chiark / gitweb /
src/method-impl.lisp: Initialize `suppliedp' flags properly.
[sod] / STYLE
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1Notes on Lisp style
2
3* Language subset and extensions
4
5None of ANSI Common Lisp is off-limits.
6
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7I think my Lisp style is rather more imperative in flavour than most
8modern Lisp programmers. It's probably closer to historical Lisp
9practice in that regard, even though I wasn't writing Lisp back then.
10
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11I make extensive use of CLOS, and macros. On a couple of occasions I've
12made macros which use CLOS generic function dispatch to compute their
13expansions. The parser language is probably the best example of this in
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14the codebase.
15
16I like hairy ~format~ strings.
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17
18I've avoided hairy ~loop~ for the most part, not because I dislike it
19strongly but because others do and I don't find that it wins big enough
20for the fight to be worthwhile.
21
22I only use ~&aux~ lambda-list parameters in ~defstruct~ BOA
23constructors, for special effects.
24
25I use ~car~, not ~first~, and ~cdr~, not ~rest~. Similarly, I use
26~cadr~, not ~second~, and I'm not afraid to use ~cddr~ or ~cadar~.
27
28Similarly, I've not used ~elt~, preferring to know what kind of sequence
29I'm dealing with, or using the built-in sequence functions.
30
31I'm happy to use ~1+~, and I like the brevity of ~1-~ enough to use it
32despite its terrible name.
33
34There are no reader syntax extensions in the code. This is because I
35couldn't think of any way they'd be especially helpful, and not because
36I'm in any way opposed to them.
37
38The main translator, in the ~SOD~ package, tries to assume very little
39beyond ANSI Common Lisp and what's included in just about every serious
40implementation: specifically, MOP introspection, and Gray streams.
41There's intentionally no MOP intercession.
42
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43The frontend additionally makes use of ~cl-launch~, but the dependency
44is actually quite weak, and it could be replaced with a different, maybe
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45implementation-specific, mechanism fairly easily. I'm keen to take
46patches which improve frontend portability.
47
48I'm more tolerant of extensions and external dependencies in the test
49suite, which makes additional use of ~xlunit~. Running the test suite
50isn't essential to getting the translator built, so this isn't as much
51of a problem.
52
53
54* Layout
55
56I pretty much let Emacs indent my code for me, based on information
57collected by SLIME. Some exceptions:
58
59 + DSLs (e.g., the parser language) have their own space of macros
60 which Emacs doesn't understand and for the most part I haven't
61 bothered to teach it.
62
63 + Emacs sometimes does a bad job with hairy ~loop~ and requires manual
64 fixing. Since I don't use hairy ~loop~ much, this isn't a major
65 problem.
66
67Lines are 77 characters at most, except for strange special effects.
68Don't ask. This is not negotiable, though. Don't try to tell me that
69your monitor is very wide so you can read longer lines. My monitor is
70likely at least as wide. On the other hand, most lines are easily short
71enough to fit in my narrow columns, so the right hand side of a wide
72window would be mostly blank. This seems wasteful to me, when I could
73fill that space with more code.
74
75Lisp code does have a tendency to march across to the right quite
76rapidly given a chance. I have a number of strategies for dealing with
77this.
78
79 + Break a long nested calculation into pieces, giving names to the
80 intermediate results, in a ~let*~ form.
81
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82 + Hoist deeply nested complex computations out into ~flet~ or
83 ~labels~, and then invoke them from inside whatever complicated
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84 conditional mess was needed to decide what to do.
85
86 + Shrug my shoulders and let code dribble down the right hand side for
87 a bit.
88
89
90* Packages and exporting
91
92A package collects symbols which are given meanings in one or more
93source files. If a package's code is all in one file, then the package
94definition can be put in that file too; otherwise I put it in its own
95file.
96
97I don't put ~:export~ in package definitions. Instead, I scatter calls
98to the ~export~ function throughout the code, right next to where the
99relevant symbol is defined. This has three important advantages.
100
101 + You can tell, when you're reading the code which defines ~foo~,
102 whether ~foo~ is exported and therefore a defined part of the
103 package interface.
104
105 + When you know that you're writing a thing which will form part of
106 the package interface, you don't have to go off and edit some other
107 file to export it.
108
109 + A master list of exported symbols becomes a merge hazard: if two
110 different branches add symbols to nearby pieces of the master list
111 then you get a merge conflict for no especially good reason.
112
113There's an apparent disadvantage: there's no immediately visible master
114list of exported symbols. But that's not a big problem:
115
116: (loop for s being the external-symbols of pkg collect s)
117
118See ~doc/list-symbols.lisp~ for more sophisticated reporting. (In
119particular, this identifies what kind of thing(s) each external symbol
120names.)
121
122
123* Comments and file structuring
124
125A file starts with a big ~;;;~ comment bearing the Emacs ~-*-lisp-*-~
126marker, a quick description, and copyright and licensing boilerplate. I
127don't use four-semicolon comments, and I only use ~#|~ ... ~|#~ for
128special effects.
129
130Then there's package stuff. There may be a ~cl:defpackage~ form (with
131explicit package qualifier) if the relevant package doesn't have its own
132package definition file.
133
134Then there's ~cl:in-package~. Like ~defpackage~, I use a gensym to name
135the package. I can't think offhand of a good reason to have a file with
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136sections `in' more than one package. So, the ~in-package~ form goes at
137the top of the file, before the first section header. If sections are
138going to end up in separate packages, I think I'd put a ~cl:in-package~
139at the top of each section in case I wanted to reorder them.
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140
141The rest of the file consists of Lisp code. I don't use page boundaries
142~^L~ to split files up. Instead, I use big banner comments for this:
143
144: ;;;--------------------------------------------------------------------------
145: ;;; Section title.
146
147Sections don't usually have internal comments, but if they did they'd
148also be ~;;;~ comments.
149
150Almost all definitions get documentation strings. I've tried to be
151consistent about formatting.
152
153 + Docstring lines are 77 characters or less.
154
155 + The first line gives a summary of what the thing does. The summary,
156 together with the SLIME-generated synopsis, is likely enough to
157 remind you what the thing does.
158
159 + The rest of the lines are indented by three spaces, and explain
160 carefully what the thing does and what all the parameters mean.
161
162Smallish functions and macros don't usually need any further
163commentary. Big functions often need to be split into bitesize pieces
164with their own internal ~;;~ comments. The idea is that these comments
165should explain the code's overall strategy to the reader, and help them
166figure out how a piece fits into that strategy.
167
168Winged, single ~;~ comments are very rare.
169
170Files end, as a result of long tradition, with a comment
171
172: ;;;----- That's all, folks --------------------------------------------------
173
174
175* Macro style
176
177I don't mind complicated macros if they're doing something worthwhile.
178They need to have good documentation strings, though.
179
180That said, where possible I've tried to factor macros into an actual
181macro providing the syntactic sugar, and a function which receives the
182parameters and $\eta$-expanded forms, and does the actual work.
183
184It's extremely bad taste for a macro to evaluate its evaluable
185parameters in any order other than strictly left to right, or to
186evaluate them more than once.
187
188
189* Data structures
190
191I've tended to be happy with plain lists for homogeneous-ish
192collections. Strongly heterogeneous collections (other than input
193syntax, destructured using ~defmacro~ or ~destructuring-bind~) I've
194tended to make a proper data type for.
195
196My first instinct when defining a new structure is to use ~defclass~.
197While it's annoyingly verbose, it has the immense benefit over
198~defstruct~ that it's safe to redefine CLOS classes in a running image
199without the world breaking, and I usually find it necessary to add or
200change slots while I'm working on new code. Once a piece of code has
201settled down and I have a good feel for what my structure is actually
202doing, I might switch the ~defclass~ for a ~defstruct~. Several
203questions influence my decision.
204
205 + Do slot accesses need to be really fast? My usual Lisp
206 implementations aggressively optimize ~defstruct~ accessor
207 functions.
208
7e55d099 209 + Have I subclassed my class? While I can move over a
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210 single-inheritance tree using ~:include~, it seems wrong to do this
211 most of the time. Also, I'd be precluding subclasses from multiple
212 inheritance, and I'd either have to prohibit subclassing by
213 extensions or have to commit to ~defstruct~ in the documentation.
214 In general, I'm much happier committing to ~defclass~.
215
216 + Are there methods specialized on my class? Again, structure classes
217 make fine method specializers, but it doesn't seem right.
218
219Apart from being hard to redefine, ~defstruct~ does a pretty good job of
220making a new structure type. I tend to tidy up a few rough edges.
221
222 + The default predicate always has ~-p~ appended. If the class name
223 is a single word, then I'll explicitly name the predicate with a
224 simple ~p~ suffix. For example, ~ship~ would have the predicate
a51bf71a 225 ~shipp~, rather than ~ship-p~.
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226
227 + If there are slots I can't default then I'll usually provide a BOA
228 constructor which sets them from required parameters; other slots
229 I'll set from optional or keyword parameters according to my taste
230 and judgement.
231
232 + Slots mustn't be given names which are external in any package.
233 Unfortunately, slot names are used in constructing accessor names,
234 and sometimes the right accessor name involves a prohibited symbol.
235 I've mostly addressed this by naming the slot ~%foo~, and then
236 providing inline reader and writer functions. (CLOS class
237 definitions don't have this problem because you get to set the
238 accessor function names independently of the slot names.)
239
240 + BOA constructors are strange. You can set the initial slots based
241 on an arbitrary computation on the provided parameters, but you have
242 to roll up your sleeves and mess with ~&aux~ parameters to pull it
243 off.
244
245
246* Naming
247
248I'm a traditionalist in some ways, and one of the reasons I like Lisp is
249the richness of its history and tradition.
250
251In other languages, I tend to use single- or two-letter names for
252variables and structure slots; not so much in Lisp. Other languages
253express more using punctuation, so the names stand out easily; I find
254that short names can be lost more easily in Lisp.
255
256I've also tended to go for fairly prosaic names, taking my inspiration
257from the CLOS MOP. While I mourn the loss of whimsical names like
258~haulong~ and ~haipart~, I've tried to avoid inventing more of them.
259
260There's a convention, which I think comes from ML, of using ~_~ in a
261where a binding occurrence of a variable name is expected, to signify
262that that the corresponding value is to be discarded. Common Lisp,
263alas, doesn't have such a convention. Instead, there's a sequence of
264silly names used with the same intention, and the bindings are then
265explicitly ignored with a declaration. The names begin ~hunoz~,
266~hukairz~, and (I think) ~huaskt~.
267
268
269* Declarations
270
271The code is light on declarations, other than ~ignore~ and similar used
272to muffle warnings. The macros try to do sensible things with
273declarations, and I think they succeed fairly well, but there might be
274bugs and rough edges. I know that some are just broken because, for
275actual correctness, declarations provided by the caller need to be split
276up into a number of different parts of the expansion, which in turn
277requires figuring out what the declarations mean and which bindings
278they're referring to. That's not completely impossible, assuming that
279there aren't implementation-specific declarations which crazy syntax
280mixed in there, but it's more work than seems worthwhile.
281
282
283* COMMENT Emacs cruft
284
285#+LATEX_CLASS: strayman
286
287## LocalWords: CLOS ish destructure destructured accessor specializers
288## LocalWords: accessors DSLs gensym
289
290## Local variables:
291## mode: org
292## End: