The parser was chomping on commas present after the arrow function expression. eg. [x=>x,2] would parse as [x=>(x,2)] instead of [(x=>x),2].
This is not the case anymore. I've added a small test to prove this.
Previously, the relational operators where casting any value to double
and comparing the results according to C++ semantics.
This patch makes the relational operators in JS behave according to the
standard specification.
Since we don't have BigInt yet, the implementation doesn't take it into
account.
Moved PreferredType from Object to Value. Value::to_primitive now
passes preferred_type to Object::to_primitive.
Adds the ability for a scope (either a function or the entire program)
to be in strict mode. Scopes default to non-strict mode.
There are two ways to determine the strict-ness of the JS engine:
1. In the parser, this can be accessed with the parser_state variable
m_is_strict_mode boolean. If true, the Parser is currently parsing in
strict mode. This is done so that the Parser can generate syntax
errors at parse time, which is required in some cases.
2. With Interpreter.is_strict_mode(). This allows strict mode checking
at runtime as opposed to compile time.
Additionally, in order to test this, a global isStrictMode() function
has been added to the JS ReplObject under the test-mode flag.
This patch adds an IndexedProperties object for storing indexed
properties within an Object. This accomplishes two goals: indexed
properties now have an associated descriptor, and objects now gracefully
handle sparse properties.
The IndexedProperties class is a wrapper around two other classes, one
for simple indexed properties storage, and one for general indexed
property storage. Simple indexed property storage is the common-case,
and is simply a vector of properties which all have attributes of
default_attributes (writable, enumerable, and configurable).
General indexed property storage is for a collection of indexed
properties where EITHER one or more properties have attributes other
than default_attributes OR there is a property with a large index (in
particular, large is '200' or higher).
Indexed properties are now treated relatively the same as storage within
the various Object methods. Additionally, there is a custom iterator
class for IndexedProperties which makes iteration easy. The iterator
skips empty values by default, but can be configured otherwise.
Likewise, it evaluates getters by default, but can be set not to.
This patch adds `Array.prototype.reduceRight()` method to LibJS Runtime. The implementation is (to my best knowledge) conformant to https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-array.prototype.reduceright.
Short test in `LibJS/Tests/Array.prototype-generic-functions.js` demonstrates that the function can be applied to other objects besides `Array`.
This patch adds `Array.prototype.reduce()` method to LibJS Runtime.
The implementation is (to my best knowledge) comformant to ECMA262.
The test `Array.prototype-generic-functions.js` demonstrates that the
function can be applied to other objects besides `Array`.
Let's treat it as zero like the ECMAScript spec does in toInteger().
That way we can use to_i32() and don't have to care about weird input
input values where a number is expected, i.e.
"foo".charAt() === "f"
"foo".charAt("bar") === "f"
"foo".charAt(0) === "f"
This patch adds a GetterSetterPair object. Values can now store pointers
to objects of this type. These objects are created when using
Object.defineProperty and providing an accessor descriptor.
This patch is unfortunately rather large and might make some things feel
bloated, but it is necessary to fix a few flaws in LibJS, primarily
blindly coercing values to numbers without exception checks - i.e.
interpreter.argument(0).to_i32(); // can fail!!!
Some examples where the interpreter would actually crash:
var o = { toString: () => { throw Error() } };
+o;
o - 1;
"foo".charAt(o);
"bar".repeat(o);
To fix this, we now have the following...
to_double(Interpreter&)
to_i32()
to_i32(Interpreter&)
to_size_t()
to_size_t(Interpreter&)
...and a whole lot of exception checking.
There's intentionally no to_double(), use as_double() directly instead.
This way we still can use these convenient utility functions but don't
need to check for exceptions if we are sure the value already is a
number.
Fixes#2267.
This commit adds the following classes: SymbolObject, SymbolConstructor,
SymbolPrototype, and Symbol. This commit does not introduce any
new functionality to the Object class, so they cannot be used as
property keys in objects.
There are now two API's on Value:
- Value::to_string(Interpreter&) -- may throw.
- Value::to_string_without_side_effects() -- will never throw.
These are some pretty big sweeping changes, so it's possible that I did
some part the wrong way. We'll work it out as we go. :^)
Fixes#2123.
Rather than printing them to stderr directly the parser now keeps a
Vector<Error>, which allows the "owner" of the parser to consume them
individually after parsing.
The Error struct has a message, line number, column number and a
to_string() helper function to format this information into a meaningful
error message.
The Function() constructor will now include an error message when
throwing a SyntaxError.