Added alises for call-with-continuation-prompt,
abort-current-continuation, and call-with-composable-continuation.
Also allow % and fcontrol to take an optional prompt tag argument.
Revise the subword matching to have three different levels for full
match (= a permutation of the input), a generic match for all parts, and
everything else.
Instead of just one array for exact results and one for all the rest,
use one array for each possible comparison result, and concatenate them
all for the final list.
Also, fix FFI procedures to preserve names: change `ptr-ref' with
`_fpointer' on an `ffi-obj' value to return the `ffi-obj'
value, so that the name in the `ffi-obj' value can be used
by `_cprocedure'.
Closes PR 12645
The new predicates are `progress-evt?' `thread-cell-values?',
`prefab-key?', `semaphore-peek-evt?', and `channel-put-evt?'.
These were used internally, and now they appear in contract
error messages.
A common Slideshow pattern is to put a subset of slides in its
own module with a `run-slides' function, and then you'd
(un)comment a `(run-slides)' call at the end of the module to
work on the subset by itself. Now, you can write
`(module+ main (run-slides))' atthe end of the module and not
have to comment it out. Adding `main' support to the `slideshow'
executable makes it more consistent with using `racket' directly.
Checking first for a `slideshow' submodule makes it possible
for `slideshow' and `racket' to do different things, in case
that's useful.
When supplying an accessor to redirect, either the corresponding field
must be accessible through the current inspector, or a mutator for
the same field must be redirected, too.
Stevie realized that we need this constraint; otherwise, impersonators
can implement mutator-like behavior even when the mutator is otherwise
secret.
Add `raise-argument-error', `raise-result-error', `raise-arguments-error',
and `raise-range-error'.
The old convention was designed for reporting on a single (sometimes very
long line). The new convention is
<name>: <short message>
<field>: <detail>
...
If <detail> is long or itself spans multiple lines, then it may
also use the form
<field>:
<detail>
where each line of <detail> is indented by 3 spaces.
Backtrace information is shown as a multi-line "context" field.
The text that says that (regexp-split #rx"whatever" "") returns '("")
rather than '() is
If `input' contains no matches [...] the result is a list containing
input’s content [...] as a single element.
This is a little implicit, if you consider such an input as having
nothing left to match over so it's as if there is no input (with a port
this confusion is a little clearer).
Clarify with an example in the docs, and also add tests.
Various repairs --- especially to avoid duplicated prose.
Instead of
@(define explain @t{Long explanation about X...})
@defproc[(a ....) ....]{ .... @|explain| }
@defproc[(b ....) ....]{ .... @|explain| }
@defproc[(c ....) ....]{ .... @|explain| }
write
@defproc[(a ....) ....]{ .... Long explanation about X ... }
@defproc[(b ....) ....]{ .... X is like @racket[a]. }
@defproc[(c ....) ....]{ .... X is like @racket[a]. }
Otherwise, a reader is forced to reverse-engineer the
abstraction underlying `a', `b', and `c'.
The properties appear in the inlining expansion of an application
of a keyword-accepting function, and they're mainly intended for
use by Typed Racket.
The property keys are hidden, so that the property value can be
trusted as originating from `racket/base'. The accessor functions are
`syntax-procedure-alias-property' and
`syntax-procedure-converted-arguments-property' from
`racket/keyword-transform'.
In consultation with Ryan. We'd prefer to have versions of all
useful things in a `racket/...' library that is consistent as
possible with Racket forms and conventions.
This reverts commit f3b687c8ed.
After discussion with Robby and Stevie, we concluded that
this procedure isn't necessary for now. If we ever think
of more examples where it's useful we can bring it back.
a chaperone contract", "no it definitely isn't" or "evaluate this code
at runtime to find out"; previously only the first two options
were available to opters
(this commit also includes other tweaks here and there so won't stand alone)
Changed `open-output-text-editor' to put its additions into
an edit sequence to better work with threads.
Fixed problems in editor-canvas refresh and resize events, where
the editor's refresh synchronization wasn't used properly.
Fixed race conditions in the the protocol that is used to separate
refreshes and edit sequences.
Related to PR 12749
These primitives atomically update a box to a new value, as long
as the current value is the same as a provided value. They also
are future-safe.
When futures are enabled, they use low-level hardware instructions
to perform the change atomically.
Also, use keywords for `make-pen' and `make-brush'.
Adding `make-pen' and `make-color' creates many conflicts among
teaching libraries, such as `2htdp/image'. These are easy to fix
up in the tree, but adding such obvious names to `racket/draw'
may create other compatibility problems, so we might have to reconsider
the names.
In consultation with Asumu.
The example relied on the current code inspector affecting
syntax object created during `eval', but since the switch
from certificates to taints, the relevant code inspector is
determined by the namespace, and a namespace gets its code
inspector at creation time.
Closes PR 12717
The preserved path is exposed by a new `module-path-index-submodule'
function, and `module-path-index-join' now accepts an optional
submodule path.
Also, fixed a problem with `collapse-module-path-index' when
a module path indx is built on a resolved module path that
is a submodule path.
In addition to the main repair, `collapse-module-path[-index]' is
correctly documented to allow '(quote <sym>) rel-to paths.
Finally, `collapse-module-path-index' changed to use a symbolic
resolved module path that appears as the base of a module path
index, rather than falling back to the given rel-to path. It's
possble that the old beavior was intentional, but it wasn't tested,
and it seems more likely to have been a bug.
Closes PR 12724
library (mostly in opt/c)
Specifically:
- add inlining declaration for ->i helper function
- modernized the opt/c contracts and improved them so that mutually
recursive define-opt/c functions recognize each other instead of
bailing out to the slow path.
- added =/c as an optimized contract
- improve the error message for the between and comparison opt
contracts
- adjust the blame struct so the name is created lazily, since opt/c
contracts just stick a copy o the contract into the thunk that
creates the name and we don't want to run those effects twice if we
can help it.
Renamed `convert' to `pict-convert', etc., to avoid confusion
with `file/convert' bindings.
Moved out of `slideshow/pict' to `slideshow/pict-convert', because
most `slideshow/pict' clients do not need it.
adjust 'one-of/c' and 'symbols' so they just use or/c (when possible)
improve or/c's stronger check so that, in the case that or/c is
getting eq or equal contracts, or/c's stronger check is as good as
'symbols'/'one-of/c's stronger check is.
This convention makes it easier to deal with a set
of ".rkt" files that implement tests, while a `test'
module implements a `main'-like split for some of the
files.
The `get-handle' method provides the underlying Cairo surface for
a bitmap, while the unsafe `make-handle-brush' function supports the
use of a Cairo surface as a `brush%'.
Also, add `racket/draw/unsafe/cairo-lib', which simplifies access
Cairo from external libraries. Documenting `racket/draw/unsafe/cairo'
might be better, but that's a lot more work.
The default is that hiniting is enabled, which causes some text
metrics (notably width) to be rounded to integer values, which makes
spacing more consistent. This default is backward-compatible. The
non-default 'unaligned mode refrains from rounding, which makes metric
information scale correctly and improves output for PS/PDF (such as
Redex output).
The `text' function from `slideshow/pict' defaults to
disabling hinting --- which is consistent with its default to combine
text instead of drawing character-by-character -- so slides and Redex
inherit the improvement.
pixel of space in between lines in DrRacket.
This change is based on Matthew's experience having a look
at the font setup on the three platforms.
He writes:
> * Mac OS X: the convention seems to be to add space between lines.
> TextEdit, for example, looks like DrRacket: the maze has spaces.
>
> (I can't find a font that makes the maze look right, actually, even
> if I adjust the line spacing.)
>
> * Windows: the convention seems to be that space is built into the
> font. DrRacket (and SirMail) draw lines more sparsely than Notepad.
>
> Perhaps consistent with the differing conventions, the height of
> "Courier New" at 11-pixel size is 14 on Windows, 13 on Mac OS X.
>
> * Unix: the convention seems to be to add space. DrRacket looks like
> the default Terminal and Text Editor programs on Ubuntu.
>
> The maze nevertheless looks right everywhere, because the glyphs
> extend an extra pixel above the declared bounding box!
Although th eoriginal idea was to distinguish "text" paths
from derived filesystem paths, practically everythign that accepts
a module path also accepts a path. Building the generalization into
`module-path?' makes it easier to support `submod' wrappers on paths,
and it seems to fix things rather than break them.
Previously, sandbox creation used `gui?', which is the result of
`gui-available?' at the time that `racket/sandbox' is instanited.
This change makes sandbox behavior less sensitive tothe order in
which modules `require'd into a program are intiantiated.
The change depends on a new `sandbox-make-namespace' default
function for `sandbox-namespace-specs'. The new function uses
either `make-base-namespace' or `make-gui-namespace', depending
on whether the GUI library is available at that point.
A new `sandbox-gui-enabled' parameter can disable use of the
GUI library even if it is available.
The `gui?' binding is still exported for backward compatibility,
but it shouldn't be used anymore.
Treat a "face" as a font description only if it has a comma,
otherwise go back to treating it as a family name.
This change fixes the problem of parsing "Times New Roman"
as "Times New, Roman".
Extend `define-cstruct' to support #:property specs, which causes
the constructor and C->Racket coercsions to wrap the pointer in
a structure instance with the specified properties. Of course,
the wrapper structure has a `prop:cpointer' property so that the
wrapper can be used transparently as a C pointer.
Add missing tests and documentation for the id`->list', `list->'id,
id`->list*', and `list*->'id bindings created by `define-cstruct'.
This addition triggered several other changes:
* -k for a Mac OS X embedding is now relative to the __PLTSCHEME
segment (which means that executables won't break if you strip
them, for example)
* the command-line no longer has a limited size for Mac OS X
launchers and embedding executables
* Mac OS X GUI and Windows launchers record the creation-time
collection path, unless they are created as "relative" launchers
In particular, allow a pair of a relative-to directory and a base
directory. Paths that syntactically extend the base directory are
recorded as relative to the relative-to directory (which must
syntactically extend the base directory).
The compilation manager now sets the parameter to a pair with
the base directory as the main collection directory, if the source
file's path extends that directory's path.
This generalization solves problems created by cross-module inlining,
where the source location of a procedure in bytecode can now be in a
different file than the enclosing module's file.
Also add a test that checks whether the build directory shows up
in any ".zo", ".dep", or documentation ".html" files.
Closes PR 12549
Setting the environment variable causes the bytecode compiler to run
the bytecode validator (which is normally applied to input from a
bytecode file) immediately on all of the compiler's own results.
The two became tangled in commit f7c16fc8, and then 952ae06105
adjusted the tangling in a way that broke code. This commit
further adjusts tangling in a way that hopefully causes fewer
compatibility problems, but it also splits inputs to
`make-evaluator' so that a programmer can choose more explicitly.
There's no particular reason that any one format will have all
the information that other formats need, but it conveniently works
for now that HTML info can subsume Latex info.
Rename `read-intern-literal' to `datum-intern-literal'.
Interning is needed only in `read-syntax' or `datum->syntax' to
set up the invariants that the bytecode compiler needs for cross-module
optimization. When `read'ing numbers from a data file, meanwhile,
interning slows things down a lot and doesn't seem worthwhile.
More generally, support a
(define _id (begin 'compiler-hint:cross-module-inline _proc-expr))
hint, which is how the compiler determines that `map', etc., are
candidates for inlining.
Inline only trivial functions, such as `(empty? x)' -> `(null? x)',
to avoid generating too much code.
Bytecode includes a new `inline-variant' form, which records a
version of a function that is suitable for cross-module inlining.
Mostly, the variant let the run-time system to retain a copy
of the bytecode while JITting (and dropping the bytecode of)
the main variant, but it may be different from the main variant
in other ways that make it better for inlining (such a less loop
unrolling).
change the implementation to special case struct procedures and to use
it in provide/contract.
This speeds up the rendering phase of the Guide documentation by more than 2x.
Thanks to Matthew for spotting the opportunity!
It now creates an inspector based on the original code inspector instead
of the (implicit) wrong default used by `make-inspector'. Change
`sandbox-make-inspector' too, to make it explicit.