| Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
The Difference
Since Ruby1.9, the keyword arguments were emulated by Ruby using the hash
object at the bottom of the arguments. But we have gradually moved toward
keyword arguments separated from normal (positinal) arguments.
At the same time, we value compatibility, so that Ruby3.0 keyword
arguments are somewhat compromise. Basically, keyword arguments are
separated from positional arguments, except when the method does not
take any formal keyword arguments, given keyword arguments (packed
in the hash object) are considered as the last argument.
And we also allow non symbol keys in the keyword arguments. In that
case, those keys are just passed in the `**` hash (or raise
`ArgumentError` for unknown keys).
The Instruction Changes
We have changed `OP_SEND` instruction. `OP_SEND` instruction used to
take 3 operands, the register, the symbol, the number of (positional)
arguments. The meaning of the third operand has been changed. It is now
considered as `n|(nk<<4)`, where `n` is the number of positional
arguments, and `nk` is the number of keyword arguments, both occupies
4 bits in the operand.
The number `15` in both `n` and `nk` means variable sized arguments are
packed in the object. Positional arguments will be packed in the array,
and keyword arguments will be packed in the hash object. That means
arguments more than 14 values are always packed in the object.
Arguments information for other instructions (`OP_SENDB` and `OP_SUPER`)
are also changed. It works as the third operand of `OP_SEND`. the
difference between `OP_SEND` and `OP_SENDB` is just trivial. It assigns
`nil` to the block hidden arguments (right after arguments).
The instruction `OP_SENDV` and `OP_SENDVB` are removed. Those
instructions are replaced by `OP_SEND` and `OP_SENDB` respectively with
the `15` (variable sized) argument information.
Calling Convention
When calling a method, the stack elements shall be in the order of the
receiver of the method, positional arguments, keyword arguments and the
block argument. If the number of positional or keyword arugument (`n` or
`nk`) is zero, corresponding arguments will be empty. So when `n=0` and
`nk=0` the stack layout (from bottom to top) will be:
+-----------------------+
| recv | block (or nil) |
+-----------------------+
The last elements `block` should be explicitly filled before `OP_SEND`
or assigned to `nil` by `OP_SENDB` internally. In other words, the
following have exactly same behavior:
OP_SENDB clears `block` implicitly:
```
OP_SENDB reg sym 0
```
OP_SEND clears `block` implicitly:
```
OP_LOADNIL R2
OP_SEND R2 sym 0
```
When calling a method with only positional arguments (n=0..14) without
keyword arguments, the stack layout will be like following:
+--------------------------------------------+
| recv | arg1 | ... | arg_n | block (or nil) |
+--------------------------------------------+
When calling a method with arguments packed in the array (n=15) which
means argument splat (*) is used in the actual arguments, or more than
14 arguments are passed the stack layout will be like following:
+-------------------------------+
| recv | array | block (or nil) |
+-------------------------------+
The number of the actual arguments is determined by the length of the
argument array.
When keyword arguments are given (nk>0), keyword arguments are passed
between positional arguments and the block argument. For example, when
we pass one positional argument `1` and one keyword argument `a: 2`,
the stack layout will be like:
+------------------------------------+
| recv | 1 | :a | 2 | block (or nil) |
+------------------------------------+
Note that keyword arguments consume `2*nk` elements in the stack when
`nk=0..14` (unpacked).
When calling a method with keyword arguments packed in the hash object
(nk=15) which means keyword argument splat (**) is used or more than
14 keyword arguments in the actual arguments, the stack layout will
be like:
+------------------------------+
| recv | hash | block (or nil) |
+------------------------------+
Note for mruby/c
When mruby/c authors try to support new keyword arguments, they need
to handle the new meaning of the argument information operand. If they
choose not to support keyword arguments in mruby/c, it just raise
error when `nk` (taken by `(c>>4)&0xf`) is not zero. And combine
`OP_SENDV` behavior with `OP_SEND` when `n` is `15`.
If they want to support keyword arguments seriously, contact me at
<[email protected]> or `@yukihiro_matz`. I can help you.
|
|
```console
% for rb in `git ls-files '*/mrblib/*.rb' 'mrblib'`; do ruby30 -cw $rb > /dev/null; done
mrbgems/mruby-array-ext/mrblib/array.rb:389: warning: assigned but unused variable - ary
mrbgems/mruby-array-ext/mrblib/array.rb:663: warning: assigned but unused variable - len
mrbgems/mruby-hash-ext/mrblib/hash.rb:119: warning: possibly useless use of a variable in void context
mrbgems/mruby-hash-ext/mrblib/hash.rb:259: warning: assigned but unused variable - keys
mrbgems/mruby-io/mrblib/io.rb:229: warning: literal in condition
mrbgems/mruby-io/mrblib/io.rb:280: warning: literal in condition
mrbgems/mruby-string-ext/mrblib/string.rb:347: warning: assigned but unused variable - len
mrbgems/mruby-toplevel-ext/mrblib/toplevel.rb:2: warning: parentheses after method name is interpreted as an argument list, not a decomposed argument
```
|
|
As CRuby behaves.
|
|
|
|
It used to be an alias to `IO#each_byte` but those methods should have
behave differently.
|
|
- remove `Integer#chr` (thus `mruby-sting-ext`) dependency
- fix the behavior when `c.is_a? String`
- fix the behavior when `c > 255`
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* The `Fixnum` constant is now an alias for the `Integer` class.
* Remove `struct mrb_state::fixnum_class` member.
If necessary, use `struct mrb_state::integer_class` instead.
|
|
The behavior is different from CRuby, but we believe this is a right
behavior for mruby, which only supports either ASCII or UTF-8
exclusively; fix #4983, ref #4982
```
$ printf '\xe3\x81' | ruby -e 'p STDIN.readchar'
"\xE3\x81"
```
```
$ printf '\xe3\x81' | mruby -e 'p STDIN.readchar'
"\xE3"
```
|
|
This fix only effective when `MRB_UTF8_STRING` is set.
|
|
The bug was introduced by #4712. The `getc' problem resurrected.
It should be addressed soon.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Character (multi-byte UTF-8) is destroyed when character spanning
`IO::BUF_SIZE` (4096 bytes) exist.
- Prepare file:
```ruby
File.open("sample", "wb") { |f| f << "●" * 1370 }
```
- Before patched:
```ruby
File.open("sample") { |f| a = []; while ch = f.getc; a << ch; end; p a }
# => ["●", "●", ..., "●", "\xe2", "\x97", "\x8f", "●", "●", "●", "●"]
- After patched:
```ruby
File.open("sample") { |f| a = []; while ch = f.getc; a << ch; end; p a }
# => ["●", "●", ..., "●", "●", "●", "●", "●", "●"]
|
|
|
|
|
|
`IO#readline` and `IO#readchar` process in character units.
|
|
`byteslice` creates 2 string objects. `_bufread` creates one, and
modifies the original buffer string, that is more efficient.
|
|
1. `$/` and other Perl-ish global variables are not defined in ISO.
2. The current Ruby policy do not encourage those variables.
3. Those variables has global effect and can cause troubles.
|
|
E.g. `io.read(5)` should read 5 byte string, not 5 characters.
|
|
|
|
git-subtree-dir: mrbgems/mruby-io
git-subtree-mainline: 10ed730e4bd921cf4d8fe6f6d2e3cb3f0840f3b7
git-subtree-split: 3c8e1f94c44252c836f79a48bb17726da28e2756
|