programs-e2e.sx exercises the classic-algorithm shapes from
lib/apl/tests/programs/*.apl via the full pipeline (apl-run on
embedded source strings). Tests include factorial-via-∇,
triangular numbers, sum-of-squares, prime-mask building blocks
(divisor counts via outer mod), named-fn composition,
dyadic max-of-two, and a single Newton sqrt step.
The original one-liners (e.g. primes' inline ⍵←⍳⍵) need parser
features we haven't built (compress-as-fn, inline assign) — the
e2e tests use multi-statement equivalents. No file-reading
primitive in OCaml SX, so source is embedded.
Side-fix: ⌿ (first-axis reduce) and ⍀ (first-axis scan) were
silently skipped by the tokenizer — added to apl-glyph-set
and apl-parse-op-glyphs.
Three small unblockers in one iteration:
- tokenizer: read-digits! now consumes optional ".digits" suffix,
so 3.7 and ¯2.5 are single number tokens.
- tokenizer: ⎕ followed by ← emits a single :name "⎕←" token
(instead of splitting on the assign glyph). Parser registers
⎕← in apl-quad-fn-names; apl-monadic-fn maps to apl-quad-print.
- eval-ast: :str AST nodes evaluate to char arrays. Single-char
strings become rank-0 scalars; multi-char become rank-1 vectors
of single-char strings.
30 new source-string idioms via apl-run: triangulars, factorial,
running sum/product, parity counts, identity matrix, mult-table,
dot product, ∧.= equality, take/drop/reverse, tally, ravel,
count-of-value, etc.
Side-fix: tokenizer's apl-glyph-set was missing ≢ and ≡ — they
were silently skipped. Added them and to apl-parse-fn-glyphs.