Add keywords and identifiers
Add comments
Add number literals
Add strings
Add a lot of new tokens
Add (and clean up) IF etc.
Improve reporting of unexpected chars / garbage bytes
Fix bug with and improved error messages when failing to open file
Add verbose-level messages about how files are opened
Enforce that files finish with a newline
Fix chars returned not being cast to unsigned char (may conflict w/ EOF)
Return null path when no file is open, rather than crash
Unify and improve error printing slightly
Known to be missing: macro expansion, REPT blocks, EQUS expansions
This should help make RGBDS portable to systems with 16-bit integers,
like DOS.
For kicks, use the macros for 16-bit and 8-bit integers.
Fix other miscellaneous things, like #include ordering and other
printf-format related things.
Reduce repitition in math.c while I'm there.
This touched a lot more code than initially expected, for two reasons.
First, this broke a big RGBASM assumption: that sections are always being
written to at their end. This plus other problems required touching
basically the entirety of `section.c`.
Second, I tried different solutions to solve the above problem, and along
the way I cleaned up many things around. (I believe that keeping this to
"cleanup" commits yields subpar results, and since it's boring they get
postponed anyways.)
RGBLINK support still needs to be added, but this will come next.
This should significantly improve performance: on pokecrystal builds, perf
reported as much CPU time spent on `yyparse` as on `sym_UseNewMacroArgs`
Measurements show ~6 seconds of improvement on that codebase.
This also fixes#321, as a bonus, due to saner management!
This was utterly stupid. The check right above ensured that `sym` was NULL,
ergo that the argument to `yyerror` *would* segfault.
The only two call sites cannot pass a non-NULL pointer anyways, which I'm
betting is why this went unnoticed.
I did what an optimizing compiler would do anyways: remove the dead code.
This causes it to auto-update whenever the current section's attributes are
updated, simplifying the code and eliminating redundancy.
This should also overall reduce overhead (one extra function call on each
PC evaluation, but less bookkeeping for each byte output)
Windows does not honor `%F` nor `%T` in `strftime`. These are worked around
by writing the full format they serve as a short for.
However, Windows also treats `%z` and `%Z` identically, where SUS instead
requires `%z` to output a ±XXXX offset.
Since the current information is broken (no information), this isn't *breaking*
anything, but at least provides something a human will probably understand.
`__ISO_8601_UTC__` is unaffected because it hardcodes the timezone character,
only `__ISO_8601_LOCAL__` suffers from this.
Stop using that bitfield for everything, including what can be determined otherwise
It also makes it easier to have a sane state, since some bits were (supposedly)
mutually exclusive