generating functions, templates, and macros

27
1 COSC3401-05-10-18 generating functions, templates, and macros Yves Lespérance Adapted from Peter Roosen- Runge

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generating functions, templates, and macros. Yves Lespérance Adapted from Peter Roosen-Runge. midterm October 20. bring photo ID closed book; no access to cellphones, PDAs, laptops, etc. test will be based on the material in the textbook (Ch. 2-8, 10-12, 14), lectures, and readings. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: generating functions, templates, and macros

1COSC3401-05-10-18

generating functions, templates, and macros

Yves LespéranceAdapted from Peter Roosen-

Runge

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midterm October 20

bring photo ID closed book; no access to cellphones, PDAs, laptops, etc.

test will be based on the material in the textbook (Ch. 2-8, 10-12, 14), lectures, and readings

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constructing a pumper

Automating Ch. 11pumper will create a tail-recursive function and a main function to call it, with arguments:function name, the initial result, and a 'construction' function f

f constructs a new (partial) result from a previous (partial) result,

with the name of f = |HELP-name|

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pumper in action

Example: construct both tail-recursive rev (reverse)and its helper function(pumper 'rev NIL ; initial 'CONS ; used to construct result )

recall in rev2result --> (CONS (FIRST list) result)

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numerical example

sum of squares: (sumsq list) slow version:

(+ (* (FIRST list) (FIRST list)) (sumsq (REST list))

or define sumsq and |Help-SUMSQ|(pumper

'sumsq0'(LAMBDA (x y) (+ (* x x) y))

)

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the main function

code to construct the main function(DEFUN makeMain (name helper initial)(EVAL (LIST 'DEFUN name '(arglist)

(LIST helper 'arglist initial))

))

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make the helper

(DEFUN makeHelp (helper f) (EVAL (LIST 'DEFUN helper '(arglist result)

(LIST 'IF '(ENDP arglist) 'result (LIST helper '(REST arglist) (LIST ’FUNCALL (LIST 'FUNCTION f)

(LIST 'FIRST arglist)

result))))))

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demo

>(makehelp 'helpfun 'CONS) (defun helpfun (arglist result) (if (endp arglist) result (helpfun (rest arglist) (FUNCALL (function CONS) (first arglist) result))))

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assembling the pieces

(DEFUN pumper (name initial f) (LET ((helper (INTERN (FORMAT nil "Help-~a" name))))

(makeMain name helper initial)

(makeHelp helper f) ) )

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using templates

use template for expressions involving substitutions of values for variables into a fixed structureLisp's substitution operators

backquote ` : means don’t evaluate unless specified

comma , : ,expr means evaluate

see form-cons.html

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template example

(DEFUN makeMain (name helper initial)

(EVAL ‘(DEFUN ,name (arglist) (,helper arglist ,initial)))

)

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the complete pumper

(DEFUN pumper (name initial f) (LET ((helper (INTERN (FORMAT nil "Help-~a"

name)))) (EVAL `(DEFUN ,name (arglist) (,helper

arglist ,initial))) (EVAL `(DEFUN ,helper (arglist result) (IF (ENDP arglist) result (,helper (REST

arglist) (FUNCALL (FUNCTION ,f) (FIRST arglist) result)))) ))

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pumper demo

tail-recursive reverse >(pumper 'rev NIL 'CONS)

|Help-REV|

>(rev '(a b c)) (C B A)

(symbol-function '|Help-REV|) = (LAMBDA-BLOCK |Help-REV| (ARGLIST RESULT) (IF (ENDP ARGLIST) RESULT (|Help-REV| (REST ARGLIST) (FUNCALL #'CONS (FIRST ARGLIST) RESULT))))

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closures

A function may be defined in one context and used in another. If it contains free variables, this may cause problems.

Lisp avoids this by keeping a record of the environment where the function was defined in a closure.

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closure e.g.

(DEFUN gen_adder (n)(FUNCTION (LAMBDA (x) (+ x n))))

(DEFUN eg (n k)(FUNCALL (gen_adder k) n))

>(eg 5 7)12

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macros

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sort of like functions, but . .

one of the most interesting but tricky aspects of Lisp.

unlike functions, macros don't evaluate their argumentsthey compute on unevaluated expressions

just uninterpreted data structures: binary trees

'dot' at the root of every sub-tree atoms at the leaves

macros can be expanded once when function that uses macros is defined or compiled

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COND is an example

>(DESCRIBE ’COND)… special operator with macro definition, has 1 property SYSTEM::MACRO.

For more information, evaluate(SYMBOL-PLIST ’COND)…

>(SYMBOL-PLIST ’COND)(SYSTEM::MACRO #<COMPILED-CLOSURE COND>)

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2-step

macro evaluation takes two steps

expansions-expression evaluation value

MACROEXPAND EVAL

>(MACROEXPAND '(COND ((NULL x) 1) ((NULL y) 2) (:OTHERWISE 3)))(IF (NULL X) 1 (IF (NULL Y) 2 (IF :OTHERWISE 3 NIL)))

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e.g. flambda

often write (FUNCTION (LAMBDA …)); define a macro flambda that abbreviates this.

(DEFMACRO flambda (&REST args) (LIST ’FUNCTION (CONS 'LAMBDA

args))) ; args will be a list

(MACROEXPAND ’(FLAMBDA (X Y) (CONS X Y)))#’(LAMBDA (X Y) (CONS X Y))

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using a template

(DEFMACRO flambda (&REST args) `(FUNCTION (LAMBDA ,args)))

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e.g. 2+

(DEFMACRO 2+ (ARG)`(1+ (1+ ,arg)))

>(MACROEXPAND ’(2+ x))(1+ (1+ x))T>(2+ (+ 3 5))10

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destructuring

Macros often destructure their arguments, i.e. extract some of their parts; this is easier if we use structured parameters, lists with named parts

>(DEFMACRO cross ((a b) (c d)) `((,a ,d) (,b ,c)))(MACROEXPAND '(cross (one two) (three four)))((one four) (two three))

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fancier example:

(DEFMACRO crossdot ((a . b) (c . d)) `((,a ,d) (,b ,c)))

(MACROEXPAND '(crossdot (one two

three) (four five six)))((one (five six)) ((two three) four)

what's happening? what are a, b, c & d bound to?

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use of macros

support abstraction at little cost, e.g. get-state-field

can add abbreviations that make programming easier, e.g. COND, AND for more than 2 arguments, loop constructs, etc.

can define embedded languages within Lisp with little execution cost

caveat: user must learn the syntax expected by the macros

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macros vs. functions

a macro is treated internally as a function of one argument

order of evaluation is different, outside-in rather than inside-out, e.g.>(MACROEXPAND ’(2+ (2+ 5))(1+ (1+ (2+ 5)))T>(2+ (2+ 5))9

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more examples

seehttp://www.cs.yorku.ca/course/3401/MacroExamples.html