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Issue DEFSTRUCT-CONSTRUCTOR-SLOT-VARIABLES Writeup

Forum:		Cleanup

Issue: DEFSTRUCT-CONSTRUCTOR-SLOT-VARIABLES

References: DEFSTRUCT; CLtL p. 309

Issue DEFSTRUCT-CONSTRUCTOR-KEY-MIXTURE (passed)

Category: CLARIFICATION, CHANGE

Edit History: V1, 11 Oct 1989, Sandra Loosemore

V2, 02 Nov 1989, Sandra Loosemore (update discussion)

Problem Description:

Must the symbols which name DEFSTRUCT slots be bound as lambda

variables by the default keyword constructor function? Normally it

would not matter, but if any of these symbols have been proclaimed

SPECIAL it will affect the dynamic environment in which the slot init

forms are evaluated.

There are three proposals, BOUND, NOT-BOUND, and VISIBLY-BOUND.

Background:

CLtL requires each default slot init form to be evaluated "in the

lexical environment of the DEFSTRUCT form in which it appeared". This

means that the obvious technique of supplying the init forms as the

defaults for the keyword arguments in the lambda list of the

constructor function is incorrect, unless care is taken to avoid

shadowing any variable bindings of the symbols which correspond to

those arguments.

For example, given

(defstruct foo

(a <a-init>)

(b <b-init>)

(c <c-init>))

Generating the constructor as

(defun make-foo (&key (a <a-init>) (b <b-init>) (c <c-init>)) ...)

may not evaluate <b-init> and <c-init> in the correct lexical environment

as specified in CLtL. Proposal VISIBLY-BOUND would change the specification

to make this the correct behavior.

One alternative is to wrap the init forms in closures named with gensyms:

(flet ((#:g1 () <a-init>)

(#:g2 () <b-init>)

(#:g3 () <c-init>))

(defun make-foo (&key (a (#:g1)) (b (#:g2)) (c (#:g3))) ...))

Under proposal BOUND, this would be the correct way to implement the

constructor function.

Another alternative is to make the lambda variables themselves gensyms:

(defun make-foo (&key ((:a #:g4) <a-init>)

((:b #:g5) <b-init>)

((:c #:g6) <c-init>)) ...)

Under proposal NOT-BOUND, this would be the correct way to implement the

constructor function.

(Of course, it's possible that DEFSTRUCT could produce a simplified

expansion in many cases by examining the init forms and/or lexical

environment.)

Issue DEFSTRUCT-CONSTRUCTOR-KEY-MIXTURE implies that BOA constructors

do bind the symbols which name slots as lambda variables, since these

variables can be referenced in the init forms for subsequent

arguments.

Proposal (DEFSTRUCT-CONSTRUCTOR-SLOT-VARIABLES:BOUND):

Clarify that the symbols which name slots must be bound as lambda

variables by the keyword constructor function, in the order in which

the slots are specified in the DEFSTRUCT form. Variables for

inherited slots are bound before variables for explitly specified

slots, in the order in which they were specified in the definition of

the inherited structure. Special bindings of these variables will be

visible during the evaluation of the default init forms for subsequent

slots. The slot default init forms are still evaluated in the

lexical environment in which the DEFSTRUCT form itself appears.

Rationale:

This appears to be closest to the intent of CLtL.

Proposal (DEFSTRUCT-CONSTRUCTOR-SLOT-VARIABLES:NOT-BOUND):

Clarify that the symbols which name slots must *not* be bound as

lambda variables by the keyword constructor function. The slot

default init forms are evaluated in the lexical environment

in which the DEFSTRUCT form itself appears and the dynamic environment

in which the call to the constructor function appears.

Rationale:

This avoids the overhead of creating and invoking closures to compute

the default values of the slots for the default keyword constructor.

Proposal (DEFSTRUCT-CONSTRUCTOR-SLOT-VARIABLES:VISIBLY-BOUND):

Clarify that the symbols which name slots must be bound as lambda

variables by the keyword constructor function, in the order in which

the slots are specified in the DEFSTRUCT form. Variables for

inherited slots are bound before variables for explitly specified

slots, in the order in which they were specified in the definition of

the inherited structure. Special bindings of these variables will be

visible during the evaluation of the default init forms for subsequent

slots.

Remove the requirement that the slot default init forms be evaluated

in the lexical environment in which the DEFSTRUCT form itself appears.

Instead, require that they be evaluated in a lexical environment that

contains bindings for the previous lambda variables of the constructor

function. This applies to both the default keyword constructor function

and BOA constructors.

Rationale:

This alternative corresponds most closely to current practice. It

avoids the overhead of creating and invoking closures to compute the

default values of the slots for both the default keyword constructor

and BOA constructors.

Example/Test Cases:

(defvar x 'global-x)

(let ((y 'local-y))

(defstruct baz (x 'x-init) (y x) (z y)))

(make-baz)

Under proposal BOUND,

slot X is initialized to X-INIT

slot Y is initialized to X-INIT

(since the init form X is evaluated in the dynamic environment

containing the binding to X-INIT)

slot Z is initialized to LOCAL-Y

(since the init form Y is evaluated in the lexical environment in

which the DEFSTRUCT appears)

Under proposal NOT-BOUND,

slot X is initialized to X-INIT

slot Y is initialized to GLOBAL-X

(since the constructor does not rebind the special variable X)

slot Z is initialized to LOCAL-Y

Under proposal VISIBLY-BOUND,

slot X is initialized to X-INIT

slot Y is initialized to X-INIT

(since the special binding of X made by the constructor is visible)

slot Z is initialized to X-INIT

(since the lexical binding of Y made by the constructor is visible)

Current Practice:

Most implementations (including Lucid CL, HPCL-I, KCL, CMU Common Lisp)

appear to implement proposal VISIBLY-BOUND even though it is in conflict

with what is required by CLtL.

Utah Common Lisp currently implements proposal NOT-BOUND.

Cost to implementors:

For proposal BOUND, the cost of implementing the proposal correctly is

fairly small. The cost of implementing it both correctly and efficiently

is potentially much larger.

For proposal NOT-BOUND, the implementation cost is again fairly small,

but it still requires essentially the same work as in proposal BOUND to

handle BOA constructors correctly.

Proposal VISIBLY-BOUND has the least implementation cost, since this

is what most implementations already do and is the least complicated

of the alternatives.

Cost to users:

Adopting any of these proposals would improve the situation faced by

users now.

Users may find proposal VISIBLY-BOUND to be marginally more useful

than the other alternatives since it allows the values of slots to be

referenced in the subsequent default init forms.

Benefits:

An area of confusion in the language is removed.

Discussion:

Loosemore doesn't care much about which of these alternatives we

adopt, but thinks that leaving this unspecified would be a mistake.

Margolin says:

By the way, I prefer this proposal [NOT-BOUND]. I think lexical

environments should be captured (I think we've fixed everything so

that init-forms are always evaluated in the appropriate lexical

environment), but I don't like making the order of slots significant

by allowing init forms to reference other slots. Order of slots is

often constrained by other requirements (such as the :INCLUDE

hierarchy, or using :TYPE to match a pre-existing structure), so they

shouldn't have an effect on the semantics of the structure.

Moon says:

Surely the default constructor function and "BOA constructors" must work

compatibly. Unspecified initforms for optional and keyword arguments in

a "BOA constructor" default from the slot initform rather than NIL, so

"BOA constructors" face the same issue as default constructors.

VISIBLY-BOUND seems semantically wrong.

I would go with BOUND, assuming we can't just get rid of DEFSTRUCT

entirely. I don't care about the supposed efficiency issue, which is

easily gotten around or ignored.

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