reference, declarationdefinition
definition → references, declarations, derived classes, virtual overrides
reference to multiple definitions → definitions
unreferenced
    1
    2
    3
    4
    5
    6
    7
    8
    9
   10
   11
   12
   13
   14
   15
   16
   17
   18
   19
   20
   21
   22
   23
   24
   25
   26
   27
   28
   29
   30
   31
   32
   33
   34
   35
   36
   37
   38
   39
   40
   41
   42
   43
   44
   45
   46
   47
   48
   49
   50
   51
   52
   53
   54
   55
   56
   57
   58
   59
   60
   61
   62
   63
   64
   65
   66
   67
   68
   69
   70
   71
   72
   73
   74
   75
   76
   77
   78
   79
   80
   81
   82
   83
   84
   85
   86
   87
   88
   89
   90
   91
   92
   93
   94
   95
   96
   97
   98
   99
  100
  101
  102
  103
  104
  105
  106
  107
  108
  109
  110
  111
  112
  113
  114
  115
  116
  117
  118
  119
  120
  121
  122
  123
  124
  125
  126
  127
  128
  129
  130
  131
  132
  133
  134
  135
  136
  137
  138
  139
  140
  141
  142
  143
  144
  145
  146
  147
  148
  149
  150
  151
  152
  153
  154
  155
  156
  157
  158
  159
  160
  161
  162
  163
  164
  165
  166
  167
  168
  169
  170
  171
  172
  173
  174
  175
  176
  177
  178
  179
  180
  181
  182
  183
  184
  185
  186
  187
  188
  189
  190
  191
  192
  193
  194
  195
  196
  197
  198
  199
  200
  201
  202
  203
  204
  205
  206
  207
  208
  209
  210
  211
  212
  213
  214
  215
  216
  217
  218
  219
  220
  221
  222
  223
  224
  225
  226
  227
  228
  229
  230
  231
  232
  233
  234
  235
  236
  237
  238
  239
  240
  241
  242
  243
  244
  245
  246
  247
  248
  249
  250
  251
  252
  253
  254
  255
  256
  257
  258
  259
  260
  261
  262
  263
  264
  265
  266
  267
  268
  269
  270
  271
  272
  273
  274
  275
  276
  277
  278
  279
  280
  281
  282
  283
  284
  285
  286
  287
  288
  289
  290
  291
  292
  293
  294
  295
  296
  297
  298
  299
  300
  301
  302
  303
  304
  305
  306
  307
  308
  309
  310
  311
  312
  313
  314
  315
  316
  317
  318
  319
  320
  321
  322
  323
  324
  325
  326
  327
  328
  329
  330
  331
  332
  333
  334
  335
  336
  337
  338
  339
  340
  341
  342
  343
  344
  345
  346
  347
  348
  349
  350
  351
  352
  353
  354
  355
  356
  357
  358
  359
  360
  361
  362
  363
  364
  365
  366
  367
  368
  369
  370
  371
  372
  373
  374
  375
  376
  377
  378
  379
  380
  381
  382
  383
  384
  385
  386
  387
  388
  389
  390
  391
  392
  393
  394
  395
  396
  397
  398
  399
  400
  401
  402
  403
  404
  405
  406
  407
  408
  409
  410
  411
  412
  413
  414
  415
  416
  417
  418
  419
  420
  421
  422
  423
  424
  425
  426
  427
  428
  429
  430
  431
  432
  433
  434
  435
  436
  437
  438
  439
  440
  441
  442
  443
  444
  445
  446
  447
  448
  449
  450
  451
  452
  453
  454
  455
  456
  457
  458
  459
  460
  461
  462
  463
  464
  465
  466
  467
  468
  469
  470
  471
  472
  473
  474
  475
  476
  477
  478
  479
  480
  481
  482
  483
  484
  485
  486
  487
  488
  489
  490
  491
  492
  493
  494
  495
  496
  497
  498
  499
  500
  501
  502
  503
  504
  505
  506
  507
  508
  509
  510
  511
  512
  513
  514
  515
  516
  517
  518
  519
  520
  521
  522
  523
  524
  525
  526
  527
  528
  529
  530
  531
  532
  533
  534
  535
  536
  537
  538
  539
  540
  541
  542
  543
  544
  545
  546
  547
  548
  549
  550
  551
  552
  553
  554
  555
  556
  557
  558
  559
  560
  561
  562
  563
  564
  565
  566
  567
  568
  569
  570
  571
  572
  573
  574
  575
  576
  577
  578
  579
  580
  581
  582
  583
  584
  585
  586
  587
  588
  589
  590
  591
  592
  593
  594
  595
  596
  597
  598
  599
  600
  601
  602
  603
  604
  605
  606
  607
  608
  609
  610
  611
  612
  613
  614
  615
  616
  617
  618
  619
  620
  621
  622
  623
  624
  625
  626
  627
  628
  629
  630
  631
  632
  633
  634
  635
  636
  637
  638
  639
  640
  641
  642
  643
  644
  645
  646
  647
  648
  649
  650
  651
  652
  653
  654
  655
  656
  657
  658
  659
  660
  661
  662
  663
  664
  665
  666
  667
  668
  669
  670
  671
  672
  673
  674
  675
  676
  677
  678
  679
  680
  681
  682
  683
  684
  685
  686
  687
  688
  689
  690
  691
  692
  693
  694
  695
  696
  697
  698
  699
  700
  701
  702
  703
  704
  705
  706
  707
  708
  709
  710
  711
  712
  713
  714
  715
  716
  717
  718
  719
  720
  721
  722
  723
  724
  725
  726
  727
  728
  729
  730
  731
  732
  733
  734
  735
  736
  737
  738
  739
  740
  741
  742
  743
  744
  745
  746
  747
  748
  749
  750
  751
  752
  753
  754
  755
  756
  757
  758
  759
  760
  761
  762
  763
  764
  765
  766
  767
  768
  769
  770
  771
  772
  773
  774
  775
  776
  777
  778
  779
  780
  781
  782
  783
  784
  785
  786
  787
  788
  789
  790
  791
  792
  793
  794
  795
  796
  797
  798
  799
  800
  801
  802
  803
  804
  805
  806
  807
  808
  809
  810
  811
  812
  813
  814
  815
  816
  817
  818
  819
  820
  821
  822
  823
  824
  825
  826
  827
  828
  829
  830
  831
  832
  833
  834
  835
  836
  837
  838
  839
  840
  841
  842
  843
  844
  845
  846
  847
  848
  849
  850
  851
  852
  853
  854
  855
  856
  857
  858
  859
  860
  861
  862
  863
  864
  865
  866
  867
  868
  869
  870
  871
  872
  873
  874
  875
  876
  877
  878
  879
  880
  881
  882
  883
  884
  885
  886
  887
  888
  889
  890
  891
  892
  893
  894
  895
  896
  897
  898
  899
  900
  901
  902
  903
  904
  905
  906
  907
  908
  909
  910
  911
  912
  913
  914
  915
  916
  917
  918
  919
  920
  921
  922
  923
  924
  925
  926
  927
  928
  929
  930
  931
  932
  933
  934
  935
  936
  937
  938
  939
  940
  941
  942
  943
  944
  945
  946
  947
  948
  949
  950
  951
  952
  953
  954
  955
  956
  957
  958
  959
  960
  961
  962
  963
  964
  965
  966
  967
  968
  969
  970
  971
  972
  973
  974
  975
  976
  977
  978
  979
  980
  981
  982
  983
  984
  985
  986
  987
  988
  989
  990
  991
  992
  993
  994
  995
  996
  997
  998
  999
 1000
 1001
 1002
 1003
 1004
 1005
 1006
 1007
 1008
 1009
 1010
 1011
 1012
 1013
 1014
 1015
 1016
 1017
 1018
 1019
 1020
 1021
 1022
 1023
 1024
 1025
 1026
 1027
 1028
 1029
 1030
 1031
 1032
 1033
 1034
 1035
 1036
 1037
 1038
 1039
 1040
 1041
 1042
 1043
 1044
 1045
 1046
 1047
 1048
 1049
 1050
 1051
 1052
 1053
 1054
 1055
 1056
 1057
 1058
 1059
 1060
 1061
 1062
 1063
 1064
 1065
 1066
 1067
 1068
 1069
 1070
 1071
 1072
 1073
 1074
 1075
 1076
 1077
 1078
 1079
 1080
 1081
 1082
 1083
 1084
 1085
 1086
 1087
 1088
 1089
 1090
 1091
 1092
 1093
 1094
 1095
 1096
 1097
 1098
 1099
 1100
 1101
 1102
 1103
 1104
 1105
 1106
 1107
 1108
 1109
 1110
 1111
 1112
 1113
 1114
 1115
 1116
 1117
 1118
 1119
 1120
 1121
 1122
 1123
 1124
 1125
 1126
 1127
 1128
 1129
 1130
 1131
 1132
 1133
 1134
 1135
 1136
 1137
 1138
 1139
 1140
 1141
 1142
 1143
 1144
 1145
 1146
 1147
 1148
 1149
 1150
 1151
 1152
 1153
 1154
 1155
 1156
 1157
 1158
 1159
 1160
 1161
 1162
 1163
 1164
 1165
 1166
 1167
 1168
 1169
 1170
 1171
 1172
 1173
 1174
 1175
 1176
 1177
 1178
 1179
 1180
 1181
 1182
 1183
 1184
 1185
 1186
 1187
 1188
 1189
 1190
 1191
 1192
 1193
 1194
 1195
 1196
 1197
 1198
 1199
 1200
 1201
 1202
 1203
 1204
 1205
 1206
 1207
 1208
 1209
 1210
 1211
 1212
 1213
 1214
 1215
 1216
 1217
 1218
 1219
 1220
 1221
 1222
 1223
 1224
 1225
 1226
 1227
 1228
 1229
 1230
 1231
 1232
 1233
 1234
 1235
 1236
 1237
 1238
 1239
 1240
 1241
 1242
 1243
 1244
 1245
 1246
 1247
 1248
 1249
 1250
 1251
 1252
 1253
 1254
 1255
 1256
 1257
 1258
 1259
 1260
 1261
 1262
 1263
 1264
 1265
 1266
 1267
 1268
 1269
 1270
 1271
 1272
 1273
 1274
 1275
 1276
 1277
 1278
 1279
 1280
 1281
 1282
 1283
 1284
 1285
 1286
 1287
 1288
 1289
 1290
 1291
 1292
 1293
 1294
 1295
 1296
 1297
 1298
 1299
 1300
 1301
 1302
 1303
 1304
 1305
 1306
 1307
 1308
 1309
 1310
 1311
 1312
 1313
 1314
 1315
 1316
 1317
 1318
 1319
 1320
 1321
 1322
 1323
 1324
 1325
 1326
 1327
 1328
 1329
 1330
 1331
 1332
 1333
 1334
 1335
 1336
 1337
 1338
 1339
 1340
 1341
 1342
 1343
 1344
 1345
 1346
 1347
 1348
 1349
 1350
 1351
 1352
 1353
 1354
 1355
 1356
 1357
 1358
 1359
 1360
 1361
 1362
 1363
 1364
 1365
 1366
 1367
 1368
 1369
 1370
 1371
 1372
 1373
 1374
 1375
 1376
 1377
 1378
 1379
 1380
 1381
 1382
 1383
 1384
 1385
 1386
 1387
 1388
 1389
 1390
 1391
 1392
 1393
 1394
 1395
 1396
 1397
 1398
 1399
 1400
 1401
 1402
 1403
 1404
 1405
 1406
 1407
 1408
 1409
 1410
 1411
 1412
 1413
 1414
 1415
 1416
 1417
 1418
 1419
 1420
 1421
 1422
 1423
 1424
 1425
 1426
 1427
 1428
 1429
 1430
 1431
 1432
 1433
 1434
 1435
 1436
 1437
 1438
 1439
 1440
 1441
============================================================
Kaleidoscope: Extending the Language: User-defined Operators
============================================================

.. contents::
   :local:

Chapter 6 Introduction
======================

Welcome to Chapter 6 of the "`Implementing a language with
LLVM <index.html>`_" tutorial. At this point in our tutorial, we now
have a fully functional language that is fairly minimal, but also
useful. There is still one big problem with it, however. Our language
doesn't have many useful operators (like division, logical negation, or
even any comparisons besides less-than).

This chapter of the tutorial takes a wild digression into adding
user-defined operators to the simple and beautiful Kaleidoscope
language. This digression now gives us a simple and ugly language in
some ways, but also a powerful one at the same time. One of the great
things about creating your own language is that you get to decide what
is good or bad. In this tutorial we'll assume that it is okay to use
this as a way to show some interesting parsing techniques.

At the end of this tutorial, we'll run through an example Kaleidoscope
application that `renders the Mandelbrot set <#kicking-the-tires>`_. This gives an
example of what you can build with Kaleidoscope and its feature set.

User-defined Operators: the Idea
================================

The "operator overloading" that we will add to Kaleidoscope is more
general than languages like C++. In C++, you are only allowed to
redefine existing operators: you can't programmatically change the
grammar, introduce new operators, change precedence levels, etc. In this
chapter, we will add this capability to Kaleidoscope, which will let the
user round out the set of operators that are supported.

The point of going into user-defined operators in a tutorial like this
is to show the power and flexibility of using a hand-written parser.
Thus far, the parser we have been implementing uses recursive descent
for most parts of the grammar and operator precedence parsing for the
expressions. See `Chapter 2 <OCamlLangImpl2.html>`_ for details. Without
using operator precedence parsing, it would be very difficult to allow
the programmer to introduce new operators into the grammar: the grammar
is dynamically extensible as the JIT runs.

The two specific features we'll add are programmable unary operators
(right now, Kaleidoscope has no unary operators at all) as well as
binary operators. An example of this is:

::

    # Logical unary not.
    def unary!(v)
      if v then
        0
      else
        1;

    # Define > with the same precedence as <.
    def binary> 10 (LHS RHS)
      RHS < LHS;

    # Binary "logical or", (note that it does not "short circuit")
    def binary| 5 (LHS RHS)
      if LHS then
        1
      else if RHS then
        1
      else
        0;

    # Define = with slightly lower precedence than relationals.
    def binary= 9 (LHS RHS)
      !(LHS < RHS | LHS > RHS);

Many languages aspire to being able to implement their standard runtime
library in the language itself. In Kaleidoscope, we can implement
significant parts of the language in the library!

We will break down implementation of these features into two parts:
implementing support for user-defined binary operators and adding unary
operators.

User-defined Binary Operators
=============================

Adding support for user-defined binary operators is pretty simple with
our current framework. We'll first add support for the unary/binary
keywords:

.. code-block:: ocaml

    type token =
      ...
      (* operators *)
      | Binary | Unary

    ...

    and lex_ident buffer = parser
      ...
          | "for" -> [< 'Token.For; stream >]
          | "in" -> [< 'Token.In; stream >]
          | "binary" -> [< 'Token.Binary; stream >]
          | "unary" -> [< 'Token.Unary; stream >]

This just adds lexer support for the unary and binary keywords, like we
did in `previous chapters <OCamlLangImpl5.html#lexer-extensions-for-if-then-else>`_. One nice
thing about our current AST, is that we represent binary operators with
full generalisation by using their ASCII code as the opcode. For our
extended operators, we'll use this same representation, so we don't need
any new AST or parser support.

On the other hand, we have to be able to represent the definitions of
these new operators, in the "def binary\| 5" part of the function
definition. In our grammar so far, the "name" for the function
definition is parsed as the "prototype" production and into the
``Ast.Prototype`` AST node. To represent our new user-defined operators
as prototypes, we have to extend the ``Ast.Prototype`` AST node like
this:

.. code-block:: ocaml

    (* proto - This type represents the "prototype" for a function, which captures
     * its name, and its argument names (thus implicitly the number of arguments the
     * function takes). *)
    type proto =
      | Prototype of string * string array
      | BinOpPrototype of string * string array * int

Basically, in addition to knowing a name for the prototype, we now keep
track of whether it was an operator, and if it was, what precedence
level the operator is at. The precedence is only used for binary
operators (as you'll see below, it just doesn't apply for unary
operators). Now that we have a way to represent the prototype for a
user-defined operator, we need to parse it:

.. code-block:: ocaml

    (* prototype
     *   ::= id '(' id* ')'
     *   ::= binary LETTER number? (id, id)
     *   ::= unary LETTER number? (id) *)
    let parse_prototype =
      let rec parse_args accumulator = parser
        | [< 'Token.Ident id; e=parse_args (id::accumulator) >] -> e
        | [< >] -> accumulator
      in
      let parse_operator = parser
        | [< 'Token.Unary >] -> "unary", 1
        | [< 'Token.Binary >] -> "binary", 2
      in
      let parse_binary_precedence = parser
        | [< 'Token.Number n >] -> int_of_float n
        | [< >] -> 30
      in
      parser
      | [< 'Token.Ident id;
           'Token.Kwd '(' ?? "expected '(' in prototype";
           args=parse_args [];
           'Token.Kwd ')' ?? "expected ')' in prototype" >] ->
          (* success. *)
          Ast.Prototype (id, Array.of_list (List.rev args))
      | [< (prefix, kind)=parse_operator;
           'Token.Kwd op ?? "expected an operator";
           (* Read the precedence if present. *)
           binary_precedence=parse_binary_precedence;
           'Token.Kwd '(' ?? "expected '(' in prototype";
            args=parse_args [];
           'Token.Kwd ')' ?? "expected ')' in prototype" >] ->
          let name = prefix ^ (String.make 1 op) in
          let args = Array.of_list (List.rev args) in

          (* Verify right number of arguments for operator. *)
          if Array.length args != kind
          then raise (Stream.Error "invalid number of operands for operator")
          else
            if kind == 1 then
              Ast.Prototype (name, args)
            else
              Ast.BinOpPrototype (name, args, binary_precedence)
      | [< >] ->
          raise (Stream.Error "expected function name in prototype")

This is all fairly straightforward parsing code, and we have already
seen a lot of similar code in the past. One interesting part about the
code above is the couple lines that set up ``name`` for binary
operators. This builds names like "binary@" for a newly defined "@"
operator. This then takes advantage of the fact that symbol names in the
LLVM symbol table are allowed to have any character in them, including
embedded nul characters.

The next interesting thing to add, is codegen support for these binary
operators. Given our current structure, this is a simple addition of a
default case for our existing binary operator node:

.. code-block:: ocaml

    let codegen_expr = function
      ...
      | Ast.Binary (op, lhs, rhs) ->
          let lhs_val = codegen_expr lhs in
          let rhs_val = codegen_expr rhs in
          begin
            match op with
            | '+' -> build_add lhs_val rhs_val "addtmp" builder
            | '-' -> build_sub lhs_val rhs_val "subtmp" builder
            | '*' -> build_mul lhs_val rhs_val "multmp" builder
            | '<' ->
                (* Convert bool 0/1 to double 0.0 or 1.0 *)
                let i = build_fcmp Fcmp.Ult lhs_val rhs_val "cmptmp" builder in
                build_uitofp i double_type "booltmp" builder
            | _ ->
                (* If it wasn't a builtin binary operator, it must be a user defined
                 * one. Emit a call to it. *)
                let callee = "binary" ^ (String.make 1 op) in
                let callee =
                  match lookup_function callee the_module with
                  | Some callee -> callee
                  | None -> raise (Error "binary operator not found!")
                in
                build_call callee [|lhs_val; rhs_val|] "binop" builder
          end

As you can see above, the new code is actually really simple. It just
does a lookup for the appropriate operator in the symbol table and
generates a function call to it. Since user-defined operators are just
built as normal functions (because the "prototype" boils down to a
function with the right name) everything falls into place.

The final piece of code we are missing, is a bit of top level magic:

.. code-block:: ocaml

    let codegen_func the_fpm = function
      | Ast.Function (proto, body) ->
          Hashtbl.clear named_values;
          let the_function = codegen_proto proto in

          (* If this is an operator, install it. *)
          begin match proto with
          | Ast.BinOpPrototype (name, args, prec) ->
              let op = name.[String.length name - 1] in
              Hashtbl.add Parser.binop_precedence op prec;
          | _ -> ()
          end;

          (* Create a new basic block to start insertion into. *)
          let bb = append_block context "entry" the_function in
          position_at_end bb builder;
          ...

Basically, before codegening a function, if it is a user-defined
operator, we register it in the precedence table. This allows the binary
operator parsing logic we already have in place to handle it. Since we
are working on a fully-general operator precedence parser, this is all
we need to do to "extend the grammar".

Now we have useful user-defined binary operators. This builds a lot on
the previous framework we built for other operators. Adding unary
operators is a bit more challenging, because we don't have any framework
for it yet - lets see what it takes.

User-defined Unary Operators
============================

Since we don't currently support unary operators in the Kaleidoscope
language, we'll need to add everything to support them. Above, we added
simple support for the 'unary' keyword to the lexer. In addition to
that, we need an AST node:

.. code-block:: ocaml

    type expr =
      ...
      (* variant for a unary operator. *)
      | Unary of char * expr
      ...

This AST node is very simple and obvious by now. It directly mirrors the
binary operator AST node, except that it only has one child. With this,
we need to add the parsing logic. Parsing a unary operator is pretty
simple: we'll add a new function to do it:

.. code-block:: ocaml

    (* unary
     *   ::= primary
     *   ::= '!' unary *)
    and parse_unary = parser
      (* If this is a unary operator, read it. *)
      | [< 'Token.Kwd op when op != '(' && op != ')'; operand=parse_expr >] ->
          Ast.Unary (op, operand)

      (* If the current token is not an operator, it must be a primary expr. *)
      | [< stream >] -> parse_primary stream

The grammar we add is pretty straightforward here. If we see a unary
operator when parsing a primary operator, we eat the operator as a
prefix and parse the remaining piece as another unary operator. This
allows us to handle multiple unary operators (e.g. "!!x"). Note that
unary operators can't have ambiguous parses like binary operators can,
so there is no need for precedence information.

The problem with this function, is that we need to call ParseUnary from
somewhere. To do this, we change previous callers of ParsePrimary to
call ``parse_unary`` instead:

.. code-block:: ocaml

    (* binoprhs
     *   ::= ('+' primary)* *)
    and parse_bin_rhs expr_prec lhs stream =
            ...
            (* Parse the unary expression after the binary operator. *)
            let rhs = parse_unary stream in
            ...

    ...

    (* expression
     *   ::= primary binoprhs *)
    and parse_expr = parser
      | [< lhs=parse_unary; stream >] -> parse_bin_rhs 0 lhs stream

With these two simple changes, we are now able to parse unary operators
and build the AST for them. Next up, we need to add parser support for
prototypes, to parse the unary operator prototype. We extend the binary
operator code above with:

.. code-block:: ocaml

    (* prototype
     *   ::= id '(' id* ')'
     *   ::= binary LETTER number? (id, id)
     *   ::= unary LETTER number? (id) *)
    let parse_prototype =
      let rec parse_args accumulator = parser
        | [< 'Token.Ident id; e=parse_args (id::accumulator) >] -> e
        | [< >] -> accumulator
      in
      let parse_operator = parser
        | [< 'Token.Unary >] -> "unary", 1
        | [< 'Token.Binary >] -> "binary", 2
      in
      let parse_binary_precedence = parser
        | [< 'Token.Number n >] -> int_of_float n
        | [< >] -> 30
      in
      parser
      | [< 'Token.Ident id;
           'Token.Kwd '(' ?? "expected '(' in prototype";
           args=parse_args [];
           'Token.Kwd ')' ?? "expected ')' in prototype" >] ->
          (* success. *)
          Ast.Prototype (id, Array.of_list (List.rev args))
      | [< (prefix, kind)=parse_operator;
           'Token.Kwd op ?? "expected an operator";
           (* Read the precedence if present. *)
           binary_precedence=parse_binary_precedence;
           'Token.Kwd '(' ?? "expected '(' in prototype";
            args=parse_args [];
           'Token.Kwd ')' ?? "expected ')' in prototype" >] ->
          let name = prefix ^ (String.make 1 op) in
          let args = Array.of_list (List.rev args) in

          (* Verify right number of arguments for operator. *)
          if Array.length args != kind
          then raise (Stream.Error "invalid number of operands for operator")
          else
            if kind == 1 then
              Ast.Prototype (name, args)
            else
              Ast.BinOpPrototype (name, args, binary_precedence)
      | [< >] ->
          raise (Stream.Error "expected function name in prototype")

As with binary operators, we name unary operators with a name that
includes the operator character. This assists us at code generation
time. Speaking of, the final piece we need to add is codegen support for
unary operators. It looks like this:

.. code-block:: ocaml

    let rec codegen_expr = function
      ...
      | Ast.Unary (op, operand) ->
          let operand = codegen_expr operand in
          let callee = "unary" ^ (String.make 1 op) in
          let callee =
            match lookup_function callee the_module with
            | Some callee -> callee
            | None -> raise (Error "unknown unary operator")
          in
          build_call callee [|operand|] "unop" builder

This code is similar to, but simpler than, the code for binary
operators. It is simpler primarily because it doesn't need to handle any
predefined operators.

Kicking the Tires
=================

It is somewhat hard to believe, but with a few simple extensions we've
covered in the last chapters, we have grown a real-ish language. With
this, we can do a lot of interesting things, including I/O, math, and a
bunch of other things. For example, we can now add a nice sequencing
operator (printd is defined to print out the specified value and a
newline):

::

    ready> extern printd(x);
    Read extern: declare double @printd(double)
    ready> def binary : 1 (x y) 0;  # Low-precedence operator that ignores operands.
    ..
    ready> printd(123) : printd(456) : printd(789);
    123.000000
    456.000000
    789.000000
    Evaluated to 0.000000

We can also define a bunch of other "primitive" operations, such as:

::

    # Logical unary not.
    def unary!(v)
      if v then
        0
      else
        1;

    # Unary negate.
    def unary-(v)
      0-v;

    # Define > with the same precedence as <.
    def binary> 10 (LHS RHS)
      RHS < LHS;

    # Binary logical or, which does not short circuit.
    def binary| 5 (LHS RHS)
      if LHS then
        1
      else if RHS then
        1
      else
        0;

    # Binary logical and, which does not short circuit.
    def binary& 6 (LHS RHS)
      if !LHS then
        0
      else
        !!RHS;

    # Define = with slightly lower precedence than relationals.
    def binary = 9 (LHS RHS)
      !(LHS < RHS | LHS > RHS);

Given the previous if/then/else support, we can also define interesting
functions for I/O. For example, the following prints out a character
whose "density" reflects the value passed in: the lower the value, the
denser the character:

::

    ready>

    extern putchard(char)
    def printdensity(d)
      if d > 8 then
        putchard(32)  # ' '
      else if d > 4 then
        putchard(46)  # '.'
      else if d > 2 then
        putchard(43)  # '+'
      else
        putchard(42); # '*'
    ...
    ready> printdensity(1): printdensity(2): printdensity(3) :
              printdensity(4): printdensity(5): printdensity(9): putchard(10);
    *++..
    Evaluated to 0.000000

Based on these simple primitive operations, we can start to define more
interesting things. For example, here's a little function that solves
for the number of iterations it takes a function in the complex plane to
converge:

::

    # determine whether the specific location diverges.
    # Solve for z = z^2 + c in the complex plane.
    def mandelconverger(real imag iters creal cimag)
      if iters > 255 | (real*real + imag*imag > 4) then
        iters
      else
        mandelconverger(real*real - imag*imag + creal,
                        2*real*imag + cimag,
                        iters+1, creal, cimag);

    # return the number of iterations required for the iteration to escape
    def mandelconverge(real imag)
      mandelconverger(real, imag, 0, real, imag);

This "z = z\ :sup:`2`\  + c" function is a beautiful little creature
that is the basis for computation of the `Mandelbrot
Set <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandelbrot_set>`_. Our
``mandelconverge`` function returns the number of iterations that it
takes for a complex orbit to escape, saturating to 255. This is not a
very useful function by itself, but if you plot its value over a
two-dimensional plane, you can see the Mandelbrot set. Given that we are
limited to using putchard here, our amazing graphical output is limited,
but we can whip together something using the density plotter above:

::

    # compute and plot the mandelbrot set with the specified 2 dimensional range
    # info.
    def mandelhelp(xmin xmax xstep   ymin ymax ystep)
      for y = ymin, y < ymax, ystep in (
        (for x = xmin, x < xmax, xstep in
           printdensity(mandelconverge(x,y)))
        : putchard(10)
      )

    # mandel - This is a convenient helper function for plotting the mandelbrot set
    # from the specified position with the specified Magnification.
    def mandel(realstart imagstart realmag imagmag)
      mandelhelp(realstart, realstart+realmag*78, realmag,
                 imagstart, imagstart+imagmag*40, imagmag);

Given this, we can try plotting out the mandelbrot set! Lets try it out:

::

    ready> mandel(-2.3, -1.3, 0.05, 0.07);
    *******************************+++++++++++*************************************
    *************************+++++++++++++++++++++++*******************************
    **********************+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++****************************
    *******************+++++++++++++++++++++.. ...++++++++*************************
    *****************++++++++++++++++++++++.... ...+++++++++***********************
    ***************+++++++++++++++++++++++.....   ...+++++++++*********************
    **************+++++++++++++++++++++++....     ....+++++++++********************
    *************++++++++++++++++++++++......      .....++++++++*******************
    ************+++++++++++++++++++++.......       .......+++++++******************
    ***********+++++++++++++++++++....                ... .+++++++*****************
    **********+++++++++++++++++.......                     .+++++++****************
    *********++++++++++++++...........                    ...+++++++***************
    ********++++++++++++............                      ...++++++++**************
    ********++++++++++... ..........                        .++++++++**************
    *******+++++++++.....                                   .+++++++++*************
    *******++++++++......                                  ..+++++++++*************
    *******++++++.......                                   ..+++++++++*************
    *******+++++......                                     ..+++++++++*************
    *******.... ....                                      ...+++++++++*************
    *******.... .                                         ...+++++++++*************
    *******+++++......                                    ...+++++++++*************
    *******++++++.......                                   ..+++++++++*************
    *******++++++++......                                   .+++++++++*************
    *******+++++++++.....                                  ..+++++++++*************
    ********++++++++++... ..........                        .++++++++**************
    ********++++++++++++............                      ...++++++++**************
    *********++++++++++++++..........                     ...+++++++***************
    **********++++++++++++++++........                     .+++++++****************
    **********++++++++++++++++++++....                ... ..+++++++****************
    ***********++++++++++++++++++++++.......       .......++++++++*****************
    ************+++++++++++++++++++++++......      ......++++++++******************
    **************+++++++++++++++++++++++....      ....++++++++********************
    ***************+++++++++++++++++++++++.....   ...+++++++++*********************
    *****************++++++++++++++++++++++....  ...++++++++***********************
    *******************+++++++++++++++++++++......++++++++*************************
    *********************++++++++++++++++++++++.++++++++***************************
    *************************+++++++++++++++++++++++*******************************
    ******************************+++++++++++++************************************
    *******************************************************************************
    *******************************************************************************
    *******************************************************************************
    Evaluated to 0.000000
    ready> mandel(-2, -1, 0.02, 0.04);
    **************************+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    ***********************++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    *********************+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++.
    *******************+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++...
    *****************+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++.....
    ***************++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++........
    **************++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++...........
    ************+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++..............
    ***********++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++........        .
    **********++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++.............
    ********+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++..................
    *******+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++.......................
    ******+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++...........................
    *****++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++............................
    *****++++++++++++++++++++++++++++...............................
    ****++++++++++++++++++++++++++......   .........................
    ***++++++++++++++++++++++++.........     ......    ...........
    ***++++++++++++++++++++++............
    **+++++++++++++++++++++..............
    **+++++++++++++++++++................
    *++++++++++++++++++.................
    *++++++++++++++++............ ...
    *++++++++++++++..............
    *+++....++++................
    *..........  ...........
    *
    *..........  ...........
    *+++....++++................
    *++++++++++++++..............
    *++++++++++++++++............ ...
    *++++++++++++++++++.................
    **+++++++++++++++++++................
    **+++++++++++++++++++++..............
    ***++++++++++++++++++++++............
    ***++++++++++++++++++++++++.........     ......    ...........
    ****++++++++++++++++++++++++++......   .........................
    *****++++++++++++++++++++++++++++...............................
    *****++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++............................
    ******+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++...........................
    *******+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++.......................
    ********+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++..................
    Evaluated to 0.000000
    ready> mandel(-0.9, -1.4, 0.02, 0.03);
    *******************************************************************************
    *******************************************************************************
    *******************************************************************************
    **********+++++++++++++++++++++************************************************
    *+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++***************************************
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++**********************************
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++*****************************
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++*************************
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++**********************
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++.........++++++++++++++++++*******************
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++....   ......+++++++++++++++++++****************
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++.......  ........+++++++++++++++++++**************
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++........   ........++++++++++++++++++++************
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++.........     ..  ...+++++++++++++++++++++**********
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++...........        ....++++++++++++++++++++++********
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++.............       .......++++++++++++++++++++++******
    +++++++++++++++++++++++.............        ........+++++++++++++++++++++++****
    ++++++++++++++++++++++...........           ..........++++++++++++++++++++++***
    ++++++++++++++++++++...........                .........++++++++++++++++++++++*
    ++++++++++++++++++............                  ...........++++++++++++++++++++
    ++++++++++++++++...............                 .............++++++++++++++++++
    ++++++++++++++.................                 ...............++++++++++++++++
    ++++++++++++..................                  .................++++++++++++++
    +++++++++..................                      .................+++++++++++++
    ++++++........        .                               .........  ..++++++++++++
    ++............                                         ......    ....++++++++++
    ..............                                                    ...++++++++++
    ..............                                                    ....+++++++++
    ..............                                                    .....++++++++
    .............                                                    ......++++++++
    ...........                                                     .......++++++++
    .........                                                       ........+++++++
    .........                                                       ........+++++++
    .........                                                           ....+++++++
    ........                                                             ...+++++++
    .......                                                              ...+++++++
                                                                        ....+++++++
                                                                       .....+++++++
                                                                        ....+++++++
                                                                        ....+++++++
                                                                        ....+++++++
    Evaluated to 0.000000
    ready> ^D

At this point, you may be starting to realize that Kaleidoscope is a
real and powerful language. It may not be self-similar :), but it can be
used to plot things that are!

With this, we conclude the "adding user-defined operators" chapter of
the tutorial. We have successfully augmented our language, adding the
ability to extend the language in the library, and we have shown how
this can be used to build a simple but interesting end-user application
in Kaleidoscope. At this point, Kaleidoscope can build a variety of
applications that are functional and can call functions with
side-effects, but it can't actually define and mutate a variable itself.

Strikingly, variable mutation is an important feature of some languages,
and it is not at all obvious how to `add support for mutable
variables <OCamlLangImpl7.html>`_ without having to add an "SSA
construction" phase to your front-end. In the next chapter, we will
describe how you can add variable mutation without building SSA in your
front-end.

Full Code Listing
=================

Here is the complete code listing for our running example, enhanced with
the if/then/else and for expressions.. To build this example, use:

.. code-block:: bash

    # Compile
    ocamlbuild toy.byte
    # Run
    ./toy.byte

Here is the code:

\_tags:
    ::

        <{lexer,parser}.ml>: use_camlp4, pp(camlp4of)
        <*.{byte,native}>: g++, use_llvm, use_llvm_analysis
        <*.{byte,native}>: use_llvm_executionengine, use_llvm_target
        <*.{byte,native}>: use_llvm_scalar_opts, use_bindings

myocamlbuild.ml:
    .. code-block:: ocaml

        open Ocamlbuild_plugin;;

        ocaml_lib ~extern:true "llvm";;
        ocaml_lib ~extern:true "llvm_analysis";;
        ocaml_lib ~extern:true "llvm_executionengine";;
        ocaml_lib ~extern:true "llvm_target";;
        ocaml_lib ~extern:true "llvm_scalar_opts";;

        flag ["link"; "ocaml"; "g++"] (S[A"-cc"; A"g++"; A"-cclib"; A"-rdynamic"]);;
        dep ["link"; "ocaml"; "use_bindings"] ["bindings.o"];;

token.ml:
    .. code-block:: ocaml

        (*===----------------------------------------------------------------------===
         * Lexer Tokens
         *===----------------------------------------------------------------------===*)

        (* The lexer returns these 'Kwd' if it is an unknown character, otherwise one of
         * these others for known things. *)
        type token =
          (* commands *)
          | Def | Extern

          (* primary *)
          | Ident of string | Number of float

          (* unknown *)
          | Kwd of char

          (* control *)
          | If | Then | Else
          | For | In

          (* operators *)
          | Binary | Unary

lexer.ml:
    .. code-block:: ocaml

        (*===----------------------------------------------------------------------===
         * Lexer
         *===----------------------------------------------------------------------===*)

        let rec lex = parser
          (* Skip any whitespace. *)
          | [< ' (' ' | '\n' | '\r' | '\t'); stream >] -> lex stream

          (* identifier: [a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9] *)
          | [< ' ('A' .. 'Z' | 'a' .. 'z' as c); stream >] ->
              let buffer = Buffer.create 1 in
              Buffer.add_char buffer c;
              lex_ident buffer stream

          (* number: [0-9.]+ *)
          | [< ' ('0' .. '9' as c); stream >] ->
              let buffer = Buffer.create 1 in
              Buffer.add_char buffer c;
              lex_number buffer stream

          (* Comment until end of line. *)
          | [< ' ('#'); stream >] ->
              lex_comment stream

          (* Otherwise, just return the character as its ascii value. *)
          | [< 'c; stream >] ->
              [< 'Token.Kwd c; lex stream >]

          (* end of stream. *)
          | [< >] -> [< >]

        and lex_number buffer = parser
          | [< ' ('0' .. '9' | '.' as c); stream >] ->
              Buffer.add_char buffer c;
              lex_number buffer stream
          | [< stream=lex >] ->
              [< 'Token.Number (float_of_string (Buffer.contents buffer)); stream >]

        and lex_ident buffer = parser
          | [< ' ('A' .. 'Z' | 'a' .. 'z' | '0' .. '9' as c); stream >] ->
              Buffer.add_char buffer c;
              lex_ident buffer stream
          | [< stream=lex >] ->
              match Buffer.contents buffer with
              | "def" -> [< 'Token.Def; stream >]
              | "extern" -> [< 'Token.Extern; stream >]
              | "if" -> [< 'Token.If; stream >]
              | "then" -> [< 'Token.Then; stream >]
              | "else" -> [< 'Token.Else; stream >]
              | "for" -> [< 'Token.For; stream >]
              | "in" -> [< 'Token.In; stream >]
              | "binary" -> [< 'Token.Binary; stream >]
              | "unary" -> [< 'Token.Unary; stream >]
              | id -> [< 'Token.Ident id; stream >]

        and lex_comment = parser
          | [< ' ('\n'); stream=lex >] -> stream
          | [< 'c; e=lex_comment >] -> e
          | [< >] -> [< >]

ast.ml:
    .. code-block:: ocaml

        (*===----------------------------------------------------------------------===
         * Abstract Syntax Tree (aka Parse Tree)
         *===----------------------------------------------------------------------===*)

        (* expr - Base type for all expression nodes. *)
        type expr =
          (* variant for numeric literals like "1.0". *)
          | Number of float

          (* variant for referencing a variable, like "a". *)
          | Variable of string

          (* variant for a unary operator. *)
          | Unary of char * expr

          (* variant for a binary operator. *)
          | Binary of char * expr * expr

          (* variant for function calls. *)
          | Call of string * expr array

          (* variant for if/then/else. *)
          | If of expr * expr * expr

          (* variant for for/in. *)
          | For of string * expr * expr * expr option * expr

        (* proto - This type represents the "prototype" for a function, which captures
         * its name, and its argument names (thus implicitly the number of arguments the
         * function takes). *)
        type proto =
          | Prototype of string * string array
          | BinOpPrototype of string * string array * int

        (* func - This type represents a function definition itself. *)
        type func = Function of proto * expr

parser.ml:
    .. code-block:: ocaml

        (*===---------------------------------------------------------------------===
         * Parser
         *===---------------------------------------------------------------------===*)

        (* binop_precedence - This holds the precedence for each binary operator that is
         * defined *)
        let binop_precedence:(char, int) Hashtbl.t = Hashtbl.create 10

        (* precedence - Get the precedence of the pending binary operator token. *)
        let precedence c = try Hashtbl.find binop_precedence c with Not_found -> -1

        (* primary
         *   ::= identifier
         *   ::= numberexpr
         *   ::= parenexpr
         *   ::= ifexpr
         *   ::= forexpr *)
        let rec parse_primary = parser
          (* numberexpr ::= number *)
          | [< 'Token.Number n >] -> Ast.Number n

          (* parenexpr ::= '(' expression ')' *)
          | [< 'Token.Kwd '('; e=parse_expr; 'Token.Kwd ')' ?? "expected ')'" >] -> e

          (* identifierexpr
           *   ::= identifier
           *   ::= identifier '(' argumentexpr ')' *)
          | [< 'Token.Ident id; stream >] ->
              let rec parse_args accumulator = parser
                | [< e=parse_expr; stream >] ->
                    begin parser
                      | [< 'Token.Kwd ','; e=parse_args (e :: accumulator) >] -> e
                      | [< >] -> e :: accumulator
                    end stream
                | [< >] -> accumulator
              in
              let rec parse_ident id = parser
                (* Call. *)
                | [< 'Token.Kwd '(';
                     args=parse_args [];
                     'Token.Kwd ')' ?? "expected ')'">] ->
                    Ast.Call (id, Array.of_list (List.rev args))

                (* Simple variable ref. *)
                | [< >] -> Ast.Variable id
              in
              parse_ident id stream

          (* ifexpr ::= 'if' expr 'then' expr 'else' expr *)
          | [< 'Token.If; c=parse_expr;
               'Token.Then ?? "expected 'then'"; t=parse_expr;
               'Token.Else ?? "expected 'else'"; e=parse_expr >] ->
              Ast.If (c, t, e)

          (* forexpr
                ::= 'for' identifier '=' expr ',' expr (',' expr)? 'in' expression *)
          | [< 'Token.For;
               'Token.Ident id ?? "expected identifier after for";
               'Token.Kwd '=' ?? "expected '=' after for";
               stream >] ->
              begin parser
                | [<
                     start=parse_expr;
                     'Token.Kwd ',' ?? "expected ',' after for";
                     end_=parse_expr;
                     stream >] ->
                    let step =
                      begin parser
                      | [< 'Token.Kwd ','; step=parse_expr >] -> Some step
                      | [< >] -> None
                      end stream
                    in
                    begin parser
                    | [< 'Token.In; body=parse_expr >] ->
                        Ast.For (id, start, end_, step, body)
                    | [< >] ->
                        raise (Stream.Error "expected 'in' after for")
                    end stream
                | [< >] ->
                    raise (Stream.Error "expected '=' after for")
              end stream

          | [< >] -> raise (Stream.Error "unknown token when expecting an expression.")

        (* unary
         *   ::= primary
         *   ::= '!' unary *)
        and parse_unary = parser
          (* If this is a unary operator, read it. *)
          | [< 'Token.Kwd op when op != '(' && op != ')'; operand=parse_expr >] ->
              Ast.Unary (op, operand)

          (* If the current token is not an operator, it must be a primary expr. *)
          | [< stream >] -> parse_primary stream

        (* binoprhs
         *   ::= ('+' primary)* *)
        and parse_bin_rhs expr_prec lhs stream =
          match Stream.peek stream with
          (* If this is a binop, find its precedence. *)
          | Some (Token.Kwd c) when Hashtbl.mem binop_precedence c ->
              let token_prec = precedence c in

              (* If this is a binop that binds at least as tightly as the current binop,
               * consume it, otherwise we are done. *)
              if token_prec < expr_prec then lhs else begin
                (* Eat the binop. *)
                Stream.junk stream;

                (* Parse the unary expression after the binary operator. *)
                let rhs = parse_unary stream in

                (* Okay, we know this is a binop. *)
                let rhs =
                  match Stream.peek stream with
                  | Some (Token.Kwd c2) ->
                      (* If BinOp binds less tightly with rhs than the operator after
                       * rhs, let the pending operator take rhs as its lhs. *)
                      let next_prec = precedence c2 in
                      if token_prec < next_prec
                      then parse_bin_rhs (token_prec + 1) rhs stream
                      else rhs
                  | _ -> rhs
                in

                (* Merge lhs/rhs. *)
                let lhs = Ast.Binary (c, lhs, rhs) in
                parse_bin_rhs expr_prec lhs stream
              end
          | _ -> lhs

        (* expression
         *   ::= primary binoprhs *)
        and parse_expr = parser
          | [< lhs=parse_unary; stream >] -> parse_bin_rhs 0 lhs stream

        (* prototype
         *   ::= id '(' id* ')'
         *   ::= binary LETTER number? (id, id)
         *   ::= unary LETTER number? (id) *)
        let parse_prototype =
          let rec parse_args accumulator = parser
            | [< 'Token.Ident id; e=parse_args (id::accumulator) >] -> e
            | [< >] -> accumulator
          in
          let parse_operator = parser
            | [< 'Token.Unary >] -> "unary", 1
            | [< 'Token.Binary >] -> "binary", 2
          in
          let parse_binary_precedence = parser
            | [< 'Token.Number n >] -> int_of_float n
            | [< >] -> 30
          in
          parser
          | [< 'Token.Ident id;
               'Token.Kwd '(' ?? "expected '(' in prototype";
               args=parse_args [];
               'Token.Kwd ')' ?? "expected ')' in prototype" >] ->
              (* success. *)
              Ast.Prototype (id, Array.of_list (List.rev args))
          | [< (prefix, kind)=parse_operator;
               'Token.Kwd op ?? "expected an operator";
               (* Read the precedence if present. *)
               binary_precedence=parse_binary_precedence;
               'Token.Kwd '(' ?? "expected '(' in prototype";
                args=parse_args [];
               'Token.Kwd ')' ?? "expected ')' in prototype" >] ->
              let name = prefix ^ (String.make 1 op) in
              let args = Array.of_list (List.rev args) in

              (* Verify right number of arguments for operator. *)
              if Array.length args != kind
              then raise (Stream.Error "invalid number of operands for operator")
              else
                if kind == 1 then
                  Ast.Prototype (name, args)
                else
                  Ast.BinOpPrototype (name, args, binary_precedence)
          | [< >] ->
              raise (Stream.Error "expected function name in prototype")

        (* definition ::= 'def' prototype expression *)
        let parse_definition = parser
          | [< 'Token.Def; p=parse_prototype; e=parse_expr >] ->
              Ast.Function (p, e)

        (* toplevelexpr ::= expression *)
        let parse_toplevel = parser
          | [< e=parse_expr >] ->
              (* Make an anonymous proto. *)
              Ast.Function (Ast.Prototype ("", [||]), e)

        (*  external ::= 'extern' prototype *)
        let parse_extern = parser
          | [< 'Token.Extern; e=parse_prototype >] -> e

codegen.ml:
    .. code-block:: ocaml

        (*===----------------------------------------------------------------------===
         * Code Generation
         *===----------------------------------------------------------------------===*)

        open Llvm

        exception Error of string

        let context = global_context ()
        let the_module = create_module context "my cool jit"
        let builder = builder context
        let named_values:(string, llvalue) Hashtbl.t = Hashtbl.create 10
        let double_type = double_type context

        let rec codegen_expr = function
          | Ast.Number n -> const_float double_type n
          | Ast.Variable name ->
              (try Hashtbl.find named_values name with
                | Not_found -> raise (Error "unknown variable name"))
          | Ast.Unary (op, operand) ->
              let operand = codegen_expr operand in
              let callee = "unary" ^ (String.make 1 op) in
              let callee =
                match lookup_function callee the_module with
                | Some callee -> callee
                | None -> raise (Error "unknown unary operator")
              in
              build_call callee [|operand|] "unop" builder
          | Ast.Binary (op, lhs, rhs) ->
              let lhs_val = codegen_expr lhs in
              let rhs_val = codegen_expr rhs in
              begin
                match op with
                | '+' -> build_add lhs_val rhs_val "addtmp" builder
                | '-' -> build_sub lhs_val rhs_val "subtmp" builder
                | '*' -> build_mul lhs_val rhs_val "multmp" builder
                | '<' ->
                    (* Convert bool 0/1 to double 0.0 or 1.0 *)
                    let i = build_fcmp Fcmp.Ult lhs_val rhs_val "cmptmp" builder in
                    build_uitofp i double_type "booltmp" builder
                | _ ->
                    (* If it wasn't a builtin binary operator, it must be a user defined
                     * one. Emit a call to it. *)
                    let callee = "binary" ^ (String.make 1 op) in
                    let callee =
                      match lookup_function callee the_module with
                      | Some callee -> callee
                      | None -> raise (Error "binary operator not found!")
                    in
                    build_call callee [|lhs_val; rhs_val|] "binop" builder
              end
          | Ast.Call (callee, args) ->
              (* Look up the name in the module table. *)
              let callee =
                match lookup_function callee the_module with
                | Some callee -> callee
                | None -> raise (Error "unknown function referenced")
              in
              let params = params callee in

              (* If argument mismatch error. *)
              if Array.length params == Array.length args then () else
                raise (Error "incorrect # arguments passed");
              let args = Array.map codegen_expr args in
              build_call callee args "calltmp" builder
          | Ast.If (cond, then_, else_) ->
              let cond = codegen_expr cond in

              (* Convert condition to a bool by comparing equal to 0.0 *)
              let zero = const_float double_type 0.0 in
              let cond_val = build_fcmp Fcmp.One cond zero "ifcond" builder in

              (* Grab the first block so that we might later add the conditional branch
               * to it at the end of the function. *)
              let start_bb = insertion_block builder in
              let the_function = block_parent start_bb in

              let then_bb = append_block context "then" the_function in

              (* Emit 'then' value. *)
              position_at_end then_bb builder;
              let then_val = codegen_expr then_ in

              (* Codegen of 'then' can change the current block, update then_bb for the
               * phi. We create a new name because one is used for the phi node, and the
               * other is used for the conditional branch. *)
              let new_then_bb = insertion_block builder in

              (* Emit 'else' value. *)
              let else_bb = append_block context "else" the_function in
              position_at_end else_bb builder;
              let else_val = codegen_expr else_ in

              (* Codegen of 'else' can change the current block, update else_bb for the
               * phi. *)
              let new_else_bb = insertion_block builder in

              (* Emit merge block. *)
              let merge_bb = append_block context "ifcont" the_function in
              position_at_end merge_bb builder;
              let incoming = [(then_val, new_then_bb); (else_val, new_else_bb)] in
              let phi = build_phi incoming "iftmp" builder in

              (* Return to the start block to add the conditional branch. *)
              position_at_end start_bb builder;
              ignore (build_cond_br cond_val then_bb else_bb builder);

              (* Set a unconditional branch at the end of the 'then' block and the
               * 'else' block to the 'merge' block. *)
              position_at_end new_then_bb builder; ignore (build_br merge_bb builder);
              position_at_end new_else_bb builder; ignore (build_br merge_bb builder);

              (* Finally, set the builder to the end of the merge block. *)
              position_at_end merge_bb builder;

              phi
          | Ast.For (var_name, start, end_, step, body) ->
              (* Emit the start code first, without 'variable' in scope. *)
              let start_val = codegen_expr start in

              (* Make the new basic block for the loop header, inserting after current
               * block. *)
              let preheader_bb = insertion_block builder in
              let the_function = block_parent preheader_bb in
              let loop_bb = append_block context "loop" the_function in

              (* Insert an explicit fall through from the current block to the
               * loop_bb. *)
              ignore (build_br loop_bb builder);

              (* Start insertion in loop_bb. *)
              position_at_end loop_bb builder;

              (* Start the PHI node with an entry for start. *)
              let variable = build_phi [(start_val, preheader_bb)] var_name builder in

              (* Within the loop, the variable is defined equal to the PHI node. If it
               * shadows an existing variable, we have to restore it, so save it
               * now. *)
              let old_val =
                try Some (Hashtbl.find named_values var_name) with Not_found -> None
              in
              Hashtbl.add named_values var_name variable;

              (* Emit the body of the loop.  This, like any other expr, can change the
               * current BB.  Note that we ignore the value computed by the body, but
               * don't allow an error *)
              ignore (codegen_expr body);

              (* Emit the step value. *)
              let step_val =
                match step with
                | Some step -> codegen_expr step
                (* If not specified, use 1.0. *)
                | None -> const_float double_type 1.0
              in

              let next_var = build_add variable step_val "nextvar" builder in

              (* Compute the end condition. *)
              let end_cond = codegen_expr end_ in

              (* Convert condition to a bool by comparing equal to 0.0. *)
              let zero = const_float double_type 0.0 in
              let end_cond = build_fcmp Fcmp.One end_cond zero "loopcond" builder in

              (* Create the "after loop" block and insert it. *)
              let loop_end_bb = insertion_block builder in
              let after_bb = append_block context "afterloop" the_function in

              (* Insert the conditional branch into the end of loop_end_bb. *)
              ignore (build_cond_br end_cond loop_bb after_bb builder);

              (* Any new code will be inserted in after_bb. *)
              position_at_end after_bb builder;

              (* Add a new entry to the PHI node for the backedge. *)
              add_incoming (next_var, loop_end_bb) variable;

              (* Restore the unshadowed variable. *)
              begin match old_val with
              | Some old_val -> Hashtbl.add named_values var_name old_val
              | None -> ()
              end;

              (* for expr always returns 0.0. *)
              const_null double_type

        let codegen_proto = function
          | Ast.Prototype (name, args) | Ast.BinOpPrototype (name, args, _) ->
              (* Make the function type: double(double,double) etc. *)
              let doubles = Array.make (Array.length args) double_type in
              let ft = function_type double_type doubles in
              let f =
                match lookup_function name the_module with
                | None -> declare_function name ft the_module

                (* If 'f' conflicted, there was already something named 'name'. If it
                 * has a body, don't allow redefinition or reextern. *)
                | Some f ->
                    (* If 'f' already has a body, reject this. *)
                    if block_begin f <> At_end f then
                      raise (Error "redefinition of function");

                    (* If 'f' took a different number of arguments, reject. *)
                    if element_type (type_of f) <> ft then
                      raise (Error "redefinition of function with different # args");
                    f
              in

              (* Set names for all arguments. *)
              Array.iteri (fun i a ->
                let n = args.(i) in
                set_value_name n a;
                Hashtbl.add named_values n a;
              ) (params f);
              f

        let codegen_func the_fpm = function
          | Ast.Function (proto, body) ->
              Hashtbl.clear named_values;
              let the_function = codegen_proto proto in

              (* If this is an operator, install it. *)
              begin match proto with
              | Ast.BinOpPrototype (name, args, prec) ->
                  let op = name.[String.length name - 1] in
                  Hashtbl.add Parser.binop_precedence op prec;
              | _ -> ()
              end;

              (* Create a new basic block to start insertion into. *)
              let bb = append_block context "entry" the_function in
              position_at_end bb builder;

              try
                let ret_val = codegen_expr body in

                (* Finish off the function. *)
                let _ = build_ret ret_val builder in

                (* Validate the generated code, checking for consistency. *)
                Llvm_analysis.assert_valid_function the_function;

                (* Optimize the function. *)
                let _ = PassManager.run_function the_function the_fpm in

                the_function
              with e ->
                delete_function the_function;
                raise e

toplevel.ml:
    .. code-block:: ocaml

        (*===----------------------------------------------------------------------===
         * Top-Level parsing and JIT Driver
         *===----------------------------------------------------------------------===*)

        open Llvm
        open Llvm_executionengine

        (* top ::= definition | external | expression | ';' *)
        let rec main_loop the_fpm the_execution_engine stream =
          match Stream.peek stream with
          | None -> ()

          (* ignore top-level semicolons. *)
          | Some (Token.Kwd ';') ->
              Stream.junk stream;
              main_loop the_fpm the_execution_engine stream

          | Some token ->
              begin
                try match token with
                | Token.Def ->
                    let e = Parser.parse_definition stream in
                    print_endline "parsed a function definition.";
                    dump_value (Codegen.codegen_func the_fpm e);
                | Token.Extern ->
                    let e = Parser.parse_extern stream in
                    print_endline "parsed an extern.";
                    dump_value (Codegen.codegen_proto e);
                | _ ->
                    (* Evaluate a top-level expression into an anonymous function. *)
                    let e = Parser.parse_toplevel stream in
                    print_endline "parsed a top-level expr";
                    let the_function = Codegen.codegen_func the_fpm e in
                    dump_value the_function;

                    (* JIT the function, returning a function pointer. *)
                    let result = ExecutionEngine.run_function the_function [||]
                      the_execution_engine in

                    print_string "Evaluated to ";
                    print_float (GenericValue.as_float Codegen.double_type result);
                    print_newline ();
                with Stream.Error s | Codegen.Error s ->
                  (* Skip token for error recovery. *)
                  Stream.junk stream;
                  print_endline s;
              end;
              print_string "ready> "; flush stdout;
              main_loop the_fpm the_execution_engine stream

toy.ml:
    .. code-block:: ocaml

        (*===----------------------------------------------------------------------===
         * Main driver code.
         *===----------------------------------------------------------------------===*)

        open Llvm
        open Llvm_executionengine
        open Llvm_target
        open Llvm_scalar_opts

        let main () =
          ignore (initialize_native_target ());

          (* Install standard binary operators.
           * 1 is the lowest precedence. *)
          Hashtbl.add Parser.binop_precedence '<' 10;
          Hashtbl.add Parser.binop_precedence '+' 20;
          Hashtbl.add Parser.binop_precedence '-' 20;
          Hashtbl.add Parser.binop_precedence '*' 40;    (* highest. *)

          (* Prime the first token. *)
          print_string "ready> "; flush stdout;
          let stream = Lexer.lex (Stream.of_channel stdin) in

          (* Create the JIT. *)
          let the_execution_engine = ExecutionEngine.create Codegen.the_module in
          let the_fpm = PassManager.create_function Codegen.the_module in

          (* Set up the optimizer pipeline.  Start with registering info about how the
           * target lays out data structures. *)
          DataLayout.add (ExecutionEngine.target_data the_execution_engine) the_fpm;

          (* Do simple "peephole" optimizations and bit-twiddling optzn. *)
          add_instruction_combination the_fpm;

          (* reassociate expressions. *)
          add_reassociation the_fpm;

          (* Eliminate Common SubExpressions. *)
          add_gvn the_fpm;

          (* Simplify the control flow graph (deleting unreachable blocks, etc). *)
          add_cfg_simplification the_fpm;

          ignore (PassManager.initialize the_fpm);

          (* Run the main "interpreter loop" now. *)
          Toplevel.main_loop the_fpm the_execution_engine stream;

          (* Print out all the generated code. *)
          dump_module Codegen.the_module
        ;;

        main ()

bindings.c
    .. code-block:: c

        #include <stdio.h>

        /* putchard - putchar that takes a double and returns 0. */
        extern double putchard(double X) {
          putchar((char)X);
          return 0;
        }

        /* printd - printf that takes a double prints it as "%f\n", returning 0. */
        extern double printd(double X) {
          printf("%f\n", X);
          return 0;
        }

`Next: Extending the language: mutable variables / SSA
construction <OCamlLangImpl7.html>`_