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Location: CSY/reowolf/testdata/parser/positive/8.pdl - annotation

MH
Preparatory work for union literals

Contains horrible parsing hacks that transmute function calls and
enum literals to union literals if appropriate. Pending the
implementation of the tokenizer the AST can be constructed more
neatly.
#version 100

/*
Suggested by Luc Edixhoven.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thue%E2%80%93Morse_sequence

In mathematics, the Thue–Morse sequence, or Prouhet–Thue–Morse sequence,
is the binary sequence (an infinite sequence of 0s and 1s) obtained by
starting with 0 and successively appending the Boolean complement of the
sequence obtained thus far.

To compute the nth element t_n, write the number n in binary. If the
number of ones in this binary expansion is odd then t_n = 1, if even
then t_n = 0. For this reason John H. Conway et al. call numbers n
satisfying t_n = 1 odious (for odd) numbers and numbers for which
t_n = 0 evil (for even) numbers. In other words, t_n = 0 if n is
an evil number and t_n = 1 if n is an odious number.

*/

import std.reo;

composite main(out x) {
	channel ao -> ai;
	channel bo -> bi;
	channel co -> ci;
	new evil_or_odious(ai, bo);
	new replicator(bi, {co, x});
	new recorder(ao, ci);
}

primitive evil_or_odious(in x, out y) {
	while (true) {
		synchronous {
			if (fires(x) && fires(y)) {
				msg a = get(x);
				msg result = create(1);
				boolean even = true;
				int i = 0;
				while (i < a.length) {
					if (a[i++] == '1')
						even = !even;
				}
				result[0] = even ? '1' : '0';
				put(y, result);
			} else {
				assert !fires(x);
				assert !fires(y);
			}
		}
	}
}
primitive recorder(out h, in a) {
	msg c = create(0);
	while (true) {
		synchronous {
			if (fires(h) && fires(a)) {
				put(h, c);
				{
					msg x = get(a);
					msg n = create(c.length + 1);
					int i = 0;
					while (i < c.length) {
						n[i] = c[i];
						i++;
					}
					n[c.length] = x[0];
					c = n;
				}
			}
		}
	}
}