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1%%% -*-latex-*-
2%%%
3%%% Module syntax
4%%%
5%%% (c) 2015 Straylight/Edgeware
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.
16%%%
17%%% SOD is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
18%%% but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
19%%% MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
20%%% GNU General Public License for more details.
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
26\chapter{Module syntax} \label{ch:syntax}
27
28%%%--------------------------------------------------------------------------
68a620ab 29\section{Notation} \label{sec:syntax.notation}
1f7d590d 30
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31Fortunately, Sod is syntactically quite simple. The notation is slightly
32unusual in order to make the presentation shorter and easier to read.
33
34Anywhere a simple nonterminal name $x$ may appear in the grammar, an
35\emph{indexed} nonterminal $x[a_1, \ldots, a_n]$ may also appear. On the
36left-hand side of a production rule, the indices $a_1$, \ldots, $a_n$ are
37variables which vary over all nonterminal and terminal symbols, and the
38variables may also appear on the right-hand side in place of a nonterminal.
39Such a rule stands for a family of rules, in each variable is replaced by
40each possible simple nonterminal or terminal symbol.
41
42The letter $\epsilon$ denotes the empty nonterminal
43\begin{quote}
44 \syntax{$\epsilon$ ::=}
45\end{quote}
46
47The following indexed productions are used throughout the grammar, some often
48enough that they deserve special notation.
1f7d590d 49\begin{itemize}
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50\item @[$x$@] abbreviates @<optional>$[x]$, denoting an optional occurrence
51 of $x$:
1f7d590d 52 \begin{quote}
0bc19f1c 53 \syntax{@[$x$@] ::= <optional>$[x]$ ::= $\epsilon$ @! $x$}
1f7d590d 54 \end{quote}
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55\item $x^*$ abbreviates @<zero-or-more>$[x]$, denoting a sequence of zero or
56 more occurrences of $x$:
1f7d590d 57 \begin{quote}
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58 \syntax{$x^*$ ::= <zero-or-more>$[x]$ ::=
59 $\epsilon$ @! <zero-or-more>$[x]$ $x$}
1f7d590d 60 \end{quote}
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61\item $x^+$ abbreviates @<one-or-more>$[x]$, denoting a sequence of zero or
62 more occurrences of $x$:
1f7d590d 63 \begin{quote}
0bc19f1c 64 \syntax{$x^+$ ::= <one-or-more>$[x]$ ::= <zero-or-more>$[x]$ $x$}
1f7d590d 65 \end{quote}
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66\item @<list>$[x]$ denotes a sequence of one or more occurrences of $x$
67 separated by commas:
1f7d590d 68 \begin{quote}
0bc19f1c 69 \syntax{<list>$[x]$ ::= $x$ @! <list>$[x]$ "," $x$}
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70 \end{quote}
71\end{itemize}
72
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73%%%--------------------------------------------------------------------------
74\section{Lexical syntax} \label{sec:syntax.lex}
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75
76Whitespace and comments are discarded. The remaining characters are
77collected into tokens according to the following syntax.
78
79\begin{grammar}
80<token> ::= <identifier>
81\alt <string-literal>
82\alt <char-literal>
83\alt <integer-literal>
84\alt <punctuation>
85\end{grammar}
86
87This syntax is slightly ambiguous, and is disambiguated by the \emph{maximal
88munch} rule: at each stage we take the longest sequence of characters which
89could be a token.
90
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91
92\subsection{Identifiers} \label{sec:syntax.lex.id}
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93
94\begin{grammar}
95<identifier> ::= <id-start-char> @<id-body-char>^*
96
97<id-start-char> ::= <alpha-char> | "_"
98
99<id-body-char> ::= <id-start-char> @! <digit-char>
100
101<alpha-char> ::= "A" | "B" | \dots\ | "Z"
102\alt "a" | "b" | \dots\ | "z"
103\alt <extended-alpha-char>
104
105<digit-char> ::= "0" | <nonzero-digit-char>
106
107<nonzero-digit-char> ::= "1" | "2" $| \cdots |$ "9"
108\end{grammar}
109
110The precise definition of @<alpha-char> is left to the function
111\textsf{alpha-char-p} in the hosting Lisp system. For portability,
112programmers are encouraged to limit themselves to the standard ASCII letters.
113
114There are no reserved words at the lexical level, but the higher-level syntax
115recognizes certain identifiers as \emph{keywords} in some contexts. There is
116also an ambiguity (inherited from C) in the declaration syntax which is
117settled by distinguishing type names from other identifiers at a lexical
118level.
119
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120
121\subsection{String and character literals} \label{sec:syntax.lex.string}
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122
123\begin{grammar}
124<string-literal> ::= "\"" @<string-literal-char>^* "\""
125
126<char-literal> ::= "'" <char-literal-char> "'"
127
128<string-literal-char> ::= any character other than "\\" or "\""
129\alt "\\" <char>
130
131<char-literal-char> ::= any character other than "\\" or "'"
132\alt "\\" <char>
133
134<char> ::= any single character
135\end{grammar}
136
137The syntax for string and character literals differs from~C. In particular,
138escape sequences such as @`\textbackslash n' are not recognized. The use
139of string and character literals in Sod, outside of C~fragments, is limited,
140and the simple syntax seems adequate. For the sake of future compatibility,
141the use of character sequences which resemble C escape sequences is
142discouraged.
143
144\subsubsection{Integer literals} \label{sec:syntax.lex.int}
145
146\begin{grammar}
147<integer-literal> ::= <decimal-integer>
148\alt <binary-integer>
149\alt <octal-integer>
150\alt <hex-integer>
151
cc0bcf39 152<decimal-integer> ::= "0" | <nonzero-digit-char> @<digit-char>^*
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153
154<binary-integer> ::= "0" @("b"|"B"@) @<binary-digit-char>^+
155
156<binary-digit-char> ::= "0" | "1"
157
158<octal-integer> ::= "0" @["o"|"O"@] @<octal-digit-char>^+
159
160<octal-digit-char> ::= "0" | "1" $| \cdots |$ "7"
161
162<hex-integer> ::= "0" @("x"|"X"@) @<hex-digit-char>^+
163
164<hex-digit-char> ::= <digit-char>
165\alt "A" | "B" | "C" | "D" | "E" | "F"
166\alt "a" | "b" | "c" | "d" | "e" | "f"
167\end{grammar}
168
169Sod understands only integers, not floating-point numbers; its integer syntax
170goes slightly beyond C in allowing a @`0o' prefix for octal and @`0b' for
171binary. However, length and signedness indicators are not permitted.
172
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173
174\subsection{Punctuation} \label{sec:syntax.lex.punct}
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175
176\begin{grammar}
177<punctuation> ::= any nonalphanumeric character other than "_", "\"" or "'"
178\end{grammar}
179
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180
181\subsection{Comments} \label{sec:syntax.lex.comment}
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182
183\begin{grammar}
184<comment> ::= <block-comment>
185\alt <line-comment>
186
187<block-comment> ::=
188 "/*"
189 @<not-star>^* @(@<star>^+ <not-star-or-slash> @<not-star>^*@)^*
190 @<star>^*
191 "*/"
192
193<star> ::= "*"
194
195<not-star> ::= any character other than "*"
196
197<not-star-or-slash> ::= any character other than "*" or "/"
198
199<line-comment> ::= "//" @<not-newline>^* <newline>
200
201<newline> ::= a newline character
202
203<not-newline> ::= any character other than newline
204\end{grammar}
205
206Comments are exactly as in C99: both traditional block comments `\texttt{/*}
207\dots\ \texttt{*/}' and \Cplusplus-style `\texttt{//} \dots' comments are
208permitted and ignored.
209
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210
211\subsection{Special nonterminals} \label{sec:syntax.lex.special}
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212
213Aside from the lexical syntax presented above (\xref{sec:lexical-syntax}),
214two special nonterminals occur in the module syntax.
215
68a620ab 216\subsubsection{S-expressions}
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217\begin{grammar}
218<s-expression> ::= an S-expression, as parsed by the Lisp reader
219\end{grammar}
220
221When an S-expression is expected, the Sod parser simply calls the host Lisp
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222system's @|read| function. Sod modules are permitted to modify the read
223table to extend the S-expression syntax.
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224
225S-expressions are self-delimiting, so no end-marker is needed.
226
68a620ab 227\subsubsection{C fragments}
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228\begin{grammar}
229<c-fragment> ::= a sequence of C tokens, with matching brackets
230\end{grammar}
231
232Sequences of C code are simply stored and written to the output unchanged
233during translation. They are read using a simple scanner which nonetheless
234understands C comments and string and character literals.
235
236A C fragment is terminated by one of a small number of delimiter characters
237determined by the immediately surrounding context -- usually a closing brace
238or bracket. The first such delimiter character which is not enclosed in
239brackets, braces or parenthesis ends the fragment.
240
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241%%%--------------------------------------------------------------------------
242\section{Module syntax} \label{sec:syntax.module}
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243
244\begin{grammar}
245<module> ::= @<definition>^*
246
247<definition> ::= <import-definition>
248\alt <load-definition>
249\alt <lisp-definition>
250\alt <code-definition>
251\alt <typename-definition>
252\alt <class-definition>
253\end{grammar}
254
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255A @<module> is the top-level syntactic item. A module consists of a sequence
256of definitions.
1f7d590d 257
68a620ab 258\subsection{Simple definitions} \label{sec:syntax.module.simple}
1f7d590d 259
68a620ab 260\subsubsection{Importing modules}
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261\begin{grammar}
262<import-definition> ::= "import" <string> ";"
263\end{grammar}
264
265The module named @<string> is processed and its definitions made available.
266
267A search is made for a module source file as follows.
268\begin{itemize}
269\item The module name @<string> is converted into a filename by appending
270 @`.sod', if it has no extension already.\footnote{%
271 Technically, what happens is \textsf{(merge-pathnames name (make-pathname
272 :type "SOD" :case :common))}, so exactly what this means varies
273 according to the host system.} %
274\item The file is looked for relative to the directory containing the
275 importing module.
276\item If that fails, then the file is looked for in each directory on the
277 module search path in turn.
278\item If the file still isn't found, an error is reported and the import
279 fails.
280\end{itemize}
281At this point, if the file has previously been imported, nothing further
282happens.\footnote{%
283 This check is done using \textsf{truename}, so it should see through simple
284 tricks like symbolic links. However, it may be confused by fancy things
285 like bind mounts and so on.} %
286
287Recursive imports, either direct or indirect, are an error.
288
68a620ab 289\subsubsection{Loading extensions}
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290\begin{grammar}
291<load-definition> ::= "load" <string> ";"
292\end{grammar}
293
294The Lisp file named @<string> is loaded and evaluated.
295
296A search is made for a Lisp source file as follows.
297\begin{itemize}
298\item The name @<string> is converted into a filename by appending @`.lisp',
299 if it has no extension already.\footnote{%
300 Technically, what happens is \textsf{(merge-pathnames name (make-pathname
301 :type "LISP" :case :common))}, so exactly what this means varies
302 according to the host system.} %
303\item A search is then made in the same manner as for module imports
304 (\xref{sec:syntax-module}).
305\end{itemize}
306If the file is found, it is loaded using the host Lisp's \textsf{load}
307function.
308
309Note that Sod doesn't attempt to compile Lisp files, or even to look for
310existing compiled files. The right way to package a substantial extension to
311the Sod translator is to provide the extension as a standard ASDF system (or
312similar) and leave a dropping @"foo-extension.lisp" in the module path saying
313something like
314\begin{quote}
315 \textsf{(asdf:load-system :foo-extension)}
316\end{quote}
317which will arrange for the extension to be compiled if necessary.
318
319(This approach means that the language doesn't need to depend on any
320particular system definition facility. It's bad enough already that it
321depends on Common Lisp.)
322
68a620ab 323\subsubsection{Lisp escapes}
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324\begin{grammar}
325<lisp-definition> ::= "lisp" <s-expression> ";"
326\end{grammar}
327
328The @<s-expression> is evaluated immediately. It can do anything it likes.
329
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330\begin{boxy}[Warning!]
331 This means that hostile Sod modules are a security hazard. Lisp code can
332 read and write files, start other programs, and make network connections.
333 Don't install Sod modules from sources that you don't trust.\footnote{%
334 Presumably you were going to run the corresponding code at some point, so
335 this isn't as unusually scary as it sounds. But please be careful.} %
336\end{boxy}
1f7d590d 337
68a620ab 338\subsubsection{Declaring type names}
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339\begin{grammar}
340<typename-definition> ::=
ea08dc56 341 "typename" <list>$[\mbox{@<identifier>}]$ ";"
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342\end{grammar}
343
344Each @<identifier> is declared as naming a C type. This is important because
345the C type syntax -- which Sod uses -- is ambiguous, and disambiguation is
346done by distinguishing type names from other identifiers.
347
348Don't declare class names using @"typename"; use @"class" forward
349declarations instead.
350
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351
352\subsection{Literal code} \label{sec:syntax.module.literal}
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353
354\begin{grammar}
355<code-definition> ::=
4fc52153 356 "code" <identifier> ":" <item-name> @[<constraints>@]
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357 "{" <c-fragment> "}"
358
ea08dc56 359<constraints> ::= "[" <list>$[\mbox{@<constraint>}]$ "]"
1f7d590d 360
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361<constraint> ::= @<item-name>^+
362
363<item-name> ::= <identifier> @! "(" @<identifier>^+ ")"
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364\end{grammar}
365
366The @<c-fragment> will be output unchanged to one of the output files.
367
368The first @<identifier> is the symbolic name of an output file. Predefined
369output file names are @"c" and @"h", which are the implementation code and
370header file respectively; other output files can be defined by extensions.
371
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372Output items are named with a sequence of identifiers, separated by
373whitespace, and enclosed in parentheses. As an abbreviation, a name
374consisting of a single identifier may be written as just that identifier,
375without the parentheses.
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376
377The @<constraints> provide a means for specifying where in the output file
378the output item should appear. (Note the two kinds of square brackets shown
379in the syntax: square brackets must appear around the constraints if they are
380present, but that they may be omitted.) Each comma-separated @<constraint>
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381is a sequence of names of output items, and indicates that the output items
382must appear in the order given -- though the translator is free to insert
383additional items in between them. (The particular output items needn't be
384defined already -- indeed, they needn't be defined ever.)
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385
386There is a predefined output item @"includes" in both the @"c" and @"h"
387output files which is a suitable place for inserting @"\#include"
388preprocessor directives in order to declare types and functions for use
389elsewhere in the generated output files.
390
1f7d590d 391
68a620ab 392\subsection{Property sets} \label{sec:syntax.module.properties}
1f7d590d 393\begin{grammar}
ea08dc56 394<properties> ::= "[" <list>$[\mbox{@<property>}]$ "]"
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395
396<property> ::= <identifier> "=" <expression>
397\end{grammar}
398
399Property sets are a means for associating miscellaneous information with
400classes and related items. By using property sets, additional information
401can be passed to extensions without the need to introduce idiosyncratic
402syntax.
403
404A property has a name, given as an @<identifier>, and a value computed by
405evaluating an @<expression>. The value can be one of a number of types,
406though the only operators currently defined act on integer values only.
407
68a620ab 408\subsubsection{The expression evaluator}
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409\begin{grammar}
410<expression> ::= <term> | <expression> "+" <term> | <expression> "-" <term>
411
412<term> ::= <factor> | <term> "*" <factor> | <term> "/" <factor>
413
414<factor> ::= <primary> | "+" <factor> | "-" <factor>
415
416<primary> ::=
417 <integer-literal> | <string-literal> | <char-literal> | <identifier>
418\alt "?" <s-expression>
419\alt "(" <expression> ")"
420\end{grammar}
421
422The arithmetic expression syntax is simple and standard; there are currently
423no bitwise, logical, or comparison operators.
424
425A @<primary> expression may be a literal or an identifier. Note that
426identifiers stand for themselves: they \emph{do not} denote values. For more
427fancy expressions, the syntax
428\begin{quote}
429 @"?" @<s-expression>
430\end{quote}
431causes the @<s-expression> to be evaluated using the Lisp \textsf{eval}
432function.
433%%% FIXME crossref to extension docs
434
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435
436\subsection{C types} \label{sec:syntax.module.types}
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437
438Sod's syntax for C types closely mirrors the standard C syntax. A C type has
439two parts: a sequence of @<declaration-specifier>s and a @<declarator>. In
440Sod, a type must contain at least one @<declaration-specifier> (i.e.,
441`implicit @"int"' is forbidden), and storage-class specifiers are not
442recognized.
443
68a620ab 444\subsubsection{Declaration specifiers}
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445\begin{grammar}
446<declaration-specifier> ::= <type-name>
447\alt "struct" <identifier> | "union" <identifier> | "enum" <identifier>
448\alt "void" | "char" | "int" | "float" | "double"
449\alt "short" | "long"
450\alt "signed" | "unsigned"
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451\alt "bool" | "_Bool"
452\alt "imaginary" | "_Imaginary" | "complex" | "_Complex"
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453\alt <qualifier>
454
455<qualifier> ::= "const" | "volatile" | "restrict"
456
457<type-name> ::= <identifier>
458\end{grammar}
459
460A @<type-name> is an identifier which has been declared as being a type name,
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461using the @"typename" or @"class" definitions. The following type names are
462defined in the built-in module.
463\begin{itemize}
464\item @"va_list"
465\item @"size_t"
466\item @"ptrdiff_t"
467\item @"wchar_t"
468\end{itemize}
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469
470Declaration specifiers may appear in any order. However, not all
471combinations are permitted. A declaration specifier must consist of zero or
c32aa709 472more @<qualifier>s, and one of the following, up to reordering.
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473\begin{itemize}
474\item @<type-name>
475\item @"struct" @<identifier>, @"union" @<identifier>, @"enum" @<identifier>
476\item @"void"
2e01fd8b 477\item @"_Bool", @"bool"
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478\item @"char", @"unsigned char", @"signed char"
479\item @"short", @"unsigned short", @"signed short"
480\item @"short int", @"unsigned short int", @"signed short int"
481\item @"int", @"unsigned int", @"signed int", @"unsigned", @"signed"
482\item @"long", @"unsigned long", @"signed long"
483\item @"long int", @"unsigned long int", @"signed long int"
484\item @"long long", @"unsigned long long", @"signed long long"
485\item @"long long int", @"unsigned long long int", @"signed long long int"
486\item @"float", @"double", @"long double"
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487\item @"float _Imaginary", @"double _Imaginary", @"long double _Imaginary"
488\item @"float imaginary", @"double imaginary", @"long double imaginary"
489\item @"float _Complex", @"double _Complex", @"long double _Complex"
490\item @"float complex", @"double complex", @"long double complex"
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491\end{itemize}
492All of these have their usual C meanings.
493
68a620ab 494\subsubsection{Declarators}
1f7d590d 495\begin{grammar}
43073476 496<declarator>$[k, a]$ ::= @<pointer>^* <primary-declarator>$[k, a]$
1f7d590d 497
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498<primary-declarator>$[k, a]$ ::= $k$
499\alt "(" <primary-declarator>$[k, a]$ ")"
500\alt <primary-declarator>$[k, a]$ @<declarator-suffix>$[a]$
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501
502<pointer> ::= "*" @<qualifier>^*
503
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504<declarator-suffix>$[a]$ ::= "[" <c-fragment> "]"
505\alt "(" $a$ ")"
1f7d590d 506
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507<argument-list> ::= $\epsilon$ | "..."
508\alt <list>$[\mbox{@<argument>}]$ @["," "..."@]
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509
510<argument> ::= @<declaration-specifier>^+ <argument-declarator>
511
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512<argument-declarator> ::=
513 <declarator>$[\mbox{@<identifier> @! $\epsilon$}, \mbox{@<argument-list>}]$
1f7d590d 514
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515<simple-declarator> ::=
516 <declarator>$[\mbox{@<identifier>}, \mbox{@<argument-list>}]$
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517\end{grammar}
518
519The declarator syntax is taken from C, but with some differences.
520\begin{itemize}
521\item Array dimensions are uninterpreted @<c-fragments>, terminated by a
522 closing square bracket. This allows array dimensions to contain arbitrary
523 constant expressions.
524\item A declarator may have either a single @<identifier> at its centre or a
525 pair of @<identifier>s separated by a @`.'; this is used to refer to
526 slots or messages defined in superclasses.
527\end{itemize}
528The remaining differences are (I hope) a matter of presentation rather than
529substance.
530
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531There is additional syntax to support messages and methods which accept
532keyword arguments.
533
534\begin{grammar}
535<keyword-argument> ::= <argument> @["=" <c-fragment>@]
536
537<keyword-argument-list> ::=
538 @[<list>$[\mbox{@<argument>}]$@]
539 "?" @[<list>$[\mbox{@<keyword-argument>}]$@]
540
541<method-argument-list> ::= <argument-list> @! <keyword-argument-list>
542
543<dotted-name> ::= <identifier> "." <identifier>
544
545<keyword-declarator>$[k]$ ::=
546 <declarator>$[k, \mbox{@<method-argument-list>}]$
547\end{grammar}
548
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549
550\subsection{Class definitions} \label{sec:syntax.module.class}
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551
552\begin{grammar}
553<class-definition> ::= <class-forward-declaration>
554\alt <full-class-definition>
555\end{grammar}
556
68a620ab 557\subsubsection{Forward declarations}
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558\begin{grammar}
559<class-forward-declaration> ::= "class" <identifier> ";"
560\end{grammar}
561
562A @<class-forward-declaration> informs Sod that an @<identifier> will be used
563to name a class which is currently undefined. Forward declarations are
564necessary in order to resolve certain kinds of circularity. For example,
565\begin{listing}
566class Sub;
567
568class Super : SodObject {
569 Sub *sub;
570};
571
572class Sub : Super {
573 /* ... */
574};
575\end{listing}
576
68a620ab 577\subsubsection{Full class definitions}
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578\begin{grammar}
579<full-class-definition> ::=
580 @[<properties>@]
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581 "class" <identifier> ":" <list>$[\mbox{@<identifier>}]$
582 "{" @<properties-class-item>^* "}"
1f7d590d 583
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584<properties-class-item> ::= @[<properties>@] <class-item>
585
586<class-item> ::= <slot-item>
587\alt <initializer-item>
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588\alt <message-item>
589\alt <method-item>
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590\end{grammar}
591
592A full class definition provides a complete description of a class.
593
594The first @<identifier> gives the name of the class. It is an error to
595give the name of an existing class (other than a forward-referenced class),
596or an existing type name. It is conventional to give classes `MixedCase'
597names, to distinguish them from other kinds of identifiers.
598
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599The @<list>$[\mbox{@<identifier>}]$ names the direct superclasses for the new
600class. It is an error if any of these @<identifier>s does not name a defined
601class.
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602
603The @<properties> provide additional information. The standard class
604properties are as follows.
605\begin{description}
606\item[@"lisp_class"] The name of the Lisp class to use within the translator
607 to represent this class. The property value must be an identifier; the
608 default is @"sod_class". Extensions may define classes with additional
609 behaviour, and may recognize additional class properties.
610\item[@"metaclass"] The name of the Sod metaclass for this class. In the
611 generated code, a class is itself an instance of another class -- its
612 \emph{metaclass}. The metaclass defines which slots the class will have,
613 which messages it will respond to, and what its behaviour will be when it
614 receives them. The property value must be an identifier naming a defined
615 subclass of @"SodClass". The default metaclass is @"SodClass".
616 %%% FIXME xref to theory
617\item[@"nick"] A nickname for the class, to be used to distinguish it from
618 other classes in various limited contexts. The property value must be an
619 identifier; the default is constructed by forcing the class name to
620 lower-case.
621\end{description}
622
623The class body consists of a sequence of @<class-item>s enclosed in braces.
624These items are discussed on the following sections.
625
68a620ab 626\subsubsection{Slot items}
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627\begin{grammar}
628<slot-item> ::=
ea08dc56 629 @<declaration-specifier>^+ <list>$[\mbox{@<init-declarator>}]$ ";"
1f7d590d 630
0bc19f1c 631<init-declarator> ::= <simple-declarator> @["=" <initializer>@]
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632\end{grammar}
633
634A @<slot-item> defines one or more slots. All instances of the class and any
635subclass will contain these slot, with the names and types given by the
636@<declaration-specifiers> and the @<declarators>. Slot declarators may not
bc7dff5c 637contain dotted names.
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638
639It is not possible to declare a slot with function type: such an item is
640interpreted as being a @<message-item> or @<method-item>. Pointers to
641functions are fine.
642
643An @<initializer>, if present, is treated as if a separate
644@<initializer-item> containing the slot name and initializer were present.
645For example,
646\begin{listing}
647[nick = eg]
648class Example : Super {
649 int foo = 17;
650};
651\end{listing}
652means the same as
653\begin{listing}
654[nick = eg]
655class Example : Super {
656 int foo;
657 eg.foo = 17;
658};
659\end{listing}
660
68a620ab 661\subsubsection{Initializer items}
1f7d590d 662\begin{grammar}
391c5a34 663<initializer-item> ::= @["class"@] <list>$[\mbox{@<slot-initializer>}]$ ";"
1f7d590d 664
bc7dff5c 665<slot-initializer> ::= <dotted-name> "=" <initializer>
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666
667<initializer> :: "{" <c-fragment> "}" | <c-fragment>
668\end{grammar}
669
670An @<initializer-item> provides an initial value for one or more slots. If
671prefixed by @"class", then the initial values are for class slots (i.e.,
672slots of the class object itself); otherwise they are for instance slots.
673
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674The first component of the @<dotted-name> must be the nickname of one of the
675class's superclasses (including itself); the second must be the name of a
676slot defined in that superclass.
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677
678The initializer has one of two forms.
679\begin{itemize}
680\item A @<c-fragment> enclosed in braces denotes an aggregate initializer.
681 This is suitable for initializing structure, union or array slots.
682\item A @<c-fragment> \emph{not} beginning with an open brace is a `bare'
683 initializer, and continues until the next @`,' or @`;' which is not within
684 nested brackets. Bare initializers are suitable for initializing scalar
685 slots, such as pointers or integers, and strings.
686\end{itemize}
687
68a620ab 688\subsubsection{Message items}
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689\begin{grammar}
690<message-item> ::=
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691 @<declaration-specifier>^+
692 <keyword-declarator>$[\mbox{@<identifier>}]$
693 @[<method-body>@]
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694\end{grammar}
695
68a620ab 696\subsubsection{Method items}
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697\begin{grammar}
698<method-item> ::=
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699 @<declaration-specifier>^+
700 <keyword-declarator>$[\mbox{@<dotted-name>}]$
ea08dc56 701 <method-body>
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702
703<method-body> ::= "{" <c-fragment> "}" | "extern" ";"
704\end{grammar}
705
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706%%%----- That's all, folks --------------------------------------------------
707
708%%% Local variables:
709%%% mode: LaTeX
710%%% TeX-master: "sod.tex"
711%%% TeX-PDF-mode: t
712%%% End: