782 lines
9.5 KiB
Markdown
782 lines
9.5 KiB
Markdown
# Cordial Language Reference Guide
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Cordial is a simple, expression-based programming language embedded in Swiftly. This guide documents every working feature.
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## Evaluation Prefix
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All evaluation in the editor uses the `/=` prefix:
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```
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/= 2 + 3
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```
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Output:
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```
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5
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```
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## Types
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Cordial has five value types:
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- **number**: floating-point numbers (internally f64). Displayed as integers when they have no fractional part.
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- **bool**: `true` or `false`
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- **str**: strings in double quotes, with escape sequences (`\n`, `\t`, `\\`, `\"`)
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- **array**: ordered collections of values
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- **void**: the value returned by statements with no explicit value
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## Variables
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### Declaration
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Use `let` to declare and initialize a variable:
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```
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let x = 5
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/= x
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```
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Output:
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```
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5
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```
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### Type Annotations
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Optionally annotate the type after the variable name:
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```
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let x: int = 3.7
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/= x
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```
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Output:
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```
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3
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```
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Supported type annotations:
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- `int`: truncates numbers to integers
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- `float`: accepts any number (no coercion)
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- `bool`: converts 0 to `false`, 1 to `true`; rejects other numbers
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- `str`: only accepts strings
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```
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let b: bool = 1
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/= b
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```
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Output:
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```
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true
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```
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### Assignment
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Reassign an existing variable without `let`:
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```
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let x = 5
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x = 10
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/= x
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```
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Output:
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```
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10
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```
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## Operators
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### Arithmetic
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- `+`: addition or string concatenation
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- `-`: subtraction
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- `*`: multiplication
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- `/`: division (errors on division by zero)
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- `%`: modulo
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- `^`: exponentiation (right-associative)
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```
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/= 2 ^ 3 ^ 2
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```
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Output:
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```
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512
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```
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(Evaluated as 2 ^ (3 ^ 2) = 2 ^ 9 = 512)
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### Comparison
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All comparison operators return booleans:
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- `<`: less than
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- `>`: greater than
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- `<=`: less than or equal
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- `>=`: greater than or equal
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- `==`: equality
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- `!=`: inequality
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```
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/= 5 > 3
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```
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Output:
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```
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true
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```
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### Logical
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- `&&`: logical AND (short-circuits)
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- `||`: logical OR (short-circuits)
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- `!`: logical NOT
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```
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/= true && false
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```
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Output:
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```
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false
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```
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```
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/= !true
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```
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Output:
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```
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false
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```
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### Operator Precedence
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From lowest to highest:
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1. `||`
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2. `&&`
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3. `==`, `!=`, `<`, `>`, `<=`, `>=`
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4. `+`, `-`
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5. `*`, `/`, `%`
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6. `^` (right-associative)
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7. unary `-`, `!`
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8. function calls, array literals
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## Strings
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String literals use double quotes:
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```
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/= "hello"
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```
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Output:
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```
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hello
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```
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Escape sequences:
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- `\n`: newline
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- `\t`: tab
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- `\\`: backslash
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- `\"`: double quote
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### String Concatenation
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Strings concatenate with the `+` operator. Numbers and booleans are automatically converted:
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```
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/= "value: " + 42
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```
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Output:
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```
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value: 42
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```
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```
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/= 100 + " items"
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```
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Output:
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```
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100 items
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```
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## Arrays
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### Literals
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Create arrays with square brackets:
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```
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/= [1, 2, 3]
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```
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Output:
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```
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[1, 2, 3]
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```
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Arrays can contain mixed types:
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```
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/= [1, "two", true]
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```
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Output:
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```
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[1, "two", true]
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```
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Empty arrays:
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```
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/= []
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```
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Output:
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```
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[]
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```
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### Indexing
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Access elements by index (zero-based):
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```
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let arr = [10, 20, 30]
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/= arr[1]
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```
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Output:
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```
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20
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```
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Negative indices count from the end:
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```
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/= [10, 20, 30][-1]
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```
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Output:
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```
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30
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```
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Out-of-bounds access returns an error.
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### String Indexing
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Strings support the same index syntax, returning individual characters:
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```
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/= "hello"[0]
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```
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Output:
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```
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h
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```
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## Functions
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### Definition
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Define functions with the `fn` keyword:
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```
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fn add(a, b) {
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a + b
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}
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```
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The last expression in the function body is returned implicitly. An explicit `return` statement is also available for early exit.
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```
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fn square(x) {
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x * x
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}
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/= square(5)
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```
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Output:
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```
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25
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```
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### Scope
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Function parameters are local to the function. The function saves and restores the variable scope:
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```
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let x = 10
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fn modify() {
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x = 5
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}
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modify()
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/= x
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```
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Output:
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```
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10
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```
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(x inside the function is a separate variable; the outer x is unchanged)
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### Recursion
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Functions can call themselves recursively, up to a maximum call depth of 256:
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```
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fn fib(n) {
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let a = 0
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let b = 1
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let i = 0
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while (i < n) {
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let tmp = b
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b = a + b
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a = tmp
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i = i + 1
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}
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a
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}
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/= fib(10)
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```
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Output:
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```
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55
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```
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## Control Flow
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### While Loops
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Loop while a condition is truthy:
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```
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let i = 0
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let sum = 0
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while (i < 10) {
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sum = sum + i
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i = i + 1
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}
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/= sum
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```
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Output:
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```
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45
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```
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Parentheses around the condition are optional (but recommended for clarity).
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Loop safety: while loops are limited to 10,000 iterations to prevent infinite loops.
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### If/Else
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Conditional branching with optional else clause:
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```
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let x = 10
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if x > 5 {
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x = 1
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} else {
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x = 0
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}
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/= x
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```
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Output:
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```
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1
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```
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Parentheses around the condition are optional. Else-if chaining works:
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```
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let grade = 85
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let letter = "F"
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if grade >= 90 {
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letter = "A"
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} else if grade >= 80 {
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letter = "B"
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} else if grade >= 70 {
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letter = "C"
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}
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/= letter
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```
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Output:
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```
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B
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```
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### For Loops
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Iterate over arrays or ranges:
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```
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let sum = 0
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for x in [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] {
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sum = sum + x
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}
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/= sum
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```
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Output:
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```
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15
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```
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Using a range expression (`start..end`, exclusive of end):
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```
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let sum = 0
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for i in 0..5 {
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sum = sum + i
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}
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/= sum
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```
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Output:
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```
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10
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```
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The `range(start, end)` builtin function also works:
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```
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let sum = 0
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for i in range(1, 6) {
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sum = sum + i
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}
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/= sum
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```
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Output:
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```
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15
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```
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For loops are limited to 10,000 iterations.
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### Return Statements
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Use `return` for early exit from functions:
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```
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fn abs_val(x) {
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if x < 0 {
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return -x
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}
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x
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}
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/= abs_val(-7)
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```
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Output:
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```
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7
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```
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Bare `return` (with no value) returns `false`.
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## Builtin Functions
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### Math Functions
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All math functions accept a single number and return a number:
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- `sin(x)`: sine
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- `cos(x)`: cosine
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- `tan(x)`: tangent
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- `asin(x)`: arc sine
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- `acos(x)`: arc cosine
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- `atan(x)`: arc tangent
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- `sqrt(x)`: square root
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- `abs(x)`: absolute value
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- `floor(x)`: round down
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- `ceil(x)`: round up
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- `round(x)`: round to nearest integer
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- `ln(x)`: natural logarithm
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- `log(x)`: base-10 logarithm
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```
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/= sqrt(16)
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```
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Output:
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```
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4
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```
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```
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/= abs(-5)
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```
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Output:
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```
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5
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```
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```
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/= floor(3.7)
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```
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Output:
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```
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3
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```
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### Range Function
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`range(start, end)` returns an array of numbers from start to end (exclusive):
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```
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/= range(0, 5)
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```
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Output:
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```
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[0, 1, 2, 3, 4]
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```
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### Length Function
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`len()` returns the length of a string or array:
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```
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/= len("hello")
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```
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Output:
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```
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5
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```
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```
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/= len([1, 2, 3])
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```
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Output:
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```
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3
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```
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## Truthiness
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In boolean contexts (conditions, logical operators), values are truthy or falsy:
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- **bool**: `true` is truthy, `false` is falsy
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- **number**: 0 is falsy, all other numbers are truthy
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- **string**: empty string is falsy, all other strings are truthy
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- **array**: empty array is falsy, all other arrays are truthy
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- **void**: falsy
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- **error**: falsy
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Truthiness matters for `if`, `while`, `for` conditions and `&&`/`||` operators.
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## Ranges
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The `..` operator creates an array from start to end (exclusive):
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```
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/= 0..5
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```
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Output:
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```
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[0, 1, 2, 3, 4]
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```
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Ranges are primarily useful with `for` loops and can be stored in variables.
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## Negative Numbers
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Negative number literals are recognized in appropriate contexts:
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```
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/= -5
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```
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Output:
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```
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-5
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```
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```
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/= 10 + -3
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```
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Output:
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```
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7
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```
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The unary minus operator also works:
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```
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/= -(5 + 3)
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```
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Output:
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```
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-8
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```
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## Error Handling
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Errors are propagated as error values and displayed with an `error:` prefix:
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```
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/= undefined_var
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```
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Output:
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```
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error: undefined variable 'undefined_var'
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```
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```
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/= 1 / 0
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```
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Output:
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```
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error: division by zero
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```
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Multiple statements execute in sequence, and errors in one statement don't prevent subsequent statements from executing.
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## Comments
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Single-line comments use `//`:
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```
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// This is a comment
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let x = 5
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/= x
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```
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Comments can appear at the end of lines too.
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## Examples
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### Multi-step Calculation
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```
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let principal = 1000
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let rate = 0.05
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let years = 10
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let amount = principal * (1 + rate) ^ years
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/= amount
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```
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Output:
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```
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1628.89462382...
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```
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### Fibonacci
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```
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fn fib(n) {
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let a = 0
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let b = 1
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let i = 0
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while (i < n) {
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let tmp = b
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b = a + b
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a = tmp
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i = i + 1
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}
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a
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}
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/= fib(15)
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```
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Output:
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```
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610
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```
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### String Building
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```
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let greeting = "Hello"
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let name = "World"
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/= greeting + ", " + name + "!"
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```
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Output:
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```
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Hello, World!
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```
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## Display Formats
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### Inline (default)
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The standard `/=` prefix displays the result as a single value on the right edge of the editor:
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```
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let x = 42
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/= x
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```
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Result appears as: `→ 42`
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Arrays display inline:
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```
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/= [1, 2, 3]
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```
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Result: `→ [1, 2, 3]`
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### Table (`/=|`)
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The `/=|` prefix renders a 2D array (array of arrays) as a visual table overlay:
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```
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let data = [["Name", "Age"], ["Alice", 30], ["Bob", 25]]
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/=| data
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```
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The first row is treated as the header (rendered bold). Each subsequent row becomes a table row. Non-array values fall back to inline display.
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Works with any 2D array:
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```
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let matrix = [[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6], [7, 8, 9]]
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/=| matrix
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```
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### Tree (`/=\`)
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The `/=\` prefix renders nested data as an indented tree overlay:
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```
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let tree = [1, [2, 3], [4, [5, 6]]]
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/=\ tree
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```
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Nested arrays are expanded with tree-drawing characters showing depth. Leaf values display inline. The root shows the total element count.
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## Limitations
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- **No array mutation**: Arrays cannot be modified after creation (no `arr[i] = val`)
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- **No mutable references**: Variable reassignment creates new bindings in the current scope
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- **Maximum call depth**: 256 function calls deep
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- **Maximum loop iterations**: 10,000 iterations per while/for loop
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- **No user-defined types or structs**
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- **No imports or modules**
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- **No pattern matching or destructuring**
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- **No closures or lambdas**
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