doc/concepts.tex: Delete fixme-ref to direct instances.
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1%%% -*-latex-*-
2%%%
3%%% Conceptual background
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5%%% (c) 2015 Straylight/Edgeware
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7
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e0808c47 10%%% This file is part of the Sensible Object Design, an object system for C.
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25
3cc520db 26\chapter{Concepts} \label{ch:concepts}
1f7d590d 27
3cc520db 28%%%--------------------------------------------------------------------------
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29\section{Modules} \label{sec:concepts.modules}
30
31A \emph{module} is the top-level syntactic unit of input to the Sod
32translator. As described above, given an input module, the translator
33generates C source and header files.
34
35A module can \emph{import} other modules. This makes the type names and
36classes defined in those other modules available to class definitions in the
37importing module. Sod's module system is intentionally very simple. There
38are no private declarations or attempts to hide things.
39
40As well as importing existing modules, a module can include a number of
41different kinds of \emph{items}:
42\begin{itemize}
43\item \emph{class definitions} describe new classes, possibly in terms of
44 existing classes;
45\item \emph{type name declarations} introduce new type names to Sod's
46 parser;\footnote{%
47 This is unfortunately necessary because C syntax, upon which Sod's input
48 language is based for obvious reasons, needs to treat type names
49 differently from other kinds of identifiers.} %
50 and
51\item \emph{code fragments} contain literal C code to be dropped into an
52 appropriate place in an output file.
53\end{itemize}
54Each kind of item, and, indeed, a module as a whole, can have a collection of
55\emph{properties} associated with it. A property has a \emph{name} and a
56\emph{value}. Properties are an open-ended way of attaching additional
57information to module items, so extensions can make use of them without
58having to implement additional syntax.
59
60%%%--------------------------------------------------------------------------
61\section{Classes, instances, and slots} \label{sec:concepts.classes}
62
63For the most part, Sod takes a fairly traditional view of what it means to be
64an object system.
65
66An \emph{object} maintains \emph{state} and exhibits \emph{behaviour}. An
67object's state is maintained in named \emph{slots}, each of which can store a
68C value of an appropriate (scalar or aggregate) type. An object's behaviour
69is stimulated by sending it \emph{messages}. A message has a name, and may
70carry a number of arguments, which are C values; sending a message may result
71in the state of receiving object (or other objects) being changed, and a C
72value being returned to the sender.
73
74Every object is a (direct) instance of some \emph{class}. The class
75determines which slots its instances have, which messages its instances can
76be sent, and which methods are invoked when those messages are received. The
77Sod translator's main job is to read class definitions and convert them into
78appropriate C declarations, tables, and functions. An object cannot
79(usually) change its direct class, and the direct class of an object is not
80affected by, for example, the static type of a pointer to it.
81
0a2d4b68 82
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83\subsection{Superclasses and inheritance}
84\label{sec:concepts.classes.inherit}
85
86\subsubsection{Class relationships}
87Each class has zero or more \emph{direct superclasses}.
88
89A class with no direct superclasses is called a \emph{root class}. The Sod
90runtime library includes a root class named @|SodObject|; making new root
91classes is somewhat tricky, and won't be discussed further here.
92
93Classes can have more than one direct superclass, i.e., Sod supports
94\emph{multiple inheritance}. A Sod class definition for a class~$C$ lists
95the direct superclasses of $C$ in a particular order. This order is called
96the \emph{local precedence order} of $C$, and the list which consists of $C$
97follows by $C$'s direct superclasses in local precedence order is called the
98$C$'s \emph{local precedence list}.
99
100The multiple inheritance in Sod works similarly to multiple inheritance in
101Lisp-like languages, such as Common Lisp, EuLisp, Dylan, and Python, which is
102very different from how multiple inheritance works in \Cplusplus.\footnote{%
103 The latter can be summarized as `badly'. By default in \Cplusplus, an
104 instance receives an additional copy of superclass's state for each path
105 through the class graph from the instance's direct class to that
106 superclass, though this behaviour can be overridden by declaring
107 superclasses to be @|virtual|. Also, \Cplusplus\ offers only trivial
108 method combination (\xref{sec:concepts.methods}), leaving programmers to
109 deal with delegation manually and (usually) statically.} %
110
111If $C$ is a class, then the \emph{superclasses} of $C$ are
112\begin{itemize}
113\item $C$ itself, and
114\item the superclasses of each of $C$'s direct superclasses.
115\end{itemize}
116The \emph{proper superclasses} of a class $C$ are the superclasses of $C$
117except for $C$ itself. If a class $B$ is a (direct, proper) superclass of
118$C$, then $C$ is a \emph{(direct, proper) subclass} of $B$. If $C$ is a root
119class then the only superclass of $C$ is $C$ itself, and $C$ has no proper
120superclasses.
121
122If an object is a direct instance of class~$C$ then the object is also an
123(indirect) instance of every superclass of $C$.
124
054e8f8f 125If $C$ has a proper superclass $B$, then $B$ must not have $C$ as a direct
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126superclass. In different terms, if we construct a directed graph, whose
127nodes are classes, and draw an arc from each class to each of its direct
128superclasses, then this graph must be acyclic. In yet other terms, the `is a
129superclass of' relation is a partial order on classes.
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130
131\subsubsection{The class precedence list}
132This partial order is not quite sufficient for our purposes. For each class
133$C$, we shall need to extend it into a total order on $C$'s superclasses.
134This calculation is called \emph{superclass linearization}, and the result is
135a \emph{class precedence list}, which lists each of $C$'s superclasses
136exactly once. If a superclass $B$ precedes (resp.\ follows) some other
137superclass $A$ in $C$'s class precedence list, then we say that $B$ is a more
138(resp.\ less) \emph{specific} superclass of $C$ than $A$ is.
139
140The superclass linearization algorithm isn't fixed, and extensions to the
141translator can introduce new linearizations for special effects, but the
142following properties are expected to hold.
143\begin{itemize}
144\item The first class in $C$'s class precedence list is $C$ itself; i.e.,
145 $C$ is always its own most specific superclass.
146\item If $A$ and $B$ are both superclasses of $C$, and $A$ is a proper
147 superclass of $B$ then $A$ appears after $B$ in $C$'s class precedence
148 list, i.e., $B$ is a more specific superclass of $C$ than $A$ is.
149\end{itemize}
150The default linearization algorithm used in Sod is the \emph{C3} algorithm,
9cd5cf15 151which has a number of good properties described in~\cite{Barrett:1996:MSL}.
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152It works as follows.
153\begin{itemize}
154\item A \emph{merge} of some number of input lists is a single list
155 containing each item that is in any of the input lists exactly once, and no
156 other items; if an item $x$ appears before an item $y$ in any input list,
157 then $x$ also appears before $y$ in the merge. If a collection of lists
158 have no merge then they are said to be \emph{inconsistent}.
159\item The class precedence list of a class $C$ is a merge of the local
160 precedence list of $C$ together with the class precedence lists of each of
161 $C$'s direct superclasses.
162\item If there are no such merges, then the definition of $C$ is invalid.
163\item Suppose that there are multiple candidate merges. Consider the
164 earliest position in these candidate merges at which they disagree. The
165 \emph{candidate classes} at this position are the classes appearing at this
166 position in the candidate merges. Each candidate class must be a
781a8fbd 167 superclass of distinct direct superclasses of $C$, since otherwise the
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168 candidates would be ordered by their common subclass's class precedence
169 list. The class precedence list contains, at this position, that candidate
170 class whose subclass appears earliest in $C$'s local precedence order.
171\end{itemize}
172
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173\begin{figure}
174 \centering
175 \begin{tikzpicture}[x=7.5mm, y=-14mm, baseline=(current bounding box.east)]
176 \node[lit] at ( 0, 0) (R) {SodObject};
177 \node[lit] at (-3, +1) (A) {A}; \draw[->] (A) -- (R);
178 \node[lit] at (-1, +1) (B) {B}; \draw[->] (B) -- (R);
179 \node[lit] at (+1, +1) (C) {C}; \draw[->] (C) -- (R);
180 \node[lit] at (+3, +1) (D) {D}; \draw[->] (D) -- (R);
181 \node[lit] at (-2, +2) (E) {E}; \draw[->] (E) -- (A);
182 \draw[->] (E) -- (B);
183 \node[lit] at (+2, +2) (F) {F}; \draw[->] (F) -- (A);
184 \draw[->] (F) -- (D);
185 \node[lit] at (-1, +3) (G) {G}; \draw[->] (G) -- (E);
186 \draw[->] (G) -- (C);
187 \node[lit] at (+1, +3) (H) {H}; \draw[->] (H) -- (F);
188 \node[lit] at ( 0, +4) (I) {I}; \draw[->] (I) -- (G);
189 \draw[->] (I) -- (H);
190 \end{tikzpicture}
191 \quad
192 \vrule
193 \quad
194 \begin{minipage}[c]{0.45\hsize}
195 \begin{nprog}
196 class A: SodObject \{ \}\quad\=@/* @|A|, @|SodObject| */ \\
197 class B: SodObject \{ \}\>@/* @|B|, @|SodObject| */ \\
198 class C: SodObject \{ \}\>@/* @|B|, @|SodObject| */ \\
199 class D: SodObject \{ \}\>@/* @|B|, @|SodObject| */ \\+
200 class E: A, B \{ \}\quad\=@/* @|E|, @|A|, @|B|, \dots */ \\
201 class F: A, D \{ \}\>@/* @|F|, @|A|, @|D|, \dots */ \\+
202 class G: E, C \{ \}\>@/* @|G|, @|E|, @|A|,
203 @|B|, @|C|, \dots */ \\
204 class H: F \{ \}\>@/* @|H|, @|F|, @|A|, @|D|, \dots */ \\+
205 class I: G, H \{ \}\>@/* @|I|, @|G|, @|E|, @|H|, @|F|,
206 @|A|, @|B|, @|C|, @|D|, \dots */
207 \end{nprog}
208 \end{minipage}
209
210 \caption{An example class graph and class precedence lists}
211 \label{fig:concepts.classes.cpl-example}
212\end{figure}
213
214\begin{example}
215 Consider the class relationships shown in
216 \xref{fig:concepts.classes.cpl-example}.
217
218 \begin{itemize}
219
220 \item @|SodObject| has no proper superclasses. Its class precedence list
221 is therefore simply $\langle @|SodObject| \rangle$.
222
223 \item In general, if $X$ is a direct subclass only of $Y$, and $Y$'s class
224 precedence list is $\langle Y, \ldots \rangle$, then $X$'s class
225 precedence list is $\langle X, Y, \ldots \rangle$. This explains $A$,
226 $B$, $C$, $D$, and $H$.
227
228 \item $E$'s list is found by merging its local precedence list $\langle E,
229 A, B \rangle$ with the class precedence lists of its direct superclasses,
230 which are $\langle A, @|SodObject| \rangle$ and $\langle B, @|SodObject|
231 \rangle$. Clearly, @|SodObject| must be last, and $E$'s local precedence
232 list orders the rest, giving $\langle E, A, B, @|SodObject|, \rangle$.
233 $F$ is similar.
234
235 \item We determine $G$'s class precedence list by merging the three lists
236 $\langle G, E, C \rangle$, $\langle E, A, B, @|SodObject| \rangle$, and
237 $\langle C, @|SodObject| \rangle$. The class precedence list begins
238 $\langle G, E, \ldots \rangle$, but the individual lists don't order $A$
239 and $C$. Comparing these to $G$'s direct superclasses, we see that $A$
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240 is a superclass of $E$, while $C$ is a superclass of -- indeed equal to
241 -- $C$; so $A$ must precede $C$, as must $B$, and the final list is
242 $\langle G, E, A, B, C, @|SodObject| \rangle$.
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243
244 \item Finally, we determine $I$'s class precedence list by merging $\langle
245 I, G, H \rangle$, $\langle G, E, A, B, C, @|SodObject| \rangle$, and
246 $\langle H, F, A, D, @|SodObject| \rangle$. The list begins $\langle I,
247 G, \ldots \rangle$, and then we must break a tie between $E$ and $H$; but
54cf3a30 248 $E$ is a superclass of $G$, so $E$ wins. Next, $H$ and $F$ must precede
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249 $A$, since these are ordered by $H$'s class precedence list. Then $B$
250 and $C$ precede $D$, since the former are superclasses of $G$, and the
251 final list is $\langle I, G, E, H, F, A, B, C, D, @|SodObject| \rangle$.
252
253 \end{itemize}
254
255 (This example combines elements from \cite{Barrett:1996:MSL} and
256 \cite{Ducournau:1994:PMM}.)
257\end{example}
258
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259\subsubsection{Class links and chains}
260The definition for a class $C$ may distinguish one of its proper superclasses
261as being the \emph{link superclass} for class $C$. Not every class need have
262a link superclass, and the link superclass of a class $C$, if it exists, need
263not be a direct superclass of $C$.
264
265Superclass links must obey the following rule: if $C$ is a class, then there
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266must be no three distinct superclasses $X$, $Y$ and~$Z$ of $C$ such that $Z$
267is the link superclass of both $X$ and $Y$. As a consequence of this rule,
268the superclasses of $C$ can be partitioned into linear \emph{chains}, such
269that superclasses $A$ and $B$ are in the same chain if and only if one can
270trace a path from $A$ to $B$ by following superclass links, or \emph{vice
271versa}.
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272
273Since a class links only to one of its proper superclasses, the classes in a
274chain are naturally ordered from most- to least-specific. The least specific
275class in a chain is called the \emph{chain head}; the most specific class is
276the \emph{chain tail}. Chains are often named after their chain head
277classes.
278
c6c9615b 279
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280\subsection{Names}
281\label{sec:concepts.classes.names}
282
283Classes have a number of other attributes:
284\begin{itemize}
285\item A \emph{name}, which is a C identifier. Class names must be globally
286 unique. The class name is used in the names of a number of associated
287 definitions, to be described later.
288\item A \emph{nickname}, which is also a C identifier. Unlike names,
289 nicknames are not required to be globally unique. If $C$ is any class,
290 then all the superclasses of $C$ must have distinct nicknames.
291\end{itemize}
292
0a2d4b68 293
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294\subsection{Slots} \label{sec:concepts.classes.slots}
295
296Each class defines a number of \emph{slots}. Much like a structure member, a
297slot has a \emph{name}, which is a C identifier, and a \emph{type}. Unlike
298many other object systems, different superclasses of a class $C$ can define
299slots with the same name without ambiguity, since slot references are always
300qualified by the defining class's nickname.
301
302\subsubsection{Slot initializers}
303As well as defining slot names and types, a class can also associate an
304\emph{initial value} with each slot defined by itself or one of its
98da9322 305subclasses. A class $C$ provides an \emph{initialization message} (see
d24d47f5 306\xref{sec:concepts.lifecycle.birth}, and \xref{sec:structures.root.sodclass})
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307whose methods set the slots of a \emph{direct} instance of the class to the
308correct initial values. If several of $C$'s superclasses define initializers
309for the same slot then the initializer from the most specific such class is
310used. If none of $C$'s superclasses define an initializer for some slot then
311that slot will be left uninitialized.
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312
313The initializer for a slot with scalar type may be any C expression. The
314initializer for a slot with aggregate type must contain only constant
315expressions if the generated code is expected to be processed by a
316implementation of C89. Initializers will be evaluated once each time an
317instance is initialized.
318
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319Slots are initialized in reverse-precedence order of their defining classes;
320i.e., slots defined by a less specific superclass are initialized earlier
321than slots defined by a more specific superclass. Slots defined by the same
322class are initialized in the order in which they appear in the class
323definition.
324
325The initializer for a slot may refer to other slots in the same object, via
326the @|me| pointer: in an initializer for a slot defined by a class $C$, @|me|
327has type `pointer to $C$'. (Note that the type of @|me| depends only on the
328class which defined the slot, not the class which defined the initializer.)
329
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330A class can also define \emph{class slot initializers}, which provide values
331for a slot defined by its metaclass; see \xref{sec:concepts.metaclasses} for
332details.
333
0a2d4b68 334
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335\subsection{C language integration} \label{sec:concepts.classes.c}
336
337For each class~$C$, the Sod translator defines a C type, the \emph{class
338type}, with the same name. This is the usual type used when considering an
339object as an instance of class~$C$. No entire object will normally have a
340class type,\footnote{%
341 In general, a class type only captures the structure of one of the
342 superclass chains of an instance. A full instance layout contains multiple
343 chains. See \xref{sec:structures.layout} for the full details.} %
344so access to instances is almost always via pointers.
345
346\subsubsection{Access to slots}
347The class type for a class~$C$ is actually a structure. It contains one
348member for each class in $C$'s superclass chain, named with that class's
349nickname. Each of these members is also a structure, containing the
350corresponding class's slots, one member per slot. There's nothing special
351about these slot members: C code can access them in the usual way.
352
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353For example, given the definition
354\begin{prog}
355 [nick = mine] \\
356 class MyClass: SodObject \{ \\ \ind
357 int x; \-\\
358 \}
359\end{prog}
360the simple function
3cc520db 361\begin{prog}
c18d6aba 362 int get_x(MyClass *m) \{ return (m@->mine.x); \}
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363\end{prog}
364will extract the value of @|x| from an instance of @|MyClass|.
365
366All of this means that there's no such thing as `private' or `protected'
367slots. If you want to hide implementation details, the best approach is to
368stash them in a dynamically allocated private structure, and leave a pointer
369to it in a slot. (This will also help preserve binary compatibility, because
370the private structure can grow more members as needed. See
021d9f84 371\xref{sec:concepts.compatibility} for more details.)
3cc520db 372
ff06eeb1 373
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374\subsubsection{Sending messages}
375Sod defines a macro for each message. If a class $C$ defines a message $m$,
376then the macro is called @|$C$_$m$|. The macro takes a pointer to the
377receiving object as its first argument, followed by the message arguments, if
378any, and returns the value returned by the object's effective method for the
379message (if any). If you have a pointer to an instance of any of $C$'s
380subclasses, then you can send it the message; it doesn't matter whether the
381subclass is on the same chain. Note that the receiver argument is evaluated
382twice, so it's not safe to write a receiver expression which has
383side-effects.
384
385For example, suppose we defined
386\begin{prog}
387 [nick = soupy] \\
388 class Super: SodObject \{ \\ \ind
389 void msg(const char *m); \-\\
390 \} \\+
391 class Sub: Super \{ \\ \ind
392 void soupy.msg(const char *m)
393 \{ printf("sub sent `\%s'@\\n", m); \} \-\\
394 \}
395\end{prog}
396then we can send the message like this:
397\begin{prog}
398 Sub *sub = /* \dots\ */; \\
399 Super_msg(sub, "hello");
400\end{prog}
401
402What happens under the covers is as follows. The structure pointed to by the
403instance pointer has a member named @|_vt|, which points to a structure
404called a `virtual table', or \emph{vtable}, which contains various pieces of
405information about the object's direct class and layout, and holds pointers to
406method entries for the messages which the object can receive. The
407message-sending macro in the example above expands to something similar to
408\begin{prog}
409 sub@->_vt.sub.msg(sub, "Hello");
410\end{prog}
411
412The vtable contains other useful information, such as a pointer to the
413instance's direct class's \emph{class object} (described below). The full
414details of the contents and layout of vtables are given in
415\xref{sec:structures.layout.vtable}.
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416
417
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418\subsubsection{Class objects}
419In Sod's object system, classes are objects too. Therefore classes are
420themselves instances; the class of a class is called a \emph{metaclass}. The
421consequences of this are explored in \xref{sec:concepts.metaclasses}. The
422\emph{class object} has the same name as the class, suffixed with
423`@|__class|'\footnote{%
424 This is not quite true. @|$C$__class| is actually a macro. See
425 \xref{sec:structures.layout.additional} for the gory details.} %
426and its type is usually @|SodClass|; @|SodClass|'s nickname is @|cls|.
427
428A class object's slots contain or point to useful information, tables and
429functions for working with that class's instances. (The @|SodClass| class
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430doesn't define any messages, so it doesn't have any methods other than for
431the @|SodObject| lifecycle messages @|init| and @|teardown|; see
432\xref{sec:concepts.lifecycle}. In Sod, a class slot containing a function
433pointer is not at all the same thing as a method.)
3cc520db 434
3cc520db 435\subsubsection{Conversions}
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436Suppose one has a value of type pointer-to-class-type for some class~$C$, and
437wants to convert it to a pointer-to-class-type for some other class~$B$.
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438There are three main cases to distinguish.
439\begin{itemize}
440\item If $B$ is a superclass of~$C$, in the same chain, then the conversion
441 is an \emph{in-chain upcast}. The conversion can be performed using the
442 appropriate generated upcast macro (see below), or by simply casting the
443 pointer, using C's usual cast operator (or the \Cplusplus\ @|static_cast<>|
444 operator).
445\item If $B$ is a superclass of~$C$, in a different chain, then the
446 conversion is a \emph{cross-chain upcast}. The conversion is more than a
447 simple type change: the pointer value must be adjusted. If the direct
448 class of the instance in question is not known, the conversion will require
449 a lookup at runtime to find the appropriate offset by which to adjust the
450 pointer. The conversion can be performed using the appropriate generated
451 upcast macro (see below); the general case is handled by the macro
58f9b400 452 \descref{SOD_XCHAIN}{mac}.
e4ea29d8 453\item If $B$ is a subclass of~$C$ then the conversion is a \emph{downcast};
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454 otherwise the conversion is a~\emph{cross-cast}. In either case, the
455 conversion can fail: the object in question might not be an instance of~$B$
e4ea29d8 456 after all. The macro \descref{SOD_CONVERT}{mac} and the function
58f9b400 457 \descref{sod_convert}{fun} perform general conversions. They return a null
054e8f8f 458 pointer if the conversion fails. (These are therefore your analogue to the
e4ea29d8 459 \Cplusplus\ @|dynamic_cast<>| operator.)
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460\end{itemize}
461The Sod translator generates macros for performing both in-chain and
462cross-chain upcasts. For each class~$C$, and each proper superclass~$B$
463of~$C$, a macro is defined: given an argument of type pointer to class type
464of~$C$, it returns a pointer to the same instance, only with type pointer to
465class type of~$B$, adjusted as necessary in the case of a cross-chain
466conversion. The macro is named by concatenating
467\begin{itemize}
468\item the name of class~$C$, in upper case,
469\item the characters `@|__CONV_|', and
470\item the nickname of class~$B$, in upper case;
471\end{itemize}
472e.g., if $C$ is named @|MyClass|, and $B$'s name is @|SuperClass| with
473nickname @|super|, then the macro @|MYCLASS__CONV_SUPER| converts a
474@|MyClass~*| to a @|SuperClass~*|. See
475\xref{sec:structures.layout.additional} for the formal description.
476
477%%%--------------------------------------------------------------------------
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478\section{Keyword arguments} \label{sec:concepts.keywords}
479
480In standard C, the actual arguments provided to a function are matched up
481with the formal arguments given in the function definition according to their
482ordering in a list. Unless the (rather cumbersome) machinery for dealing
483with variable-length argument tails (@|<stdarg.h>|) is used, exactly the
484correct number of arguments must be supplied, and in the correct order.
485
486A \emph{keyword argument} is matched by its distinctive \emph{name}, rather
487than by its position in a list. Keyword arguments may be \emph{omitted},
488causing some default behaviour by the function. A function can detect
489whether a particular keyword argument was supplied: so the default behaviour
490need not be the same as that caused by any specific value of the argument.
491
492Keyword arguments can be provided in three ways.
493\begin{enumerate}
494\item Directly, as a variable-length argument tail, consisting (for the most
495 part) of alternating keyword names, as pointers to null-terminated strings,
496 and argument values, and terminated by a null pointer. This is somewhat
497 error-prone, and the support library defines some macros which help ensure
498 that keyword argument lists are well formed.
499\item Indirectly, through a @|va_list| object capturing a variable-length
500 argument tail passed to some other function. Such indirect argument tails
501 have the same structure as the direct argument tails described above.
502 Because @|va_list| objects are hard to copy, the keyword-argument support
503 library consistently passes @|va_list| objects \emph{by reference}
504 throughout its programming interface.
505\item Indirectly, through a vector of @|struct kwval| objects, each of which
506 contains a keyword name, as a pointer to a null-terminated string, and the
507 \emph{address} of a corresponding argument value. (This indirection is
508 necessary so that the items in the vector can be of uniform size.)
509 Argument vectors are rather inconvenient to use, but are the only practical
510 way in which a caller can decide at runtime which arguments to include in a
511 call, which is useful when writing wrapper functions.
512\end{enumerate}
513
514Keyword arguments are provided as a general feature for C functions.
43073476 515However, Sod has special support for messages which accept keyword arguments
8ec911fa 516(\xref{sec:concepts.methods.keywords}); and they play an essential rôle in
a142609c 517the instance construction protocol (\xref{sec:concepts.lifecycle.birth}).
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518
519%%%--------------------------------------------------------------------------
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520\section{Messages and methods} \label{sec:concepts.methods}
521
522Objects can be sent \emph{messages}. A message has a \emph{name}, and
523carries a number of \emph{arguments}. When an object is sent a message, a
524function, determined by the receiving object's class, is invoked, passing it
525the receiver and the message arguments. This function is called the
526class's \emph{effective method} for the message. The effective method can do
527anything a C function can do, including reading or updating program state or
528object slots, sending more messages, calling other functions, issuing system
529calls, or performing I/O; if it finishes, it may return a value, which is
530returned in turn to the message sender.
531
532The set of messages an object can receive, characterized by their names,
533argument types, and return type, is determined by the object's class. Each
534class can define new messages, which can be received by any instance of that
535class. The messages defined by a single class must have distinct names:
536there is no `function overloading'. As with slots
537(\xref{sec:concepts.classes.slots}), messages defined by distinct classes are
538always distinct, even if they have the same names: references to messages are
539always qualified by the defining class's name or nickname.
540
541Messages may take any number of arguments, of any non-array value type.
542Since message sends are effectively function calls, arguments of array type
543are implicitly converted to values of the corresponding pointer type. While
544message definitions may ascribe an array type to an argument, the formal
545argument will have pointer type, as is usual for C functions. A message may
546accept a variable-length argument suffix, denoted @|\dots|.
547
548A class definition may include \emph{direct methods} for messages defined by
549it or any of its superclasses.
550
551Like messages, direct methods define argument lists and return types, but
8ec911fa 552they may also have a \emph{body}, and a \emph{rôle}.
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553
554A direct method need not have the same argument list or return type as its
555message. The acceptable argument lists and return types for a method depend
556on the message, in particular its method combination
8ec911fa 557(\xref{sec:concepts.methods.combination}), and the method's rôle.
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558
559A direct method body is a block of C code, and the Sod translator usually
560defines, for each direct method, a function with external linkage, whose body
561contains a copy of the direct method body. Within the body of a direct
562method defined for a class $C$, the variable @|me|, of type pointer to class
563type of $C$, refers to the receiving object.
564
0a2d4b68 565
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566\subsection{Effective methods and method combinations}
567\label{sec:concepts.methods.combination}
568
569For each message a direct instance of a class might receive, there is a set
570of \emph{applicable methods}, which are exactly the direct methods defined on
571the object's class and its superclasses. These direct methods are combined
572together to form the \emph{effective method} for that particular class and
573message. Direct methods can be combined into an effective method in
574different ways, according to the \emph{method combination} specified by the
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575message. The method combination determines which direct method rôles are
576acceptable, and, for each rôle, the appropriate argument lists and return
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577types.
578
579One direct method, $M$, is said to be more (resp.\ less) \emph{specific} than
580another, $N$, with respect to a receiving class~$C$, if the class defining
581$M$ is a more (resp.\ less) specific superclass of~$C$ than the class
582defining $N$.
583
43073476 584\subsubsection{The standard method combination}
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585The default method combination is called the \emph{standard method
586combination}; other method combinations are useful occasionally for special
8ec911fa 587effects. The standard method combination accepts four direct method rôles,
9761db0d 588called `primary' (the default), @|before|, @|after|, and @|around|.
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589
590All direct methods subject to the standard method combination must have
591argument lists which \emph{match} the message's argument list:
592\begin{itemize}
593\item the method's arguments must have the same types as the message, though
594 the arguments may have different names; and
595\item if the message accepts a variable-length argument suffix then the
596 direct method must instead have a final argument of type @|va_list|.
597\end{itemize}
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598Primary and @|around| methods must have the same return type as the message;
599@|before| and @|after| methods must return @|void| regardless of the
600message's return type.
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601
602If there are no applicable primary methods then no effective method is
603constructed: the vtables contain null pointers in place of pointers to method
604entry functions.
605
f1aa19a8 606\begin{figure}
d82d5db5 607 \hbox to\hsize{\hss\hbox{\begin{tikzpicture}
a4094071 608 [order/.append style={color=green!70!black},
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609 code/.append style={font=\sffamily},
610 action/.append style={font=\itshape},
611 method/.append style={rectangle, draw=black, thin, fill=blue!30,
612 text height=\ht\strutbox, text depth=\dp\strutbox,
613 minimum width=40mm}]
614
615 \def\delgstack#1#2#3{
616 \node (#10) [method, #2] {#3};
617 \node (#11) [method, above=6mm of #10] {#3};
618 \draw [->] ($(#10.north)!.5!(#10.north west) + (0mm, 1mm)$) --
619 ++(0mm, 4mm)
620 node [code, left=4pt, midway] {next_method};
621 \draw [<-] ($(#10.north)!.5!(#10.north east) + (0mm, 1mm)$) --
622 ++(0mm, 4mm)
623 node [action, right=4pt, midway] {return};
624 \draw [->] ($(#11.north)!.5!(#11.north west) + (0mm, 1mm)$) --
625 ++(0mm, 4mm)
626 node [code, left=4pt, midway] {next_method}
627 node (ld) [above] {$\smash\vdots\mathstrut$};
628 \draw [<-] ($(#11.north)!.5!(#11.north east) + (0mm, 1mm)$) --
629 ++(0mm, 4mm)
630 node [action, right=4pt, midway] {return}
631 node (rd) [above] {$\smash\vdots\mathstrut$};
632 \draw [->] ($(ld.north) + (0mm, 1mm)$) -- ++(0mm, 4mm)
633 node [code, left=4pt, midway] {next_method};
634 \draw [<-] ($(rd.north) + (0mm, 1mm)$) -- ++(0mm, 4mm)
635 node [action, right=4pt, midway] {return};
636 \node (p) at ($(ld.north)!.5!(rd.north)$) {};
637 \node (#1n) [method, above=5mm of p] {#3};
638 \draw [->, order] ($(#10.south east) + (4mm, 1mm)$) --
639 ($(#1n.north east) + (4mm, -1mm)$)
640 node [midway, right, align=left]
641 {Most to \\ least \\ specific};}
642
dc20d91f 643 \delgstack{a}{}{@|around| method}
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644 \draw [<-] ($(a0.south)!.5!(a0.south west) - (0mm, 1mm)$) --
645 ++(0mm, -4mm);
646 \draw [->] ($(a0.south)!.5!(a0.south east) - (0mm, 1mm)$) --
647 ++(0mm, -4mm)
648 node [action, right=4pt, midway] {return};
649
650 \draw [->] ($(an.north)!.6!(an.north west) + (0mm, 1mm)$) --
651 ++(-8mm, 8mm)
652 node [code, midway, left=3mm] {next_method}
653 node (b0) [method, above left = 1mm + 4mm and -6mm - 4mm] {};
654 \node (b1) [method] at ($(b0) - (2mm, 2mm)$) {};
dc20d91f 655 \node (bn) [method] at ($(b1) - (2mm, 2mm)$) {@|before| method};
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656 \draw [->, order] ($(bn.west) - (6mm, 0mm)$) -- ++(12mm, 12mm)
657 node [midway, above left, align=center] {Most to \\ least \\ specific};
658 \draw [->] ($(b0.north east) + (-10mm, 1mm)$) -- ++(8mm, 8mm)
659 node (p) {};
660
661 \delgstack{m}{above right=1mm and 0mm of an.west |- p}{Primary method}
662 \draw [->] ($(mn.north)!.5!(mn.north west) + (0mm, 1mm)$) -- ++(0mm, 4mm)
663 node [code, left=4pt, midway] {next_method}
664 node [above right = 0mm and -8mm]
665 {$\vcenter{\hbox{\Huge\textcolor{red}{!}}}
666 \vcenter{\hbox{\begin{tabular}[c]{l}
667 \textsf{next_method} \\
668 pointer is null
669 \end{tabular}}}$};
670
671 \draw [->, color=blue, dotted]
672 ($(m0.south)!.2!(m0.south east) - (0mm, 1mm)$) --
673 ($(an.north)!.2!(an.north east) + (0mm, 1mm)$)
674 node [midway, sloped, below] {Return value};
675
676 \draw [<-] ($(an.north)!.6!(an.north east) + (0mm, 1mm)$) --
677 ++(8mm, 8mm)
678 node [action, midway, right=3mm] {return}
679 node (f0) [method, above right = 1mm and -6mm] {};
680 \node (f1) [method] at ($(f0) + (-2mm, 2mm)$) {};
dc20d91f 681 \node (fn) [method] at ($(f1) + (-2mm, 2mm)$) {@|after| method};
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682 \draw [<-, order] ($(f0.east) + (6mm, 0mm)$) -- ++(-12mm, 12mm)
683 node [midway, above right, align=center]
684 {Least to \\ most \\ specific};
685 \draw [<-] ($(fn.north west) + (6mm, 1mm)$) -- ++(-8mm, 8mm);
686
d82d5db5 687 \end{tikzpicture}}\hss}
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688
689 \caption{The standard method combination}
690 \label{fig:concepts.methods.stdmeth}
691\end{figure}
692
3cc520db 693The effective method for a message with standard method combination works as
f1aa19a8 694follows (see also~\xref{fig:concepts.methods.stdmeth}).
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695\begin{enumerate}
696
8ec911fa 697\item If any applicable methods have the @|around| rôle, then the most
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698 specific such method, with respect to the class of the receiving object, is
699 invoked.
700
b1254eb6 701 Within the body of an @|around| method, the variable @|next_method| is
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702 defined, having pointer-to-function type. The method may call this
703 function, as described below, any number of times.
704
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705 If there any remaining @|around| methods, then @|next_method| invokes the
706 next most specific such method, returning whichever value that method
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707 returns; otherwise the behaviour of @|next_method| is to invoke the
708 @|before| methods (if any), followed by the most specific primary method,
b0563651 709 followed by the @|after| methods (if any), and to return whichever value
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710 was returned by the most specific primary method, as described in the
711 following items. That is, the behaviour of the least specific @|around|
712 method's @|next_method| function is exactly the behaviour that the
713 effective method would have if there were no @|around| methods. Note that
714 if the least-specific @|around| method calls its @|next_method| more than
715 once then the whole sequence of @|before|, primary, and @|after| methods
716 occurs multiple times.
3cc520db 717
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718 The value returned by the most specific @|around| method is the value
719 returned by the effective method.
3cc520db 720
8ec911fa 721\item If any applicable methods have the @|before| rôle, then they are all
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722 invoked, starting with the most specific.
723
724\item The most specific applicable primary method is invoked.
725
726 Within the body of a primary method, the variable @|next_method| is
727 defined, having pointer-to-function type. If there are no remaining less
728 specific primary methods, then @|next_method| is a null pointer.
729 Otherwise, the method may call the @|next_method| function any number of
730 times.
731
732 The behaviour of the @|next_method| function, if it is not null, is to
733 invoke the next most specific applicable primary method, and to return
734 whichever value that method returns.
735
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736 If there are no applicable @|around| methods, then the value returned by
737 the most specific primary method is the value returned by the effective
738 method; otherwise the value returned by the most specific primary method is
739 returned to the least specific @|around| method, which called it via its
740 own @|next_method| function.
3cc520db 741
8ec911fa 742\item If any applicable methods have the @|after| rôle, then they are all
3cc520db 743 invoked, starting with the \emph{least} specific. (Hence, the most
b1254eb6 744 specific @|after| method is invoked with the most `afterness'.)
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745
746\end{enumerate}
747
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748A typical use for @|around| methods is to allow a base class to set up the
749dynamic environment appropriately for the primary methods of its subclasses,
756e9293 750e.g., by claiming a lock, and releasing it afterwards.
3cc520db 751
9761db0d 752The @|next_method| function provided to methods with the primary and
8ec911fa 753@|around| rôles accepts the same arguments, and returns the same type, as the
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754message, except that one or two additional arguments are inserted at the
755front of the argument list. The first additional argument is always the
756receiving object, @|me|. If the message accepts a variable argument suffix,
757then the second addition argument is a @|va_list|; otherwise there is no
758second additional argument; otherwise, In the former case, a variable
759@|sod__master_ap| of type @|va_list| is defined, containing a separate copy
760of the argument pointer (so the method body can process the variable argument
761suffix itself, and still pass a fresh copy on to the next method).
762
8ec911fa 763A method with the primary or @|around| rôle may use the convenience macro
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764@|CALL_NEXT_METHOD|, which takes no arguments itself, and simply calls
765@|next_method| with appropriate arguments: the receiver @|me| pointer, the
766argument pointer @|sod__master_ap| (if applicable), and the method's
767arguments. If the method body has overwritten its formal arguments, then
768@|CALL_NEXT_METHOD| will pass along the updated values, rather than the
769original ones.
770
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771A primary or @|around| method which invokes its @|next_method| function is
772said to \emph{extend} the message behaviour; a method which does not invoke
773its @|next_method| is said to \emph{override} the behaviour. Note that a
774method may make a decision to override or extend at runtime.
775
43073476 776\subsubsection{Aggregating method combinations}
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777A number of other method combinations are provided. They are called
778`aggregating' method combinations because, instead of invoking just the most
779specific primary method, as the standard method combination does, they invoke
780the applicable primary methods in turn and aggregate the return values from
781each.
782
8ec911fa 783The aggregating method combinations accept the same four rôles as the
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784standard method combination, and @|around|, @|before|, and @|after| methods
785work in the same way.
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786
787The aggregating method combinations provided are as follows.
788\begin{description} \let\makelabel\code
789\item[progn] The message must return @|void|. The applicable primary methods
790 are simply invoked in turn, most specific first.
791\item[sum] The message must return a numeric type.\footnote{%
792 The Sod translator does not check this, since it doesn't have enough
793 insight into @|typedef| names.} %
794 The applicable primary methods are invoked in turn, and their return values
795 added up. The final result is the sum of the individual values.
796\item[product] The message must return a numeric type. The applicable
797 primary methods are invoked in turn, and their return values multiplied
798 together. The final result is the product of the individual values.
799\item[min] The message must return a scalar type. The applicable primary
800 methods are invoked in turn. The final result is the smallest of the
801 individual values.
802\item[max] The message must return a scalar type. The applicable primary
803 methods are invoked in turn. The final result is the largest of the
804 individual values.
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805\item[and] The message must return a scalar type. The applicable primary
806 methods are invoked in turn. If any method returns zero then the final
807 result is zero and no further methods are invoked. If all of the
808 applicable primary methods return nonzero, then the final result is the
809 result of the last primary method.
810\item[or] The message must return a scalar type. The applicable primary
811 methods are invoked in turn. If any method returns nonzero then the final
812 result is that nonzero value and no further methods are invoked. If all of
813 the applicable primary methods return zero, then the final result is zero.
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814\end{description}
815
816There is also a @|custom| aggregating method combination, which is described
817in \xref{sec:fixme.custom-aggregating-method-combination}.
818
43073476 819
f4e44f7f 820\subsection{Method entries} \label{sec:concepts.methods.entry}
caa6f4b9 821
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822The effective methods for each class are determined at translation time, by
823the Sod translator. For each effective method, one or more \emph{method
824entry functions} are constructed. A method entry function has three
825responsibilities.
826\begin{itemize}
827\item It converts the receiver pointer to the correct type. Method entry
828 functions can perform these conversions extremely efficiently: there are
829 separate method entries for each chain of each class which can receive a
830 message, so method entry functions are in the privileged situation of
831 knowing the \emph{exact} class of the receiving object.
832\item If the message accepts a variable-length argument tail, then two method
833 entry functions are created for each chain of each class: one receives a
834 variable-length argument tail, as intended, and captures it in a @|va_list|
835 object; the other accepts an argument of type @|va_list| in place of the
836 variable-length tail and arranges for it to be passed along to the direct
837 methods.
838\item It invokes the effective method with the appropriate arguments. There
839 might or might not be an actual function corresponding to the effective
840 method itself: the translator may instead open-code the effective method's
841 behaviour into each method entry function; and the machinery for handling
842 `delegation chains', such as is used for @|around| methods and primary
843 methods in the standard method combination, is necessarily scattered among
844 a number of small functions.
845\end{itemize}
846
847
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848\subsection{Messages with keyword arguments}
849\label{sec:concepts.methods.keywords}
850
851A message or a direct method may declare that it accepts keyword arguments.
852A message which accepts keyword arguments is called a \emph{keyword message};
853a direct method which accepts keyword arguments is called a \emph{keyword
854method}.
855
856While method combinations may set their own rules, usually keyword methods
857can only be defined on keyword messages, and all methods defined on a keyword
858message must be keyword methods. The direct methods defined on a keyword
859message may differ in the keywords they accept, both from each other, and
860from the message. If two superclasses of some common class both define
861keyword methods on the same message, and the methods both accept a keyword
862argument with the same name, then these two keyword arguments must also have
863the same type. Different applicable methods may declare keyword arguments
864with the same name but different defaults; see below.
865
866The keyword arguments acceptable in a message sent to an object are the
867keywords listed in the message definition, together with all of the keywords
868accepted by any applicable method. There is no easy way to determine at
869runtime whether a particular keyword is acceptable in a message to a given
870instance.
871
872At runtime, a direct method which accepts one or more keyword arguments
873receives an additional argument named @|suppliedp|. This argument is a small
874structure. For each keyword argument named $k$ accepted by the direct
875method, @|suppliedp| contains a one-bit-wide bitfield member of type
876@|unsigned|, also named $k$. If a keyword argument named $k$ was passed in
877the message, then @|suppliedp.$k$| is one, and $k$ contains the argument
878value; otherwise @|suppliedp.$k$| is zero, and $k$ contains the default value
879from the direct method definition if there was one, or an unspecified value
880otherwise.
881
3cc520db 882%%%--------------------------------------------------------------------------
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883\section{The object lifecycle} \label{sec:concepts.lifecycle}
884
885\subsection{Creation} \label{sec:concepts.lifecycle.birth}
886
887Construction of a new instance of a class involves three steps.
888\begin{enumerate}
889\item \emph{Allocation} arranges for there to be storage space for the
890 instance's slots and associated metadata.
891\item \emph{Imprinting} fills in the instance's metadata, associating the
892 instance with its class.
893\item \emph{Initialization} stores appropriate initial values in the
894 instance's slots, and maybe links it into any external data structures as
895 necessary.
896\end{enumerate}
897The \descref{SOD_DECL}[macro]{mac} handles constructing instances with
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898automatic storage duration (`on the stack'). Similarly, the
899\descref{SOD_MAKE}[macro]{mac} and the \descref{sod_make}{fun} and
900\descref{sod_makev}{fun} functions construct instances allocated from the
901standard @|malloc| heap. Programmers can add support for other allocation
902strategies by using the \descref{SOD_INIT}[macro]{mac} and the
903\descref{sod_init}{fun} and \descref{sod_initv}{fun} functions, which package
904up imprinting and initialization.
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905
906\subsubsection{Allocation}
907Instances of most classes (specifically including those classes defined by
908Sod itself) can be held in any storage of sufficient size. The in-memory
909layout of an instance of some class~$C$ is described by the type @|struct
910$C$__ilayout|, and if the relevant class is known at compile time then the
911best way to discover the layout size is with the @|sizeof| operator. Failing
912that, the size required to hold an instance of $C$ is available in a slot in
913$C$'s class object, as @|$C$__class@->cls.initsz|.
914
915It is not in general sufficient to declare, or otherwise allocate, an object
916of the class type $C$. The class type only describes a single chain of the
917object's layout. It is nearly always an error to use the class type as if it
918is a \emph{complete type}, e.g., to declare objects or arrays of the class
919type, or to enquire about its size or alignment requirements.
920
921Instance layouts may be declared as objects with automatic storage duration
922(colloquially, `allocated on the stack') or allocated dynamically, e.g.,
923using @|malloc|. They may be included as members of structures or unions, or
924elements of arrays. Sod's runtime system doesn't retain addresses of
925instances, so, for example, Sod doesn't make using fancy allocators which
926sometimes move objects around in memory any more difficult than it needs to
927be.
928
929There isn't any way to discover the alignment required for a particular
930class's instances at runtime; it's best to be conservative and assume that
931the platform's strictest alignment requirement applies.
932
933The following simple function correctly allocates and returns space for an
934instance of a class given a pointer to its class object @<cls>.
935\begin{prog}
020b9e2b 936 void *allocate_instance(const SodClass *cls) \\ \ind
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937 \{ return malloc(cls@->cls.initsz); \}
938\end{prog}
939
940\subsubsection{Imprinting}
941Once storage has been allocated, it must be \emph{imprinted} before it can be
942used as an instance of a class, e.g., before any messages can be sent to it.
943
944Imprinting an instance stores some metadata about its direct class in the
945instance structure, so that the rest of the program (and Sod's runtime
946library) can tell what sort of object it is, and how to use it.\footnote{%
947 Specifically, imprinting an instance's storage involves storing the
948 appropriate vtable pointers in the right places in it.} %
949A class object's @|imprint| slot points to a function which will correctly
950imprint storage for one of that class's instances.
951
952Once an instance's storage has been imprinted, it is technically possible to
953send messages to the instance; however the instance's slots are still
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954uninitialized at this point, so the applicable methods are unlikely to do
955much of any use unless they've been written specifically for the purpose.
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956
957The following simple function imprints storage at address @<p> as an instance
958of a class, given a pointer to its class object @<cls>.
959\begin{prog}
020b9e2b 960 void imprint_instance(const SodClass *cls, void *p) \\ \ind
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961 \{ cls@->cls.imprint(p); \}
962\end{prog}
963
964\subsubsection{Initialization}
965The final step for constructing a new instance is to \emph{initialize} it, to
966establish the necessary invariants for the instance itself and the
967environment in which it operates.
968
969Details of initialization are necessarily class-specific, but typically it
970involves setting the instance's slots to appropriate values, and possibly
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971linking it into some larger data structure to keep track of it. It is
972possible for initialization methods to attempt to allocate resources, but
973this must be done carefully: there is currently no way to report an error
974from object initialization, so the object must be marked as incompletely
975initialized, and left in a state where it will be safe to tear down later.
d24d47f5 976
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977Initialization is performed by sending the imprinted instance an @|init|
978message, defined by the @|SodObject| class. This message uses a nonstandard
979method combination which works like the standard combination, except that the
980\emph{default behaviour}, if there is no overriding method, is to initialize
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981the instance's slots, as described below, and to invoke each superclass's
982initialization fragments. This default behaviour may be invoked multiple
983times if some method calls on its @|next_method| more than once, unless some
984other method takes steps to prevent this.
a142609c 985
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986Slots are initialized in a well-defined order.
987\begin{itemize}
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988\item Slots defined by a more specific superclass are initialized after slots
989 defined by a less specific superclass.
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990\item Slots defined by the same class are initialized in the order in which
991 their definitions appear.
992\end{itemize}
993
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994A class can define \emph{initialization fragments}: pieces of literal code to
995be executed to set up a new instance. Each superclass's initialization
996fragments are executed with @|me| bound to an instance pointer of the
997appropriate superclass type, immediately after that superclass's slots (if
998any) have been initialized; therefore, fragments defined by a more specific
13cb243a 999superclass are executed after fragments defined by a less specific
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1000superclass. A class may define more than one initialization fragment: the
1001fragments are executed in the order in which they appear in the class
1002definition. It is possible for an initialization fragment to use @|return|
1003or @|goto| for special control-flow effects, but this is not likely to be a
1004good idea.
1005
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1006The @|init| message accepts keyword arguments
1007(\xref{sec:concepts.methods.keywords}). The set of acceptable keywords is
1008determined by the applicable methods as usual, but also by the
1009\emph{initargs} defined by the receiving instance's class and its
1010superclasses, which are made available to slot initializers and
1011initialization fragments.
1012
1013There are two kinds of initarg definitions. \emph{User initargs} are defined
1014by an explicit @|initarg| item appearing in a class definition: the item
1015defines a name, type, and (optionally) a default value for the initarg.
1016\emph{Slot initargs} are defined by attaching an @|initarg| property to a
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1017slot or slot initializer item: the property's value determines the initarg's
1018name, while the type is taken from the underlying slot type; slot initargs do
1019not have default values. Both kinds define a \emph{direct initarg} for the
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1020containing class.
1021
1022Initargs are inherited. The \emph{applicable} direct initargs for an @|init|
1023effective method are those defined by the receiving object's class, and all
1024of its superclasses. Applicable direct initargs with the same name are
1025merged to form \emph{effective initargs}. An error is reported if two
1026applicable direct initargs have the same name but different types. The
1027default value of an effective initarg is taken from the most specific
1028applicable direct initarg which specifies a defalt value; if no applicable
1029direct initarg specifies a default value then the effective initarg has no
1030default.
1031
1032All initarg values are made available at runtime to user code --
1033initialization fragments and slot initializer expressions -- through local
1034variables and a @|suppliedp| structure, as in a direct method
1035(\xref{sec:concepts.methods.keywords}). Furthermore, slot initarg
1036definitions influence the initialization of slots.
1037
1038The process for deciding how to initialize a particular slot works as
1039follows.
1040\begin{enumerate}
1041\item If there are any slot initargs defined on the slot, or any of its slot
1042 initializers, \emph{and} the sender supplied a value for one or more of the
1043 corresponding effective initargs, then the value of the most specific slot
1044 initarg is stored in the slot.
1045\item Otherwise, if there are any slot initializers defined which include an
1046 initializer expression, then the initializer expression from the most
1047 specific such slot initializer is evaluated and its value stored in the
1048 slot.
1049\item Otherwise, the slot is left uninitialized.
1050\end{enumerate}
1051Note that the default values (if any) of effective initargs do \emph{not}
1052affect this procedure.
d24d47f5 1053
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1054
1055\subsection{Destruction}
1056\label{sec:concepts.lifecycle.death}
1057
1058Destruction of an instance, when it is no longer required, consists of two
1059steps.
1060\begin{enumerate}
1061\item \emph{Teardown} releases any resources held by the instance and
1062 disentangles it from any external data structures.
1063\item \emph{Deallocation} releases the memory used to store the instance so
1064 that it can be reused.
1065\end{enumerate}
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1066Teardown alone, for objects which require special deallocation, or for which
1067deallocation occurs automatically (e.g., instances with automatic storage
1068duration, or instances whose storage will be garbage-collected), is performed
1069using the \descref{sod_teardown}[function]{fun}. Destruction of instances
1070allocated from the standard @|malloc| heap is done using the
1071\descref{sod_destroy}[function]{fun}.
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1072
1073\subsubsection{Teardown}
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1074Details of teardown are necessarily class-specific, but typically it
1075involves releasing resources held by the instance, and disentangling it from
1076any data structures it might be linked into.
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1077
1078Teardown is performed by sending the instance the @|teardown| message,
1079defined by the @|SodObject| class. The message returns an integer, used as a
1080boolean flag. If the message returns zero, then the instance's storage
1081should be deallocated. If the message returns nonzero, then it is safe for
1082the caller to forget about instance, but should not deallocate its storage.
1083This is \emph{not} an error return: if some teardown method fails then the
1084program may be in an inconsistent state and should not continue.
d24d47f5 1085
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1086This simple protocol can be used, for example, to implement a reference
1087counting system, as follows.
d24d47f5 1088\begin{prog}
020b9e2b 1089 [nick = ref] \\
d7451ac3 1090 class ReferenceCountedObject: SodObject \{ \\ \ind
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1091 unsigned nref = 1; \\-
1092 void inc() \{ me@->ref.nref++; \} \\-
1093 [role = around] \\
1094 int obj.teardown() \\
1095 \{ \\ \ind
1096 if (--\,--me@->ref.nref) return (1); \\
1097 else return (CALL_NEXT_METHOD); \-\\
1098 \} \-\\
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1099 \}
1100\end{prog}
1101
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1102The @|teardown| message uses a nonstandard method combination which works
1103like the standard combination, except that the \emph{default behaviour}, if
1104there is no overriding method, is to execute the superclass's teardown
1105fragments, and to return zero. This default behaviour may be invoked
1106multiple times if some method calls on its @|next_method| more than once,
1107unless some other method takes steps to prevent this.
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1108
1109A class can define \emph{teardown fragments}: pieces of literal code to be
1110executed to shut down an instance. Each superclass's teardown fragments are
1111executed with @|me| bound to an instance pointer of the appropriate
1112superclass type; fragments defined by a more specific superclass are executed
13cb243a 1113before fragments defined by a less specific superclass. A class may define
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1114more than one teardown fragment: the fragments are executed in the order in
1115which they appear in the class definition. It is possible for an
1116initialization fragment to use @|return| or @|goto| for special control-flow
1117effects, but this is not likely to be a good idea. Similarly, it's probably
1118a better idea to use an @|around| method to influence the return value than
1119to write an explicit @|return| statement in a teardown fragment.
1120
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1121\subsubsection{Deallocation}
1122The details of instance deallocation are obviously specific to the allocation
1123strategy used by the instance, and this is often orthogonal from the object's
1124class.
1125
1126The code which makes the decision to destroy an object may often not be aware
1127of the object's direct class. Low-level details of deallocation often
1128require the proper base address of the instance's storage, which can be
1129determined using the \descref{SOD_INSTBASE}[macro]{mac}.
1130
d24d47f5 1131%%%--------------------------------------------------------------------------
3cc520db 1132\section{Metaclasses} \label{sec:concepts.metaclasses}
1f7d590d 1133
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1134In Sod, every object is an instance of some class, and -- unlike, say,
1135\Cplusplus\ -- classes are proper objects. It follows that, in Sod, every
1136class~$C$ is itself an instance of some class~$M$, which is called $C$'s
1137\emph{metaclass}. Metaclass instances are usually constructed statically, at
1138compile time, and marked read-only.
1139
1140As an added complication, Sod classes, and other metaobjects such as
1141messages, methods, slots and so on, also have classes \emph{at translation
1142time}. These translation-time metaclasses are not Sod classes; they are CLOS
1143classes, implemented in Common Lisp.
1144
1145
1146\subsection{Runtime metaclasses}
1147\label{sec:concepts.metaclasses.runtime}
1148
1149Like other classes, metaclasses can declare messages, and define slots and
1150methods. Slots defined by the metaclass are called \emph{class slots}, as
1151opposed to \emph{instance slots}. Similarly, messages and methods defined by
1152the metaclass are termed \emph{class messages} and \emph{class methods}
1153respectively, though these are used much less frequently.
1154
1155\subsubsection{The braid}
1156Every object is an instance of some class. There are only finitely many
1157classes.
1158
1159\begin{figure}
1160 \centering
1161 \begin{tikzpicture}
1162 \node[lit] (obj) {SodObject};
1163 \node[lit] (cls) [right=10mm of obj] {SodClass};
1164 \draw [->, dashed] (obj) to[bend right] (cls);
1165 \draw [->] (cls) to[bend right] (obj);
1166 \draw [->, dashed] (cls) to[loop right] (cls);
1167 \end{tikzpicture}
1168 \qquad
1169 \fbox{\ \begin{tikzpicture}
1170 \node (subclass) {subclass of};
1171 \node (instance) [below=\jot of subclass] {instance of};
1172 \draw [->] ($(subclass.west) - (10mm, 0)$) -- ++(8mm, 0);
1173 \draw [->, dashed] ($(instance.west) - (10mm, 0)$) -- ++(8mm, 0);
1174 \end{tikzpicture}}
1175 \caption{The Sod braid} \label{fig:concepts.metaclasses.braid}
1176\end{figure}
1177
1178Consider the directed graph whose nodes are classes, and where there is an
1179arc from $C$ to $D$ if and only if $C$ is an instance of $D$. There are only
1180finitely many nodes. Every node has an arc leaving it, because every object
1181-- and hence every class -- is an instance of some class. Therefore this
1182graph must contain at least one cycle.
1183
1184In Sod, this situation is resolved in the simplest manner possible:
1185@|SodClass| is the only predefined metaclass, and it is an instance of
1186itself. The only other predefined class is @|SodObject|, which is also an
1187instance of @|SodClass|. There is exactly one root class, namely
1188@|SodObject|; consequently, @|SodClass| is a direct subclass of @|SodObject|.
1189
1190\Xref{fig:concepts.metaclasses.braid} shows a diagram of this situation.
1191
1192\subsubsection{Class slots and initializers}
1193Instance initializers were described in \xref{sec:concepts.classes.slots}. A
1194class can also define \emph{class initializers}, which provide values for
1195slots defined by its metaclass. The initial value for a class slot is
1196determined as follows.
1197\begin{itemize}
1198\item Nonstandard slot classes may be initialized by custom Lisp code. For
1199 example, all of the slots defined by @|SodClass| are of this kind. User
1200 initializers are not permitted for such slots.
1201\item If the class or any of its superclasses defines a class initializer for
1202 the slot, then the class initializer defined by the most specific such
1203 superclass is used.
1204\item Otherwise, if the metaclass or one of its superclasses defines an
1205 instance initializer, then the instance initializer defined by he most
1206 specific such class is used.
1207\item Otherwise there is no initializer, and an error will be reported.
1208\end{itemize}
1209Initializers for class slots must be constant expressions (for scalar slots)
1210or aggregate initializers containing constant expressions.
1211
1212\subsubsection{Metaclass selection and consistency}
1213Sod enforces a \emph{metaclass consistency rule}: if $C$ has metaclass $M$,
1214then any subclass $C$ must have a metaclass which is a subclass of $M$.
1215
1216The definition of a new class can name the new class's metaclass explicitly,
1217by defining a @|metaclass| property; the Sod translator will verify that the
1218choice of metaclass is acceptable.
1219
1220If no @|metaclass| property is given, then the translator will select a
1221default metaclass as follows. Let $C_1$, $C_2$, \dots, $C_n$ be the direct
1222superclasses of the new class, and let $M_1$, $M_2$, \dots, $M_n$ be their
1223respective metaclasses (not necessarily distinct). If there exists exactly
1224one minimal metaclass $M_i$, i.e., there exists an $i$, with $1 \le i \le n$,
1225such that $M_i$ is a subclass of every $M_j$, for $1 \le j \le n$, then $M_i$
1226is selected as the new class's metaclass. Otherwise the situation is
1227ambiguous and an error will be reported. Usually, the ambiguity can be
1228resolved satisfactorily by defining a new class $M^*$ as a direct subclass of
1229the minimal $M_j$.
1230
1231
1232\subsection{Translation-time metaobjects}
1233\label{sec:concepts.metaclasses.compile-time}
1234
1235
1236
1237\fixme{unwritten}
1238
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1239%%%--------------------------------------------------------------------------
1240\section{Compatibility considerations} \label{sec:concepts.compatibility}
1241
1242Sod doesn't make source-level compatibility especially difficult. As long as
1243classes, slots, and messages don't change names or dissappear, and slots and
1244messages retain their approximate types, everything will be fine.
1245
1246Binary compatibility is much more difficult. Unfortunately, Sod classes have
1247rather fragile binary interfaces.\footnote{%
1248 Research suggestion: investigate alternative instance and vtable layouts
1249 which improve binary compatibility, probably at the expense of instance
1250 compactness, and efficiency of slot access and message sending. There may
1251 be interesting trade-offs to be made.} %
1252
6390b845 1253If instances are allocated \fixme{incomplete}
caa6f4b9 1254
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1255%%%----- That's all, folks --------------------------------------------------
1256
1257%%% Local variables:
1258%%% mode: LaTeX
1259%%% TeX-master: "sod.tex"
1260%%% TeX-PDF-mode: t
1261%%% End: