| Imager documentation | view source | Contained in the Imager distribution. |
Imager::Expr::Assem - an assembler for producing code for the Imager register machine
use Imager::Expr::Assem; my $expr = Imager::Expr->new(assem=>'...', ...)
This module is a simple Imager::Expr compiler that compiles a low-level language that has a nearly 1-to-1 relationship to the internal representation used for compiled register machine code.
Each line can contain multiple statements separated by semi-colons.
Anything after '#' in a line is ignored.
Types of statements:
var name:type
defines variable name to have type, which can be any of n or
num for a numeric type or pixel, p or c for a pixel or
color type.
Variable names cannot include white-space.
Operators can be split into 3 basic types, those that have a result value, those that don't and the null operator, eg. jump has no value.
The format for operators that return a value is typically:
result = operator operand ...
and for those that don't return a value:
operator operand
where operator is any valid register machine operator, result is any
variable defined with var, and operands are variables, constants or
literals, or for jump operators, labels.
The set operator can be simplified to:
result = operator
All operators maybe preceded by a label, which is any non-white-space text immediately followed by a colon (':').
Note that the current optimizer may produce incorrect optimization for
your code, fortunately the optimizer will disable itself if you
include any jump operator in your code. A single jump to anywhere
after your final ret operator can be used to disable the optimizer
without slowing down your code.
There's currently no high-level code generation that can generate code with loops or real conditions.
Imager(3), transform.perl, regmach.c
Tony Cook <tony@develop-help.com>
| Imager documentation | view source | Contained in the Imager distribution. |