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authorLeo Tenenbaum <pommicket@gmail.com>2020-01-29 11:37:25 -0500
committerLeo Tenenbaum <pommicket@gmail.com>2020-01-29 11:37:25 -0500
commit426d9c9977489f7adba7f4b554e8466a47e520f1 (patch)
treefd5e83ef2e7c8e16fd66f2784736337170ab32de /docs/00.html
parentd79ac12de0ceb4ff82f486c26608b754b145f0fc (diff)
made #foreign a part of the language
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/00.html')
-rw-r--r--docs/00.html7
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/docs/00.html b/docs/00.html
index b8c961c..cd0c352 100644
--- a/docs/00.html
+++ b/docs/00.html
@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ x := 0.0;
when no type is specified, it defaults to an <code>int</code>, whereas <code>0.0</code>
defaults to a <code>float</code>.</p>
-<p>Here are all of toc&rsquo;s builtin types and their ranges of values:</p>
+<p>Here are all of toc's builtin types and their ranges of values:</p>
<ul>
<li><code>int</code> - A 64-bit signed integer (always), -9223372036854775808 to 9223372036854775807</li>
@@ -49,14 +49,13 @@ defaults to a <code>float</code>.</p>
<li><code>char</code> - A character. The specific values are technically platform-dependent, but usually there are 256 of them.</li>
</ul>
-
<p>At the moment, it is not technically guaranteed that <code>f32</code>/<code>float</code> is actually 32-bit and that <code>f64</code> is actually 64-bit; they are platform dependent. Perhaps someday there will be a version of toc which does not compile to C, where that could be guaranteed.</p>
<p>To make declarations constant, use <code>::</code> instead of <code>:</code>. e.g.</p>
<p><code>
-x ::= 5+3;
+x ::= 5+3; <br />
y :: float = 5.123;
</code></p>
-<p>Here, &ldquo;constant&rdquo; means constant at compile time, not read-only as it does in C. One interesting thing about toc is that normal functions can run at compile time, so pretty much any expression is a valid initializer for a constant, e.g. doing <code>x ::= some_function();</code> runs <code>some_function</code> at compile time, not at run time.</p>
+<p>Here, "constant" means constant at compile time, not read-only as it does in C. One interesting thing about toc is that normal functions can run at compile time, so pretty much any expression is a valid initializer for a constant, e.g. doing <code>x ::= some_function();</code> runs <code>some_function</code> at compile time, not at run time.</p>