=true" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
exit 0
fi
changed_files=$(git diff --name-only origin/${{ github.base_ref }})
echo "$changed_files"
if grep -Evq '^README.md|^public/kcl-samples/|^rust/kcl-lib/tests/kcl_samples/' <<< "$changed_files" ; then
echo "significant=true" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
else
echo "significant=false" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
fi
- name: Should run
id: should-run
shell: bash
run: |
set -euo pipefail
# We should run when this is a scheduled run or if there are
# significant changes in the diff.
if [[ ${{ github.event_name }} == 'schedule' || ${{ steps.path-changes.outputs.significant }} == 'true' ]]; then
echo "should-run=true" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
else
echo "should-run=false" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
fi
- name: Display conditions
shell: bash
run: |
# For debugging purposes
set -euo pipefail
echo "GITHUB_REF: $GITHUB_REF"
echo "GITHUB_HEAD_REF: $GITHUB_HEAD_REF"
echo "GITHUB_BASE_REF: $GITHUB_BASE_REF"
echo "significant: ${{ steps.path-changes.outputs.significant }}"
echo "should-run: ${{ steps.should-run.outputs.should-run }}"
prepare-wasm:
# separate job on Ubuntu to build or fetch the wasm blob once on the fastest runner
runs-on: runs-on=${{ github.run_id }}/family=i7ie.2xlarge/image=ubuntu22-full-x64
needs: conditions
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
- id: filter
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
name: Check for Rust changes
uses: dorny/paths-filter@v3
with:
@ -33,16 +93,18 @@ jobs:
- 'rust/**'
- uses: actions/setup-node@v4
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
with:
node-version-file: '.nvmrc'
cache: 'npm'
- name: Install dependencies
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
run: npm install
- name: Download Wasm Cache
id: download-wasm
if: ${{ github.event_name != 'schedule' && steps.filter.outputs.rust == 'false' }}
if: ${{ needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true' && github.event_name != 'schedule' && steps.filter.outputs.rust == 'false' }}
uses: dawidd6/action-download-artifact@v7
continue-on-error: true
with:
@ -54,6 +116,7 @@ jobs:
- name: Build WASM condition
id: wasm
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
run: |
set -euox pipefail
# Build wasm if this is a scheduled run, there are Rust changes, or
@ -65,34 +128,35 @@ jobs:
fi
- name: Use correct Rust toolchain
if: ${{ steps.wasm.outputs.should-build-wasm == 'true' }}
if: ${{ needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true' && steps.wasm.outputs.should-build-wasm == 'true' }}
shell: bash
run: |
[ -e rust-toolchain.toml ] || cp rust/rust-toolchain.toml ./
- name: Install rust
if: ${{ steps.wasm.outputs.should-build-wasm == 'true' }}
if: ${{ needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true' && steps.wasm.outputs.should-build-wasm == 'true' }}
uses: actions-rust-lang/setup-rust-toolchain@v1
with:
cache: false # Configured below.
- uses: taiki-e/install-action@d4635f2de61c8b8104d59cd4aede2060638378cc
if: ${{ steps.wasm.outputs.should-build-wasm == 'true' }}
if: ${{ needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true' && steps.wasm.outputs.should-build-wasm == 'true' }}
with:
tool: wasm-pack
- name: Rust Cache
if: ${{ steps.wasm.outputs.should-build-wasm == 'true' }}
if: ${{ needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true' && steps.wasm.outputs.should-build-wasm == 'true' }}
uses: Swatinem/rust-cache@v2
with:
workspaces: './rust'
- name: Build Wasm
if: ${{ steps.wasm.outputs.should-build-wasm == 'true' }}
if: ${{ needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true' && steps.wasm.outputs.should-build-wasm == 'true' }}
shell: bash
run: npm run build:wasm
- uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
with:
name: prepared-wasm
path: |
@ -101,9 +165,10 @@ jobs:
snapshots:
name: playwright:snapshots:ubuntu
runs-on: runs-on=${{ github.run_id }}/family=i7ie.2xlarge/image=ubuntu22-full-x64
needs: [prepare-wasm]
needs: [conditions, prepare-wasm]
steps:
- uses: actions/create-github-app-token@v1
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
id: app-token
with:
app-id: ${{ secrets.MODELING_APP_GH_APP_ID }}
@ -111,13 +176,16 @@ jobs:
owner: ${{ github.repository_owner }}
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
with:
token: ${{ steps.app-token.outputs.token }}
- uses: actions/download-artifact@v4
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
name: prepared-wasm
- name: Copy prepared wasm
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
run: |
ls -R prepared-wasm
cp prepared-wasm/kcl_wasm_lib_bg.wasm public
@ -125,15 +193,18 @@ jobs:
cp prepared-wasm/kcl_wasm_lib* rust/kcl-wasm-lib/pkg
- uses: actions/setup-node@v4
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
with:
node-version-file: '.nvmrc'
cache: 'npm'
- name: Install dependencies
id: deps-install
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
run: npm install
- name: Cache Playwright Browsers
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
uses: actions/cache@v4
with:
path: |
@ -141,12 +212,15 @@ jobs:
key: ${{ runner.os }}-playwright-${{ hashFiles('package-lock.json') }}
- name: Install Playwright Browsers
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
run: npm run playwright install --with-deps
- name: build web
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
run: npm run tronb:vite:dev
- name: Run ubuntu/chrome snapshots
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
uses: nick-fields/retry@v3.0.2
with:
shell: bash
@ -155,6 +229,7 @@ jobs:
max_attempts: 5
env:
token: ${{ secrets.KITTYCAD_API_TOKEN_DEV }}
snapshottoken: ${{ secrets.KITTYCAD_API_TOKEN }}
TAB_API_URL: ${{ secrets.TAB_API_URL }}
TAB_API_KEY: ${{ secrets.TAB_API_KEY }}
CI_COMMIT_SHA: ${{ github.event.pull_request.head.sha }}
@ -162,7 +237,7 @@ jobs:
TARGET: web
- uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
if: ${{ !cancelled() && (success() || failure()) }}
if: ${{ needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true' && !cancelled() && (success() || failure()) }}
with:
name: playwright-report-ubuntu-snapshot-${{ github.sha }}
path: playwright-report/
@ -171,7 +246,7 @@ jobs:
overwrite: true
- name: Check for changes
if: ${{ github.ref != 'refs/heads/main' }}
if: ${{ needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true' && github.ref != 'refs/heads/main' }}
shell: bash
id: git-check
run: |
@ -183,7 +258,7 @@ jobs:
- name: Commit changes, if any
# TODO: find a more reliable way to detect visual changes
if: ${{ false && steps.git-check.outputs.modified == 'true' }}
if: ${{ false && needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true' && steps.git-check.outputs.modified == 'true' }}
shell: bash
run: |
git add e2e/playwright/snapshot-tests.spec.ts-snapshots e2e/playwright/snapshots
@ -198,7 +273,7 @@ jobs:
git push origin ${{ github.head_ref }}
electron:
needs: [prepare-wasm]
needs: [conditions, prepare-wasm]
timeout-minutes: 60
env:
OS_NAME: ${{ contains(matrix.os, 'ubuntu') && 'ubuntu' || (contains(matrix.os, 'windows') && 'windows' || 'macos') }}
@ -241,11 +316,14 @@ jobs:
runs-on: ${{ matrix.os }}
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
- uses: actions/download-artifact@v4
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
name: prepared-wasm
- name: Copy prepared wasm
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
run: |
ls -R prepared-wasm
cp prepared-wasm/kcl_wasm_lib_bg.wasm public
@ -253,15 +331,18 @@ jobs:
cp prepared-wasm/kcl_wasm_lib* rust/kcl-wasm-lib/pkg
- uses: actions/setup-node@v4
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
with:
node-version-file: '.nvmrc'
cache: 'npm'
- name: Install dependencies
id: deps-install
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
run: npm install
- name: Cache Playwright Browsers
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
uses: actions/cache@v4
with:
path: |
@ -269,20 +350,22 @@ jobs:
key: ${{ runner.os }}-playwright-${{ hashFiles('package-lock.json') }}
- name: Install Playwright Browsers
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
run: npm run playwright install --with-deps
- name: Build web
if: needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true'
run: npm run tronb:vite:dev
- name: Start Vector
if: ${{ !contains(matrix.os, 'windows') }}
if: ${{ needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true' && !contains(matrix.os, 'windows') }}
run: .github/ci-cd-scripts/start-vector-${{ env.OS_NAME }}.sh
env:
GH_ACTIONS_AXIOM_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GH_ACTIONS_AXIOM_TOKEN }}
OS_NAME: ${{ env.OS_NAME }}
- uses: actions/download-artifact@v4
if: ${{ !cancelled() && (success() || failure()) }}
if: ${{ needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true' && !cancelled() && (success() || failure()) }}
continue-on-error: true
with:
name: test-results-${{ env.OS_NAME }}-${{ matrix.shardIndex }}-${{ github.sha }}
@ -290,7 +373,7 @@ jobs:
- name: Run playwright/electron flow (with retries)
id: retry
if: ${{ !cancelled() && steps.deps-install.outcome == 'success' }}
if: ${{ needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true' && !cancelled() && steps.deps-install.outcome == 'success' }}
uses: nick-fields/retry@v3.0.2
with:
shell: bash
@ -307,7 +390,7 @@ jobs:
TARGET: desktop
- uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
if: always()
if: ${{ needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true' && always() }}
with:
name: test-results-${{ env.OS_NAME }}-${{ matrix.shardIndex }}-${{ github.sha }}
path: test-results/
@ -316,7 +399,7 @@ jobs:
overwrite: true
- uses: actions/upload-artifact@v4
if: always()
if: ${{ needs.conditions.outputs.should-run == 'true' && always() }}
with:
name: playwright-report-${{ env.OS_NAME }}-${{ matrix.shardIndex }}-${{ github.sha }}
path: playwright-report/

View File

@ -38,13 +38,17 @@ jobs:
run: |
mkdir -p documentation/content/pages/docs/kcl/
# cleanup old
rm -rf documentation/content/pages/docs/kcl-std
rm -rf documentation/content/pages/docs/kcl-lang
rm -rf documentation/content/pages/docs/kcl/*.md
rm -rf documentation/content/pages/docs/kcl/types
rm -rf documentation/content/pages/docs/kcl/functions
rm -rf documentation/content/pages/docs/kcl/consts
# move new
mv -f docs/kcl-std documentation/content/pages/docs
mv -f docs/kcl-lang documentation/content/pages/docs
mv -f docs/kcl/*.md documentation/content/pages/docs/kcl/
mv -f docs/kcl/types documentation/content/pages/docs/kcl/
mv -f docs/kcl/functions documentation/content/pages/docs/kcl/
mv -f docs/kcl/consts documentation/content/pages/docs/kcl/
# We don't need the README
rm documentation/content/pages/docs/kcl-std/README.md
rm documentation/content/pages/docs/kcl/README.md
- name: move kcl-samples
shell: bash
run: |

View File

@ -171,8 +171,13 @@ jobs:
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Set up Python
uses: actions/setup-python@v5
- name: Install codespell
run: |
python -m pip install codespell
- name: Run codespell
uses: crate-ci/typos@v1.32.0
run: codespell --config .codespellrc # Edit this file to tweak the typo list and other configuration.
npm-unit-test-kcl-samples:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
@ -213,13 +218,7 @@ jobs:
if: ${{ github.event_name != 'release' && github.event_name != 'schedule' }}
run: npm run playwright install chromium --with-deps
- name: Download internal KCL samples
run: git clone --depth=1 https://x-access-token:${{ secrets.GH_PAT_KCL_SAMPLES_INTERNAL }}@github.com/KittyCAD/kcl-samples-internal public/kcl-samples/internal
- name: Regenerate KCL samples manifest
run: cd rust/kcl-lib && EXPECTORATE=overwrite cargo test generate_manifest
- name: Check public and internal KCL samples
- name: run unit tests for kcl samples
if: ${{ github.event_name != 'release' && github.event_name != 'schedule' }}
run: npm run test:unit:kcl-samples
env:

39
.github/workflows/tag-nightly.yml vendored Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,39 @@
name: tag-nightly
permissions:
contents: write
on:
schedule:
- cron: '0 4 * * *'
# Daily at 04:00 AM UTC
# Will checkout the last commit from the default branch (main as of 2023-10-04)
jobs:
tag-nightly:
runs-on: ubuntu-22.04
steps:
- uses: actions/create-github-app-token@v1
id: app-token
with:
app-id: ${{ secrets.MODELING_APP_GH_APP_ID }}
private-key: ${{ secrets.MODELING_APP_GH_APP_PRIVATE_KEY }}
owner: ${{ github.repository_owner }}
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
token: ${{ steps.app-token.outputs.token }}
- uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with:
node-version-file: '.nvmrc'
- run: npm install
- name: Push tag
run: |
VERSION_NO_V=$(date +'%-y.%-m.%-d')
TAG="nightly-v$VERSION_NO_V"
git config --local user.email "github-actions[bot]@users.noreply.github.com"
git config --local user.name "github-actions[bot]"
git tag $TAG
git push origin tag $TAG

View File

@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ If you're not a Zoo employee you won't be able to access the dev environment, yo
### Development environment variables
The Copilot LSP plugin in the editor requires a Zoo API token to run. In production, we authenticate this with a token via cookie in the browser and device auth token in the desktop environment, but this token is inaccessible in the dev browser version because the cookie is considered "cross-site" (from `localhost` to `zoo.dev`). There is an optional environment variable called `VITE_KC_DEV_TOKEN` that you can populate with a dev token in a `.env.development.local` file to not check it into Git, which will use that token instead of other methods for the LSP service.
The Copilot LSP plugin in the editor requires a Zoo API token to run. In production, we authenticate this with a token via cookie in the browser and device auth token in the desktop environment, but this token is inaccessible in the dev browser version because the cookie is considered "cross-site" (from `localhost` to `dev.zoo.dev`). There is an optional environment variable called `VITE_KC_DEV_TOKEN` that you can populate with a dev token in a `.env.development.local` file to not check it into Git, which will use that token instead of other methods for the LSP service.
### Developing in Chrome
@ -97,7 +97,7 @@ The following will need to be run when checking out a new commit and guarantees
```bash
npm install
npm run build:wasm
npm start
npm start # or npm run build:local && npm run serve for slower but more production-like build
```
## Before submitting a PR
@ -198,9 +198,15 @@ For more information on fuzzing you can check out
### Playwright tests
Prepare these system dependencies:
You will need a `./e2e/playwright/playwright-secrets.env` file:
- Set $token from https://zoo.dev/account/api-tokens
```bash
$ touch ./e2e/playwright/playwright-secrets.env
$ cat ./e2e/playwright/playwright-secrets.env
token=<dev.zoo.dev/account/api-tokens>
snapshottoken=<zoo.dev/account/api-tokens>
```
or use `export` to set the environment variables `token` and `snapshottoken`.
#### Snapshot tests (Google Chrome on Ubuntu only)
@ -294,17 +300,131 @@ Which will run our suite of [Vitest unit](https://vitest.dev/) and [React Testin
### Rust tests
Prepare these system dependencies:
**Dependencies**
- Set `$KITTYCAD_API_TOKEN` from https://zoo.dev/account/api-tokens
- Install `just` following [these instructions](https://just.systems/man/en/packages.html)
- `KITTYCAD_API_TOKEN`
- `cargo-nextest`
- `just`
then run tests that target the KCL language:
#### Setting KITTYCAD_API_TOKEN
Use the production zoo.dev token, set this environment variable before running the tests
#### Installing cargonextest
```
npm run test:rust
cd rust
cargo search cargo-nextest
cargo install cargo-nextest
```
#### just
install [`just`](https://github.com/casey/just?tab=readme-ov-file#pre-built-binaries)
#### Running the tests
```bash
# With just
# Make sure KITTYCAD_API_TOKEN=<prod zoo.dev token> is set
# Make sure you installed cargo-nextest
# Make sure you installed just
cd rust
just test
```
```bash
# Without just
# Make sure KITTYCAD_API_TOKEN=<prod zoo.dev token> is set
# Make sure you installed cargo-nextest
cd rust
export RUST_BRACKTRACE="full" && cargo nextest run --workspace --test-threads=1
```
Where `XXX` is an API token from the production engine (NOT the dev environment).
We recommend using [nextest](https://nexte.st/) to run the Rust tests (its faster and is used in CI). Once installed, run the tests using
```
cd rust
KITTYCAD_API_TOKEN=XXX cargo run nextest
```
### Mapping CI CD jobs to local commands
When you see the CI CD fail on jobs you may wonder three things
- Do I have a bug in my code?
- Is the test flaky?
- Is there a bug in `main`?
To answer these questions the following commands will give you confidence to locate the issue.
#### Static Analysis
Part of the CI CD pipeline performs static analysis on the code. Use the following commands to mimic the CI CD jobs.
The following set of commands should get us closer to one and done commands to instantly retest issues.
```
npm run test-setup
```
> Gotcha, are packages up to date and is the wasm built?
```
npm run tsc
npm run fmt:check
npm run lint
npm run test:unit:local
```
> Gotcha: Our unit tests have integration tests in them. You need to run a localhost server to run the unit tests.
#### E2E Tests
**Playwright Electron**
These E2E tests run in electron. There are tests that are skipped if they are ran in a windows, linux, or macos environment. We can use playwright tags to implement test skipping.
```
npm run test:playwright:electron:local
npm run test:playwright:electron:windows:local
npm run test:playwright:electron:macos:local
npm run test:playwright:electron:ubuntu:local
```
> Why does it say local? The CI CD commands that run in the pipeline cannot be ran locally. A single command will not properly setup the testing environment locally.
#### Some notes on CI
The tests are broken into snapshot tests and non-snapshot tests, and they run in that order, they automatically commit new snap shots, so if you see an image commit check it was an intended change. If we have non-determinism in the snapshots such that they are always committing new images, hopefully this annoyance makes us fix them asap, if you notice this happening let Kurt know. But for the odd occasion `git reset --hard HEAD~ && git push -f` is your friend.
How to interpret failing playwright tests?
If your tests fail, click through to the action and see that the tests failed on a line that includes `await page.getByTestId('loading').waitFor({ state: 'detached' })`, this means the test fail because the stream never started. It's you choice if you want to re-run the test, or ignore the failure.
We run on ubuntu and macos, because safari doesn't work on linux because of the dreaded "no RTCPeerConnection variable" error. But linux runs first and then macos for the same reason that we limit the number of parallel tests to 1 because we limit stream connections per user, so tests would start failing we if let them run together.
If something fails on CI you can download the artifact, unzip it and then open `playwright-report/data/<UUID>.zip` with https://trace.playwright.dev/ to see what happened.
#### Getting started writing a playwright test in our app
Besides following the instructions above and using the playwright docs, our app is weird because of the whole stream thing, which means our testing is weird. Because we've just figured out this stuff and therefore docs might go stale quick here's a 15min vid/tutorial
https://github.com/KittyCAD/modeling-app/assets/29681384/6f5e8e85-1003-4fd9-be7f-f36ce833942d
<details>
<summary>
PS: for the debug panel, the following JSON is useful for snapping the camera
</summary>
```JSON
{"type":"modeling_cmd_req","cmd_id":"054e5472-e5e9-4071-92d7-1ce3bac61956","cmd":{"type":"default_camera_look_at","center":{"x":15,"y":0,"z":0},"up":{"x":0,"y":0,"z":1},"vantage":{"x":30,"y":30,"z":30}}}
```
</details>
### Logging
To display logging (to the terminal or console) set `ZOO_LOG=1`. This will log some warnings and simple performance metrics. To view these in test runs, use `-- --nocapture`.

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
.PHONY: all
all: install check build
all: install build check
###############################################################################
# INSTALL
@ -23,7 +23,6 @@ endif
install: node_modules/.package-lock.json $(CARGO) $(WASM_PACK) ## Install dependencies
node_modules/.package-lock.json: package.json package-lock.json
npm prune
npm install
$(CARGO):
@ -44,7 +43,6 @@ endif
# BUILD
CARGO_SOURCES := rust/.cargo/config.toml $(wildcard rust/Cargo.*) $(wildcard rust/**/Cargo.*)
KCL_SOURCES := $(wildcard public/kcl-samples/**/*.kcl)
RUST_SOURCES := $(wildcard rust/**/*.rs)
REACT_SOURCES := $(wildcard src/*.tsx) $(wildcard src/**/*.tsx)
@ -52,7 +50,13 @@ TYPESCRIPT_SOURCES := tsconfig.* $(wildcard src/*.ts) $(wildcard src/**/*.ts)
VITE_SOURCES := $(wildcard vite.*) $(wildcard vite/**/*.tsx)
.PHONY: build
build: install public/kcl_wasm_lib_bg.wasm public/kcl-samples/manifest.json .vite/build/main.js
build: build-web build-desktop
.PHONY: build-web
build-web: install public/kcl_wasm_lib_bg.wasm build/index.html
.PHONY: build-desktop
build-desktop: install public/kcl_wasm_lib_bg.wasm .vite/build/main.js
public/kcl_wasm_lib_bg.wasm: $(CARGO_SOURCES) $(RUST_SOURCES)
ifdef WINDOWS
@ -61,8 +65,8 @@ else
npm run build:wasm:dev
endif
public/kcl-samples/manifest.json: $(KCL_SOURCES)
cd rust/kcl-lib && EXPECTORATE=overwrite cargo test generate_manifest
build/index.html: $(REACT_SOURCES) $(TYPESCRIPT_SOURCES) $(VITE_SOURCES)
npm run build:local
.vite/build/main.js: $(REACT_SOURCES) $(TYPESCRIPT_SOURCES) $(VITE_SOURCES)
npm run tronb:vite:dev
@ -91,11 +95,11 @@ TARGET ?= desktop
run: run-$(TARGET)
.PHONY: run-web
run-web: install build ## Start the web app
run-web: install build-web ## Start the web app
npm run start
.PHONY: run-desktop
run-desktop: install build ## Start the desktop app
run-desktop: install build-desktop ## Start the desktop app
npm run tron:start
###############################################################################
@ -110,17 +114,14 @@ test: test-unit test-e2e
.PHONY: test-unit
test-unit: install ## Run the unit tests
npm run test:rust
npm run test:unit:components
@ curl -fs localhost:3000 >/dev/null || ( echo "Error: localhost:3000 not available, 'make run-web' first" && exit 1 )
npm run test:unit
npm run test:unit:kcl-samples
.PHONY: test-e2e
test-e2e: test-e2e-$(TARGET)
.PHONY: test-e2e-web
test-e2e-web: install build ## Run the web e2e tests
test-e2e-web: install build-web ## Run the web e2e tests
@ curl -fs localhost:3000 >/dev/null || ( echo "Error: localhost:3000 not available, 'make run-web' first" && exit 1 )
ifdef E2E_GREP
npm run chrome:test -- --headed --grep="$(E2E_GREP)" --max-failures=$(E2E_FAILURES)
@ -129,7 +130,7 @@ else
endif
.PHONY: test-e2e-desktop
test-e2e-desktop: install build ## Run the desktop e2e tests
test-e2e-desktop: install build-desktop ## Run the desktop e2e tests
ifdef E2E_GREP
npm run test:playwright:electron -- --grep="$(E2E_GREP)" --max-failures=$(E2E_FAILURES)
else

View File

@ -1,39 +0,0 @@
[files]
extend-exclude = [
"**/target",
"node_modules",
"build",
"dist",
"out",
"**/Cargo.lock",
"docs/**/*.md",
"docs/**/*.json",
"e2e/playwright/lib/console-error-whitelist.ts",
".package-lock.json",
"**/package-lock.json",
"openapi/*.json",
"packages/codemirror-lang-kcl/test/all.test.ts",
"public/kcl-samples",
"rust/kcl-lib/tests/kcl_samples",
"tsconfig.tsbuildinfo",
"src/lib/machine-api.d.ts",
"kcl-book/book",
]
[default.extend-words]
metalness = "metalness" # appearance API
Hom = "Hom" # short for homogenous
typ = "typ" # used to declare a variable named 'type' which is a reserved keyword in Rust
ue = "ue" # short for UnaryExpression
THRE = "THRE" # Weird bug that wrongly detects THREEjs as a typo
nwo = "nwo" # don't know what this is about tbh
"ot" = "ot" # some abbreviation, idk what
"oe" = "oe" # some abbreviation, idk what
[default]
extend-ignore-identifiers-re = [
"\\dnd", # e.g. 2nd
]
extend-ignore-re = [
"@xstate-layout .*",
]

View File

@ -1,53 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Arithmetic and logic"
excerpt: "Documentation of the KCL language for the Zoo Design Studio."
layout: manual
---
KCL supports the usual arithmetic operators on numbers and logic operators on booleans:
| Operator | Meaning |
|----------|---------|
| `+` | Addition |
| `-` | Subtraction or unary negation |
| `*` | Multiplication |
| `/` | Division |
| `%` | Modulus aka remainder |
| `^` | Power, e.g., `x ^ 2` means `x` squared |
| `&` | Logical 'and' |
| `|` | Logical 'or' |
| `!` | Unary logical 'not' |
KCL also supports comparsion operators which operate on numbers and produce booleans:
| Operator | Meaning |
|----------|---------|
| `==` | Equal |
| `!=` | Not equal |
| `<` | Less than |
| `>` | Greater than |
| `<=` | Less than or equal |
| `>=` | Greater than or equal |
Arithmetics and logic expressions can be arbitrairly combined with the usual rules of associativity and precedence, e.g.,
```
myMathExpression = 3 + 1 * 2 / 3 - 7
```
You can also nest expressions in parenthesis:
```
myMathExpression = 3 + (1 * 2 / (3 - 7))
```
KCL numbers are implemented using [floating point numbers](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floating-point_arithmetic). This means that there are occasionally representation and rounding issues, and some oddities such as supporting positive and negative zero.
Some operators can be applied to other types:
- `+` can be used to concatenate strings, e.g., `'hello' + ' ' + 'world!'`
- Unary `-` can be used with planes or line-like objects such as axes to produce an object with opposite orientation, e.g., `-XY` is a plain which is aligned with `XY` but whose normal aligns with the negative Z axis.
- The following operators can be used with solids as shorthand for CSG operations:
- `+` or `|` for [`union`](/docs/kcl-std/union).
- `-` for [`subtract`](/docs/kcl-std/subtract).
- `&` for [`intersect`](/docs/kcl-std/intersect)

View File

@ -1,32 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Arrays and ranges"
excerpt: "Documentation of the KCL language for the Zoo Design Studio."
layout: manual
---
Arrays are sequences of values.
Arrays can be written out as *array literals* using a sequence of expressions surrounded by square brackets, e.g., `['hello', 'world']` is an array of strings, `[x, x + 1, x + 2]` is an array of numbers (assuming `x` is a number), `[]` is an empty array, and `['hello', 42, true]` is a mixed array.
A value in an array can be accessed by indexing using square brackets where the index is a number, for example, `arr[0]`, `arr[42]`, `arr[i]` (where `arr` is an array and `i` is a (whole) number).
There are some useful functions for working with arrays in the standard library, see [std::array](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-array) for details.
## Array types
Arrays have their own types: `[T]` where `T` is the type of the elements of the array, for example, `[string]` means an array of `string`s and `[any]` means an array of any values.
Array types can also include length information: `[T; n]` denotes an array of length `n` (where `n` is a number literal) and `[T; 1+]` denotes an array whose length is at least one (i.e., a non-empty array). E.g., `[string; 1+]` and `[number(mm); 3]` are valid array types.
## Ranges
Ranges are a succinct way to create an array of sequential numbers. The syntax is `[start .. end]` where `start` and `end` evaluate to whole numbers (integers). Ranges are inclusive of the start and end. The end must be greater than the start. Examples:
```kcl,norun
[0..3] // [0, 1, 2, 3]
[3..10] // [3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]
x = 2
[x..x+1] // [2, 3]
```
The units of the start and end numbers must be the same and the result inherits those units.

View File

@ -1,30 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Attributes"
excerpt: "Documentation of the KCL language for the Zoo Design Studio."
layout: manual
---
Attributes are syntax which affects the language item they annotate. In KCL they are indicated using `@`. For example, `@settings` affects the file in which it appears.
There are two kinds of attributes: named and unnamed attributes. Named attributes (e.g., `@settings`) have a name immediately after the `@` (e.g., `settings`) and affect their surrounding scope. Unnamed attributes have no name and affect the following item, e.g.,
```kcl,norun
@(lengthUnit = ft, coords = opengl)
import "tests/inputs/cube.obj"
```
has an unnamed attribute on the `import` statement.
Named and unnamed attributes may take a parenthesized list of arguments (like a function). Named attributes may also appear without any arguments (e.g., `@no_std`).
## Named attributes
The `@settings` attribute affects the current file and accepts the following arguments: `defaultLengthUnit`, `defaultAngleUnit`, and `kclVersion`. See [settings](/docs/kcl-lang/settings) for details.
The `@no_std` attribute affects the current file, takes no arguments, and causes the standard library to not be implicitly available. It can still be used by being explicitly imported.
## Unnamed attributes
Unnamed attributes may be used on `import` statements when importing non-KCL files. See [projects, modules, and imports](/docs/kcl-lang/modules) for details.
Other unnamed attributes are used on functions inside the standard library, but these are not available in user code.

View File

@ -1,99 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Importing geometry from other CAD systems"
excerpt: "Documentation of the KCL language for the Zoo Design Studio."
layout: manual
---
`import` can also be used to import files from other CAD systems. The format of the statement is the
same as for KCL files. You can only import the whole file, not items from it. E.g.,
```norun
import "tests/inputs/cube.obj"
// Use `cube` just like a KCL object.
```
```kcl
import "tests/inputs/cube.sldprt" as cube
// Use `cube` just like a KCL object.
```
For formats lacking unit data (such as STL, OBJ, or PLY files), the default
unit of measurement is millimeters. Alternatively you may specify the unit
by using an attribute. Likewise, you can also specify a coordinate system. E.g.,
```kcl
@(lengthUnit = ft, coords = opengl)
import "tests/inputs/cube.obj"
```
When importing a GLTF file, the bin file will be imported as well.
Import paths are relative to the current project directory. Imports currently only work when
using the native Design Studio, not in the browser.
### Supported values
File formats: `fbx`, `gltf`/`glb`, `obj`+, `ply`+, `sldprt`, `step`/`stp`, `stl`+. (Those marked with a
'+' support customising the length unit and coordinate system).
Length units: `mm` (the default), `cm`, `m`, `inch`, `ft`, `yd`.
Coordinate systems:
- `zoo` (the default), forward: -Y, up: +Z, handedness: right
- `opengl`, forward: +Z, up: +Y, handedness: right
- `vulkan`, forward: +Z, up: -Y, handedness: left
---
## Performance deepdive for foreignfile imports
Parallelized foreignfile imports now let you overlap file reads, initialization,
and rendering. To maximize throughput, you need to understand the three distinct
stages—reading, initializing (background render start), and invocation (blocking)
—and structure your code to defer blocking operations until the end.
### Foreign import execution stages
1. **Import (Read / Initialization) Stage**
```kcl
import "tests/inputs/cube.step" as cube
```
- Reads the file from disk and makes its API available.
- Starts engine rendering but **does not block** your script.
- This kickstarts the render pipeline while you keep executing other code.
2. **Invocation (Blocking) Stage**
```kcl
import "tests/inputs/cube.step" as cube
cube
|> translate(z=10) // ← blocks here only
```
- Any method call (e.g., `translate`, `scale`, `rotate`) waits for the background render to finish before applying transformations.
### Best practices
#### 1. Defer blocking calls
```kcl
import "tests/inputs/cube.step" as cube // 1) Read / Background render starts
// --- perform other operations and calculations here ---
cube
|> translate(z=10) // 2) Blocks only here
```
#### 2. Split heavy work into separate modules
Place computationally expensive or IOheavy work into its own module so it can render in parallel while `main.kcl` continues.
#### Future improvements
Upcoming releases will autoanalyse dependencies and only block when truly necessary. Until then, explicit deferral will give you the best performance.

View File

@ -1,46 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Functions"
excerpt: "Documentation of the KCL language for the Zoo Design Studio."
layout: manual
---
We have support for defining your own functions. Functions can take in any
type of argument. Below is an example of the syntax:
```
fn myFn(x) {
return x
}
```
As you can see above `myFn` just returns whatever it is given.
KCL uses keyword arguments:
```
// If you declare a function like this
fn add(left, right) {
return left + right
}
// You can call it like this:
total = add(left = 1, right = 2)
```
Functions can also declare one *unlabeled* arg. If you do want to declare an unlabeled arg, it must
be the first arg declared.
```
// The @ indicates an argument is used without a label.
// Note that only the first argument can use @.
fn increment(@x) {
return x + 1
}
fn add(@x, delta) {
return x + delta
}
two = increment(1)
three = add(1, delta = 2)
```

View File

@ -1,22 +0,0 @@
---
title: "KCL Language Reference"
excerpt: "Documentation of the KCL language for the Zoo Design Studio."
layout: manual
---
This is a reference for KCL. If you are learning KCL, you may prefer the [guide]() which explains
things in a more tutorial fashion. See also our documentation of the [standard library](/docs/kcl-std).
## Topics
* [Pipelines](/docs/kcl-lang/pipelines)
* [Arithmetic and logic](/docs/kcl-lang/arithmetic)
* [Values and types](/docs/kcl-lang/types)
* [Numeric types and units](/docs/kcl-lang/numeric)
* [Functions](/docs/kcl-lang/functions)
* [Arrays and ranges](/docs/kcl-lang/arrays)
* [Projects and modules](/docs/kcl-lang/modules)
* [Attributes](/docs/kcl-lang/attributes)
* [Importing geometry from other CAD systems](/docs/kcl-lang/foreign-imports)
* [Settings](/docs/kcl-lang/settings)
* [Known Issues](/docs/kcl-lang/known-issues)

View File

@ -1,48 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Numeric types and units"
excerpt: "Documentation of the KCL language for the Zoo Design Studio."
layout: manual
---
Numbers and numeric types in KCL include information about the units of the numbers. So rather than just having a number like `42`, we always have information about the units so we don't confuse 42 mm with 42 inches.
## Numeric literals
When writing a number literal, you can use a unit suffix to explicitly state the unit, e.g., `42mm`. The following units are available:
- Length units:
- metric: `mm`, `cm`, `m`
- imperial: `in`, `ft`, `yd`
- Angle units: `deg`, `rad`
- `_` to indicate a unitless number such as a count or ratio.
If you write a numeric literal without a suffix, then the defaults for the current file are used. These defaults are specified using the `@settings` attribute, see [settings](/docs/kcl-lang/settings) for details. Note that if using the defaults, the KCL interpreter won't know whether you intend the number to be a length, angle, or count and will treat it as being possibly any of them.
## Numeric types
Just like numbers carry units information, the `number` type also includes units information. Units are written in parentheses after the type, e.g., `number(mm)`.
Any of the suffixes described above can be used meaning that values with that type have the supplied units. E.g., `number(mm)` is the type of number values with mm units and `number(_)` is the type of number values with no units.
You can also use `number(Length)`, `number(Angle)`, or `number(Count)`. These types mean a number with any length, angle, or unitless (count) units, respectively (note that `number(_)` and `number(Count)` are equivalent since there is only one kind of unitless-ness).
Using just `number` means accepting any kind of number, even where the units are unknown by KCL.
## Function calls
When calling a function with an argument with numeric type, the declared numeric type in the function signature and the units of the argument value used in the function call must be compatible. Units are adjusted automatically. For example, if a function requires an argument with type `number(mm)`, then you can call it with `2in` and the units will be automatically adjusted, but calling it with `90deg` will cause an error.
## Mixing units with arithmetic
When doing arithmetic or comparisons, units will be adjusted as necessary if possible. However, often arithmetic expressions exceed the ability of KCL to accurately choose units which can result in warnings in your code or sometimes errors. In these cases, you will need to give KCL more information. Sometimes this can be done by making units explicit using suffixes. If not, then you will need to use *type ascription*, which asserts that an expression has the supplied type. For example, `(x * y): number(mm)` tells KCL that the units of `x * y` is mm. Note that type ascription does not do any adjustment of the numbers, e.g., `2mm: number(in)` has the value `2in` (note that this would be a very non-idiomatic way to use numeric type ascription, you could simply write `2in`. Usually type ascription is only necessary for supplying type information about the result of computation).
KCL has no support for area, volume, or other higher dimension units. When internal unit tracking requires multiple dimensions, KCL essentially gives up. This is usually where the extra type information described above is needed. If doing computation with higher dimensioned units, you must ensure that all adjustments occur before any computation. E.g., if you want to compute an area with unknown units, you must convert all numbers to the same unit before starting.
## Explicit conversions
You might sometimes need to convert from one unit to another for some calculation. You can do this implicitly when calling a function (see above), but if you can't or don't want to, then you can use the explicit conversion functions in the [`std::units`](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-units) module.

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@ -1,66 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Pipelines"
excerpt: "Documentation of the KCL language for the Zoo Design Studio."
layout: manual
---
It can be hard to read repeated function calls, because of all the nested brackets.
```norun
i = 1
x = h(g(f(i)))
```
You can make this easier to read by breaking it into many declarations, but that is a bit annoying.
```norun
i = 1
x0 = f(i)
x1 = g(x0)
x = h(x1)
```
Instead, you can use the pipeline operator (`|>`) to simplify this.
Basically, `x |> f(%)` is a shorthand for `f(x)`. The left-hand side of the `|>` gets put into
the `%` in the right-hand side.
So, this means `x |> f(%) |> g(%)` is shorthand for `g(f(x))`. The code example above, with its
somewhat-clunky `x0` and `x1` constants could be rewritten as
```norun
i = 1
x = i
|> f(%)
|> g(%)
|> h(%)
```
This helps keep your code neat and avoid unnecessary declarations.
## Pipelines and keyword arguments
Say you have a long pipeline of sketch functions, like this:
```norun
startSketchOn(XZ)
|> line(%, end = [3, 4])
|> line(%, end = [10, 10])
|> line(%, end = [-13, -14])
|> close(%)
```
In this example, each function call outputs a sketch, and it gets put into the next function call via
the `%`, into the first (unlabeled) argument.
If a function call uses an unlabeled first parameter, it will default to `%` if it's not given. This
means that `|> line(%, end = [3, 4])` and `|> line(end = [3, 4])` are equivalent! So the above
could be rewritten as
```norun
startSketchOn(XZ)
|> line(end = [3, 4])
|> line(end = [10, 10])
|> line(end = [-13, -14])
|> close()
```

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
---
title: "Known Issues"
title: "KCL Known Issues"
excerpt: "Known issues with the KCL standard library for the Zoo Design Studio."
layout: manual
---
@ -15,6 +15,12 @@ once fixed in engine will just start working here with no language changes.
- **Import**: Right now you can import a file, even if that file has brep data
you cannot edit it, after v1, the engine will account for this.
- **Fillets**: Fillets cannot intersect, you will get an error. Only simple fillet
cases work currently.
- **Chamfers**: Chamfers cannot intersect, you will get an error. Only simple
chamfer cases work currently.
- **Appearance**: Changing the appearance on a loft does not work.
- **CSG Booleans**: Coplanar (bodies that share a plane) unions, subtractions, and intersections are not currently supported.

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@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
---
title: "Projects and modules"
excerpt: "Documentation of the KCL language for the Zoo Design Studio."
title: "KCL Modules"
excerpt: "Documentation of modules for the KCL language for the Zoo Design Studio."
layout: manual
---
@ -264,3 +264,102 @@ cube
clone(cube)
|> translate(x=20)
```
---
## Importing files from other CAD systems
`import` can also be used to import files from other CAD systems. The format of the statement is the
same as for KCL files. You can only import the whole file, not items from it. E.g.,
```norun
import "tests/inputs/cube.obj"
// Use `cube` just like a KCL object.
```
```kcl
import "tests/inputs/cube.sldprt" as cube
// Use `cube` just like a KCL object.
```
For formats lacking unit data (such as STL, OBJ, or PLY files), the default
unit of measurement is millimeters. Alternatively you may specify the unit
by using an attribute. Likewise, you can also specify a coordinate system. E.g.,
```kcl
@(lengthUnit = ft, coords = opengl)
import "tests/inputs/cube.obj"
```
When importing a GLTF file, the bin file will be imported as well.
Import paths are relative to the current project directory. Imports currently only work when
using the native Design Studio, not in the browser.
### Supported values
File formats: `fbx`, `gltf`/`glb`, `obj`+, `ply`+, `sldprt`, `step`/`stp`, `stl`+. (Those marked with a
'+' support customising the length unit and coordinate system).
Length units: `mm` (the default), `cm`, `m`, `inch`, `ft`, `yd`.
Coordinate systems:
- `zoo` (the default), forward: -Y, up: +Z, handedness: right
- `opengl`, forward: +Z, up: +Y, handedness: right
- `vulkan`, forward: +Z, up: -Y, handedness: left
---
## Performance deepdive for foreignfile imports
Parallelized foreignfile imports now let you overlap file reads, initialization,
and rendering. To maximize throughput, you need to understand the three distinct
stages—reading, initializing (background render start), and invocation (blocking)
—and structure your code to defer blocking operations until the end.
### Foreign import execution stages
1. **Import (Read / Initialization) Stage**
```kcl
import "tests/inputs/cube.step" as cube
```
- Reads the file from disk and makes its API available.
- Starts engine rendering but **does not block** your script.
- This kickstarts the render pipeline while you keep executing other code.
2. **Invocation (Blocking) Stage**
```kcl
import "tests/inputs/cube.step" as cube
cube
|> translate(z=10) // ← blocks here only
```
- Any method call (e.g., `translate`, `scale`, `rotate`) waits for the background render to finish before applying transformations.
### Best practices
#### 1. Defer blocking calls
```kcl
import "tests/inputs/cube.step" as cube // 1) Read / Background render starts
// --- perform other operations and calculations here ---
cube
|> translate(z=10) // 2) Blocks only here
```
#### 2. Split heavy work into separate modules
Place computationally expensive or IOheavy work into its own module so it can render in parallel while `main.kcl` continues.
#### Future improvements
Upcoming releases will autoanalyse dependencies and only block when truly necessary. Until then, explicit deferral will give you the best performance.

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@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
---
title: "Settings"
excerpt: "Documentation of the KCL language for the Zoo Design Studio."
title: "KCL Settings"
excerpt: "Documentation of settings for the KCL language and Zoo Design Studio."
layout: manual
---
@ -8,16 +8,16 @@ layout: manual
There are three levels of settings available in Zoo Design Studio:
1. [User Settings](/docs/kcl-lang/settings/user): Global settings that apply to all projects, stored in `user.toml`
2. [Project Settings](/docs/kcl-lang/settings/project): Settings specific to a project, stored in `project.toml`
1. [User Settings](/docs/kcl/settings-user): Global settings that apply to all projects, stored in `user.toml`
2. [Project Settings](/docs/kcl/settings-project): Settings specific to a project, stored in `project.toml`
3. Per-file Settings: Settings that apply to a single KCL file, specified using the `@settings` attribute
## Configuration Files
Zoo Design Studio uses TOML files for configuration:
* **User Settings**: `user.toml` - See [complete documentation](/docs/kcl-lang/settings/user)
* **Project Settings**: `project.toml` - See [complete documentation](/docs/kcl-lang/settings/project)
* **User Settings**: `user.toml` - See [complete documentation](/docs/kcl/settings-user)
* **Project Settings**: `project.toml` - See [complete documentation](/docs/kcl/settings-project)
## Per-file settings

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@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
---
title: "Values and types"
excerpt: "Documentation of the KCL language for the Zoo Design Studio."
title: "KCL Types"
excerpt: "Documentation of types for the KCL standard library for the Zoo Design Studio."
layout: manual
---
@ -19,6 +19,18 @@ myBool = false
Currently you cannot redeclare a constant.
## Arrays
An array is defined with `[]` braces. What is inside the brackets can
be of any type. For example, the following is completely valid:
```
myArray = ["thing", 2, false]
```
If you want to get a value from an array you can use the index like so:
`myArray[0]`.
## Objects
@ -28,8 +40,8 @@ An object is defined with `{}` braces. Here is an example object:
myObj = { a = 0, b = "thing" }
```
To get the property of an object, you can call `myObj.a`, which in the above
example returns 0.
We support two different ways of getting properties from objects, you can call
`myObj.a` or `myObj["a"]` both work.
## `ImportedGeometry`
@ -40,6 +52,131 @@ their internal components. See the [modules and imports docs](modules) for more
detail on importing geometry.
## Binary expressions
You can also do math! Let's show an example below:
```
myMathExpression = 3 + 1 * 2 / 3 - 7
```
You can nest expressions in parenthesis as well:
```
myMathExpression = 3 + (1 * 2 / (3 - 7))
```
## Functions
We also have support for defining your own functions. Functions can take in any
type of argument. Below is an example of the syntax:
```
fn myFn(x) {
return x
}
```
As you can see above `myFn` just returns whatever it is given.
KCL's early drafts used positional arguments, but we now use keyword arguments:
```
// If you declare a function like this
fn add(left, right) {
return left + right
}
// You can call it like this:
total = add(left = 1, right = 2)
```
Functions can also declare one *unlabeled* arg. If you do want to declare an unlabeled arg, it must
be the first arg declared.
```
// The @ indicates an argument can be used without a label.
// Note that only the first argument can use @.
fn increment(@x) {
return x + 1
}
fn add(@x, delta) {
return x + delta
}
two = increment(1)
three = add(1, delta = 2)
```
## Pipelines
It can be hard to read repeated function calls, because of all the nested brackets.
```norun
i = 1
x = h(g(f(i)))
```
You can make this easier to read by breaking it into many declarations, but that is a bit annoying.
```norun
i = 1
x0 = f(i)
x1 = g(x0)
x = h(x1)
```
Instead, you can use the pipeline operator (`|>`) to simplify this.
Basically, `x |> f(%)` is a shorthand for `f(x)`. The left-hand side of the `|>` gets put into
the `%` in the right-hand side.
So, this means `x |> f(%) |> g(%)` is shorthand for `g(f(x))`. The code example above, with its
somewhat-clunky `x0` and `x1` constants could be rewritten as
```norun
i = 1
x = i
|> f(%)
|> g(%)
|> h(%)
```
This helps keep your code neat and avoid unnecessary declarations.
## Pipelines and keyword arguments
Say you have a long pipeline of sketch functions, like this:
```norun
startSketchOn(XZ)
|> line(%, end = [3, 4])
|> line(%, end = [10, 10])
|> line(%, end = [-13, -14])
|> close(%)
```
In this example, each function call outputs a sketch, and it gets put into the next function call via
the `%`, into the first (unlabeled) argument.
If a function call uses an unlabeled first parameter, it will default to `%` if it's not given. This
means that `|> line(%, end = [3, 4])` and `|> line(end = [3, 4])` are equivalent! So the above
could be rewritten as
```norun
startSketchOn(XZ)
|> line(end = [3, 4])
|> line(end = [10, 10])
|> line(end = [-13, -14])
|> close()
```
Note that we are still in the process of migrating KCL's standard library to use keyword arguments. So some
functions are still unfortunately using positional arguments. We're moving them over, so keep checking back.
Some functions are still using the old positional argument syntax.
Check the docs page for each function and look at its examples to see.
## Tags
Tags are used to give a name (tag) to a specific path.
@ -73,7 +210,7 @@ As per the example above you can use the tag identifier to get a reference to th
tagged object. The syntax for this is `myTag`.
In the example above we use the tag identifier to get the angle of the segment
`segAng(rectangleSegmentA001)`.
`segAng(rectangleSegmentA001, %)`.
### `Start`
@ -154,6 +291,7 @@ See how we use the tag `rectangleSegmentA001` in the `fillet` function outside
the `rect` function. This is because the `rect` function is returning the
sketch group that contains the tags.
---
If you find any issues using any of the above expressions or syntax,

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@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
---
title: "X"
subtitle: "Constant in std"
excerpt: "The X-axis (can be used in both 2d and 3d contexts)."
layout: manual
---
The X-axis (can be used in both 2d and 3d contexts).
```kcl
X
```

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@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
---
title: "XY"
subtitle: "Constant in std"
excerpt: "An abstract 3d plane aligned with the X and Y axes. Its normal is the positive Z axis."
layout: manual
---
An abstract 3d plane aligned with the X and Y axes. Its normal is the positive Z axis.
```kcl
XY
```

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@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
---
title: "XZ"
subtitle: "Constant in std"
excerpt: "An abstract 3d plane aligned with the X and Z axes. Its normal is the negative Y axis."
layout: manual
---
An abstract 3d plane aligned with the X and Z axes. Its normal is the negative Y axis.
```kcl
XZ
```

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@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Y"
subtitle: "Constant in std"
excerpt: "The Y-axis (can be used in both 2d and 3d contexts)."
layout: manual
---
The Y-axis (can be used in both 2d and 3d contexts).
```kcl
Y
```

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@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
---
title: "YZ"
subtitle: "Constant in std"
excerpt: "An abstract 3d plane aligned with the Y and Z axes. Its normal is the positive X axis."
layout: manual
---
An abstract 3d plane aligned with the Y and Z axes. Its normal is the positive X axis.
```kcl
YZ
```

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@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Z"
subtitle: "Constant in std"
excerpt: "The 3D Z-axis."
layout: manual
---
The 3D Z-axis.
```kcl
Z
```

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@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
---
title: "turns::HALF_TURN"
subtitle: "Constant in std::turns"
excerpt: "A half turn, 180 degrees or π radians."
layout: manual
---
A half turn, 180 degrees or π radians.
```kcl
turns::HALF_TURN: number(deg) = 180deg
```

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@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
---
title: "turns::QUARTER_TURN"
subtitle: "Constant in std::turns"
excerpt: "A quarter turn, 90 degrees or π/2 radians."
layout: manual
---
A quarter turn, 90 degrees or π/2 radians.
```kcl
turns::QUARTER_TURN: number(deg) = 90deg
```

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@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
---
title: "turns::THREE_QUARTER_TURN"
subtitle: "Constant in std::turns"
excerpt: "Three quarters of a turn, 270 degrees or 1.5*π radians."
layout: manual
---
Three quarters of a turn, 270 degrees or 1.5*π radians.
```kcl
turns::THREE_QUARTER_TURN: number(deg) = 270deg
```

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@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
---
title: "turns::ZERO"
subtitle: "Constant in std::turns"
excerpt: "No turn, zero degrees/radians."
layout: manual
---
No turn, zero degrees/radians.
```kcl
turns::ZERO: number = 0
```

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@ -1,38 +0,0 @@
---
title: "legAngX"
subtitle: "Function in std::math"
excerpt: "Compute the angle of the given leg for x."
layout: manual
---
Compute the angle of the given leg for x.
```kcl
legAngX(
hypotenuse: number(Length),
leg: number(Length),
): number(deg)
```
### Arguments
| Name | Type | Description | Required |
|----------|------|-------------|----------|
| `hypotenuse` | [`number(Length)`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) | The length of the triangle's hypotenuse. | Yes |
| `leg` | [`number(Length)`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) | The length of one of the triangle's legs (i.e. non-hypotenuse side). | Yes |
### Returns
[`number(deg)`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) - A number.
### Examples
```kcl
legAngX(hypotenuse = 5, leg = 3)
```

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@ -1,38 +0,0 @@
---
title: "legAngY"
subtitle: "Function in std::math"
excerpt: "Compute the angle of the given leg for y."
layout: manual
---
Compute the angle of the given leg for y.
```kcl
legAngY(
hypotenuse: number(Length),
leg: number(Length),
): number(deg)
```
### Arguments
| Name | Type | Description | Required |
|----------|------|-------------|----------|
| `hypotenuse` | [`number(Length)`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) | The length of the triangle's hypotenuse. | Yes |
| `leg` | [`number(Length)`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) | The length of one of the triangle's legs (i.e. non-hypotenuse side). | Yes |
### Returns
[`number(deg)`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) - A number.
### Examples
```kcl
legAngY(hypotenuse = 5, leg = 3)
```

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@ -1,38 +0,0 @@
---
title: "legLen"
subtitle: "Function in std::math"
excerpt: "Compute the length of the given leg."
layout: manual
---
Compute the length of the given leg.
```kcl
legLen(
hypotenuse: number(Length),
leg: number(Length),
): number(deg)
```
### Arguments
| Name | Type | Description | Required |
|----------|------|-------------|----------|
| `hypotenuse` | [`number(Length)`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) | The length of the triangle's hypotenuse. | Yes |
| `leg` | [`number(Length)`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) | The length of one of the triangle's legs (i.e. non-hypotenuse side). | Yes |
### Returns
[`number(deg)`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) - A number.
### Examples
```kcl
legLen(hypotenuse = 5, leg = 3)
```

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@ -1,163 +0,0 @@
---
title: "KCL Standard Library"
excerpt: "Documentation for the KCL standard library for the Zoo Design Studio."
layout: manual
---
## Table of Contents
### Functions
* [**std**](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std)
* [`appearance`](/docs/kcl-std/appearance)
* [`assert`](/docs/kcl-std/assert)
* [`assertIs`](/docs/kcl-std/assertIs)
* [`clone`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-clone)
* [`helix`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-helix)
* [`offsetPlane`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-offsetPlane)
* [`patternLinear2d`](/docs/kcl-std/patternLinear2d)
* [**std::array**](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-array)
* [`map`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-array-map)
* [`pop`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-array-pop)
* [`push`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-array-push)
* [`reduce`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-array-reduce)
* [**std::math**](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-math)
* [`abs`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-abs)
* [`acos`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-acos)
* [`asin`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-asin)
* [`atan`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-atan)
* [`atan2`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-atan2)
* [`ceil`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-ceil)
* [`cos`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-cos)
* [`floor`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-floor)
* [`legAngX`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-legAngX)
* [`legAngY`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-legAngY)
* [`legLen`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-legLen)
* [`ln`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-ln)
* [`log`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-log)
* [`log10`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-log10)
* [`log2`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-log2)
* [`max`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-max)
* [`min`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-min)
* [`polar`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-polar)
* [`pow`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-pow)
* [`rem`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-rem)
* [`round`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-round)
* [`sin`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-sin)
* [`sqrt`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-sqrt)
* [`tan`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-tan)
* [**std::sketch**](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-sketch)
* [`angledLine`](/docs/kcl-std/angledLine)
* [`angledLineThatIntersects`](/docs/kcl-std/angledLineThatIntersects)
* [`arc`](/docs/kcl-std/arc)
* [`bezierCurve`](/docs/kcl-std/bezierCurve)
* [`circle`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-sketch-circle)
* [`circleThreePoint`](/docs/kcl-std/circleThreePoint)
* [`close`](/docs/kcl-std/close)
* [`extrude`](/docs/kcl-std/extrude)
* [`getCommonEdge`](/docs/kcl-std/getCommonEdge)
* [`getNextAdjacentEdge`](/docs/kcl-std/getNextAdjacentEdge)
* [`getOppositeEdge`](/docs/kcl-std/getOppositeEdge)
* [`getPreviousAdjacentEdge`](/docs/kcl-std/getPreviousAdjacentEdge)
* [`involuteCircular`](/docs/kcl-std/involuteCircular)
* [`lastSegX`](/docs/kcl-std/lastSegX)
* [`lastSegY`](/docs/kcl-std/lastSegY)
* [`line`](/docs/kcl-std/line)
* [`loft`](/docs/kcl-std/loft)
* [`patternCircular2d`](/docs/kcl-std/patternCircular2d)
* [`patternTransform2d`](/docs/kcl-std/patternTransform2d)
* [`polygon`](/docs/kcl-std/polygon)
* [`profileStart`](/docs/kcl-std/profileStart)
* [`profileStartX`](/docs/kcl-std/profileStartX)
* [`profileStartY`](/docs/kcl-std/profileStartY)
* [`revolve`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-sketch-revolve)
* [`segAng`](/docs/kcl-std/segAng)
* [`segEnd`](/docs/kcl-std/segEnd)
* [`segEndX`](/docs/kcl-std/segEndX)
* [`segEndY`](/docs/kcl-std/segEndY)
* [`segLen`](/docs/kcl-std/segLen)
* [`segStart`](/docs/kcl-std/segStart)
* [`segStartX`](/docs/kcl-std/segStartX)
* [`segStartY`](/docs/kcl-std/segStartY)
* [`startProfile`](/docs/kcl-std/startProfile)
* [`startSketchOn`](/docs/kcl-std/startSketchOn)
* [`subtract2d`](/docs/kcl-std/subtract2d)
* [`sweep`](/docs/kcl-std/sweep)
* [`tangentToEnd`](/docs/kcl-std/tangentToEnd)
* [`tangentialArc`](/docs/kcl-std/tangentialArc)
* [`xLine`](/docs/kcl-std/xLine)
* [`yLine`](/docs/kcl-std/yLine)
* [**std::solid**](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-solid)
* [`chamfer`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-solid-chamfer)
* [`fillet`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-solid-fillet)
* [`hollow`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-solid-hollow)
* [`intersect`](/docs/kcl-std/intersect)
* [`patternCircular3d`](/docs/kcl-std/patternCircular3d)
* [`patternLinear3d`](/docs/kcl-std/patternLinear3d)
* [`patternTransform`](/docs/kcl-std/patternTransform)
* [`shell`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-solid-shell)
* [`subtract`](/docs/kcl-std/subtract)
* [`union`](/docs/kcl-std/union)
* [**std::transform**](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-transform)
* [`mirror2d`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-transform-mirror2d)
* [`rotate`](/docs/kcl-std/rotate)
* [`scale`](/docs/kcl-std/scale)
* [`translate`](/docs/kcl-std/translate)
* [**std::units**](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-units)
* [`units::toCentimeters`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-units-toCentimeters)
* [`units::toDegrees`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-units-toDegrees)
* [`units::toFeet`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-units-toFeet)
* [`units::toInches`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-units-toInches)
* [`units::toMeters`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-units-toMeters)
* [`units::toMillimeters`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-units-toMillimeters)
* [`units::toRadians`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-units-toRadians)
* [`units::toYards`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-units-toYards)
### Constants
* [**std**](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std)
* [`END`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-END)
* [`START`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-START)
* [`X`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-X)
* [`XY`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-XY)
* [`XZ`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-XZ)
* [`Y`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-Y)
* [`YZ`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-YZ)
* [`Z`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-Z)
* [**std::math**](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-math)
* [`E`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-math-E)
* [`PI`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-math-PI)
* [`TAU`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-math-TAU)
* [**std::turns**](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-turns)
* [`turns::HALF_TURN`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-turns-HALF_TURN)
* [`turns::QUARTER_TURN`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-turns-QUARTER_TURN)
* [`turns::THREE_QUARTER_TURN`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-turns-THREE_QUARTER_TURN)
* [`turns::ZERO`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-turns-ZERO)
### Types
See also the [types overview](/docs/kcl-lang/types)
* [**Primitive types**](/docs/kcl-lang/types)
* [`End`](/docs/kcl-lang/types#End)
* [`ImportedGeometry`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-ImportedGeometry)
* [`Start`](/docs/kcl-lang/types#Start)
* [`TagDeclarator`](/docs/kcl-lang/types#TagDeclarator)
* [`TagIdentifier`](/docs/kcl-lang/types#TagIdentifier)
* [`any`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-any)
* [`bool`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-bool)
* [`fn`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-fn)
* [`number`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number)
* [`string`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-string)
* [`tag`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-tag)
* [**std::types**](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-types)
* [`Axis2d`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Axis2d)
* [`Axis3d`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Axis3d)
* [`Edge`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Edge)
* [`Face`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Face)
* [`Helix`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Helix)
* [`Plane`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Plane)
* [`Point2d`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Point2d)
* [`Point3d`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Point3d)
* [`Sketch`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Sketch)
* [`Solid`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Solid)

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---
title: "array"
subtitle: "Module in std"
excerpt: "Functions for manipulating arrays of values. "
layout: manual
---
Functions for manipulating arrays of values.
## Functions and constants
* [`map`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-array-map)
* [`pop`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-array-pop)
* [`push`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-array-push)
* [`reduce`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-array-reduce)

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---
title: "math"
subtitle: "Module in std"
excerpt: "Functions for mathematical operations and some useful constants. "
layout: manual
---
Functions for mathematical operations and some useful constants.
## Functions and constants
* [`E`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-math-E)
* [`PI`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-math-PI)
* [`TAU`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-math-TAU)
* [`abs`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-abs)
* [`acos`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-acos)
* [`asin`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-asin)
* [`atan`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-atan)
* [`atan2`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-atan2)
* [`ceil`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-ceil)
* [`cos`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-cos)
* [`floor`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-floor)
* [`legAngX`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-legAngX)
* [`legAngY`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-legAngY)
* [`legLen`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-legLen)
* [`ln`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-ln)
* [`log`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-log)
* [`log10`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-log10)
* [`log2`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-log2)
* [`max`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-max)
* [`min`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-min)
* [`polar`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-polar)
* [`pow`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-pow)
* [`rem`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-rem)
* [`round`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-round)
* [`sin`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-sin)
* [`sqrt`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-sqrt)
* [`tan`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-math-tan)

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---
title: "sketch"
subtitle: "Module in std"
excerpt: "Sketching is the foundational activity for most KCL programs. A sketch is a two-dimensional drawing made from paths or shapes. A sketch is always drawn on a surface (either an abstract plane of a face of a solid). A sketch can be made into a solid by extruding it (or revolving, etc.). "
layout: manual
---
Sketching is the foundational activity for most KCL programs. A sketch is a two-dimensional drawing made from paths or shapes. A sketch is always drawn on a surface (either an abstract plane of a face of a solid). A sketch can be made into a solid by extruding it (or revolving, etc.).
This module contains functions for creating and manipulating sketches, and making them into solids.
## Functions and constants
* [`angledLine`](/docs/kcl-std/angledLine)
* [`angledLineThatIntersects`](/docs/kcl-std/angledLineThatIntersects)
* [`arc`](/docs/kcl-std/arc)
* [`bezierCurve`](/docs/kcl-std/bezierCurve)
* [`circle`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-sketch-circle)
* [`circleThreePoint`](/docs/kcl-std/circleThreePoint)
* [`close`](/docs/kcl-std/close)
* [`extrude`](/docs/kcl-std/extrude)
* [`getCommonEdge`](/docs/kcl-std/getCommonEdge)
* [`getNextAdjacentEdge`](/docs/kcl-std/getNextAdjacentEdge)
* [`getOppositeEdge`](/docs/kcl-std/getOppositeEdge)
* [`getPreviousAdjacentEdge`](/docs/kcl-std/getPreviousAdjacentEdge)
* [`involuteCircular`](/docs/kcl-std/involuteCircular)
* [`lastSegX`](/docs/kcl-std/lastSegX)
* [`lastSegY`](/docs/kcl-std/lastSegY)
* [`line`](/docs/kcl-std/line)
* [`loft`](/docs/kcl-std/loft)
* [`patternCircular2d`](/docs/kcl-std/patternCircular2d)
* [`patternTransform2d`](/docs/kcl-std/patternTransform2d)
* [`polygon`](/docs/kcl-std/polygon)
* [`profileStart`](/docs/kcl-std/profileStart)
* [`profileStartX`](/docs/kcl-std/profileStartX)
* [`profileStartY`](/docs/kcl-std/profileStartY)
* [`revolve`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-sketch-revolve)
* [`segAng`](/docs/kcl-std/segAng)
* [`segEnd`](/docs/kcl-std/segEnd)
* [`segEndX`](/docs/kcl-std/segEndX)
* [`segEndY`](/docs/kcl-std/segEndY)
* [`segLen`](/docs/kcl-std/segLen)
* [`segStart`](/docs/kcl-std/segStart)
* [`segStartX`](/docs/kcl-std/segStartX)
* [`segStartY`](/docs/kcl-std/segStartY)
* [`startProfile`](/docs/kcl-std/startProfile)
* [`startSketchOn`](/docs/kcl-std/startSketchOn)
* [`subtract2d`](/docs/kcl-std/subtract2d)
* [`sweep`](/docs/kcl-std/sweep)
* [`tangentToEnd`](/docs/kcl-std/tangentToEnd)
* [`tangentialArc`](/docs/kcl-std/tangentialArc)
* [`xLine`](/docs/kcl-std/xLine)
* [`yLine`](/docs/kcl-std/yLine)

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---
title: "solid"
subtitle: "Module in std"
excerpt: "This module contains functions for modifying solids, e.g., by adding a fillet or chamfer, or removing part of a solid. "
layout: manual
---
This module contains functions for modifying solids, e.g., by adding a fillet or chamfer, or removing part of a solid.
## Functions and constants
* [`chamfer`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-solid-chamfer)
* [`fillet`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-solid-fillet)
* [`hollow`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-solid-hollow)
* [`intersect`](/docs/kcl-std/intersect)
* [`patternCircular3d`](/docs/kcl-std/patternCircular3d)
* [`patternLinear3d`](/docs/kcl-std/patternLinear3d)
* [`patternTransform`](/docs/kcl-std/patternTransform)
* [`shell`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-solid-shell)
* [`subtract`](/docs/kcl-std/subtract)
* [`union`](/docs/kcl-std/union)

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---
title: "transform"
subtitle: "Module in std"
excerpt: "This module contains functions for transforming sketches and solids. "
layout: manual
---
This module contains functions for transforming sketches and solids.
## Functions and constants
* [`mirror2d`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-transform-mirror2d)
* [`rotate`](/docs/kcl-std/rotate)
* [`scale`](/docs/kcl-std/scale)
* [`translate`](/docs/kcl-std/translate)

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---
title: "turns"
subtitle: "Module in std"
excerpt: "This module contains a few handy constants for defining turns. "
layout: manual
---
This module contains a few handy constants for defining turns.
## Functions and constants
* [`turns::HALF_TURN`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-turns-HALF_TURN)
* [`turns::QUARTER_TURN`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-turns-QUARTER_TURN)
* [`turns::THREE_QUARTER_TURN`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-turns-THREE_QUARTER_TURN)
* [`turns::ZERO`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-turns-ZERO)

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---
title: "types"
subtitle: "Module in std"
excerpt: "KCL types. This module contains fundamental types like `number`, `string`, `Solid`, and `Sketch`. "
layout: manual
---
KCL types. This module contains fundamental types like `number`, `string`, `Solid`, and `Sketch`.
Types can (optionally) be used to describe a function's arguments and returned value. They are checked when a program runs and can help avoid errors. They are also useful to help document what a function does.
## Types
* [`Axis2d`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Axis2d)
* [`Axis3d`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Axis3d)
* [`Edge`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Edge)
* [`Face`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Face)
* [`Helix`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Helix)
* [`ImportedGeometry`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-ImportedGeometry)
* [`Plane`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Plane)
* [`Point2d`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Point2d)
* [`Point3d`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Point3d)
* [`Sketch`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Sketch)
* [`Solid`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Solid)
* [`any`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-any)
* [`bool`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-bool)
* [`fn`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-fn)
* [`number`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number)
* [`string`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-string)
* [`tag`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-tag)

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---
title: "units"
subtitle: "Module in std"
excerpt: "Functions for converting numbers to different units. "
layout: manual
---
Functions for converting numbers to different units.
All numbers in KCL include units, e.g., the number `42` is always '42 mm' or '42 degrees', etc. it is never just '42'. For more information, see [numeric types](/docs/kcl-lang/numeric).
Note that you only need to explicitly convert the units of a number if you need a specific unit for your own calculations. When calling a function, KCL will convert a number to the required units automatically (where possible, and give an error or warning if it's not possible).
## Functions and constants
* [`units::toCentimeters`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-units-toCentimeters)
* [`units::toDegrees`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-units-toDegrees)
* [`units::toFeet`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-units-toFeet)
* [`units::toInches`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-units-toInches)
* [`units::toMeters`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-units-toMeters)
* [`units::toMillimeters`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-units-toMillimeters)
* [`units::toRadians`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-units-toRadians)
* [`units::toYards`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-units-toYards)

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---
title: "std"
subtitle: "Module in std::"
excerpt: "The KCL standard library "
layout: manual
---
The KCL standard library
Contains frequently used constants, functions for interacting with the KittyCAD servers to create sketches and geometry, and utility functions.
The standard library is organised into modules (listed below), but most things are always available in KCL programs.
You might also want the [KCL language reference](/docs/kcl-lang) or the [KCL guide]().
## Modules
* [`array`](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-array)
* [`math`](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-math)
* [`sketch`](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-sketch)
* [`solid`](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-solid)
* [`transform`](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-transform)
* [`turns::turns`](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-turns)
* [`types`](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-types)
* [`units::units`](/docs/kcl-std/modules/std-units)
## Functions and constants
* [`END`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-END)
* [`START`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-START)
* [`X`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-X)
* [`XY`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-XY)
* [`XZ`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-XZ)
* [`Y`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-Y)
* [`YZ`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-YZ)
* [`Z`](/docs/kcl-std/consts/std-Z)
* [`appearance`](/docs/kcl-std/appearance)
* [`assert`](/docs/kcl-std/assert)
* [`assertIs`](/docs/kcl-std/assertIs)
* [`clone`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-clone)
* [`helix`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-helix)
* [`offsetPlane`](/docs/kcl-std/functions/std-offsetPlane)
* [`patternLinear2d`](/docs/kcl-std/patternLinear2d)

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@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Axis2d"
subtitle: "Type in std::types"
excerpt: "An abstract and infinite line in 2d space."
layout: manual
---
An abstract and infinite line in 2d space.

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@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Axis3d"
subtitle: "Type in std::types"
excerpt: "An abstract and infinite line in 3d space."
layout: manual
---
An abstract and infinite line in 3d space.

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@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Edge"
subtitle: "Type in std::types"
excerpt: "An edge of a solid."
layout: manual
---
An edge of a solid.

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---
title: "Face"
subtitle: "Type in std::types"
excerpt: "A face of a solid."
layout: manual
---
A face of a solid.

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@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Helix"
subtitle: "Type in std::types"
excerpt: "A helix; created by the `helix` function."
layout: manual
---
A helix; created by the `helix` function.

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@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
---
title: "ImportedGeometry"
subtitle: "Type in std::types"
excerpt: "Represents geometry which is defined using some other CAD system and imported into KCL."
layout: manual
---
Represents geometry which is defined using some other CAD system and imported into KCL.

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---
title: "Plane"
subtitle: "Type in std::types"
excerpt: "An abstract plane."
layout: manual
---
An abstract plane.
A plane has a position and orientation in space defined by its origin and axes. A plane is abstract
in the sense that it is not part of the objects being drawn. A plane can be used to sketch on.
A plane can be created in several ways:
- you can use one of the default planes, e.g., `XY`.
- you can use `offsetPlane` to create a new plane offset from an existing one, e.g., `offsetPlane(XY, offset = 150)`.
- you can use negation to create a plane from an existing one which is identical but has an opposite normal
e.g., `-XY`.
- you can define an entirely custom plane, e.g.,
```js
myXY = {
origin = { x = 0, y = 0, z = 0 },
xAxis = { x = 1, y = 0, z = 0 },
yAxis = { x = 0, y = 1, z = 0 },
}
```
Any object with appropriate `origin`, `xAxis`, and `yAxis` fields can be used as a plane.

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---
title: "Point2d"
subtitle: "Type in std::types"
excerpt: "A point in two dimensional space."
layout: manual
---
A point in two dimensional space.
```kcl
type Point2d = [number(Length); 2]
```
[`Point2d`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Point2d) is an alias for a two-element array of [number](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number)s. To write a value
with type [`Point2d`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Point2d), use an array, e.g., `[0, 0]` or `[5.0, 3.14]`.

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@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
---
title: "Point3d"
subtitle: "Type in std::types"
excerpt: "A point in three dimensional space."
layout: manual
---
A point in three dimensional space.
```kcl
type Point3d = [number(Length); 3]
```
[`Point3d`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Point3d) is an alias for a three-element array of [number](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number)s. To write a value
with type [`Point3d`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Point3d), use an array, e.g., `[0, 0, 0]` or `[5.0, 3.14, 6.8]`.

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---
title: "any"
subtitle: "Type in std::types"
excerpt: ""
layout: manual
---
The [`any`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-any) type is the type of all possible values in KCL. I.e., if a function accepts an argument
with type [`any`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-any), then it can accept any value.
### Examples
```kcl
fn acceptAnything(@input: any) {
return true
}
acceptAnything(42)
acceptAnything('hello')
acceptAnything(XY)
acceptAnything([0, 1, 2])
```

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---
title: "fn"
subtitle: "Type in std::types"
excerpt: "The type of any function in KCL."
layout: manual
---
The type of any function in KCL.

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@ -1,28 +0,0 @@
---
title: "number"
subtitle: "Type in std::types"
excerpt: "A number."
layout: manual
---
A number.
May be signed or unsigned, an integer or decimal value.
KCL numbers always include units, e.g., the number `42` is always '42 mm' or '42 degrees', etc.
it is never just '42'. The [`number`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) type may or may not include units, if none are specified, then
it is the type of any number. E.g.,
- [`number`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number): the type of any numbers,
- [`number(mm)`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number): the type of numbers in millimeters,
- [`number(in)`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number): the type of numbers in inches,
- [`number(Length)`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number): the type of numbers in any length unit,
- [`number(deg)`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number): the type of numbers in degrees,
- [`number(Angle)`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number): the type of numbers in any angle unit,
- [`number(_)`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) or [`number(Count)`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number): the type of unit-less numbers, representing a count of things,
or a ratio, etc.
For more information, see [numeric types](/docs/kcl-lang/numeric).

View File

@ -1,15 +1,16 @@
---
title: "angledLine"
subtitle: "Function in std::sketch"
excerpt: "Draw a line segment relative to the current origin using the polar measure of some angle and distance."
layout: manual
---
Draw a line segment relative to the current origin using the polar measure of some angle and distance.
```kcl
angledLine(
@sketch: Sketch,
sketch: Sketch,
angle: number,
length?: number,
lengthX?: number,
@ -21,23 +22,22 @@ angledLine(
```
### Arguments
| Name | Type | Description | Required |
|----------|------|-------------|----------|
| `sketch` | [`Sketch`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Sketch) | Which sketch should this path be added to? | Yes |
| `angle` | [`number`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) | Which angle should the line be drawn at? | Yes |
| `length` | [`number`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) | Draw the line this distance along the given angle. Only one of `length`, `lengthX`, `lengthY`, `endAbsoluteX`, `endAbsoluteY` can be given. | No |
| `lengthX` | [`number`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) | Draw the line this distance along the X axis. Only one of `length`, `lengthX`, `lengthY`, `endAbsoluteX`, `endAbsoluteY` can be given. | No |
| `lengthY` | [`number`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) | Draw the line this distance along the Y axis. Only one of `length`, `lengthX`, `lengthY`, `endAbsoluteX`, `endAbsoluteY` can be given. | No |
| `endAbsoluteX` | [`number`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) | Draw the line along the given angle until it reaches this point along the X axis. Only one of `length`, `lengthX`, `lengthY`, `endAbsoluteX`, `endAbsoluteY` can be given. | No |
| `endAbsoluteY` | [`number`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) | Draw the line along the given angle until it reaches this point along the Y axis. Only one of `length`, `lengthX`, `lengthY`, `endAbsoluteX`, `endAbsoluteY` can be given. | No |
| [`tag`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-tag) | [`TagDeclarator`](/docs/kcl-lang/types#TagDeclarator) | Create a new tag which refers to this line | No |
| `sketch` | [`Sketch`](/docs/kcl/types/std-types-Sketch) | Which sketch should this path be added to? | Yes |
| `angle` | [`number`](/docs/kcl/types/std-types-number) | Which angle should the line be drawn at? | Yes |
| `length` | [`number`](/docs/kcl/types/std-types-number) | Draw the line this distance along the given angle. Only one of `length`, `lengthX`, `lengthY`, `endAbsoluteX`, `endAbsoluteY` can be given. | No |
| `lengthX` | [`number`](/docs/kcl/types/std-types-number) | Draw the line this distance along the X axis. Only one of `length`, `lengthX`, `lengthY`, `endAbsoluteX`, `endAbsoluteY` can be given. | No |
| `lengthY` | [`number`](/docs/kcl/types/std-types-number) | Draw the line this distance along the Y axis. Only one of `length`, `lengthX`, `lengthY`, `endAbsoluteX`, `endAbsoluteY` can be given. | No |
| `endAbsoluteX` | [`number`](/docs/kcl/types/std-types-number) | Draw the line along the given angle until it reaches this point along the X axis. Only one of `length`, `lengthX`, `lengthY`, `endAbsoluteX`, `endAbsoluteY` can be given. | No |
| `endAbsoluteY` | [`number`](/docs/kcl/types/std-types-number) | Draw the line along the given angle until it reaches this point along the Y axis. Only one of `length`, `lengthX`, `lengthY`, `endAbsoluteX`, `endAbsoluteY` can be given. | No |
| [`tag`](/docs/kcl/types/std-types-tag) | [`TagDeclarator`](/docs/kcl/types#TagDeclarator) | Create a new tag which refers to this line | No |
### Returns
[`Sketch`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Sketch) - A sketch is a collection of paths.
[`Sketch`](/docs/kcl/types/std-types-Sketch)
### Examples

View File

@ -1,15 +1,16 @@
---
title: "angledLineThatIntersects"
subtitle: "Function in std::sketch"
excerpt: "Draw an angled line from the current origin, constructing a line segment such that the newly created line intersects the desired target line segment."
layout: manual
---
Draw an angled line from the current origin, constructing a line segment such that the newly created line intersects the desired target line segment.
```kcl
angledLineThatIntersects(
@sketch: Sketch,
sketch: Sketch,
angle: number,
intersectTag: TagIdentifier,
offset?: number,
@ -18,20 +19,19 @@ angledLineThatIntersects(
```
### Arguments
| Name | Type | Description | Required |
|----------|------|-------------|----------|
| `sketch` | [`Sketch`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Sketch) | Which sketch should this path be added to? | Yes |
| `angle` | [`number`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) | Which angle should the line be drawn at? | Yes |
| `intersectTag` | [`TagIdentifier`](/docs/kcl-lang/types#TagIdentifier) | The tag of the line to intersect with | Yes |
| `offset` | [`number`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-number) | The offset from the intersecting line. Defaults to 0. | No |
| [`tag`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-tag) | [`TagDeclarator`](/docs/kcl-lang/types#TagDeclarator) | Create a new tag which refers to this line | No |
| `sketch` | [`Sketch`](/docs/kcl/types/std-types-Sketch) | Which sketch should this path be added to? | Yes |
| `angle` | [`number`](/docs/kcl/types/std-types-number) | Which angle should the line be drawn at? | Yes |
| `intersectTag` | [`TagIdentifier`](/docs/kcl/types#TagIdentifier) | The tag of the line to intersect with | Yes |
| `offset` | [`number`](/docs/kcl/types/std-types-number) | The offset from the intersecting line. Defaults to 0. | No |
| [`tag`](/docs/kcl/types/std-types-tag) | [`TagDeclarator`](/docs/kcl/types#TagDeclarator) | Create a new tag which refers to this line | No |
### Returns
[`Sketch`](/docs/kcl-std/types/std-types-Sketch) - A sketch is a collection of paths.
[`Sketch`](/docs/kcl/types/std-types-Sketch)
### Examples

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