All the contracts have the following form:
[%%version 2.1] <... local declarations ...> type storage = TYPE let%init storage (x : TYPE) (y : TYPE) ... = BODY let%entry entrypoint1 (p1 : TYPE) (s1 : TYPE) = BODY let%entry entrypoint2 (p2 : TYPE) (s2 : TYPE) = BODY let%entry default (parameter : TYPE) (storage : TYPE) = BODY let%view view1 (parameter : TYPE) (storage : TYPE) : TYPE = BODY ...
The optional version
statement tells the compiler in which version
of Liquidity the contract is written. The compiler will reject any
contract that has a version that it does not understand (too old, more
recent).
A contract is composed of type declarations, local values definitions,
an initializer, and a set of entry points and views. The type
storage
must be defined for all contracts.
Each entry point is a special function declared with the keyword
let%entry
. An entry point must have two arguments, the first one
being the parameter (whose type can be inferred, but we recommend
writing a type annotation for documentation purposes) and the second
one is the storage. The return type of the function can be specified
but is not necessary. Each entry point and view must be given a unique
name within the same contract.
If there is an entry point named default
, it will be the default
entry point for the contract, i.e. the one that is called when the
entry point is not specified in Contract.call
. It is generally a
good idea to make this entry point take a parameter of type unit, so
that the code will be executed by any transfer made to it without
arguments. (This can code to prevent accidental token transfers for
instance.)
An entry point always returns a pair (operations, storage)
, where
operations
is a list of internal operations to perform after
execution of the contract, and storage
is the final state of the
contract after the call. The type of the pair must match the type of a
pair where the first component is a list of opertations and the second
is the type of the storage argument.
Only with Love
Views are effect-less functions that return values (usually by reading the storage) and that are accessible outside the contract. Each view takes a parameter and a storage, and returns a value. We recommend writing the parameter and return types for documentation.
<... local declarations ...>
is an optional set of type, function
and extended primitives declarations. Type declarations can be used to
define records and variants (sum-types), described later in this
documentation.
An optional initial storage or storage initializer can be given with
let%init storage
. When deploying a Liquidity contract, if the
storage is not constant it is evaluated in the head context.
Note that types, values, entry points and values definitions can be written in any order as long as they are defined before their use (forward references are forbidden).
Types in Liquidity are monomorphic. They are all inherited from Michelson, except for algebraic data types and records, that are translated to Michelson types.
Only with love Structured types are kept when compiling to Love.
The built-in base types are:
unit
: whose only constructor is()
bool
: Booleansint
: Unbounded integersnat
: Unbounded naturals (positive integers)dun
: The type of amountsstring
: character stringsbytes
: bytes sequencestimestamp
: dates and timestampskey
: cryptographic keyskey_hash
: hashes of cryptographic keyssignature
: cryptographic signaturesoperation
: type of operations, can only be constructedaddress
: abstract type of contract addresseschain_id
: abstract type for chain ids
Types can be composed using the following type operators:
- tuples: noted
t1 * t2
,t1 * t2 * t3
, etc. - functions:
'a -> 'b
is the type of functions from'a
to'b
, equivalent to('a, 'b) lambda
.
and the following predefined combinators:
- lists:
'a list
is the type of lists of elements in'a
- sets:
'a set
is the type of sets of elements in'a
('a
must be a comparable type) - maps:
('key, 'val) map
is the type of maps whose keys are of type'key
, a comparable type, and values of type'val
; - big maps:
('key, 'val) big_map
is the type of lazily deserialized maps whose keys are of type'key
(a comparable type) and values of type'val
; - contracts:
S.instance
is the type of contracts (instances) of signatureS
(see Contract Types and Signatures);
and the predefined algebraic data types:
- option type:
'a option = None | Some of 'a
- variant type:
('a, 'b) variant = Left of 'a | Right of 'b
Record and variant types must be declared beforehand and are referred to by their names.
User defined types can be parameterized by type variables. See Polymorphism for the specifics and limitations.
Contracts can either be manipulated (stored, passed as argument to a function or a parameter to another contract) as addresses (this is a representation for an untyped contract, whose signature is unknown) or as typed values. Contracts can be freely converted to one type or the other (the internal representation during execution remains identical, but extra checks are performed when going from an address to a typed contract). These typed values mention only a subset of the contract signature. In fact they must mention only a single entry point or view in the signature, this is why we call them handles (to a specific entry point).
There are two kinds of types for these handles: handles to entry points and handles to views.
Handles to entry points need only mention the type of the parameter as such:
%[handle 'parameter]
Only with love Handles to views must mention the view name, the parameter type and the return type:
%[view (view_name : 'parameter -> 'return)]
These special types can be used anywhere a type is required.
Follow these links for the conversion primitives:
- :ref:`Converting handles addresses <handle_to_address>` :
Contract.address
. - :ref:`Converting addresses to entry point handles <handle_entry>`:
[%handle: val%entry : ...]
or[%handle C.entry]
. - Only with love :ref:`Converting addresses to view handles <handle_view>`:
[%handle: val%view : ...]
or[%view C.view]
.
The unique constructor of type unit
is ()
.
The two Booleans (bool
) constants are:
true
false
As in Michelson, there are different types of integers:
int
: an unbounded integer, positive or negative, simply written0
,1
,2
,-1
,-2
, ...nat
: an unbounded positive integer, written either with ap
suffix (0p
,12p
, etc.) or as an integer with a type coercion ((0 : nat)
).dun
: an unbounded positive float of DUNs, written either with aDUN
(ordun
) suffix (1.00DUN
, etc.) or as a string with type coercion (("1.00" : dun)
).
Strings (string
) are delimited by the characters "
and "
.
Bytes (bytes
) are sequences of hexadecimal pairs preceeded by 0x
, for
instance:
0x
0xabcdef
Timestamps (timestamp
) are written in ISO 8601 format, like in Michelson:
2015-12-01T10:01:00+01:00
Keys, key hashes and signatures are base58-check encoded, the same as in Michelson:
dn1HieGdCFcT8Lg9jDANfEGbJyt6arqEuSJb
is a key hash (key_hash
)edpkuit3FiCUhd6pmqf9ztUTdUs1isMTbF9RBGfwKk1ZrdTmeP9ypN
is a public key (key
)edsigedsigthTzJ8X7MPmNeEwybRAvdxS1pupqcM5Mk4uCuyZAe7uEk68YpuGDeViW8wSXMrCi5CwoNgqs8V2w8ayB5dMJzrYCHhD8C7
is a signature (signature
)
There are also three types of collections: lists, sets and maps. Constants collections can be created directly:
- Lists:
["x"; "y"]
for astring list
; - Sets:
Set [1; 2; 3; 4]
for anint set
; - Maps:
Map [1, "x"; 2, "y"; 3, "z"]
for a(int, string) map
; - Big maps:
BigMap [1, "x"; 2, "y"; 3, "z"]
for a(int, string) big_map
Options (option
) can be defined with:
- An empty option:
None
- A valued option:
Some 3
Variants (variant
) can be defined with:
- Left alternative:
Left "hello"
- Right alternative:
Right 3
for a (string, int) variant
.
The variant
type is not supposed to be used by programmers, who
can defined their own algebraic data types. Instead, variant
is
used when decompiling Michelson code.
It is also possible to coerce some constants between their inferred
type and another compatible type, using the notation
( CONSTANT : NEWTYPE )
:
- A
string
can be coerced todun
(the string must contain an integer in mudun à la Michelson),timestamp
,key
,address
,_ contract
,key_hash
andsignature
. - A
bytes
can be coerced toaddress
,_.instance
,key
,key_hash
andsignature
. - An constant
address
can be coerced to a contract handle. - A constant contract handle can be coerced to
address
. - A
key_hash
can be coerced to anaddress
and a contract handle (to entry pointdefault
of parameter typeunit
).
Starting with version 0.5
, constant values such as []
,
Map
, Set
, None
do not need to be annotated with their type
anymore. It will be inferred (when possible), see Type inference).
Pure (not closures) lambdas are also constants in Liquidity.
- For instance
fun (x : int) -> x + 1
can be used anywhere that a constant of typeint -> int
is required.
There are two kinds of primitives in the language:
- Prefix primitives are used by putting the primitive before the
arguments:
prim x y z
. All alphanumerical primitives are prefix primitives, exceptlor
,lxor
,mod
,land
,lsl
,lsr
andasr
. - Infix primitves are used by putting the primitive between the
arguments:
x prim y
. Infix primitives are always operators (+
,-
, etc.).
When the type of a primitive is specified, we extend the notation for functions like this:
TYPE_ARG -> TYPE_RESULT
for a primitive with one argumentTYPE_ARG1 -> TYPE_ARG2 -> TYPE_RESULT
for a primitive with two arguments
Only with michelson
Additional prefix Michelson primitives can be added to the language through a local declaration as follows:
external prim_name : TYPE1 -> ... -> TYPE_ARG1 -> ... -> TYPE_RESULT = "MINST" FLAGS
Such declaration takes as input an arbitrary number of type arguments
(TYPE1 -> ...
) of the form [%type: 'a]
, where 'a
is the
variable bound to the type.
Then follows an arbitrary (but non-null) number of typed arguments
(TYPE_ARG1 -> ...
) of the form [%stack: TYPE]
, where TYPE
corresponds to any Michelson type, possibly containing one or more of
the type variables introduced previously. Here, %stack
means the
argument resides on the stack. It is mandatory for all arguments,
except when declaring a primitive that takes no argument, in which
case it takes a single argument of type unit
, without the
%stack
specifier ([%stack: unit]
would instead mean
that the primitive takes a unit value from the stack).
The result type (TYPE_RESULT
) is specified using the same form as
arguments, i.e. [%stack: TYPE]
, where a bare unit
indicates
a primitive that does not produce any value on the stack. It is
also possible to specify that the primitive returns several
values on the stack using a tuple notation :
[%stack: TYPE1] * [%stack: TYPE2] * ...
. In this case, every
component of the tuple must have a %stack
specifier and will
occupy a different stack cell. All the values will be assembled
into an actual tuple before being returned to Liquidity.
MINST
is the actual Michelson instruction to generate and will
be written as-is in the output file, followed by the given type
arguments, if any.
FLAGS
allows to give additional information about the primitive.
Currently, the only supported flag is [@@effect]
, which specifies
that the primitive may have side-effects. This prevents calls to
this primitive from being inlined or eliminated when the return
value is not used.
A call to an extended primitive is then performed as follows:
prim_name TYPE1 ... ARG1 ...
After the primitive name, a number of type arguments (TYPE1 ...
)
of the form [%type: TYPE]
may be given (if the primitive has
been declared to take type arguments), where TYPE
is any
Michelson type. Then follow the actual arguments (ARG1 ...
).
All values are not comparable. Only two values of the following types can be compared with each other:
bool
int
nat
dun
string
bytes
timestamp
key_hash
address
The following comparison operators are available:
=
: equal<>
: not-equal<
: strictly less<=
: less or equal>
: strictly greater>=
: greater or equal
There is also a function compare : 'a -> 'a -> int
to compare two
values and return an integer, as follows. compare x y
- returns 0 if
x
andy
are equal - returns a strictly positive integer if
x > y
- returns a strictly negative integer if
x < y
Current.balance: unit -> dun
: returns the balance of the current contract. The balance contains the amount of dun that was sent by the current operation... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc1.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc1.liq
Current.time: unit -> timestamp
: returns the timestamp of the block in which the transaction is included. This value is chosen by the baker that is including the transaction, so it should not be used as a reliable source of alea... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc2.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc2.liq
Current.amount: unit -> dun
: returns the amount of dun transferred by the current operation (standard or internal transaction)... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc3.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc3.liq
Current.source: unit -> address
: returns the address that initiated the current top-level transaction in the blockchain. It is the same one for all the transactions resulting from the top-level transaction, standard and internal. It is the address that paid the fees and storage cost, and signed the operation on the blockchain... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc5.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc5.liq
Current.sender: unit -> address
: returns the address that initiated the current transaction. It is the same as the source for the top-level transaction, but it is the originating contract for internal operations... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc6.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc6.liq
failwith
orCurrent.failwith: 'a -> 'b
: makes the current transaction and all its internal transactions fail. No modification is done to the context. The argument can be any value (often a string and some argument), the system will display it to explain why the transaction failed... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc7.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc7.liq
Current.block_level: unit -> nat
: returns the level of the block in which the transaction is included... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc75.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc75.liq
Current.collect_call: unit -> bool
: returnstrue
if the current call is a collect call.... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc76.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc76.liq
get t n
,Array.get t n
andt.(n)
wheren
is a constant positive-or-nul int: returns then
-th element of the tuplet
. Tuples are translated to Michelson by pairing on the right, i.e.(a,b,c,d)
becomes(a, (b, (c, d)))
. In this example,a
is the0
-th element... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc8.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc8.liq
set t n x
,Array.set t n x
andt.(n) <- x
wheren
is constant positive-or-nul int: returns the tuple where then
-th element has been replaced byx
... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc9.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc9.liq
+
: Addition. With the following types:dun -> dun -> dun
nat -> nat -> nat
int|nat -> int|nat -> int
timestamp -> int -> timestamp
int -> timestamp -> timestamp
-
: Substraction. With the following types:dun -> dun -> dun
int|nat -> int|nat -> int
timestamp -> int -> timestamp
timestamp -> timestamp -> int
int|nat -> int
(unary negation)
*
: Multiplication. With the following types:nat -> dun -> dun
dun -> nat -> dun
nat -> nat -> nat
nat|int -> nat|int -> int
.. tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc10.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc10.liq
/
: Euclidian division. With the following types:nat -> nat -> ( nat * nat ) option
int|nat -> int|nat -> ( int * nat ) option
dun -> nat -> ( dun * dun ) option
dun -> dun -> ( nat * dun ) option
.. tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc11.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc11.liq
~-
: Negation. Type:int|nat -> int
lor
,or
and||
: logical OR with the following types:bool -> bool -> bool
nat -> nat -> nat
&
,land
and&&
: logical AND with the following types:bool -> bool -> bool
nat|int -> nat -> nat
lxor
,xor
: logical exclusive OR with the following types:bool -> bool -> bool
nat -> nat -> nat
not
: logical NOTbool -> bool
nat|int -> int
(two-complement with sign negation)
abs
: Absolute value. Typeint -> int
is_nat
: Maybe positive. Typeint -> nat option
.Instead of using
is_nat
, it is recommended to use a specific form of pattern matching:.. tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc12.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc12.liq
int
: To integer. Typenat -> int
>>
andlsr
: Logical shift right. Typenat -> nat -> nat
<<
andlsl
: Logical shift left. Typenat -> nat -> nat
Contract.call: dest:(address | [%handle 'a] | 'S.instance) -> amount:dun -> ?entry:<entry_name> -> parameter:'a -> operation
. Forge an internal contract call. Arguments can be labeled, in which case they can be given in any order. The entry point name is optional (default
by default). The destination is either a contract handle to an entry point, a contract instance, or an address (in the last two cases, an entry point must be specified)... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc13.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc13.liq
<c.entry>: 'parameter -> amount:dun -> operation
. Forge an internal contract call. The amount argument can be labeled, in which case it can appear before the parameter.c
is either a contract handle (of type[%handle 'parameter]
) or an address... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc14.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc14.liq
Account.transfer: dest:key_hash -> amount:dun -> operation
. Forge an internal transaction to the implicit (_i.e._ default) account contract ofdest
. Arguments can be labeled, in which case they can be given in any order. The resulting operation cannot fail (if the transfer amount leaves more than 0.257DUN on both contracts)... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc15.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc15.liq
Contract.view: dest:(address | [%view (view_name : 'a -> 'b)]) -> ?view:<view_name> -> parameter:'a -> 'b
. Call a specific contract view. Arguments can be labeled, in which case they can be given in any order. The view name is mandatory if andest
is an address (it is not required ifdest
is a view handle). The destination is either a view handle or an address (in which case, an view name point must be specified). Only with love.. tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/test_view.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/test_view.liq :lines: 8-12
Account.default: key_hash -> [%handle unit]
. Returns a contract handle to thedefault
entry point of the implicit account associated to the givenkey_hash
. Transfers to it cannot fail... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc17.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc17.liq
Contract.set_delegate: key_hash option -> operation
. Forge a delegation operation for the current contract. ANone
argument means that the contract should have no delegate (it falls back to its manager). The delegation operation will only be executed in an internal operation if it is returned at the end of the entry point definition... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc18.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc18.liq
Contract.address: [%handle 'a] -> address
. Returns the address of a contract. The returned address can be converted to any entry point (or view) handle of the contract (contrary toContract.untype
)... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc19.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc19.liq
Contract.untype: [%handle 'a] -> address
. Returns the address corresponding to an untype version of the contract handle... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc16.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc16.liq
C.at: address -> C.instance option
. Returns the contract associated with the address and of typeC
, if any. Only with love.. tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc20.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc20.liq :lines: 13-18
[%handle: val%entry <entry_name> : 'a ] : address -> [%handle 'a] option
. Returns a contract handle to the entry point<entry_name>
if the contract at the specified address has an entry point named<entry_name>
of parameter type'a
. If no such entry point exists or the parameter type is different then this function returnsNone
. For any contract or contract typeC
, you can also use the syntactic sugar[%handle C.<entry_name>]
instead... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc20.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc20.liq :lines: 1-11
[%handle: val%view <view_name> : 'a -> 'b] : address -> [%view (view_name : 'a -> 'b)] option
. Returns a contract view handle to the view<view_name>
if the contract at the specified address has an view named<view_name>
of parameter type'a
and return type'b
. If no such view exists or the parameter or return types are different then this function returnsNone
. For any contract or contract typeC
, you can also use the syntactic sugar[%view C.<view_name>]
instead. Only with love.. tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/test_view.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/test_view.liq :lines: 14-19
Contract.get_balance: [%handle 'a] -> dun
. Returns the balance of the contract... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc77.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc77.liq
Contract.is_implicit: [%handle unit] -> key_hash option
. Returns the key hash of a contract handle if it is an implicit one, otherwise, returnsNone
... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc74.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc74.liq
[%handle Self.<entry>] -> [%handle 'a]
. Returns a handle to the entry point<entry>
of the currently executing contract. You can use the syntactic sugarContract.self ()
for[%handle Self.default]
... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc21.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc21.liq
Contract.create: delegate:key_hash option -> amount:dun -> storage:'storage -> code:(contract _) -> (operation, address)
. Forge an operation to originate a contract with code. The contract is only created when the operation is executed, so it must be returned by the transaction. Note that the code must be specified as a contract structure (inlined or not).Contract.create delegate_opt initial_amount initial_storage (contract C)
forges an an origination operation for contractC
with optional delegatedelegate
, initial balanceinitial_amount
and initial storageinitial_storage
. Arguments can be named and put in any order... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc22.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc22.liq
The contract code parameter is a first class value, it can be written inlined as above, or equivalently the contract code can be referred to by its name (in scope) as below:
.. tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc23.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc23.liq
Crypto.blake2b: bytes -> bytes
. Computes the cryptographic hash of a bytes with the cryptographic Blake2b function... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc24.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc24.liq
Crypto.sha256: bytes -> bytes
. Computes the cryptographic hash of a bytes with the cryptographic Sha256 function... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc25.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc25.liq
Crypto.sha512: bytes -> bytes
. Computes the cryptographic hash of a bytes with the cryptographic Sha512 function... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc26.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc26.liq
Crypto.hash_key: key -> key_hash
. Hash a public key and encode the hash in B58check... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc27.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc27.liq
Crypto.check: key -> signature -> bytes -> bool
. Check that the signature corresponds to signing the (Blake2b hash of the) sequence of bytes with the public key. Signatures generated bydune-client sign bytes ...
can be checked this way... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc28.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc28.liq
Bytes.pack: 'a -> bytes
. Serialize any data to a binary representation in a sequence of bytes... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc29.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc29.liq
Bytes.unpack: bytes -> 'a option
. Deserialize a sequence of bytes to a value from which it was serialized. The expression must be annotated with the (option) type that it should return... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc30.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc30.liq
Bytes.length
orBytes.size: bytes -> nat
. Return the size of the sequence of bytes... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc31.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc31.liq
Bytes.concat: bytes list -> bytes
. Append all the sequences of bytes of a list into a single sequence of bytes... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc32.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc32.liq
Bytes.slice
orBytes.sub" of type ``nat -> nat -> bytes -> bytes option
. Extract a sequence of bytes within another sequence of bytes.Bytes.slice start len b
extracts the bytes subsequence ofb
starting at indexstart
and of lengthlen
. A return valueNone
means that the position or length was invalid... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc33.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc33.liq
( @ ) : bytes -> bytes -> bytes
. Append two sequences of bytes into a single sequence of bytes.b1 @ b2
is syntactic sugar forBytes.concat [b1; b2]
... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc34.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc34.liq
A string is a fixed sequence of characters. They are restricted to the
printable subset of 7-bit ASCII, plus some escaped characters (\n
,
\t
, \b
, \r
, \\
, \"
).
String.length
orString.size
of typestring -> nat
. Return the size of the string in characters... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc35.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc35.liq
String.slice
orString.sub
with typenat -> nat -> string -> string option
.String.sub start len s
returns a substring of a strings
at the given starting at positionlen
with the specified lengthlen
, orNone
if invalid... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc36.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc36.liq
String.concat: string list -> string
. Append all strings of a list into a single string... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc37.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc37.liq
( @ ) : string -> string -> string
. Append two strings into a single string.s1 @ s2
is syntactic sugar forString.concat [s1; s2]
... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc38.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc38.liq
Lambda.pipe
or( |> )
of type'a -> ('a -> 'b) -> 'b
or'a -> ('a,'b) closure -> 'b
. Applies a function or closure to its argument.( @@ ) : ('a -> 'b) -> 'a -> 'b
is also function application... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc39.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc39.liq
Lists are immutable data structures containing values (of any type) that can only be accessed in a sequential order. Since they are immutable, all modification primitives return a new list, and the list given in argument is unmodified.
( :: ) : 'a -> 'a list -> 'a list
Add a new element at the head of the list. The previous list becomes the tail of the new list... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc40.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc40.liq
List.rev : 'a list -> 'a list
Return the list in the reverse order... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc41.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc41.liq
List.length
orList.size: 'a list -> nat
. Return the length of the list... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc42.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc42.liq
List.iter: ('a -> unit) -> 'a list -> unit
. Iter the function on all the elements of a list. Since no value can be returned, it can only be used for side effects, i.e. to fail the transaction... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc43.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc43.liq
List.fold: ('elt * 'acc -> 'acc) -> 'elt list -> 'acc -> 'acc
. Iter on all elements of a list, while modifying an accumulator... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc44.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc44.liq
List.map: ('a -> 'b) -> 'a list -> 'b list
. Return a list with the result of applying the function on each element of the list... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc45.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc45.liq
List.map_fold: ('a * 'acc -> 'b * 'acc) -> 'a list -> 'acc -> 'b list * 'acc
. Return a list with the result of applying the function on each element of the list, plus an accumulator... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc46.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc46.liq
Sets are immutable data structures containing unique values (a comparable type). Since they are immutable, all modification primitives return a new updated set, and the set given in argument is unmodified.
Set.update: 'a -> bool -> 'a set -> 'a set
. Update a set for a particular element. If the boolean istrue
, the element is added. If the boolean isfalse
, the element is removed... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc47.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc47.liq
Set.add: 'a -> 'a set -> 'a set
. Add an element to a set, if not present.Set.add x s
is syntactic sugar forSet.update x true s
... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc48.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc48.liq
Set.remove: 'a -> 'a set -> 'a set
. Remove an element to a set, if present.Set.remove x s
is syntactic sugar forSet.update x false s
... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc49.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc49.liq
Set.mem: 'a -> 'a set -> bool
. Returntrue
if the element is in the set,false
otherwise... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc50.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc50.liq
Set.cardinal
orSet.size
with type'a set -> nat
. Return the number of elements in the set... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc51.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc51.liq
Set.iter: ('ele -> unit) -> 'ele set -> unit
. Apply a function on all elements of the set. Since no value can be returned, it can only be used for side effects, i.e. to fail the transaction... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc52.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc52.liq
Maps are immutable data structures containing associations between keys (a comparable type) and values (any type). Since they are immutable, all modification primitives return a new updated map, and the map given in argument is unmodified.
Map.add: 'key -> 'val -> ('key, 'val) map -> ('key, 'val) map
. Return a map with a new association between a key and a value. If an association previously existed for the same key, it is not present in the new map... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc56.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc56.liq
Map.remove: 'key -> ('key,'val) map -> ('key,'val) map
. Return a map where any associated with the key has been removed... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc57.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc57.liq
Map.find: 'key -> ('key,'val) map -> 'val option
. Return the value associated with a key in the map... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc58.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc58.liq
Map.update: 'key -> 'val option -> ('key,'val) map -> ('key,'val) map
. Return a new map where the association between the key and the value has been removed (caseNone
) or added/updated (caseSome v
)... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc59.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc59.liq
Map.mem: 'key -> ('key, 'val) map -> bool
. Returntrue
if an association exists in the map for the key,false
otherwise... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc60.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc60.liq
Map.cardinal
orMap.size
with type('key,'val) map -> nat
. Return the number of associations (i.e. uniq keys) in the map... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc61.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc61.liq
Map.iter: ('key * 'val -> unit) -> ('key,'val) map -> unit
. Apply a function on all associations in the map. Since no value can be returned, it can only be used for side effects, i.e. to fail the transaction... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc62.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc62.liq
Map.fold: (('key * 'val) * 'acc -> 'acc) -> ('key,'val) map -> 'acc -> 'acc
. Apply a function on all associations of the map, updating and returning an accumulator... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc63.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc63.liq
Map.map: ('key * 'src -> 'dst) -> ('key,'src) map -> ('key,'dst) map
. Apply a function on all associations of a map, and return a new map where keys are now associated with the return values of the function... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc64.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc64.liq
Map.map_fold: (('key * 'src) * 'acc -> 'dst * 'acc) -> ('key,'src) map -> 'acc -> ('key,'dst) map * 'acc
. Apply a function on all associations of a map, returning both a new map and an updated accumulator... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc65.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc65.liq
Big maps are a specific kind of maps, optimized for storing. They can be updated incrementally and scale to a high number of associations, whereas standard maps will have an expensive serialization and deserialization cost. Big maps cannot be iterated and cannot have big maps as their keys or as their elements.
Map.find: 'key -> ('key,'val) big_map -> 'val option
. Return the value associated with a key in the map... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc66.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc66.liq
Map.mem: 'key -> ('key, 'val) big_map -> bool
. Returntrue
if an association exists in the map for the key,false
otherwise... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc67.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc67.liq
Map.update: 'key -> 'val option -> ('key,'val) big_map -> ('key,'val) big_map
. Return a new map where the association between the key and the value has been removed (caseNone
) or added/updated (caseSome v
).Map.add: 'key -> 'val -> ('key, 'val) big_map -> ('key, 'val) big_map
. Syntactic sugar forMap.update (Some ...)
.Map.remove: 'key -> ('key,'val) big_map -> ('key,'val) big_map
. Syntactic sugar forMap.update None
... tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc68.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc68.liq
These primitives should not be used directly in Liquidity. They are
only used by the decompiler. They are automatically replaced during
typing by the corresponding primitive for the collection of the
argument (in either List
, Set
, Map
, String
or
Bytes
). However, they can be used to write some polymorphic code on
collections.
Coll.update
Coll.mem
Coll.find
Coll.size
Coll.concat
Coll.slice
Coll.iter
Coll.fold
Coll.map
Coll.map_fold
The system described in this section allows to define several contracts and modules in the same file, to reference contracts by their names, and to call contracts defined in other files.
The notion of contract and module structures in Liquidity is a way
to define namespaces and to encapsulate types, values and contracts in
packages. These packages are called structures and are introduced with
the struct
keyword. Modules, introduced with the keyword
module
, can contain types and values but cannot contain any entry
points. Contracts are introduced with the keyword contract
, they
can contain types, values and must have at least one entry point.
Types in scope (defined before their use) can be referred to anywhere,
provided they are adequately qualified (with a dot .
notation).
Values are exported outside the module or the contract by default,
which means they can be used by other modules and contracts. One can
annotate the value with [@private]
to prevent exporting the value.
For instance the following example defines a module M
with a type
t
and an exported function f
.
.. tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc73.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc73.liq :lines: 1-4
The contract C
can be defined as such. It uses the type t
of
M
, written M.t
and the function f
of M
written
M.f
. The function succ
is exported and can be called with
C.succ
outside the contract, whereas prev
cannot (the compiler
will complain that is does not know the symbol C.prev
if we try to
use it elsewhere).
.. tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc73.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc73.liq :lines: 6-16
The toplevel contract can use elements from either structures. Here we
use types and functions from both M
and C
and call the entry
point default
of a contract instance of type C
.
.. tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc73.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc73.liq :lines: 30-33
Modules and contracts can be arbitrarily nested and aliases can be defined by simply giving the qualified name (instead of the whole structure).
.. tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc73.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc73.liq :lines: 18-28
Contracts structures (note we are not talking about contract instances here) can also be used as first class values:
.. tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc23.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc23.liq
Handles to contracts can be called with three different syntaxes:
Contract.call ~dest:c ~amount:1DUN ~parameter:"hello"
Contract.call ~dest:c ~amount:1DUN ~entry:default ~parameter:"hello"
c.default "hello" ~amount:1DUN
These calls are all equivalent when c is an address or a handle to the default entry point.
A contract defined at toplevel in a file path/to/my_contract.liq
implicitly defines a contract structure named My_contract
which
can be called in other Liquidity files.
A contract is a first class object in Liquidity only for the
instruction Contract.create
, while contract handles can be
used like any other values. Contract signatures are introduced with
the keyword sig
and defined with the keyword contract type
:
contract type S = sig type t1 = ... type t2 = ... val%entry entry1 : TYPE val%entry entry2 : TYPE val%entry default : TYPE val%view view1 : TYPE -> TYPE val%view view2 : TYPE -> TYPE ... end
A contract signature can contain:
- type declarations,
- declarations for the entry point signatures with the special keyword
val%entry
in which only the type parameter must be specified, - declarations for the view signatures with the special keyword
val%view
whose type must be an arrow type of the parameter to the result type.
Only with Love
The type of a contract (instance) whose signature is C is written
C.instance
. Note that C
must be declared as a contract or a
contract signature beforehand if we want to declare values of type
C.instance
.
For example:
type t = { counter : int; dest : C.instance; }
is a record type with a contract field dest
of signature C
.
The contract signature UnitContract
is built-in, in Liquidity, and
stands for contracts with a single entry point default
whose
parameter is of type unit
:
.. tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc70.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc70.liq
A new addition of version 0.5
of the Liquidity compiler is a type
inference algorithm (a variant of Hindley-Milner type inference) which
works in the presence of parametric types and polymorphic values
(functions) and can infer parametric types.
A consequence of this addition is that most type annotations in Liquidity are now unnecessary, but can be used to restrict types or to enforce a constraint. This makes programs more readable by removing superfluous noise.
In particular, types of entry point parameters, storage initializer
parameters, constant values (like []
, None
, etc.) and
functions are not necessary anymore.
The following example shows type inference at work.
.. tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc71.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc71.liq
In general, values in Liquidity cannot be polymorphic: type variables
must (and will) be instantiated (by inference and
monomorphization). This restriction is inherited from
Michelson. However there is still a way to write polymorphic
functions. This is especially useful to write reusable
code. Polymorphic functions are transformed into several monomorphized
versions. For instance a function f : 'a option -> int
will be
transformed into two functions f_i : int option
and
f_Ln : nat list option
if it is used with both an integer argument
and a list of naturals argument in the code.
To make this extension even more useful, Liquidity allows user declared type to be parameterized by one or more type variables. Every type variable that appears in the type definition must also appear in the type name declaration (on the left hand side).
The following example defines a record type ('a, 'b) t
with two
fields whose type are parameters. The function mk_t
builds values
of type t
with it argument. mk_t
has the polymorphic type
mk_t : ('a * 'b) -> ('a, b') t
.
.. tryliquidity:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc72.liq
.. literalinclude:: ../../../../tests/doc/doc72.liq
The type of storage cannot be polymorphic, however it can contain
weak type variables (like '_a
), which means they must be the
same for every instance (i.e. there can only be one instance of type
storage
). For example writing type '_a storage = '_a
allows
type storage to be inferred.
Liquidity supports two syntaxes:
- OCaml syntax (OCaml with Dune-specific changes)
- ReasonML syntax (with Dune-specific changes)
By default, the compiler uses expects the OCaml syntax, and outputs
files in OCaml syntax. This behavior changes with the file extension
and with the --re
argument. Files that end in .reliq
will be
parsed as ReasonML Liquidity files. The decompiler will ouptu files in
ReasonML syntax when given the flag -re
. If your file is
test.reliq
, you can compile it using:
liquidity test.reliq
You can also convert a file from one syntax to another, using the
--convert FILE
argument. For example, a file in OCaml-syntax can
be converted to ReasonML syntax:
$ liquidity --convert test19.liq type storage = { key, hash: bytes, c: address, }; let%init storage: storage = { key: 0x0085b1e4560f47f089d7b97aabcf46937a4c137a9c3f96f73f20c83621694e36d5, hash: 0xabcdef, c: KT1LLcCCB9Fr1hrkGzfdiJ9u3ZajbdckBFrF, }; contract PlusOne = { type storage = int; type t = | A | B; let%init init_storage = (x: bool, y: int) => if (x == false) { 0; } else { y; }; let%entry default = (_: unit, s) => ([], s + 1); }; let%entry default = (sign: signature, storage) => { let x = PlusOne.A; switch (x) { | PlusOne.B => failwith() | _ => () }; let c = Contract.self(); let key_hash = Crypto.hash_key(storage.key); if (key_hash == tz1KqTpEZ7Yob7QbPE4Hy4Wo8fHG8LhKxZSx) { Current.failwith(); }; if (key_hash == Crypto.hash_key( edpkuTXkJDGcFd5nh6VvMz8phXxU3Bi7h6hqgywNFi1vZTfQNnS1RV, )) { Current.failwith(); }; let delegate = Some(key_hash); let spendable = Crypto.check(storage.key, sign, storage.hash); let amount = Current.amount(); let amount = switch (amount / 2p) { | None => Current.failwith() /* not possible */ | Some(qr) => qr }; let delegatable = false; let _cocococ = [%handle PlusOne.default](storage.c); let _op1 = Self.default(sign, ~amount=0DUN); let (c_op, c_addr) = Contract.create( ~delegate, ~amount=amount[0], ~storage=9, (contract PlusOne), ); let storage = storage.c = c_addr; ([c_op], storage); };
The same file can be converted back and forth:
$ liquidity --convert test19.liq > test19.reliq $ liquidity --convert test19.reliq > test19.liq
Beware however that the conversion from ReasonML syntax back to the OCaml one erases the comments.
Liquidity borrows most of ReasonML syntax, with a few changes, similar to the changes in the OCaml syntax:
- The
module
keyword is replaced by thecontract
keyword, to define contracts and contract signatures - Dune-specific literals are available, such as
12.2DUN
,dn1c35okrd97ZfiH6X2j8DiD3dSkCqVkGkZN
, etc. - Tezos-specific literals are available, such as
12.2tz
,tz1KqTpEZ7Yob7QbPE4Hy4Wo8fHG8LhKxZSx
, etc.
A good way to learn this syntax is to use the syntax conversion
argument of the compiler (--convert FILE
).