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author | Dave Gauer <dave@ratfactor.com> | 2021-04-24 14:34:46 -0400 |
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committer | Dave Gauer <dave@ratfactor.com> | 2021-04-24 14:34:46 -0400 |
commit | 2f0f823a738ced78d28de2cb86e1ef186a35778b (patch) | |
tree | fd8449ea0bf10cc1eedf7b08e48737c4e5c7b369 /exercises/072_comptime7.zig | |
parent | 92307078d5142fd35df210f4764381c06198c364 (diff) | |
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add 072 comptime 7
Diffstat (limited to 'exercises/072_comptime7.zig')
-rw-r--r-- | exercises/072_comptime7.zig | 66 |
1 files changed, 66 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/exercises/072_comptime7.zig b/exercises/072_comptime7.zig new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c5e04dd --- /dev/null +++ b/exercises/072_comptime7.zig @@ -0,0 +1,66 @@ +// +// There is also an 'inline while'. Just like 'inline for', it +// loops at compile time, allowing you do all sorts of +// interesting things not possible at runtime. See if you can +// figure out what this rather bonkers example prints: +// +// const foo = [3]*const [5]u8{ "~{s}~", "<{s}>", "d{s}b" }; +// comptime var i = 0; +// +// inline while ( i < foo.len ) : (i += 1) { +// print(foo[i] ++ "\n", .{foo[i]}); +// } +// +// You haven't taken off that wizard hat yet, have you? +// +const print = @import("std").debug.print; + +pub fn main() void { + // Here is a string containing a series of arithmetic + // operations and single-digit decimal values. Let's call + // each operation and digit pair an "instruction". + const instructions = "+3 *5 -2 *2"; + + // Here is a u32 variable that will keep track of our current + // value in the program at runtime. It starts at 0, and we + // will get the final value by performing the sequence of + // instructions above. + var value: u32 = 0; + + // This "index" variable will only be used at compile time in + // our loop. + comptime var i = 0; + + // Here we wish to loop over each "instruction" in the string + // at compile time. + // + // Please fix this to loop once per "instruction": + ??? (i < instructions.len) : (???) { + + // This gets the digit from the "instruction". Can you + // figure out why we subtract '0' from it? + comptime var digit = instructions[i + 1] - '0'; + + // This 'switch' statement contains the actual work done + // at runtime. At first, this doesn't seem exciting... + switch (instructions[i]) { + '+' => value += digit, + '-' => value -= digit, + '*' => value *= digit, + else => unreachable, + } + // ...But it's quite a bit more exciting than it first appears. + // The 'inline while' no longer exists at runtime and neither + // does anything else not touched by directly by runtime + // code. The 'instructions' string, for example, does not + // appear anywhere in the compiled program because it's + // not used by it! + // + // So in a very real sense, this loop actually converts + // the instructions contained in a string into runtime + // code at compile time. Guess we're compiler writers + // now. See? The wizard hat was justified after all. + } + + print("{}\n", .{value}); +} |