Commit graph

9 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alexis Hildebrandt
1dd9dcaab4 Bump copyright notice to 2015
The following script makes it a no-brainer:
% NEXT_YEAR=2015; ag -l 'Copyright.*Wiegley' \
  | xargs sed -i '' -e "s/\(Copyright.*\)-20[0-9]\{2\}/\1-${NEXT_YEAR}/"
2014-12-27 11:24:55 +01:00
Alexis Hildebrandt
2b9208e850 Bump copyright information to 2014 2014-02-02 12:36:22 +01:00
John Wiegley
0951bcebef Bump copyright information to 2013 2013-02-18 06:51:21 -06:00
John Wiegley
e2afc783db Increased file copyrights to 2012 2012-02-29 22:32:23 -06:00
John Wiegley
ab416f759f Updated copyrights to 2003-2010 2010-03-05 22:14:10 -05:00
John Wiegley
192972f854 Renamed the "args" command to "query" 2010-03-04 13:37:08 -05:00
John Wiegley
394c7bd8df Removed a bunch of empty comments 2009-11-08 14:59:11 -05:00
John Wiegley
1f39d4148e Create a new interactive_t helper class
The purpose of this class is much like Emacs' (interactive) form: it
allows a value expression function to declare exactly how many
arguments, and of what type, it intends to receive.  It then offers
type-safe access to theese arguments in a consistent manner.

An example value expression function definition in C++:

    value_t fn_foo(call_scope_t& scope) {
      // We expect a string, an integer, and an optional date
      interactive_t args(scope, "sl&d");

      std::cout << "String  = " << args.get<string>(0)
                << "Integer = " << args.get<long>(1) << std::endl;

      if (args.has(2)) // was a date provided?
        std::cout << "Date    = " << args.get<date_t>(2) << std::endl;

      return NULL_VALUE;
    }

There is also an in_context_t<T> template, which finds the context type
T in the current scope hierarchy.  The in_context_t then also acts as a
smart pointer to reference this context object, in addition to serving
the same duty as interactive_t.  This combination of intent is solely
for the sake of brevity.

    value_t fn_bar(call_scope_t& scope) {
      in_context_t<account_t> env(scope, "sl&d");
      std::cout << "Account name = " << env->fullname()
                << "String arg   = " << env.get<string>(0)
                << std::endl;
      return NULL_VALUE;
    }

As you can see here, 'env' acts as a smart pointer to the required
context, and an object to extract the typed arguments.
2009-02-21 18:49:43 -04:00
John Wiegley
ae65e8ae05 Moved the pre-commands to their own file, and created new "args" command. 2009-02-01 18:36:28 -04:00