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.
The ECMAScript spec defines multiple equality operations which are used
all over the spec; this patch introduces them. Of course, the two
primary equality operations are AbtractEquals ('==') and StrictEquals
('==='), which have been renamed to 'abstract_eq' and 'strict_eq' in
this patch.
In support of the two operations mentioned above, the following have
also been added: SameValue, SameValueZero, and SameValueNonNumeric.
These are important to have, because they are used elsewhere in the spec
aside from the two primary equality comparisons.
JS::Value already has the empty state ({} or Value() gives you one.)
Use this instead of wrapping Value in Optional in some places.
I've also added Value::value_or(Value) so you can easily provide a
fallback value when one is not present.
This is not effectful since all constructors overwrite the type anyway,
but it seems reasonable that the default value of m_type would match
what Value() would give you.
This patch adds a new kind of JS::Value, the empty value.
It's what you get when you do JSValue() (or most commonly, {} in C++.)
An empty Value signifies the absence of a value, and should never be
visible to JavaScript itself. As of right now, it's used for array
holes and as a return value when an exception has been thrown and we
just want to unwind.
This patch is a bit of a mess as I had to fix a whole bunch of code
that was relying on JSValue() being undefined, etc.
Let's move towards using references over pointers in LibJS as well.
I had originally steered away from it because that's how I've seen
things done in other engines. But this is not the other engines. :^)
This adds:
- A global Date object (with `length` property and `now` function)
- The Date constructor (no arguments yet)
- The Date prototype (with `get*` functions)
Native functions now only get the Interpreter& as an argument. They can
then extract |this| along with any indexed arguments it wants from it.
This forces functions that want |this| to actually deal with calling
interpreter.this_value().to_object(), and dealing with the possibility
of a non-object |this|.
This is still not great but let's keep massaging it forward.
This operator walks the prototype chain of the RHS value and looks for
a "prototype" property with the same value as the prototype of the LHS.
This is pretty cool. :^)