+\subsection{Sending messages in C} \label{sec:concepts.methods.c}
+
+Each instance is associated with its direct class [FIXME]
+
+The effective methods for each class are determined at translation time, by
+the Sod translator. For each effective method, one or more \emph{method
+entry functions} are constructed. A method entry function has three
+responsibilities.
+\begin{itemize}
+\item It converts the receiver pointer to the correct type. Method entry
+ functions can perform these conversions extremely efficiently: there are
+ separate method entries for each chain of each class which can receive a
+ message, so method entry functions are in the privileged situation of
+ knowing the \emph{exact} class of the receiving object.
+\item If the message accepts a variable-length argument tail, then two method
+ entry functions are created for each chain of each class: one receives a
+ variable-length argument tail, as intended, and captures it in a @|va_list|
+ object; the other accepts an argument of type @|va_list| in place of the
+ variable-length tail and arranges for it to be passed along to the direct
+ methods.
+\item It invokes the effective method with the appropriate arguments. There
+ might or might not be an actual function corresponding to the effective
+ method itself: the translator may instead open-code the effective method's
+ behaviour into each method entry function; and the machinery for handling
+ `delegation chains', such as is used for @|around| methods and primary
+ methods in the standard method combination, is necessarily scattered among
+ a number of small functions.
+\end{itemize}
+
+