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author | Dave Gauer <dave@ratfactor.com> | 2021-04-15 20:58:12 -0400 |
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committer | Dave Gauer <dave@ratfactor.com> | 2021-04-15 20:58:12 -0400 |
commit | 1880b24ea67c595eff4b051cb1f624f2b0ab737d (patch) | |
tree | ed4c775edee24d02b8651aa1aceba188eff6baa9 | |
parent | 6f3ab8b0251fb07d8665ca98dca6510298c76bd2 (diff) | |
download | ziglings-1880b24ea67c595eff4b051cb1f624f2b0ab737d.tar.gz ziglings-1880b24ea67c595eff4b051cb1f624f2b0ab737d.tar.bz2 ziglings-1880b24ea67c595eff4b051cb1f624f2b0ab737d.tar.xz ziglings-1880b24ea67c595eff4b051cb1f624f2b0ab737d.zip |
add ex067 comptime TWO
-rw-r--r-- | build.zig | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | exercises/067_comptime2.zig | 69 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | patches/patches/067_comptime2.patch | 4 |
3 files changed, 77 insertions, 0 deletions
@@ -336,6 +336,10 @@ const exercises = [_]Exercise{ .output = "Immutable: 12345, 987.654; Mutable: 54321, 456.789; Types: comptime_int, comptime_float, u32, f32", .hint = "It may help to read this one out loud to your favorite stuffed animal until it sinks in completely." }, + .{ + .main_file = "067_comptime2.zig", + .output = "A BB CCC DDDD", + }, }; /// Check the zig version to make sure it can compile the examples properly. diff --git a/exercises/067_comptime2.zig b/exercises/067_comptime2.zig new file mode 100644 index 0000000..79f4335 --- /dev/null +++ b/exercises/067_comptime2.zig @@ -0,0 +1,69 @@ +// +// Understanding how Zig treats numeric literals is fundamental +// and important, but it isn't exactly exciting. +// +// We're about to get into the cool wizard stuff that makes +// programming computers fun. But first, let's introduce a new and +// vital Zig keyword: +// +// comptime +// +// When you put 'comptime' in front of a variable declaration, +// function parameter, or expression, you're saying, "I want Zig +// to evaluate this at compile time rather than runtime." +// +// We've already seen that Zig implicitly performs certain types +// of evaluations at compile time. (Many compilers do a certain +// amount of this, but Zig is explicit about it.) Therefore, +// these two statements are equivalent and using the 'comptime' +// keyword here is redundant: +// +// const foo1 = 5; +// comptime const foo2 = 5; +// +// But here it makes a difference: +// +// var bar1 = 5; // ERROR! +// comptime var bar2 = 5; // OKAY! +// +// 'bar1' gives us an error because Zig assumes mutable +// identifiers will be used at runtime and trying to use a +// comptime_int of undetermined size at runtime is basically a +// MEMORY CRIME and you are UNDER ARREST. +// +// 'bar2' is okay because we've told Zig that this identifier +// MUST be resolvable at compile time. Now Zig won't yell at us +// for assigning a comptime_int to it without a specific runtime +// size. +// +// The comptime property is also INFECTIOUS. Once you declare +// something to be comptime, Zig will always either: +// +// 1. Be able to resolve that thing at compile time. +// 2. Yell at you. +// +const print = @import("std").debug.print; + +pub fn main() void { + // + // In this contrived example, we've decided to allocate some + // arrays using a variable count! + // + // Please make this work. Please? + // + var count = 0; + + count += 1; + var a1: [count]u8 = .{'A'} ** count; + + count += 1; + var a2: [count]u8 = .{'B'} ** count; + + count += 1; + var a3: [count]u8 = .{'C'} ** count; + + count += 1; + var a4: [count]u8 = .{'D'} ** count; + + print("{s} {s} {s} {s}\n", .{a1, a2, a3, a4}); +} diff --git a/patches/patches/067_comptime2.patch b/patches/patches/067_comptime2.patch new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b22e0bd --- /dev/null +++ b/patches/patches/067_comptime2.patch @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +54c54 +< var count = 0; +--- +> comptime var count = 0; |