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nescript/examples/README.md
Claude ee3dddb19e
examples: add feature_canary that turns red on any memory silent-drop regression
Phase 5 of the post-PR-#31 audit, and the structural piece that
closes the failure mode the earlier phases couldn't fix alone.

The audit's recurring diagnosis: pixel/audio goldens capture
*whatever* the program does, not what it *should* do. A silent
drop in codegen is still deterministic — the golden locks in
the broken behaviour and every future run agrees with it. That's
how state-locals, uninitialized struct-field writes, `on exit`
handlers, and `slow` placement each sat broken for months-to-a-
year in a green CI.

The canary inverts the relationship: the committed golden is a
solid-green universal backdrop that only appears when every
round-trip check passes. Each check writes a distinctive constant
through one language construct, reads it back, and clears
`all_ok` on mismatch. A final `if all_ok == 0 { set_palette Fail }`
flips the entire screen red for the rest of the run.

Checks cover the silent-drop shapes caught by this audit:
  - state-local variable write-read (PR #31)
  - uninitialized struct-field write-read (caught by phase 1)
  - u8 / u16 globals (u16 exercises both StoreVar + StoreVarHi)
  - array-element write at nonzero index
  - `slow`-placed global still round-trips
  - function call return value

The canary doesn't use `debug.assert` on purpose — debug-only
ops get stripped in release and the emulator harness runs
release builds. The palette swap works in release and is what
the harness pixel-diff sees.

### Why this matters as a long-lived test

The harness already had 34 pixel goldens covering full-program
behaviour, but none of them exist specifically to fail if a
*specific language feature* silently drops. The canary does.
Every silent-drop bug the audit found would have flipped it
red the moment the check was added, which is the "behaviour
assertion that can't be satisfied by silence" the plan called
for.

### Harness footprint

`tests/emulator/goldens/feature_canary.{png,audio.hash}` +
`examples/feature_canary.{ne,nes}`. 35/35 ROMs match their
goldens with the canary added. Listed in both README tables.

https://claude.ai/code/session_01AoQ678uVeqpyayvWHpfDhC
2026-04-18 00:14:40 +00:00

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# NEScript Examples
## Quick Start
```bash
# Build the compiler
cargo build --release
# Compile all examples
for f in examples/*.ne; do cargo run -- build "$f"; done
# Or compile one
cargo run -- build examples/hello_sprite.ne
```
Open any `.nes` file in an NES emulator ([Mesen](https://www.mesen.ca/), [FCEUX](https://fceux.com/), etc.)
## Examples
| File | Features | Description |
|------|----------|-------------|
| `hello_sprite.ne` | input, draw | Move a sprite with the d-pad |
| `bouncing_ball.ne` | if/else, variables | Auto-bouncing sprite with edge detection |
| `coin_cavern.ne` | states, functions, constants | 3-state game with gravity and coin collection |
| `arrays_and_functions.ne` | arrays, functions, while | Enemy array with collision detection |
| `state_machine.ne` | on enter/exit, transitions | Multi-state flow with timers |
| `sprites_and_palettes.ne` | sprites, scroll, cast | Inline CHR data, PPU scroll writes, type casting |
| `mmc1_banked.ne` | MMC1, banks, multiply | Banked mapper with software multiply |
| `uxrom_user_banked.ne` | UxROM, `bank Foo { fun ... }`, cross-bank trampoline | First example to put real user code inside a switchable bank. The animation step lives in `bank Extras` and is invoked from the fixed-bank state handler via a generated `__tramp_step_animation` stub that selects bank 0, JSRs the body, then restores the fixed bank before returning. |
| `uxrom_banked_to_banked.ne` | UxROM, banked → banked cross-bank call | Two `bank Foo { fun ... }` blocks: `step` lives in bank Logic and calls `clamp` in bank Helpers. The trampoline uses `ZP_BANK_CURRENT + PHA/PLA` to save and restore the caller's bank, so the same per-callee stub works whether the caller is in the fixed bank or another switchable bank. |
| `palette_and_background.ne` | palette, background, set_palette, load_background | Reset-time initial load plus vblank-safe runtime swaps |
| `auto_chr_background.ne` | `background @nametable(...)` with auto-CHR | First example to use the `@nametable("file.png")` shortcut without supplying any matching CHR data. The resolver dedupes the PNG's 8×8 cells, encodes them via the same brightness-bucketing the sprite CHR encoder uses, and slots them into CHR ROM at the next free tile slot. The committed `auto_chr_bg.png` is a 256×240 grayscale gradient that exercises ~50 unique tiles. |
| `friendly_assets.ne` | named colours, grouped palette, pixel art, tilemap+legend, palette_map, scalar sfx pitch, note-name music | Exercises every "friendlier" asset syntax at once — the `palette` uses `bg0..sp3` + a shared `universal:`, the sprite is authored as ASCII pixel art, the background uses a `legend { ... } + map:` tilemap with a `palette_map:` for attributes, the sfx uses a scalar `pitch:` + `envelope:` alias, and the music uses note names (`C4, E4 40, rest 10`) with a `tempo:` default. |
| `noise_triangle_sfx.ne` | `channel: noise`, `channel: triangle` on `sfx` blocks | Demonstrates the noise and triangle sfx channels. Declares one noise burst and one triangle bass note, plays each on a timer so the emulator harness captures both the pixel output and the APU state. |
| `sfx_pitch_envelope.ne` | varying-pitch pulse SFX | A 16-frame frequency sweep written as a per-frame `pitch:` array on a Pulse-1 sfx. The compiler emits a separate `__sfx_pitch_<name>` blob and gates the audio tick's pitch update path on the `__sfx_pitch_used` marker, so programs that stick to the scalar `pitch:` form still get byte-identical ROM output. |
| `metasprite_demo.ne` | declarative multi-tile sprites | A 16×16 hero sprite split into a `metasprite Hero { sprite: Hero16, dx: [...], dy: [...], frame: [...] }` declaration. `draw Hero at: (px, py)` then expands to one `DrawSprite` op per tile in the IR lowering, each with its dx/dy added to the user's anchor point and the frame offset by the underlying sprite's base tile. The codegen needs no metasprite-specific support — it sees N regular draws and the OAM cursor allocator handles the slots. |
| `nested_structs.ne` | nested struct fields, array struct fields, chained literals | Two `Hero` instances each carry a `Vec2` position and a `u8[4]` inventory. Exercises `hero.pos.x` chained access, `hero.inv[i]` array-field access, and chained struct-literal initializers (`Hero { pos: Vec2 { x: ..., y: ... }, inv: [...] }`). |
| `platformer.ne` | **every subsystem** | End-to-end side-scrolling demo: custom CHR tileset, full 32×30 nametable with per-region attribute palettes, 2×2 metasprite hero with gravity/jump physics, wrap-around horizontal scrolling, stomp-or-die enemy collisions with a live stomp-count HUD, coin pickups, user-declared SFX + music, and a Title → Playing → GameOver state machine with a proximity-based autopilot so the headless harness cycles through stomp, stomp, die, and retry inside six seconds. Regenerate the tile art with `cargo run --bin gen_platformer_tiles`. |
| `sprite_flicker_demo.ne` | `cycle_sprites`, 8-per-scanline hardware limit | Twelve sprites packed onto the same 4-pixel band — two more than the NES's 8-sprites-per-scanline hardware budget. The W0109 analyzer warning fires at compile time, and a `cycle_sprites` call at the end of `on frame` rotates the OAM DMA offset one slot per frame so the PPU drops a *different* sprite each frame. The permanent-dropout failure mode becomes visible flicker, which the eye reconstructs across frames. The classic NES technique used by Gradius, Battletoads, and every shmup that ever existed. |
| `war.ne` | **production-quality card game**, multi-file source layout | A complete port of the card game War, split across `examples/war/*.ne` files and pulled in via `include` directives. Title screen with a 0/1/2-player menu (cursor sprite, blinking PRESS A, brisk 4/4 march on pulse 2), a 50-frame deal animation, a deep `Playing` state with an inner phase machine (`P_WAIT_A`/`P_FLY_A`/.../`P_WAR_BANNER`/`P_WAR_BURY`/`P_CHECK`), card-conserving queue-based decks built on a 200-iteration random-swap shuffle, a "WAR!" tie-break that buries 3+1 face-down cards per player and plays a noise-channel thump per bury, and a victory screen with the builtin fanfare. The first NEScript example to use a top-level file as a thin shell that `include`s ~12 component files; building it surfaced seven compiler bugs across the analyzer, IR lowerer, and codegen that were all fixed on the same branch (see `git log` for details). |
| `pong.ne` | **production-quality Pong**, powerups, multi-ball, multi-file | A complete Pong game split across `examples/pong/*.ne`. CPU VS CPU / 1 PLAYER / 2 PLAYERS title menu with brisk pulse-2 title march and autopilot, smooth ball physics with wall and paddle bouncing, CPU AI that tracks the ball with a reaction lag and dead zone, three powerup types (LONG paddle for 5 hits, FAST ball on next hit, MULTI-ball on next hit spawning 3 balls) that bounce around the field and are caught by paddle AABB overlap, multi-ball scoring (each ball scores a point, round continues until last ball exits), inner phase machine (`P_SERVE`/`P_PLAY`/`P_POINT`), and a "PLAYER N WINS" victory screen with the builtin fanfare. First-to-7 wins. |
| `feature_canary.ne` | **regression canary**, state-locals, uninitialized struct-field writes, u16, arrays, `slow` placement, function returns | A minimal program whose sole job is to paint a green universal backdrop at frame 180 when every memory-affecting language construct round-trips a write through the compiler correctly, and to flip to red if any check fails. Each check writes a distinctive byte through one construct (state-local, uninit struct field, u8/u16 global, array element, `slow`-placed u8, function call return), reads it back, and clears `all_ok` on mismatch. Because the emulator harness compares pixels at frame 180, any compiler regression that silently drops one of these writes turns the committed golden red — the structural counter to the "goldens capture whatever happens, not what should happen" failure mode that let PR #31 survive for a year. |
| `sha256.ne` | **interactive SHA-256**, inline-asm 32-bit primitives, multi-file | A full FIPS 180-4 SHA-256 hasher split across `examples/sha256/*.ne`. An on-screen 5×8 keyboard grid lets the player type up to 16 ASCII characters (`A`..`Z`, `0`..`9`, space, `.`, backspace, enter), and pressing ↵ runs the 48-entry message-schedule expansion + 64-round compression on the NES itself. Every 32-bit primitive (`copy`, `xor`, `and`, `add`, `not`, rotate-right, shift-right) is hand-tuned inline assembly that walks the four little-endian bytes of a word with `LDA {wk},X` / `ADC {wk},Y` chains, so a whole round costs a few thousand cycles. The phased driver runs four schedule steps or four rounds per frame so the full compression finishes well under a second, and the 64-character hex digest renders as sprites in 8 rows of 8 glyphs at the bottom of the screen. The jsnes golden auto-types `"NES"` after 1 s of keyboard idle and captures its hash `AE9145DB5CABC41FE34B54E34AF8881F462362EA20FD8F861B26532FFBB84E0D`. |
## Emulator Controls
| NES Button | Typical Key |
|------------|-------------|
| D-pad | Arrow keys |
| A | Z |
| B | X |
| Start | Enter |
| Select | Right Shift |
## About Sprites
Sprite names in `draw Player at: (x, y)` are parsed and recorded in the AST.
You can define sprites with inline CHR tile data:
```
sprite Player {
chr: [0x3C, 0x42, 0x81, 0x81, 0x81, 0x81, 0x42, 0x3C,
0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00]
}
```
If no matching sprite declaration exists, the draw uses the built-in default
tile (a smiley face). See `sprites_and_palettes.ne` for a full example.
## Compiler Commands
```bash
# Compile to ROM
cargo run -- build game.ne
# Custom output path
cargo run -- build game.ne --output my_game.nes
# Type-check only
cargo run -- check game.ne
# View generated 6502 assembly
cargo run -- build game.ne --asm-dump
# Debug mode
cargo run -- build game.ne --debug
```