- May 10, 2014
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Paul Sokolovsky authored
Should support everything supported by strings.
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Paul Sokolovsky authored
So one has some chance to convert numeric op code into symbol.
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- May 09, 2014
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Paul Sokolovsky authored
Add modtime implementation for mingw
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stijn authored
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Damien George authored
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Damien George authored
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Paul Sokolovsky authored
Also, "upgrade" project to "early beta", and elaborate pyboard description.
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- May 08, 2014
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Damien George authored
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Damien George authored
time.time: returns seconds since 1/1/2000, as an integer. time.localtime: Returns 8-tuple: (year, month, date, hour, minute, second, weekday, yearday).
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Paul Sokolovsky authored
Windows MS Visual C port
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Damien George authored
You can now do: X = const(123) Y = const(456 + X) and the compiler will replace X and Y with their values. See discussion in issue #266 and issue #573.
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stijn authored
Extend the windows port so it compiles with the toolchain from Visual Studio 2013
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- May 07, 2014
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Ilya Dmitrichenko authored
This is primarily intended to provide testing of Thumb-specific code within Travis CI as well as if anyone else want to run it locally. As discussed in purposes. This is currently agains an emulated Cortex-M3 core, however in the near future it can extended to support M0, M0+ as well M4 (work in progress exists in sushihangover/qemu). It's probably true that most of the code base can be covered running uPy natively on a POSIX system, however we do have the tiny bit of assembly code. There may exist bugs related to endianness and type aliases, let alone potential standard library or compiler bugs or even architecture-specific optimisations. This could also incorporate lwIP (or other TCP/IP stack) integration as well as SDIO+FATFS drivers. The solution to inline the test cases was chose due to simplicity. It could alternatively be implemented in a number of different way (see #515), but this looked the simplest. Inclusion of tinytest was just to avoid writing boilerplate code for counting failed tests and other utility functions. Currently only a few functions are used, however this could be extended. Checking in the code instead of using submodule was a personal preference, but if people do want the pain of submodules, this can provided. This particular framework is also pretty good if one desires to run unit test on target. The approach with scripts being inlined is probably not quite suited for the size of memory an MCU has, but the tinytest itself should be good, if lower-level C code is to be unit tested.
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Ilya Dmitrichenko authored
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Ilya Dmitrichenko authored
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Damien George authored
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Paul Sokolovsky authored
windows: Fix input.c missing in Makefile after changes for #582
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Paul Sokolovsky authored
Inspired by discussion in #577. So, in this case of builtin function, passing args by keyword has less than 1% overhead.
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Paul Sokolovsky authored
Passing 3 args with keywords is for example 50% slower than via positional args.
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Paul Sokolovsky authored
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Paul Sokolovsky authored
... and we have not that bad mapping type after all - lookup time is ~ the same as in one-attr instance. My namedtuple implementation on the other hand degrades awfully. So, need to rework it. First observation is that named tuple fields are accessed as attributes, so all names are interned at the program start. Then, really should store field array as qstr[], and do quick 32/64 bit scan thru it.
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Paul Sokolovsky authored
That's higher than instance field access - behold the power of hashing.
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stijn authored
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Damien George authored
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Damien George authored
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Damien George authored
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Damien George authored
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Damien George authored
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Damien George authored
Just a start, no working code yet. As per issue #573.
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Damien George authored
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Damien George authored
Add input command for unix
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Dave Hylands authored
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Damien George authored
windows: Enable math module
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stijn authored
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- May 06, 2014
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Paul Sokolovsky authored
Enable only on unix. To avoid unpleasant surprises with error codes.
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Paul Sokolovsky authored
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Paul Sokolovsky authored
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Paul Sokolovsky authored
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Paul Sokolovsky authored
In case of empty non-blocking read()/write(), both return None. read() cannot return 0, as that means EOF, so returns another value, and then write() just follows. This is still pretty unexpected, and typical "if not len:" check would treat this as EOF. Well, non-blocking files require special handling! This also kind of makes it depending on POSIX, but well, anything else should emulate POSIX anyway ;-).
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Damien George authored
Doesn't help with RAM reduction because doc strings are interned as soon as they are encountered, which is too soon to do any optimisations on them.
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