Add the current definition context's scope to any expression that is
produced by macro expansion before trying to expand again, in case the
expansion needs to refer to a definition introduced by a previous
expansion.
Previously, the scope was added before any expansion and after any
expansion, but that misses intermediate points.
The old expander had this bug, too (some of the new tests fail there),
but it showed up less often and was sometimes considered correct, for
various reasons.
The revised implementation of `define-generics` for the new macro
expander wasn't right, because the macro attached to `<gen>/c` for a
given `<gen>` used a macro-introduced reference to the generic to
match up method names with the generic's methods.
When a package "p" is clone-linked and the repo for "p" changes to be
a multi-package repository (e.g., with "p-lib", "p-doc", and "p"), a
`raco update` would get confused. Unofrtunately, a plain `raco pkg
update p` can't work in that case, because the clone link would still
be a pathless repo URL; the repairs make `raco pkg update --lookup
--clone ..../p` work as is should.
Related: fix inference of package names in the early check for whether
a package is installed.
- Coalesce repeated use of the same predicate.
- Fix scoring of Exact patterns, and scoring generally.
- Use `OrderedAnd` where needed.
- Guarantee that `and` patterns match in order.
- Thread bound variable information properly in GSeq compilation.
- Warn when variables are used non-linearly with `...`
(making this behave properly was not backwards compatible).
Closes#952, which now runs in <1ms and make it a test case.
Also add margin note about `?` patterns and multiple calls.
If the selector is itself a chaperone, then doing the access once
will mean that the saved result is not `chaperone-of?` the result
of doing the access a second time, at least in some cases (such as
when the accessor uses vector contracts).
Thanks to Neil T for initial spotting, and to Robby for actually
finding the bug and suggesting the fix.
When using `compound-unit/infer` and similar, check the `link` clause
against each unit's static information for initialization dependencies.
Also, propagate dependency information in `define-compount-unit`.
Unlike `collapse-module-path`, it makes sense for
`collapse-module-path-index` to convert a relative module path index
to a plain module path. In other words, `collapse-module-path-index`
can convert a module path index to a module path.
be equal?-based contracts instead of = based contracts.
Before this change, the contract (or/c 1 2 +nan.0) was the same
contract as (or/c 1 2), because +nan.0 was the same contract as
the predicate (lambda (x) (= x +nan.0)), which is the same as
(lambda (x) #f). Now, +nan.0 and +nan.f are the only numbers
that are treated as equal?-based contracts, but this means that
(or/c 1 2 +nan.0) actually accepts +nan.0.