OILS / demo / shedskin / const.py View on Github | oilshell.org

35 lines, 2 significant
1"""
2const.py
3"""
4
5DEFAULT_INT_WIDTH = 3 # 24 bits
6
7# 2^24 - 1 is used as an invalid/uninitialized value for ASDL integers.
8
9# Why? We have a few use cases for invalid/sentinel values:
10# - span_id, line_id. Sometimes we don't have a span ID.
11# - file descriptor: 'read x < f.txt' vs 'read x 0< f.txt'
12#
13# Other options for representation:
14#
15# 1. ADSL could use signed integers, then -1 is valid.
16# 2. Use a type like fd = None | Some(int fd)
17#
18# I don't like #1 because ASDL is lazily-decoded, and then we have to do sign
19# extension on demand. (24 bits to 32 or 64). As far as I can tell, sign
20# extension requires a branch, at least in portable C (on the sign bit).
21#
22# The second option is semantically cleaner. But it needlessly
23# inflates the size of both the source code and the data. Instead of having a
24# single "inline" integer, we would need a reference to another value.
25#
26# We could also try to do some fancy thing like fd = None |
27# Range<1..max_fd>(fd), with smart encoding. But that is overkill for these
28# use cases.
29#
30# Using InvalidInt instead of -1 seems like a good compromise.
31
32NO_INTEGER = (1 << (DEFAULT_INT_WIDTH * 8)) - 1
33
34# NOTE: In Python: 1 << (n * 8) - 1 is wrong! I thought that bit shift would
35# have higher precedence.