Anything Nock can do, Hoon can do also. These runes are used for carrying out Nock operations in Hoon.
.^
"dotket"
Load from the Arvo namespace (scry) with a fake Nock instruction: Nock 12.
Syntax
Two arguments, with the second optionally split into an arbitrary number of elements.
While this rune technically takes a fixed number of arguments, q
is usually
split into at least two parts, and the tall form of this rune must be terminated
with a ==
. Note also that the ==
does not make the arguments into a list as
you might expect, so q
must be explicitly null-terminated if its elements are
specified separately.
Form | Syntax |
---|---|
Tall |
.^ p q1 q2 q3 qn == |
Wide |
.^(p q1 q2) |
Irregular | None. |
AST
[%dtkt p=spec q=hoon]
Produces
The noun q
, cast to the type p
.
Discussion
Nock has no 12
instruction! But the virtual Nock
used to run userspace code does. Nock 12
loads from a
typed immutable namespace defined by its virtual context.
Ordinarily a Hoon expression has access to no information but whatever can be found in the subject. The one exception is with the .^
rune. It essentially allows you to request information from one of the Arvo vanes (modules).
.^
checks that the type of the value retrieved from Arvo nests under p
. q
is a path
which includes information about which vane is being queried, and what sort of information is requested.
In principle .^
takes two subexpressions, but in practice q
is often given in two parts: the first part includes the vane to be queried (e.g., %a
for Ames, %b
for Behn, %c
for Clay, etc.) and the kind of request. The second part is a path that corresponds to the kind of request.
Examples
In the dojo we can ask Clay -- the Arvo filesystem -- for a listing of the files at our current path, %
:
> .^(arch %cy %)
[ fil=~
dir
{ [p=~.app q=~]
[p=~.sur q=~]
[p=~.gen q=~]
[p=~.lib q=~]
[p=~.mar q=~]
[p=~.ted q=~]
[p=~.desk q=~]
[p=~.sys q=~]
}
]
The %c
is for Clay, and the y
is for the request type. arch
is the type of the listing. See gen/cat.hoon
to see how this information is printed more prettily.
The %
is for the current path in the dojo:
> `path`%
/~zod/base/~2018.9.20..23.05.35..0231
You can modify the time of the file listing quite simply and ask for a listing from 5 hours ago. (Remember that Clay is a revision-controlled file system.)
> .^(arch %cy /(scot %p our)/base/(scot %da (sub now ~h5)))
[ fil=~
dir
{ [p=~.app q=~]
[p=~.sur q=~]
[p=~.gen q=~]
[p=~.lib q=~]
[p=~.mar q=~]
[p=~.ted q=~]
[p=~.desk q=~]
[p=~.sys q=~]
}
]
our
is the value for your ship's name.
.+
"dotlus"
Increment an atom with Nock 4
.
Syntax
One argument, fixed.
Form | Syntax |
---|---|
Tall |
.+ p |
Wide |
.+(p) |
Irregular |
+(p) |
AST
[%dtls p=hoon]
Produces
p
plus 1
if p
is an atom; otherwise, crashes. The product atom has no aura.
Examples
> .+(6)
7
> +(6)
7
> +(%foo)
7.303.015
> +([1 2])
nest-fail
.*
"dottar"
Evaluate with Nock 2
.
Produces
Nock of formula q
and subject p
, with type %noun
.
Syntax
Two arguments, fixed.
Form | Syntax |
---|---|
Tall |
.* p q |
Wide |
.*(p q) |
Irregular | None. |
AST
[%dttr p=hoon q=hoon]
Discussion
.*(p q)
is used to run Nock formula q
on the subject p
from within Hoon.
Keep in mind that p
and q
can be arbitrary Hoon expressions, as long as they evaluate to the appropriate nouns for Nock evaluation.
Note also that .*
("dottar") can be used to bypass the type system. It's
therefore possible to use Hoon as a typeless language.
Examples
> .*([20 30] [0 2])
20
> .*(33 [4 0 1])
34
> .*(|.(50) [9 2 0 1])
50
> .*(12 [7 [`1 [4 `1]] [`2 `3 `2]])
[12 13 12]
> .*(~ [5 1^4 [4 1^3]])
0
> .*(~ [5 1^5 [4 1^3]])
1
.=
"dottis"
Test for equality with Nock 5
.
Syntax
Two arguments, fixed.
Form | Syntax |
---|---|
Tall |
.= p q |
Wide |
.=(p q) |
Irregular |
=(p q) |
AST
[%dtts p=hoon q=hoon]
Produces
%.y
if p
equals q
; otherwise %.n
.
Discussion
Like Nock equality, .=
("dottis") tests whether two nouns are the same,
ignoring invisible pointer structure. Because in a conventional noun
implementation each noun has a lazy short hash, comparisons are fast unless the
hash needs to be computed, or we are comparing separate copies of identical
nouns. (Comparing large duplicates is a common cause of performance bugs.)
Examples
> .=(0 0)
%.y
> =(0 0)
%.y
> .=(1 2)
%.n
> =(1 2)
%.n
> =(12 [12 14])
%.n
.?
"dotwut"
Test for cell or atom with Nock 3
.
Syntax
One argument, fixed.
Form | Syntax |
---|---|
Tall |
.? p |
Wide |
.?(p) |
Irregular | None. |
AST
[%dtwt p=hoon]
Produces
%.y
if p
is a cell; otherwise %.n
.
Examples
> .?(42)
%.n
> .?([42 43])
%.y