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1%%% -*-latex-*-
2%%%
1f7d590d 3%%% C language utilities
dea4d055 4%%%
1f7d590d 5%%% (c) 2015 Straylight/Edgeware
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6%%%
7
8%%%----- Licensing notice ---------------------------------------------------
9%%%
e0808c47 10%%% This file is part of the Sensible Object Design, an object system for C.
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11%%%
12%%% SOD is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
13%%% it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
14%%% the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
15%%% (at your option) any later version.
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17%%% SOD is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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19%%% MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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21%%%
22%%% You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
23%%% along with SOD; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
24%%% Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
25
1f7d590d 26\chapter{C language utilities} \label{ch:clang}
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27
28%%%--------------------------------------------------------------------------
1f7d590d 29\section{C type representation} \label{sec:clang.c-types}
dea4d055 30
1f7d590d 31\subsection{Overview} \label{sec:clang.c-types.over}
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32
33The Sod translator represents C types in a fairly simple and direct way.
34However, because it spends a fair amount of its time dealing with C types, it
35provides a number of useful operations and macros.
36
64d1ecf7 37The class hierarchy is shown in~\xref{fig:codegen.c-types.classes}.
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38
39\begin{figure} \centering
40 \parbox{10pt}{\begin{tabbing}
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41 @|c-type| \\ \ind
42 @|qualifiable-c-type| \\ \ind
43 @|simple-c-type| \\ \ind
44 @|c-class-type| \-\\
45 @|tagged-c-type| \\ \ind
46 @|c-struct-type| \\
47 @|c-union-type| \\
48 @|c-enum-type| \-\\
49 @|c-atomic-type| \\
50 @|c-pointer-type| \-\\
51 @|c-array-type| \\
52 @|c-function-type| \\ \ind
53 @|c-keyword-function-type| \-
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54 \end{tabbing}}
55 \caption{Classes representing C types}
64d1ecf7 56\label{fig:codegen.c-types.classes}
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57\end{figure}
58
59C type objects are immutable unless otherwise specified.
60
61\subsubsection{Constructing C type objects}
62There is a constructor function for each non-abstract class of C type object.
63Note, however, that constructor functions need not generate a fresh type
64object if a previously existing type object is suitable. In this case, we
65say that the objects are \emph{interned}. Some constructor functions are
66specified to return interned objects: programs may rely on receiving the same
67(@|eq|) type object for similar (possibly merely @|equal|) arguments. Where
68not specified, clients may still not rely on receiving fresh objects.
69
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70A convenient S-expression notation is provided by the
71\descref{c-type}[macro]{mac}. Use of this macro is merely an abbreviation
72for corresponding use of the various constructor functions, and therefore
73interns type objects in the same manner. The syntax accepted by the macro
74can be extended in order to support new classes: see \descref{defctype}{mac},
75\descref{c-type-alias}{mac} and \descref{define-c-type-syntax}{mac}.
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76
77The descriptions of each of the various classes include descriptions of the
78initargs which may be passed to @|make-instance| when constructing a new
79instance of the class. However, the constructor functions and S-expression
80syntax are strongly recommended over direct use of @|make-instance|.
81
82\subsubsection{Printing}
83There are two protocols for printing C types. Unfortunately they have
84similar names.
85\begin{itemize}
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86\item The \descref{print-c-type}[function]{gf} prints a C type value using
87 the S-expression notation. It is mainly useful for diagnostic purposes.
88\item The \descref{pprint-c-type}[function]{gf} prints a C type as a
89 C-syntax declaration.
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90\end{itemize}
91Neither generic function defines a default primary method; subclasses of
92@|c-type| must define their own methods in order to print correctly.
93
31d4431b 94
1f7d590d 95\subsection{The C type root class} \label{sec:clang.c-types.root}
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96
97\begin{describe}{cls}{c-type ()}
98 The class @|c-type| marks the root of the built-in C type hierarchy.
99
100 Users may define subclasses of @|c-type|. All non-abstract subclasses must
101 have a primary method defined on @|pprint-c-type|; unless instances of the
102 subclass are interned, a method on @|c-type-equal-p| is also required.
103
104 The class @|c-type| is abstract.
105\end{describe}
106
31d4431b 107
1f7d590d 108\subsection{C type S-expression notation} \label{sec:clang.c-types.sexp}
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109
110The S-expression representation of a type is described syntactically as a
111type specifier. Type specifiers fit into two syntactic categories.
112\begin{itemize}
113\item A \emph{symbolic type specifier} consists of a symbol. It has a
114 single, fixed meaning: if @<name> is a symbolic type specifier, then each
115 use of @<name> in a type specifier evaluates to the same (@|eq|) type
116 object, until the @<name> is redefined.
117\item A \emph{type operator} is a symbol; the corresponding specifier is a
118 list whose @|car| is the operator. The remaining items in the list are
119 arguments to the type operator.
120\end{itemize}
121
1f7d590d 122\begin{describe}{mac}{c-type @<type-spec> @> @<c-type>}
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123 Evaluates to a C type object, as described by the type specifier
124 @<type-spec>.
125\end{describe}
126
1f7d590d 127\begin{describe}{mac}
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128 {defctype \=@{ @<name> @! (@<name>^+) @} @<type-spec> \+\\
129 @[[ @|:export| @<export-flag> @]]^*
130 \-\nlret @<names>}
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131 Defines a new symbolic type specifier @<name>; if a list of @<name>s is
132 given, then all are defined in the same way. The type constructed by using
133 any of the @<name>s is as described by the type specifier @<type-spec>.
134
135 The resulting type object is constructed once, at the time that the macro
136 expansion is evaluated; the same (@|eq|) value is used each time any
137 @<name> is used in a type specifier.
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138
139 A variable named @|c-type-@<name>|, for the first @<name> only, is defined
140 and initialized to contain the C type object so constructed. Altering or
141 binding this name is discouraged.
142
143 If @<export-flag> is true, then the variable name, and all of the @<name>s,
144 are exported from the current package.
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145\end{describe}
146
1f7d590d 147\begin{describe}{mac}{c-type-alias @<original> @<alias>^* @> @<aliases>}
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148 Defines each @<alias> as being a type operator identical in behaviour to
149 @<original>. If @<original> is later redefined then the behaviour of the
150 @<alias>es changes too.
151\end{describe}
152
1f7d590d 153\begin{describe}{mac}
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154 {define-c-type-syntax @<name> @<lambda-list> \\ \ind
155 @[[ @<declaration>^* @! @<doc-string> @]] \\
156 @<form>^*
157 \-\nlret @<name>}
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158 Defines the symbol @<name> as a new type operator. When a list of the form
159 @|(@<name> @<argument>^*)| is used as a type specifier, the @<argument>s
160 are bound to fresh variables according to @<lambda-list> (a destructuring
161 lambda-list) and the @<form>s evaluated in order in the resulting lexical
162 environment as an implicit @|progn|. The value should be a Lisp form which
163 will evaluate to the type specified by the arguments.
164
165 The @<form>s may call @|expand-c-type-spec| in order to recursively expand
166 type specifiers among its arguments.
167\end{describe}
168
e07fb83c 169\begin{describe}{gf}{expand-c-type-spec @<type-spec> @> @<form>}
dea4d055 170 Returns the Lisp form that @|(c-type @<type-spec>)| would expand into.
e07fb83c 171
054e8f8f 172 If @<type-spec> is a list, then \descref{expand-c-type-form}{gf} is
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173 invoked.
174\end{describe}
175
176\begin{describe}{gf}{expand-c-type-form @<head> @<tail> @> @<form>}
054e8f8f 177 Returns the Lisp form that @|(c-type (@<head> . @<tail>))| would expand
e07fb83c 178 into.
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179\end{describe}
180
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181\begin{describe}{gf}
182 {print-c-type @<stream> @<type> \&optional @<colon> @<atsign>}
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183 Print the C type object @<type> to @<stream> in S-expression form. The
184 @<colon> and @<atsign> arguments may be interpreted in any way which seems
185 appropriate: they are provided so that @|print-c-type| may be called via
186 @|format|'s @|\char`\~/\dots/| command; they are not set when
187 @|print-c-type| is called by Sod functions.
188
189 There should be a method defined for every C type class; there is no
190 default method.
191\end{describe}
192
31d4431b 193
1f7d590d 194\subsection{Comparing C types} \label{sec:clang.c-types.cmp}
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195
196It is necessary to compare C types for equality, for example when checking
197argument lists for methods. This is done by @|c-type-equal-p|.
198
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199\begin{describe}{gf}
200 {c-type-equal-p @<c-type>_1 @<c-type>_2 @> @<generalized-boolean>}
201 The generic function @|c-type-equal-p| compares two C types @<c-type>_1 and
202 @<c-type>_2 for equality; it returns true if the two types are equal and
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203 false if they are not.
204
205 Two types are equal if they are structurally similar, where this property
206 is defined by methods for each individual class; see the descriptions of
207 the classes for the details.
208
209 The generic function @|c-type-equal-p| uses the @|and| method combination.
210
1f7d590d 211 \begin{describe}{meth}{c-type-equal-p @<c-type>_1 @<c-type>_2}
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212 A default primary method for @|c-type-equal-p| is defined. It simply
213 returns @|nil|. This way, methods can specialize on both arguments
214 without fear that a call will fail because no methods are applicable.
215 \end{describe}
1f7d590d 216 \begin{describe}{ar-meth}{c-type-equal-p @<c-type>_1 @<c-type>_2}
dea4d055 217 A default around-method for @|c-type-equal-p| is defined. It returns
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218 true if @<c-type>_1 and @<c-type>_2 are @|eql|; otherwise it delegates to
219 the primary methods. Since several common kinds of C types are interned,
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220 this is a common case worth optimizing.
221 \end{describe}
222\end{describe}
223
31d4431b 224
1f7d590d 225\subsection{Outputting C types} \label{sec:clang.c-types.output}
dea4d055 226
1f7d590d 227\begin{describe}{gf}{pprint-c-type @<c-type> @<stream> @<kernel>}
dea4d055 228 The generic function @|pprint-c-type| pretty-prints to @<stream> a C-syntax
1f7d590d 229 declaration of an object or function of type @<c-type>. The result is
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230 written to @<stream>.
231
232 A C declaration has two parts: a sequence of \emph{declaration specifiers}
233 and a \emph{declarator}. The declarator syntax involves parentheses and
234 operators, in order to reflect the operators applicable to the declared
235 variable. For example, the name of a pointer variable is preceded by @`*';
236 the name of an array is followed by dimensions enclosed in @`['\dots @`]'.
237
238 The @<kernel> argument must be a function designator (though see the
239 standard around-method); it is invoked as
240 \begin{quote} \codeface
241 (funcall @<kernel> @<stream> @<priority> @<spacep>)
242 \end{quote}
243 It should write to @<stream> -- which may not be the same stream originally
244 passed into the generic function -- the `kernel' of the declarator, i.e.,
245 the part to which prefix and/or postfix operators are attached to form the
246 full declarator.
247
248 The methods on @|pprint-c-type| specialized for compound types work by
249 recursively calling @|pprint-c-type| on the subtype, passing down a closure
250 which prints the necessary additional declarator operators before calling
251 the original @<kernel> function. The additional arguments @<priority> and
252 @<spacep> support this implementation technique.
253
254 The @<priority> argument describes the surrounding operator context. It is
255 zero if no type operators are directly attached to the kernel (i.e., there
256 are no operators at all, or the kernel is enclosed in parentheses), one if
257 a prefix operator is directly attached, or two if a postfix operator is
258 directly attached. If the @<kernel> function intends to provide its own
259 additional declarator operators, it should check the @<priority> in order
260 to determine whether parentheses are necessary. See also the
58f9b400 261 \descref{maybe-in-parens}[macro]{mac}.
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262
263 The @<spacep> argument indicates whether a space needs to be printed in
264 order to separate the declarator from the declaration specifiers. A kernel
265 which contains an identifier should insert a space before the identifier
266 when @<spacep> is non-nil. An `empty' kernel, as found in an abstract
267 declarator (one that specifies no name), looks more pleasing without a
58f9b400 268 trailing space. See also the \descref{c-type-space}[function]{fun}.
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269
270 Every concrete subclass of @|c-type| is expected to provide a primary
271 method on this function. There is no default primary method.
272
1f7d590d 273 \begin{describe}{ar-meth}{pprint-c-type @<c-type> @<stream> @<kernel>}
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274 A default around method is defined on @|pprint-c-type| which `canonifies'
275 non-function @<kernel> arguments. In particular:
276 \begin{itemize}
277 \item if @<kernel> is nil, then @|pprint-c-type| is called recursively
278 with a @<kernel> function that does nothing; and
279 \item if @<kernel> is any other kind of object, then @|pprint-c-type| is
280 called recursively with a @<kernel> function that prints the object as
281 if by @|princ|, preceded if necessary by space using @|c-type-space|.
282 \end{itemize}
283 \end{describe}
284\end{describe}
285
286\begin{describe}{fun}{c-type-space @<stream>}
287 Writes a space and other pretty-printing instructions to @<stream> in order
288 visually to separate a declarator from the preceding declaration
289 specifiers. The precise details are subject to change.
290\end{describe}
291
1f7d590d 292\begin{describe}{mac}
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293 {maybe-in-parens (@<stream-var> @<guard-form>)
294 @<declaration>^*
295 @<form>^*}
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296 The @<guard-form> is evaluated, and then the @<form>s are evaluated in
297 sequence within a pretty-printer logical block writing to the stream named
298 by the symbol @<stream-var>. If the @<guard-form> evaluates to nil, then
299 the logical block has empty prefix and suffix strings; if it evaluates to a
300 non-nil value, then the logical block has prefix and suffix @`(' and @`)'
301 respectively.
302
303 Note that this may cause @<stream> to be bound to a different stream object
304 within the @<form>s.
305\end{describe}
306
31d4431b 307
dea4d055 308\subsection{Type qualifiers and qualifiable types}
1f7d590d 309\label{sec:clang.ctypes.qual}
dea4d055 310
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311Qualifiers -- @|const|, @|volatile|, and so on -- are represented as lists of
312keywords attached to types. Not all C types can carry qualifiers: notably,
313function and array types cannot be qualified.
314
315For the most part, the C qualifier keywords correspond to like-named Lisp
316keywords, only the Lisp keyword names are in uppercase. The correspondence
317is shown in \xref{tab:clang.ctypes.qual}.
318
319\begin{table}
320 \begin{tabular}[C]{*2{>{\codeface}l}l} \hlx*{hv}
321 \thd{\textbf{C name}} & \thd{\textbf{Lisp name}} \\ \hlx{vhv}
322 _Atomic & :atomic \\
323 const & :const \\
324 restrict & :restrict \\
325 volatile & :volatile \\ \hlx*{vh}
326 \end{tabular}
327 \caption{C and Lisp qualifier names} \label{tab:clang.ctypes.qual}
328\end{table}
329
330The default behaviour, on output, is to convert keywords to lowercase and
331hope for the best: special cases can be dealt with by adding appropriate
332methods to \descref{c-qualifier-keyword}{gf}.
333
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334\begin{describe}{cls}{qualifiable-c-type (c-type) \&key :qualifiers}
335 The class @|qualifiable-c-type| describes C types which can bear
336 `qualifiers' (\Cplusplus\ calls them `cv-qualifiers'): @|const|,
337 @|restrict| and @|volatile|.
338
339 The @<qualifiers> are a list of keyword symbols @|:const|, @|:restrict| and
340 @|:volatile|. There is no built-in limitation to these particular
341 qualifiers; others keywords may be used, though this isn't recommended.
342
343 Two qualifiable types are equal only if they have \emph{matching
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344 qualifiers}: i.e., every qualifier attached to one is also attached to the
345 other: order is not significant, and neither is multiplicity.
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346
347 The class @|qualifiable-c-type| is abstract.
348\end{describe}
349
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350\begin{describe}{gf}{c-type-qualifiers @<c-type> @> @<list>}
351 Returns the qualifiers of the @|qualifiable-c-type| instance @<c-type> as
352 an immutable list.
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353\end{describe}
354
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355\begin{describe}{fun}{qualify-type @<c-type> @<qualifiers> @> @<c-type>}
356 The argument @<c-type> must be an instance of @|qualifiable-c-type|,
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357 currently bearing no qualifiers, and @<qualifiers> a list of qualifier
358 keywords. The result is a C type object like @<c-type> except that it
359 bears the given @<qualifiers>.
360
1f7d590d 361 The @<c-type> is not modified. If @<c-type> is interned, then the returned
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362 type will be interned.
363\end{describe}
364
0b80399d 365\begin{describe}{fun}{format-qualifiers @<qualifiers> @> @<string>}
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366 Returns a string containing the qualifiers listed in @<qualifiers> in C
367 syntax, with a space after each. In particular, if @<qualifiers> is
368 non-null then the final character of the returned string will be a space.
369\end{describe}
370
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371\begin{describe}{gf}{c-qualifier-keyword @<qualifier> @> @<string>}
372 Return, as a string, the C keyword corresponding to the Lisp @<qualifier>.
373
374 There is a standard method, which deals with many qualifiers. Additional
375 methods exist for qualifier keywords which need special handling, such as
376 @|:atomic|; they are not listed here explicitly.
377
378 \begin{describe}{meth}{c-qualifier-keyword @<keyword> @> @<string>}
379 Returns the @<keyword>'s print-name, in lower case. This is sufficient
380 for the standard qualifiers @|:const|, @|:restrict|, and @|:volatile|.
381 \end{describe}
382\end{describe}
383
384\begin{describe}{fun}{c-type-qualifier-keywords @<c-type> @> @<list>}
385 Return the @<c-type>'s qualifiers, as a list of C keyword names.
386\end{describe}
387
31d4431b 388
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389\subsection{Storage specifiers} \label{sec:clang.ctypes.specs}
390
391Some declaration specifiers, mostly to do with how to store the specific
392object in question, are determinedly `top level', and, unlike qualifiers,
393don't stay attached to the base type when acted on by declarator operators.
394Sod calls these `storage specifiers', though no such category exists in the C
395standard. They have their own protocol, which is similar in many ways to
396that of C types.
397
398Every Lisp keyword is potentially a storage specifier, which simply maps to
399its lower-case print name in C; but other storage specifiers may be more
400complicated objects.
401
402\begin{describe}{cls}
403 {c-storage-specifiers-type (c-type) \&key :subtype :specifiers}
404 A type which carries storage specifiers. The @<subtype> is the actual
405 type, and may be any C type; the @<specifiers> are a list of
406 storage-specifier objects.
407
408 The type specifier @|(specs @<subtype> @<specifier>^*)| wraps the
409 @<subtype> in a @|c-storage-specifiers-type|, carrying the @<specifier>s,
410 which are a list of storage specifiers in S-expression notation.
411\end{describe}
412
413\begin{describe}{fun}{c-type-specifiers @<type> @> @<list>}
414 Returns the list of type specifiers attached to the @<type> object, which
415 must be a @|c-storage-specifiers-type|.
416\end{describe}
417
418\begin{describe}{mac}
419 {define-c-storage-specifier-syntax @<name> @<lambda-list> \\ \ind
420 @[[ @<declaration>^* @! @<doc-string> @]] \\
421 @<form>^* \-
422 \nlret @<name>}
423
424 Defines the symbol @<name> as a new storage-specifier operator. When a
425 list of the form @|(@<name> @<argument>^*)| is used as a storage specifier,
426 the @<argument>s are bound to fresh variables according to the
427 @<lambda-list> (a destructuring lambda-list) and the @<form>s evaluated in
428 order in the resulting lexical environment as an implicit @<progn>. The
429 value should be a Lisp form which will evaluate to the storage-specifier
430 object described by the arguments.
431
432 The @<form>s may call @|expand-c-storage-specifier| in order to recursively
433 expand storage specifiers among its arguments.
434\end{describe}
435
436\begin{describe}{gf}{expand-c-storage-specifier @<spec> @> @<form>}
437 Returns the Lisp form that @<spec> expands to within @|(c-type (specs
438 @<subtype> @<spec>))|.
439
440 If @<spec> is a list, then \descref{expand-c-storage-specifier-form} is
441 invoked.
442\end{describe}
443
444\begin{describe}{gf}{expand-c-storage-specifier-form @<spec> @> @<form>}
445 Returns the Lisp form that @|(@<head> . @<tail>)| expands to within
446 @|(c-type (specs @<subtype> (@<head> . @<tail>)))|.
447\end{describe}
448
449\begin{describe}{gf}{pprint-c-storage-specifier @<spec> @<stream>}
450\end{describe}
451
452\begin{describe}{gf}
453 {print-c-storage-specifier @<stream> @<spec>
454 \&optional @<colon> @<atsign>}
455\end{describe}
456
457\begin{describe}{fun}{wrap-c-type @<func> @<base-type> @> @<c-type>}
458 Apply @<func> to the underlying C type of @<base-type> to create a new
459 `wrapped' type, and attach the storage specifiers of @<base-type> to the
460 wrapped type.
461
462 If @<base-type> is \emph{not} a @|c-storage-specifiers-type|, then return
463 @|(funcall @<func> @<base-type>)|. Otherwise, return a new
464 @|c-storage-specifiers-type|, with the same specifiers, but whose subtype
465 is the result of applying @<func> to the subtype of the original
466 @<base-type>.
467\end{describe}
468
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469\begin{describe}{cls}{alignas-storage-specifier () \&key :alignment}
470 The class of @|_Alignas| storage specifiers; an instance denotes the
471 specifier @|_Alignas(@<alignment>)|. The @<alignment> parameter may be any
472 printable object, but is usually a string or C fragment.
473
474 The storage specifier form @|(alignas @<alignment>)| returns a storage
475 specifier @|_Alignas(@<alignment>)|, where @<alignment> is evaluated.
476\end{describe}
477
31d4431b 478
1f7d590d 479\subsection{Leaf types} \label{sec:clang.c-types.leaf}
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480
481A \emph{leaf type} is a type which is not defined in terms of another type.
482In Sod, the leaf types are
483\begin{itemize}
484\item \emph{simple types}, including builtin types like @|int| and @|char|,
485 as well as type names introduced by @|typename|, because Sod isn't
486 interested in what the type name means, merely that it names a type; and
487\item \emph{tagged types}, i.e., enum, struct and union types which are named
488 by a keyword identifying the kind of type, and a \emph{tag}.
489\end{itemize}
490
491\begin{describe}{cls}{simple-c-type (qualifiable-c-type)
492 \&key :qualifiers :name}
493 The class of `simple types'; an instance denotes the type @<qualifiers>
494 @<name>.
495
496 A simple type object maintains a \emph{name}, which is a string whose
497 contents are the C name for the type. The initarg @|:name| may be used to
498 provide this name when calling @|make-instance|.
499
500 Two simple type objects are equal if and only if they have @|string=| names
501 and matching qualifiers.
502
503 A number of symbolic type specifiers for builtin types are predefined as
64d1ecf7 504 shown in \xref{tab:codegen.c-types.simple}. These are all defined as if by
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505 @|define-simple-c-type|, so can be used to construct qualified types.
506\end{describe}
507
508\begin{table}
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509 \begin{tabular}[C]{ll} \hlx*{hv}
510 \thd{C type} & \thd{Specifiers} \\ \hlx{vhv}
511 @|void| & @|void| \\ \hlx{v}
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512 @|_Bool| & @|bool| \\ \hlx{v}
513 @|char| & @|char| \\ \hlx{}
a4434457 514 @|wchar_t| & @|wchar-t| \\ \hlx{v}
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515 @|signed char| & @|signed-char|, @|schar| \\ \hlx{}
516 @|unsigned char| & @|unsigned-char|, @|uchar| \\ \hlx{v}
dea4d055 517 @|short| & @|short|, @|signed-short|, @|short-int|,
fcb6c0fb 518 @|signed-short-int| @|sshort| \\ \hlx{}
dea4d055 519 @|unsigned short| & @|unsigned-short|, @|unsigned-short-int|,
fcb6c0fb 520 @|ushort| \\ \hlx{v}
dea4d055 521 @|int| & @|int|, @|signed|, @|signed-int|,
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522 @|sint| \\ \hlx{}
523 @|unsigned int| & @|unsigned|, @|unsigned-int|, @|uint| \\ \hlx{v}
dea4d055 524 @|long| & @|long|, @|signed-long|, @|long-int|,
fcb6c0fb 525 @|signed-long-int|, @|slong| \\ \hlx{}
dea4d055 526 @|unsigned long| & @|unsigned-long|, @|unsigned-long-int|,
fcb6c0fb 527 @|ulong| \\ \hlx{v}
dea4d055 528 @|long long| & @|long-long|, @|signed-long-long|,
d21ac4d9 529 @|long-long-int|, \\ \hlx{}
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530 & \qquad @|signed-long-long-int|,
531 @|llong|, @|sllong| \\ \hlx{v}
532 @|unsigned long long|
533 & @|unsigned-long-long|, @|unsigned-long-long-int|,
fcb6c0fb 534 @|ullong| \\ \hlx{v}
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535 @|size_t| & @|size-t| \\ \hlx{}
536 @|ptrdiff_t| & @|ptrdiff-t| \\ \hlx{v}
fcb6c0fb 537 @|float| & @|float| \\ \hlx{}
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538 @|double| & @|double| \\ \hlx{}
539 @|long double| & @|long-double| \\ \hlx{v}
540 @|float _Imaginary| & @|float-imaginary| \\ \hlx{}
a4434457 541 @|double _Imaginary|& @|double-imaginary| \\ \hlx{}
a4434457 542 @|long double _Imaginary|
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543 & @|long-double-imaginary| \\ \hlx{v}
544 @|float _Complex| & @|float-complex| \\ \hlx{}
545 @|double _Complex| & @|double-complex| \\ \hlx{}
a4434457 546 @|long double _Complex|
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547 & @|long-double-complex| \\ \hlx{v}
548 @|va_list| & @|va-list| \\ \hlx*{vh}
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549 \end{tabular}
550 \caption{Builtin symbolic type specifiers for simple C types}
64d1ecf7 551 \label{tab:codegen.c-types.simple}
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552\end{table}
553
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554\begin{describe}{fun}
555 {make-simple-type @<name> \&optional @<qualifiers> @> @<c-type>}
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556 Return the (unique interned) simple C type object for the C type whose name
557 is @<name> (a string) and which has the given @<qualifiers> (a list of
558 keywords).
559\end{describe}
560
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561\begin{describe}{gf}{c-type-name @<c-type> @> @<string>}
562 Returns the name of a @|simple-c-type| instance @<c-type> as an immutable
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563 string.
564\end{describe}
565
1f7d590d 566\begin{describe}{mac}
020b9e2b 567 {define-simple-c-type
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568 \=@{ @<name> @! (@<name>^+) @}
569 @{ @<string> @! (@<string>^*) @} \+\\
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570 @[[ @|:export| @<export-flag> @]]
571 \-\nlret @<name>}
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572 Define type specifiers for a new simple C type. Each symbol @<name> is
573 defined as a symbolic type specifier for the (unique interned) simple C
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574 type whose name is the value of (the first) @<string>. Further, each
575 @<name> is defined to be a type operator: the type specifier @|(@<name>
dea4d055 576 @<qualifier>^*)| evaluates to the (unique interned) simple C type whose
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577 name is (the first) @<string> and which has the @<qualifiers> (which are
578 evaluated).
e43d3532 579
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580 Each of the @<string>s is associated with the resulting type for retrieval
581 by \descref{find-simple-c-type}{fun}. Furthermore, a variable
582 @|c-type-@<name>| is defined, for the first @<name> only, and initialized
583 with the newly constructed C type object.
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584
585 If @<export-flag> is true, then the @|c-type-@<name>| variable name, and
586 all of the @<name>s, are exported from the current package.
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587\end{describe}
588
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589\begin{describe}{fun}
590 {find-simple-c-type @<string> @> @{ @<simple-c-type> @! @|nil| @}}
591 If @<string> is the name of a simple C type, as established by the
592 \descref{define-simple-c-type}[macro]{mac}, then return the corresponding
593 @|simple-c-type| object; otherwise, return @|nil|.
594\end{describe}
595
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596\begin{describe}{cls}{tagged-c-type (qualifiable-c-type)
597 \&key :qualifiers :tag}
598 Provides common behaviour for C tagged types. A @<tag> is a string
599 containing a C identifier.
600
601 Two tagged types are equal if and only if they have the same class, their
602 @<tag>s are @|string=|, and they have matching qualifiers. (User-defined
603 subclasses may have additional methods on @|c-type-equal-p| which impose
604 further restrictions.)
605\end{describe}
606\begin{boxy}[Bug]
607 Sod maintains distinct namespaces for the three kinds of tagged types. In
608 C, there is only one namespace for tags which is shared between enums,
609 structs and unions.
610\end{boxy}
611
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612\begin{describe}{gf}{c-tagged-type-kind @<c-type> @> @<keyword>}
613 Returns a keyword classifying the tagged @<c-type>: one of @|:enum|,
614 @|:struct| or @|:union|. User-defined subclasses of @|tagged-c-type|
615 should return their own classification symbols. It is intended that
616 @|(string-downcase (c-tagged-type-kind @<c-type>))| be valid C
617 syntax.\footnote{%
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618 Alas, C doesn't provide a syntactic category for these keywords;
619 \Cplusplus\ calls them a @<class-key>.} %
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620 There is a method defined for each of the built-in tagged type classes
621 @|c-struct-type|, @|c-union-type| and @|c-enum-type|.
622\end{describe}
623
624\begin{describe}{gf}{kind-c-tagged-type @<keyword> @> @<symbol>}
625 This is not quite the inverse of @|c-tagged-type-kind|. Given a keyword
626 naming a kind of tagged type, return the name of the corresponding C
627 type class as a symbol.
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628\end{describe}
629
630\begin{describe}{cls}{c-enum-type (tagged-c-type) \&key :qualifiers :tag}
631 Represents a C enumerated type. An instance denotes the C type @|enum|
632 @<tag>. See the direct superclass @|tagged-c-type| for details.
633
634 The type specifier @|(enum @<tag> @<qualifier>^*)| returns the (unique
635 interned) enumerated type with the given @<tag> and @<qualifier>s (all
636 evaluated).
637\end{describe}
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638\begin{describe}{fun}
639 {make-enum-type @<tag> \&optional @<qualifiers> @> @<c-enum-type>}
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640 Return the (unique interned) C type object for the enumerated C type whose
641 tag is @<tag> (a string) and which has the given @<qualifiers> (a list of
642 keywords).
643\end{describe}
644
645\begin{describe}{cls}{c-struct-type (tagged-c-type) \&key :qualifiers :tag}
646 Represents a C structured type. An instance denotes the C type @|struct|
647 @<tag>. See the direct superclass @|tagged-c-type| for details.
648
649 The type specifier @|(struct @<tag> @<qualifier>^*)| returns the (unique
650 interned) structured type with the given @<tag> and @<qualifier>s (all
651 evaluated).
652\end{describe}
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653\begin{describe}{fun}
654 {make-struct-type @<tag> \&optional @<qualifiers> @> @<c-struct-type>}
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655 Return the (unique interned) C type object for the structured C type whose
656 tag is @<tag> (a string) and which has the given @<qualifiers> (a list of
657 keywords).
658\end{describe}
659
660\begin{describe}{cls}{c-union-type (tagged-c-type) \&key :qualifiers :tag}
661 Represents a C union type. An instance denotes the C type @|union|
662 @<tag>. See the direct superclass @|tagged-c-type|
663 for details.
664
665 The type specifier @|(union @<tag> @<qualifier>^*)| returns the (unique
666 interned) union type with the given @<tag> and @<qualifier>s (all
667 evaluated).
668\end{describe}
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669\begin{describe}{fun}
670 {make-union-type @<tag> \&optional @<qualifiers> @> @<c-union-type>}
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671 Return the (unique interned) C type object for the union C type whose tag
672 is @<tag> (a string) and which has the given @<qualifiers> (a list of
673 keywords).
674\end{describe}
675
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677\subsection{Compound C types} \label{sec:code.c-types.compound}
678
679Some C types are \emph{compound types}: they're defined in terms of existing
680types. The classes which represent compound types implement a common
681protocol.
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683\begin{describe}{gf}{c-type-subtype @<c-type> @> @<subtype>}
684 Returns the underlying type of a compound type @<c-type>. Precisely what
685 this means depends on the class of @<c-type>.
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686\end{describe}
687
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689\subsection{Atomic types} \label{sec:clang.c-types.atomic}
690
691Atomic types are compound types. The subtype of an atomic type is simply the
692underlying type of the object. Note that, as far as Sod is concerned, atomic
693types are not the same as atomic-qualified types: you must be consistent
694about which you use.
695
696\begin{describe}{cls}
697 {c-atomic-type (qualifiable-c-type) \&key :qualifiers :subtype}
698 Represents an atomic type. An instance denotes the C type
699 @|_Atomic(@<subtype>)|.
700
701 The @<subtype> may be any C type.\footnote{%
702 C does not permit atomic function or array types.} %
703 Two atomic types are equal if and only if their subtypes are equal and they
704 have matching qualifiers. It is possible, though probably not useful, to
705 have an atomic-qualified atomic type.
706
707 The type specifier @|(atomic @<type-spec> @<qualifier>^*)| returns a type
708 qualified atomic @<subtype>, where @<subtype> is the type specified by
709 @<type-spec> and the @<qualifier>s are qualifier keywords (which are
710 evaluated).
711\end{describe}
712
713\begin{describe}{fun}
714 {make-atomic-type @<c-type> \&optional @<qualifiers> @> @<c-atomic-type>}
715 Return an object describing the type qualified atomic @<subtype>. If
716 @<subtype> is interned, then the returned atomic type object is interned
717 also.
718\end{describe}
719
720
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721\subsection{Pointer types} \label{sec:clang.c-types.pointer}
722
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723Pointers are compound types. The subtype of a pointer type is the type it
724points to.
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725
726\begin{describe}{cls}
727 {c-pointer-type (qualifiable-c-type) \&key :qualifiers :subtype}
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728 Represents a C pointer type. An instance denotes the C type @<subtype>
729 @|*|@<qualifiers>.
730
731 The @<subtype> may be any C type. Two pointer types are equal if and only
732 if their subtypes are equal and they have matching qualifiers.
733
734 The type specifier @|(* @<type-spec> @<qualifier>^*)| returns a type
735 qualified pointer-to-@<subtype>, where @<subtype> is the type specified by
736 @<type-spec> and the @<qualifier>s are qualifier keywords (which are
737 evaluated). The synonyms @|ptr| and @|pointer| may be used in place of the
738 star @`*'.
739
fcb6c0fb 740 The symbol @|string| is a type specifier for the type pointer to
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741 characters; the symbol @|const-string| is a type specifier for the type
742 pointer to constant characters.
743\end{describe}
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744
745\begin{describe}{fun}
746 {make-pointer-type @<c-type> \&optional @<qualifiers>
747 @> @<c-pointer-type>}
fcb6c0fb 748 Return an object describing the type qualified pointer to @<subtype>.
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749 If @<subtype> is interned, then the returned pointer type object is
750 interned also.
751\end{describe}
752
31d4431b 753
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754\subsection{Array types} \label{sec:clang.c-types.array}
755
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756Arrays implement the compound-type protocol. The subtype of an array type is
757the array element type.
1f7d590d 758
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759\begin{describe}{cls}{c-array-type (c-type) \&key :subtype :dimensions}
760 Represents a multidimensional C array type. The @<dimensions> are a list
761 of dimension specifiers $d_0$, $d_1$, \ldots, $d_{n-1}$; an instance then
762 denotes the C type @<subtype> @|[$d_0$][$d_1$]$\ldots$[$d_{n-1}$]|. An
763 individual dimension specifier is either a string containing a C integral
764 constant expression, or nil which is equivalent to an empty string. Only
765 the first (outermost) dimension $d_0$ should be empty.
766
767 C doesn't actually have multidimensional arrays as a primitive notion;
768 rather, it permits an array (with known extent) to be the element type of
769 an array, which achieves an equivalent effect. C arrays are stored in
770 row-major order: i.e., if we write down the indices of the elements of an
771 array in order of ascending address, the rightmost index varies fastest;
772 hence, the type constructed is more accurately an array of $d_0$ arrays of
773 $d_1$ of \ldots\ arrays of $d_{n-1}$ elements of type @<subtype>. We shall
774 continue to abuse terminology and refer to multidimensional arrays.
775
776 The type specifier @|([] @<type-spec> @<dimension>^*)| constructs a
777 multidimensional array with the given @<dimension>s whose elements have the
778 type specified by @<type-spec>. If no dimensions are given then a
779 single-dimensional array with unspecified extent. The synonyms @|array|
780 and @|vector| may be used in place of the brackets @`[]'.
781\end{describe}
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782
783\begin{describe}{fun}
784 {make-array-type @<subtype> @<dimensions> @> @<c-array-type>}
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785 Return an object describing the type of arrays with given @<dimensions> and
786 with element type @<subtype> (an instance of @|c-type|). The @<dimensions>
787 argument is a list whose elements are strings or nil; see the description
788 of the class @|c-array-type| above for details.
789\end{describe}
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790
791\begin{describe}{gf}{c-array-dimensions @<c-type> @> @<list>}
792 Returns the dimensions of @<c-type>, an array type, as an immutable list.
793\end{describe}
794
31d4431b 795
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796\subsection{Function types} \label{sec:clang.c-types.fun}
797
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798Function types implement the compound-type protocol. The subtype of a
799function type is the type of the function's return value.
800
1f7d590d 801\begin{describe}{cls}{argument}
fcb6c0fb 802 Represents an ordinary function argument.
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803\end{describe}
804
805\begin{describe}{fun}{argumentp @<value> @> @<generalized-boolean>}
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806 Decide whether @<value> is an @<argument> object: if so, return non-nil; if
807 not return nil.
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808\end{describe}
809
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810\begin{describe}{fun}
811 {make-argument @<name> @<c-type> \&optional @<default> @> @<argument>}
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812 Construct and a return a new @<argument> object. The argument has type
813 @<c-type>, which must be a @|c-type| object, and is named @<name>.
814
815 The @<name> may be nil to indicate that the argument has no name: in this
816 case the argument will be formatted as an abstract declarator, which is not
817 suitable for function definitions. If @<name> is not nil, then the
818 @<name>'s print representation, with @|*print-escape*| nil, is used as the
819 argument name.
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820
821 A @<default> may be supplied. If the argument is used in a
822 keyword-argument list (e.g., in a \descref{c-keyword-function-type}
823 [object]{cls}), and the @<default> value is provided and non-nil, then its
824 (unescaped) printed representation is used to provide a default value if
825 the keyword argument is not supplied by the caller.
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826\end{describe}
827
52e2a70f 828\begin{describe*}
31d4431b 829 {\dhead{fun}{argument-name @<argument> @> @<name>}
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830 \dhead{fun}{argument-type @<argument> @> @<c-type>}
831 \dhead{fun}{argument-default @<argument> @> @<default>}}
832 Accessor functions for @|argument| objects. They return the appropriate
833 component of the object, as set by to @|make-argument|. The @<default> is
834 nil if no default was provided to @|make-argument|.
52e2a70f 835\end{describe*}
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fcb6c0fb 837\begin{describe}{gf}
1f7d590d 838 {commentify-argument-name @<name> @> @<commentified-name>}
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839 Convert the argument name @<name> so that it's suitable to declare the
840 function in a header file.
dea4d055 841
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842 Robust header files shouldn't include literal argument names in
843 declarations of functions or function types, since this restricts the
844 including file from defining such names as macros. This generic function
845 is used to convert names into a safe form.
846
847 \begin{describe}{meth}{commentify-argument-name (@<name> null) @> nil}
848 Returns nil: if the argument name is already omitted, it's safe for use
849 in a header file.
850 \end{describe}
851 \begin{describe}{meth}{commentify-argument-name (@<name> t) @> @<string>}
852 Returns the print form of @<name> wrapped in a C comment, as
853 @`/*@<name>*/'.
854 \end{describe}
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855\end{describe}
856
857\begin{describe}{fun}
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858 {commentify-argument-names @<arguments> @> @<commentified-arguments>}
859 Convert the @<arguments> list so that it's suitable for use in a header
860 file.
861
862 The @<arguments> list should be a list whose items are @|argument| objects
863 or the keyword @|:ellipsis|. The return value is a list constructed as
864 follows. For each @|argument| object in the input list, there is a
865 corresponding @|argument| object in the returned list, with the same type,
866 and whose name is the result of @|commentify-argument-name| applied to the
867 input argument name; an @|:ellipsis| in the input list is passed through
868 unchanged.
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869\end{describe}
870
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871\begin{describe}{cls}{c-function-type (c-type) \&key :subtype :arguments}
872 Represents C function types. An instance denotes the type of a C
873 function which accepts the @<arguments> and returns @<subtype>.
874
875 The @<arguments> are a possibly empty list. All but the last element of
876 the list must be @|argument| objects; the final element may instead be the
877 keyword @|:ellipsis|, which denotes a variable argument list.
878
879 An @<arguments> list consisting of a single argument with type @|void| is
880 converted into an empty list. On output as C code, an empty argument list
881 is written as @|void|. It is not possible to represent a pre-ANSI C
882 function without prototypes.
883
884 Two function types are considered to be the same if their return types are
885 the same, and their argument lists consist of arguments with the same type,
886 in the same order, and either both or neither argument list ends with
887 @|:ellipsis|; argument names are not compared.
888
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889 The type specifier
890 \begin{prog}
891 (fun @<return-type>
892 @{ (@<arg-name> @<arg-type>) @}^*
893 @[:ellipsis @! . @<form>@])
894 \end{prog}
895 constructs a function type. The function has the subtype @<return-type>.
896 The remaining items in the type-specifier list are used to construct the
897 argument list. The argument items are a possibly improper list, beginning
898 with zero or more \emph{explicit arguments}: two-item
899 @<arg-name>/@<arg-type> lists. For each such list, an @|argument| object
900 is constructed with the given name (evaluated) and type. Following the
901 explicit arguments, there may be
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902 \begin{itemize}
903 \item nothing, in which case the function's argument list consists only of
904 the explicit arguments;
905 \item the keyword @|:ellipsis|, as the final item in the type-specifier
906 list, indicating a variable argument list may follow the explicit
907 arguments; or
908 \item a possibly-improper list tail, beginning with an atom either as a
909 list item or as the final list cdr, indicating that the entire list tail
910 is Lisp expression which is to be evaluated to compute the remaining
911 arguments.
912 \end{itemize}
913 A tail expression may return a list of @|argument| objects, optionally
914 followed by an @|:ellipsis|.
915
916 For example,
917 \begin{prog}
020b9e2b 918 (c-type (fun \=(lisp (c-type-subtype other-func)) \+\\
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919 ("first" int) . (c-function-arguments other-func))
920 \end{prog}
921 evaluates to a function type like @|other-func|, only with an additional
922 argument of type @|int| added to the front of its argument list. This
923 could also have been written
924 \begin{prog}
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925 (let (\=(args (c-function-arguments other-func)) \+\\
926 (ret (c-type-subtype other-func))) \-\\ \ind
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927 (c-type (fun \=(lisp ret) ("first" int) . args)
928 \end{prog}
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929\end{describe}
930
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931\begin{describe}{cls}
932 {c-keyword-function-type (c-function-type)
933 \&key :subtype :arguments :keywords}
934 Represents `functions' which accept keyword arguments. Of course, actual C
935 functions can't accept keyword arguments directly, but this type is useful
936 for describing messages and methods which deal with keyword arguments.
937
938 An instance denotes the type of C function which accepts the position
939 argument list @<arguments>, and keyword arguments from the @<keywords>
940 list, and returns @<subtype>. Either or both of the @<arguments> and
941 @<keywords> lists may be empty. (It is important to note the distinction
942 between a function which doesn't accept keyword arguments, and one which
943 does but for which no keyword arguments are defined. In particular, the
944 latter function can be changed later to accept a keyword argument without
945 breaking compatibility with old code.) The @<arguments> and @<keywords>
946 lists must \emph{not} contain @|:ellipsis| markers: a function can accept
947 keywords, or a variable-length argument tail, but not both.
948
949 Keyword arguments may (but need not) have a \emph{default value} which is
950 supplied to the function body if the keyword is omitted.
951
952 Keyword functions are never considered to be the same as ordinary
953 functions. Two keyword function types are considered to be the same if
954 their return types are the same, and their positional argument lists consist of
955 arguments with the same type, in the same order: the keyword arguments
956 accepted by the functions is not significant.
957
958 Keyword functions are constructed using an extended version of the @|fun|
959 specifier used for ordinary C function types. The extended syntax is as
960 follows.
961 \begin{prog}
962 (fun \=@<return-type>
020b9e2b 963 @{ (@<arg-name> @<arg-type>) @}^* \+\\
ced609b8 964 @{ \=:keys @{ (@<kw-name> @<kw-type> @[@<kw-default>@]) @}^*
020b9e2b 965 @[. @<form>@] @! \+\\
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966 . @<form> @}
967 \end{prog}
968 where either the symbol @|:keys| appears literally in the specifier, or the
969 @<form> evaluates to a list containing the symbol @|:keys|. (If neither of
970 these circumstances obtains, then the specifier constructs an ordinary
971 function type.)
972
973 See the description of \descref{c-function-type}{cls} for how a trailing
974 @<form> is handled.
975
976 The list of @<arg-name>s and @<arg-type>s describes the positional
977 arguments. The list of @<kw-name>s, @<kw-type>s and @<kw-defaults>s
978 describes the keyword arguments.
979\end{describe}
980
1f7d590d 981\begin{describe}{fun}
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982 {make-function-type @<subtype> @<arguments> @> @<c-function-type>}
983 Construct and return a new function type, returning @<subtype> and
984 accepting the @<arguments>.
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985
986 If the @<arguments> list contains a @|:keys| marker, then a
987 \descref{c-keyword-function-type}[object]{cls} is returned: those arguments
988 preceding the @|:keys| marker form the positional argument list, and those
989 following the marker form the list of keyword arguments.
990\end{describe}
991
992\begin{describe}{fun}
993 {make-keyword-function-type @<subtype> @<arguments> @<keywords>
994 \nlret @<c-keyword-function-type>}
995 Construct and return a new keyword-function type, returning @<subtype> and
996 accepting the @<arguments> and @<keywords>.
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997\end{describe}
998
999\begin{describe}{gf}
1000 {c-function-arguments @<c-function-type> @> @<arguments>}
1001 Return the arguments list of the @<c-function-type>.
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1002\end{describe}
1003
1004\begin{describe}{fun}
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1005 {commentify-function-type @<c-function-type> @> @<commentified-c-type>}
1006 Return a commentified version of the @<c-function-type>.
1007
1008 The returned type has the same subtype as the given type, and the argument
1009 list of the returned type is the result of applying
1010 @|commentify-argument-names| to the argument list of the given type.
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1011\end{describe}
1012
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1013\begin{describe}{fun}{reify-variable-argument-tail @<arguments> @> @<list>}
1014 If the @<argument> list contains an @|:ellipsis| marker, then replace it
1015 with a @|va_list|. The name for the new argument, if any, is taken from
1016 the \descref{*sod-ap*}[variable]{var}. The new list is returned; the
1017 original list is not modified, but may share structure with the new list.
1018\end{describe}
1019
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1020\begin{describe}{fun}
1021 {merge-keyword-lists @<what-function> @<lists> @> @<list>}
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1022 Merge a number of keyword-argument lists together and return the result.
1023
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1024 The @<what-function> is either nil or a function designator; see below.
1025
1026 The @<lists> parameter is a list consisting of a number of
1027 @|(@<report-function> . @<args>)| pairs: in each pair, @<report-function>
1028 is either nil or a function designator, and @<args> is a list of
01778b39 1029 \descref{argument}{cls} objects.
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1030
1031 The resulting list contains exactly one argument for each distinct argument
1032 name appearing in the input @<lists>; this argument will contain the
1033 default value from the earliest occurrence in the input @<lists> of an
1034 argument with that name.
1035
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1036 If the same name appears multiple times with different types, a continuable
1037 error will be signalled, and one of the conflicting argument types will be
1038 chosen arbitrarily. The @<what-function> will be called to establish
1039 information which will be reported to the user. It will be called with no
1040 arguments and is expected to return two values:
1041 \begin{itemize}
1042 \item a file location @<floc> or other object acceptable to
1043 \descref{file-location}{gf}, to be used as the location of the main
1044 error; and
1045 \item an object @<what>, whose printed representation should be a noun
1046 phrase describing the object for which the argument lists are being
1047 combined.
1048 \end{itemize}
1049 The phrasing of the error message is `type mismatch in @<what>'. Either,
1050 or both, of @<floc> and @<what> may be nil, though this is considered poor
1051 practice; if @<what-function> is nil, this is equivalent to a function
1052 which returns two nil values. Following the error, the @<report-function>s
1053 for the @<args> lists containing the conflicting argument objects are
1054 called, in an arbitrary order, with a single argument which is the
1055 offending @|argument| object; the function is expected to issue information
1056 messages (see \descref{info}{fun}) to give more detail for diagnosing the
1057 conflict. If a @<report-function> is nil, then nothing happens; this is
1058 considered poor practice.
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1059\end{describe}
1060
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1061\begin{describe}{fun}
1062 {pprint-c-function-type @<return-type> @<stream>
1063 @<print-args> @<print-kernel>}
1064 Provides the top-level structure for printing C function types.
1065
1066 Output is written to @<stream> to describe a function type returning
1067 @<return-type>, whose declarator kernel (containing the name, and any
1068 further type operands) will be printed by @<print-kernel>, and whose
1069 arguments, if any, will be printed by @<print-args>.
1070
1071 The @<print-kernel> function is a standard kernel-printing function
1072 following the \descref{pprint-c-type}[protocol]{gf}.
1073
1074 The @<print-args> function is given a single argument, which is the
1075 @<stream> to print on. It should not print the surrounding parentheses.
1076
1077 The output written to @<stream> looks approximately like
1078 \begin{prog}
1079 @<return-type> @<kernel>(@<args>)
1080 \end{prog}
1081\end{describe}
1082
1083\begin{describe}{fun}{pprint-argument-list @<args> @<stream> @> @<flag>}
1084 Print an argument list to @<stream>.
1085
1086 The @<args> is a list of \descref{argument}[objects]{cls}, optionally
1087 containing an @|:ellipsis| marker. The function returns true if any
1088 arguments were actually printed.
1089\end{describe}
1090
31d4431b 1091
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1092\subsection{Parsing C types} \label{sec:clang.c-types.parsing}
1093
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1094\begin{describe}{fun}
1095 {parse-c-type @<scanner>
1096 @> @<result> @<success-flag> @<consumed-flag>}
1097\end{describe}
1098
1099\begin{describe}{fun}
1100 {parse-declarator @<scanner> @<base-type> \&key :kernel :abstractp
1101 \nlret @<result> @<success-flag> @<consumed-flag>}
1102\end{describe}
1103
31d4431b 1104
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1105\subsection{Class types} \label{sec:clang.c-types.class}
1106
1107\begin{describe}{cls}
1108 {c-class-type (simple-c-type) \&key :class :tag :qualifiers :name}
1109\end{describe}
1110
1111\begin{describe*}
1112 {\dhead{gf}{c-type-class @<class-type> @> @<class>}
1113 \dhead{gf}{setf (c-type-class @<class-type>) @<class>}}
1114\end{describe*}
1115
1116\begin{describe}{fun}{find-class-type @<name> @> @<class-type-or-nil>}
1117\end{describe}
1118
1119\begin{describe}{fun}
1120 {make-class-type @<name> \&optional @<qualifiers> @> @<class-type>}
1121\end{describe}
1122
1123\begin{describe}{fun}
1124 {make-class-type @<name> \&optional @<qualifiers> @> @<class-type>}
1125\end{describe}
1126
1127\begin{describe}{fun}{find-sod-class @<name> @> @<class>}
1128\end{describe}
1129
1130\begin{describe}{fun}{record-sod-class @<class>}
1131\end{describe}
1132
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1133%%%--------------------------------------------------------------------------
1134\section{Generating C code} \label{sec:clang.codegen}
1135
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1136This section deals with Sod's facilities for constructing and manipulating C
1137expressions, declarations, instructions and definitions.
1138
31d4431b 1139
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1140\subsection{Temporary names} \label{sec:clang.codegen.temporaries}
1141
1142Many C-level objects, especially ones with external linkage or inclusion in a
1143header file, are assigned names which are simple strings, perhaps fixed ones,
1144perhaps constructed. Other objects don't need meaningful names, and
1145suitably unique constructed names would be tedious and most likely rather
1146opaque. Therefore Sod has an ability to construct \emph{temporary names}.
1147
1148These aren't temporary in the sense that they name C objects which have
1149limited lifetimes at runtime. Rather, the idea is that the names be
1150significant only to small pieces of Lisp code, which will soon forget about
1151them.
1152
1153\subsubsection{The temporary name protocol}
1154Temporary names are represented by objects which implement a simple protocol.
1155
1156\begin{describe}{gf}{format-temporary-name @<var> @<stream>}
1157\end{describe}
1158
1159\begin{describe*}
1160 {\dhead{gf}{var-in-use-p @<var> @> @<generalized-boolean>}
1161 \dhead[setf var-in-use-p]
1162 {gf}{setf (var-in-use-p @<var>) @<generalized-boolean>}}
1163\end{describe*}
1164
1165\subsubsection{Temporary name objects}
1166
1167\begin{describe}{cls}{temporary-name () \&key :tag}
1168 A temporary name object. This is the root of a small collection of
1169 subclasses, but is also usable on its own.
1170\end{describe}
1171
1172\begin{describe}{meth}
1173 {commentify-argument-name (@<name> temporary-name) @> nil}
1174\end{describe}
1175
1176\begin{table}
1177 \begin{tabular}[C]{*2{>{\codeface}l}} \hlx*{hv}
1178 \thd{\textbf{Class}} & \thd{\textbf{Name format}} \\ \hlx{vhv}
1179 temporary-name & @<tag> \\
1180 temporary-argument & sod__a@<tag> \\
1181 temporary-function & sod__f@<tag> \\
1182 temporary-variable & sod__v@<tag> \\ \hlx*{vh}
1183 \end{tabular}
1184 \caption{Temporary name formats}
1185 \label{tab:codegen.codegen.temps-format}
1186\end{table}
1187
1188\begin{describe}{cls}{temporary-argument (temporary-name) \&key :tag}
1189\end{describe}
1190
1191\begin{describe}{cls}{temporary-function (temporary-name) \&key :tag}
1192\end{describe}
1193
1194\begin{describe}{fun}{temporary-function @> @<name>}
1195\end{describe}
1196
1197\begin{describe}{cls}
1198 {temporary-variable (temporary-name) \&key :tag :in-use-p}
1199\end{describe}
1200
1201\subsubsection{Well-known `temporary' names}
1202
1203\begin{table}
1204 \begin{tabular}[C]{*2{>{\codeface}l}} \hlx*{hv}
1205 \thd{\textbf{Variable}} & \thd{\textbf{Name format}} \\ \hlx{vhv}
1206 {}*sod-ap* & sod__ap \\
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1207 {}*sod-master-ap* & sod__master_ap \\
1208 {}*null-pointer* & NULL \\ \hlx*{vh}
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1209 \end{tabular}
1210 \caption{Well-known temporary names}
1211 \label{tab:codegen.codegen.well-known-temps}
1212\end{table}
1213
31d4431b 1214
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1215\subsection{Instructions} \label{sec:clang.codegen.insts}
1216
1217\begin{describe}{cls}{inst () \&key}
1218\end{describe}
1219
1220\begin{describe}{gf}{inst-metric @<inst>}
1221\end{describe}
1222
1223\begin{describe}{mac}
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1224 {definst @<code> (@<streamvar> \&key @<export>) (@<arg>^*) \\ \ind
1225 @[[ @<declaration>^* @! @<doc-string> @]] \\
1226 @<form>^*
1227 \-\nlret @<code>}
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1228\end{describe}
1229
1230\begin{describe}{mac}
cac85e0b 1231 {format-compound-statement
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1232 (@<stream> @<child> \&optional @<morep>) \\ \ind
1233 @<declaration>^* \\
cac85e0b 1234 @<form>^*}
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1235\end{describe}
1236
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1237\begin{describe}{fun}
1238 {format-banner-comment @<stream> @<control> \&rest @<args>}
1239\end{describe}
1240
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1241\begin{table}
1242 \begin{tabular}[C]{ll>{\codeface}l} \hlx*{hv}
1243 \thd{Class name} &
1244 \thd{Arguments} &
1245 \thd{Output format} \\ \hlx{vhv}
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1246 @|var| & @<name> @<type> @|\&optional| @<init>
1247 & @<type> @<name> @[= @<init>@];
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1248 \\ \hlx{v}
1249 @|set| & @<var> @<expr> & @<var> = @<expr>; \\ \hlx{v}
1250 @|update| & @<var> @<op> @<expr> & @<var> @<op>= @<expr>;
1251 \\ \hlx{v}
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1252 @|cond| & @<cond> @<conseq> @<alt> & @<cond> ? @<conseq> : @<alt>
1253 \\ \hlx{v}
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1254 @|return| & @<expr> & return @[@<expr>@];
1255 \\ \hlx{v}
1256 @|break| & --- & break; \\ \hlx{v}
1257 @|continue| & --- & continue; \\ \hlx{v}
1258 @|expr| & @<expr> & @<expr>; \\ \hlx{v}
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1259 @|call| & @<func> @|\&rest| @<args>
1260 & @<func>(@<arg>_1,
fcb6c0fb 1261 $\ldots$,
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1262 @<arg>_n) \\ \hlx{v}
1263 @|banner| & @<control> @|\&rest| @<args>
1264 & /* @<banner> */ \\ \hlx{vhv}
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1265 @|block| & @<decls> @<body> & \{ @[@<decls>@] @<body> \}
1266 \\ \hlx{v}
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1267 @|if| & @<cond> @<conseq> @|\&optional| @<alt>
1268 & if (@<cond>) @<conseq>
fcb6c0fb 1269 @[else @<alt>@] \\ \hlx{v}
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1270 @|for| & @<init> @<cond> @<update> @<body> &
1271 for (@<init>; @<cond>; @<update>) @<body> \\ \hlx{v}
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1272 @|while| & @<cond> @<body> & while (@<cond>) @<body>
1273 \\ \hlx{v}
1274 @|do-while| & @<body> @<cond> & do @<body> while (@<cond>);
1275 \\ \hlx{v}
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1276 @|function| &
1277 \vtop{\hbox{\strut @<name> @<type> @<body>}
1278 \hbox{\strut \quad @|\&optional @<banner>|}
1279 \hbox{\strut \quad @|\&rest| @<banner-args>}} &
1280 \vtop{\hbox{\strut @[/* @<banner> */@]}
1281 \hbox{\strut @<type>_0 @<name>(@<type>_1 @<arg>_1, $\ldots$,
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1282 @<type>_n @<arg>_n @[, \dots@])}
1283 \hbox{\strut \quad @<body>}} \\ \hlx*{vh}
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1284 \end{tabular}
1285 \caption{Instruction classes}
1286 \label{tab:codegen.codegen.insts}
1287\end{table}
1288
31d4431b 1289
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1290\subsection{Code generation} \label{sec:clang.codegen.codegen}
1291
1292\begin{describe}{gf}{codegen-functions @<codegen> @> @<list>}
1293\end{describe}
1294
1295\begin{describe}{gf}
1296 {ensure-var @<codegen> @<name> @<type> \&optional @<init>}
1297\end{describe}
1298
1299\begin{describe}{gf}{emit-inst @<codegen> @<inst>}
1300\end{describe}
1301
1302\begin{describe}{gf}{emit-insts @<codegen> @<insts>}
1303\end{describe}
1304
1305\begin{describe}{gf}{emit-decl @<codegen> @<decl>}
1306\end{describe}
1307
7c3f8ae6 1308\begin{describe}{gf}{emit-decls @<codegen> @<decls>}
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1309\end{describe}
1310
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1311\begin{describe}{fun}{emit-banner @<codegen> @<control> \&rest @<args>}
1312\end{describe}
1313
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1314\begin{describe}{gf}{codegen-push @<codegen>}
1315\end{describe}
1316
1317\begin{describe}{gf}{codegen-pop @<codegen> @> @<decls> @<insts>}
1318\end{describe}
1319
1320\begin{describe}{gf}{codegen-pop-block @<codegen> @> @<block-inst>}
1321\end{describe}
1322
1323\begin{describe}{gf}
1324 {codegen-pop-function @<codegen> @<name> @<type> @> @<name>}
1325\end{describe}
1326
1327\begin{describe}{gf}{codegen-add-function @<codegen> @<function>}
1328\end{describe}
1329
1330\begin{describe}{fun}
1331 {codegen-build-function @<codegen> @<name> @<type> @<vars> @<insts>
1332 @> @<name>}
1333\end{describe}
1334
1335\begin{describe}{gf}{temporary-var @<codegen> @<type> @> @<name>}
1336\end{describe}
1337
1338\begin{describe}{mac}
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1339 {with-temporary-var (@<codegen> @<var> @<type>) \\ \ind
1340 @<declaration>^* \\
1341 @<form>^*
1342 \-\nlret @<value>^*}
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1343\end{describe}
1344
1345\begin{describe}{fun}{deliver-expr @<codegen> @<target> @<expr>}
1346\end{describe}
1347
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1348\begin{describe}{fun}
1349 {deliver-call @<codegen> @<target> @<func> \&rest @<args>}
1350\end{describe}
1351
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1352\begin{describe}{fun}{convert-stmts @<codegen> @<target> @<type> @<func>}
1353\end{describe}
1354
1355\begin{describe}{cls}{codegen () \&key :vars :insts (:temp-index 0)}
1356\end{describe}
1357
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1358%%%--------------------------------------------------------------------------
1359\section{Literal C code fragments} \label{sec:clang.fragment}
1360
1361\begin{describe}{cls}{c-fragment () \&key :location :text}
1362\end{describe}
1363
1364\begin{describe}{gf}{c-fragment-text @<fragment> @> @<string>}
1365\end{describe}
1366
1367\begin{describe}{fun}
1368 {scan-c-fragment @<scanner> @<end-chars>
1369 @> @<result> @<success-flag> @<consumed-flag>}
1370\end{describe}
1371
1372\begin{describe}{fun}
1373 {parse-delimited-fragment @<scanner> @<begin> @<end> \&key :keep-end
1374 \nlret @<result> @<success-flag> @<consumed-flag>}
1375\end{describe}
1376
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1377%%%----- That's all, folks --------------------------------------------------
1378
1379%%% Local variables:
1380%%% mode: LaTeX
1381%%% TeX-master: "sod.tex"
1382%%% TeX-PDF-mode: t
1383%%% End: