Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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Also fix bug in $string.replace().
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This exposes the std::set<std::string> type to buildfiles.
New functions:
$size(<string-set>)
Subscript returns true if the value is present and false otherwise (so
it is mapped to std::set::contains()). For example:
set = [string_set] a b c
if ($set[b])
...
Note that append (+=) and prepend (=+) have the same semantics
(std::set::insert()). For example:
set = [string_set] a b
set += c b # a b c
set =+ d b # a b c d
Example of iteration:
set = [string_set] a b c
for k: $set
...
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This exposes the std::map<std::string,std::string> type to buildfiles.
New functions:
$size(<string-map>)
$keys(<string-map>)
Subscript can be used to lookup a value by key. The result is [null] if
there is no value associated with the specified key. For example:
map = [string_map] a@1 b@2 c@3
b = ($map[b]) # 2
if ($map[z] == [null])
...
Note that append (+=) is overriding (like std::map::insert_or_assign())
while prepend (=+) is not (like std::map::insert()). In a sense, whatever
appears last (from left to right) is kept, which is consistent with what
we expect to happen when specifying the same key repeatedly in a literal
representation. For example:
map = [string_map] a@0 b@2 a@1 # a@1 b@2
map += b@0 c@3 # a@1 b@0 c@3
map =+ b@1 d@4 # a@1 b@0 c@3 d@4
Example of iteration:
map = [string_map] a@1 b@2 c@3
for p: $map
{
k = $first($p)
v = $second($p)
}
While the subscript is mapped to key lookup only, index-based access can be
implemented (with a bit of overhead) using the $keys() function:
map = [string_map] a@1 b@2 c@3
keys = $keys($m)
for i: $integer_sequence(0, $size($keys))
{
k = ($keys[$i])
v = ($map[$k])
}
Also, this commit changes the naming of other template-based value types (not
exposed as buildfile value types) to use C++ template id-like names (e.g.,
map<string,optional<bool>>).
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Also:
- Move the $target.*() function family from functions-name.cxx to separate
functions-target.cxx.
- Get rid of the separate $process_path_ex.*() family, merging it with
$process_path.*().
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This is relied upon by the parser to provide conversion/concatenation
semantics consistent with untyped values. Note that we handle NULL values
only for types that have empty representation.
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The $find() function returns true if the sequence contains the specified
value. The $find_index() function returns the index of the first element
in the sequence that is equal to the specified value or $size(<sequence>)
if none is found. For string sequences, it's possible to request case-
insensitive comparison with a flag.
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Available overloads:
$sort(<names> [, <flags>])
$sort(<ints> [, <flags>])
$sort(<strings> [, <flags>])
$sort(<paths> [, <flags>])
$sort(<dir_paths> [, <flags>])
The following flag is supported by the all overloads:
dedup - in addition to sorting also remove duplicates
Additionally, the strings overload also support the following flag:
icase - sort ignoring case
Note that on case-insensitive filesystem the paths and dir_paths overload's
order is case-insensitive.
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All non-const global state is now in class context and we can now have
multiple independent builds going on at the same time.
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