Add flattening of operator chains when building operator tree
Relates to #44
This commit is contained in:
parent
531b7b72a0
commit
d576cec9b9
@ -91,6 +91,15 @@ impl Operator {
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/// Returns true if chains of this operator should be flattened into one operator with many arguments.
|
||||
// Make this a const fn once #57563 is resolved
|
||||
fn is_flatten_chains(&self) -> bool {
|
||||
match self {
|
||||
Operator::Chain => true,
|
||||
_ => false,
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/// True if this operator is a leaf, meaning it accepts no arguments.
|
||||
// Make this a const fn once #57563 is resolved
|
||||
pub(crate) fn is_leaf(&self) -> bool {
|
||||
|
@ -383,6 +383,9 @@ impl Node {
|
||||
.last_mut()
|
||||
.unwrap()
|
||||
.insert_back_prioritized(node, false)
|
||||
} else if self.children.last().unwrap().operator().id() == node.operator().id() && node.operator().is_flatten_chains() && !self.children.last().unwrap().has_enough_children() {
|
||||
// The operators will be chained together, and the next value will be added to this nodes last child.
|
||||
Ok(())
|
||||
} else {
|
||||
if node.operator().is_leaf() {
|
||||
return Err(EvalexprError::AppendedToLeafNode);
|
||||
|
@ -194,6 +194,10 @@ impl From<Value> for EvalexprResult<Value> {
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
impl From<()> for Value {
|
||||
fn from(_: ()) -> Self { Value::Empty }
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
#[cfg(test)]
|
||||
mod tests {
|
||||
use value::{TupleType, Value};
|
||||
|
@ -605,3 +605,17 @@ fn test_serde() {
|
||||
assert_eq!(manual_tree.eval(), serde_tree.eval());
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
#[test]
|
||||
fn test_tuple_definitions() {
|
||||
assert_eq!(eval_empty("()"), Ok(()));
|
||||
assert_eq!(eval_int("(3)"), Ok(3));
|
||||
assert_eq!(eval_tuple("(3, 4)"), Ok(vec![Value::from(3), Value::from(4)]));
|
||||
assert_eq!(eval_tuple("2, (5, 6)"), Ok(vec![Value::from(2), Value::from(vec![Value::from(5), Value::from(6)])]));
|
||||
assert_eq!(eval_tuple("1, 2"), Ok(vec![Value::from(1), Value::from(2)]));
|
||||
assert_eq!(eval_tuple("1, 2, 3, 4"), Ok(vec![Value::from(1), Value::from(2), Value::from(3), Value::from(4)]));
|
||||
assert_eq!(eval_tuple("(1, 2, 3), 5, 6, (true, false, 0)"), Ok(vec![Value::from(vec![Value::from(1), Value::from(2), Value::from(3)]), Value::from(5), Value::from(6), Value::from(vec![Value::from(true), Value::from(false), Value::from(0)])]));
|
||||
assert_eq!(eval_tuple("1, (2)"), Ok(vec![Value::from(1), Value::from(2)]));
|
||||
assert_eq!(eval_tuple("1, ()"), Ok(vec![Value::from(1), Value::from(())]));
|
||||
assert_eq!(eval_tuple("1, ((2))"), Ok(vec![Value::from(1), Value::from(2)]));
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user