SweetJS : Write a macro for a specific library - macros

I'm currently working on a little project which consists about writing macros for Ramda. Here is an example :
let map = macro {
rule { $f $array } => { R.map($f, $array) }
rule { $f } => { R.map($f) }
}
I tried to compile this simple sample of code as a beginning :
var R = require('ramda');
function log (value) {
console.log(value);
}
map log [1, 2, 3];
Because of hygiene, the compiled code looks like this :
var R$759 = require('ramda');
function log$761(value$762) {
console.log(value$762);
}
R.map(log$761)[1, 2, 3];
My problem is that I don't know how to make reference to ramda.
Has anyone tried to write macros for a specific library and encountered this problem ?

At the moment the ways to do it are a little hacky. In the next release when we get ES6 modules this will actually be taken care of automatically for you but until then the best option is to have an initialization macro (this is what ki and contracts.js do). This works by having a shared variable in scope for all of your macros and then having the user first invoke an import macro that does the necessary require:
var r_lib;
macro import {
rule { $name from $path } => {
r_lib = require($path);
}
}
let map = macro {
rule { $f $l } => { r_lib.map($f, $l) }
}
import R from "ramda"
map log [1,2,3]

Related

How to print fields with numeric names in mongo shell? [duplicate]

I'm trying to access a property of an object using a dynamic name. Is this possible?
const something = { bar: "Foobar!" };
const foo = 'bar';
something.foo; // The idea is to access something.bar, getting "Foobar!"
There are two ways to access properties of an object:
Dot notation: something.bar
Bracket notation: something['bar']
The value between the brackets can be any expression. Therefore, if the property name is stored in a variable, you have to use bracket notation:
var something = {
bar: 'foo'
};
var foo = 'bar';
// both x = something[foo] and something[foo] = x work as expected
console.log(something[foo]);
console.log(something.bar)
This is my solution:
function resolve(path, obj) {
return path.split('.').reduce(function(prev, curr) {
return prev ? prev[curr] : null
}, obj || self)
}
Usage examples:
resolve("document.body.style.width")
// or
resolve("style.width", document.body)
// or even use array indexes
// (someObject has been defined in the question)
resolve("part.0.size", someObject)
// returns null when intermediate properties are not defined:
resolve('properties.that.do.not.exist', {hello:'world'})
In javascript we can access with:
dot notation - foo.bar
square brackets - foo[someVar] or foo["string"]
But only second case allows to access properties dynamically:
var foo = { pName1 : 1, pName2 : [1, {foo : bar }, 3] , ...}
var name = "pName"
var num = 1;
foo[name + num]; // 1
// --
var a = 2;
var b = 1;
var c = "foo";
foo[name + a][b][c]; // bar
Following is an ES6 example of how you can access the property of an object using a property name that has been dynamically generated by concatenating two strings.
var suffix = " name";
var person = {
["first" + suffix]: "Nicholas",
["last" + suffix]: "Zakas"
};
console.log(person["first name"]); // "Nicholas"
console.log(person["last name"]); // "Zakas"
This is called computed property names
You can achieve this in quite a few different ways.
let foo = {
bar: 'Hello World'
};
foo.bar;
foo['bar'];
The bracket notation is specially powerful as it let's you access a property based on a variable:
let foo = {
bar: 'Hello World'
};
let prop = 'bar';
foo[prop];
This can be extended to looping over every property of an object. This can be seem redundant due to newer JavaScript constructs such as for ... of ..., but helps illustrate a use case:
let foo = {
bar: 'Hello World',
baz: 'How are you doing?',
last: 'Quite alright'
};
for (let prop in foo.getOwnPropertyNames()) {
console.log(foo[prop]);
}
Both dot and bracket notation also work as expected for nested objects:
let foo = {
bar: {
baz: 'Hello World'
}
};
foo.bar.baz;
foo['bar']['baz'];
foo.bar['baz'];
foo['bar'].baz;
Object destructuring
We could also consider object destructuring as a means to access a property in an object, but as follows:
let foo = {
bar: 'Hello World',
baz: 'How are you doing?',
last: 'Quite alright'
};
let prop = 'last';
let { bar, baz, [prop]: customName } = foo;
// bar = 'Hello World'
// baz = 'How are you doing?'
// customName = 'Quite alright'
You can do it like this using Lodash get
_.get(object, 'a[0].b.c');
UPDATED
Accessing root properties in an object is easily achieved with obj[variable], but getting nested complicates things. Not to write already written code I suggest to use lodash.get.
Example
// Accessing root property
var rootProp = 'rootPropert';
_.get(object, rootProp, defaultValue);
// Accessing nested property
var listOfNestedProperties = [var1, var2];
_.get(object, listOfNestedProperties);
Lodash get can be used in different ways, the documentation lodash.get
To access a property dynamically, simply use square brackets [] as follows:
const something = { bar: "Foobar!" };
const userInput = 'bar';
console.log(something[userInput])
The problem
There's a major gotchya in that solution! (I'm surprised other answers have not brought this up yet). Often you only want to access properties that you've put onto that object yourself, you don't want to grab inherited properties.
Here's an illustration of this issue. Here we have an innocent-looking program, but it has a subtle bug - can you spot it?
const agesOfUsers = { sam: 16, sally: 22 }
const username = prompt('Enter a username:')
if (agesOfUsers[username] !== undefined) {
console.log(`${username} is ${agesOfUsers[username]} years old`)
} else {
console.log(`${username} is not found`)
}
When prompted for a username, if you supply "toString" as a username, it'll give you the following message: "toString is function toString() { [native code] } years old". The issue is that agesOfUsers is an object, and as such, automatically inherits certain properties like .toString() from the base Object class. You can look here for a full list of properties that all objects inherit.
Solutions
Use a Map data structure instead. The stored contents of a map don't suffer from prototype issues, so they provide a clean solution to this problem.
const agesOfUsers = new Map()
agesOfUsers.set('sam', 16)
agesOfUsers.set('sally', 2)
console.log(agesOfUsers.get('sam')) // 16
Use an object with a null prototype, instead of the default prototype. You can use Object.create(null) to create such an object. This sort of object does not suffer from these prototype issues, because you've explicitly created it in a way that it does not inherit anything.
const agesOfUsers = Object.create(null)
agesOfUsers.sam = 16
agesOfUsers.sally = 22;
console.log(agesOfUsers['sam']) // 16
console.log(agesOfUsers['toString']) // undefined - toString was not inherited
You can use Object.hasOwn(yourObj, attrName) to first check if the dynamic key you wish to access is directly on the object and not inherited (learn more here). This is a relatively newer feature, so check the compatibility tables before dropping it into your code. Before Object.hasOwn(yourObj, attrName) came around, you would achieve this same effect via Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(yourObj, attrName). Sometimes, you might see code using yourObj.hasOwnProperty(attrName) too, which sometimes works but it has some pitfalls that you can read about here.
// Try entering the property name "toString",
// you'll see it gets handled correctly.
const user = { name: 'sam', age: 16 }
const propName = prompt('Enter a property name:')
if (Object.hasOwn(user, propName)) {
console.log(`${propName} = ${user[propName]}`)
} else {
console.log(`${propName} is not found`)
}
If you know the key you're trying to use will never be the name of an inherited property (e.g. maybe they're numbers, or they all have the same prefix, etc), you can choose to use the original solution.
I came across a case where I thought I wanted to pass the "address" of an object property as data to another function and populate the object (with AJAX), do lookup from address array, and display in that other function. I couldn't use dot notation without doing string acrobatics so I thought an array might be nice to pass instead. I ended-up doing something different anyway, but seemed related to this post.
Here's a sample of a language file object like the one I wanted data from:
const locs = {
"audioPlayer": {
"controls": {
"start": "start",
"stop": "stop"
},
"heading": "Use controls to start and stop audio."
}
}
I wanted to be able to pass an array such as: ["audioPlayer", "controls", "stop"] to access the language text, "stop" in this case.
I created this little function that looks-up the "least specific" (first) address parameter, and reassigns the returned object to itself. Then it is ready to look-up the next-most-specific address parameter if one exists.
function getText(selectionArray, obj) {
selectionArray.forEach(key => {
obj = obj[key];
});
return obj;
}
usage:
/* returns 'stop' */
console.log(getText(["audioPlayer", "controls", "stop"], locs));
/* returns 'use controls to start and stop audio.' */
console.log(getText(["audioPlayer", "heading"], locs));
ES5 // Check Deeply Nested Variables
This simple piece of code can check for deeply nested variable / value existence without having to check each variable along the way...
var getValue = function( s, context ){
return Function.call( context || null, 'return ' + s )();
}
Ex. - a deeply nested array of objects:
a = [
{
b : [
{
a : 1,
b : [
{
c : 1,
d : 2 // we want to check for this
}
]
}
]
}
]
Instead of :
if(a && a[0] && a[0].b && a[0].b[0] && a[0].b[0].b && a[0].b[0].b[0] && a[0].b[0].b[0].d && a[0].b[0].b[0].d == 2 ) // true
We can now :
if( getValue('a[0].b[0].b[0].d') == 2 ) // true
Cheers!
Others have already mentioned 'dot' and 'square' syntaxes so I want to cover accessing functions and sending parameters in a similar fashion.
Code jsfiddle
var obj = {method:function(p1,p2,p3){console.log("method:",arguments)}}
var str = "method('p1', 'p2', 'p3');"
var match = str.match(/^\s*(\S+)\((.*)\);\s*$/);
var func = match[1]
var parameters = match[2].split(',');
for(var i = 0; i < parameters.length; ++i) {
// clean up param begninning
parameters[i] = parameters[i].replace(/^\s*['"]?/,'');
// clean up param end
parameters[i] = parameters[i].replace(/['"]?\s*$/,'');
}
obj[func](parameters); // sends parameters as array
obj[func].apply(this, parameters); // sends parameters as individual values
I asked a question that kinda duplicated on this topic a while back, and after excessive research, and seeing a lot of information missing that should be here, I feel I have something valuable to add to this older post.
Firstly I want to address that there are several ways to obtain the value of a property and store it in a dynamic Variable. The first most popular, and easiest way IMHO would be:
let properyValue = element.style['enter-a-property'];
however I rarely go this route because it doesn't work on property values assigned via style-sheets. To give you an example, I'll demonstrate with a bit of pseudo code.
let elem = document.getElementById('someDiv');
let cssProp = elem.style['width'];
Using the code example above; if the width property of the div element that was stored in the 'elem' variable was styled in a CSS style-sheet, and not styled inside of its HTML tag, you are without a doubt going to get a return value of undefined stored inside of the cssProp variable. The undefined value occurs because in-order to get the correct value, the code written inside a CSS Style-Sheet needs to be computed in-order to get the value, therefore; you must use a method that will compute the value of the property who's value lies within the style-sheet.
Henceforth the getComputedStyle() method!
function getCssProp(){
let ele = document.getElementById("test");
let cssProp = window.getComputedStyle(ele,null).getPropertyValue("width");
}
W3Schools getComputedValue Doc This gives a good example, and lets you play with it, however, this link Mozilla CSS getComputedValue doc talks about the getComputedValue function in detail, and should be read by any aspiring developer who isn't totally clear on this subject.
As a side note, the getComputedValue method only gets, it does not set. This, obviously is a major downside, however there is a method that gets from CSS style-sheets, as well as sets values, though it is not standard Javascript.
The JQuery method...
$(selector).css(property,value)
...does get, and does set. It is what I use, the only downside is you got to know JQuery, but this is honestly one of the very many good reasons that every Javascript Developer should learn JQuery, it just makes life easy, and offers methods, like this one, which is not available with standard Javascript.
Hope this helps someone!!!
For anyone looking to set the value of a nested variable, here is how to do it:
const _ = require('lodash'); //import lodash module
var object = { 'a': [{ 'b': { 'c': 3 } }] };
_.set(object, 'a[0].b.c', 4);
console.log(object.a[0].b.c);
// => 4
Documentation: https://lodash.com/docs/4.17.15#set
Also, documentation if you want to get a value: https://lodash.com/docs/4.17.15#get
You can do dynamically access the property of an object using the bracket notation. This would look like this obj[yourKey] however JavaScript objects are really not designed to dynamically updated or read. They are intended to be defined on initialisation.
In case you want to dynamically assign and access key value pairs you should use a map instead.
const yourKey = 'yourKey';
// initialise it with the value
const map1 = new Map([
['yourKey', 'yourValue']
]);
// initialise empty then dynamically assign
const map2 = new Map();
map2.set(yourKey, 'yourValue');
console.log(map1.get(yourKey));
console.log(map2.get(yourKey));
demo object example
let obj = {
name: {
first_name: "Bugs",
last_name: "Founder",
role: "Programmer"
}
}
dotted string key for getting the value of
let key = "name.first_name"
Function
const getValueByDottedKeys = (obj, strKey)=>{
let keys = strKey.split(".")
let value = obj[keys[0]];
for(let i=1;i<keys.length;i++){
value = value[keys[i]]
}
return value
}
Calling getValueByDottedKeys function
value = getValueByDottedKeys(obj, key)
console.log(value)
output
Bugs
const getValueByDottedKeys = (obj, strKey)=>{
let keys = strKey.split(".")
let value = obj[keys[0]];
for(let i=1;i<keys.length;i++){
value = value[keys[i]]
}
return value
}
let obj = {
name: {
first_name: "Bugs",
last_name: "Founder",
role: "Programmer"
}
}
let key = "name.first_name"
value = getValueByDottedKeys(obj, key)
console.log(value)
I bumped into the same problem, but the lodash module is limited when handling nested properties. I wrote a more general solution following the idea of a recursive descendent parser. This solution is available in the following Gist:
Recursive descent object dereferencing
Finding Object by reference without, strings,
Note make sure the object you pass in is cloned , i use cloneDeep from lodash for that
if object looks like
const obj = {data: ['an Object',{person: {name: {first:'nick', last:'gray'} }]
path looks like
const objectPath = ['data',1,'person',name','last']
then call below method and it will return the sub object by path given
const child = findObjectByPath(obj, objectPath)
alert( child) // alerts "last"
const findObjectByPath = (objectIn: any, path: any[]) => {
let obj = objectIn
for (let i = 0; i <= path.length - 1; i++) {
const item = path[i]
// keep going up to the next parent
obj = obj[item] // this is by reference
}
return obj
}
You can use getter in Javascript
getter Docs
Check inside the Object whether the property in question exists,
If it does not exist, take it from the window
const something = {
get: (n) => this.n || something.n || window[n]
};
You should use JSON.parse, take a look at https://www.w3schools.com/js/js_json_parse.asp
const obj = JSON.parse('{ "name":"John", "age":30, "city":"New York"}')
console.log(obj.name)
console.log(obj.age)

`inline` and `register` modules options

What do --modules inline and --modules register options do?
https://github.com/google/traceur-compiler/wiki/Options-for-Compiling.
Using 2ality.com's lib.js example module:
//------ lib.js ------
export const sqrt = Math.sqrt;
export function square(x) {
return x * x;
}
export function diag(x, y) {
return sqrt(square(x) + square(y));
}
//------ main.js ------
import { square, diag } from 'lib';
console.log(square(11)); // 121
console.log(diag(4, 3)); // 5
inline wraps the module in an anonymous function, assigned to an auto-generated variable by the looks, it would be interesting to know what this is all about, the technique can be used to bundle modules without actually using a module system, but the var assigned the object returned would have to be known:
var $__src_47_lib_46_js__ = (function() {
"use strict";
var __moduleName = "src/lib.js";
var sqrt = Math.sqrt;
function square(x) {
return x * x;
}
function diag(x, y) {
return sqrt(square(x) + square(y));
}
return {
get sqrt() {
return sqrt;
},
get square() {
return square;
},
get diag() {
return diag;
}
};
})();
//# sourceMappingURL=lib.js.map
System.register is a draft module format:
System.registerModule("src/lib.js", [], function() {
"use strict";
var __moduleName = "src/lib.js";
var sqrt = Math.sqrt;
function square(x) {
return x * x;
}
function diag(x, y) {
return sqrt(square(x) + square(y));
}
return {
get sqrt() {
return sqrt;
},
get square() {
return square;
},
get diag() {
return diag;
}
};
});
System.get("src/lib.js" + '');
//# sourceMappingURL=lib.js.map
Once the module has been registered, then the System.module( ... ) can be called to load the module. Currently I know traceur (though not the runtime) has the System object polyfilled, presumably also babel.
The System.register format has some useful advantages I would suggest, more than one module can be included in a file which suits a collection of smaller closely coupled modules (typically classes); there is no need to buy in to another module system, e.g., including vanilla JS (test data, shims attached to the global object, etc.) in a node module requires additional boilerplate code adding overhead to the workflow, etc.
The System object though is technology still in development (not included the current draft standard).

how to setup a for loop inside if statement with correct syntax Play framework Scala Template

I am trying to setup a variable in the scala template. Loop through the roles that user have , if found out the user is customer , then do something with the input. If not then do something else.
But scala isnt that simple , it won't compile on following code.
#var = #{ if(user != null){
#for(role <- user.roles.filter(_.getName()=="customer")) {
var=#customer(input)
}
}
}
#if( var == null){
var=#others(input)
}
It gives me two errors
t.scala.html:275:: identifier expected but 'for' found.
[error] #for(role <- user.roles.filter(_.getName()=="customer"))
t.scala.html:278: expected start of definition
Also , is there a better way to do this in scala ? Thanks
My reference : Scala template set variable
Update:
My goal was trying to do something like below , but in scala template:
result=null
for role in User.roles:
if(role == "customer"):
result=customer(xyz)
break
if(result==null):
result = others(xyz)
To set up a for loop inside of an if statement in a Scala template, you don't need to assign a variable. You can simply use an if block in the template where you want to display stuff. For example
#if(user != null) {
#for(role <- user.roles.filter(_.getName()=="customer")) {
#customer(input)
#* Do other stuff related to 'role' and 'input' here *#
}
} else {
#* Do something else *#
}
For further reference I encourage you to look at the documentation for Play templates. If you really want to define a variable you could do it using the defining helper:
#defining(user.getFirstName() + " " + user.getLastName()) { fullName =>
<div>Hello #fullName</div>
}
Instead of defining a variable you could also define a resusable block, which might be useful in your case. For example,
#customer_loop(input: String) = {
#if(user != null) {
#for(role <- user.roles.filter(_.getName()=="customer")) {
#customer(input)
#* Do other stuff related to 'role' and 'input' here *#
}
} else {
#* Do something else *#
}
}
To declare a variable do
#import scala.Any; var result:Any=null //where Any is the datatype accoding to your requirement
To reassign its value do
#{result = "somevalue"}
So the solution accoding to the pseudo you provided
#import java.lang.String; var result:String=null
#import scala.util.control._;val loop = new Breaks;
#loop.breakable {
#for(role <- roleList) {
#if(role.equals("customer")) {
#{
result = "somevalue"
}
#{loop.break};
}
}
}
#if(result==null){
#{result="notfound"}
}
Also check Similar1,Similar2

Coffeescript best way to var

I was poking around trying to figure a good way to do var, and here's one.. is this intentionally in cs, because it's not documented?
me=;
fetchUser()
.then((_me) =>
me = _me
fetchFriend()
)
.then((_you) =>
me.friend(_you)
)
.then(done)
.otherwise(=>
console.log ':('
)
compiles correctly to
var me;
me = fetchUser().then((function(_this) {
return function(_me) {
me = _me;
return fetchFriend();
};
})(this)).then((function(_this) {
return function(_you) {
return me.friend(_you);
};
})(this)).then(done).otherwise((function(_this) {
return function() {
return console.log(':(');
};
})(this));
Edit: it's not compiling correctly.
I wouldn't expect me = fetchUser() either, but I didn't see that before
https://github.com/jashkenas/coffee-script/issues/3098
I think it's just a quirk of the parser. The normal way variables are declared in order to establish scoping is just by defining them with some default value (e.g. null).

specman: Assign multiple struct member in one expression

Hy,
I expanding an existing specman test where some code like this appears:
struct dataset {
!register : int (bits:16);
... other members
}
...
data : list of dataset;
foo : dataset;
gen foo;
foo.register = 0xfe;
... assign other foo members ...
data.push(foo.copy());
is there a way to assign to the members of the struct in one line? like:
foo = { 0xff, ... };
I currently can't think of a direct way of setting all members as you want, but there is a way to initialize variables (I'm not sure if it works on struct members as well). Anyway something like the following may fit for you:
myfunc() is {
var foo : dataset = new dataset with {
.register = 0xff;
.bar = 0xfa;
}
data.push(foo.copy());
}
You can find more information about new with help new struct from the specman prompt.
Hope it helps!
the simple beuty of assigning fields by name is one language feature i've always found usefull , safe to code and readable.
this is how i'd go about it:
struct s {
a : int;
b : string;
c : bit;
};
extend sys {
ex() is {
var s := new s with {.a = 0x0; .b = "zero"; .c = 0;};
};
run() is also {
var s;
gen s keeping {.a == 0x0; .b == "zero"; .c == 0;};
};
};
i even do data.push(new dataset with {.reg = 0xff; bar = 0x0;}); but you may raise the readablity flag if you want.
warning: using unpack() is perfectly correct (see ross's answer), however error prone IMO. i recommend to verify (with code that actually runs) every place you opt to use unpack().
You can directly use the pack and unpack facility of Specman with "physical fields" ( those instance members prefixed with the modifier %).
Example:
define FLOODLES_WIDTH 47;
type floodles_t : uint(bits:FLOODLES_WIDTH);
define FLABNICKERS_WIDTH 28;
type flabnickers_t : uint(bits:FLABNICKERS_WIDTH);
struct foo_s {
%!floodle : floodles_t;
%!flabnicker : flabnickers_t;
};
extend sys {
run() is also {
var f : foo_s = new;
unpack(packing.low,64'hdeadbeefdeadbeef,f);
print f;
unpack(packing.low,64'hacedacedacedaced,f);
print f;
};
setup() is also {
set_config(print,radix,hex);
};
};
When this run, it prints:
Loading /nfs/pdx/home/rbroger1/tmp.e ...
read...parse...update...patch...h code...code...clean...
Doing setup ...
Generating the test using seed 1...
Starting the test ...
Running the test ...
f = foo_s-#0: foo_s of unit: sys
---------------------------------------------- #tmp
0 !%floodle: 0x3eefdeadbeef
1 !%flabnicker: 0x001bd5b
f = foo_s-#0: foo_s of unit: sys
---------------------------------------------- #tmp
0 !%floodle: 0x2cedacedaced
1 !%flabnicker: 0x00159db
Look up packing, unpacking, physical fields, packing.low, packing.high in your Specman docs.
You can still use physical fields even if the struct doesn't map to the DUT. If your struct is already using physical fields for some other purpose then you'll need to pursue some sort of set* method for that struct.