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+---
+language: mercury
+contributors:
+ - ["Julian Fondren", "https://mercury-in.space/"]
+---
+
+Mercury is a strict, pure functional/logic programming language, with
+influences from Prolog, ML, and Haskell.
+
+```mercury
+% Percent sign starts a one-line comment.
+
+ % foo(Bar, Baz)
+ %
+ % Documentation comments are indented before what they describe.
+:- pred foo(bar::in, baz::out) is det.
+
+% All toplevel syntax elements end with a '.' -- a full stop.
+
+% Mercury terminology comes from predicate logic. Very roughly:
+
+% | Mercury | C |
+% | | |
+% | Goal | statement |
+% | expression | expression |
+% | predicate rule | void function |
+% | function rule | function |
+% | head (of a rule) | function name and parameters |
+% | body (of a rule) | function body |
+% | fact | (rule without a body) |
+% | pred/func declaration | function signature |
+% | A, B (conjunction) | A && B |
+% | A ; B (disjunction) | if (A) {} else if (B) {} |
+
+% some facts:
+man(socrates). % "it is a fact that Socrates is a man"
+man(plato).
+man(aristotle).
+
+% a rule:
+mortal(X) :- man(X). % "It is a rule that X is a mortal if X is a man."
+% ^^^^^^-- the body of the rule
+% ^^-- an arrow <--, pointing to the head from the body
+%^^^^^^^^-- the head of the rule
+% this is also a single clause that defines the rule.
+
+% that X is capitalized is how you know it's a variable.
+% that socrates is uncapitalized is how you know it's a term.
+
+% it's an error for 'socrates' to be undefined. It must have a type:
+
+% declarations begin with ':-'
+:- type people
+ ---> socrates
+ ; plato
+ ; aristotle
+ ; hermes.
+ %<--first tab stop (using 4-space tabs)
+ %<--third tab stop (first after --->)
+
+:- pred man(people). % rules and facts also require types
+
+% a rule's modes tell you how it can be used.
+:- mode man(in) is semidet. % man(plato) succeeds. man(hermes) fails.
+:- mode man(out) is multi. % man(X) binds X to one of socrates ; plato ; aristotle
+
+% a semidet predicate is like a test. It doesn't return a value, but
+% it can succeed or fail, triggering backtracking or the other side of
+% a disjunction or conditional.
+
+% 'is semidet' provides the determinism of a mode. Other determinisms:
+% | Can fail? | 0 solutions | 1 | more than 1 |
+% | | | | |
+% | no | erroneous | det | multi |
+% | yes | failure | semidet | nondet |
+
+:- pred mortal(people::in) is semidet. % type/mode in one declaration
+
+% this rule's body consists of two conjunctions: A, B, C
+% this rule is true if A, B, and C are all true.
+% if age(P) returns 16, it fails.
+% if alive(P) fails, it fails.
+:- type voter(people::in) is semidet.
+voter(P) :-
+ alive(P),
+ registered(P, locale(P)),
+ age(P) >= 18. % age/1 is a function; int.>= is a function used as an operator
+
+% "a P is a voter if it is alive, is registered in P's locale, and if
+% P's age is 18 or older."
+
+% the >= used here is provided by the 'int' module, which isn't
+% imported by default. Mercury has a very small 'Prelude' (the
+% 'builtin' module). You even need to import the 'list' module if
+% you're going to use list literals.
+```
+
+Complete runnable example. File in 'types.m'; compile with 'mmc --make types'.
+
+```mercury
+:- module types.
+:- interface.
+:- import_module io. % required for io.io types in...
+% main/2 is usually 'det'. threading and exceptions require 'cc_multi'
+:- pred main(io::di, io::uo) is cc_multi. % program entry point
+:- implementation.
+:- import_module int, float, string, list, bool, map, exception.
+
+% enum.
+:- type days
+ ---> sunday
+ ; monday
+ ; tuesday
+ ; wednesday
+ ; thursday
+ ; friday
+ ; saturday.
+
+% discriminated union, like datatype in ML.
+:- type payment_method
+ ---> cash(int)
+ ; credit_card(
+ name :: string, % named fields
+ cc_number :: string,
+ cvv :: int,
+ expiration :: string
+ )
+ ; crypto(coin_type, wallet, amount).
+
+:- type coin_type
+ ---> etherium
+ ; monero. % "other coins are available"
+
+% type aliases.
+:- type wallet == string.
+:- type amount == int.
+
+% !IO is the pair of io.io arguments
+% pass it to anything doing I/O, in order to perform I/O.
+% many otherwise-impure functions can 'attach to the I/O state' by taking !IO
+main(!IO) :-
+ Ints = [
+ 3,
+ 1 + 1,
+ 8 - 1,
+ 10 * 2,
+ 35 / 5,
+ 5 / 2, % truncating division
+ int.div(5, 2), % floored division
+ div(5, 2), % (module is unambiguous due to types)
+ 5 `div` 2, % (any binary function can be an operator with ``)
+ 7 `mod` 3, % modulo of floored division
+ 7 `rem` 3, % remainder of truncating division
+ 2 `pow` 4, % 2 to the 4th power
+ (1 + 3) * 2, % parens have their usual meaning
+
+ 2 >> 3, % bitwise right shift
+ 128 << 3, % bitwise left shift
+ \ 0, % bitwise complement
+ 5 /\ 1, % bitwise and
+ 5 \/ 1, % bitwise or
+ 5 `xor` 3, % bitwise xor
+
+ max_int,
+ min_int,
+
+ 5 `min` 3, % ( if 5 > 3 then 3 else 5 )
+ 5 `max` 3
+ ],
+ Bools = [
+ yes,
+ no
+ % bools are much less important in Mercury because control flow goes by
+ % semidet goals instead of boolean expressions.
+ ],
+ Strings = [
+ "this is a string",
+ "strings can have "" embedded doublequotes via doubling",
+ "strings support \u4F60\u597D the usual escapes\n",
+ % no implicit concatenation of strings: "concat:" "together"
+ "but you can " ++ " use the string.++ operator",
+
+ % second param is a list(string.poly_type)
+ % s/1 is a function that takes a string and returns a poly_type
+ % i/1 takes an int. f/1 takes a float. c/1 takes a char.
+ string.format("Hello, %d'th %s\n", [i(45), s("World")])
+ ],
+
+ % start with purely functional types like 'map' and 'list'!
+ % arrays and hash tables are available too, but using them
+ % requires knowing a lot more about Mercury
+ get_map1(Map1),
+ get_map2(Map2),
+
+ % list.foldl has *many* variations
+ % this one calls io.print_line(X, !IO) for each X of the list
+ foldl(io.print_line, Ints, !IO),
+ foldl(io.print_line, Bools, !IO),
+ foldl(io.print_line, Strings, !IO),
+ io.print_line(Map1, !IO),
+ % ( if Cond then ThenGoal else ElseGoal )
+ % I/O not allowed in Cond: I/O isn't allowed to fail!
+ ( if Map2^elem(42) = Elem then
+ io.print_line(Elem, !IO)
+ else % always required
+ true % do nothing, successfully (vs. 'fail')
+ ),
+
+ % exception handling:
+ ( try [io(!IO)] ( % io/1 param required or no I/O allowed here
+ io.print_line(received(cash(1234)), !IO),
+ io.print_line(received(crypto(monero, "invalid", 123)), !IO)
+ ) then
+ io.write_string("all payments accepted\n", !IO) % never reached
+ catch "monero not yet supported" -> % extremely specific catch!
+ io.write_string("monero payment failed\n", !IO)
+ ).
+
+:- pred get_map1(map(string, int)::out) is det.
+get_map1(!:Map) :- % !:Map in the head is the final (free, unbound) Map
+ !:Map = init, % !:Map in the body is the next Map
+ det_insert("hello", 1, !Map), % pair of Map vars
+ det_insert("world", 2, !Map),
+
+ % debug print of current (bound) Map
+ % other [Params] can make it optional per runtime or compiletime flags
+ trace [io(!IO)] (io.print_line(!.Map, !IO)),
+
+ det_insert_from_corresponding_lists(K, V, !Map),
+ % this code is reordered so that K and V and defined prior to their use
+ K = ["more", "words", "here"],
+ V = [3, 4, 5].
+
+:- pred get_map2(map(int, bool)::out) is det.
+get_map2(Map) :-
+ det_insert(42, yes, map.init, Map).
+
+:- func received(payment_method) = string.
+received(cash(N)) = string.format("received %d dollars", [i(N)]).
+received(credit_card(_, _, _, _)) = "received credit card". % _ is throwaway
+received(crypto(Type, _Wallet, Amount)) = S :- % _Wallet is named throwaway
+ ( % case/switch structure
+ Type = etherium,
+ S = string.format("receiving %d ETH", [i(Amount)])
+ ;
+ Type = monero,
+ throw("monero not yet supported") % exception with string as payload
+ ).
+```
+
+## That was quick! Want more?
+
+### More Tutorials
+
+* [Mercury Tutorial](https://mercurylang.org/documentation/papers/book.pdf) (pdf link) - a more traditional tutorial with a more relaxed pace
+* [Mercury Crash Course](https://mercury-in.space/crash.html) - a dense example-driven tutorial with Q&A format
+* [Github Wiki Tutorial](https://github.com/Mercury-Language/mercury/wiki/Tutorial)
+* [Getting Started with Mercury](https://bluishcoder.co.nz/2019/06/23/getting-started-with-mercury.html) - installation and your first steps
+
+### Documentation
+
+* Language manual, user's guide, and library reference are all at
+ [mercurylang.org](https://mercurylang.org/documentation/documentation.html)