This is how the spec describes it, and it allows sharing data between
multiple typed arrays.
Typed arrays now support constructing from an existing ArrayBuffer,
and has been prepared for constructing from another typed array or
iterator as well.
We have multiple array types now, so ArrayInvalidLength has been
replaced with a generic InvalidLength.
Also fixes a small issue in the Array constructor, it should throw
RangeError for invalid lengths, not TypeError.
This patch adds six of the standard type arrays and tries to share as
much code as possible:
- Uint8Array
- Uint16Array
- Uint32Array
- Int8Array
- Int16Array
- Int32Array
This should be using the individual flag boolean properties rather than
the [[OriginalFlags]] internal slot.
Use an enumerator macro here for brevity, this will be useful for other
things as well. :^)
- Default values should depend on arguments being undefined, not being
missing
- "(?:)" for empty pattern happens in RegExp.prototype.source, not the
constructor
This makes RegExpObject compile and store a Regex<ECMA262>, adds
all flag-related properties, and implements `RegExpPrototype.test()`
(complete with 'lastIndex' support) :^)
It should be noted that this only implements `test()' using the builtin
`exec()'.
If a receiver is given, e.g. via Reflect.get/set(), forward it to the
target object's get()/put() or use it as last argument of the trap
function. The default value is the Proxy object itself.
As the global object is constructed and initialized in a different way
than most other objects we were not setting its prototype! This made
things like "globalThis.toString()" fail unexpectedly.
Some things, like (the non-generic version of) Array.prototype.pop(),
check is_empty() to determine whether an action, like removing elements,
can be performed. We need to know the array-like size for that, not the
size of the underlying storage, which can be different - and is not
something IndexedProperties should expose so I removed its size().
Fixes#3948.
We can't assume that property names can be converted to strings anymore,
as we have symbols. Use name.to_value() instead.
This makes something like this possible:
new Proxy(Object, { get(t, p) { return t[p] } })[Symbol.hasInstance]
This fixes Array.prototype.{join,toString}() crashing with arrays
containing themselves, i.e. circular references.
The spec is suspiciously silent about this, and indeed engine262, a
"100% spec compliant" ECMA-262 implementation, can't handle these cases.
I had a look at some major engines instead and they all seem to keep
track or check for circular references and return an empty string for
already seen objects.
- SpiderMonkey: "AutoCycleDetector detector(cx, obj)"
- V8: "CycleProtectedArrayJoin<JSArray>(...)"
- JavaScriptCore: "StringRecursionChecker checker(globalObject, thisObject)"
- ChakraCore: "scriptContext->CheckObject(thisArg)"
To keep things simple & consistent this uses the same pattern as
JSONObject, MarkupGenerator and js: simply putting each seen object in a
HashTable<Object*>.
Fixes#3929.
This should not just inherit Object.prototype.toString() (and override
Object::to_string()) but be its own function, i.e.
'RegExp.prototype.toString !== Object.prototype.toString'.
ES 5(.1) described parsing of the function body string as:
https://www.ecma-international.org/ecma-262/5.1/#sec-15.3.2.1
7. If P is not parsable as a FormalParameterList[opt] then throw a SyntaxError exception.
8. If body is not parsable as FunctionBody then throw a SyntaxError exception.
We implemented it as building the source string of a complete function
and feeding that to the parser, with the same outcome. ES 2015+ does
exactly that, but with newlines at certain positions:
https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-createdynamicfunction
16. Let bodyString be the string-concatenation of 0x000A (LINE FEED), ? ToString(bodyArg), and 0x000A (LINE FEED).
17. Let prefix be the prefix associated with kind in Table 49.
18. Let sourceString be the string-concatenation of prefix, " anonymous(", P, 0x000A (LINE FEED), ") {", bodyString, and "}".
This patch updates the generated source string to match these
requirements. This will make certain edge cases work, e.g.
'new Function("-->")', where the user supplied input must be placed on
its own line to be valid syntax.
- A regular function can have duplicate parameters except in strict mode
or if its parameter list is not "simple" (has a default or rest
parameter)
- An arrow function can never have duplicate parameters
Compared to other engines I opted for more useful syntax error messages
than a generic "duplicate parameter name not allowed in this context":
"use strict"; function test(foo, foo) {}
^
Uncaught exception: [SyntaxError]: Duplicate parameter 'foo' not allowed in strict mode (line: 1, column: 34)
function test(foo, foo = 1) {}
^
Uncaught exception: [SyntaxError]: Duplicate parameter 'foo' not allowed in function with default parameter (line: 1, column: 20)
function test(foo, ...foo) {}
^
Uncaught exception: [SyntaxError]: Duplicate parameter 'foo' not allowed in function with rest parameter (line: 1, column: 23)
(foo, foo) => {}
^
Uncaught exception: [SyntaxError]: Duplicate parameter 'foo' not allowed in arrow function (line: 1, column: 7)
When changing the attributes of an existing property of an object with
unique shape we must not change the PropertyMetadata offset.
Doing so without resizing the underlying storage vector caused an OOB
write crash.
Fixes#3735.
In the case of an exception in a property getter function we would not
return early, and a subsequent attempt to call the replacer function
would crash the interpreter due to call_internal() asserting.
Fixes#3548.
Test files created with:
$ for f in Libraries/LibJS/Tests/builtins/Date/Date.prototype.get*js; do
cp $f $(echo $f | sed -e 's/get/getUTC/') ;
done
$ rm Libraries/LibJS/Tests/builtins/Date/Date.prototype.getUTCTime.js
$ git add Libraries/LibJS/Tests/builtins/Date/Date.prototype.getUTC*.js
$ ls Libraries/LibJS/Tests/builtins/Date/Date.prototype.getUTC*.js | \
xargs sed -i -e 's/get/getUTC/g'
Year computation has to be based on seconds, not days, in case
t is < 0 but t / __seconds_per_day is 0.
Year computation also has to consider negative timestamps.
With this, days is always positive and <= the number of days in the
year, so base the tm_wday computation directly on the timestamp,
and do it first, before t is modified in the year computation.
In C, % can return a negative number if the left operand is negative,
compensate for that.
Tested via test-js. (Except for tm_wday, since we don't implement
Date.prototype.getUTCDate() yet.)