If a line ended with a string's closing quote, or a newline escape, then
skipping over that line via IF/ELIF/ELSE would fail to count that line,
offsetting the rest of the file.
I have no idea why but for some reason 9829be1 changed *specifically*
`if_skip_to_else` to have incorrect behavior on string endings. The incorrect
behavior on newline escapes seems to have been here since the beginning.
Also added a test to check for both of those behaviors in both functions.
Honestly, it baffles me that nobody ever noticed. I didn't until I started
working on #395.
Unlike macros, REPTs and INCLUDEs, this recursion depth is independent.
This is intentional, because string expansions work very differently.
While it's easy to know when a string expansion begins, checking where it
ends is much more complicated, since the expansion's contents are simply
injected back into the lex buffer. Therefore, the depth has to be checked
after lexing took place.
Because of this, the placement of the expansion end check is somewhat
haphazard, but I think it's good. While I have no certainty, all tests
ended with all expansions properly ended, and I couldn't find any pitfalls.
Finally, `pCurrentStringExpansion` has been made global so error printing
can use it to tell the user if an error occurred inside of an expansion.
REPT blocks nested in macros (and possibly other cases) leaked
memory on every call. Unlike most other memory leaks, which would
be freed at the end of program execution if they were done properly,
those piled up the more compilation went on.
I believe memory usage could have started being fairly high on
large projects following the "one master file INCLUDEs all the rest"
so this may have actually been worth it.
sym_SetMacroArgID used a `sprintf` that could write no \0.
In practice this was benign because %u cannot print 256 chars,
but better future-proof this.
(And REPT.)
Not exactly a *recursion* limit, more like a *stack depth* limit,
but calling it "recursion" conveys its purpose better.
The default of 64 is super overkill: even in a a project with
what I believe to be above-average levels of nesting, the
level only peaked at 6.
Keeping in mind the purpose of this is to catch infinite
recursion, which is still caught quickly (in usual cases, anyways),
this default seems sensible.
And it passes tests. What more do you need?
This adds two new directives: newcharmap and setcharmap.
newcharmap creates a new charmap and switches to it.
setcharmap switches to an existing charmap.
While working on #392, I noticed that the macro-@ test (as well
as the line-continuation test, but for that one see #393)
printed an additional '@(-1)' entry which doesn't make sense.
When trying to skip over nested if statements, if there was no whitespace
after an "if", then that "if" would not be recognized. That's a problem since
"if(" and "if{" are also valid ways to start an if statement. This change
will make it so that they are recognized correctly.
c75a953 broke my (previously-working) project that defined, via
macros, 'sizeof_.player'.
A test was added to confirm that those are indeed accepted
outside of macros.
Should partially cover #178 and close#270.
This allows printing numbers in different bases and without the dollar prefix
This is especially useful in macros because the dollar isnt a valid character
for symbol names, requiring heavy `STRSUB` usage.
When trying to fix a section becoming too large, the size it reached is necessary to know whether to optimize away a few bytes or split it entirely.
This error is also commonly encountered when INCBINing too large a slice of a file, in which case the amount of bytes by which the section is too large is again an useful information
Previously, a PUSHS before a SECTION directive would cause rgbasm to crash when encountering a subsequent POPS.
This is because the subsequently-called out_setCurrentSection() expected the new section to be non-null, which wasn’t the case in this situation. This has been addressed by allowing the ‘null’ section to be set in this function, and only dereferencing it (to set nPC) if a non-null section is to be set.
In practice, this means that PUSHS/POPS can now be used to push/restore a context without a section.