"Repetition renders the ridiculous reasonable." -- Norman Wildberger
This document is a tutorial for the advanced constructs of the Nim programming language. Note that this document is somewhat obsolete as the manual contains many more examples of the advanced language features.
Pragmas are Nim's method to give the compiler additional information/ commands without introducing a massive number of new keywords. Pragmas are enclosed in the special {.
and .}
curly dot brackets. This tutorial does not cover pragmas. See the manual or user guide for a description of the available pragmas.
While Nim's support for object oriented programming (OOP) is minimalistic, powerful OOP techniques can be used. OOP is seen as one way to design a program, not the only way. Often a procedural approach leads to simpler and more efficient code. In particular, preferring composition over inheritance is often the better design.
Like tuples, objects are a means to pack different values together in a structured way. However, objects provide many features that tuples do not: They provide inheritance and information hiding. Because objects encapsulate data, the T()
object constructor should only be used internally and the programmer should provide a proc to initialize the object (this is called a constructor).
Objects have access to their type at runtime. There is an of
operator that can be used to check the object's type:
type Person = ref object of RootObj name*: string # the * means that `name` is accessible from other modules age: int # no * means that the field is hidden from other modules Student = ref object of Person # Student inherits from Person id: int # with an id field var student: Student person: Person assert(student of Student) # is true # object construction: student = Student(name: "Anton", age: 5, id: 2) echo student[]
Object fields that should be visible from outside the defining module have to be marked by *
. In contrast to tuples, different object types are never equivalent. New object types can only be defined within a type section.
Inheritance is done with the object of
syntax. Multiple inheritance is currently not supported. If an object type has no suitable ancestor, RootObj
can be used as its ancestor, but this is only a convention. Objects that have no ancestor are implicitly final
. You can use the inheritable
pragma to introduce new object roots apart from system.RootObj
. (This is used in the GTK wrapper for instance.)
Ref objects should be used whenever inheritance is used. It isn't strictly necessary, but with non-ref objects assignments such as let person: Person = Student(id: 123)
will truncate subclass fields.
Note: Composition (has-a relation) is often preferable to inheritance (is-a relation) for simple code reuse. Since objects are value types in Nim, composition is as efficient as inheritance.
Objects, tuples and references can model quite complex data structures which depend on each other; they are mutually recursive. In Nim these types can only be declared within a single type section. (Anything else would require arbitrary symbol lookahead which slows down compilation.)
Example:
type Node = ref NodeObj # a traced reference to a NodeObj NodeObj = object le, ri: Node # left and right subtrees sym: ref Sym # leaves contain a reference to a Sym Sym = object # a symbol name: string # the symbol's name line: int # the line the symbol was declared in code: Node # the symbol's abstract syntax tree
Nim distinguishes between type casts and type conversions. Casts are done with the cast
operator and force the compiler to interpret a bit pattern to be of another type.
Type conversions are a much more polite way to convert a type into another: They preserve the abstract value, not necessarily the bit-pattern. If a type conversion is not possible, the compiler complains or an exception is raised.
The syntax for type conversions is destination_type(expression_to_convert)
(like an ordinary call):
proc getID(x: Person): int = Student(x).id
The InvalidObjectConversionError
exception is raised if x
is not a Student
.
Often an object hierarchy is overkill in certain situations where simple variant types are needed.
An example:
# This is an example how an abstract syntax tree could be modelled in Nim type NodeKind = enum # the different node types nkInt, # a leaf with an integer value nkFloat, # a leaf with a float value nkString, # a leaf with a string value nkAdd, # an addition nkSub, # a subtraction nkIf # an if statement Node = ref NodeObj NodeObj = object case kind: NodeKind # the ``kind`` field is the discriminator of nkInt: intVal: int of nkFloat: floatVal: float of nkString: strVal: string of nkAdd, nkSub: leftOp, rightOp: Node of nkIf: condition, thenPart, elsePart: Node var n = Node(kind: nkFloat, floatVal: 1.0) # the following statement raises an `FieldError` exception, because # n.kind's value does not fit: n.strVal = ""
As can been seen from the example, an advantage to an object hierarchy is that no conversion between different object types is needed. Yet, access to invalid object fields raises an exception.
In ordinary object oriented languages, procedures (also called methods) are bound to a class. This has disadvantages:
join
a string method or an array method?Nim avoids these problems by not assigning methods to a class. All methods in Nim are multi-methods. As we will see later, multi-methods are distinguished from procs only for dynamic binding purposes.
There is a syntactic sugar for calling routines: The syntax obj.method(args)
can be used instead of method(obj, args)
. If there are no remaining arguments, the parentheses can be omitted: obj.len
(instead of len(obj)
).
This method call syntax is not restricted to objects, it can be used for any type:
echo "abc".len # is the same as echo len("abc") echo "abc".toUpper() echo({'a', 'b', 'c'}.card) stdout.writeLine("Hallo") # the same as writeLine(stdout, "Hallo")
(Another way to look at the method call syntax is that it provides the missing postfix notation.)
So "pure object oriented" code is easy to write:
import strutils, sequtils stdout.writeLine("Give a list of numbers (separated by spaces): ") stdout.write(stdin.readLine.splitWhitespace.map(parseInt).max.`$`) stdout.writeLine(" is the maximum!")
As the above example shows, Nim has no need for get-properties: Ordinary get-procedures that are called with the method call syntax achieve the same. But setting a value is different; for this a special setter syntax is needed:
type Socket* = ref object of RootObj h: int # cannot be accessed from the outside of the module due to missing star proc `host=`*(s: var Socket, value: int) {.inline.} = ## setter of host address s.h = value proc host*(s: Socket): int {.inline.} = ## getter of host address s.h var s: Socket new s s.host = 34 # same as `host=`(s, 34)
(The example also shows inline
procedures.)
The []
array access operator can be overloaded to provide array properties:
type Vector* = object x, y, z: float proc `[]=`* (v: var Vector, i: int, value: float) = # setter case i of 0: v.x = value of 1: v.y = value of 2: v.z = value else: assert(false) proc `[]`* (v: Vector, i: int): float = # getter case i of 0: result = v.x of 1: result = v.y of 2: result = v.z else: assert(false)
The example is silly, since a vector is better modelled by a tuple which already provides v[]
access.
Procedures always use static dispatch. For dynamic dispatch replace the proc
keyword by method
:
type PExpr = ref object of RootObj ## abstract base class for an expression PLiteral = ref object of PExpr x: int PPlusExpr = ref object of PExpr a, b: PExpr # watch out: 'eval' relies on dynamic binding method eval(e: PExpr): int = # override this base method quit "to override!" method eval(e: PLiteral): int = e.x method eval(e: PPlusExpr): int = eval(e.a) + eval(e.b) proc newLit(x: int): PLiteral = PLiteral(x: x) proc newPlus(a, b: PExpr): PPlusExpr = PPlusExpr(a: a, b: b) echo eval(newPlus(newPlus(newLit(1), newLit(2)), newLit(4)))
Note that in the example the constructors newLit
and newPlus
are procs because it makes more sense for them to use static binding, but eval
is a method because it requires dynamic binding.
In a multi-method all parameters that have an object type are used for the dispatching:
type Thing = ref object of RootObj Unit = ref object of Thing x: int method collide(a, b: Thing) {.inline.} = quit "to override!" method collide(a: Thing, b: Unit) {.inline.} = echo "1" method collide(a: Unit, b: Thing) {.inline.} = echo "2" var a, b: Unit new a new b collide(a, b) # output: 2
As the example demonstrates, invocation of a multi-method cannot be ambiguous: Collide 2 is preferred over collide 1 because the resolution works from left to right. Thus Unit, Thing
is preferred over Thing, Unit
.
Performance note: Nim does not produce a virtual method table, but generates dispatch trees. This avoids the expensive indirect branch for method calls and enables inlining. However, other optimizations like compile time evaluation or dead code elimination do not work with methods.
In Nim exceptions are objects. By convention, exception types are suffixed with 'Error'. The system module defines an exception hierarchy that you might want to stick to. Exceptions derive from system.Exception
, which provides the common interface.
Exceptions have to be allocated on the heap because their lifetime is unknown. The compiler will prevent you from raising an exception created on the stack. All raised exceptions should at least specify the reason for being raised in the msg
field.
A convention is that exceptions should be raised in exceptional cases: For example, if a file cannot be opened, this should not raise an exception since this is quite common (the file may not exist).
Raising an exception is done with the raise
statement:
var e: ref OSError new(e) e.msg = "the request to the OS failed" raise e
If the raise
keyword is not followed by an expression, the last exception is re-raised. For the purpose of avoiding repeating this common code pattern, the template newException
in the system
module can be used:
raise newException(OSError, "the request to the OS failed")
The try
statement handles exceptions:
# read the first two lines of a text file that should contain numbers # and tries to add them var f: File if open(f, "numbers.txt"): try: let a = readLine(f) let b = readLine(f) echo "sum: ", parseInt(a) + parseInt(b) except OverflowError: echo "overflow!" except ValueError: echo "could not convert string to integer" except IOError: echo "IO error!" except: echo "Unknown exception!" # reraise the unknown exception: raise finally: close(f)
The statements after the try
are executed unless an exception is raised. Then the appropriate except
part is executed.
The empty except
part is executed if there is an exception that is not explicitly listed. It is similar to an else
part in if
statements.
If there is a finally
part, it is always executed after the exception handlers.
The exception is consumed in an except
part. If an exception is not handled, it is propagated through the call stack. This means that often the rest of the procedure - that is not within a finally
clause - is not executed (if an exception occurs).
If you need to access the actual exception object or message inside an except
branch you can use the getCurrentException() and getCurrentExceptionMsg() procs from the system module. Example:
try: doSomethingHere() except: let e = getCurrentException() msg = getCurrentExceptionMsg() echo "Got exception ", repr(e), " with message ", msg
Through the use of the optional {.raises.}
pragma you can specify that a proc is meant to raise a specific set of exceptions, or none at all. If the {.raises.}
pragma is used, the compiler will verify that this is true. For instance, if you specify that a proc raises IOError
, and at some point it (or one of the procs it calls) starts raising a new exception the compiler will prevent that proc from compiling. Usage example:
proc complexProc() {.raises: [IOError, ArithmeticError].} = ... proc simpleProc() {.raises: [].} = ...
Once you have code like this in place, if the list of raised exception changes the compiler will stop with an error specifying the line of the proc which stopped validating the pragma and the raised exception not being caught, along with the file and line where the uncaught exception is being raised, which may help you locate the offending code which has changed.
If you want to add the {.raises.}
pragma to existing code, the compiler can also help you. You can add the {.effects.}
pragma statement to your proc and the compiler will output all inferred effects up to that point (exception tracking is part of Nim's effect system). Another more roundabout way to find out the list of exceptions raised by a proc is to use the Nim doc2
command which generates documentation for a whole module and decorates all procs with the list of raised exceptions. You can read more about Nim's effect system and related pragmas in the manual.
Generics are Nim's means to parametrize procs, iterators or types with type parameters. They are most useful for efficient type safe containers:
type BinaryTreeObj[T] = object # BinaryTree is a generic type with # with generic param ``T`` le, ri: BinaryTree[T] # left and right subtrees; may be nil data: T # the data stored in a node BinaryTree*[T] = ref BinaryTreeObj[T] # type that is exported proc newNode*[T](data: T): BinaryTree[T] = # constructor for a node new(result) result.data = data proc add*[T](root: var BinaryTree[T], n: BinaryTree[T]) = # insert a node into the tree if root == nil: root = n else: var it = root while it != nil: # compare the data items; uses the generic ``cmp`` proc # that works for any type that has a ``==`` and ``<`` operator var c = cmp(it.data, n.data) if c < 0: if it.le == nil: it.le = n return it = it.le else: if it.ri == nil: it.ri = n return it = it.ri proc add*[T](root: var BinaryTree[T], data: T) = # convenience proc: add(root, newNode(data)) iterator preorder*[T](root: BinaryTree[T]): T = # Preorder traversal of a binary tree. # Since recursive iterators are not yet implemented, # this uses an explicit stack (which is more efficient anyway): var stack: seq[BinaryTree[T]] = @[root] while stack.len > 0: var n = stack.pop() while n != nil: yield n.data add(stack, n.ri) # push right subtree onto the stack n = n.le # and follow the left pointer var root: BinaryTree[string] # instantiate a BinaryTree with ``string`` add(root, newNode("hello")) # instantiates ``newNode`` and ``add`` add(root, "world") # instantiates the second ``add`` proc for str in preorder(root): stdout.writeLine(str)
The example shows a generic binary tree. Depending on context, the brackets are used either to introduce type parameters or to instantiate a generic proc, iterator or type. As the example shows, generics work with overloading: the best match of add
is used. The built-in add
procedure for sequences is not hidden and is used in the preorder
iterator.
Templates are a simple substitution mechanism that operates on Nim's abstract syntax trees. Templates are processed in the semantic pass of the compiler. They integrate well with the rest of the language and share none of C's preprocessor macros flaws.
To invoke a template, call it like a procedure.
Example:
template `!=` (a, b: untyped): untyped = # this definition exists in the System module not (a == b) assert(5 != 6) # the compiler rewrites that to: assert(not (5 == 6))
The !=
, >
, >=
, in
, notin
, isnot
operators are in fact templates: this has the benefit that if you overload the ==
operator, the !=
operator is available automatically and does the right thing. (Except for IEEE floating point numbers - NaN breaks basic boolean logic.)
a > b
is transformed into b < a
. a in b
is transformed into contains(b, a)
. notin
and isnot
have the obvious meanings.
Templates are especially useful for lazy evaluation purposes. Consider a simple proc for logging:
const debug = true proc log(msg: string) {.inline.} = if debug: stdout.writeLine(msg) var x = 4 log("x has the value: " & $x)
This code has a shortcoming: if debug
is set to false someday, the quite expensive $
and &
operations are still performed! (The argument evaluation for procedures is eager).
Turning the log
proc into a template solves this problem:
const debug = true template log(msg: string) = if debug: stdout.writeLine(msg) var x = 4 log("x has the value: " & $x)
The parameters' types can be ordinary types or the meta types untyped
, typed
, or typedesc
. typedesc
stands for type description, and untyped
means symbol lookups and type resolution is not performed before the expression is passed to the template.
If the template has no explicit return type, void
is used for consistency with procs and methods.
To pass a block of statements to a template, use 'untyped' for the last parameter:
template withFile(f: untyped, filename: string, mode: FileMode, body: untyped): typed = let fn = filename var f: File if open(f, fn, mode): try: body finally: close(f) else: quit("cannot open: " & fn) withFile(txt, "ttempl3.txt", fmWrite): txt.writeLine("line 1") txt.writeLine("line 2")
In the example the two writeLine
statements are bound to the body
parameter. The withFile
template contains boilerplate code and helps to avoid a common bug: to forget to close the file. Note how the let fn = filename
statement ensures that filename
is evaluated only once.
Macros enable advanced compile-time code transformations, but they cannot change Nim's syntax. However, this is no real restriction because Nim's syntax is flexible enough anyway. Macros have to be implemented in pure Nim code if the foreign function interface (FFI) is not enabled in the compiler, but other than that restriction (which at some point in the future will go away) you can write any kind of Nim code and the compiler will run it at compile time.
There are two ways to write a macro, either generating Nim source code and letting the compiler parse it, or creating manually an abstract syntax tree (AST) which you feed to the compiler. In order to build the AST one needs to know how the Nim concrete syntax is converted to an abstract syntax tree (AST). The AST is documented in the macros module.
Once your macro is finished, there are two ways to invoke it:
macrostmt
syntax (statement macros)The following example implements a powerful debug
command that accepts a variable number of arguments:
# to work with Nim syntax trees, we need an API that is defined in the # ``macros`` module: import macros macro debug(n: varargs[untyped]): typed = # `n` is a Nim AST that contains a list of expressions; # this macro returns a list of statements (n is passed for proper line # information): result = newNimNode(nnkStmtList, n) # iterate over any argument that is passed to this macro: for x in n: # add a call to the statement list that writes the expression; # `toStrLit` converts an AST to its string representation: result.add(newCall("write", newIdentNode("stdout"), toStrLit(x))) # add a call to the statement list that writes ": " result.add(newCall("write", newIdentNode("stdout"), newStrLitNode(": "))) # add a call to the statement list that writes the expressions value: result.add(newCall("writeLine", newIdentNode("stdout"), x)) var a: array[0..10, int] x = "some string" a[0] = 42 a[1] = 45 debug(a[0], a[1], x)
The macro call expands to:
write(stdout, "a[0]") write(stdout, ": ") writeLine(stdout, a[0]) write(stdout, "a[1]") write(stdout, ": ") writeLine(stdout, a[1]) write(stdout, "x") write(stdout, ": ") writeLine(stdout, x)
Statement macros are defined just as expression macros. However, they are invoked by an expression following a colon.
The following example outlines a macro that generates a lexical analyzer from regular expressions:
macro case_token(n: varargs[untyped]): typed = # creates a lexical analyzer from regular expressions # ... (implementation is an exercise for the reader :-) discard case_token: # this colon tells the parser it is a macro statement of r"[A-Za-z_]+[A-Za-z_0-9]*": return tkIdentifier of r"0-9+": return tkInteger of r"[\+\-\*\?]+": return tkOperator else: return tkUnknown
To give a footstart to writing macros we will show now how to turn your typical dynamic code into something that compiles statically. For the exercise we will use the following snippet of code as the starting point:
import strutils, tables proc readCfgAtRuntime(cfgFilename: string): Table[string, string] = let inputString = readFile(cfgFilename) var source = "" result = initTable[string, string]() for line in inputString.splitLines: # Ignore empty lines if line.len < 1: continue var chunks = split(line, ',') if chunks.len != 2: quit("Input needs comma split values, got: " & line) result[chunks[0]] = chunks[1] if result.len < 1: quit("Input file empty!") let info = readCfgAtRuntime("data.cfg") when isMainModule: echo info["licenseOwner"] echo info["licenseKey"] echo info["version"]
Presumably this snippet of code could be used in a commercial software, reading a configuration file to display information about the person who bought the software. This external file would be generated by an online web shopping cart to be included along the program containing the license information:
version,1.1 licenseOwner,Hyori Lee licenseKey,M1Tl3PjBWO2CC48m
The readCfgAtRuntime
proc will open the given filename and return a Table
from the tables module. The parsing of the file is done (without much care for handling invalid data or corner cases) using the splitLines proc from the strutils module. There are many things which can fail; mind the purpose is explaining how to make this run at compile time, not how to properly implement a DRM scheme.
The reimplementation of this code as a compile time proc will allow us to get rid of the data.cfg
file we would need to distribute along the binary, plus if the information is really constant, it doesn't make from a logical point of view to have it mutable in a global variable, it would be better if it was a constant. Finally, and likely the most valuable feature, we can implement some verification at compile time. You could think of this as a better unit testing, since it is impossible to obtain a binary unless everything is correct, preventing you to ship to users a broken program which won't start because a small critical file is missing or its contents changed by mistake to something invalid.
Our first attempt will start by modifying the program to generate a compile time string with the generated source code, which we then pass to the parseStmt
proc from the macros module. Here is the modified source code implementing the macro:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 |
import macros, strutils macro readCfgAndBuildSource(cfgFilename: string): typed = let inputString = slurp(cfgFilename.strVal) var source = "" for line in inputString.splitLines: # Ignore empty lines if line.len < 1: continue var chunks = split(line, ',') if chunks.len != 2: error("Input needs comma split values, got: " & line) source &= "const cfg" & chunks[0] & "= \"" & chunks[1] & "\"\n" if source.len < 1: error("Input file empty!") result = parseStmt(source) readCfgAndBuildSource("data.cfg") when isMainModule: echo cfglicenseOwner echo cfglicenseKey echo cfgversion |
The good news is not much has changed! First, we need to change the handling of the input parameter (line 3). In the dynamic version the readCfgAtRuntime
proc receives a string parameter. However, in the macro version it is also declared as string, but this is the outside interface of the macro. When the macro is run, it actually gets a PNimNode
object instead of a string, and we have to call the strVal proc (line 5) from the macros module to obtain the string being passed in to the macro.
Second, we cannot use the readFile proc from the system module due to FFI restriction at compile time. If we try to use this proc, or any other which depends on FFI, the compiler will error with the message cannot evaluate
and a dump of the macro's source code, along with a stack trace where the compiler reached before bailing out. We can get around this limitation by using the slurp proc from the system module, which was precisely made for compilation time (just like gorge which executes an external program and captures its output).
The interesting thing is that our macro does not return a runtime Table object. Instead, it builds up Nim source code into the source
variable. For each line of the configuration file a const
variable will be generated (line 15). To avoid conflicts we prefix these variables with cfg
. In essence, what the compiler is doing is replacing the line calling the macro with the following snippet of code:
const cfgversion= "1.1" const cfglicenseOwner= "Hyori Lee" const cfglicenseKey= "M1Tl3PjBWO2CC48m"
You can verify this yourself adding the line echo source
somewhere at the end of the macro and compiling the program. Another difference is that instead of calling the usual quit proc to abort (which we could still call) this version calls the error proc (line 14). The error
proc has the same behavior as quit
but will dump also the source and file line information where the error happened, making it easier for the programmer to find where compilation failed. In this situation it would point to the line invoking the macro, but not the line of data.cfg
we are processing, that's something the macro itself would need to control.
To generate an AST we would need to intimately know the structures used by the Nim compiler exposed in the macros module, which at first look seems a daunting task. But we can use as helper shortcut the dumpTree macro, which is used as a statement macro instead of an expression macro. Since we know that we want to generate a bunch of const
symbols we can create the following source file and compile it to see what the compiler expects from us:
import macros dumpTree: const cfgversion: string = "1.1" const cfglicenseOwner= "Hyori Lee" const cfglicenseKey= "M1Tl3PjBWO2CC48m"
During compilation of the source code we should see the following lines in the output (again, since this is a macro, compilation is enough, you don't have to run any binary):
StmtList ConstSection ConstDef Ident !"cfgversion" Ident !"string" StrLit 1.1 ConstSection ConstDef Ident !"cfglicenseOwner" Empty StrLit Hyori Lee ConstSection ConstDef Ident !"cfglicenseKey" Empty StrLit M1Tl3PjBWO2CC48m
With this output we have a better idea of what kind of input the compiler expects. We need to generate a list of statements. For each constant the source code generates a ConstSection
and a ConstDef
. If we were to move all the constants to a single const
block we would see only a single ConstSection
with three children.
Maybe you didn't notice, but in the dumpTree
example the first constant explicitly specifies the type of the constant. That's why in the tree output the two last constants have their second child Empty
but the first has a string identifier. So basically a const
definition is made up from an identifier, optionally a type (can be an empty node) and the value. Armed with this knowledge, let's look at the finished version of the AST building macro:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 |
import macros, strutils macro readCfgAndBuildAST(cfgFilename: string): typed = let inputString = slurp(cfgFilename.strVal) result = newNimNode(nnkStmtList) for line in inputString.splitLines: # Ignore empty lines if line.len < 1: continue var chunks = split(line, ',') if chunks.len != 2: error("Input needs comma split values, got: " & line) var section = newNimNode(nnkConstSection) constDef = newNimNode(nnkConstDef) constDef.add(newIdentNode("cfg" & chunks[0])) constDef.add(newEmptyNode()) constDef.add(newStrLitNode(chunks[1])) section.add(constDef) result.add(section) if result.len < 1: error("Input file empty!") readCfgAndBuildAST("data.cfg") when isMainModule: echo cfglicenseOwner echo cfglicenseKey echo cfgversion |
Since we are building on the previous example generating source code, we will only mention the differences to it. Instead of creating a temporary string
variable and writing into it source code as if it were written by hand, we use the result
variable directly and create a statement list node (nnkStmtList
) which will hold our children (line 7).
For each input line we have to create a constant definition (nnkConstDef
) and wrap it inside a constant section (nnkConstSection
). Once these variables are created, we fill them hierarchichally (line 17) like the previous AST dump tree showed: the constant definition is a child of the section definition, and the constant definition has an identifier node, an empty node (we let the compiler figure out the type), and a string literal with the value.
A last tip when writing a macro: if you are not sure the AST you are building looks ok, you may be tempted to use the dumpTree
macro. But you can't use it inside the macro you are writting/debugging. Instead echo
the string generated by treeRepr. If at the end of the this example you add echo treeRepr(result)
you should get the same output as using the dumpTree
macro, but of course you can call that at any point of the macro where you might be having troubles.
import math template liftScalarProc(fname) = ## Lift a proc taking one scalar parameter and returning a ## scalar value (eg ``proc sssss[T](x: T): float``), ## to provide templated procs that can handle a single ## parameter of seq[T] or nested seq[seq[]] or the same type ## ## .. code-block:: Nim ## liftScalarProc(abs) ## # now abs(@[@[1,-2], @[-2,-3]]) == @[@[1,2], @[2,3]] proc fname[T](x: openarray[T]): auto = var temp: T type outType = type(fname(temp)) result = newSeq[outType](x.len) for i in 0..<x.len: result[i] = fname(x[i]) liftScalarProc(sqrt) # make sqrt() work for sequences echo sqrt(@[4.0, 16.0, 25.0, 36.0]) # => @[2.0, 4.0, 5.0, 6.0]
proc echoHW() = echo "Hello world" proc echoHW0() = echo "Hello world 0" proc echoHW1() = echo "Hello world 1" template joinSymbols(a, b: untyped): untyped = `a b`() joinSymbols(echo, HW) macro str2Call(s1, s2): typed = result = newNimNode(nnkStmtList) for i in 0..1: # combines s1, s2 and an integer into an proc identifier # that is called in a statement list result.add(newCall(!($s1 & $s2 & $i))) str2Call("echo", "HW") # Output: # Hello world # Hello world 0 # Hello world 1
Nim code can be compiled to JavaScript. However in order to write JavaScript-compatible code you should remember the following:
addr
and ptr
have slightly different semantic meaning in JavaScript. It is recommended to avoid those if you're not sure how they are translated to JavaScript.cast[T](x)
in JavaScript is translated to (x)
, except for casting between signed/unsigned ints, in which case it behaves as static cast in C language.cstring
in JavaScript means JavaScript string. It is a good practice to use cstring
only when it is semantically appropriate. E.g. don't use cstring
as a binary data buffer.
© 2006–2017 Andreas Rumpf
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://nim-lang.org/docs/tut2.html