Typos in `Init/` and `Std/`.
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Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
This PR renames `String.ValidPos` to `String.Pos`, `String.endValidPos`
to `String.endPos` and `String.startValidPos` to `String.startPos`.
Accordingly, the deprecations of `String.Pos` to `String.Pos.Raw` and
`String.endPos` to `String.rawEndPos` are removed early, after an
abbreviated deprecation cycle of two releases.
This PR cleans up the API around `String.find` and moves it uniformly to
the new position types `String.ValidPos` and `String.Slice.Pos`
Overview:
- To search for a character, character predicate, string or slice in a
string or slice `s`, use `s.find?` or `s.find`.
- To do the same, but starting at a position `p` of a string or slice,
use `p.find?` or `p.find`.
- To do the same but between two positions `p` and `q`, construct the
slice from `p` to `q` and then use `find?` or `find` on that.
- To search backwards, all of the above applies, except that the
function is called `revFind?`, there is no non-question-mark version
(use `getD` if there is a sane default return value in your specific
application), and that you can only search for characters and character
predicates, not strings or slices.
This PR introduces a function `String.split` which is based on
`String.Slice.split` and therefore supports all pattern types and
returns a `Std.Iter String.Slice`.
This supersedes the functions `String.splitOn` and `String.splitToList`,
and we remove all all uses of these functions from core. They will be
deprecated in a future PR.
Migrating from `String.splitOn` and `String.splitToList` is easy: we
introduce functions `Iter.toStringList` and `Iter.toStringArray` that
can be used to conveniently go from `Std.Iter String.Slice` to `List
String` and `Array String`, so for example `s.splitOn "foo"` can be
replaced by `s.split "foo" |>.toStringList`.
This PR removes all uses of `String.Iterator` from core, preferring
`String.ValidPos` instead.
In an upcoming PR, `String.Iterator` will be renamed to
`String.Legacy.Iterator`.
This PR splits some low-hanging fruit out of `Init.Data.String.Basic`:
basic material about `String.Pos.Raw`, `String.Substrig`, and
`String.Iterator`.
More splitting required and the remaining material is quite unorganized,
but it's a start.
This PR renames `String.endPos` to `String.rawEndPos`, as in a future
release the name `String.endPos` will be taken by the function that is
currently called `String.endValidPos`.
This PR moves many operations involving `String.Pos.Raw` to a the
`String.Pos.Raw` namespace with the eventual aim of freeing up the
`String` namespace to contain operations using `String.ValidPos` (to be
renamed to `String.Pos`) instead.
This PR adds the `String.ValidPos.set` and `String.ValidPos.modify`
functions.
After this PR, `String.pos_lt_eq` is no longer a `simp` lemma. Add
`String.Pos.Raw.lt_iff` as a `simp` lemma if your proofs break.
This PR renames `String.split` to `String.splitToList`, because soon the
name `String.split` will be used by a new implementation which is
superior because it is polymorphic over the pattern kind and it returns
an iterator of slices instead of a list of strings.
This PR adjusts the experimental module system to make `private` the
default visibility modifier in `module`s, introducing `public` as a new
modifier instead. `public section` can be used to revert the default for
an entire section, though this is more intended to ease gradual adoption
of the new semantics such as in `Init` (and soon `Std`) where they
should be replaced by a future decl-by-decl re-review of visibilities.
System.FilePath.parent did not return the correct parent path in the
case of absolute file paths
Example of previous behavior
```
(FilePath.mk "/foo").parent -> some (FilePath.mk "")
(System.FilePath.mk "/").parent -> some (FilePath.mk "")
```
The new behavior is based on rust's std::path::Path::parent function (as
previously described in comment in System.FilePath)
Example of updated behavior
```
(System.FilePath.mk "/foo").parent -> some (FilePath.mk "/")
(System.FilePath.mk "/").parent -> none
```
Behavior for relative file paths is unchanged
Closes#3618
This introduces `FilePath.addExtension` to take a path that we know has
no prior extension, and append a new extension to it.
As this function is simpler than `FilePath.withExtension`, this change
eagerly replaces uses of the latter with the former, except in a few
cases where stripping the extension really is the right thing to do.
This should fix the bug described at
https://leanprover.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/270676-lean4/topic/Import.20file.20with.20multiple.20dots.20in.20file.20name/near/404508048,
where `import «A.B».«C.D.lean»` is needed to import `A.B/C.D.lean`.
Closes#2999
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Co-authored-by: Mac Malone <tydeu@hatpress.net>
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Ullrich <sebasti@nullri.ch>