- Aug 29, 2008
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Erwan Jahier authored
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- Aug 28, 2008
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Erwan Jahier authored
polymorphic operators. For instance, when LicDumping expression such as map<<map<<+,4>>,5>> an alias node was created for "map<<+,4>>" (to unnest iterator calls). Fut this node is intrically overloaded (polymorphic). In this change, we look at the type this innr call is used to generate a specialised (mono-morphic) version of the node alias. Note that we currently still generate type variable when users write node mymap = map<<+,4>>;
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- Aug 26, 2008
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Erwan Jahier authored
+ enhance error msg (which helped finding the bug, but that migth also be useful for ed-users...).
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- Aug 25, 2008
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Erwan Jahier authored
The idea is the following: each time a nested iterator call (map<<map<<n,3>>,4>>) is encountered, we create a fresh alias name (create_alias_name) ad we add it in the node_alias_tbl. At the end of the compilation, LicDump.dump_node_alias is called, which prints the definition of those node aliases. For example, the expression "map<<map<<n,3>>,4>>" is printed like this: map<<_node_alias1, 4>> and later, the node alias is defined: node _node_alias1(x:int) returns(y:int); let y = map<<n,3>>(x); tel;
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- Aug 19, 2008
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Erwan Jahier authored
as many new local variables as necessary so that an expression is made at most of one operator. The rational for that is to obtain a lic code that is trivial to clock check (nested node calls, for example, make it less simple). The old behavior can still be obtained using --keep-nested-calls. During that change, I realised that I did not clock check asserts. Hence, I have also added this check.
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- Jul 23, 2008
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Erwan Jahier authored
to avoid name clashes in the lic.
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- Jul 22, 2008
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Erwan Jahier authored
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