Arc Forumnew | comments | leaders | submitlogin
1 point by rocketnia 5309 days ago | link | parent

Cool, I'll check it out really soon.

While I agree with the hackability of Arc, I think it's perhaps a problem that you can change the definition of a function after it's defined. You are essentially reaching into foo and changing the cons inside it.

Yeah, I don't like this feature either. It makes me a bit paranoid about using quasiquote at all sometimes, since I might be unintentionally opening up parts of my macro code to being modified. I don't let that affect my coding style--I just don't usually mutate macro-expansions and stuff--but it's sort of a pet peeve.

I'm sure there's a pg post somewhere around here about it being a bit of effort to get things to work this way, but I can't find it.

Unless there's a precise definition for how `(1) should be expanded...

I think the obvious one is '(1), which is to say, replacing the 'quasiquote symbol with 'quote. If 'quasiquote is taken out of the core, then 'quote is really the only fundamental form left that you can "reach into" this way. Furthermore, Jarc 12 already worked for '(1):

  (def foo () '(1))
  (= ((foo) 0) 2)
  (foo)            ; results in 2
If (use 'qq) gives you something that yields (2) and it's a macro, then it probably expands `(1) into '(1), and so the work is probably done for you.

This probably also means that your optimizer stops (quote (1)) from returning a reference to a single mutable (1) and makes it cons up a whole new (1) instead. If that's the case, then it isn't even much of an optimization. ^_^ I wonder if the compiled JVM bytecode can contain a sort of quote-closure field for each 'quote form, so that the compiled Java object/class can be initialized with a direct reference to a subtree of foo's syntax.

On the other hand, if this is something you don't want to fix, I'll agree with you there. :-p



1 point by rocketnia 5309 days ago | link

Okay, I've brought Lathe's buggy-jarc branch up-to-date with Jarc 13. The code I had for Jarc 12 already worked, so I took the opportunity to remove all the unnecessary workarounds that were still in there. It sure is an awesome relief having the diff with the master branch get so small, but there are still two bugs in my way right now:

- Jarc's metafns aren't metafns. This has been a problem for quite a while, but usually I phrase it in terms of (my:foo ...) not working, since that's the way my namespace system encourages macro calls to look.

Each of the following should result in t rather than trying to apply 1 as a function:

  (iso ((compose do) '(1 2 3)) '(1 2 3))
  (iso ((andf do) '(1 2 3)) '(1 2 3))
For compatibility, this should work even if someone rebinds 'compose, 'andf, or some other metafn name to a completely different value. Metafn forms are identified purely by name in official Arc.

- Jarc's a&b ssyntax no longer works. The result of (ssexpand 'a&b) is (andf a b) as it should be, and (andf a b) does work correctly in most cases (the above bug being an exception), but for some reason using a&b in the code itself causes an error. It tries to look up the symbol a&b.

-----

1 point by fallintothis 5308 days ago | link

I'm sure there's a pg post somewhere around here about it being a bit of effort to get things to work this way, but I can't find it.

http://arclanguage.org/item?id=10248

-----

1 point by jazzdev 5309 days ago | link

It makes me a bit paranoid about using quasiquote

This isn't particular to quasiquote. You can reach into any function that returns a literal cons or string.

If this is something you don't want to fix, I'll agree with you there

Yeah, I'm disinclined to try to emulate Arc precisely in this regard because it appears to be an arbitrary artifact of how Arc does quasiquote expansion, and not a defined feature.

-----

2 points by fallintothis 5308 days ago | link

Yeah, I'm disinclined to try to emulate Arc precisely in this regard because it appears to be an arbitrary artifact of how Arc does quasiquote expansion, and not a defined feature.

I think the only thing going on here is quotation. Generally, quoted things work like pointers (see http://arclanguage.org/item?id=10248). Because you can still do

  arc> (def foo () '(1)) ; note: just quote, no quasiquote
  #<procedure: foo>
  arc> (= ((foo) 0) 2)
  2
  arc> (foo)
  (2)
but

  arc> (def foo () (cons 1 nil)) ; note: cons creates new data each call
  *** redefining foo
  #<procedure: foo>
  arc> (= ((foo) 0) 2)
  2
  arc> (foo)
  (1)
Then, the reason the quasiquoted thing gets weird results with the qq.arc I ported is that optimizing `(1) manages to switch between always consing new data with (list '1) and trying to reduce runtime consing with '(1).

-----

1 point by jazzdev 5307 days ago | link

I'm not (terribly) surprised that the ability to modify literals was intentional. Thanks for that link. I'm still wondering if `(1) expanding to '(1) is intentional or not.

Clearly '(foo) is a literal and `(foo ,bar) is not a literal, right? I guess it's not a huge stretch to say that `(foo) is a literal. Unfortunately, qq-expand doesn't always expand `(...) with no commas into '(...)

  Jarc> (qq-expand '(foo))
  (quote (foo))  ; literal
  Jarc> (qq-expand '(foo bar))
  (quote (foo bar)) ; literal
  Jarc> (qq-expand '(foo nil))
  (list (quote foo) nil) ; not a literal
But Arc does expand `(foo nil) into a literal

  arc> (def foo(s) (let a `(3 nil) (= (car a) (cons s (car a)))))
  #<procedure: foo>
  arc> (foo 2)
  (2 . 3)
  arc> (foo 1)
  (1 2 . 3)

-----

2 points by aw 5307 days ago | link

I'm still wondering if `(1) expanding to '(1) is intentional or not.

A quasiquote expander can expand `(1) into '(1) or (list 1), or even (join '(1) ' nil), which is what Bawden's simple, correct, but inefficient quasiquote expander does.

The expander may choose '(1) as being more efficient than (list 1), but isn't required to do so to be a quasiquote expander.

Since it's an optimization, I wouldn't write code that relies on a particular instance of `(1) evaluating to the same list every time, that's just an accidental result of the optimization. Instead, use a plain quote for that.

-----

1 point by fallintothis 5307 days ago | link

That's a bug. It didn't think that nil was a constant. Apparently I didn't know about literal 327 days ago. Thanks for finding it. :)

http://bitbucket.org/fallintothis/qq/changeset/6c0dab5f091e

(Really, all of that code needs a good rewrite. It was straight-ported from some Common Lisp, and suffers greatly for it. Bleh.)

-----

3 points by fallintothis 5307 days ago | link

There. Just updated qq.arc, removing almost 100 lines of cruft in the process. It still passes all the old tests, and (with any luck) is much more pleasant to work with.

http://bitbucket.org/fallintothis/qq/src/tip/qq.arc

-----

2 points by aw 5307 days ago | link

Yay!

-----

1 point by rocketnia 5308 days ago | link

This isn't particular to quasiquote. You can reach into any function that returns a literal cons or string.

I know, hence why I talked about 'quote. On principle, I'm equally paranoid about 'quote, 'quasiquote, and literal strings, but I've never mutated strings in my own projects, and I almost exclusively quasiquote my "escaping" cons cells rather than quoting them, so I just glossed over those facets of my paranoia. :-p

it appears to be an arbitrary artifact of how Arc does quasiquote expansion, and not a defined feature.

Like I said, I think there's a relevant pg comment around here somewhere. I've searched some more, but I still can't find it. Maybe it was just my imagination. ^_^;

Oh, wait, fallintothis's post links to it.

Arrgh, it would help if Google weren't so inconsistent. It's a result for ("behavior can be quite useful in some contexts"), but it doesn't show up in the results for ("behavior can be quite useful in some"), and ("can be quite useful in some contexts") has no results at all. Of course, observing this property and posting about it will no doubt change the search results. XD

Ah, here we go, http://af.searchyc.com/ is much nicer. ^_^

-----