Rename all example tests/companions to the XXXX-category-test-name scheme (per-category 100-blocks: basic 0010, types 0100, ... errors 1000, diagnostics 1100, ffi 1200, ffi-objc 1300, ffi-jni 1400, vectors 1500, platform 1600). Companions and dir/C fixtures move in lockstep with their parent test; #import/#source/#include paths rewritten to match. Expected output now lives in examples/expected/ (a sibling dir of the tests) split into three streams per the new convention: <name>.exit / <name>.stdout / <name>.stderr (+ optional <name>.ir) run_examples.sh rewritten: scans examples/ and issues/ for an expected/<name>.exit marker, captures stdout and stderr separately (no more 2>&1), compares each stream + exit + optional IR snapshot. Behavior validated unchanged: every renamed test reproduces its prior merged output + exit (diffs limited to file paths/basenames embedded in diagnostics + traces, which correctly reflect the new names). Suite: 292 passed, 0 failed. 50-smoke.sx split + issue relocation + docs follow in subsequent commits.
33 lines
1.2 KiB
Plaintext
33 lines
1.2 KiB
Plaintext
// First runnable `try` (ERR step E1.4a). The STANDALONE form: a failable
|
|
// expression whose failure propagates to the enclosing function's error
|
|
// return (Zig-style). `outer` calls `try inner(n)` — on `inner`'s failure
|
|
// `outer` returns that error; on success it continues. Both are pure
|
|
// failable (`-> !E`). The error-channel tuple ABI for value-carrying
|
|
// `-> (T, !)` and `try` in an `or` chain land in ERR E1.4b/E2.
|
|
|
|
#import "modules/std.sx";
|
|
|
|
E :: error { Bad, Worse }
|
|
|
|
inner :: (n: s32) -> !E {
|
|
if n < 0 { raise error.Bad; }
|
|
return; // success — no error
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Propagates inner's error (standalone `try`, target = function return).
|
|
outer :: (n: s32) -> !E {
|
|
try inner(n);
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
main :: () -> s32 {
|
|
bad := outer(-1); // inner raises Bad -> outer propagates
|
|
good := outer(7); // inner succeeds -> outer succeeds
|
|
r : s32 = 0;
|
|
if bad == error.Bad { r = r + 5; } // true -> +5
|
|
if good == error.Bad { r = r + 1; } // false (success = no error)
|
|
if bad == error.Worse { r = r + 2; } // false (propagated Bad)
|
|
print("try result: {}\n", r); // -> 5
|
|
return r;
|
|
}
|