rubyx/lib/parfait/word.rb
2015-05-28 21:10:27 +03:00

136 lines
4.0 KiB
Ruby

module Parfait
# A word is a a short sequence of characters
# Characters are not modeled as objects but as (small) integers
# The small means two of them have to fit into a machine word, iw utf16 or similar
#
# Words are constant, maybe like js strings, ruby symbols
# Words are short, but may have spaces
# Words are objects, that means they carry Layout as index 0
# So all indexes are offset by one in the implementation
# Object length is measured in non-layout cells though
# big TODO , this has NO encoding, a char takes a machine word. Go fix.
class Word < Object
# initialize with length. For now we try to keep all non-parfait (including String) out
# String will contain spaces for non-zero length
# Virtual provides methods to create Parfait objects from ruby
def initialize len
super()
raise "Must init with int, not #{len.class}" unless len.kind_of? Fixnum
raise "Must init with positive, not #{len}" if len < 0
set_length( len , 32 ) unless len == 0
end
# return a copy of self
def copy
cop = Word.new( self.length )
index = 1
while( index <= self.length )
cop.set_char(index , self.get_char(index))
index = index + 1
end
cop
end
# return the number of characters
def length()
obj_len = internal_object_length - 1
return obj_len
end
# make every char equal the given one
def fill_with char
fill_from_with(0 , char)
end
def fill_from_with from , char
len = self.length()
return if from <= 0
while( from <= len)
set_char( from , char)
from = from + 1
end
from
end
# true if no characters
def empty?
return self.length == 0
end
# pad the string with the given character to the given length
#
def set_length(len , fill_char)
return if len <= 0
counter = self.length()
return if counter >= len
internal_object_grow( len + 1)
fill_from_with( counter + 1 , fill_char )
end
# set the character at the given index to the given character
# character must be an integer, as is the index
# the index starts at one, but may be negative to count from the end
# indexes out of range will raise an error
def set_char at , char
raise "char not fixnum #{char}" unless char.kind_of? Fixnum
index = range_correct_index(at)
internal_object_set( index + 1 , char )
end
# get the character at the given index
# the index starts at one, but may be negative to count from the end
# indexes out of range will raise an error
#the return "character" is an integer
def get_char at
index = range_correct_index(at)
return internal_object_get(index + 1)
end
# private method to calculate negative indexes into positives
def range_correct_index at
index = at
index = self.length + at if at < 0
raise "index must be positive , not #{at}" if (index <= 0)
raise "index too large #{at} > #{self.length}" if (index > self.length)
return index
end
# compare the word to another
# currently checks for same class, though really identity of the characters
# in right order would suffice
def == other
return false if other.class != self.class
return false if other.length != self.length
len = self.length
while(len > 0)
return false if self.get_char(len) != other.get_char(len)
len = len - 1
end
return true
end
# this is a sof check if there are instance variables or "structure"
def is_value?
true
end
# as we answered is_value? with true, sof will create a basic node with this string
def to_sof
"'" + to_s + "'"
end
#below here is OLD, DUBIOUS and needs to be checked TODO
def result= value
raise "called"
class_for(MoveInstruction).new(value , self , :opcode => :mov)
end
def mem_length
padded(1 + string.length)
end
end
end