This makes it a lot easier to understand what is going wrong when an
eval test fails. As an example instead of just getting:
`ExpectationError`
You would now get:
`ExpectationError: Expected _1_2E+0_1_ to eval to _12_ but got _120_`.
This adds plumbing for the Intl.DateTimeFormat object, constructor, and
prototype.
Note that unlike other Intl objects, the Intl.DateTimeFormat object has
a LibUnicode structure as a base. This is to prevent wild amounts of
code duplication between LibUnicode, Intl.DateTimeFormat, and other
not-yet-defined Intl structures, because there's 12 fields shared
between them.
Currently, we generate separate data files for locale and number format
related tables/methods, but provide public accessors for all of the data
in one Locale.h file. Rather than continuing this trend for date-time,
relative time, etc. formatting, it's a bit easier to reason about if the
public accessors are also in separate files.
Allocating a Vector for each of these invocations is a bit silly when
the values are basically all compile-time arrays. This AO is used even
more heavily by Intl.DateTimeFormat, so change it to accept a Span to
reduce its cost.
This also adds an overload to accept a fixed-size C-array so callers do
not have to be prefixed with AK::Array, i.e. this:
get_option(..., AK::Array { "a"sv, "b"sv }, ...);
Reduces to:
get_option(..., { "a"sv, "b"sv }, ...);
(Which is how all call sites were already written to construct a Vector
in place).
Since AsyncIteratorClose and IteratorClose differ only in that the async
version awaits the inner value we just implement them with an enum flag
to switch just that behavior.
This is required for Temporal.Duration.prototype.round(). Subsequently,
this now returns ThrowCompletionOr<Optional<String>>, which brings the
signature in line with that of to_smallest_temporal_unit().
Much nicer! :^)
This is now as defined in the spec. However since we execute async
functions in bytecode by transforming it to a generator function it must
have a prototype for the GeneratorObject. We check whether it is an
async function and in that case use the hardcoded generator object
prototype. This also ensures that user code cannot override this
property thus preventing exposing internal implementation details.