* I deleted Alt-H and Alt-L because Ctrl-F and Ctrl-B serve the same
roles.
* Ctrl-W, Alt-D, Alt-F, and Alt-B behave more similarly to the same
key bindings on GNU readline.
* Improved documentation of REPL keybindings on man page.
* Home and End keys now work on more terminal environments.
* Removed bindings for `Esc OH` and `Esc OF` because andrewchambers
doesn't need those bindings and the bindings don't seem to make much
sense for Home and End. `Esc O` is Single Shift Select of G3 Character
Set in xterm. https://invisible-island.net/xterm/ctlseqs/ctlseqs.html
Also add a few ctrl sequences from readline, and
ignore unknown ctrl sequences.
Address #264
Adds Ctrl-n, Ctrl-p, and Ctrl-w
Ignores unknown ctrl sequences
No alt-* sequences yet.
This allows easy builds of the full interpreter with no
build system.
1. Get janet.c, janet.h, janetconf.h, and shell.c in a directory. Edit
janetconf.h as desired.
2. gcc shell.c janet.c -lm -ldl -O2 -o janet (on GNU-Linux for example)
3. ./janet -h (Yay!)
This makes it easier to get the CLI functionality when
embedding Janet, although the main reason is the init script
is now pre-compiled to bytecode when generating the boot image.
Flychecking will now work correctly with arity checking, and
will better handle imports. Well structured modules should interact
cleanly with the flychecker in a mostly safe manner, but maliciously
crafted modules can execute arbitrary code. As such, the flychecker is
not a good way to validate completely untrusted modules.
We also extend run-context with an :evaluator option to replace
:compile-only. This is more flexible and allows users to create their
own flychecker like functionality.
This should be friendlier to most users. It does, however, mean
we lose range information. However, range information could be
recovered by re-parsing, as janet's grammar is simple enough to do this.
We will probably shift to NSIS as the default
installation method for windows. Shipping around a
single binary just doesn't cut it if we want to be able
to reliably use tools like `jpm` to build things.
- Allow passing a table to fibers, which make fiber level scope easier.
- Add fiber/getenv, fiber/setenv, dyn, and setdyn
- Remove meta, *env*, and *doc-width*
- Some functions changed dignatures, and no longer take an env