From 6a9a4e2bb860e7e1c8bd832b251dc6877912c233 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: chriseth Date: Thu, 4 Jan 2018 17:19:45 +0100 Subject: Explain the difference to inline assembly. --- docs/julia.rst | 7 +++++++ 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+) diff --git a/docs/julia.rst b/docs/julia.rst index 309e6b36..9e961a9d 100644 --- a/docs/julia.rst +++ b/docs/julia.rst @@ -14,6 +14,13 @@ It can already be used for "inline assembly" inside Solidity and future versions of the Solidity compiler will even use JULIA as intermediate language. It should also be easy to build high-level optimizer stages for JULIA. +.. note:: + + Note that the flavour used for "inline assembly" does not have types + (everything is ``u256``) and the built-in functions are identical + to the EVM opcodes. Please resort to the inline assembly documentation + for details. + The core components of JULIA are functions, blocks, variables, literals, for-loops, if-statements, switch-statements, expressions and assignments to variables. -- cgit