The Tact smart contract programming language is a statically-typed smart contract programming language which is currently implemented as a transpiler into FunC, which in its turn compiles down to the TVM bitcode. This implementation strategy is likely to change in the future.
The Tact compiler parses the input source code into an abstract syntax tree, type-checks it, generates FunC code, runs the FunC compiler, which produces the corresponding Fift code and a TVM binary in the BoC format.
Besides TVM binaries, the Tact compiler generates TypeScript "wrappers" to conveniently test Tact contracts locally in a simulated blockchain environment using, for instance, the standard de-facto Sandbox package.
Additionally, it generates summaries for humans and machines in Markdown and JSON formats. The summaries include information like
- binary code size,
- TL-B schemas for the program types including contract storage and message formats,
- TVM exit codes,
- trait inheritance and contract dependency diagrams.
Currently, Tact does not have a (formal) language specification, so one needs to consult the Tact docs and the tests in this repository.
The list of known bugs can be obtained using the following GitHub request: https://github.com/tact-lang/tact/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3Abug.
More detail about different part of the compiler including their corresponding entry points can be found below.
Tact is implemented in TypeScript. The minimum required version for Node.js is 22.
The rest of the build and development dependencies are specified, as usual, in the package.json file and the most important ones are described in the present document.
Tact's pipeline uses a patched version of the FunC compiler vendored as a WASM binary with some JS wrappers, see the following files:
The message of the commit f777da3213e3b064a7f407b2569cfd546cca277e
explains how the patched version was obtained. We had to patch the FunC compiler because the corresponding FunC compiler issue is unresolved at the time of writing.
The most up-to-date recipe to build Tact is described in .github/workflows/tact.yml GitHub Actions file.
As our testing framework we use Jest. We use a combination of snapshot and expectation tests supported by Jest.
Some tests are put in the same folder with the implementation and can be located in *.spec.ts
files,
other tests are grouped into categories in the src/test folder. The project map section has more information on tests relevant for each compiler component.
Updating all the test snapshots:
yarn test -u
Updating a subset of the test snapshots can be done like so:
yarn test -u spec-name-pattern1 spec-name-pattern2
To pass CI, one needs to have a warning-free build. To run all the lints described below execute the following command in your terminal:
yarn lint:all
Running ESLint across the whole Tact codebase:
yarn lint
To spell-check the entire codebase with CSpell run:
yarn spell
The Knip tool is used to check issues with the compiler dependencies and API. It can be run with
yarn knip
Tact's command-line interface (CLI) is located in bin/tact.js. Tact uses the meow CLI arguments parser.
The main entry point for the Tact CLI is src/node.ts and src/pipeline/build.ts is the platform-independent compiler driver which contains the high-level compiler pipeline logic described above.
The Tact CLI gets Tact settings from a tact.config.json
file or creates a default config for a single-file compilation mode. The format of tact.config.json
files is specified in schemas/configSchema.json.
The so-called "pre-compilation" steps that include imports resolution, type-checking, building schemas for high-level Tact data structures to be serialized/deserialized as cells (this step is dubbed "allocation") are located in src/pipeline/precompile.ts.
Besides the terminal, the Tact compiler is supposed to work in browser environments as well.
Some CLI tests can be found in .github/workflows/tact.yml GitHub Action file.
The src/grammar/grammar.ohm file contains the Tact grammar expressed in the PEG-like language of the Ohm.js parser generator.
The helper file src/grammar/grammar.ts contains the logic that transforms concrete syntax trees produced with the help of the Ohm.js-generated parser into abstract syntax trees (ASTs) defined in src/grammar/ast.ts. The grammar.ts file also does a bit of grammar validation, like checking that function or constant attributes are not duplicated or that user identifiers do not start with certain reserved prefixes.
The src/grammar/test folder contains Tact files that are supposed to be parsed without any issues, and the src/grammar/test-failed folder contains grammatically incorrect test files which should result in parser errors. The parser error messages and the locations they point to are fixed in the src/grammar/snapshots/grammar.spec.ts.snap Jest snapshot file.
The Tact type-checker's implementation can be found mostly in the following files:
- src/types/resolveDescriptors.ts takes care of checking at the level of module-items, data type definitions, function signatures, etc. and it does not deal with statements (so does not traverse function bodies);
- src/types/resolveStatements.ts checks statements and statements blocks;
- src/types/resolveExpression.ts type-checks the Tact expressions.
The current implementation of the typechecker is going to be significantly refactored, as per issue #458. The corresponding pull request will have formally specified the Tact typing rules.
Until we have the Tact type system specified, the only source of information about it would be the aforementioned Tact docs and the tests in the following locations:
- src/types/test: positive well-formedness tests at the level of data types, contracts, traits and function signatures;
- src/types/test-failed: negative well-formedness tests at the level of data types, contracts, traits and function signatures;
- src/types/stmts: positive type-checking tests at the level of function bodies;
- src/types/stmts-failed: negative type-checking tests at the level of function bodies;
- src/test/compilation-failed: negative type-checking tests that require full environment, for instance, the standard library (the other tests in
src/types
don't have access to the full environment).
The constant evaluator is used as an optimizer to prevent some statically known expressions from being evaluated at run-time and increase gas consumption of the contracts. It will be later extended to perform partial evaluation of contracts and use various simplification rules such as applying some algebraic laws to further reduce gas consumption of contracts at run-time.
The constant evaluator supports a large subset of Tact and handles, for instance, constants defined in terms of other constants, built-in and user-defined functions, logical and arithmetic operations.
The main logic of the constant evaluator can be found in the file src/interpreter.ts.
You can find the relevant tests in src/test/e2e-emulated/contracts/constants.tact and the corresponding spec-file: .
The negative tests for constant evaluation are contained in the Tact files prefixed with const-eval
in the src/test/compilation-failed/contracts folder.
Some general information on how Tact code maps to FunC is described in the Tact docs: https://docs.tact-lang.org/book/func.
The code generator lives in the src/generator sub-folder with the entry point in src/generator/writeProgram.ts.
The implementation that we have right now is being refactored to produce FunC ASTs and then pretty-print those ASTs as strings instead of producing source FunC code in one step. Here is the relevant pull request: #559.
One can find the end-to-end codegen test spec files in the src/test/e2e-emulated folder. The test contracts are located in src/test/e2e-emulated/contracts subfolder. Many of those spec files test various language features in relative isolation. An important spec file that tests argument passing semantics for functions and assignment semantics for variables is here: src/test/e2e-emulated/semantics.spec.ts.
Note: If you add an end-to-end test contract, you also need to include it into tact.config.json and run yarn gen
to compile it and create TypeScript wrappers.
yarn gen
also re-compiles test contracts, so it's important to run it when code generation is changed.
Some other codegen tests are as follows:
- src/test/exit-codes: test that certain actions produce the expected exit codes;
- src/test/codegen: test that these contracts compile just fine without running any dynamic tests: bug fixes for FunC code generation often add tests into this folder.
The entry point to the Tact AST pretty-printer is src/prettyPrinter.ts. It is going to be used for the Tact source code formatter once the parser keeps comments and other relevant information.
The AST comparator is defined in src/grammar/compare.ts. This is useful, for instance, for static analysis tools which can re-use the Tact TypeScript API.
The corresponding test spec files can be found in src/test folder with the test contracts in src/test/contracts folder.