dict: Document, add release snippet

pull/3490/head
Mathieu Duponchelle 7 years ago
parent 195c356f91
commit 1de7dce414
  1. 15
      docs/markdown/Reference-manual.md
  2. 64
      docs/markdown/Syntax.md
  3. 19
      docs/markdown/snippets/dict_builtin.md

@ -1730,6 +1730,21 @@ The following methods are defined for all [arrays](Syntax.md#arrays):
You can also iterate over arrays with the [`foreach`
statement](Syntax.md#foreach-statements).
### `dictionary` object
The following methods are defined for all [dictionaries](Syntax.md#dictionaries):
- `has_key(key)` returns `true` if the dictionary contains the key
given as argument, `false` otherwise
- `get(key, fallback)`, returns the value for the key given as first argument
if it is present in the dictionary, or the optional fallback value given
as the second argument. If a single argument was given and the key was not
found, causes a fatal error
You can also iterate over dictionaries with the [`foreach`
statement](Syntax.md#foreach-statements).
## Returned objects
These are objects returned by the [functions listed above](#functions).

@ -284,6 +284,29 @@ The following methods are defined for all arrays:
- `contains`, returns `true` if the array contains the object given as argument, `false` otherwise
- `get`, returns the object at the given index, negative indices count from the back of the array, indexing out of bounds is a fatal error. Provided for backwards-compatibility, it is identical to array indexing.
Dictionaries
--
Dictionaries are delimited by curly braces. A dictionary can contain an
arbitrary number of key value pairs. Keys are required to be literal
strings, values can be objects of any type.
```meson
my_dict = {'foo': 42, 'bar': 'baz'}
```
Keys must be unique:
```meson
# This will fail
my_dict = {'foo': 42, 'foo': 43}
```
Dictionaries are immutable.
Visit the [Reference Manual](Reference-manual.md#dictionary-object) to read
about the methods exposed by dictionaries.
Function calls
--
@ -329,9 +352,17 @@ endif
## Foreach statements
To do an operation on all elements of an array, use the `foreach`
command. As an example, here's how you would define two executables
with corresponding tests.
To do an operation on all elements of an iterable, use the `foreach`
command.
> Note that Meson variables are immutable. Trying to assign a new value
> to the iterated object inside a foreach loop will not affect foreach's
> control flow.
### Foreach with an array
Here's an example of how you could define two executables
with corresponding tests using arrays and foreach.
```meson
progs = [['prog1', ['prog1.c', 'foo.c']],
@ -343,9 +374,30 @@ foreach p : progs
endforeach
```
Note that Meson variables are immutable. Trying to assign a new value
to `progs` inside a foreach loop will not affect foreach's control
flow.
### Foreach with a dictionary
Here's an example of you could iterate a set of components that
should be compiled in according to some configuration.
```meson
components = {
'foo': ['foo.c'],
'bar': ['bar.c'],
'baz:' ['baz.c'],
}
# compute a configuration based on system dependencies, custom logic
conf = configuration_data()
conf.set('USE_FOO', 1)
# Determine the sources to compile
sources_to_compile = []
foreach name, sources : components
if conf.get('USE_@0@'.format(name.to_upper()), 0) == 1
sources_to_compile += sources
endif
endforeach
```
Logical operations
--

@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
## New built-in object dictionary
Meson dictionaries use a syntax similar to python's dictionaries,
but have a narrower scope: they are immutable, keys can only
be string literals, and initializing a dictionary with duplicate
keys causes a fatal error.
Example usage:
```meson
dict = {'foo': 42, 'bar': 'baz'}
foo = dict.get('foo')
foobar = dict.get('foobar', 'fallback-value')
foreach key, value : dict
# Do something with key and value
#endforeach
```
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