doc/clang.tex: Squish the `\desclabel' mess for simple C types.
[sod] / doc / misc.tex
1 %%% -*-latex-*-
2 %%%
3 %%% Miscellaneous functionality
4 %%%
5 %%% (c) 2015 Straylight/Edgeware
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25
26 \chapter{Miscellaneous functionality} \label{ch:misc}
27
28 %%%--------------------------------------------------------------------------
29 \section{Utilities} \label{sec:misc.utilities}
30
31 These symbols are defined in the @|sod-utilities| package.
32
33
34 \subsection{Macro utilities}
35
36 We begin with some simple utilities which help with writing macros. Several
37 of these are standard.
38
39 \begin{describe}{mac}
40 {with-gensyms (@{ @<var> @! (@<var> @[@<name>@]) @}^*) \\ \ind
41 @<declaration>^* \\
42 @<form>^*
43 \-\nlret @<value>^*}
44 Bind each @<var> (a symbol, not evaluated) to a freshly made gensym whose
45 name is based on the corresponding @<name> (a string, evaluated), and
46 evaluate the @<form>s as an implicit @|progn| in the resulting environment.
47 If @<name> is omitted, then the name of the @<var> is used as a default; a
48 bare symbol may be written in place of a singleton list.
49 \end{describe}
50
51 \begin{describe}{mac}
52 {once-only (@[[ :environment @<env> @]]
53 @{ @<var> @! (@<var> @[@<value-form>@]) @}^*) \\ \ind
54 @<declaration>^* \\
55 @<form>^*
56 \-\nlret @<result-form>}
57 This is a helper to ensure that macro expansions evaluate their arguments
58 exactly once each, in the correct order.
59
60 Each @<var> is bound to an appropriate value (often a gensym) and then the
61 @<form>s are evaluated as an implicit @|progn| in the resulting environment
62 to produce an output form. This output form is then enclosed in one or
63 more binding forms to produce a @<result-form>. When the @<result-form> is
64 evaluated, the behaviour will be as if each @<value-form> is evaluated
65 exactly once each, in order, and each value is captured in the
66 corresponding @<var>.
67
68 A simple @|once-only| expansion might look something like
69 \begin{prog}
70 (let (\=(@<var>_1 (gensym)) \\
71 \>\qquad\vdots \\
72 \>(@<var>_n (gensym))) \\ \ind
73 `(let (\=(,@<var>_1 ,@<value-form>_1) \\
74 \>\qquad\vdots \\
75 \>(,@<var>_n ,@<value-form>_n)) \\ \ind
76 @<declaration>_1 \dots\ @<declaration>_m \\
77 @<form>_1 \dots\ @<form>_\ell))
78 \end{prog}
79 However, if @|once-only| can determine that some @<value-form> is a
80 constant (e.g., it is @|quote|d, self-evaluating, or reported as
81 @|constantp| in the given environment @<env>), then it need not allocate a
82 gensym: it can instead bind the @<var> directly to the constant value.
83
84 If a @<value-form> is omitted, then the value of the corresponding @<var>
85 is used. It is conventional usage for a macro to wrap @|once-only| around
86 its body so as to convert the arguments which it should evaluate into safe
87 gensyms capturing their runtime values. (Not that the simple expansion
88 given above can't do this correctly.) A bare symbol may be written in
89 place of a singleton list.
90 \end{describe}
91
92 \begin{describe}{fun}
93 {parse-body @<body> \&key :docp :declp
94 @> @<doc-string> @<declarations> @<body-forms>}
95 Parse the @<body> into a @<doc-string>, some @<declaration>s, and a list of
96 @<body-forms>.
97
98 The @<body> is assumed to have the general syntax
99 \begin{prog}
100 @[[ @<doc-string> @! @<declaration>^* @]] \\
101 @<form>^*
102 \end{prog}
103 A @<doc-string> is permitted if and only if @<docp> is non-nil, and
104 declarations are permitted if and only if @<declp> is non-nil; both are
105 true by default.
106
107 Each return value is a list, which is empty if the corresponding part of
108 the input @<body> is missing. Specifically:
109 \begin{itemize}
110 \item @<doc-string> is either nil, or a singleton list containing a string;
111 \item @<declarations> is either nil, or a singleton list containing a
112 @|(declare \dots)| form gathering up all of the individual
113 @<declaration>s within the @<body>; and
114 \item @<body-forms> is a list of the remaining forms in the @<body>.
115 \end{itemize}
116 Thus, the parsed body-parts can conveniently be spliced into a macro
117 expansion using @|,@@|.
118 \end{describe}
119
120 \begin{describe}{fun}{symbolicate \&rest @<symbols> @> @<symbol>}
121 Return the symbol, interned in the current @|*package*|, whose name is the
122 concatenation of the names of the given @<symbols>.
123 \end{describe}
124
125
126 \subsection{Locatives}
127
128 A \emph{locative} is a value which remembers where another value is stored,
129 -- whether it's in a variable, an array element, a structure slot, a hash
130 table, etc.\ -- and can modify and retrieve it.
131
132 Some Lisp systems have highly efficient locatives which actually keep track
133 of the machine addresses of the places to which they refer. Common Lisp does
134 not implement true locatives of this kind, but something sufficiently useful
135 can be synthesized.
136
137 These locatives can't usefully be compared. It should be possible to compare
138 true locatives, such that two locatives compare equal if and only if they
139 refer to the same place; but that doesn't work for these locatives.
140
141 \begin{describe}{cls}{loc}
142 The type of locative objects.
143 \end{describe}
144
145 \begin{describe}{fun}{locp @<object> @> @<generalized-boolean>}
146 Return non-nil if and only if @<object> is a locative.
147 \end{describe}
148
149 \begin{describe}{mac}{locf @<place> @> @<locative>}
150 Return a fresh locative capturing the @<place>, which may be any expression
151 usable as the first operand to @|setf|.
152 \end{describe}
153
154 \begin{describe*}
155 {\dhead{fun}{ref @<locative> @> @<value>}
156 \dhead{fun}{setf (ref @<locative>) @<value>}}
157 Retrieve and return the current value stored in the place captured by the
158 @<locative>. With @|setf|, store the new @<value> in the place captured by
159 the @<locative>.
160 \end{describe*}
161
162 \begin{describe}{mac}
163 {with-locatives
164 @{ @<var> @! (@{ @<var> @!
165 (@<var> @[@<locative>@]) @}^*) @} \\ \ind
166 @<declaration>^* \\
167 @<form>^*
168 \-\nlret @<values>^*}
169 This is a macro which hides the use of locatives from its caller using
170 symbol-macros.
171
172 Each @<locative> should be an expression which evaluates to a locative
173 value (not a general place). These are evaluated once each, left to
174 right. The @<form>s are then evaluated as an implicit @|progn|, with each
175 @<var> defined as a symbol macro which will retrieve -- or, with @|setf|,
176 modify -- the value referred to by the corresponding locative.
177
178 If a @<locative> is omitted, it defaults to the value of @<var>; a
179 bare symbol may be used in place of a singleton list.
180 \end{describe}
181
182
183 \subsection{Anaphorics}
184
185 An anaphoric macro implicitly binds a well-known name to a value of interest,
186 in the course of doing something else. The concept was popularized by Paul
187 Graham \cite{FIXME:OnLisp}.
188
189 The macros described here all bind the variable @|it|.
190
191 \begin{describe}{sym}{it}
192 The symbol @|it| is exported by the @|sod-utilities| package.
193 \end{describe}
194
195 \begin{describe}{mac}{aif @<condition> @<consequent> @[@<alt>@] @> @<value>^*}
196 Evaluate the @<condition>. If @<condition> is non-nil, then bind @|it| to
197 the resulting value and evaluate the @<consequent>, returning all of its
198 values. Otherwise, evaluate @<alt>, returning all of its values.
199 \end{describe}
200
201 \begin{describe}{mac}{aand @<form>^* @> @<value>^*}
202 Evaluate each @<form> in turn. If any @<form> evaluates to nil, then stop
203 and return nil. Each form except the first is evaluated with @|it| bound
204 to the (necessarily non-nil) value of the previous form. If all but the
205 last form evaluate non-nil, then return all the values of the final form.
206 \end{describe}
207
208 (No @|aor| is provided, since @|it| would necessarily be bound to nil.)
209
210 \begin{describe}{mac}{awhen @<condition> @<form>^* @> nil}
211 If @<condition> evaluates to a non-nil value, bind @|it| to that value, and
212 evaluate the @<form>s as an implicit @|progn|. Otherwise, return nil.
213 \end{describe}
214
215 \begin{describe}{mac}{acond @{ (@<condition> @<form>^*) @}^* @> @<value>^*}
216 Evaluate each @<condition> in turn, until one of them produces a non-nil
217 value. If the @<condition> is followed by one or more @<form>s, then bind
218 @|it| to the non-nil value of the @<condition> and evaluate the @<form>s as
219 an implicit @|progn|; otherwise, simply return the value of the
220 @<condition>. If no @<condition> produces a non-nil value then return nil.
221 \end{describe}
222
223 \begin{describe*}
224 {\dhead{mac}{acase @<scrutinee>
225 @{ (@{ @<case> @! (@<case>^*) @} @<form>^*) @}^*
226 @> @<value>^*}
227 \dhead{mac}{aecase @<scrutinee>
228 @{ (@{ @<case> @! (@<case>^*) @} @<form>^*) @}^*
229 @> @<value>^*}
230 \dhead{mac}{atypecase @<scrutinee> @{ (@<type> @<form>^*) @}^*
231 @> @<value>^*}
232 \dhead{mac}{aetypecase @<scrutinee> @{ (@<type> @<form>^*) @}^*
233 @> @<value>^*}}
234 These are like the Common Lisp macros @|case|, @|ecase|, @|typecase|, and
235 @|etypecase|, except that @|it| is bound to the value of the @<scrutinee>
236 while evaluating the matching @<form>s.
237 \end{describe*}
238
239 \begin{describe}{mac}{asetf @{ @<place> @<value> @}^* @> @<value>^*}
240 For each @<place> and @<value> in turn: bind @|it| to the current value of
241 the @<place>, evaluate the @<value> expression, and store the resulting
242 value back in the @<place>. Return the @<value>(s) stored by the final
243 pair: there may be more than one value, e.g., if @<place> is a @|values|
244 form.
245
246 For example, @|(asetf @<place> (1+ it))| is almost equivalent to @|(incf
247 @<place>)|, even if evaluating @<place> has side-effects.
248 \end{describe}
249
250
251 \subsection{Metaobject protocol utilities}
252
253 The following utilities make use of the introspection features of the CLOS
254 metaobject protocol.
255
256 \begin{describe}{gf}{instance-initargs @<instance> @> @<initargs-list>}
257 Return a fresh list of plausible initargs for the given @<instance>.
258
259 This is done by digging through the instance's class's slot definitions and
260 enquiring about their initargs. Initargs which are handled by methods on
261 @|shared-initialize| or similar generic functions won't be discovered.
262 \end{describe}
263
264 \begin{describe*}
265 {\dhead{fun}{copy-instance @<instance> \&rest @<initargs>
266 @> @<new-instance>}
267 \dhead{gf}{copy-instance-using-class @<class> @<instance>
268 \&rest @<initargs>
269 @> @<new-instance>}}
270 The @|copy-instance| function creates and returns a fresh copy of a given
271 @<instance>, possibly modifying it according to the given @<initargs>.
272
273 It immediately calls @|copy-instance-using-class|, calling it with the
274 instance's class and the instance itself, and simply returns the result of
275 that generic function.
276
277 The default method on @|copy-instance-using-class| should work for most
278 classes, but may be overridden to cope with special effects. It works as
279 follows.
280 \begin{enumerate}
281 \item Allocate a fresh instance of @<class>, using @|allocate-instance|.
282 \item For each slot defined by @<class>, if that slot is bound in the
283 original instance, then set the corresponding slot in the new instance to
284 the same value.
285 \item Call @|shared-initialize| on the new instance, providing it the given
286 list of @<initargs>, but inhibiting the usual initialization of slots
287 from their initforms.
288 \item Return the new instance.
289 \end{enumerate}
290 \end{describe*}
291
292 \begin{describe*}
293 {\dhead{gf}{generic-function-methods @<generic-function> @> @<list>}
294 \dhead{gf}{method-specializers @<method> @> @<list>}
295 \dhead{cls}{eql-specializer}
296 \dhead{gf}{eql-specializer-object @<specializer> @> @<value>}}
297 These are precisely the MOP functions and class: the symbols are
298 re-exported for portability, because different Lisp systems define these
299 symbols in different packages.
300 \end{describe*}
301
302
303 \subsection{Other CLOS utilities}
304
305 Some other minor CLOS utilities.
306
307 \begin{describe}{mac}
308 {default-slot (@<instance> @<slot> @[@<slot-names>@]) \\ \ind
309 @<form>^*}
310 This macro is useful in methods (usually @|:after| methods) on
311 @|shared-initialize|, to set slots to some sensible default values in the
312 case where no suitable initarg was given, and default initialization is too
313 complicated to be done using an initform.
314
315 Set a slot to a default value, obeying the @|shared-initialize| protocol.
316 If (a) the named @<slot> of @<instance> is unbound, and (b) either
317 @<slot-names> is @|t|, or @<slot> is a member of the list @<slot-names>,
318 then evaluate the @<form>s as an implicit @|progn| and store their
319 value in the @<slot>. Otherwise do nothing.
320
321 The @<instance>, @<slot>, and @<slot-names> (if any) are evaluated once
322 each, left-to-right.
323 \end{describe}
324
325 \begin{describe}{mac}
326 {define-on-demand-slot @<class> @<slot> (@<instance>) \\ \ind
327 @[[ @<declaration>^* @! @<doc-string> @]] \\
328 @<form>^*}
329 This macro makes slots with delayed initialization: rather than being
330 set when the object is constructed, the slot's initial value is only
331 calculated when it's first requested. This is useful if calculating the
332 slot value is expensive and often not required, or if it's not possible to
333 initialize the slot along with the rest of the object because of dependency
334 cycles.
335
336 The macro arranges things as follows. Whenever @|slot-value| is called
337 (possibly indirectly, via a reader function) to read the named @<slot> (a
338 symbol, not evaluated) on an (indirect) instance of @<class>, but the slot
339 is unbound, then @<instance> is bound to the instance in question and the
340 @<form>s are evaluated as an implicit @|progn| within the lexical
341 environment of the @|define-on-demand-slot| call, and the resulting value
342 is used as the initial value of the slot. (Furthermore, a block named
343 @<slot> is wrapped around the @<form>s, allowing an early return if that
344 should be useful.)
345
346 This macro currently works by defining a method on @|slot-unbound|.
347 \end{describe}
348
349
350 \subsection{Building lists}
351
352 Many Lisp functions end up constructing lists. In simple cases, a function
353 like @|mapcar| will just do the job directly. In more complex cases, a
354 common idiom is to build the list using @|push| for each element in turn; but
355 a list built this way ends up in the wrong order, so an additional pass,
356 usually using @|nreverse|, is necessary to fix it.
357
358 A `list builder' is an object which can be used to construct a list in the
359 right order. (Currently, a list-builder is simply a cons cell, whose cdr
360 points to the first cons-cell of the list, and whose car points to its last
361 cons; an empty list-builder is a cons whose cdr is nil and whose car is the
362 cons itself, i.e., @|\#1=(\#1\# . nil)|.)
363
364 \begin{describe}{fun}{make-list-builder \&optional @<initial> @> @<builder>}
365 Return a fresh new list-builder, initially containing no items.
366 \end{describe}
367
368 \begin{describe}{fun}{lbuild-add @<builder> @<item> @> @<builder>}
369 Add @<item> to the end of the list being constructed in @<builder>.
370 \end{describe}
371
372 \begin{describe}{fun}{lbuild-add-list @<builder> @<list> @> @<builder>}
373 Append @<list> to the list being constructed in @<builder>. The list is
374 \emph{not} copied: adding further items to the list will clobber cdr of its
375 final cons-cell.
376 \end{describe}
377
378 \begin{describe}{fun}{lbuild-list @<builder> @> @<list>}
379 Return the list being constructed in the @<builder>.
380
381 It is permitted to continue adding items to the list: this will mutate the
382 list in-place. Often, this is what you want. For example, one might write
383 an analogue to @|pushnew| like this:
384 \begin{prog}
385 (defun lbuild-add-new
386 (builder item \&key key test test-not \&rest keywords) \\ \ind
387 (declare (ignore key test test-not)) \\
388 (when (apply \#'member item (lbuild-list builder)
389 keywords) \\ \ind
390 (lbuild-add builder item)))
391 \end{prog}
392 \end{describe}
393
394
395 \subsection{Merging lists}
396
397 The following machinery merges lists representing a partial order. The
398 primary use for this is in computing class precedence lists during class
399 finalization. By building the input lists and choosing the tie-breaking
400 @<pick> function appropriately, many different linearization algorithms can
401 be implemented fairly easily using @|merge-lists| below.
402
403 \begin{describe*}
404 {\dhead{cls}
405 {inconsistent-merge-error (error) \&key :candidates :present}
406 \dhead{gf}{merge-error-candidates @<error> @> @<list>}
407 \dhead{gf}{merge-error-present-function @<error> @> @<function>}}
408 The @|inconsistent-merge-error| condition class used to represent a failure
409 of the \descref{fun}{merge-lists}[function].
410
411 The @<candidates> are a list of offending items from the input lists, in
412 some order: the error is reporting that the function has failed because it
413 is not possible to order the items listed in @<candidates> in any way
414 without being inconsistent with at least one of the input lists. There is
415 no default.
416
417 The @<present> function is used to convert the input items into
418 human-readable descriptions (printed using @|princ|); the default is
419 @|identity|, which will simply print the items in a `friendly' format.
420 (Using @|prin1-to-string| would print their machine-readable escaped forms
421 instead.)
422
423 The functions @|merge-error-candidates| and @|merge-error-present-function|
424 respectively retrieve the candidates list and presentation function
425 assigned to a condition when it was created.
426 \end{describe*}
427
428 \begin{describe}{fun}
429 {merge-lists @<lists> \&key :pick :test :present @> @<list>}
430 Return a merge of the @<lists>, considered as partial orderings.
431
432 In more detail: @<lists> should be a list of lists. Each distinct item, as
433 determined by the @<test> function (by default, @|eql|) appears in the
434 result list exactly once. Furthermore, if, in some input list, an item $x$
435 appears earlier than a different item $y$, then $x$ will also precede $y$
436 in the output list.
437
438 If the input lists contradict each other (e.g., list $A$ has $x$ before
439 $y$, but list $B$ has $y$ before $x$), then an error of type
440 @|inconsistent-merge-error| is signalled, with the offending items attached
441 as candidates, and the function @<present> (by default, @|identity|) as the
442 presentation function.
443
444 Frequently, a collection of input lists has multiple valid merges.
445 Whenever @|merge-lists| must decide between two or more equally good
446 candidates, it calls the @<pick> function to choose one of them.
447 Specifically, it invokes @|(funcall @<pick> @<candidates>
448 @<merge-so-far>)|, where @<candidates> are the items it needs to choose
449 between, and @<merge-so-far> is the currently determined prefix of the
450 final merge. The order of items in the @<candidates> list reflects their
451 order in the input lists: item $x$ precedes item $y$ in @<candidates> if
452 any only if an occurrence of $x$ appears in an earlier input list than
453 $y$. (This completely determines the order of candidates: if two items
454 appear in the same list, then that list would have ordered them and we
455 wouldn't have to call @<pick> to break the tie.) The default @<pick>
456 function simply chooses the item appearing in the earliest list, i.e.,
457 effectively
458 \begin{prog}
459 (lambda (candidates merge-so-far) \\ \ind
460 (declare (ignore merge-so-far)) \\
461 (car candidates))
462 \end{prog}
463 \end{describe}
464
465
466 \subsection{Other list utilities}
467
468 \begin{describe}{fun}
469 {mappend @<function> @<list> \&rest @<more-lists> @> @<result-list>}
470 Return the result of appending @<list> and @<more-lists>, in order. All
471 but the final list are copied into the @<result-list>; the last one is used
472 as-is.
473 \end{describe}
474
475 \begin{describe}{mac}
476 {categorize (\=@<item-var> @<items>
477 @[[ :bind (@{ @<var> @!
478 (@<var> @[@<value>@]) @}^*) @]])
479 \\ \ind\ind
480 (@{ (@<cat-var> @<cat-predicate>) @}^*) \-\\
481 @<declaration>^* \\
482 @<form>^*
483 \-\nlret @<value>^*}
484 Partition an input list of @<items> according to the @<cat-predicate>s.
485
486 First, @<items> is evaluated, to yield a list. The @<item-var> is bound,
487 an empty list is created for each @|(@<cat-var> @<cat-predicate>)| pair,
488 and an iteration is begun. For each item in the list in turn is assigned
489 to @<item-var>; then, the bindings given by the @|:bind| keyword are
490 performed, as if by @|let*|; and the @<cat-predicate>s are evaluated in the
491 resulting environment, one by one, until one of them returns non-nil. When
492 this happens, the item is added to the corresponding list. If no predicate
493 matches the item, an error is signalled.
494
495 Once this iteration is complete, each @<cat-var> is bound to its
496 corresponding completed list, and the body @<form>s are evaluated in the
497 resulting environment (which does not include @<item-var>), as an implicit
498 @|progn|, and the macro yields the values of the final @<form>.
499 \end{describe}
500
501 \begin{describe}{fun}{partial-order-minima @<items> @<order> @> @<list>}
502 Return a list of minimal items from the list @<items> according to a
503 non-strict partial order defined by the function @<order>: @|(funcall
504 @<order> $x$ $y$)| should return non-nil if and only if $x \preceq y$ in
505 the partial order.
506 \end{describe}
507
508 \begin{describe}{fun}
509 {find-duplicates @<report> @<sequence> \&key :key :test}
510 Call @<report> on each pair of duplicate items in a @<sequence>.
511 Duplicates are determined according to the @<key> (by default @|identity|)
512 and @<test> (by default @|eql|) functions, in the usual way: two items $x$
513 and $y$ are considered equal if and only if @|(funcall @<test> (funcall
514 @<key> $x$) (funcall @<key> $y$))| returns non-nil.
515
516 The @<report> function is called as @|(funcall @<report> @<duplicate>
517 @<previous>)|. Duplicates are reported in order; the @<previous> item is
518 always the first matching item in the sequence.
519
520 This function will work for arbitrary @<test> functions, but it will run
521 much more efficiently if @<test> is @|eq|, @|eql|, @|equal|, or @|equalp|,
522 because it can use hash-tables. (The generic implementation for lists is
523 especially inefficient.)
524 \end{describe}
525
526
527 \subsection{Position tracking}
528
529 The following functions are used to maintain file positions: see
530 \xref{sec:parsing.floc}. Columns are counted starting from zero at the far
531 left. (No particular origin is needed for line numbers.) Newlines, vertical
532 tabs, and form-feeds all move to the start of the next line; horizontal tabs
533 move to the next multiple of eight columns; other characters simply advance
534 to the next column.
535
536 \begin{describe}{fun}
537 {update-position @<character> @<line> @<column>
538 @> @<new-line> @<new-column>}
539 Assume that we found @<character> at a particular @<line> and @<column> in
540 a file: return the @<new-line> and @<new-column> for the next character.
541 \end{describe}
542
543 \begin{describe}{fun}
544 {backtrack-position @<character> @<line> @<column>
545 @> @<old-line> @<old-column>}
546 Assume that we are currently at a particular @<line> and @<column> in a
547 file, and wish to \emph{unread} @<character>: return an @<old-line> and
548 @<old-column> at which we might plausibly re-read the character, so that
549 the next call to \descref{fun}{update-position} will return us to @<line>
550 and @<column>. (Specifically, the @<old-column> will likely be wrong if
551 @<character> is a horizontal tab. It is expected that this won't matter:
552 the purpose of this function is to set things up so that the
553 @|update-position| call that will accompany re-reading the character will
554 return the correct values, rather than to use the @<old-line> and
555 @<old-column> for any other purpose.)
556 \end{describe}
557
558
559 \subsection{Object printing}
560
561 \begin{describe}{mac}
562 {maybe-print-unreadable-object
563 (@<object> @<stream>
564 @[[ :type @<type> @!
565 :identity @<identity> @]]) \\ \ind
566 @<declaration>^* \\
567 @<form>^*}
568 If @|*print-escape*| is nil, then simply evaluate the @<form>s as an
569 implicit @|progn|; otherwise, print an `unreadable' object, as if by
570 \begin{prog}
571 (print-unreadable-object
572 (@<object> @<stream>
573 @[:type @<type>@]
574 @[:identity @<identity>@]) \\ \ind
575 @<form>^*)
576 \end{prog}
577 \end{describe}
578
579 \begin{describe}{fun}{print-ugly-stuff @<stream> @<func> @> @<value>^*}
580 If @<stream> is a pretty-printing stream, then print a mandatory newline,
581 and call @<func> on the underlying non-pretty-printing stream. If
582 @<stream> is not a pretty-printing stream, then simply call @<func> on
583 @<stream> directly.
584
585 The main purpose for this is to be able to access features of the
586 underlying stream which a pretty-printing stream can't proxy. Most
587 notably, this is used by C fragment output, which takes advantage of an
588 underlying \descref{cls}{position-aware-output-stream} to print @|\#line|
589 directives, so that a C~compiler will blame the original fragment in the
590 Sod module source rather than the generated C code.
591 \end{describe}
592
593
594 \subsection{Condition utilities}
595
596 The following definitions are useful when working with conditions.
597
598 \begin{describe}{cls}
599 {simple-control-error (control-error simple-error)
600 \&key :format-control :format-arguments}
601 This is the obvious multiply-inherited subclass of @|control-error| whose
602 print form is determined by a @<format-control> and a @<format-arguments>
603 list.
604 \end{describe}
605
606 \begin{describe}{fun}
607 {designated-condition
608 \=@<default-type> @<datum> @<arguments> \\
609 \>\&key :allow-pointless-arguments
610 \nlret @<condition>}
611 Creates and returns a condition object of @<default-type>, given a
612 condition designator @<datum> and @<arguments>.
613
614 The Common Lisp specification carefully explains how a `datum' and an
615 argument list together form a `condition designator', and how such a pair
616 are to be converted into a condition object with some default type, but
617 there's no mechanism provided to simply do this task. (Functions like
618 @|error| and @|signal| implicitly, but have possibly-undesirable
619 side-effects, and don't allow control over the default type.)
620
621 \begin{itemize}
622
623 \item If @<datum> is a condition object, then the designated condition is
624 simply @<datum>. In this case, if @<arguments> is not an empty list and
625 @<allow-pointless-arguments> is nil (the default), an error is signalled;
626 otherwise, the @<arguments> are ignored.
627
628 \item If @<datum> is a symbol, then the designated condition is constructed
629 by calling
630 \begin{prog}
631 (apply \#'make-condition @<datum> @<arguments>)
632 \end{prog}
633
634 \item If @<datum> is a string or function (i.e., a `format-control'), then
635 the designated condition is constructed by calling
636 \begin{prog}
637 (make-condition \=@<default-type> \\
638 \>:format-control @<datum> \\
639 \>:format-arguments @<arguments>)
640 \end{prog}
641
642 \item Otherwise the designator is malformed, and an error is signalled.
643 \end{itemize}
644 \end{describe}
645
646 \begin{describe}{fun}
647 {invoke-associated-restart @<restart> @<condition> \&rest @<arguments>}
648 Invoke the active restart named @<restart>, associated with the given
649 @<condition>, passing a list of @<arguments>.
650
651 The function attempts to find and invoke a restart with the given name. If
652 @<condition> is non-nil, then it searches among restarts associated with
653 that specific condition, and restarts associated with no condition; if
654 @<condition> is nil, then it searches among all restarts.
655
656 If a matching restart is found, it is invoked, passing the @<arguments>
657 list. Otherwise, an error (of class @|control-error|) is signalled.
658 \end{describe}
659
660 \begin{describe*}
661 {\dhead{cls}{enclosing-condition (condition) \&key :condition}
662 \dhead{gf}{enclosed-condition @<enclosing-condition> @> @<condition>}}
663 An @|enclosing condition| is a condition which contains another condition
664 within it. Objects of type @|enclosing-condition| are used to add
665 additional information to an existing condition, or to alter the type of a
666 condition without losing information.
667
668 When an @|enclosing-condition| is constructed, the @<condition> argument
669 names the existing condition to be enclosed. This enclosed condition can
670 be retrieved by calling @|enclosed-condition|.
671 \end{describe*}
672
673 \begin{describe}{cls}{information (condition) \&key}
674 A condition of class @|information| conveys information which might be of
675 interest, but does not of itself indicate that anything is wrong.
676
677 Within a compiler, @|information| conditions may be signalled in order to
678 present the user with additional diagnostic information about a recently
679 reported error.
680 \end{describe}
681
682 \begin{describe}{cls}
683 {simple-information (simple-condition information) \\ \ind
684 \&key :format-control :format-arguments}
685 This is the obvious multiply-inherited subclass of @|information|
686 whose print-representation is determined by a @<format-control> and a
687 @<format-arguments> list.
688 \end{describe}
689
690 \begin{describe*}
691 {\dhead{fun}{info @<datum> \&rest @<arguments> @> @<flag>}
692 \dhead{rst}{noted}
693 \dhead{fun}{noted \&optional @<condition>}}
694 The @|info| function establishes a restart named @|noted| and signals a
695 condition of default type @|simple-information|, designated by the @<datum>
696 and @<arguments>. The @|info| function returns non-nil if and only if the
697 associated @|noted| restart was invoked.
698
699 The @|noted| restart accepts no arguments.
700
701 The @|noted| function finds and invokes a @|noted| restart: if @<condition>
702 is non-nil, then only the restart associated with that condition (and those
703 not associated with any condition) are considered; otherwise, all
704 conditions are considered.
705 \end{describe*}
706
707 \begin{describe}{fun}
708 {promiscuous-cerror @<continue-string> @<datum> \&rest @<arguments>}
709 Establish a @|continue| restart and signal an error of default type
710 @|simple-error|, designated by @<datum> and @<arguments>. The restart's
711 report format is determined by @<continue-string> and the @<arguments>.
712
713 Some implementations of @|cerror| associate the @|continue| restart which
714 they establish with the condition they signal. This interferes with
715 special effects -- specifically, enclosing the signalled condition and
716 resignalling it. The @|promiscuous-cerror| function carefully avoids
717 associating its restart with the condition.
718 \end{describe}
719
720 \begin{describe}{fun}{cerror* @<datum> \&rest @<arguments>}
721 A simplified version of \descref{fun}{promiscuous-cerror} which uses the
722 hardcoded string @|Continue| for the restart. This makes calling the
723 function more similar to other condition-signalling functions, at the
724 expense of some usability in environments which don't continue after
725 continuable errors automatically.
726 \end{describe}
727
728
729 \subsection{Very miscellaneous utilities}
730
731 \begin{describe}{fun}
732 {whitespace-char-p @<character> @> @<generalized-boolean>}
733 Return non-nil if and only if @<character> is a whitespace character.
734
735 A character is whitespace if @|(peek-char t @<stream>)| would skip it.
736 \end{describe}
737
738 \begin{describe}{fun}
739 {frob-identifier @<string> \&key :swap-case :swap-hyphen
740 @> @<frobbed-string>}
741 Return a `frobbed' version of the identifier @<string>. Two different
742 transformations can be applied.
743
744 \begin{itemize}
745
746 \item If @<swap-case> is non-nil (the default), and the letters in
747 @<string> are either all uppercase or all lowercase, then switch the case
748 of all of the letters.
749
750 \item If @<swap-hyphen> is non-nil (the default), and @<string> contains
751 either hyphens @`--' or underscores @`_', but not both, then replace the
752 hyphens by underscores or \emph{vice-versa}.
753
754 \end{itemize}
755
756 (These are the `obvious' transformations to convert a C identifier into a
757 Lisp symbol.)
758
759 Some examples:
760 \begin{itemize}
761 \item @|(frob-identifier "foo")| $\Longrightarrow$ @|"FOO"|
762 \item @|(frob-identifier "FOO")| $\Longrightarrow$ @|"foo"|
763 \item @|(frob-identifier "FooBar")| $\Longrightarrow$ @|"FooBar"|
764 \item @|(frob-identifier "Foo-Bar")| $\Longrightarrow$ @|"Foo_Bar"|
765 \item @|(frob-identifier "Foo_Bar")| $\Longrightarrow$ @|"Foo-Bar"|
766 \item @|(frob-identifier "foo_bar")| $\Longrightarrow$ @|"FOO-BAR"|
767 \item @|(frob-identifier "foo_bar" :swap-hyphen nil)| $\Longrightarrow$
768 @|"FOO_BAR"|
769 \item @|(frob-identifier "foo_bar" :swap-case nil)| $\Longrightarrow$
770 @|"foo-bar"|
771 \item @|(frob-identifier "foo_bar" :swap-case nil :swap-hyphen nil)|
772 $\Longrightarrow$ @|"foo_bar"|
773 \end{itemize}
774 \end{describe}
775
776 \begin{describe}{fun}
777 {compose @<functions> @> @<function>}
778 Return the left-to-right composition zero or more @<functions>.
779
780 Let $f_1$, $f_2$, \ldots, $f_n$ be functions, and let $g = @|(compose $f_1$
781 $f_2$ $\cdots$ $f_n$)|$ is their composition. If $g$ is applied to
782 arguments, the effect is as follows: first, $f_1$ is applied to the
783 arguments, yielding some value; $f_2$ is applied to this value, yielding a
784 second value; and so on, until finally the value yielded by $f_n$ is
785 returned as the result of $g$. Note that this is the reverse of the usual
786 mathematician's convention, but the author finds this ordering
787 significantly easier to work with:
788 \[ g = f_n \circ \cdots \circ f_2 \circ f_1 \]
789
790 If any of the input functions return multiple values then \emph{all} of the
791 values are passed on to the next function in the list. (If the last
792 function returns multiple values then all of the values are returned from
793 the composition.
794
795 The result of composing no functions is a function which simply returns all
796 of its arguments as values; essentially, $@|(compose)| \equiv
797 @|\#'values|$.
798 \end{describe}
799
800 \begin{describe}{mac}{defvar-unbound @<name> @<documentation> @> @<name>}
801 Define a variable called @<name>, with a @<documentation> string.
802
803 The Common Lisp @|defvar| macro accepts both an initial value and a
804 doc-string as optional arguments, in that order, with the result that it's
805 not possible to define a variable and establish a documentation string for
806 it without also giving it an initial value. The @|defvar-unbound| macro,
807 on the other hand, never changes the symbol's variable-value.
808 \end{describe}
809
810 \begin{describe}{mac}
811 {dosequence (@<var> @<sequence>
812 @[[ :start @<start> @! :end @<end> @!
813 :indexvar @<index-var> @]]) \\ \ind
814 @<declaration>^* \\
815 @{ @<tag> @! @<statement> @}^*}
816 Iterate over a @<sequence>. Common Lisp has a rich collection of iteration
817 primitives, and a rich collection of functions for working with sequences,
818 but no macro for iterating over the items of a sequence.
819
820 First, the @<sequence> is evaluated. If @<start> and/or @<end> are
821 provided, they are also evaluated (in that order), which should produce
822 integers; @<end> may be also be nil. If not provided, or nil (in the case
823 of @<end>), @<start> and @<end> default respectively to zero and the length
824 of the @<sequence>. For each item in the sequence between the @<start> and
825 @<end> positions (i.e., each item in @|(subseq @<sequence> @<start>
826 @<end>)|, in order, the body is evaluated as an implicit @|tagbody|, with
827 @<var> bound to the item and, if provided, @<index-var> bound to the item's
828 index. It is not specified whether the @<var> and @<index-var> are
829 let-bound or mutated in each iteration.
830
831 Unlike other Common Lisp @|do|\dots\ forms, there is no `result' form.
832 \end{describe}
833
834 \begin{describe}{mac}
835 {define-access-wrapper @<from> @<to>
836 @[[ :read-only @<read-only-flag> @]]}
837 Define @<from> as a function of one argument, so that @|(@<from> @<thing>)|
838 is equivalent to @|(@<to> @<thing>)|. If @<read-only-flag> is nil (the
839 default), then also define @|(setf @<from>)| so that @|(setf (@<from>
840 @<thing>) @<value>)| is equivalent to @|(setf (@<to> @<thing>) @<value>)|.
841
842 In a @|defstruct| form, the accessor function names are constructed based
843 on the structure name and slot names. The structure name and accessor
844 names are part of the exported interface, but the slot names ideally
845 shouldn't be. This causes a problem when the slot name which will lead to
846 the right accessor is already an external symbol in some package. You can
847 solve this problem by choosing an internal name for the symbol, and then
848 using this macro to define an accessor function with the name that you
849 want, in terms of the accessor that @|defstruct| made.
850 \end{describe}
851
852 \begin{describe}{fun}
853 {distinguished-point-shortest-paths @<root> @<neighbours-func>
854 @> @<list>}
855 Calculate the shortest path from the @<root> to each node reachable from it
856 in a directed graph. The nodes of the graph can be any kind of object;
857 they will be compared using @|eql|.
858
859 The @<neighbours-func> should be a function which, given a node~$v$ as its
860 only argument, returns a list of cons cells @|($v'$ . $c'$)|, one for each
861 node~$v'$ adjacent to $v$, indicating the cost $c'$ of traversing the arc
862 from $v$ to $v'$.
863
864 The return value is a list of cons cells @|($c$ . $p$)|, where $p$ is list
865 of nodes, in reverse order, along a path from the @<root> to some other
866 node, and $c$ is the total cost of traversing this path. (Therefore @|(car
867 $p$)| is the destination node, and @|(car (last $p$))| is always the
868 @<root> itself.)
869
870 The function runs in $O(n^2)$ time, where $n$ is the number of nodes
871 reachable from the @<root>. Currently, it uses an algorithm due to Edsger
872 Dijkstra.
873 \end{describe}
874
875
876 \subsection{Other exported symbols}
877
878 \begin{describe}{sym}{int}
879 The symbol @|int| is exported by the @|sod-utilities| package, without
880 giving it any particular meaning. This is done because it's given
881 non-conflicting meanings by two different packages, and it's more
882 convenient for user code not to have to deal with an unnecessary symbol
883 conflict. Specifically, the @|sod| package wants to define it as a C type
884 specifier, see \descref{cls}{simple-c-type}; and @|optparse| wants to
885 define it as an option handler, see \descref{opt}{int}.
886 \end{describe}
887
888 %%%--------------------------------------------------------------------------
889 \section{Option parser} \label{sec:misc.optparse}
890
891 Most of these symbols are defined in the @|optparse| package.
892
893 \begin{describe}{fun}{exit \&optional (@<code> 0) \&key :abrupt}
894 \end{describe}
895
896 \begin{describe}{var}{*program-name*}
897 \end{describe}
898
899 \begin{describe}{var}{*command-line*}
900 \end{describe}
901
902 \begin{describe}{fun}{set-command-line-arguments}
903 \end{describe}
904
905 \begin{describe}{fun}{moan @<format-string> \&rest @<format-args>}
906 \end{describe}
907
908 \begin{describe}{fun}{die @<format-string> \&rest @<format-args>}
909 \end{describe}
910
911 \begin{describe}{var}{*options*}
912 \end{describe}
913
914 \begin{describe}{cls}{option}
915 \end{describe}
916
917 \begin{describe}{fun}{optionp @<object> @> @<generalized-boolean>}
918 \end{describe}
919
920 \begin{describe}{fun}
921 {make-option \=@<long-name> @<short-name> \+\\
922 \&optional @<arg-name> \\
923 \&key :tag :negated-tag
924 :arg-optional-p :documentation \-
925 \nlret @<option>}
926 \end{describe}
927
928 \begin{describe*}
929 {\dhead{fun}{opt-short-name @<option> @> @<character-or-null>}
930 \dhead{fun}{setf (opt-short-name @<option>) @<character-or-null>}
931 \dhead{fun}{opt-long-name @<option> @> @<string-or-null>}
932 \dhead{fun}{setf (opt-long-name @<option>) @<string-or-null>}
933 \dhead{fun}{opt-tag @<option> @> @<tag>}
934 \dhead{fun}{setf (opt-tag @<option>) @<tag>}
935 \dhead{fun}{opt-negated-tag @<option> @> @<tag>}
936 \dhead{fun}{setf (opt-negated-tag @<option>) @<tag>}
937 \dhead{fun}{opt-arg-name @<option> @> @<string-or-null>}
938 \dhead{fun}{setf (opt-arg-name @<option>) @<string-or-null>}
939 \dhead{fun}{opt-arg-optional-p @<option> @> @<generalized-boolean>}
940 \dhead{fun}{setf (opt-arg-optional-p @<option>) @<generalized-boolean>}
941 \dhead{fun}{opt-documentation @<option> @> @<string-or-null>}
942 \dhead{fun}{setf (opt-documentation @<option>) @<string-or-null>}}
943 \end{describe*}
944
945 \begin{describe}{cls}{option-parser}
946 \end{describe}
947
948 \begin{describe}{fun}{option-parser-p @<object> @> @<generalized-boolean>}
949 \end{describe}
950
951 \begin{describe}{fun}
952 {make-option-parser \&key \=:args :options :non-option :numericp \+ \\
953 :negated-numeric-p long-only-p \-
954 \nlret @<option-parser>}
955 \end{describe}
956
957 \begin{describe*}
958 {\dhead{fun}{op-options @<option-parser> @> @<list>}
959 \dhead{fun}{setf (op-options @<option-parser>) @<list>}
960 \dhead{fun}{op-non-option @<option-parser> @> @<action>}
961 \dhead{fun}{setf (op-non-option @<option-parser>) @<action>}
962 \dhead{fun}{op-long-only-p @<option-parser> @> @<generalized-boolean>}
963 \dhead{fun}{setf (op-long-only-p @<option-parser>) @<generalized-boolean>}
964 \dhead{fun}{op-numeric-p @<option-parser> @> @<generalized-boolean>}
965 \dhead{fun}{setf (op-numeric-p @<option-parser>) @<generalized-boolean>}
966 \dhead{fun}{op-negated-numeric-p @<option-parser> @<generalized-boolean>}
967 \dhead{fun}{setf (op-negated-numeric-p @<option-parser>) @<generalized-boolean>}
968 \dhead{fun}{op-negated-p @<option-parser> @> @<generalized-boolean>}
969 \dhead{fun}{setf (op-negated-p @<option-parser>) @<generalized-boolean>}}
970 \end{describe*}
971
972 \begin{describe}{cls}
973 {option-parse-error (error simple-condition)
974 \&key :format-control :format-arguments}
975 \end{describe}
976
977 \begin{describe}{fun}{option-parse-error @<msg> \&optional @<args>}
978 \end{describe}
979
980 \begin{describe}{fun}{option-parse-remainder @<option-parser>}
981 \end{describe}
982
983 \begin{describe}{fun}{option-parse-return @<tag> \&optional @<argument>}
984 \end{describe}
985
986 \begin{describe}{fun}{option-parse-next @<option-parser>}
987 \end{describe}
988
989 \begin{describe}{mac}{option-parse-try @<form>^*}
990 \end{describe}
991
992 \begin{describe}{mac}{with-unix-error-reporting () @<form>^*}
993 \end{describe}
994
995 \begin{describe}{mac}
996 {defopthandler @<name> (@<var> @[@<arg>@]) @<lambda-list> \\ \ind
997 @[[ @<declaration>^* @! @<doc-string> @]] \\
998 @<form>^*}
999 \end{describe}
1000
1001 \begin{describe}{fun}
1002 {invoke-option-handler @<handler> @<locative> @<arg> @<arguments>}
1003 \end{describe}
1004
1005 \begin{describe}{opt}{set \&optional @<value>}
1006 \end{describe}
1007
1008 \begin{describe}{opt}{clear \&optional @<value>}
1009 \end{describe}
1010
1011 \begin{describe}{opt}{inc \&optional @<maximum> @<step>}
1012 \end{describe}
1013
1014 \begin{describe}{opt}{dec \&optional @<minimum> @<step>}
1015 \end{describe}
1016
1017 \begin{describe}{opt}{read}
1018 \end{describe}
1019
1020 \begin{describe}{opt}{int \&key :radix :min :max}
1021 \end{describe}
1022
1023 \begin{describe}{opt}{string}
1024 \end{describe}
1025
1026 \begin{describe}{opt}{keyword \&optional @<valid>}
1027 \end{describe}
1028
1029 \begin{describe}{opt}{list \&optional @<handler> \&rest @<handler-args>}
1030 \end{describe}
1031
1032 \begin{describe}{mac}
1033 {defoptmacro @<name> @<lambda-list> \\ \ind
1034 @[[ @<declaration>^* @! @<doc-string> @]] \\
1035 @<form>^*}
1036 \end{describe}
1037
1038 \begin{describe}{fun}{parse-option-form @<form>}
1039 \end{describe}
1040
1041 \begin{describe}{mac}
1042 {options @{ \=@<string> @! \+ \\
1043 @<option-macro> @! (@<option-macro> @<macro-arg>^*) @! \\
1044 (@[[ \=@<character> @! (:short-name @<character>) @! \+ \\
1045 @<string>^* @! @<symbol> @! @<rational> @!
1046 (:long-name @<string>) @! \\
1047 (@<string> @<format-arg>^+) @!
1048 (:doc @<string> @<format-arg>^*) @! \\
1049 (:arg @<arg-name>) @! (:opt-arg @<arg-name>) @! \\
1050 @<keyword> @! (:tag @<tag>) @!
1051 (:negated-tag @<tag>) @! \\
1052 @{ (@<handler> @<var> @<handler-arg>^*) @}^*
1053 @]]) @}^*}
1054 \end{describe}
1055
1056 \begin{describe}{fun}
1057 {simple-usage @<option-list> \&optional @<mandatory-args> @> @<list>}
1058 \end{describe}
1059
1060 \begin{describe}{fun}{show-usage @<prog> @<usage> \&optional @<stream>}
1061 \end{describe}
1062
1063 \begin{describe}{fun}
1064 {show-help @<prog> @<usage> @<option-list> \&optional @<stream>}
1065 \end{describe}
1066
1067 \begin{describe}{fun}{sanity-check-option-list @<option-list>}
1068 \end{describe}
1069
1070 \begin{describe*}
1071 {\dhead{var}{*help*}
1072 \dhead{var}{*version*}
1073 \dhead{var}{*usage*}}
1074 \end{describe*}
1075
1076 \begin{describe}{fun}{do-usage \&optional @<stream>}
1077 \end{describe}
1078
1079 \begin{describe}{fun}{die-usage}
1080 \end{describe}
1081
1082 \begin{describe}{optmac}
1083 {help-options \&key :short-help :short-version :short-usage}
1084 \end{describe}
1085
1086 \begin{describe}{fun}
1087 {define-program \&key \=:program-name \+ \\
1088 :help :version :usage :full-usage \\
1089 :options}
1090 \end{describe}
1091
1092 \begin{describe}{mac}
1093 {do-options (@[[ :parser @<option-parser> @]]) \\ \ind
1094 @{ (@{ @<case> @! (@<case>^*)@} (@[@[@<opt-var>@] @<arg-var>@])
1095 @<form>^*) @}^*}
1096 \end{describe}
1097
1098 \begin{describe}{fun}{sod-frontend:augment-options @<options-list>}
1099 \end{describe}
1100
1101 %%%--------------------------------------------------------------------------
1102 \section{Property sets} \label{sec:misc.pset}
1103
1104 \begin{describe}{fun}{property-key @<name> @> @<keyword>}
1105 \end{describe}
1106
1107 \begin{describe}{gf}{decode-property @<raw-value> @> @<type> @<value>}
1108 \end{describe}
1109
1110 \begin{describe}{cls}{property}
1111 \end{describe}
1112
1113 \begin{describe}{fun}{propertyp @<object> @> @<generalized-boolean>}
1114 \end{describe}
1115
1116 \begin{describe}{fun}
1117 {make-property @<name> @<raw-value> \&key :type :location :seenp}
1118 \end{describe}
1119
1120 \begin{describe*}
1121 {\dhead{fun}{p-name @<property> @> @<name>}
1122 \dhead{meth}{property}{file-location (@<property> property) @> @<floc>}
1123 \dhead{fun}{p-value @<property> @> @<value>}
1124 \dhead{fun}{p-type @<property> @> @<type>}
1125 \dhead{fun}{p-key @<property> @> @<symbol>}
1126 \dhead{fun}{p-seenp @<property> @> @<boolean>}
1127 \dhead{fun}{setf (p-seenp @<property>) @<boolean>}}
1128 \end{describe*}
1129
1130 \begin{describe}{gf}
1131 {coerce-property-value @<value> @<type> @<wanted> @> @<coerced-value>}
1132 \end{describe}
1133
1134 \begin{describe}{cls}{pset}
1135 \end{describe}
1136
1137 \begin{describe}{fun}{psetp @<object> @> @<generalized-boolean>}
1138 \end{describe}
1139
1140 \begin{describe}{fun}{make-pset @> @<pset>}
1141 \end{describe}
1142
1143 \begin{describe}{fun}{pset-get @<pset> @<key> @> @<property-or-nil>}
1144 \end{describe}
1145
1146 \begin{describe}{fun}{pset-store @<pset> @<property> @> @<property>}
1147 \end{describe}
1148
1149 \begin{describe}{fun}{pset-map @<func> @<pset>}
1150 \end{describe}
1151
1152 \begin{describe}{mac}
1153 {with-pset-iterator (@<iter> @<pset>) @<declaration>^* @<form>^*}
1154 \end{describe}
1155
1156 \begin{describe}{fun}
1157 {store-property @<pset> @<name> @<value> \&key :type :location
1158 @> @<property>}
1159 \end{describe}
1160
1161 \begin{describe}{fun}
1162 {get-property @<pset> @<name> @<type> \&optional @<default>
1163 @> @<value> @<floc-or-nil>}
1164 \end{describe}
1165
1166 \begin{describe}{fun}
1167 {add-property @<pset> @<name> @<value> \&key :type :location
1168 @> @<property>}
1169 \end{describe}
1170
1171 \begin{describe}{fun}{make-property-set \&rest @<plist> @> @<pset>}
1172 \end{describe}
1173
1174 \begin{describe}{gf}{property-set @<thing> @> @<pset>}
1175 \end{describe}
1176
1177 \begin{describe}{fun}{check-unused-properties @<pset>}
1178 \end{describe}
1179
1180 \begin{describe}{mac}
1181 {default-slot-from-property
1182 (@<instance> @<slot> @[@<slot-names>@]) \\ \ind\ind
1183 (@<pset> @<property> @<type> @[@<prop-var> @<convert-form>^*@]) \- \\
1184 @<declaration>^* \\
1185 @<default-form>^*}
1186 \end{describe}
1187
1188 \begin{describe}{fun}
1189 {parse-property @<scanner> @<pset>
1190 @> @<result> @<success-flag> @<consumed-flag>}
1191 \end{describe}
1192
1193 \begin{describe}{fun}
1194 {parse-property-set @<scanner>
1195 @> @<result> @<success-flag> @<consumed-flag>}
1196 \end{describe}
1197
1198 %%%--------------------------------------------------------------------------
1199 \section{Miscellaneous translator features} \label{sec:misc.misc}
1200
1201 \begin{describe}{var}{*sod-version*}
1202 \end{describe}
1203
1204 \begin{describe}{var}{*debugout-pathname*}
1205 \end{describe}
1206
1207 \begin{describe}{fun}
1208 {test-module @<path> \&key :reason :clear :backtrace @> @<status>}
1209 \end{describe}
1210
1211 \begin{describe}{fun}
1212 {test-parse-c-type @<string>
1213 @> t @<c-type> @<kernel> @<string> @! nil @<indicator>}
1214 \end{describe}
1215
1216 \begin{describe}{fun}
1217 {test-parse-pset @<string>
1218 @> t @<pset> @! nil @<indicator>}
1219 \end{describe}
1220
1221 \begin{describe}{mac}
1222 {test-parser (@<scanner> \&key :backtrace) @<parser> @<input>
1223 @> @<result> @<status> @<remainder>}
1224 \end{describe}
1225
1226 \begin{describe}{fun}{exercise}
1227 \end{describe}
1228
1229 \begin{describe}{fun}{sod-frontend:main}
1230 \end{describe}
1231
1232 %%%----- That's all, folks --------------------------------------------------
1233
1234 %%% Local variables:
1235 %%% mode: LaTeX
1236 %%% TeX-master: "sod.tex"
1237 %%% TeX-PDF-mode: t
1238 %%% End: