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Fift is a high-level stack-based language used for local manipulation of cells and other TVM primitives. Its primary purpose is to compile TVM assembly code into contract code as a bag-of-cells (BoC).

Simple arithmetic

Use the Fift interpreter as a calculator with reverse Polish notation:
6 17 17 * * 289 + .
2023 ok
This example calculates:
  1. 17 * 17 = 289
  2. 6 * 289 = 1734
  3. 1734 + 289 = 2023

Standard output

27 emit ."[30;1mgrey text" 27 emit ."[37m"
grey text ok
  • emit prints the Unicode character corresponding to the number on top of the stack
  • ."..." outputs a constant string

Defining functions (Fift words)

To define a word, follow these steps:
  1. Enclose the word’s effects in curly braces {}.
  2. Add a colon : after the closing brace.
  3. Specify the word’s name after the colon.
First line defines a word increment that increases x by 1. Examples:
// Fift.fif
{ x 1 + } : increment
{ minmax drop } : min
{ minmax nip } : max
In TON, multiple defining words exist, not just :. They differ in behavior:
  • Active words – Operate inside curly braces {}.
  • Prefix words – Do not require a trailing space .
// Fift.fif
{ bl word 1 2 ' (create) } "::" 1 (create)
{ bl word 0 2 ' (create) } :: :
{ bl word 2 2 ' (create) } :: :_
{ bl word 3 2 ' (create) } :: ::_
{ bl word 0 (create) } : create

Conditional execution

Execute code blocks conditionally using cond:
{ { ."true " } { ."false " } cond } : ?.   4 5 = ?.  4 5 < ?.
false true  ok
{ ."hello " } execute ."world"
hello world ok

Loops

Use loop primitives for repetitive operations:
// GetOpt.fif
// ( l c -- l') Removes first c elements from list l
{ ' safe-cdr swap times } : list-delete-first
Loop word times takes two arguments - let’s call them cont and n - and executes cont n times. Here list-delete-first takes continuation of safe-cdr (command deleting head from Lisp-style list), places it under c and then c times removes head from list present on stack. while/until provide conditional looping.

Comments

Comments in Fift are defined in Fift.fif and come in two forms:
  1. Single-line comments: Start with // and continue to the end of the line
  2. Multiline comments: Start with /* and end with */
// Fift.fif
{ 0 word drop 0 'nop } :: //
{ char " word 1 { swap { abort } if drop } } ::_ abort"
{ { bl word dup "" $= abort"comment extends after end of file" "*/" $= } until 0 'nop } :: /*

How comments work

Fift programs are sequences of words that transform the stack or define new words. Comments must work even during word definitions, requiring them to be active words (defined with ::). Breaking down the // definition:
  1. 0 - Pushes zero onto the stack
  2. word - Reads characters until reaching one matching the top stack value (zero is special - skips leading spaces then reads to end of line)
  3. drop - Removes the comment text from the stack
  4. 0 - Pushes zero again (number of results for :: definition)
  5. 'nop - Pushes an execution token that does nothing (equivalent to { nop })

Using Fift for defining TVM assembly codes

// Asm.fif (line order reversed)
x{00} @Defop NOP
{ 1 ' @addop does create } : @Defop
{ tuck sbitrefs @ensurebitrefs swap s, } : @addop
{ @havebitrefs ' @| ifnot } : @ensurebitrefs
{ 2 pick brembitrefs 1- 2x<= } : @havebitrefs
{ rot >= -rot <= and } : 2x<=
...

How @Defop works

@Defop checks available space for the opcode using @havebitrefs. If space is insufficient, it writes to another builder via @| (implicit jump). Important: Always use x{A988} @addop instead of x{A988} s, to avoid compilation failures when space is limited.

Including cells in contracts

You can embed large bag-of-cells into contracts:
<b 8 4 u, 8 4 u, "fift/blob.boc" file>B B>boc ref, b> <s @Defop LDBLOB
This defines an opcode that:
  1. Writes x{88} (PUSHREF) when included in the program
  2. Adds a reference to the specified bag-of-cells
  3. Pushes the cell to TVM stack when executing LDBLOB

Special features

Ed25519 cryptography

Fift provides built-in support for Ed25519 cryptographic operations:
  • newkeypair - Generates a private-public key pair
  • priv>pub - Derives a public key from a private key
  • ed25519_sign[_uint] - Creates a signature for given data using a private key
  • ed25519_chksign - Verifies an Ed25519 signature

TVM interaction

  • runvmcode and similar commands - Executes TVM with a code slice taken from the stack

File operations

  • Save BoC to file:
    boc>B ".../contract.boc" B>file
    

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