!,
"zapcom"
Produce the Hoon AST of an expression.
Syntax
Two arguments, fixed.
Form | Syntax |
---|---|
Tall |
|
Wide |
|
Irregular | None. |
AST
[%zpcm p=hoon q=hoon]
Discussion
This produces the $hoon
AST of expression q
. The first argument, p
, is always an example of the $hoon
type, typically just the *hoon
bunt value, and is used for type inference. The reason for p
is just to handle transitions if the $hoon
type changes.
Examples
> !, *hoon [1 1][%cltr p=~[[%sand p=%ud q=1] [%sand p=%ud q=1]]]> !, *hoon (add 1 1)[%cncl p=[%wing p=~[%add]] q=~[[%sand p=%ud q=1] [%sand p=%ud q=1]]]
!>
"zapgar"
Wrap a noun in its type (form a vase
).
Syntax
One argument, fixed.
Form | Syntax |
---|---|
Tall |
|
Wide |
|
Irregular | None. |
AST
[%zpgr p=hoon]
Produces
A cell whose tail is the product of p
, and whose head is the static type of p
.
Discussion
In Hoon, a dynamic type is a static type compiled at runtime. This type-noun cell is generally called a vase
.
Examples
> !>(1)[#t/@ud q=1]
If you want just the type value, use a 'type spear'. This is -:!>
, i.e., the head of the cell produced by !>
:
> -:!>(1)#t/@ud
!<
"zapgal"
Extracts a vase
to the given mold if its type nests.
Syntax
Two arguments, fixed.
Form | Syntax |
---|---|
Tall |
|
Wide |
|
Irregular | None. |
AST
[%zpgl p=spec q=hoon]
Produces
The value of vase q
typed with the type of mold p
if possible, else a nest-fail
.
Discussion
This is something like a partial inverse to the !>
rune and can be used to extract a typed value from a vase
.
Examples
> !< @ !> ~zod0> !< @p !> 0nest-fail> !< tape !>("foobar")"foobar"
!;
"zapmic"
Wrap a noun in its type (raw).
Syntax
Two arguments, fixed.
Form | Syntax |
---|---|
Tall |
|
Wide |
|
Irregular | None. |
AST
[%zpmc p=hoon q=hoon]
Discussion
This wraps the product of q
in its inferred type. It's a raw version of !>
. Unlike zapgar, q
is not given a p
face and its type information is not stripped to a raw noun.
The first field, p
, must be an example of the $type
type, typically just *type
(the bunt of $type
). The p
argument is just so transitions can be handled if the $type
type changes.
It's unlikely you'd use this rune directly; !>
is much more typical.
Examples
> !; *type [1 1][#t/[@ud @ud] 1 1]> !; *type 'foo'[#t/@t 'foo']
!=
"zaptis"
Make the Nock formula for a Hoon expression.
Syntax
One argument, fixed.
Form | Syntax |
---|---|
Tall |
|
Wide |
|
Irregular | None. |
AST
[%zpts p=hoon]
Produces
The Nock generated by p
.
Discussion
Don't confuse !=
with a negation, !
, followed by a test for equality, =(10 11)
.
Examples
> !=(20)[1 20]> !=(~zod)[1 0]> !=((add 2 2))[8 [9 3.110.356 0 31] 9 2 [0 4] [7 [0 3] 1 2 2] 0 11]
Don't confuse the !=
rune with:
> !=(10 11)%.y> !=(10 10)%.n
The syntax difference is that a test for equality takes two subexpressions, and the !=
rune only one.
!?
"zapwut"
Restrict Hoon version.
Syntax
Two arguments, fixed.
Form | Syntax |
---|---|
Tall |
|
Wide |
|
Irregular | None. |
AST
[%zpwt p=$@(p=@ [p=@ q=@]) q=hoon]
Produces
When p
is an atom:
q
ifp
≥ Hoon kelvin version, otherwise crash.
When p
is a cell:
q
, ifp.p
≥ Hoon kelvin version ≥q.p
, otherwise crash.
(Versions count down; the current version is 140.)
Examples
> !? [142 140] (add 2 2)4> !? 142 (add 2 2)4> !? 64 (add 2 2)! exit
!@
"zappat"
Branch on whether a wing exists.
Syntax
Three arguments, fixed.
Form | Syntax |
---|---|
Tall |
|
Wide |
|
Irregular | None. |
AST
[%zppt p=(list wing) q=hoon r=hoon]
Discussion
p
is a wing reference like foo
, bar.foo
, etc. If p
exists, q
. If p
does not exist, r
. Essentially, this is like ?:
for wing existence.
Examples
> =foo 42> !@(foo 'exists' 'does not exist')'exists'> !@(baz 'exists' 'does not exist')'does not exist'
!!
"zapzap"
Crash.
Syntax
No arguments.
Form | Syntax |
---|---|
Tall |
|
Wide |
|
Irregular | None. |
AST
[%zpzp ~]
Produces
Nothing. Always crashes, with type %void
.
Discussion
%void
nests in every other type, so you can stub out anything with !!
.
Examples
> !!dojo: hoon expression failed
!:
"zapcol"
Turn on stack trace.
Syntax
One argument, fixed
Form | Syntax |
---|---|
Tall |
|
Wide |
|
Irregular | None. |
Produces
The product of p
unless p
crashes, in which case a stack trace is given.
Discussion
!:
is used to turn on a debugging stack trace option for any code you have in p
.
Examples
> ?:(=(0 1) 123 !!)dojo: hoon expression failed> !: ?:(=(0 1) 123 !!)/~zod/base/~2022.4.2..08.54.53..07d7:<[1 5].[1 22]>/~zod/base/~2022.4.2..08.54.53..07d7:<[1 19].[1 21]>dojo: hoon expression failed
!.
"zapdot"
Turn off stack trace for a subexpression p
Syntax
One argument, fixed.
Form | Syntax |
---|---|
Tall |
|
Wide |
|
Irregular | None. |
Produces
The product of p
. If p
crashes, no stack trace entries are given for that code.
Discussion
!.
is used to turn off a debugging stack trace option for any code you have in p
. This rune can be embedded under a !:
rune for inner loops of your code that you don't want or need to trace. This is especially useful if a trace overflows the stack.
Examples
> %.(1 |=(a=@ ^-(@ ?:(=(a 10) !! $(a +(a))))))dojo: hoon expression failed> !: %.(1 |=(a=@ ^-(@ ?:(=(a 10) !! $(a +(a))))))/~zod/base/~2022.4.2..08.56.45..5ecc:<[1 5].[1 49]>/~zod/base/~2022.4.2..08.56.45..5ecc:<[1 17].[1 47]>/~zod/base/~2022.4.2..08.56.45..5ecc:<[1 22].[1 46]>...skipping some lines.../~zod/base/~2022.4.2..08.56.45..5ecc:<[1 22].[1 46]>/~zod/base/~2022.4.2..08.56.45..5ecc:<[1 33].[1 35]>dojo: hoon expression failed> !: %.(1 !.(|=(a=@ ^-(@ ?:(=(a 10) !! $(a +(a)))))))/~zod/base/~2022.4.2..08.57.07..d40b:<[1 5].[1 53]>dojo: hoon expression failed