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doc: tweak built-in functions section & move dump section here (#13841)

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@ -108,7 +108,8 @@ For more details and troubleshooting, please visit the [vab GitHub repository](h
* [References](#references)
* [Constants](#constants)
* [Builtin functions](#builtin-functions)
* [Printing custom types](#printing-custom-types)
* [println](#println)
* [Dumping expressions at runtime](#dumping-expressions-at-runtime)
* [Modules](#modules)
* [Type Declarations](#type-declarations)
* [Interfaces](#interfaces)
@ -140,7 +141,6 @@ For more details and troubleshooting, please visit the [vab GitHub repository](h
* [Package Management](#package-management)
* [Publish package](#publish-package)
* [Advanced Topics](#advanced-topics)
* [Dumping expressions at runtime](#dumping-expressions-at-runtime)
* [Memory-unsafe code](#memory-unsafe-code)
* [Structs with reference fields](#structs-with-reference-fields)
* [sizeof and __offsetof](#sizeof-and-__offsetof)
@ -199,7 +199,7 @@ In this case `main` doesn't return anything, so there is no return type.
As in many other languages (such as C, Go, and Rust), `main` is the entry point of your program.
`println` is one of the few built-in functions.
[`println`](#println) is one of the few [built-in functions](#builtin-functions).
It prints the value passed to it to standard output.
`fn main()` declaration can be skipped in one file programs.
@ -2626,16 +2626,22 @@ println('Top cities: ${top_cities.filter(.usa)}')
Some functions are builtin like `println`. Here is the complete list:
```v ignore
fn print(s string) // print anything on sdtout
fn println(s string) // print anything and a newline on sdtout
fn print(s string) // prints anything on stdout
fn println(s string) // prints anything and a newline on stdout
fn eprint(s string) // same as print(), but use stderr
fn eprintln(s string) // same as println(), but use stderr
fn eprint(s string) // same as print(), but uses stderr
fn eprintln(s string) // same as println(), but uses stderr
fn exit(code int) // terminate the program with a custom error code
fn panic(s string) // print a message and backtraces on stderr, and terminate the program with error code 1
fn print_backtrace() // print backtraces on stderr
fn exit(code int) // terminates the program with a custom error code
fn panic(s string) // prints a message and backtraces on stderr, and terminates the program with error code 1
fn print_backtrace() // prints backtraces on stderr
```
Note: Although the `print` functions take a string, V accepts other printable types too.
See below for details.
There is also a special built-in function called [`dump`](#dumping-expressions-at-runtime).
### println
`println` is a simple yet powerful builtin function, that can print anything:
strings, numbers, arrays, maps, structs.
@ -2656,10 +2662,10 @@ See also [Array methods](#array-methods).
<a id='custom-print-of-types' />
## Printing custom types
### Printing custom types
If you want to define a custom print value for your type, simply define a
`.str() string` method:
`str() string` method:
```v
struct Color {
@ -2680,6 +2686,40 @@ red := Color{
println(red)
```
### Dumping expressions at runtime
You can dump/trace the value of any V expression using `dump(expr)`.
For example, save this code sample as `factorial.v`, then run it with
`v run factorial.v`:
```v
fn factorial(n u32) u32 {
if dump(n <= 1) {
return dump(1)
}
return dump(n * factorial(n - 1))
}
fn main() {
println(factorial(5))
}
```
You will get:
```
[factorial.v:2] n <= 1: false
[factorial.v:2] n <= 1: false
[factorial.v:2] n <= 1: false
[factorial.v:2] n <= 1: false
[factorial.v:2] n <= 1: true
[factorial.v:3] 1: 1
[factorial.v:5] n * factorial(n - 1): 2
[factorial.v:5] n * factorial(n - 1): 6
[factorial.v:5] n * factorial(n - 1): 24
[factorial.v:5] n * factorial(n - 1): 120
120
```
Note that `dump(expr)` will trace both the source location,
the expression itself, and the expression value.
## Modules
Every file in the root of a folder is part of the same module.
@ -4681,39 +4721,6 @@ to allow for a better search experience.
# Advanced Topics
## Dumping expressions at runtime
You can dump/trace the value of any V expression using `dump(expr)`.
For example, save this code sample as `factorial.v`, then run it with
`v run factorial.v`:
```v
fn factorial(n u32) u32 {
if dump(n <= 1) {
return dump(1)
}
return dump(n * factorial(n - 1))
}
fn main() {
println(factorial(5))
}
```
You will get:
```
[factorial.v:2] n <= 1: false
[factorial.v:2] n <= 1: false
[factorial.v:2] n <= 1: false
[factorial.v:2] n <= 1: false
[factorial.v:2] n <= 1: true
[factorial.v:3] 1: 1
[factorial.v:5] n * factorial(n - 1): 2
[factorial.v:5] n * factorial(n - 1): 6
[factorial.v:5] n * factorial(n - 1): 24
[factorial.v:5] n * factorial(n - 1): 120
120
```
Note that `dump(expr)` will trace both the source location,
the expression itself, and the expression value.
## Memory-unsafe code
Sometimes for efficiency you may want to write low-level code that can potentially