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120 lines
3.8 KiB
Markdown
120 lines
3.8 KiB
Markdown
TODO for SixtyPical
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===================
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Language
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--------
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### Save values to other-than-the-stack
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Allow
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save a to temp_a {
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...
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}
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Which uses some other storage location instead of the stack. A local non-static
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would be a good candidate for such. At any rate, the location must not
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be writeable by anything that is called from within the block. So, probably
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just restrict this to local non-statics.
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### Copy byte to/from table
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Do we want a `copy bytevar, table + x` instruction? We don't currently have one.
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You have to `ld a`, `st a`. I think maybe we should have one.
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### Character literals
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For goodness sake, let the programmer say `'A'` instead of `65`.
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### Character set mapping
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Not all computers think `'A'` should be `65`. Allow the character set to be
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mapped. Probably copy what Ophis does.
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### "Include" directives
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Search a searchlist of include paths. And use them to make libraries of routines.
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One such library routine might be an `interrupt routine` type for various architectures.
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Since "the supervisor" has stored values on the stack, we should be able to trash them
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with impunity, in such a routine.
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### Pointers into non-byte tables
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Right now you cannot get a pointer into a non-byte (for instance, word or vector) table.
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Word and vector tables are stored as two byte tables in memory. This is useful for
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indexed access, but makes pointer access more difficult.
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Laying them out for pointer access would make indexed access more difficult.
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### Saving non-byte values
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Right now you cannot save a word value.
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There doesn't seem to be a hugely pressing reason why not.
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Analysis
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--------
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### Forbid recursion
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What happens if a routine calls itself, directly or indirectly? Many
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constraints might be violated in this case. We should probably disallow
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recursion by default. (Which means assembling the callgraph in all cases.)
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### Analyze memory usage
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If you define two variables that occupy the same address, an analysis error ought
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to be raised. (But there should also be a way to annotate this as intentional.
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Intentionally making two tables overlap could be valuable. However, the analysis
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will probably completely miss this fact.)
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Optimization
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------------
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### Space optimization of local non-statics
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If there are two routines A and B, and A never calls B (even indirectly), and
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B never calls A (even indirectly), then their non-static locals can
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be allocated at the same space.
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This is not just an impressive trick -- in the presence of local pointers, which
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use up a word in zero-page, which we consider a precious resource, it allow those
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zero-page locations to be re-used.
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Implementation
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--------------
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### Line numbers in analysis error messages
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For analysis errors, there is a line number, but it's the line of the routine
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after the routine in which the analysis error occurred. Fix this.
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### Libraries
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Now that we have dead-code removal, establish some libraries of reusable
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routines.
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Blue-skying
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-----------
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### Pointers associated globally with a table(?)
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We have `point into` blocks, but we would also like to sometimes pass a pointer
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around to different routines, and have them all "know" what table it operates on.
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We could associate every pointer variable with a specific table variable, in its
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declaration. This makes some things simple, and would allow us to know what table a
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pointer is supposed to point into, even if that pointer was passed into our routine.
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One drawback is that it would limit each pointer to be used only on one table. Since a
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pointer basically represents a zero-page location, and since those are a relatively scarce
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resource, we would prefer if a single pointer could be used to point into different tables
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at different times.
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These can co-exist with general, non-specific-table-linked `pointer` variables.
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If we have local pointers and space optimization for local non-statics, though,
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these don't add as much.
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