Finally use Symbol.iterator protocol in language features :) currently
only used in for-of loops and spread expressions, but will have more
uses later (Maps, Sets, Array.from, etc).
Not only is this a much nicer api (can't pass a typo'd string into the
get_well_known_symbol function), it is also a bit more performant since
there are no hashmap lookups.
With the addition of symbol keys, work can now be done on starting to
implement the well-known symbol functionality. The most important of
these well-known symbols is by far Symbol.iterator.
This patch adds IteratorPrototype, as well as ArrayIterator and
ArrayIteratorPrototype. In the future, sometime after StringIterator has
also been added, this will allow us to use Symbol.iterator directly in
for..of loops, enabling the use of custom iterator objects. Also makes
adding iterator support to native objects much easier (as will have to
be done for Map and Set, when they get added).
Skipped tests count as a "pass" rather than a "fail" (i.e. a test suite
with a skipped test will pass), however it does display a message when
the test is printing.
This is intended for tests which _should_ work, but currently do not.
This should be preferred over "// FIXME" notes if possible.
This commit also exposes JSONObject's implementation of stringify to the
public, so that it can be used by test-js without having to go through
the interpreter's environment.
This moves most of the work from run-tests.sh to test-js.cpp. This way,
we have a lot more control over how the test suite runs, as well as how
it outputs. This should result in some cool functionality!
This commit also refactors test-common.js to mimic the jest library.
This should allow tests to be much more expressive :)
- Use emojis instead of the pass/fail text
- Fix the new version of the script to run inside Serenity
- Don't print erroneous output after 'Output:'; start on a newline
instead
- Skip 'run-tests.sh' while testing
literal methods; add EnvrionmentRecord fields and methods to
LexicalEnvironment
Adding EnvrionmentRecord's fields and methods lets us throw an exception
when |this| is not initialized, which occurs when the super constructor
in a derived class has not yet been called, or when |this| has already
been initialized (the super constructor was already called).
This is a helper function based on the getter/setter definition logic from
ObjectExpression::execute() to look up an Accessor property if it already
exists, define a new Accessor property if it doesn't exist, and set the getter or
setter function on the Accessor.