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Nimscripter

Nimscripter is enables easy interop between Nim and Nimscript for realtime scriptable applications.

How to use

Install Nimscripter(nimble install nimscripter) with Nimble then create a .nim file with the following.

import nimscripter
proc doThing(): int = 42
exportTo(myImpl, doThing) # The name of our "nimscript module" is `myImpl`
const 
  scriptProcs = implNimScriptModule(myImpl) # This emits our exported code
  ourScript = NimScriptFile("assert doThing() == 42") # Convert to `NimScriptFile` for loading from strings
let intr = loadScript(ourScript, scriptProcs) # Load our script with our code and using our system `stdlib`(not portable)

Note that exportTo can take in multiple procedures, types, or global variables at once.

proc doThing(): int = 42
var myGlobal = 30
type MyType = enum
  a, b, c
exportTo(myImpl,
  doThing
  myGlobal,
  myType)

Calling code from Nim

Any exported non overloaded and non generic procedures can be called from Nim

const script = NimScriptFile"proc fancyStuff*(a: int) = assert a in [10, 300]" # Notice `fancyStuff` is exported
let intr = loadScript(script) # We are not exposing any procedures hence single parameter
intr.invoke(fancyStuff, 10) # Calls `fancyStuff(10)` in vm
intr.invoke(fancyStuff, 300) # Calls `fancyStuff(300)` in vm

The above works but does not impose any safety on the VM code, to do that the following can be done

addCallable(test3):
  proc fancyStuff(a: int) # Has checks for the nimscript to ensure it's definition doesnt change to something unexpected.
const
  addins = implNimscriptModule(test3)
  script = NimScriptFile"proc fancyStuff*(a: int) = assert a in [10, 300]" # Notice `fancyStuff` is exported
let intr = loadScript(script, addins) # This adds in out checks for the proc
intr.invoke(fancyStuff, 10) # Calls `fancyStuff(10)` in vm
intr.invoke(fancyStuff, 300) # Calls `fancyStuff(300)` in vm

Getting global variables from nimscript

One may extract global variables from a nimscript file using a convenience macro.

import nimscripter, nimscripter/variables

let script = NimScriptFile"""
let required* = "main"
let defaultValueExists* = "foo"
"""
let intr = loadScript script

getGlobalNimsVars intr:
  required: string # required variable
  optional: Option[string] # optional variable
  defaultValue: int = 1 # optional variable with default value
  defaultValueExists = "bar" # You may omit the type if there is a default value

check required == "main"
check optional.isNone
check defaultValue == 1
check defaultValueExists == "foo"

Basic types are supported, such as string, int, bool, etc..

Exporting code verbatim

nimscriptr/expose has exportCode and exportCodeAndKeep they both work the same, except the latter keeps the code so it can be used inside Nim.

exportCode(nimScripter):
 proc doThing(a, b: int) = echo a, " ", b # This runs on nimscript if called there

Keeping state inbetween loads

loadScriptWithState will load a script, if it loads a valid script it will reset any global exported variables in the script with their preload values.

safeloadScriptWithState will attempt to load a script keeping global state, if it fails it does not change the interpeter, else it'll load the script and set it's state to the interpreters.

saveState/loadState can be used to manually manage the state inbetween loaded scripts.

VmOps

A subset of the nimscript interopped procedures are available inside nimscripter/vmops. If you feel a new op should be added feel free to PR it.

import nimscripter
import nimscripter/vmops

const script = """
proc build*(): bool =
  echo "building nim... "
  echo getCurrentDir()
  echo "done"
  true

when isMainModule:
  discard build()
"""
addVmops(buildpackModule)
addCallable(buildpackModule):
  proc build(): bool
const addins = implNimscriptModule(buildpackModule)
discard loadScript(NimScriptFile(script), addins)

Using a custom/shipped stdlib

Make a folder entitled stdlib and copy all Nim files you wish to ship as a stdlib from Nim's stdlib and any of your own files. system.nim and the system folder are required. You can copy any other pure libraries and ship them, though they're only usable if they support Nimscript. If you use choosenim you can find the the Nim stdlib to copy from inside ~/.choosenim/toolchains/nim-version/lib. When using a custom search paths add the root file only, if you provide more than that it will break modules.

Overriding the error hook

The error hook can be overridden for more behaviour like showing the error in the program, the builtin error hook is as follows:

proc errorHook(config: ConfigRef; info: TLineInfo; msg: string; severity: Severity) {.gcsafe.} =
  if severity == Error and config.error_counter >= config.error_max:
    var fileName: string
    for k, v in config.m.filenameToIndexTbl.pairs:
      if v == info.fileIndex:
        fileName = k
    echo "Script Error: $1:$2:$3 $4." % [fileName, $info.line, $(info.col + 1), msg]
    raise (ref VMQuit)(info: info, msg: msg)

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Quick and easy Nim <-> Nimscript interop

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