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authorBrian Anderson <[email protected]>2011-04-13 20:51:24 -0400
committerBrian Anderson <[email protected]>2011-04-13 22:14:40 -0400
commit5c0f4c1939b392e0bd0bcbce86fa83eb7a421992 (patch)
tree9d88f7766e9b3526ffccb2a38c06acbcd38e009f /src/lib
parentAdd support for printing uints as lower-case hex to ExtFmt. (diff)
downloadrust-5c0f4c1939b392e0bd0bcbce86fa83eb7a421992.tar.xz
rust-5c0f4c1939b392e0bd0bcbce86fa83eb7a421992.zip
Add more commentary about ExtFmt
Diffstat (limited to 'src/lib')
-rw-r--r--src/lib/ExtFmt.rs31
1 files changed, 30 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/src/lib/ExtFmt.rs b/src/lib/ExtFmt.rs
index 229a0c5d..da32568a 100644
--- a/src/lib/ExtFmt.rs
+++ b/src/lib/ExtFmt.rs
@@ -1,6 +1,32 @@
+/* The 'fmt' extension is modeled on the posix printf system.
+ *
+ * A posix conversion ostensibly looks like this:
+ *
+ * %[parameter][flags][width][.precision][length]type
+ *
+ * Given the different numeric type bestiary we have, we omit the 'length'
+ * parameter and support slightly different conversions for 'type':
+ *
+ * %[parameter][flags][width][.precision]type
+ *
+ * we also only support translating-to-rust a tiny subset of the possible
+ * combinations at the moment.
+ */
+
import option.none;
import option.some;
+/*
+ * We have a CT (compile-time) module that parses format strings into a
+ * sequence of conversions. From those conversions AST fragments are built
+ * that call into properly-typed functions in the RT (run-time) module. Each
+ * of those run-time conversion functions accepts another conversion
+ * description that specifies how to format its output.
+ *
+ * The building of the AST is currently done in a module inside the compiler,
+ * but should migrate over here as the plugin interface is defined.
+ */
+
// Functions used by the fmt extension at compile time
mod CT {
tag signedness {
@@ -262,7 +288,10 @@ mod CT {
}
}
-// Functions used by the fmt extension at runtime
+// Functions used by the fmt extension at runtime. For now there are a lot of
+// decisions made a runtime. If it proves worthwhile then some of these
+// conditions can be evaluated at compile-time. For now though it's cleaner to
+// implement it this way, I think.
mod RT {
tag ty {