For IU Compiler course
Maintained by: Hongbo Chen, Sandy Wheeler, Louis Labuzienski
The framework of this repo is from IUCompilerCourse/python-student-support-code.
I use pyenv
to manage Python environment. Since match
clause is just introduced in Python 3.10, which is still an rc
version and not stable yet, it can be installed using pyenv
and related packages can also be managed in a clean fashion.
Support code for students (Python version).
The runtime.c file needs to be compiled by doing the following
gcc -c -g -std=c99 runtime.c
This will produce a file named runtime.o. The -g flag is to tell the compiler to produce debug information that you may need to use the gdb (or lldb) debugger.
Please use run-tests.py
to check our test cases for lambda.
use python run-tests.py <chapter>
Where chapter is one of the chapters we've covered in the course:
var, conditional, loop, tuple, function, lambda, bug
Use keyword all to run them all except for bug
To test our lambda functionality run python run-tests.py lambda
To test all functionality run python run-testes.py all
To compile and run all tests at the same time gcc -c -g -std=c99 runtime.c & python run-tests.py all
Note: Certain passes cannot be checked (select instructions and onward), but just pay attention to the overall output of the program. Also, a detailed output (tracing) can be toggled on or off by commenting line enable_tracing().
Note2: There are two test cases in the tests/bug directory that fail during run-tests.py. We are not certain as to why this is, but when we compile these test cases outside of run-tests.py there is no issue.
For the final project we implemented Chapter 8: Lexically Scoped Functions. This means we added Uniquify, Assignment Conversion, and Closure Conversion to our compiler.