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2011-12-06Recursive bump for lang/ocaml buildlink addition.sbd1-2/+2
2011-11-16Add missing devel/readline buildlinks.sbd1-1/+3
Bump PKGREVISIONs
2010-12-17Update to 0.9.8.6rc1 and add lots of upstream SVN patches to makewiz26-24/+2311
it build again. Changes: This is a major feature enhancement and bugfix release * Added keyword and optional function arguments. The syntax of a keyword parameter/argument is "identifier = expr". Function Application ------------------------------------------- f(a) f(1) f(~a, b) f(~a = 10, 11) Required keyword argument f(?a, b) f(~a = 10, 12) Optional keyword argument f(12) -- defaults to empty f(?a = 1, b) f(~a = 10, 11) Optional keyword argument with default value f(~a = 1, b) f(11) -- ~a is same as ?a if there is a default value f(?a = 10, 11) -- Arguments can use ?, but it means the same thing Keyword arguments and normal arguments are processed independently. Normal arguments have to appear in the same order as in the parameter list, but keyword arguments can go anywhere. This also adds the function notation. fun(x, y) => add($x, $y) foreach(x => ..., a b c) println($x) where the "..." essentially means "parse as if the indented block below was actually an expression in here" Old-style foreach generate a warning. * Added "program" syntax. This provides a more standard programming language, where strings must be explicit, and variables represent applications. The outer syntax is normal; the program syntax is an ast to ast translation. The translation is turned on with the command ".LANGUAGE: program", which is scoped like "export". Here is an example: #!/usr/bin/env osh .LANGUAGE: program f(x) = return x + 1 println(f(f(1))) The normal $-style expressions are always allowed, but in program-syntax mode, identifiers stand for variables, function application is the f(e1, ..., e2) form, and there are the standard infix operators. To switch back to the default syntax, use .LANGUAGE: make Note, shell commands and rules never use program syntax, except within function arguments. This is not heavily tested. * Added support for partial and curried function applications. Normal funcation application still require using the correct number of arguments (as relaxed by the introduction of optional arguments), but apply function can be used to create curried and partial applications. f(x,y) = return $(add $x, $y) g = $(apply $f, 2) # Partial applications must use apply println($(g 3)) # 5 ff(x) = gg(y) = return $(add $x, $y) println($(apply $(ff), 3, 5)) # Prints 8, also need to use apply here apply can also take keyword arguments. * A high-quality C parser was added to OMake — see lib/parse/C/Parse.om * Added a LaTeX parser and spellchecker - see lib/parse/LaTeX/README.txt * New functions added: localtime, gmtime, mktime, normalize-tm, utimes, digest-string, url-escaped, find-all, addprefixes * New object added: Tm * About 10 Bugs fixed * [Experimental] Object methods can now export their fields back into the parent object. For example, Z. = x = 1 f() = x = 2 export Z.f() echo $(Z.x) # Prints "2" This works with arbitrary levels of nesting.
2010-05-29Import omake-0.9.8.5 as devel/omake.obache6-0/+107
Based on PR#43374 by YAMAMOTO Takeshi, some improvements. OMake is a build system, similar to GNU make, but with many additional features, including: - Support for large projects spanning multiple directories; - Support for commands that produce several targets at once; - Fast, accurate, automated dependency analysis using MD5 digests; - Portability: omake provides a consistent interface on Win32 and on Unix systems including Linux, OSX, and Cygwin; - Builtin functions that provide the most common features of programs like grep, sed, and awk; - Active filesystem monitoring, where the build automatically restarts whenever you modify a source file.