8.7 KiB
Literals and initializers
Numeric literals
Decimal: 1
, 10
Binary: %0101
, 0b101001
Quaternary: 0q2131
Octal: 0o172
Hexadecimal: $D323
, 0x2a2
When using Intel syntax for inline assembly, another hexadecimal syntax is available: 0D323H
, 2a2h
.
It is not allowed in any other places.
The type of a literal is the smallest type of undefined signedness
that can fit either the unsigned or signed representation of the value:
200
is a byte
, 4000
is a word
, 75000
is an int24
etc.
However, padding the literal to the left with zeroes changes the type
to the smallest type that can fit the smallest number with the same number of digits and without padding.
For example, 0002
is of type word
, as 1000 does not fit in one byte.
String literals
String literals can be used as either array initializers or expressions of type pointer
.
String literals are equivalent to constant arrays. Writing to them via their pointer is undefined behaviour.
If a string literal is used as an expression, then the text data will be located in the default code segment, regardless of which code segment the current function is located it. This may be subject to change in future releases.
String literals are surrounded with double quotes and optionally followed by the name of the encoding:
"this is a string" ascii
"this is also a string"
If there is no encoding name specified, then the default
encoding is used.
Two encoding names are special and refer to platform-specific encodings:
default
and scr
.
Zero-terminated strings
You can also append z
to the name of the encoding to make the string zero-terminated.
This means that the string will have a string terminator appended, usually a single byte.
The exact value of that byte is encoding-dependent:
-
in the
vectrex
encoding it's 128, -
in the
zx80
encoding it's 1, -
in the
zx81
encoding it's 11, -
in the
petscr
andpetscrjp
encodings it's 224, -
in the
atascii
encoding it's 219, -
in the
utf16be
andutf16le
encodings it's exceptionally two bytes: 0, 0 -
in other encodings it's 0 (this may be a subject to change in future versions).
"this is a zero-terminated string" asciiz "this is also a zero-terminated string"z
The byte constant nullchar
is defined to be equal to the string terminator in the default
encoding (or, in other words, to '{nullchar}'
)
and the byte constant nullchar_scr
is defined to be equal to the string terminator in the scr
encoding ('{nullchar}'scr
).
You can override the values for nullchar
and nullchar_scr
by defining preprocesor features NULLCHAR
and NULLCHAR_SCR
respectively.
Warning: If you define UTF-16 to be you default or screen encoding, you will encounter several problems:
nullchar
andnullchar_scr
will still be bytes, equal to zero.- the
string
module in the Millfork standard library will not work correctly
Escape sequences and miscellaneous compatibility issues
Most characters between the quotes are interpreted literally.
To allow characters that cannot be inserted normally,
each encoding may define escape sequences.
Every encoding is guaranteed to support at least
{q}
for double quote
and {apos}
for single quote/apostrophe.
The number of bytes used to represent given characters may differ from the number of the characters.
For example, the petjp
, msx_jp
and jis
encodings represent ポ as two separate characters, and therefore two bytes.
For the list of all text encodings and escape sequences, see this page.
In some encodings, multiple characters are mapped to the same byte value, for compatibility with multiple variants.
If the characters in the literal cannot be encoded in particular encoding, an error is raised.
However, if the command-line option -flenient-encoding
is used,
then literals using default
and scr
encodings replace unsupported characters with supported ones,
skip unsupported escape sequences, and a warning is issued.
For example, if -flenient-encoding
is enabled, then a literal "£¥↑ž©ß"
is equivalent to:
-
"£Y↑z(C)ss"
if the default encoding ispet
-
"£Y↑z©ss"
if the default encoding isbbc
-
"?Y^z(C)ss"
if the default encoding isascii
-
"?Y^ž(C)ss"
if the default encoding isiso_yu
-
"?Y^z(C)ß"
if the default encoding isiso_de
-
"?¥^z(C)ss"
if the default encoding isjisx
-
"£¥^z(C)β"
if the default encoding ismsx_intl
Note that the final length of the string may vary.
Character literals
Character literals are surrounded by single quotes and optionally followed by the name of the encoding:
'x' ascii
'W'
Character literals have to be separated from preceding operators with whitespace:
a='a' // wrong
a = 'a' // ok
From the type system point of view, they are constants of type byte.
If the character cannot be represented as one byte, an error is raised.
For the list of all text encodings and escape sequences, see this page.
If the characters in the literal cannot be encoded in particular encoding, an error is raised.
However, if the command-line option -flenient-encoding
is used,
then literals using default
and scr
encodings replace unsupported characters with supported ones.
If the replacement is one character long, only a warning is issued, otherwise an error is raised.
Struct constructors
You can create a constant of a given struct type by listing constant values of fields as arguments:
struct point { word x, word y }
point(5,6)
Array initializers
An array is initialized with either:
-
(only byte arrays) a string literal
-
(only byte arrays) a
file
expression -
a
for
-style expression -
(only byte arrays) a format, followed by an array initializer:
-
@word_le
: for every term of the array initializer, emit two bytes, first being the low byte of the value, second being the high byte:
@word_le [$1122]
is equivalent to[$22, $11]
-
@word_be
– like the above, but opposite:
@word_be [$1122]
is equivalent to[$11, $22]
-
@word
: equivalent to@word_le
on little-endian architectures and@word_be
on big-endian architectures -
@long
,@long_le
,@long_be
: similar, but with four bytes
@long_le [$11223344]
is equivalent to[$44, $33, $22, $11]
@long_be [$11223344]
is equivalent to[$11, $22, $33, $44]
-
@struct
: every term of the initializer is interpreted as a struct constructor (see below) and treated as a list of bytes with no padding
@struct [s(1, 2)]
is equivalent to[1, 2]
whenstruct s {byte x, byte y}
is defined
@struct [s2(1, 2), s2(3, 4)]
is equivalent to[1, 0, 2, 0, 3, 0, 4, 0]
on little-endian machines whenstruct s2 {word x, word y}
is defined
-
-
a list of literals and/or other array initializers, surrounded by brackets:
array a = [1, 2] array b = "----" scr array c = ["hello world!" ascii, 13] array d = file("d.bin") array d1 = file("d.bin", 128) array e = file("d.bin", 128, 256) array f = for x,0,until,8 [x * 3 + 5] // equivalent to [5, 8, 11, 14, 17, 20, 23, 26] array(point) g = [point(2,3), point(5,6)] array(point) i = for x,0,until,100 [point(x, x+1)]
Trailing commas ([1, 2,]
) are not allowed.
The parameters for file
are: file path, optional start offset, optional length
(if only two parameters are present, then the second one is assumed to be the start offset).
The file
expression is expanded at the compile time to an array of bytes equal to the bytes contained in the file.
If the start offset is present, then that many bytes at the start of the file are skipped.
If the length is present, then only that many bytes are taken, otherwise, all bytes until the end of the file are taken.
The for
-style expression has a variable, a starting index, a direction, a final index,
and a parameterizable array initializer.
The initializer is repeated for every value of the variable in the given range.
Struct constructors look like a function call, where the callee name is the name of the struct type
and the parameters are the values of fields in the order of declaration.
Fields of arithmetic, pointer and enum types are declared using normal expressions.
Fields of struct types are declared using struct constructors.
Fields of union types cannot be declared.
What might be useful is the fact that the compiler allows for certain built-in functions in constant expressions only:
-
sin(x, n)
– returns n·sin(xπ/128) -
cos(x, n)
– returns n·cos(xπ/128) -
tan(x, n)
– returns n·tan(xπ/128) -
min(x,...)
– returns the smallest argument -
max(x,...)
– returns the largest argument