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Re: lexical-let detail semantics


From: Pascal J. Bourguignon
Subject: Re: lexical-let detail semantics
Date: Mon, 27 Jul 2009 15:16:44 +0200
User-agent: Gnus/5.101 (Gnus v5.10.10) Emacs/22.2 (gnu/linux)

Daniel Kraft <d@domob.eu> writes:

> Hi,
>
> I'm working on an implementation of elisp for GNU Guile, and want to
> include the lexical-let construct from the Common Lisp Extensions of
> elisp.  There are some details of its semantics I'm not sure about and
> that are not clarified in the documentation of lexical-let, so I had
> to do some experiments.  Here are two questions that came up during
> these where I'd love to hear comments from regular elisp users:
>
>
> 1) let within lexical-let:
>
> (setq a 1)
> (defun dyna () a)
> (lexical-let ((a 2))
>   (let ((a 3))
>     (print (dyna))))
>   => 1

If you have a look at the macro expansion of lexical-let, it looks
like it is the intended behavior.

(macroexpand '(lexical-let ((a 2))
               (let ((a 3))
                 (print (dyna)))))
--> (let ((--cl-a-- 2)) (letf (((symbol-value (quote --cl-a--)) 3)) (print 
(dyna))))



> My first thought was that a let within the lexical scope of another

> lexical-let would revert the symbols to dynamic scoping again, but it
> seems that let behaves just as if it was lexical-let for symbols
> already lexically bound.
>
> Is this 'expected behaviour' or something 'by chance'?  Do you think
> it is necessary for compatibility with (most) existing code to mimic
> this behaviour or would it be ok for the code above to print 3?

I agree, it's not what I'd expect either.

Have a look at the Common Lisp reference:
http://www.lispworks.com/documentation/HyperSpec/Body/s_let_l.htm
http://www.lispworks.com/documentation/HyperSpec/Body/d_specia.htm


I would translate the above forms in Common Lisp as:

(SETF (SYMBOL-VALUE 'A) 1)

(DEFUN DYNA () 
  (DECLARE (SPECIAL A))
  A)

(LET ((A 2))
  (LET ((A 3))
    (DECLARE (SPECIAL A))
    (PRINT (DYNA))))
prints: 3
--> 3



You can avoid the problem by putting the dynaminc bindings outside of
reach of lexical-let:

(defun call-dyna ()
  (let ((a 3)) (print (dyna))))

(lexical-let ((a 2))
        (call-dyna))
prints: 3
--> 3


Notice also that in languages that have both special variables and
lexical variables, it is found worthwhile to keep them in separate
name spaces.  In ISO-LISP, this is done with the (dynamic var) form
for special variables.  In Common Lisp it's done with the *earmuff*
convention.


(defvar *a* 1)
(defun dyna ()
    (print *a*))
(lexical-let ((a 2))
   (let ((*a* 3))
     (dyna)))
prints: 3
--> 3

which is what we expect:

(macroexpand '(lexical-let ((a 2))
                 (let ((*a* 3))
                   (dyna))))
--> (let ((--cl-a-- 2)) (let ((*a* 3)) (dyna)))





You may report the bug to the maintainers, but I'm not sure it's
worthwhile.  If you want a real language, perhaps you could use
emacs-cl?  http://www.lisp.se/emacs-cl/


> In contrast, the code:
>
> (setq a 1)
> (defun dyna () a)
> (lexical-let ((a 2))
>   ((lambda (a)
>      (print (dyna))) 3))
>   => 3
>
> does indeed revert a to dynamic binding...  This seems somewhat
> inconsistent to me (although of course argument-lists and let's are
> not really the same thing).

Yes, there's a (theorical) equivalence between lambda and let.

In this case again the macroexpansion explains why it works:

(macroexpand '(lexical-let ((a 2))
               ((lambda (a)
                  (print (dyna))) 3)))
--> (let ((--cl-a-- 2)) (funcall (function (lambda (a) (print (dyna)))) 3))



> 2) Closures:
>
> I'm happy that lexical-let works well to build closures (and in fact
> it seems that this is the main intention for lexical-let at all);
> however this code does not work as expected:
>
> (setq a 1)
> (lexical-let ((a 2))
>   ((lambda () (print a))))
>   => 1
>
> I don't know why, but it seems that calling a closure directly fails,
> while storing it and calling it later succeeds (as in the examples at
> http://www.delorie.com/gnu/docs/emacs/cl_21.html for instance).  Is
> this a bug or again something expected?  If the latter, what's the
> exact rationale and semantics then?

I guess you have a bug in your version.  Mine works ok.
Again, the macroexpansion explains what lexical-let does in this case:

(macroexpand '(lexical-let ((a 2))
               ((lambda () (print a)))))
--> (let ((--cl-a-- (make-symbol "--a--")))
      (setf (symbol-value --cl-a--) 2)
      (funcall (list (quote lambda) (quote (&rest --cl-rest--))
                     (list (quote apply)
                           (function (lambda (G93796) (print (symbol-value 
G93796))))
                           (list (quote quote) --cl-a--)
                           (quote --cl-rest--)))))

In emacs-version "22.2.1", I get the right result:

(lexical-let ((a 2))
    ((lambda () (print a))))
prints: 2
--> 2


-- 
__Pascal Bourguignon__


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