Files
c3c/lib/std/collections/range.c3
Christoffer Lerno 25bccf4883 New faults and syntax (#2034)
- Remove `[?]` syntax.
- Change `int!` to `int?` syntax.
- New `fault` declarations.
- Enum associated values can reference the calling enum.
2025-03-10 00:11:35 +01:00

66 lines
1.3 KiB
Plaintext

<*
@require Type.is_ordered : "The type must be ordered"
*>
module std::collections::range{Type};
import std::io;
struct Range (Printable)
{
Type start;
Type end;
}
fn usz Range.len(&self) @operator(len)
{
if (self.end < self.start) return 0;
return (usz)(self.end - self.start) + 1;
}
fn bool Range.contains(&self, Type value) @inline
{
return value >= self.start && value <= self.end;
}
<*
@require index < self.len() : "Can't index into an empty range"
*>
fn Type Range.get(&self, usz index) @operator([])
{
return (Type)(self.start + (usz)index);
}
fn usz? Range.to_format(&self, Formatter* formatter) @dynamic
{
return formatter.printf("[%s..%s]", self.start, self.end)!;
}
struct ExclusiveRange (Printable)
{
Type start;
Type end;
}
fn usz ExclusiveRange.len(&self) @operator(len)
{
if (self.end < self.start) return 0;
return (usz)(self.end - self.start);
}
fn bool ExclusiveRange.contains(&self, Type value) @inline
{
return value >= self.start && value < self.end;
}
fn usz? ExclusiveRange.to_format(&self, Formatter* formatter) @dynamic
{
return formatter.printf("[%s..<%s]", self.start, self.end)!;
}
<*
@require index < self.len() : "Can't index into an empty range"
*>
fn Type ExclusiveRange.get(&self, usz index) @operator([])
{
return (Type)(self.start + index);
}