1 ;;;; This file contains the definition of non-CLASS types (e.g.
2 ;;;; subtypes of interesting BUILT-IN-CLASSes) and the interfaces to
3 ;;;; the type system. Common Lisp type specifiers are parsed into a
4 ;;;; somewhat canonical internal type representation that supports
5 ;;;; type union, intersection, etc. (Except that ALIEN types have
8 ;;;; This software is part of the SBCL system. See the README file for
11 ;;;; This software is derived from the CMU CL system, which was
12 ;;;; written at Carnegie Mellon University and released into the
13 ;;;; public domain. The software is in the public domain and is
14 ;;;; provided with absolutely no warranty. See the COPYING and CREDITS
15 ;;;; files for more information.
17 (in-package "SB!KERNEL")
19 (/show0 "late-type.lisp 19")
21 (!begin-collecting-cold-init-forms)
23 ;;; ### Remaining incorrectnesses:
25 ;;; There are all sorts of nasty problems with open bounds on FLOAT
26 ;;; types (and probably FLOAT types in general.)
28 ;;; This condition is signalled whenever we make a UNKNOWN-TYPE so that
29 ;;; compiler warnings can be emitted as appropriate.
30 (define-condition parse-unknown-type (condition)
31 ((specifier :reader parse-unknown-type-specifier :initarg :specifier)))
33 ;;; These functions are used as method for types which need a complex
34 ;;; subtypep method to handle some superclasses, but cover a subtree
35 ;;; of the type graph (i.e. there is no simple way for any other type
36 ;;; class to be a subtype.) There are always still complex ways,
37 ;;; namely UNION and MEMBER types, so we must give TYPE1's method a
38 ;;; chance to run, instead of immediately returning NIL, T.
39 (defun delegate-complex-subtypep-arg2 (type1 type2)
41 (type-class-complex-subtypep-arg1
42 (type-class-info type1))))
44 (funcall subtypep-arg1 type1 type2)
46 (defun delegate-complex-intersection2 (type1 type2)
47 (let ((method (type-class-complex-intersection2 (type-class-info type1))))
48 (if (and method (not (eq method #'delegate-complex-intersection2)))
49 (funcall method type2 type1)
50 (hierarchical-intersection2 type1 type2))))
52 ;;; This is used by !DEFINE-SUPERCLASSES to define the SUBTYPE-ARG1
53 ;;; method. INFO is a list of conses
54 ;;; (SUPERCLASS-CLASS . {GUARD-TYPE-SPECIFIER | NIL}).
55 (defun !has-superclasses-complex-subtypep-arg1 (type1 type2 info)
56 ;; If TYPE2 might be concealing something related to our class
58 (if (type-might-contain-other-types-p type2)
59 ;; too confusing, gotta punt
61 ;; ordinary case expected by old CMU CL code, where the taxonomy
62 ;; of TYPE2's representation accurately reflects the taxonomy of
65 ;; FIXME: This old CMU CL code probably deserves a comment
66 ;; explaining to us mere mortals how it works...
67 (and (sb!xc:typep type2 'classoid)
69 (when (or (not (cdr x))
70 (csubtypep type1 (specifier-type (cdr x))))
72 (or (eq type2 (car x))
73 (let ((inherits (layout-inherits
74 (classoid-layout (car x)))))
75 (dotimes (i (length inherits) nil)
76 (when (eq type2 (layout-classoid (svref inherits i)))
80 ;;; This function takes a list of specs, each of the form
81 ;;; (SUPERCLASS-NAME &OPTIONAL GUARD).
82 ;;; Consider one spec (with no guard): any instance of the named
83 ;;; TYPE-CLASS is also a subtype of the named superclass and of any of
84 ;;; its superclasses. If there are multiple specs, then some will have
85 ;;; guards. We choose the first spec whose guard is a supertype of
86 ;;; TYPE1 and use its superclass. In effect, a sequence of guards
89 ;;; G0,(and G1 (not G0)), (and G2 (not (or G0 G1))).
91 ;;; WHEN controls when the forms are executed.
92 (defmacro !define-superclasses (type-class-name specs when)
93 (with-unique-names (type-class info)
95 (let ((,type-class (type-class-or-lose ',type-class-name))
96 (,info (mapcar (lambda (spec)
98 (super &optional guard)
100 (cons (find-classoid super) guard)))
102 (setf (type-class-complex-subtypep-arg1 ,type-class)
103 (lambda (type1 type2)
104 (!has-superclasses-complex-subtypep-arg1 type1 type2 ,info)))
105 (setf (type-class-complex-subtypep-arg2 ,type-class)
106 #'delegate-complex-subtypep-arg2)
107 (setf (type-class-complex-intersection2 ,type-class)
108 #'delegate-complex-intersection2)))))
110 ;;;; FUNCTION and VALUES types
112 ;;;; Pretty much all of the general type operations are illegal on
113 ;;;; VALUES types, since we can't discriminate using them, do
114 ;;;; SUBTYPEP, etc. FUNCTION types are acceptable to the normal type
115 ;;;; operations, but are generally considered to be equivalent to
116 ;;;; FUNCTION. These really aren't true types in any type theoretic
117 ;;;; sense, but we still parse them into CTYPE structures for two
120 ;;;; -- Parsing and unparsing work the same way, and indeed we can't
121 ;;;; tell whether a type is a function or values type without
123 ;;;; -- Many of the places that can be annotated with real types can
124 ;;;; also be annotated with function or values types.
126 ;;; the description of a &KEY argument
127 (defstruct (key-info #-sb-xc-host (:pure t)
129 ;; the key (not necessarily a keyword in ANSI Common Lisp)
130 (name (missing-arg) :type symbol)
131 ;; the type of the argument value
132 (type (missing-arg) :type ctype))
134 (!define-type-method (values :simple-subtypep :complex-subtypep-arg1)
136 (declare (ignore type2))
137 ;; FIXME: should be TYPE-ERROR, here and in next method
138 (error "SUBTYPEP is illegal on this type:~% ~S" (type-specifier type1)))
140 (!define-type-method (values :complex-subtypep-arg2)
142 (declare (ignore type1))
143 (error "SUBTYPEP is illegal on this type:~% ~S" (type-specifier type2)))
145 (!define-type-method (values :negate) (type)
146 (error "NOT VALUES too confusing on ~S" (type-specifier type)))
148 (!define-type-method (values :unparse) (type)
150 (let ((unparsed (unparse-args-types type)))
151 (if (or (values-type-optional type)
152 (values-type-rest type)
153 (values-type-allowp type))
155 (nconc unparsed '(&optional))))))
157 ;;; Return true if LIST1 and LIST2 have the same elements in the same
158 ;;; positions according to TYPE=. We return NIL, NIL if there is an
159 ;;; uncertain comparison.
160 (defun type=-list (list1 list2)
161 (declare (list list1 list2))
162 (do ((types1 list1 (cdr types1))
163 (types2 list2 (cdr types2)))
164 ((or (null types1) (null types2))
165 (if (or types1 types2)
168 (multiple-value-bind (val win)
169 (type= (first types1) (first types2))
171 (return (values nil nil)))
173 (return (values nil t))))))
175 (!define-type-method (values :simple-=) (type1 type2)
176 (type=-args type1 type2))
178 (!define-type-class function)
180 ;;; a flag that we can bind to cause complex function types to be
181 ;;; unparsed as FUNCTION. This is useful when we want a type that we
182 ;;; can pass to TYPEP.
183 (defvar *unparse-fun-type-simplify*)
184 (!cold-init-forms (setq *unparse-fun-type-simplify* nil))
186 (!define-type-method (function :negate) (type)
187 (make-negation-type :type type))
189 (!define-type-method (function :unparse) (type)
190 (if *unparse-fun-type-simplify*
193 (if (fun-type-wild-args type)
195 (unparse-args-types type))
197 (fun-type-returns type)))))
199 ;;; The meaning of this is a little confused. On the one hand, all
200 ;;; function objects are represented the same way regardless of the
201 ;;; arglists and return values, and apps don't get to ask things like
202 ;;; (TYPEP #'FOO (FUNCTION (FIXNUM) *)) in any meaningful way. On the
203 ;;; other hand, Python wants to reason about function types. So...
204 (!define-type-method (function :simple-subtypep) (type1 type2)
205 (flet ((fun-type-simple-p (type)
206 (not (or (fun-type-rest type)
207 (fun-type-keyp type))))
208 (every-csubtypep (types1 types2)
212 do (multiple-value-bind (res sure-p)
214 (unless res (return (values res sure-p))))
215 finally (return (values t t)))))
216 (and/type (values-subtypep (fun-type-returns type1)
217 (fun-type-returns type2))
218 (cond ((fun-type-wild-args type2) (values t t))
219 ((fun-type-wild-args type1)
220 (cond ((fun-type-keyp type2) (values nil nil))
221 ((not (fun-type-rest type2)) (values nil t))
222 ((not (null (fun-type-required type2)))
224 (t (and/type (type= *universal-type*
225 (fun-type-rest type2))
230 ((not (and (fun-type-simple-p type1)
231 (fun-type-simple-p type2)))
233 (t (multiple-value-bind (min1 max1) (fun-type-nargs type1)
234 (multiple-value-bind (min2 max2) (fun-type-nargs type2)
235 (cond ((or (> max1 max2) (< min1 min2))
237 ((and (= min1 min2) (= max1 max2))
238 (and/type (every-csubtypep
239 (fun-type-required type1)
240 (fun-type-required type2))
242 (fun-type-optional type1)
243 (fun-type-optional type2))))
246 (fun-type-required type1)
247 (fun-type-optional type1))
249 (fun-type-required type2)
250 (fun-type-optional type2))))))))))))
252 (!define-superclasses function ((function)) !cold-init-forms)
254 ;;; The union or intersection of two FUNCTION types is FUNCTION.
255 (!define-type-method (function :simple-union2) (type1 type2)
256 (declare (ignore type1 type2))
257 (specifier-type 'function))
258 (!define-type-method (function :simple-intersection2) (type1 type2)
259 (let ((ftype (specifier-type 'function)))
260 (cond ((eq type1 ftype) type2)
261 ((eq type2 ftype) type1)
262 (t (let ((rtype (values-type-intersection (fun-type-returns type1)
263 (fun-type-returns type2))))
264 (flet ((change-returns (ftype rtype)
265 (declare (type fun-type ftype) (type ctype rtype))
266 (make-fun-type :required (fun-type-required ftype)
267 :optional (fun-type-optional ftype)
268 :keyp (fun-type-keyp ftype)
269 :keywords (fun-type-keywords ftype)
270 :allowp (fun-type-allowp ftype)
273 ((fun-type-wild-args type1)
274 (if (fun-type-wild-args type2)
275 (make-fun-type :wild-args t
277 (change-returns type2 rtype)))
278 ((fun-type-wild-args type2)
279 (change-returns type1 rtype))
280 (t (multiple-value-bind (req opt rest)
281 (args-type-op type1 type2 #'type-intersection #'max)
282 (make-fun-type :required req
286 :allowp (and (fun-type-allowp type1)
287 (fun-type-allowp type2))
288 :returns rtype))))))))))
290 ;;; The union or intersection of a subclass of FUNCTION with a
291 ;;; FUNCTION type is somewhat complicated.
292 (!define-type-method (function :complex-intersection2) (type1 type2)
294 ((type= type1 (specifier-type 'function)) type2)
295 ((csubtypep type1 (specifier-type 'function)) nil)
296 (t :call-other-method)))
297 (!define-type-method (function :complex-union2) (type1 type2)
298 (declare (ignore type2))
299 ;; TYPE2 is a FUNCTION type. If TYPE1 is a classoid type naming
300 ;; FUNCTION, then it is the union of the two; otherwise, there is no
303 ((type= type1 (specifier-type 'function)) type1)
306 (!define-type-method (function :simple-=) (type1 type2)
307 (macrolet ((compare (comparator field)
308 (let ((reader (symbolicate '#:fun-type- field)))
309 `(,comparator (,reader type1) (,reader type2)))))
310 (and/type (compare type= returns)
311 (cond ((neq (fun-type-wild-args type1) (fun-type-wild-args type2))
313 ((eq (fun-type-wild-args type1) t)
315 (t (type=-args type1 type2))))))
317 (!define-type-class constant :inherits values)
319 (!define-type-method (constant :negate) (type)
320 (error "NOT CONSTANT too confusing on ~S" (type-specifier type)))
322 (!define-type-method (constant :unparse) (type)
323 `(constant-arg ,(type-specifier (constant-type-type type))))
325 (!define-type-method (constant :simple-=) (type1 type2)
326 (type= (constant-type-type type1) (constant-type-type type2)))
328 (!def-type-translator constant-arg (type)
329 (make-constant-type :type (single-value-specifier-type type)))
331 ;;; Return the lambda-list-like type specification corresponding
333 (declaim (ftype (function (args-type) list) unparse-args-types))
334 (defun unparse-args-types (type)
337 (dolist (arg (args-type-required type))
338 (result (type-specifier arg)))
340 (when (args-type-optional type)
342 (dolist (arg (args-type-optional type))
343 (result (type-specifier arg))))
345 (when (args-type-rest type)
347 (result (type-specifier (args-type-rest type))))
349 (when (args-type-keyp type)
351 (dolist (key (args-type-keywords type))
352 (result (list (key-info-name key)
353 (type-specifier (key-info-type key))))))
355 (when (args-type-allowp type)
356 (result '&allow-other-keys))
360 (!def-type-translator function (&optional (args '*) (result '*))
361 (let ((result (coerce-to-values (values-specifier-type result))))
363 (if (eq result *wild-type*)
364 (specifier-type 'function)
365 (make-fun-type :wild-args t :returns result))
366 (multiple-value-bind (required optional rest keyp keywords allowp)
367 (parse-args-types args)
368 (if (and (null required)
370 (eq rest *universal-type*)
372 (if (eq result *wild-type*)
373 (specifier-type 'function)
374 (make-fun-type :wild-args t :returns result))
375 (make-fun-type :required required
381 :returns result))))))
383 (!def-type-translator values (&rest values)
386 (multiple-value-bind (required optional rest keyp keywords allowp llk-p)
387 (parse-args-types values)
388 (declare (ignore keywords))
390 (error "&KEY appeared in a VALUES type specifier ~S."
393 (make-values-type :required required
398 (make-short-values-type required))))))
400 ;;;; VALUES types interfaces
402 ;;;; We provide a few special operations that can be meaningfully used
403 ;;;; on VALUES types (as well as on any other type).
405 ;;; Return the minimum number of values possibly matching VALUES type
407 (defun values-type-min-value-count (type)
410 (ecase (named-type-name type)
414 (length (values-type-required type)))))
416 ;;; Return the maximum number of values possibly matching VALUES type
418 (defun values-type-max-value-count (type)
421 (ecase (named-type-name type)
422 ((t *) call-arguments-limit)
425 (if (values-type-rest type)
427 (+ (length (values-type-optional type))
428 (length (values-type-required type)))))))
430 (defun values-type-may-be-single-value-p (type)
431 (<= (values-type-min-value-count type)
433 (values-type-max-value-count type)))
435 ;;; VALUES type with a single value.
436 (defun type-single-value-p (type)
437 (and (%values-type-p type)
438 (not (values-type-rest type))
439 (null (values-type-optional type))
440 (singleton-p (values-type-required type))))
442 ;;; Return the type of the first value indicated by TYPE. This is used
443 ;;; by people who don't want to have to deal with VALUES types.
444 #!-sb-fluid (declaim (freeze-type values-type))
445 ; (inline single-value-type))
446 (defun single-value-type (type)
447 (declare (type ctype type))
448 (cond ((eq type *wild-type*)
450 ((eq type *empty-type*)
452 ((not (values-type-p type))
454 (t (or (car (args-type-required type))
455 (car (args-type-optional type))
456 (args-type-rest type)
457 (specifier-type 'null)))))
459 ;;; Return the minimum number of arguments that a function can be
460 ;;; called with, and the maximum number or NIL. If not a function
461 ;;; type, return NIL, NIL.
462 (defun fun-type-nargs (type)
463 (declare (type ctype type))
464 (if (and (fun-type-p type) (not (fun-type-wild-args type)))
465 (let ((fixed (length (args-type-required type))))
466 (if (or (args-type-rest type)
467 (args-type-keyp type)
468 (args-type-allowp type))
470 (values fixed (+ fixed (length (args-type-optional type))))))
473 ;;; Determine whether TYPE corresponds to a definite number of values.
474 ;;; The first value is a list of the types for each value, and the
475 ;;; second value is the number of values. If the number of values is
476 ;;; not fixed, then return NIL and :UNKNOWN.
477 (defun values-types (type)
478 (declare (type ctype type))
479 (cond ((or (eq type *wild-type*) (eq type *empty-type*))
480 (values nil :unknown))
481 ((or (args-type-optional type)
482 (args-type-rest type))
483 (values nil :unknown))
485 (let ((req (args-type-required type)))
486 (values req (length req))))))
488 ;;; Return two values:
489 ;;; 1. A list of all the positional (fixed and optional) types.
490 ;;; 2. The &REST type (if any). If no &REST, then the DEFAULT-TYPE.
491 (defun values-type-types (type &optional (default-type *empty-type*))
492 (declare (type ctype type))
493 (if (eq type *wild-type*)
494 (values nil *universal-type*)
495 (values (append (args-type-required type)
496 (args-type-optional type))
497 (cond ((args-type-rest type))
500 ;;; types of values in (the <type> (values o_1 ... o_n))
501 (defun values-type-out (type count)
502 (declare (type ctype type) (type unsigned-byte count))
503 (if (eq type *wild-type*)
504 (make-list count :initial-element *universal-type*)
506 (flet ((process-types (types)
507 (loop for type in types
511 (process-types (values-type-required type))
512 (process-types (values-type-optional type))
514 (loop with rest = (the ctype (values-type-rest type))
519 ;;; types of variable in (m-v-bind (v_1 ... v_n) (the <type> ...
520 (defun values-type-in (type count)
521 (declare (type ctype type) (type unsigned-byte count))
522 (if (eq type *wild-type*)
523 (make-list count :initial-element *universal-type*)
525 (let ((null-type (specifier-type 'null)))
526 (loop for type in (values-type-required type)
530 (loop for type in (values-type-optional type)
533 do (res (type-union type null-type)))
535 (loop with rest = (acond ((values-type-rest type)
536 (type-union it null-type))
542 ;;; Return a list of OPERATION applied to the types in TYPES1 and
543 ;;; TYPES2, padding with REST2 as needed. TYPES1 must not be shorter
544 ;;; than TYPES2. The second value is T if OPERATION always returned a
545 ;;; true second value.
546 (defun fixed-values-op (types1 types2 rest2 operation)
547 (declare (list types1 types2) (type ctype rest2) (type function operation))
549 (values (mapcar (lambda (t1 t2)
550 (multiple-value-bind (res win)
551 (funcall operation t1 t2)
557 (make-list (- (length types1) (length types2))
558 :initial-element rest2)))
561 ;;; If TYPE isn't a values type, then make it into one.
562 (defun-cached (%coerce-to-values
564 :hash-function (lambda (type)
565 (logand (type-hash-value type)
568 (cond ((multiple-value-bind (res sure)
569 (csubtypep (specifier-type 'null) type)
570 (and (not res) sure))
571 ;; FIXME: What should we do with (NOT SURE)?
572 (make-values-type :required (list type) :rest *universal-type*))
574 (make-values-type :optional (list type) :rest *universal-type*))))
576 (defun coerce-to-values (type)
577 (declare (type ctype type))
578 (cond ((or (eq type *universal-type*)
579 (eq type *wild-type*))
581 ((values-type-p type)
583 (t (%coerce-to-values type))))
585 ;;; Return type, corresponding to ANSI short form of VALUES type
587 (defun make-short-values-type (types)
588 (declare (list types))
589 (let ((last-required (position-if
591 (not/type (csubtypep (specifier-type 'null) type)))
595 (make-values-type :required (subseq types 0 (1+ last-required))
596 :optional (subseq types (1+ last-required))
597 :rest *universal-type*)
598 (make-values-type :optional types :rest *universal-type*))))
600 (defun make-single-value-type (type)
601 (make-values-type :required (list type)))
603 ;;; Do the specified OPERATION on TYPE1 and TYPE2, which may be any
604 ;;; type, including VALUES types. With VALUES types such as:
607 ;;; we compute the more useful result
608 ;;; (VALUES (<operation> a0 b0) (<operation> a1 b1))
609 ;;; rather than the precise result
610 ;;; (<operation> (values a0 a1) (values b0 b1))
611 ;;; This has the virtue of always keeping the VALUES type specifier
612 ;;; outermost, and retains all of the information that is really
613 ;;; useful for static type analysis. We want to know what is always
614 ;;; true of each value independently. It is worthless to know that if
615 ;;; the first value is B0 then the second will be B1.
617 ;;; If the VALUES count signatures differ, then we produce a result with
618 ;;; the required VALUE count chosen by NREQ when applied to the number
619 ;;; of required values in TYPE1 and TYPE2. Any &KEY values become
620 ;;; &REST T (anyone who uses keyword values deserves to lose.)
622 ;;; The second value is true if the result is definitely empty or if
623 ;;; OPERATION returned true as its second value each time we called
624 ;;; it. Since we approximate the intersection of VALUES types, the
625 ;;; second value being true doesn't mean the result is exact.
626 (defun args-type-op (type1 type2 operation nreq)
627 (declare (type ctype type1 type2)
628 (type function operation nreq))
629 (when (eq type1 type2)
631 (multiple-value-bind (types1 rest1)
632 (values-type-types type1)
633 (multiple-value-bind (types2 rest2)
634 (values-type-types type2)
635 (multiple-value-bind (rest rest-exact)
636 (funcall operation rest1 rest2)
637 (multiple-value-bind (res res-exact)
638 (if (< (length types1) (length types2))
639 (fixed-values-op types2 types1 rest1 operation)
640 (fixed-values-op types1 types2 rest2 operation))
641 (let* ((req (funcall nreq
642 (length (args-type-required type1))
643 (length (args-type-required type2))))
644 (required (subseq res 0 req))
645 (opt (subseq res req)))
646 (values required opt rest
647 (and rest-exact res-exact))))))))
649 (defun values-type-op (type1 type2 operation nreq)
650 (multiple-value-bind (required optional rest exactp)
651 (args-type-op type1 type2 operation nreq)
652 (values (make-values-type :required required
657 (defun type=-args (type1 type2)
658 (macrolet ((compare (comparator field)
659 (let ((reader (symbolicate '#:args-type- field)))
660 `(,comparator (,reader type1) (,reader type2)))))
662 (cond ((null (args-type-rest type1))
663 (values (null (args-type-rest type2)) t))
664 ((null (args-type-rest type2))
667 (compare type= rest)))
668 (and/type (and/type (compare type=-list required)
669 (compare type=-list optional))
670 (if (or (args-type-keyp type1) (args-type-keyp type2))
674 ;;; Do a union or intersection operation on types that might be values
675 ;;; types. The result is optimized for utility rather than exactness,
676 ;;; but it is guaranteed that it will be no smaller (more restrictive)
677 ;;; than the precise result.
679 ;;; The return convention seems to be analogous to
680 ;;; TYPES-EQUAL-OR-INTERSECT. -- WHN 19990910.
681 (defun-cached (values-type-union :hash-function type-cache-hash
684 :init-wrapper !cold-init-forms)
685 ((type1 eq) (type2 eq))
686 (declare (type ctype type1 type2))
687 (cond ((or (eq type1 *wild-type*) (eq type2 *wild-type*)) *wild-type*)
688 ((eq type1 *empty-type*) type2)
689 ((eq type2 *empty-type*) type1)
691 (values (values-type-op type1 type2 #'type-union #'min)))))
693 (defun-cached (values-type-intersection :hash-function type-cache-hash
695 :default (values nil)
696 :init-wrapper !cold-init-forms)
697 ((type1 eq) (type2 eq))
698 (declare (type ctype type1 type2))
699 (cond ((eq type1 *wild-type*)
700 (coerce-to-values type2))
701 ((or (eq type2 *wild-type*) (eq type2 *universal-type*))
703 ((or (eq type1 *empty-type*) (eq type2 *empty-type*))
705 ((and (not (values-type-p type2))
706 (values-type-required type1))
707 (let ((req1 (values-type-required type1)))
708 (make-values-type :required (cons (type-intersection (first req1) type2)
710 :optional (values-type-optional type1)
711 :rest (values-type-rest type1)
712 :allowp (values-type-allowp type1))))
714 (values (values-type-op type1 (coerce-to-values type2)
718 ;;; This is like TYPES-EQUAL-OR-INTERSECT, except that it sort of
719 ;;; works on VALUES types. Note that due to the semantics of
720 ;;; VALUES-TYPE-INTERSECTION, this might return (VALUES T T) when
721 ;;; there isn't really any intersection.
722 (defun values-types-equal-or-intersect (type1 type2)
723 (cond ((or (eq type1 *empty-type*) (eq type2 *empty-type*))
725 ((or (eq type1 *wild-type*) (eq type2 *wild-type*))
728 (let ((res (values-type-intersection type1 type2)))
729 (values (not (eq res *empty-type*))
732 ;;; a SUBTYPEP-like operation that can be used on any types, including
734 (defun-cached (values-subtypep :hash-function type-cache-hash
737 :default (values nil :empty)
738 :init-wrapper !cold-init-forms)
739 ((type1 eq) (type2 eq))
740 (declare (type ctype type1 type2))
741 (cond ((or (eq type2 *wild-type*) (eq type2 *universal-type*)
742 (eq type1 *empty-type*))
744 ((eq type1 *wild-type*)
745 (values (eq type2 *wild-type*) t))
746 ((or (eq type2 *empty-type*)
747 (not (values-types-equal-or-intersect type1 type2)))
749 ((and (not (values-type-p type2))
750 (values-type-required type1))
751 (csubtypep (first (values-type-required type1))
753 (t (setq type2 (coerce-to-values type2))
754 (multiple-value-bind (types1 rest1) (values-type-types type1)
755 (multiple-value-bind (types2 rest2) (values-type-types type2)
756 (cond ((< (length (values-type-required type1))
757 (length (values-type-required type2)))
759 ((< (length types1) (length types2))
762 (do ((t1 types1 (rest t1))
763 (t2 types2 (rest t2)))
765 (csubtypep rest1 rest2))
766 (multiple-value-bind (res win-p)
767 (csubtypep (first t1) (first t2))
769 (return (values nil nil)))
771 (return (values nil t))))))))))))
773 ;;;; type method interfaces
775 ;;; like SUBTYPEP, only works on CTYPE structures
776 (defun-cached (csubtypep :hash-function type-cache-hash
779 :default (values nil :empty)
780 :init-wrapper !cold-init-forms)
781 ((type1 eq) (type2 eq))
782 (declare (type ctype type1 type2))
783 (cond ((or (eq type1 type2)
784 (eq type1 *empty-type*)
785 (eq type2 *universal-type*))
788 ((eq type1 *universal-type*)
791 (!invoke-type-method :simple-subtypep :complex-subtypep-arg2
793 :complex-arg1 :complex-subtypep-arg1))))
795 ;;; Just parse the type specifiers and call CSUBTYPE.
796 (defun sb!xc:subtypep (type1 type2 &optional environment)
798 "Return two values indicating the relationship between type1 and type2.
799 If values are T and T, type1 definitely is a subtype of type2.
800 If values are NIL and T, type1 definitely is not a subtype of type2.
801 If values are NIL and NIL, it couldn't be determined."
802 (declare (ignore environment))
803 (csubtypep (specifier-type type1) (specifier-type type2)))
805 ;;; If two types are definitely equivalent, return true. The second
806 ;;; value indicates whether the first value is definitely correct.
807 ;;; This should only fail in the presence of HAIRY types.
808 (defun-cached (type= :hash-function type-cache-hash
811 :default (values nil :empty)
812 :init-wrapper !cold-init-forms)
813 ((type1 eq) (type2 eq))
814 (declare (type ctype type1 type2))
817 (!invoke-type-method :simple-= :complex-= type1 type2)))
819 ;;; Not exactly the negation of TYPE=, since when the relationship is
820 ;;; uncertain, we still return NIL, NIL. This is useful in cases where
821 ;;; the conservative assumption is =.
822 (defun type/= (type1 type2)
823 (declare (type ctype type1 type2))
824 (multiple-value-bind (res win) (type= type1 type2)
829 ;;; the type method dispatch case of TYPE-UNION2
830 (defun %type-union2 (type1 type2)
831 ;; As in %TYPE-INTERSECTION2, it seems to be a good idea to give
832 ;; both argument orders a chance at COMPLEX-INTERSECTION2. Unlike
833 ;; %TYPE-INTERSECTION2, though, I don't have a specific case which
834 ;; demonstrates this is actually necessary. Also unlike
835 ;; %TYPE-INTERSECTION2, there seems to be no need to distinguish
836 ;; between not finding a method and having a method return NIL.
838 (!invoke-type-method :simple-union2 :complex-union2
841 (declare (inline 1way))
842 (or (1way type1 type2)
843 (1way type2 type1))))
845 ;;; Find a type which includes both types. Any inexactness is
846 ;;; represented by the fuzzy element types; we return a single value
847 ;;; that is precise to the best of our knowledge. This result is
848 ;;; simplified into the canonical form, thus is not a UNION-TYPE
849 ;;; unless we find no other way to represent the result.
850 (defun-cached (type-union2 :hash-function type-cache-hash
852 :init-wrapper !cold-init-forms)
853 ((type1 eq) (type2 eq))
854 ;; KLUDGE: This was generated from TYPE-INTERSECTION2 by Ye Olde Cut And
855 ;; Paste technique of programming. If it stays around (as opposed to
856 ;; e.g. fading away in favor of some CLOS solution) the shared logic
857 ;; should probably become shared code. -- WHN 2001-03-16
858 (declare (type ctype type1 type2))
860 (cond ((eq type1 type2)
862 ;; CSUBTYPEP for array-types answers questions about the
863 ;; specialized type, yet for union we want to take the
864 ;; expressed type in account too.
865 ((and (not (and (array-type-p type1) (array-type-p type2)))
866 (or (setf t2 (csubtypep type1 type2))
867 (csubtypep type2 type1)))
869 ((or (union-type-p type1)
870 (union-type-p type2))
871 ;; Unions of UNION-TYPE should have the UNION-TYPE-TYPES
872 ;; values broken out and united separately. The full TYPE-UNION
873 ;; function knows how to do this, so let it handle it.
874 (type-union type1 type2))
876 ;; the ordinary case: we dispatch to type methods
877 (%type-union2 type1 type2)))))
879 ;;; the type method dispatch case of TYPE-INTERSECTION2
880 (defun %type-intersection2 (type1 type2)
881 ;; We want to give both argument orders a chance at
882 ;; COMPLEX-INTERSECTION2. Without that, the old CMU CL type
883 ;; methods could give noncommutative results, e.g.
884 ;; (TYPE-INTERSECTION2 *EMPTY-TYPE* SOME-HAIRY-TYPE)
886 ;; (TYPE-INTERSECTION2 SOME-HAIRY-TYPE *EMPTY-TYPE*)
887 ;; => #<NAMED-TYPE NIL>, T
888 ;; We also need to distinguish between the case where we found a
889 ;; type method, and it returned NIL, and the case where we fell
890 ;; through without finding any type method. An example of the first
891 ;; case is the intersection of a HAIRY-TYPE with some ordinary type.
892 ;; An example of the second case is the intersection of two
893 ;; completely-unrelated types, e.g. CONS and NUMBER, or SYMBOL and
896 ;; (Why yes, CLOS probably *would* be nicer..)
898 (!invoke-type-method :simple-intersection2 :complex-intersection2
900 :default :call-other-method)))
901 (declare (inline 1way))
902 (let ((xy (1way type1 type2)))
903 (or (and (not (eql xy :call-other-method)) xy)
904 (let ((yx (1way type2 type1)))
905 (or (and (not (eql yx :call-other-method)) yx)
906 (cond ((and (eql xy :call-other-method)
907 (eql yx :call-other-method))
912 (defun-cached (type-intersection2 :hash-function type-cache-hash
916 :init-wrapper !cold-init-forms)
917 ((type1 eq) (type2 eq))
918 (declare (type ctype type1 type2))
919 (cond ((eq type1 type2)
920 ;; FIXME: For some reason, this doesn't catch e.g. type1 =
921 ;; type2 = (SPECIFIER-TYPE
922 ;; 'SOME-UNKNOWN-TYPE). Investigate. - CSR, 2002-04-10
924 ((or (intersection-type-p type1)
925 (intersection-type-p type2))
926 ;; Intersections of INTERSECTION-TYPE should have the
927 ;; INTERSECTION-TYPE-TYPES values broken out and intersected
928 ;; separately. The full TYPE-INTERSECTION function knows how
929 ;; to do that, so let it handle it.
930 (type-intersection type1 type2))
932 ;; the ordinary case: we dispatch to type methods
933 (%type-intersection2 type1 type2))))
935 ;;; Return as restrictive and simple a type as we can discover that is
936 ;;; no more restrictive than the intersection of TYPE1 and TYPE2. At
937 ;;; worst, we arbitrarily return one of the arguments as the first
938 ;;; value (trying not to return a hairy type).
939 (defun type-approx-intersection2 (type1 type2)
940 (cond ((type-intersection2 type1 type2))
941 ((hairy-type-p type1) type2)
944 ;;; a test useful for checking whether a derived type matches a
947 ;;; The first value is true unless the types don't intersect and
948 ;;; aren't equal. The second value is true if the first value is
949 ;;; definitely correct. NIL is considered to intersect with any type.
950 ;;; If T is a subtype of either type, then we also return T, T. This
951 ;;; way we recognize that hairy types might intersect with T.
952 (defun types-equal-or-intersect (type1 type2)
953 (declare (type ctype type1 type2))
954 (if (or (eq type1 *empty-type*) (eq type2 *empty-type*))
956 (let ((intersection2 (type-intersection2 type1 type2)))
957 (cond ((not intersection2)
958 (if (or (csubtypep *universal-type* type1)
959 (csubtypep *universal-type* type2))
962 ((eq intersection2 *empty-type*) (values nil t))
965 ;;; Return a Common Lisp type specifier corresponding to the TYPE
967 (defun type-specifier (type)
968 (declare (type ctype type))
969 (funcall (type-class-unparse (type-class-info type)) type))
971 (defun-cached (type-negation :hash-function (lambda (type)
972 (logand (type-hash-value type)
977 :init-wrapper !cold-init-forms)
979 (declare (type ctype type))
980 (funcall (type-class-negate (type-class-info type)) type))
982 (defun-cached (type-singleton-p :hash-function (lambda (type)
983 (logand (type-hash-value type)
987 :default (values nil t)
988 :init-wrapper !cold-init-forms)
990 (declare (type ctype type))
991 (let ((function (type-class-singleton-p (type-class-info type))))
993 (funcall function type)
996 ;;; (VALUES-SPECIFIER-TYPE and SPECIFIER-TYPE moved from here to
997 ;;; early-type.lisp by WHN ca. 19990201.)
999 ;;; Take a list of type specifiers, computing the translation of each
1000 ;;; specifier and defining it as a builtin type.
1001 (declaim (ftype (function (list) (values)) precompute-types))
1002 (defun precompute-types (specs)
1003 (dolist (spec specs)
1004 (let ((res (specifier-type spec)))
1005 (unless (unknown-type-p res)
1006 (setf (info :type :builtin spec) res)
1007 ;; KLUDGE: the three copies of this idiom in this file (and
1008 ;; the one in class.lisp as at sbcl-0.7.4.1x) should be
1009 ;; coalesced, or perhaps the error-detecting code that
1010 ;; disallows redefinition of :PRIMITIVE types should be
1011 ;; rewritten to use *TYPE-SYSTEM-FINALIZED* (rather than
1012 ;; *TYPE-SYSTEM-INITIALIZED*). The effect of this is not to
1013 ;; cause redefinition errors when precompute-types is called
1014 ;; for a second time while building the target compiler using
1015 ;; the cross-compiler. -- CSR, trying to explain why this
1016 ;; isn't completely wrong, 2002-06-07
1017 (setf (info :type :kind spec) #+sb-xc-host :defined #-sb-xc-host :primitive))))
1020 ;;;; general TYPE-UNION and TYPE-INTERSECTION operations
1022 ;;;; These are fully general operations on CTYPEs: they'll always
1023 ;;;; return a CTYPE representing the result.
1025 ;;; shared logic for unions and intersections: Return a list of
1026 ;;; types representing the same types as INPUT-TYPES, but with
1027 ;;; COMPOUND-TYPEs satisfying %COMPOUND-TYPE-P broken up into their
1028 ;;; component types, and with any SIMPLY2 simplifications applied.
1030 ((def (name compound-type-p simplify2)
1031 `(defun ,name (types)
1033 (multiple-value-bind (first rest)
1034 (if (,compound-type-p (car types))
1035 (values (car (compound-type-types (car types)))
1036 (append (cdr (compound-type-types (car types)))
1038 (values (car types) (cdr types)))
1039 (let ((rest (,name rest)) u)
1040 (dolist (r rest (cons first rest))
1041 (when (setq u (,simplify2 first r))
1042 (return (,name (nsubstitute u r rest)))))))))))
1043 (def simplify-intersections intersection-type-p type-intersection2)
1044 (def simplify-unions union-type-p type-union2))
1046 (defun maybe-distribute-one-union (union-type types)
1047 (let* ((intersection (apply #'type-intersection types))
1048 (union (mapcar (lambda (x) (type-intersection x intersection))
1049 (union-type-types union-type))))
1050 (if (notany (lambda (x) (or (hairy-type-p x)
1051 (intersection-type-p x)))
1056 (defun type-intersection (&rest input-types)
1057 (%type-intersection input-types))
1058 (defun-cached (%type-intersection :hash-bits 8
1059 :hash-function (lambda (x)
1060 (logand (sxhash x) #xff)))
1061 ((input-types equal))
1062 (let ((simplified-types (simplify-intersections input-types)))
1063 (declare (type list simplified-types))
1064 ;; We want to have a canonical representation of types (or failing
1065 ;; that, punt to HAIRY-TYPE). Canonical representation would have
1066 ;; intersections inside unions but not vice versa, since you can
1067 ;; always achieve that by the distributive rule. But we don't want
1068 ;; to just apply the distributive rule, since it would be too easy
1069 ;; to end up with unreasonably huge type expressions. So instead
1070 ;; we try to generate a simple type by distributing the union; if
1071 ;; the type can't be made simple, we punt to HAIRY-TYPE.
1072 (if (and (cdr simplified-types) (some #'union-type-p simplified-types))
1073 (let* ((first-union (find-if #'union-type-p simplified-types))
1074 (other-types (coerce (remove first-union simplified-types)
1076 (distributed (maybe-distribute-one-union first-union
1079 (apply #'type-union distributed)
1081 :specifier `(and ,@(map 'list
1083 simplified-types)))))
1085 ((null simplified-types) *universal-type*)
1086 ((null (cdr simplified-types)) (car simplified-types))
1087 (t (%make-intersection-type
1088 (some #'type-enumerable simplified-types)
1089 simplified-types))))))
1091 (defun type-union (&rest input-types)
1092 (%type-union input-types))
1093 (defun-cached (%type-union :hash-bits 8
1094 :hash-function (lambda (x)
1095 (logand (sxhash x) #xff)))
1096 ((input-types equal))
1097 (let ((simplified-types (simplify-unions input-types)))
1099 ((null simplified-types) *empty-type*)
1100 ((null (cdr simplified-types)) (car simplified-types))
1102 (every #'type-enumerable simplified-types)
1103 simplified-types)))))
1107 (!define-type-class named)
1110 (macrolet ((frob (name var)
1112 (setq ,var (make-named-type :name ',name))
1113 (setf (info :type :kind ',name)
1114 #+sb-xc-host :defined #-sb-xc-host :primitive)
1115 (setf (info :type :builtin ',name) ,var))))
1116 ;; KLUDGE: In ANSI, * isn't really the name of a type, it's just a
1117 ;; special symbol which can be stuck in some places where an
1118 ;; ordinary type can go, e.g. (ARRAY * 1) instead of (ARRAY T 1).
1119 ;; In SBCL it also used to denote universal VALUES type.
1120 (frob * *wild-type*)
1121 (frob nil *empty-type*)
1122 (frob t *universal-type*)
1123 ;; new in sbcl-0.9.5: these used to be CLASSOID types, but that
1124 ;; view of them was incompatible with requirements on the MOP
1125 ;; metaobject class hierarchy: the INSTANCE and
1126 ;; FUNCALLABLE-INSTANCE types are disjoint (instances have
1127 ;; instance-pointer-lowtag; funcallable-instances have
1128 ;; fun-pointer-lowtag), while FUNCALLABLE-STANDARD-OBJECT is
1129 ;; required to be a subclass of STANDARD-OBJECT. -- CSR,
1131 (frob instance *instance-type*)
1132 (frob funcallable-instance *funcallable-instance-type*)
1133 ;; new in sbcl-1.0.3.3: necessary to act as a join point for the
1134 ;; extended sequence hierarchy. (Might be removed later if we use
1135 ;; a dedicated FUNDAMENTAL-SEQUENCE class for this.)
1136 (frob extended-sequence *extended-sequence-type*))
1137 (setf *universal-fun-type*
1138 (make-fun-type :wild-args t
1139 :returns *wild-type*)))
1141 (!define-type-method (named :simple-=) (type1 type2)
1142 ;;(aver (not (eq type1 *wild-type*))) ; * isn't really a type.
1143 (values (eq type1 type2) t))
1145 (defun cons-type-might-be-empty-type (type)
1146 (declare (type cons-type type))
1147 (let ((car-type (cons-type-car-type type))
1148 (cdr-type (cons-type-cdr-type type)))
1150 (if (cons-type-p car-type)
1151 (cons-type-might-be-empty-type car-type)
1152 (multiple-value-bind (yes surep)
1153 (type= car-type *empty-type*)
1156 (if (cons-type-p cdr-type)
1157 (cons-type-might-be-empty-type cdr-type)
1158 (multiple-value-bind (yes surep)
1159 (type= cdr-type *empty-type*)
1163 (!define-type-method (named :complex-=) (type1 type2)
1165 ((and (eq type2 *empty-type*)
1166 (or (and (intersection-type-p type1)
1167 ;; not allowed to be unsure on these... FIXME: keep
1168 ;; the list of CL types that are intersection types
1169 ;; once and only once.
1170 (not (or (type= type1 (specifier-type 'ratio))
1171 (type= type1 (specifier-type 'keyword)))))
1172 (and (cons-type-p type1)
1173 (cons-type-might-be-empty-type type1))))
1174 ;; things like (AND (EQL 0) (SATISFIES ODDP)) or (AND FUNCTION
1175 ;; STREAM) can get here. In general, we can't really tell
1176 ;; whether these are equal to NIL or not, so
1178 ((type-might-contain-other-types-p type1)
1179 (invoke-complex-=-other-method type1 type2))
1180 (t (values nil t))))
1182 (!define-type-method (named :simple-subtypep) (type1 type2)
1183 (aver (not (eq type1 *wild-type*))) ; * isn't really a type.
1184 (aver (not (eq type1 type2)))
1185 (values (or (eq type1 *empty-type*)
1186 (eq type2 *wild-type*)
1187 (eq type2 *universal-type*)) t))
1189 (!define-type-method (named :complex-subtypep-arg1) (type1 type2)
1190 ;; This AVER causes problems if we write accurate methods for the
1191 ;; union (and possibly intersection) types which then delegate to
1192 ;; us; while a user shouldn't get here, because of the odd status of
1193 ;; *wild-type* a type-intersection executed by the compiler can. -
1196 ;; (aver (not (eq type1 *wild-type*))) ; * isn't really a type.
1197 (cond ((eq type1 *empty-type*)
1199 (;; When TYPE2 might be the universal type in disguise
1200 (type-might-contain-other-types-p type2)
1201 ;; Now that the UNION and HAIRY COMPLEX-SUBTYPEP-ARG2 methods
1202 ;; can delegate to us (more or less as CALL-NEXT-METHOD) when
1203 ;; they're uncertain, we can't just barf on COMPOUND-TYPE and
1204 ;; HAIRY-TYPEs as we used to. Instead we deal with the
1205 ;; problem (where at least part of the problem is cases like
1206 ;; (SUBTYPEP T '(SATISFIES FOO))
1208 ;; (SUBTYPEP T '(AND (SATISFIES FOO) (SATISFIES BAR)))
1209 ;; where the second type is a hairy type like SATISFIES, or
1210 ;; is a compound type which might contain a hairy type) by
1211 ;; returning uncertainty.
1213 ((eq type1 *funcallable-instance-type*)
1214 (values (eq type2 (specifier-type 'function)) t))
1216 ;; This case would have been picked off by the SIMPLE-SUBTYPEP
1217 ;; method, and so shouldn't appear here.
1218 (aver (not (named-type-p type2)))
1219 ;; Since TYPE2 is not EQ *UNIVERSAL-TYPE* and is not another
1220 ;; named type in disguise, TYPE2 is not a superset of TYPE1.
1223 (!define-type-method (named :complex-subtypep-arg2) (type1 type2)
1224 (aver (not (eq type2 *wild-type*))) ; * isn't really a type.
1225 (cond ((eq type2 *universal-type*)
1227 ;; some CONS types can conceal danger
1228 ((and (cons-type-p type1) (cons-type-might-be-empty-type type1))
1230 ((type-might-contain-other-types-p type1)
1231 ;; those types can be other types in disguise. So we'd
1233 (invoke-complex-subtypep-arg1-method type1 type2))
1234 ((and (or (eq type2 *instance-type*)
1235 (eq type2 *funcallable-instance-type*))
1236 (member-type-p type1))
1237 ;; member types can be subtypep INSTANCE and
1238 ;; FUNCALLABLE-INSTANCE in surprising ways.
1239 (invoke-complex-subtypep-arg1-method type1 type2))
1240 ((and (eq type2 *extended-sequence-type*) (classoid-p type1))
1241 (let* ((layout (classoid-layout type1))
1242 (inherits (layout-inherits layout))
1243 (sequencep (find (classoid-layout (find-classoid 'sequence))
1245 (values (if sequencep t nil) t)))
1246 ((and (eq type2 *instance-type*) (classoid-p type1))
1247 (if (member type1 *non-instance-classoid-types* :key #'find-classoid)
1249 (let* ((layout (classoid-layout type1))
1250 (inherits (layout-inherits layout))
1251 (functionp (find (classoid-layout (find-classoid 'function))
1256 ((eq type1 (find-classoid 'function))
1258 ((or (structure-classoid-p type1)
1260 (condition-classoid-p type1))
1262 (t (values nil nil))))))
1263 ((and (eq type2 *funcallable-instance-type*) (classoid-p type1))
1264 (if (member type1 *non-instance-classoid-types* :key #'find-classoid)
1266 (let* ((layout (classoid-layout type1))
1267 (inherits (layout-inherits layout))
1268 (functionp (find (classoid-layout (find-classoid 'function))
1270 (values (if functionp t nil) t))))
1272 ;; FIXME: This seems to rely on there only being 4 or 5
1273 ;; NAMED-TYPE values, and the exclusion of various
1274 ;; possibilities above. It would be good to explain it and/or
1275 ;; rewrite it so that it's clearer.
1278 (!define-type-method (named :complex-intersection2) (type1 type2)
1279 ;; FIXME: This assertion failed when I added it in sbcl-0.6.11.13.
1280 ;; Perhaps when bug 85 is fixed it can be reenabled.
1281 ;;(aver (not (eq type2 *wild-type*))) ; * isn't really a type.
1283 ((eq type2 *extended-sequence-type*)
1285 (structure-classoid *empty-type*)
1287 (if (member type1 *non-instance-classoid-types* :key #'find-classoid)
1289 (if (find (classoid-layout (find-classoid 'sequence))
1290 (layout-inherits (classoid-layout type1)))
1294 (if (or (type-might-contain-other-types-p type1)
1295 (member-type-p type1))
1298 ((eq type2 *instance-type*)
1300 (structure-classoid type1)
1302 (if (and (not (member type1 *non-instance-classoid-types*
1303 :key #'find-classoid))
1304 (not (eq type1 (find-classoid 'function)))
1305 (not (find (classoid-layout (find-classoid 'function))
1306 (layout-inherits (classoid-layout type1)))))
1310 (if (or (type-might-contain-other-types-p type1)
1311 (member-type-p type1))
1314 ((eq type2 *funcallable-instance-type*)
1316 (structure-classoid *empty-type*)
1318 (if (member type1 *non-instance-classoid-types* :key #'find-classoid)
1320 (if (find (classoid-layout (find-classoid 'function))
1321 (layout-inherits (classoid-layout type1)))
1323 (if (type= type1 (find-classoid 'function))
1328 (if (or (type-might-contain-other-types-p type1)
1329 (member-type-p type1))
1332 (t (hierarchical-intersection2 type1 type2))))
1334 (!define-type-method (named :complex-union2) (type1 type2)
1335 ;; Perhaps when bug 85 is fixed this can be reenabled.
1336 ;;(aver (not (eq type2 *wild-type*))) ; * isn't really a type.
1338 ((eq type2 *extended-sequence-type*)
1339 (if (classoid-p type1)
1340 (if (or (member type1 *non-instance-classoid-types*
1341 :key #'find-classoid)
1342 (not (find (classoid-layout (find-classoid 'sequence))
1343 (layout-inherits (classoid-layout type1)))))
1347 ((eq type2 *instance-type*)
1348 (if (classoid-p type1)
1349 (if (or (member type1 *non-instance-classoid-types*
1350 :key #'find-classoid)
1351 (find (classoid-layout (find-classoid 'function))
1352 (layout-inherits (classoid-layout type1))))
1356 ((eq type2 *funcallable-instance-type*)
1357 (if (classoid-p type1)
1358 (if (or (member type1 *non-instance-classoid-types*
1359 :key #'find-classoid)
1360 (not (find (classoid-layout (find-classoid 'function))
1361 (layout-inherits (classoid-layout type1)))))
1363 (if (eq type1 (specifier-type 'function))
1367 (t (hierarchical-union2 type1 type2))))
1369 (!define-type-method (named :negate) (x)
1370 (aver (not (eq x *wild-type*)))
1372 ((eq x *universal-type*) *empty-type*)
1373 ((eq x *empty-type*) *universal-type*)
1374 ((or (eq x *instance-type*)
1375 (eq x *funcallable-instance-type*)
1376 (eq x *extended-sequence-type*))
1377 (make-negation-type :type x))
1378 (t (bug "NAMED type unexpected: ~S" x))))
1380 (!define-type-method (named :unparse) (x)
1381 (named-type-name x))
1383 ;;;; hairy and unknown types
1385 (!define-type-method (hairy :negate) (x)
1386 (make-negation-type :type x))
1388 (!define-type-method (hairy :unparse) (x)
1389 (hairy-type-specifier x))
1391 (!define-type-method (hairy :simple-subtypep) (type1 type2)
1392 (let ((hairy-spec1 (hairy-type-specifier type1))
1393 (hairy-spec2 (hairy-type-specifier type2)))
1394 (cond ((equal-but-no-car-recursion hairy-spec1 hairy-spec2)
1396 ((maybe-reparse-specifier! type1)
1397 (csubtypep type1 type2))
1398 ((maybe-reparse-specifier! type2)
1399 (csubtypep type1 type2))
1401 (values nil nil)))))
1403 (!define-type-method (hairy :complex-subtypep-arg2) (type1 type2)
1404 (if (maybe-reparse-specifier! type2)
1405 (csubtypep type1 type2)
1406 (let ((specifier (hairy-type-specifier type2)))
1407 (cond ((and (consp specifier) (eql (car specifier) 'satisfies))
1408 (case (cadr specifier)
1409 ((keywordp) (if (type= type1 (specifier-type 'symbol))
1411 (invoke-complex-subtypep-arg1-method type1 type2)))
1412 (t (invoke-complex-subtypep-arg1-method type1 type2))))
1414 (invoke-complex-subtypep-arg1-method type1 type2))))))
1416 (!define-type-method (hairy :complex-subtypep-arg1) (type1 type2)
1417 (if (maybe-reparse-specifier! type1)
1418 (csubtypep type1 type2)
1421 (!define-type-method (hairy :complex-=) (type1 type2)
1422 (if (maybe-reparse-specifier! type2)
1426 (!define-type-method (hairy :simple-intersection2 :complex-intersection2)
1428 (if (type= type1 type2)
1432 (!define-type-method (hairy :simple-union2)
1434 (if (type= type1 type2)
1438 (!define-type-method (hairy :simple-=) (type1 type2)
1439 (if (equal-but-no-car-recursion (hairy-type-specifier type1)
1440 (hairy-type-specifier type2))
1444 (!def-type-translator satisfies (&whole whole fun)
1445 (declare (ignore fun))
1446 ;; Check legality of arguments.
1447 (destructuring-bind (satisfies predicate-name) whole
1448 (declare (ignore satisfies))
1449 (unless (symbolp predicate-name)
1450 (error 'simple-type-error
1451 :datum predicate-name
1452 :expected-type 'symbol
1453 :format-control "The SATISFIES predicate name is not a symbol: ~S"
1454 :format-arguments (list predicate-name))))
1456 (make-hairy-type :specifier whole))
1460 (!define-type-method (negation :negate) (x)
1461 (negation-type-type x))
1463 (!define-type-method (negation :unparse) (x)
1464 (if (type= (negation-type-type x) (specifier-type 'cons))
1466 `(not ,(type-specifier (negation-type-type x)))))
1468 (!define-type-method (negation :simple-subtypep) (type1 type2)
1469 (csubtypep (negation-type-type type2) (negation-type-type type1)))
1471 (!define-type-method (negation :complex-subtypep-arg2) (type1 type2)
1472 (let* ((complement-type2 (negation-type-type type2))
1473 (intersection2 (type-intersection2 type1
1476 ;; FIXME: if uncertain, maybe try arg1?
1477 (type= intersection2 *empty-type*)
1478 (invoke-complex-subtypep-arg1-method type1 type2))))
1480 (!define-type-method (negation :complex-subtypep-arg1) (type1 type2)
1481 ;; "Incrementally extended heuristic algorithms tend inexorably toward the
1482 ;; incomprehensible." -- http://www.unlambda.com/~james/lambda/lambda.txt
1484 ;; You may not believe this. I couldn't either. But then I sat down
1485 ;; and drew lots of Venn diagrams. Comments involving a and b refer
1486 ;; to the call (subtypep '(not a) 'b) -- CSR, 2002-02-27.
1488 ;; (Several logical truths in this block are true as long as
1489 ;; b/=T. As of sbcl-0.7.1.28, it seems impossible to construct a
1490 ;; case with b=T where we actually reach this type method, but
1491 ;; we'll test for and exclude this case anyway, since future
1492 ;; maintenance might make it possible for it to end up in this
1494 (multiple-value-bind (equal certain)
1495 (type= type2 *universal-type*)
1497 (return (values nil nil)))
1499 (return (values t t))))
1500 (let ((complement-type1 (negation-type-type type1)))
1501 ;; Do the special cases first, in order to give us a chance if
1502 ;; subtype/supertype relationships are hairy.
1503 (multiple-value-bind (equal certain)
1504 (type= complement-type1 type2)
1505 ;; If a = b, ~a is not a subtype of b (unless b=T, which was
1508 (return (values nil nil)))
1510 (return (values nil t))))
1511 ;; KLUDGE: ANSI requires that the SUBTYPEP result between any
1512 ;; two built-in atomic type specifiers never be uncertain. This
1513 ;; is hard to do cleanly for the built-in types whose
1514 ;; definitions include (NOT FOO), i.e. CONS and RATIO. However,
1515 ;; we can do it with this hack, which uses our global knowledge
1516 ;; that our implementation of the type system uses disjoint
1517 ;; implementation types to represent disjoint sets (except when
1518 ;; types are contained in other types). (This is a KLUDGE
1519 ;; because it's fragile. Various changes in internal
1520 ;; representation in the type system could make it start
1521 ;; confidently returning incorrect results.) -- WHN 2002-03-08
1522 (unless (or (type-might-contain-other-types-p complement-type1)
1523 (type-might-contain-other-types-p type2))
1524 ;; Because of the way our types which don't contain other
1525 ;; types are disjoint subsets of the space of possible values,
1526 ;; (SUBTYPEP '(NOT AA) 'B)=NIL when AA and B are simple (and B
1527 ;; is not T, as checked above).
1528 (return (values nil t)))
1529 ;; The old (TYPE= TYPE1 TYPE2) branch would never be taken, as
1530 ;; TYPE1 and TYPE2 will only be equal if they're both NOT types,
1531 ;; and then the :SIMPLE-SUBTYPEP method would be used instead.
1532 ;; But a CSUBTYPEP relationship might still hold:
1533 (multiple-value-bind (equal certain)
1534 (csubtypep complement-type1 type2)
1535 ;; If a is a subtype of b, ~a is not a subtype of b (unless
1536 ;; b=T, which was excluded above).
1538 (return (values nil nil)))
1540 (return (values nil t))))
1541 (multiple-value-bind (equal certain)
1542 (csubtypep type2 complement-type1)
1543 ;; If b is a subtype of a, ~a is not a subtype of b. (FIXME:
1544 ;; That's not true if a=T. Do we know at this point that a is
1547 (return (values nil nil)))
1549 (return (values nil t))))
1550 ;; old CSR comment ca. 0.7.2, now obsoleted by the SIMPLE-CTYPE?
1551 ;; KLUDGE case above: Other cases here would rely on being able
1552 ;; to catch all possible cases, which the fragility of this type
1553 ;; system doesn't inspire me; for instance, if a is type= to ~b,
1554 ;; then we want T, T; if this is not the case and the types are
1555 ;; disjoint (have an intersection of *empty-type*) then we want
1556 ;; NIL, T; else if the union of a and b is the *universal-type*
1557 ;; then we want T, T. So currently we still claim to be unsure
1558 ;; about e.g. (subtypep '(not fixnum) 'single-float).
1560 ;; OTOH we might still get here:
1563 (!define-type-method (negation :complex-=) (type1 type2)
1564 ;; (NOT FOO) isn't equivalent to anything that's not a negation
1565 ;; type, except possibly a type that might contain it in disguise.
1566 (declare (ignore type2))
1567 (if (type-might-contain-other-types-p type1)
1571 (!define-type-method (negation :simple-intersection2) (type1 type2)
1572 (let ((not1 (negation-type-type type1))
1573 (not2 (negation-type-type type2)))
1575 ((csubtypep not1 not2) type2)
1576 ((csubtypep not2 not1) type1)
1577 ;; Why no analagous clause to the disjoint in the SIMPLE-UNION2
1578 ;; method, below? The clause would read
1580 ;; ((EQ (TYPE-UNION NOT1 NOT2) *UNIVERSAL-TYPE*) *EMPTY-TYPE*)
1582 ;; but with proper canonicalization of negation types, there's
1583 ;; no way of constructing two negation types with union of their
1584 ;; negations being the universal type.
1586 (aver (not (eq (type-union not1 not2) *universal-type*)))
1589 (defun maybe-complex-array-refinement (type1 type2)
1590 (let* ((ntype (negation-type-type type2))
1591 (ndims (array-type-dimensions ntype))
1592 (ncomplexp (array-type-complexp ntype))
1593 (nseltype (array-type-specialized-element-type ntype))
1594 (neltype (array-type-element-type ntype)))
1595 (if (and (eql ndims '*) (null ncomplexp)
1596 (eql neltype *wild-type*) (eql nseltype *wild-type*))
1597 (make-array-type :dimensions (array-type-dimensions type1)
1599 :element-type (array-type-element-type type1)
1600 :specialized-element-type (array-type-specialized-element-type type1)))))
1602 (!define-type-method (negation :complex-intersection2) (type1 type2)
1604 ((csubtypep type1 (negation-type-type type2)) *empty-type*)
1605 ((eq (type-intersection type1 (negation-type-type type2)) *empty-type*)
1607 ((and (array-type-p type1) (array-type-p (negation-type-type type2)))
1608 (maybe-complex-array-refinement type1 type2))
1611 (!define-type-method (negation :simple-union2) (type1 type2)
1612 (let ((not1 (negation-type-type type1))
1613 (not2 (negation-type-type type2)))
1615 ((csubtypep not1 not2) type1)
1616 ((csubtypep not2 not1) type2)
1617 ((eq (type-intersection not1 not2) *empty-type*)
1621 (!define-type-method (negation :complex-union2) (type1 type2)
1623 ((csubtypep (negation-type-type type2) type1) *universal-type*)
1624 ((eq (type-intersection type1 (negation-type-type type2)) *empty-type*)
1628 (!define-type-method (negation :simple-=) (type1 type2)
1629 (type= (negation-type-type type1) (negation-type-type type2)))
1631 (!def-type-translator not (typespec)
1632 (type-negation (specifier-type typespec)))
1636 (!define-type-class number)
1638 (declaim (inline numeric-type-equal))
1639 (defun numeric-type-equal (type1 type2)
1640 (and (eq (numeric-type-class type1) (numeric-type-class type2))
1641 (eq (numeric-type-format type1) (numeric-type-format type2))
1642 (eq (numeric-type-complexp type1) (numeric-type-complexp type2))))
1644 (!define-type-method (number :simple-=) (type1 type2)
1646 (and (numeric-type-equal type1 type2)
1647 (equalp (numeric-type-low type1) (numeric-type-low type2))
1648 (equalp (numeric-type-high type1) (numeric-type-high type2)))
1651 (!define-type-method (number :negate) (type)
1652 (if (and (null (numeric-type-low type)) (null (numeric-type-high type)))
1653 (make-negation-type :type type)
1656 :type (modified-numeric-type type :low nil :high nil))
1658 ((null (numeric-type-low type))
1659 (modified-numeric-type
1661 :low (let ((h (numeric-type-high type)))
1662 (if (consp h) (car h) (list h)))
1664 ((null (numeric-type-high type))
1665 (modified-numeric-type
1668 :high (let ((l (numeric-type-low type)))
1669 (if (consp l) (car l) (list l)))))
1671 (modified-numeric-type
1674 :high (let ((l (numeric-type-low type)))
1675 (if (consp l) (car l) (list l))))
1676 (modified-numeric-type
1678 :low (let ((h (numeric-type-high type)))
1679 (if (consp h) (car h) (list h)))
1682 (!define-type-method (number :unparse) (type)
1683 (let* ((complexp (numeric-type-complexp type))
1684 (low (numeric-type-low type))
1685 (high (numeric-type-high type))
1686 (base (case (numeric-type-class type)
1688 (rational 'rational)
1689 (float (or (numeric-type-format type) 'float))
1692 (cond ((and (eq base 'integer) high low)
1693 (let ((high-count (logcount high))
1694 (high-length (integer-length high)))
1696 (cond ((= high 0) '(integer 0 0))
1698 ((and (= high-count high-length)
1699 (plusp high-length))
1700 `(unsigned-byte ,high-length))
1702 `(mod ,(1+ high)))))
1703 ((and (= low sb!xc:most-negative-fixnum)
1704 (= high sb!xc:most-positive-fixnum))
1706 ((and (= low (lognot high))
1707 (= high-count high-length)
1709 `(signed-byte ,(1+ high-length)))
1711 `(integer ,low ,high)))))
1712 (high `(,base ,(or low '*) ,high))
1714 (if (and (eq base 'integer) (= low 0))
1722 (aver (neq base+bounds 'real))
1723 `(complex ,base+bounds))
1725 (aver (eq base+bounds 'real))
1728 (!define-type-method (number :singleton-p) (type)
1729 (let ((low (numeric-type-low type))
1730 (high (numeric-type-high type)))
1733 (eql (numeric-type-complexp type) :real)
1734 (member (numeric-type-class type) '(integer rational
1735 #-sb-xc-host float)))
1736 (values t (numeric-type-low type))
1739 ;;; Return true if X is "less than or equal" to Y, taking open bounds
1740 ;;; into consideration. CLOSED is the predicate used to test the bound
1741 ;;; on a closed interval (e.g. <=), and OPEN is the predicate used on
1742 ;;; open bounds (e.g. <). Y is considered to be the outside bound, in
1743 ;;; the sense that if it is infinite (NIL), then the test succeeds,
1744 ;;; whereas if X is infinite, then the test fails (unless Y is also
1747 ;;; This is for comparing bounds of the same kind, e.g. upper and
1748 ;;; upper. Use NUMERIC-BOUND-TEST* for different kinds of bounds.
1749 (defmacro numeric-bound-test (x y closed open)
1754 (,closed (car ,x) (car ,y))
1755 (,closed (car ,x) ,y)))
1761 ;;; This is used to compare upper and lower bounds. This is different
1762 ;;; from the same-bound case:
1763 ;;; -- Since X = NIL is -infinity, whereas y = NIL is +infinity, we
1764 ;;; return true if *either* arg is NIL.
1765 ;;; -- an open inner bound is "greater" and also squeezes the interval,
1766 ;;; causing us to use the OPEN test for those cases as well.
1767 (defmacro numeric-bound-test* (x y closed open)
1772 (,open (car ,x) (car ,y))
1773 (,open (car ,x) ,y)))
1779 ;;; Return whichever of the numeric bounds X and Y is "maximal"
1780 ;;; according to the predicates CLOSED (e.g. >=) and OPEN (e.g. >).
1781 ;;; This is only meaningful for maximizing like bounds, i.e. upper and
1782 ;;; upper. If MAX-P is true, then we return NIL if X or Y is NIL,
1783 ;;; otherwise we return the other arg.
1784 (defmacro numeric-bound-max (x y closed open max-p)
1787 `(cond ((not ,n-x) ,(if max-p nil n-y))
1788 ((not ,n-y) ,(if max-p nil n-x))
1791 (if (,closed (car ,n-x) (car ,n-y)) ,n-x ,n-y)
1792 (if (,open (car ,n-x) ,n-y) ,n-x ,n-y)))
1795 (if (,open (car ,n-y) ,n-x) ,n-y ,n-x)
1796 (if (,closed ,n-y ,n-x) ,n-y ,n-x))))))
1798 (!define-type-method (number :simple-subtypep) (type1 type2)
1799 (let ((class1 (numeric-type-class type1))
1800 (class2 (numeric-type-class type2))
1801 (complexp2 (numeric-type-complexp type2))
1802 (format2 (numeric-type-format type2))
1803 (low1 (numeric-type-low type1))
1804 (high1 (numeric-type-high type1))
1805 (low2 (numeric-type-low type2))
1806 (high2 (numeric-type-high type2)))
1807 ;; If one is complex and the other isn't, they are disjoint.
1808 (cond ((not (or (eq (numeric-type-complexp type1) complexp2)
1811 ;; If the classes are specified and different, the types are
1812 ;; disjoint unless type2 is RATIONAL and type1 is INTEGER.
1813 ;; [ or type1 is INTEGER and type2 is of the form (RATIONAL
1814 ;; X X) for integral X, but this is dealt with in the
1815 ;; canonicalization inside MAKE-NUMERIC-TYPE ]
1816 ((not (or (eq class1 class2)
1818 (and (eq class1 'integer) (eq class2 'rational))))
1820 ;; If the float formats are specified and different, the types
1822 ((not (or (eq (numeric-type-format type1) format2)
1825 ;; Check the bounds.
1826 ((and (numeric-bound-test low1 low2 >= >)
1827 (numeric-bound-test high1 high2 <= <))
1832 (!define-superclasses number ((number)) !cold-init-forms)
1834 ;;; If the high bound of LOW is adjacent to the low bound of HIGH,
1835 ;;; then return true, otherwise NIL.
1836 (defun numeric-types-adjacent (low high)
1837 (let ((low-bound (numeric-type-high low))
1838 (high-bound (numeric-type-low high)))
1839 (cond ((not (and low-bound high-bound)) nil)
1840 ((and (consp low-bound) (consp high-bound)) nil)
1842 (let ((low-value (car low-bound)))
1843 (or (eql low-value high-bound)
1845 (load-time-value (make-unportable-float
1846 :single-float-negative-zero)))
1847 (eql high-bound 0f0))
1848 (and (eql low-value 0f0)
1850 (load-time-value (make-unportable-float
1851 :single-float-negative-zero))))
1853 (load-time-value (make-unportable-float
1854 :double-float-negative-zero)))
1855 (eql high-bound 0d0))
1856 (and (eql low-value 0d0)
1858 (load-time-value (make-unportable-float
1859 :double-float-negative-zero)))))))
1861 (let ((high-value (car high-bound)))
1862 (or (eql high-value low-bound)
1863 (and (eql high-value
1864 (load-time-value (make-unportable-float
1865 :single-float-negative-zero)))
1866 (eql low-bound 0f0))
1867 (and (eql high-value 0f0)
1869 (load-time-value (make-unportable-float
1870 :single-float-negative-zero))))
1871 (and (eql high-value
1872 (load-time-value (make-unportable-float
1873 :double-float-negative-zero)))
1874 (eql low-bound 0d0))
1875 (and (eql high-value 0d0)
1877 (load-time-value (make-unportable-float
1878 :double-float-negative-zero)))))))
1879 ((and (eq (numeric-type-class low) 'integer)
1880 (eq (numeric-type-class high) 'integer))
1881 (eql (1+ low-bound) high-bound))
1885 ;;; Return a numeric type that is a supertype for both TYPE1 and TYPE2.
1887 ;;; Binding *APPROXIMATE-NUMERIC-UNIONS* to T allows merging non-adjacent
1888 ;;; numeric types, eg (OR (INTEGER 0 12) (INTEGER 20 128)) => (INTEGER 0 128),
1889 ;;; the compiler does this occasionally during type-derivation to avoid
1890 ;;; creating absurdly complex unions of numeric types.
1891 (defvar *approximate-numeric-unions* nil)
1893 (!define-type-method (number :simple-union2) (type1 type2)
1894 (declare (type numeric-type type1 type2))
1895 (cond ((csubtypep type1 type2) type2)
1896 ((csubtypep type2 type1) type1)
1898 (let ((class1 (numeric-type-class type1))
1899 (format1 (numeric-type-format type1))
1900 (complexp1 (numeric-type-complexp type1))
1901 (class2 (numeric-type-class type2))
1902 (format2 (numeric-type-format type2))
1903 (complexp2 (numeric-type-complexp type2)))
1905 ((and (eq class1 class2)
1906 (eq format1 format2)
1907 (eq complexp1 complexp2)
1908 (or *approximate-numeric-unions*
1909 (numeric-types-intersect type1 type2)
1910 (numeric-types-adjacent type1 type2)
1911 (numeric-types-adjacent type2 type1)))
1916 :low (numeric-bound-max (numeric-type-low type1)
1917 (numeric-type-low type2)
1919 :high (numeric-bound-max (numeric-type-high type1)
1920 (numeric-type-high type2)
1922 ;; FIXME: These two clauses are almost identical, and the
1923 ;; consequents are in fact identical in every respect.
1924 ((and (eq class1 'rational)
1925 (eq class2 'integer)
1926 (eq format1 format2)
1927 (eq complexp1 complexp2)
1928 (integerp (numeric-type-low type2))
1929 (integerp (numeric-type-high type2))
1930 (= (numeric-type-low type2) (numeric-type-high type2))
1931 (or *approximate-numeric-unions*
1932 (numeric-types-adjacent type1 type2)
1933 (numeric-types-adjacent type2 type1)))
1938 :low (numeric-bound-max (numeric-type-low type1)
1939 (numeric-type-low type2)
1941 :high (numeric-bound-max (numeric-type-high type1)
1942 (numeric-type-high type2)
1944 ((and (eq class1 'integer)
1945 (eq class2 'rational)
1946 (eq format1 format2)
1947 (eq complexp1 complexp2)
1948 (integerp (numeric-type-low type1))
1949 (integerp (numeric-type-high type1))
1950 (= (numeric-type-low type1) (numeric-type-high type1))
1951 (or *approximate-numeric-unions*
1952 (numeric-types-adjacent type1 type2)
1953 (numeric-types-adjacent type2 type1)))
1958 :low (numeric-bound-max (numeric-type-low type1)
1959 (numeric-type-low type2)
1961 :high (numeric-bound-max (numeric-type-high type1)
1962 (numeric-type-high type2)
1968 (setf (info :type :kind 'number)
1969 #+sb-xc-host :defined #-sb-xc-host :primitive)
1970 (setf (info :type :builtin 'number)
1971 (make-numeric-type :complexp nil)))
1973 (!def-type-translator complex (&optional (typespec '*))
1974 (if (eq typespec '*)
1975 (specifier-type '(complex real))
1976 (labels ((not-numeric ()
1977 (error "The component type for COMPLEX is not numeric: ~S"
1980 (error "The component type for COMPLEX is not a subtype of REAL: ~S"
1982 (complex1 (component-type)
1983 (unless (numeric-type-p component-type)
1985 (when (eq (numeric-type-complexp component-type) :complex)
1987 (if (csubtypep component-type (specifier-type '(eql 0)))
1989 (modified-numeric-type component-type
1990 :complexp :complex)))
1993 ((eq ctype *empty-type*) *empty-type*)
1994 ((eq ctype *universal-type*) (not-real))
1995 ((typep ctype 'numeric-type) (complex1 ctype))
1996 ((typep ctype 'union-type)
1998 (mapcar #'do-complex (union-type-types ctype))))
1999 ((typep ctype 'member-type)
2001 (mapcar-member-type-members
2002 (lambda (x) (do-complex (ctype-of x)))
2004 ((and (typep ctype 'intersection-type)
2005 ;; FIXME: This is very much a
2006 ;; not-quite-worst-effort, but we are required to do
2007 ;; something here because of our representation of
2008 ;; RATIO as (AND RATIONAL (NOT INTEGER)): we must
2009 ;; allow users to ask about (COMPLEX RATIO). This
2010 ;; will of course fail to work right on such types
2011 ;; as (AND INTEGER (SATISFIES ZEROP))...
2012 (let ((numbers (remove-if-not
2014 (intersection-type-types ctype))))
2016 (null (cdr numbers))
2017 (eq (numeric-type-complexp (car numbers)) :real)
2018 (complex1 (car numbers))))))
2020 (multiple-value-bind (subtypep certainly)
2021 (csubtypep ctype (specifier-type 'real))
2022 (if (and (not subtypep) certainly)
2024 ;; ANSI just says that TYPESPEC is any subtype of
2025 ;; type REAL, not necessarily a NUMERIC-TYPE. In
2026 ;; particular, at this point TYPESPEC could legally
2027 ;; be a hairy type like (AND NUMBER (SATISFIES
2028 ;; REALP) (SATISFIES ZEROP)), in which case we fall
2029 ;; through the logic above and end up here,
2031 (bug "~@<(known bug #145): The type ~S is too hairy to be ~
2032 used for a COMPLEX component.~:@>"
2034 (let ((ctype (specifier-type typespec)))
2035 (do-complex ctype)))))
2037 ;;; If X is *, return NIL, otherwise return the bound, which must be a
2038 ;;; member of TYPE or a one-element list of a member of TYPE.
2039 #!-sb-fluid (declaim (inline canonicalized-bound))
2040 (defun canonicalized-bound (bound type)
2041 (cond ((eq bound '*) nil)
2042 ((or (sb!xc:typep bound type)
2044 (sb!xc:typep (car bound) type)
2045 (null (cdr bound))))
2048 (error "Bound is not ~S, a ~S or a list of a ~S: ~S"
2054 (!def-type-translator integer (&optional (low '*) (high '*))
2055 (let* ((l (canonicalized-bound low 'integer))
2056 (lb (if (consp l) (1+ (car l)) l))
2057 (h (canonicalized-bound high 'integer))
2058 (hb (if (consp h) (1- (car h)) h)))
2059 (if (and hb lb (< hb lb))
2061 (make-numeric-type :class 'integer
2063 :enumerable (not (null (and l h)))
2067 (defmacro !def-bounded-type (type class format)
2068 `(!def-type-translator ,type (&optional (low '*) (high '*))
2069 (let ((lb (canonicalized-bound low ',type))
2070 (hb (canonicalized-bound high ',type)))
2071 (if (not (numeric-bound-test* lb hb <= <))
2073 (make-numeric-type :class ',class
2078 (!def-bounded-type rational rational nil)
2080 ;;; Unlike CMU CL, we represent the types FLOAT and REAL as
2081 ;;; UNION-TYPEs of more primitive types, in order to make
2082 ;;; type representation more unique, avoiding problems in the
2083 ;;; simplification of things like
2084 ;;; (subtypep '(or (single-float -1.0 1.0) (single-float 0.1))
2085 ;;; '(or (real -1 7) (single-float 0.1) (single-float -1.0 1.0)))
2086 ;;; When we allowed REAL to remain as a separate NUMERIC-TYPE,
2087 ;;; it was too easy for the first argument to be simplified to
2088 ;;; '(SINGLE-FLOAT -1.0), and for the second argument to be simplified
2089 ;;; to '(OR (REAL -1 7) (SINGLE-FLOAT 0.1)) and then for the
2090 ;;; SUBTYPEP to fail (returning NIL,T instead of T,T) because
2091 ;;; the first argument can't be seen to be a subtype of any of the
2092 ;;; terms in the second argument.
2094 ;;; The old CMU CL way was:
2095 ;;; (!def-bounded-type float float nil)
2096 ;;; (!def-bounded-type real nil nil)
2098 ;;; FIXME: If this new way works for a while with no weird new
2099 ;;; problems, we can go back and rip out support for separate FLOAT
2100 ;;; and REAL flavors of NUMERIC-TYPE. The new way was added in
2101 ;;; sbcl-0.6.11.22, 2001-03-21.
2103 ;;; FIXME: It's probably necessary to do something to fix the
2104 ;;; analogous problem with INTEGER and RATIONAL types. Perhaps
2105 ;;; bounded RATIONAL types should be represented as (OR RATIO INTEGER).
2106 (defun coerce-bound (bound type upperp inner-coerce-bound-fun)
2107 (declare (type function inner-coerce-bound-fun))
2110 (funcall inner-coerce-bound-fun bound type upperp)))
2111 (defun inner-coerce-real-bound (bound type upperp)
2112 #+sb-xc-host (declare (ignore upperp))
2113 (let #+sb-xc-host ()
2115 ((nl (load-time-value (symbol-value 'sb!xc:most-negative-long-float)))
2116 (pl (load-time-value (symbol-value 'sb!xc:most-positive-long-float))))
2117 (let ((nbound (if (consp bound) (car bound) bound))
2118 (consp (consp bound)))
2122 (list (rational nbound))
2126 ((floatp nbound) bound)
2128 ;; Coerce to the widest float format available, to avoid
2129 ;; unnecessary loss of precision, but don't coerce
2130 ;; unrepresentable numbers, except on the host where we
2131 ;; shouldn't be making these types (but KLUDGE: can't even
2132 ;; assert portably that we're not).
2136 (when (< nbound nl) (return-from inner-coerce-real-bound nl)))
2138 (when (> nbound pl) (return-from inner-coerce-real-bound pl))))
2139 (let ((result (coerce nbound 'long-float)))
2140 (if consp (list result) result)))))))))
2141 (defun inner-coerce-float-bound (bound type upperp)
2142 #+sb-xc-host (declare (ignore upperp))
2143 (let #+sb-xc-host ()
2145 ((nd (load-time-value (symbol-value 'sb!xc:most-negative-double-float)))
2146 (pd (load-time-value (symbol-value 'sb!xc:most-positive-double-float)))
2147 (ns (load-time-value (symbol-value 'sb!xc:most-negative-single-float)))
2148 (ps (load-time-value
2149 (symbol-value 'sb!xc:most-positive-single-float))))
2150 (let ((nbound (if (consp bound) (car bound) bound))
2151 (consp (consp bound)))
2155 ((typep nbound 'single-float) bound)
2160 (when (< nbound ns) (return-from inner-coerce-float-bound ns)))
2162 (when (> nbound ps) (return-from inner-coerce-float-bound ps))))
2163 (let ((result (coerce nbound 'single-float)))
2164 (if consp (list result) result)))))
2167 ((typep nbound 'double-float) bound)
2172 (when (< nbound nd) (return-from inner-coerce-float-bound nd)))
2174 (when (> nbound pd) (return-from inner-coerce-float-bound pd))))
2175 (let ((result (coerce nbound 'double-float)))
2176 (if consp (list result) result)))))))))
2177 (defun coerced-real-bound (bound type upperp)
2178 (coerce-bound bound type upperp #'inner-coerce-real-bound))
2179 (defun coerced-float-bound (bound type upperp)
2180 (coerce-bound bound type upperp #'inner-coerce-float-bound))
2181 (!def-type-translator real (&optional (low '*) (high '*))
2182 (specifier-type `(or (float ,(coerced-real-bound low 'float nil)
2183 ,(coerced-real-bound high 'float t))
2184 (rational ,(coerced-real-bound low 'rational nil)
2185 ,(coerced-real-bound high 'rational t)))))
2186 (!def-type-translator float (&optional (low '*) (high '*))
2188 `(or (single-float ,(coerced-float-bound low 'single-float nil)
2189 ,(coerced-float-bound high 'single-float t))
2190 (double-float ,(coerced-float-bound low 'double-float nil)
2191 ,(coerced-float-bound high 'double-float t))
2192 #!+long-float ,(error "stub: no long float support yet"))))
2194 (defmacro !define-float-format (f)
2195 `(!def-bounded-type ,f float ,f))
2197 (!define-float-format short-float)
2198 (!define-float-format single-float)
2199 (!define-float-format double-float)
2200 (!define-float-format long-float)
2202 (defun numeric-types-intersect (type1 type2)
2203 (declare (type numeric-type type1 type2))
2204 (let* ((class1 (numeric-type-class type1))
2205 (class2 (numeric-type-class type2))
2206 (complexp1 (numeric-type-complexp type1))
2207 (complexp2 (numeric-type-complexp type2))
2208 (format1 (numeric-type-format type1))
2209 (format2 (numeric-type-format type2))
2210 (low1 (numeric-type-low type1))
2211 (high1 (numeric-type-high type1))
2212 (low2 (numeric-type-low type2))
2213 (high2 (numeric-type-high type2)))
2214 ;; If one is complex and the other isn't, then they are disjoint.
2215 (cond ((not (or (eq complexp1 complexp2)
2216 (null complexp1) (null complexp2)))
2218 ;; If either type is a float, then the other must either be
2219 ;; specified to be a float or unspecified. Otherwise, they
2221 ((and (eq class1 'float)
2222 (not (member class2 '(float nil)))) nil)
2223 ((and (eq class2 'float)
2224 (not (member class1 '(float nil)))) nil)
2225 ;; If the float formats are specified and different, the
2226 ;; types are disjoint.
2227 ((not (or (eq format1 format2) (null format1) (null format2)))
2230 ;; Check the bounds. This is a bit odd because we must
2231 ;; always have the outer bound of the interval as the
2233 (if (numeric-bound-test high1 high2 <= <)
2234 (or (and (numeric-bound-test low1 low2 >= >)
2235 (numeric-bound-test* low1 high2 <= <))
2236 (and (numeric-bound-test low2 low1 >= >)
2237 (numeric-bound-test* low2 high1 <= <)))
2238 (or (and (numeric-bound-test* low2 high1 <= <)
2239 (numeric-bound-test low2 low1 >= >))
2240 (and (numeric-bound-test high2 high1 <= <)
2241 (numeric-bound-test* high2 low1 >= >))))))))
2243 ;;; Take the numeric bound X and convert it into something that can be
2244 ;;; used as a bound in a numeric type with the specified CLASS and
2245 ;;; FORMAT. If UP-P is true, then we round up as needed, otherwise we
2246 ;;; round down. UP-P true implies that X is a lower bound, i.e. (N) > N.
2248 ;;; This is used by NUMERIC-TYPE-INTERSECTION to mash the bound into
2249 ;;; the appropriate type number. X may only be a float when CLASS is
2252 ;;; ### Note: it is possible for the coercion to a float to overflow
2253 ;;; or underflow. This happens when the bound doesn't fit in the
2254 ;;; specified format. In this case, we should really return the
2255 ;;; appropriate {Most | Least}-{Positive | Negative}-XXX-Float float
2256 ;;; of desired format. But these conditions aren't currently signalled
2257 ;;; in any useful way.
2259 ;;; Also, when converting an open rational bound into a float we
2260 ;;; should probably convert it to a closed bound of the closest float
2261 ;;; in the specified format. KLUDGE: In general, open float bounds are
2262 ;;; screwed up. -- (comment from original CMU CL)
2263 (defun round-numeric-bound (x class format up-p)
2265 (let ((cx (if (consp x) (car x) x)))
2269 (if (and (consp x) (integerp cx))
2270 (if up-p (1+ cx) (1- cx))
2271 (if up-p (ceiling cx) (floor cx))))
2275 ((and format (subtypep format 'double-float))
2276 (if (<= most-negative-double-float cx most-positive-double-float)
2280 (if (<= most-negative-single-float cx most-positive-single-float)
2282 (coerce cx (or format 'single-float))
2284 (if (consp x) (list res) res)))))
2287 ;;; Handle the case of type intersection on two numeric types. We use
2288 ;;; TYPES-EQUAL-OR-INTERSECT to throw out the case of types with no
2289 ;;; intersection. If an attribute in TYPE1 is unspecified, then we use
2290 ;;; TYPE2's attribute, which must be at least as restrictive. If the
2291 ;;; types intersect, then the only attributes that can be specified
2292 ;;; and different are the class and the bounds.
2294 ;;; When the class differs, we use the more restrictive class. The
2295 ;;; only interesting case is RATIONAL/INTEGER, since RATIONAL includes
2298 ;;; We make the result lower (upper) bound the maximum (minimum) of
2299 ;;; the argument lower (upper) bounds. We convert the bounds into the
2300 ;;; appropriate numeric type before maximizing. This avoids possible
2301 ;;; confusion due to mixed-type comparisons (but I think the result is
2303 (!define-type-method (number :simple-intersection2) (type1 type2)
2304 (declare (type numeric-type type1 type2))
2305 (if (numeric-types-intersect type1 type2)
2306 (let* ((class1 (numeric-type-class type1))
2307 (class2 (numeric-type-class type2))
2308 (class (ecase class1
2310 ((integer float) class1)
2311 (rational (if (eq class2 'integer)
2314 (format (or (numeric-type-format type1)
2315 (numeric-type-format type2))))
2319 :complexp (or (numeric-type-complexp type1)
2320 (numeric-type-complexp type2))
2321 :low (numeric-bound-max
2322 (round-numeric-bound (numeric-type-low type1)
2324 (round-numeric-bound (numeric-type-low type2)
2327 :high (numeric-bound-max
2328 (round-numeric-bound (numeric-type-high type1)
2330 (round-numeric-bound (numeric-type-high type2)
2335 ;;; Given two float formats, return the one with more precision. If
2336 ;;; either one is null, return NIL.
2337 (defun float-format-max (f1 f2)
2339 (dolist (f *float-formats* (error "bad float format: ~S" f1))
2340 (when (or (eq f f1) (eq f f2))
2343 ;;; Return the result of an operation on TYPE1 and TYPE2 according to
2344 ;;; the rules of numeric contagion. This is always NUMBER, some float
2345 ;;; format (possibly complex) or RATIONAL. Due to rational
2346 ;;; canonicalization, there isn't much we can do here with integers or
2347 ;;; rational complex numbers.
2349 ;;; If either argument is not a NUMERIC-TYPE, then return NUMBER. This
2350 ;;; is useful mainly for allowing types that are technically numbers,
2351 ;;; but not a NUMERIC-TYPE.
2352 (defun numeric-contagion (type1 type2)
2353 (if (and (numeric-type-p type1) (numeric-type-p type2))
2354 (let ((class1 (numeric-type-class type1))
2355 (class2 (numeric-type-class type2))
2356 (format1 (numeric-type-format type1))
2357 (format2 (numeric-type-format type2))
2358 (complexp1 (numeric-type-complexp type1))
2359 (complexp2 (numeric-type-complexp type2)))
2360 (cond ((or (null complexp1)
2362 (specifier-type 'number))
2366 :format (ecase class2
2367 (float (float-format-max format1 format2))
2368 ((integer rational) format1)
2370 ;; A double-float with any real number is a
2373 (if (eq format1 'double-float)
2376 ;; A long-float with any real number is a
2379 (if (eq format1 'long-float)
2382 :complexp (if (or (eq complexp1 :complex)
2383 (eq complexp2 :complex))
2386 ((eq class2 'float) (numeric-contagion type2 type1))
2387 ((and (eq complexp1 :real) (eq complexp2 :real))
2389 :class (and class1 class2 'rational)
2392 (specifier-type 'number))))
2393 (specifier-type 'number)))
2397 (!define-type-class array)
2399 (!define-type-method (array :simple-=) (type1 type2)
2400 (cond ((not (and (equal (array-type-dimensions type1)
2401 (array-type-dimensions type2))
2402 (eq (array-type-complexp type1)
2403 (array-type-complexp type2))))
2405 ((or (unknown-type-p (array-type-element-type type1))
2406 (unknown-type-p (array-type-element-type type2)))
2407 (type= (array-type-element-type type1)
2408 (array-type-element-type type2)))
2410 (values (type= (array-type-specialized-element-type type1)
2411 (array-type-specialized-element-type type2))
2414 (!define-type-method (array :negate) (type)
2415 ;; FIXME (and hint to PFD): we're vulnerable here to attacks of the
2416 ;; form "are (AND ARRAY (NOT (ARRAY T))) and (OR (ARRAY BIT) (ARRAY
2417 ;; NIL) (ARRAY CHAR) ...) equivalent?" -- CSR, 2003-12-10
2418 (make-negation-type :type type))
2420 (!define-type-method (array :unparse) (type)
2421 (let ((dims (array-type-dimensions type))
2422 (eltype (type-specifier (array-type-element-type type)))
2423 (complexp (array-type-complexp type)))
2427 ((t) '(and array (not simple-array)))
2429 ((nil) 'simple-array))
2431 ((t) `(and (array ,eltype) (not simple-array)))
2432 ((:maybe) `(array ,eltype))
2433 ((nil) `(simple-array ,eltype)))))
2434 ((= (length dims) 1)
2437 (if (eq (car dims) '*)
2440 ((base-char #!-sb-unicode character) 'base-string)
2442 (t `(vector ,eltype)))
2444 (bit `(bit-vector ,(car dims)))
2445 ((base-char #!-sb-unicode character)
2446 `(base-string ,(car dims)))
2447 (t `(vector ,eltype ,(car dims)))))))
2448 (if (eql complexp :maybe)
2450 `(and ,answer (not simple-array))))
2451 (if (eq (car dims) '*)
2453 (bit 'simple-bit-vector)
2454 ((base-char #!-sb-unicode character) 'simple-base-string)
2455 ((t) 'simple-vector)
2456 (t `(simple-array ,eltype (*))))
2458 (bit `(simple-bit-vector ,(car dims)))
2459 ((base-char #!-sb-unicode character)
2460 `(simple-base-string ,(car dims)))
2461 ((t) `(simple-vector ,(car dims)))
2462 (t `(simple-array ,eltype ,dims))))))
2465 ((t) `(and (array ,eltype ,dims) (not simple-array)))
2466 ((:maybe) `(array ,eltype ,dims))
2467 ((nil) `(simple-array ,eltype ,dims)))))))
2469 (!define-type-method (array :simple-subtypep) (type1 type2)
2470 (let ((dims1 (array-type-dimensions type1))
2471 (dims2 (array-type-dimensions type2))
2472 (complexp2 (array-type-complexp type2)))
2473 (cond (;; not subtypep unless dimensions are compatible
2474 (not (or (eq dims2 '*)
2475 (and (not (eq dims1 '*))
2476 ;; (sbcl-0.6.4 has trouble figuring out that
2477 ;; DIMS1 and DIMS2 must be lists at this
2478 ;; point, and knowing that is important to
2479 ;; compiling EVERY efficiently.)
2480 (= (length (the list dims1))
2481 (length (the list dims2)))
2482 (every (lambda (x y)
2483 (or (eq y '*) (eql x y)))
2485 (the list dims2)))))
2487 ;; not subtypep unless complexness is compatible
2488 ((not (or (eq complexp2 :maybe)
2489 (eq (array-type-complexp type1) complexp2)))
2491 ;; Since we didn't fail any of the tests above, we win
2492 ;; if the TYPE2 element type is wild.
2493 ((eq (array-type-element-type type2) *wild-type*)
2495 (;; Since we didn't match any of the special cases above, if
2496 ;; either element type is unknown we can only give a good
2497 ;; answer if they are the same.
2498 (or (unknown-type-p (array-type-element-type type1))
2499 (unknown-type-p (array-type-element-type type2)))
2500 (if (type= (array-type-element-type type1)
2501 (array-type-element-type type2))
2504 (;; Otherwise, the subtype relationship holds iff the
2505 ;; types are equal, and they're equal iff the specialized
2506 ;; element types are identical.
2508 (values (type= (array-type-specialized-element-type type1)
2509 (array-type-specialized-element-type type2))
2512 (!define-superclasses array
2513 ((vector vector) (array))
2516 (defun array-types-intersect (type1 type2)
2517 (declare (type array-type type1 type2))
2518 (let ((dims1 (array-type-dimensions type1))
2519 (dims2 (array-type-dimensions type2))
2520 (complexp1 (array-type-complexp type1))
2521 (complexp2 (array-type-complexp type2)))
2522 ;; See whether dimensions are compatible.
2523 (cond ((not (or (eq dims1 '*) (eq dims2 '*)
2524 (and (= (length dims1) (length dims2))
2525 (every (lambda (x y)
2526 (or (eq x '*) (eq y '*) (= x y)))
2529 ;; See whether complexpness is compatible.
2530 ((not (or (eq complexp1 :maybe)
2531 (eq complexp2 :maybe)
2532 (eq complexp1 complexp2)))
2536 ;; If either element type is wild, then they intersect.
2537 ;; Otherwise, the types must be identical.
2539 ;; FIXME: There seems to have been a fair amount of
2540 ;; confusion about the distinction between requested element
2541 ;; type and specialized element type; here is one of
2542 ;; them. If we request an array to hold objects of an
2543 ;; unknown type, we can do no better than represent that
2544 ;; type as an array specialized on wild-type. We keep the
2545 ;; requested element-type in the -ELEMENT-TYPE slot, and
2546 ;; *WILD-TYPE* in the -SPECIALIZED-ELEMENT-TYPE. So, here,
2547 ;; we must test for the SPECIALIZED slot being *WILD-TYPE*,
2548 ;; not just the ELEMENT-TYPE slot. Maybe the return value
2549 ;; in that specific case should be T, NIL? Or maybe this
2550 ;; function should really be called
2551 ;; ARRAY-TYPES-COULD-POSSIBLY-INTERSECT? In any case, this
2552 ;; was responsible for bug #123, and this whole issue could
2553 ;; do with a rethink and/or a rewrite. -- CSR, 2002-08-21
2554 ((or (eq (array-type-specialized-element-type type1) *wild-type*)
2555 (eq (array-type-specialized-element-type type2) *wild-type*)
2556 (type= (array-type-specialized-element-type type1)
2557 (array-type-specialized-element-type type2)))
2563 (!define-type-method (array :simple-union2) (type1 type2)
2564 (let* ((dims1 (array-type-dimensions type1))
2565 (dims2 (array-type-dimensions type2))
2566 (complexp1 (array-type-complexp type1))
2567 (complexp2 (array-type-complexp type2))
2568 (eltype1 (array-type-element-type type1))
2569 (eltype2 (array-type-element-type type2))
2570 (stype1 (array-type-specialized-element-type type1))
2571 (stype2 (array-type-specialized-element-type type2))
2572 (wild1 (eq eltype1 *wild-type*))
2573 (wild2 (eq eltype2 *wild-type*))
2575 (when (or wild1 wild2
2576 (and (or (setf e2 (csubtypep eltype1 eltype2))
2577 (csubtypep eltype2 eltype1))
2578 (type= stype1 stype2)))
2580 :dimensions (cond ((or (eq dims1 '*) (eq dims2 '*))
2582 ((equal dims1 dims2)
2584 ((= (length dims1) (length dims2))
2585 (mapcar (lambda (x y) (if (eq x y) x '*))
2589 :complexp (if (eq complexp1 complexp2) complexp1 :maybe)
2590 :element-type (if (or wild2 e2) eltype2 eltype1)
2591 :specialized-element-type (if wild2 stype2 stype1)))))
2593 (!define-type-method (array :simple-intersection2) (type1 type2)
2594 (declare (type array-type type1 type2))
2595 (if (array-types-intersect type1 type2)
2596 (let ((dims1 (array-type-dimensions type1))
2597 (dims2 (array-type-dimensions type2))
2598 (complexp1 (array-type-complexp type1))
2599 (complexp2 (array-type-complexp type2))
2600 (eltype1 (array-type-element-type type1))
2601 (eltype2 (array-type-element-type type2))
2602 (stype1 (array-type-specialized-element-type type1))
2603 (stype2 (array-type-specialized-element-type type2)))
2604 (flet ((intersect ()
2606 :dimensions (cond ((eq dims1 '*) dims2)
2607 ((eq dims2 '*) dims1)
2609 (mapcar (lambda (x y) (if (eq x '*) y x))
2611 :complexp (if (eq complexp1 :maybe) complexp2 complexp1)
2613 ((eq eltype1 *wild-type*) eltype2)
2614 ((eq eltype2 *wild-type*) eltype1)
2615 (t (type-intersection eltype1 eltype2))))))
2616 (if (or (eq stype1 *wild-type*) (eq stype2 *wild-type*))
2617 (specialize-array-type (intersect))
2618 (let ((type (intersect)))
2619 (aver (type= stype1 stype2))
2620 (setf (array-type-specialized-element-type type) stype1)
2624 ;;; Check a supplied dimension list to determine whether it is legal,
2625 ;;; and return it in canonical form (as either '* or a list).
2626 (defun canonical-array-dimensions (dims)
2631 (error "Arrays can't have a negative number of dimensions: ~S" dims))
2632 (when (>= dims sb!xc:array-rank-limit)
2633 (error "array type with too many dimensions: ~S" dims))
2634 (make-list dims :initial-element '*))
2636 (when (>= (length dims) sb!xc:array-rank-limit)
2637 (error "array type with too many dimensions: ~S" dims))
2640 (unless (and (integerp dim)
2642 (< dim sb!xc:array-dimension-limit))
2643 (error "bad dimension in array type: ~S" dim))))
2646 (error "Array dimensions is not a list, integer or *:~% ~S" dims))))
2650 (!define-type-class member)
2652 (!define-type-method (member :negate) (type)
2653 (let ((xset (member-type-xset type))
2654 (fp-zeroes (member-type-fp-zeroes type)))
2656 ;; Hairy case, which needs to do a bit of float type
2657 ;; canonicalization.
2658 (apply #'type-intersection
2659 (if (xset-empty-p xset)
2662 :type (make-member-type :xset xset)))
2665 (let* ((opposite (neg-fp-zero x))
2666 (type (ctype-of opposite)))
2669 :type (modified-numeric-type type :low nil :high nil))
2670 (modified-numeric-type type :low nil :high (list opposite))
2671 (make-member-type :members (list opposite))
2672 (modified-numeric-type type :low (list opposite) :high nil))))
2675 (make-negation-type :type type))))
2677 (!define-type-method (member :unparse) (type)
2678 (let ((members (member-type-members type)))
2680 ((equal members '(nil)) 'null)
2681 ((type= type (specifier-type 'standard-char)) 'standard-char)
2682 (t `(member ,@members)))))
2684 (!define-type-method (member :singleton-p) (type)
2685 (if (eql 1 (member-type-size type))
2686 (values t (first (member-type-members type)))
2689 (!define-type-method (member :simple-subtypep) (type1 type2)
2690 (values (and (xset-subset-p (member-type-xset type1)
2691 (member-type-xset type2))
2692 (subsetp (member-type-fp-zeroes type1)
2693 (member-type-fp-zeroes type2)))
2696 (!define-type-method (member :complex-subtypep-arg1) (type1 type2)
2698 (mapc-member-type-members
2700 (multiple-value-bind (ok surep) (ctypep elt type2)
2702 (return-from punt (values nil nil)))
2704 (return-from punt (values nil t)))))
2708 ;;; We punt if the odd type is enumerable and intersects with the
2709 ;;; MEMBER type. If not enumerable, then it is definitely not a
2710 ;;; subtype of the MEMBER type.
2711 (!define-type-method (member :complex-subtypep-arg2) (type1 type2)
2712 (cond ((not (type-enumerable type1)) (values nil t))
2713 ((types-equal-or-intersect type1 type2)
2714 (invoke-complex-subtypep-arg1-method type1 type2))
2715 (t (values nil t))))
2717 (!define-type-method (member :simple-intersection2) (type1 type2)
2718 (make-member-type :xset (xset-intersection (member-type-xset type1)
2719 (member-type-xset type2))
2720 :fp-zeroes (intersection (member-type-fp-zeroes type1)
2721 (member-type-fp-zeroes type2))))
2723 (!define-type-method (member :complex-intersection2) (type1 type2)
2725 (let ((xset (alloc-xset))
2727 (mapc-member-type-members
2729 (multiple-value-bind (ok sure) (ctypep member type1)
2731 (return-from punt nil))
2733 (if (fp-zero-p member)
2734 (pushnew member fp-zeroes)
2735 (add-to-xset member xset)))))
2737 (if (and (xset-empty-p xset) (not fp-zeroes))
2739 (make-member-type :xset xset :fp-zeroes fp-zeroes)))))
2741 ;;; We don't need a :COMPLEX-UNION2, since the only interesting case is
2742 ;;; a union type, and the member/union interaction is handled by the
2743 ;;; union type method.
2744 (!define-type-method (member :simple-union2) (type1 type2)
2745 (make-member-type :xset (xset-union (member-type-xset type1)
2746 (member-type-xset type2))
2747 :fp-zeroes (union (member-type-fp-zeroes type1)
2748 (member-type-fp-zeroes type2))))
2750 (!define-type-method (member :simple-=) (type1 type2)
2751 (let ((xset1 (member-type-xset type1))
2752 (xset2 (member-type-xset type2))
2753 (l1 (member-type-fp-zeroes type1))
2754 (l2 (member-type-fp-zeroes type2)))
2755 (values (and (eql (xset-count xset1) (xset-count xset2))
2756 (xset-subset-p xset1 xset2)
2757 (xset-subset-p xset2 xset1)
2762 (!define-type-method (member :complex-=) (type1 type2)
2763 (if (type-enumerable type1)
2764 (multiple-value-bind (val win) (csubtypep type2 type1)
2765 (if (or val (not win))
2770 (!def-type-translator member (&rest members)
2772 (let (ms numbers char-codes)
2773 (dolist (m (remove-duplicates members))
2775 (float (if (zerop m)
2777 (push (ctype-of m) numbers)))
2778 (real (push (ctype-of m) numbers))
2779 (character (push (sb!xc:char-code m) char-codes))
2783 (make-member-type :members ms)
2786 (make-character-set-type
2787 :pairs (mapcar (lambda (x) (cons x x))
2788 (sort char-codes #'<)))
2790 (nreverse numbers)))
2793 ;;;; intersection types
2795 ;;;; Until version 0.6.10.6, SBCL followed the original CMU CL approach
2796 ;;;; of punting on all AND types, not just the unreasonably complicated
2797 ;;;; ones. The change was motivated by trying to get the KEYWORD type
2798 ;;;; to behave sensibly:
2799 ;;;; ;; reasonable definition
2800 ;;;; (DEFTYPE KEYWORD () '(AND SYMBOL (SATISFIES KEYWORDP)))
2801 ;;;; ;; reasonable behavior
2802 ;;;; (AVER (SUBTYPEP 'KEYWORD 'SYMBOL))
2803 ;;;; Without understanding a little about the semantics of AND, we'd
2804 ;;;; get (SUBTYPEP 'KEYWORD 'SYMBOL)=>NIL,NIL and, for entirely
2805 ;;;; parallel reasons, (SUBTYPEP 'RATIO 'NUMBER)=>NIL,NIL. That's
2808 ;;;; We still follow the example of CMU CL to some extent, by punting
2809 ;;;; (to the opaque HAIRY-TYPE) on sufficiently complicated types
2812 (!define-type-class intersection)
2814 (!define-type-method (intersection :negate) (type)
2816 (mapcar #'type-negation (intersection-type-types type))))
2818 ;;; A few intersection types have special names. The others just get
2819 ;;; mechanically unparsed.
2820 (!define-type-method (intersection :unparse) (type)
2821 (declare (type ctype type))
2822 (or (find type '(ratio keyword compiled-function) :key #'specifier-type :test #'type=)
2823 `(and ,@(mapcar #'type-specifier (intersection-type-types type)))))
2825 ;;; shared machinery for type equality: true if every type in the set
2826 ;;; TYPES1 matches a type in the set TYPES2 and vice versa
2827 (defun type=-set (types1 types2)
2828 (flet ((type<=-set (x y)
2829 (declare (type list x y))
2830 (every/type (lambda (x y-element)
2831 (any/type #'type= y-element x))
2833 (and/type (type<=-set types1 types2)
2834 (type<=-set types2 types1))))
2836 ;;; Two intersection types are equal if their subtypes are equal sets.
2838 ;;; FIXME: Might it be better to use
2839 ;;; (AND (SUBTYPEP X Y) (SUBTYPEP Y X))
2840 ;;; instead, since SUBTYPEP is the usual relationship that we care
2841 ;;; most about, so it would be good to leverage any ingenuity there
2842 ;;; in this more obscure method?
2843 (!define-type-method (intersection :simple-=) (type1 type2)
2844 (type=-set (intersection-type-types type1)
2845 (intersection-type-types type2)))
2847 (defun %intersection-complex-subtypep-arg1 (type1 type2)
2848 (type= type1 (type-intersection type1 type2)))
2850 (defun %intersection-simple-subtypep (type1 type2)
2851 (every/type #'%intersection-complex-subtypep-arg1
2853 (intersection-type-types type2)))
2855 (!define-type-method (intersection :simple-subtypep) (type1 type2)
2856 (%intersection-simple-subtypep type1 type2))
2858 (!define-type-method (intersection :complex-subtypep-arg1) (type1 type2)
2859 (%intersection-complex-subtypep-arg1 type1 type2))
2861 (defun %intersection-complex-subtypep-arg2 (type1 type2)
2862 (every/type #'csubtypep type1 (intersection-type-types type2)))
2864 (!define-type-method (intersection :complex-subtypep-arg2) (type1 type2)
2865 (%intersection-complex-subtypep-arg2 type1 type2))
2867 ;;; FIXME: This will look eeriely familiar to readers of the UNION
2868 ;;; :SIMPLE-INTERSECTION2 :COMPLEX-INTERSECTION2 method. That's
2869 ;;; because it was generated by cut'n'paste methods. Given that
2870 ;;; intersections and unions have all sorts of symmetries known to
2871 ;;; mathematics, it shouldn't be beyond the ken of some programmers to
2872 ;;; reflect those symmetries in code in a way that ties them together
2873 ;;; more strongly than having two independent near-copies :-/
2874 (!define-type-method (intersection :simple-union2 :complex-union2)
2876 ;; Within this method, type2 is guaranteed to be an intersection
2878 (aver (intersection-type-p type2))
2879 ;; Make sure to call only the applicable methods...
2880 (cond ((and (intersection-type-p type1)
2881 (%intersection-simple-subtypep type1 type2)) type2)
2882 ((and (intersection-type-p type1)
2883 (%intersection-simple-subtypep type2 type1)) type1)
2884 ((and (not (intersection-type-p type1))
2885 (%intersection-complex-subtypep-arg2 type1 type2))
2887 ((and (not (intersection-type-p type1))
2888 (%intersection-complex-subtypep-arg1 type2 type1))
2890 ;; KLUDGE: This special (and somewhat hairy) magic is required
2891 ;; to deal with the RATIONAL/INTEGER special case. The UNION
2892 ;; of (INTEGER * -1) and (AND (RATIONAL * -1/2) (NOT INTEGER))
2893 ;; should be (RATIONAL * -1/2) -- CSR, 2003-02-28
2894 ((and (csubtypep type2 (specifier-type 'ratio))
2895 (numeric-type-p type1)
2896 (csubtypep type1 (specifier-type 'integer))
2901 :low (if (null (numeric-type-low type1))
2903 (list (1- (numeric-type-low type1))))
2904 :high (if (null (numeric-type-high type1))
2906 (list (1+ (numeric-type-high type1)))))))
2907 (let* ((intersected (intersection-type-types type2))
2908 (remaining (remove (specifier-type '(not integer))
2911 (and (not (equal intersected remaining))
2912 (type-union type1 (apply #'type-intersection remaining)))))
2914 (let ((accumulator *universal-type*))
2915 (do ((t2s (intersection-type-types type2) (cdr t2s)))
2916 ((null t2s) accumulator)
2917 (let ((union (type-union type1 (car t2s))))
2918 (when (union-type-p union)
2919 ;; we have to give up here -- there are all sorts of
2920 ;; ordering worries, but it's better than before.
2921 ;; Doing exactly the same as in the UNION
2922 ;; :SIMPLE/:COMPLEX-INTERSECTION2 method causes stack
2923 ;; overflow with the mutual recursion never bottoming
2925 (if (and (eq accumulator *universal-type*)
2927 ;; KLUDGE: if we get here, we have a partially
2928 ;; simplified result. While this isn't by any
2929 ;; means a universal simplification, including
2930 ;; this logic here means that we can get (OR
2931 ;; KEYWORD (NOT KEYWORD)) canonicalized to T.
2935 (type-intersection accumulator union))))))))
2937 (!def-type-translator and (&whole whole &rest type-specifiers)
2938 (apply #'type-intersection
2939 (mapcar #'specifier-type type-specifiers)))
2943 (!define-type-class union)
2945 (!define-type-method (union :negate) (type)
2946 (declare (type ctype type))
2947 (apply #'type-intersection
2948 (mapcar #'type-negation (union-type-types type))))
2950 ;;; The LIST, FLOAT and REAL types have special names. Other union
2951 ;;; types just get mechanically unparsed.
2952 (!define-type-method (union :unparse) (type)
2953 (declare (type ctype type))
2955 ((type= type (specifier-type 'list)) 'list)
2956 ((type= type (specifier-type 'float)) 'float)
2957 ((type= type (specifier-type 'real)) 'real)
2958 ((type= type (specifier-type 'sequence)) 'sequence)
2959 ((type= type (specifier-type 'bignum)) 'bignum)
2960 ((type= type (specifier-type 'simple-string)) 'simple-string)
2961 ((type= type (specifier-type 'string)) 'string)
2962 ((type= type (specifier-type 'complex)) 'complex)
2963 ((type= type (specifier-type 'standard-char)) 'standard-char)
2964 (t `(or ,@(mapcar #'type-specifier (union-type-types type))))))
2966 ;;; Two union types are equal if they are each subtypes of each
2967 ;;; other. We need to be this clever because our complex subtypep
2968 ;;; methods are now more accurate; we don't get infinite recursion
2969 ;;; because the simple-subtypep method delegates to complex-subtypep
2970 ;;; of the individual types of type1. - CSR, 2002-04-09
2972 ;;; Previous comment, now obsolete, but worth keeping around because
2973 ;;; it is true, though too strong a condition:
2975 ;;; Two union types are equal if their subtypes are equal sets.
2976 (!define-type-method (union :simple-=) (type1 type2)
2977 (multiple-value-bind (subtype certain?)
2978 (csubtypep type1 type2)
2980 (csubtypep type2 type1)
2981 ;; we might as well become as certain as possible.
2984 (multiple-value-bind (subtype certain?)
2985 (csubtypep type2 type1)
2986 (declare (ignore subtype))
2987 (values nil certain?))))))
2989 (!define-type-method (union :complex-=) (type1 type2)
2990 (declare (ignore type1))
2991 (if (some #'type-might-contain-other-types-p
2992 (union-type-types type2))
2996 ;;; Similarly, a union type is a subtype of another if and only if
2997 ;;; every element of TYPE1 is a subtype of TYPE2.
2998 (defun union-simple-subtypep (type1 type2)
2999 (every/type (swapped-args-fun #'union-complex-subtypep-arg2)
3001 (union-type-types type1)))
3003 (!define-type-method (union :simple-subtypep) (type1 type2)
3004 (union-simple-subtypep type1 type2))
3006 (defun union-complex-subtypep-arg1 (type1 type2)
3007 (every/type (swapped-args-fun #'csubtypep)
3009 (union-type-types type1)))
3011 (!define-type-method (union :complex-subtypep-arg1) (type1 type2)
3012 (union-complex-subtypep-arg1 type1 type2))
3014 (defun union-complex-subtypep-arg2 (type1 type2)
3015 ;; At this stage, we know that type2 is a union type and type1
3016 ;; isn't. We might as well check this, though:
3017 (aver (union-type-p type2))
3018 (aver (not (union-type-p type1)))
3019 ;; was: (any/type #'csubtypep type1 (union-type-types type2)), which
3020 ;; turns out to be too restrictive, causing bug 91.
3022 ;; the following reimplementation might look dodgy. It is dodgy. It
3023 ;; depends on the union :complex-= method not doing very much work
3024 ;; -- certainly, not using subtypep. Reasoning:
3026 ;; A is a subset of (B1 u B2)
3027 ;; <=> A n (B1 u B2) = A
3028 ;; <=> (A n B1) u (A n B2) = A
3030 ;; But, we have to be careful not to delegate this type= to
3031 ;; something that could invoke subtypep, which might get us back
3032 ;; here -> stack explosion. We therefore ensure that the second type
3033 ;; (which is the one that's dispatched on) is either a union type
3034 ;; (where we've ensured that the complex-= method will not call
3035 ;; subtypep) or something with no union types involved, in which
3036 ;; case we'll never come back here.
3038 ;; If we don't do this, then e.g.
3039 ;; (SUBTYPEP '(MEMBER 3) '(OR (SATISFIES FOO) (SATISFIES BAR)))
3040 ;; would loop infinitely, as the member :complex-= method is
3041 ;; implemented in terms of subtypep.
3043 ;; Ouch. - CSR, 2002-04-10
3044 (multiple-value-bind (sub-value sub-certain?)
3047 (mapcar (lambda (x) (type-intersection type1 x))
3048 (union-type-types type2))))
3050 (values sub-value sub-certain?)
3051 ;; The ANY/TYPE expression above is a sufficient condition for
3052 ;; subsetness, but not a necessary one, so we might get a more
3053 ;; certain answer by this CALL-NEXT-METHOD-ish step when the
3054 ;; ANY/TYPE expression is uncertain.
3055 (invoke-complex-subtypep-arg1-method type1 type2))))
3057 (!define-type-method (union :complex-subtypep-arg2) (type1 type2)
3058 (union-complex-subtypep-arg2 type1 type2))
3060 (!define-type-method (union :simple-intersection2 :complex-intersection2)
3062 ;; The CSUBTYPEP clauses here let us simplify e.g.
3063 ;; (TYPE-INTERSECTION2 (SPECIFIER-TYPE 'LIST)
3064 ;; (SPECIFIER-TYPE '(OR LIST VECTOR)))
3065 ;; (where LIST is (OR CONS NULL)).
3067 ;; The tests are more or less (CSUBTYPEP TYPE1 TYPE2) and vice
3068 ;; versa, but it's important that we pre-expand them into
3069 ;; specialized operations on individual elements of
3070 ;; UNION-TYPE-TYPES, instead of using the ordinary call to
3071 ;; CSUBTYPEP, in order to avoid possibly invoking any methods which
3072 ;; might in turn invoke (TYPE-INTERSECTION2 TYPE1 TYPE2) and thus
3073 ;; cause infinite recursion.
3075 ;; Within this method, type2 is guaranteed to be a union type:
3076 (aver (union-type-p type2))
3077 ;; Make sure to call only the applicable methods...
3078 (cond ((and (union-type-p type1)
3079 (union-simple-subtypep type1 type2)) type1)
3080 ((and (union-type-p type1)
3081 (union-simple-subtypep type2 type1)) type2)
3082 ((and (not (union-type-p type1))
3083 (union-complex-subtypep-arg2 type1 type2))
3085 ((and (not (union-type-p type1))
3086 (union-complex-subtypep-arg1 type2 type1))
3089 ;; KLUDGE: This code accumulates a sequence of TYPE-UNION2
3090 ;; operations in a particular order, and gives up if any of
3091 ;; the sub-unions turn out not to be simple. In other cases
3092 ;; ca. sbcl-0.6.11.15, that approach to taking a union was a
3093 ;; bad idea, since it can overlook simplifications which
3094 ;; might occur if the terms were accumulated in a different
3095 ;; order. It's possible that that will be a problem here too.
3096 ;; However, I can't think of a good example to demonstrate
3097 ;; it, and without an example to demonstrate it I can't write
3098 ;; test cases, and without test cases I don't want to
3099 ;; complicate the code to address what's still a hypothetical
3100 ;; problem. So I punted. -- WHN 2001-03-20
3101 (let ((accumulator *empty-type*))
3102 (dolist (t2 (union-type-types type2) accumulator)
3104 (type-union accumulator
3105 (type-intersection type1 t2))))))))
3107 (!def-type-translator or (&rest type-specifiers)
3109 (mapcar #'specifier-type
3114 (!define-type-class cons)
3116 (!def-type-translator cons (&optional (car-type-spec '*) (cdr-type-spec '*))
3117 (let ((car-type (single-value-specifier-type car-type-spec))
3118 (cdr-type (single-value-specifier-type cdr-type-spec)))
3119 (make-cons-type car-type cdr-type)))
3121 (!define-type-method (cons :negate) (type)
3122 (if (and (eq (cons-type-car-type type) *universal-type*)
3123 (eq (cons-type-cdr-type type) *universal-type*))
3124 (make-negation-type :type type)
3126 (make-negation-type :type (specifier-type 'cons))
3128 ((and (not (eq (cons-type-car-type type) *universal-type*))
3129 (not (eq (cons-type-cdr-type type) *universal-type*)))
3132 (type-negation (cons-type-car-type type))
3136 (type-negation (cons-type-cdr-type type)))))
3137 ((not (eq (cons-type-car-type type) *universal-type*))
3139 (type-negation (cons-type-car-type type))
3141 ((not (eq (cons-type-cdr-type type) *universal-type*))
3144 (type-negation (cons-type-cdr-type type))))
3145 (t (bug "Weird CONS type ~S" type))))))
3147 (!define-type-method (cons :unparse) (type)
3148 (let ((car-eltype (type-specifier (cons-type-car-type type)))
3149 (cdr-eltype (type-specifier (cons-type-cdr-type type))))
3150 (if (and (member car-eltype '(t *))
3151 (member cdr-eltype '(t *)))
3153 `(cons ,car-eltype ,cdr-eltype))))
3155 (!define-type-method (cons :simple-=) (type1 type2)
3156 (declare (type cons-type type1 type2))
3157 (multiple-value-bind (car-match car-win)
3158 (type= (cons-type-car-type type1) (cons-type-car-type type2))
3159 (multiple-value-bind (cdr-match cdr-win)
3160 (type= (cons-type-cdr-type type1) (cons-type-cdr-type type2))
3161 (cond ((and car-match cdr-match)
3162 (aver (and car-win cdr-win))
3166 ;; FIXME: Ideally we would like to detect and handle
3167 ;; (CONS UNKNOWN INTEGER) (CONS UNKNOWN SYMBOL) => NIL, T
3168 ;; but just returning a secondary true on (and car-win cdr-win)
3169 ;; unfortunately breaks other things. --NS 2006-08-16
3170 (and (or (and (not car-match) car-win)
3171 (and (not cdr-match) cdr-win))
3172 (not (and (cons-type-might-be-empty-type type1)
3173 (cons-type-might-be-empty-type type2))))))))))
3175 (!define-type-method (cons :simple-subtypep) (type1 type2)
3176 (declare (type cons-type type1 type2))
3177 (multiple-value-bind (val-car win-car)
3178 (csubtypep (cons-type-car-type type1) (cons-type-car-type type2))
3179 (multiple-value-bind (val-cdr win-cdr)
3180 (csubtypep (cons-type-cdr-type type1) (cons-type-cdr-type type2))
3181 (if (and val-car val-cdr)
3182 (values t (and win-car win-cdr))
3183 (values nil (or (and (not val-car) win-car)
3184 (and (not val-cdr) win-cdr)))))))
3186 ;;; Give up if a precise type is not possible, to avoid returning
3187 ;;; overly general types.
3188 (!define-type-method (cons :simple-union2) (type1 type2)
3189 (declare (type cons-type type1 type2))
3190 (let ((car-type1 (cons-type-car-type type1))
3191 (car-type2 (cons-type-car-type type2))
3192 (cdr-type1 (cons-type-cdr-type type1))
3193 (cdr-type2 (cons-type-cdr-type type2))
3196 ;; UGH. -- CSR, 2003-02-24
3197 (macrolet ((frob-car (car1 car2 cdr1 cdr2
3198 &optional (not1 nil not1p))
3200 (make-cons-type ,car1 (type-union ,cdr1 ,cdr2))
3202 (type-intersection ,car2
3205 `(type-negation ,car1)))
3207 (cond ((type= car-type1 car-type2)
3208 (make-cons-type car-type1
3209 (type-union cdr-type1 cdr-type2)))
3210 ((type= cdr-type1 cdr-type2)
3211 (make-cons-type (type-union car-type1 car-type2)
3213 ((csubtypep car-type1 car-type2)
3214 (frob-car car-type1 car-type2 cdr-type1 cdr-type2))
3215 ((csubtypep car-type2 car-type1)
3216 (frob-car car-type2 car-type1 cdr-type2 cdr-type1))
3217 ;; more general case of the above, but harder to compute
3219 (setf car-not1 (type-negation car-type1))
3220 (multiple-value-bind (yes win)
3221 (csubtypep car-type2 car-not1)
3222 (and (not yes) win)))
3223 (frob-car car-type1 car-type2 cdr-type1 cdr-type2 car-not1))
3225 (setf car-not2 (type-negation car-type2))
3226 (multiple-value-bind (yes win)
3227 (csubtypep car-type1 car-not2)
3228 (and (not yes) win)))
3229 (frob-car car-type2 car-type1 cdr-type2 cdr-type1 car-not2))
3230 ;; Don't put these in -- consider the effect of taking the
3231 ;; union of (CONS (INTEGER 0 2) (INTEGER 5 7)) and
3232 ;; (CONS (INTEGER 0 3) (INTEGER 5 6)).
3234 ((csubtypep cdr-type1 cdr-type2)
3235 (frob-cdr car-type1 car-type2 cdr-type1 cdr-type2))
3237 ((csubtypep cdr-type2 cdr-type1)
3238 (frob-cdr car-type2 car-type1 cdr-type2 cdr-type1))))))
3240 (!define-type-method (cons :simple-intersection2) (type1 type2)
3241 (declare (type cons-type type1 type2))
3242 (let ((car-int2 (type-intersection2 (cons-type-car-type type1)
3243 (cons-type-car-type type2)))
3244 (cdr-int2 (type-intersection2 (cons-type-cdr-type type1)
3245 (cons-type-cdr-type type2))))
3247 ((and car-int2 cdr-int2) (make-cons-type car-int2 cdr-int2))
3248 (car-int2 (make-cons-type car-int2
3250 (cons-type-cdr-type type1)
3251 (cons-type-cdr-type type2))))
3252 (cdr-int2 (make-cons-type
3253 (type-intersection (cons-type-car-type type1)
3254 (cons-type-car-type type2))
3257 (!define-superclasses cons ((cons)) !cold-init-forms)
3259 ;;;; CHARACTER-SET types
3261 (!define-type-class character-set)
3263 (!def-type-translator character-set
3264 (&optional (pairs '((0 . #.(1- sb!xc:char-code-limit)))))
3265 (make-character-set-type :pairs pairs))
3267 (!define-type-method (character-set :negate) (type)
3268 (let ((pairs (character-set-type-pairs type)))
3269 (if (and (= (length pairs) 1)
3271 (= (cdar pairs) (1- sb!xc:char-code-limit)))
3272 (make-negation-type :type type)
3273 (let ((not-character
3275 :type (make-character-set-type
3276 :pairs '((0 . #.(1- sb!xc:char-code-limit)))))))
3279 (make-character-set-type
3280 :pairs (let (not-pairs)
3281 (when (> (caar pairs) 0)
3282 (push (cons 0 (1- (caar pairs))) not-pairs))
3283 (do* ((tail pairs (cdr tail))
3284 (high1 (cdar tail) (cdar tail))
3285 (low2 (caadr tail) (caadr tail)))
3287 (when (< (cdar tail) (1- sb!xc:char-code-limit))
3288 (push (cons (1+ (cdar tail))
3289 (1- sb!xc:char-code-limit))
3291 (nreverse not-pairs))
3292 (push (cons (1+ high1) (1- low2)) not-pairs)))))))))
3294 (!define-type-method (character-set :unparse) (type)
3296 ((type= type (specifier-type 'character)) 'character)
3297 ((type= type (specifier-type 'base-char)) 'base-char)
3298 ((type= type (specifier-type 'extended-char)) 'extended-char)
3299 ((type= type (specifier-type 'standard-char)) 'standard-char)
3300 (t (let ((pairs (character-set-type-pairs type)))
3301 `(member ,@(loop for (low . high) in pairs
3302 nconc (loop for code from low upto high
3303 collect (sb!xc:code-char code))))))))
3305 (!define-type-method (character-set :singleton-p) (type)
3306 (let* ((pairs (character-set-type-pairs type))
3307 (pair (first pairs)))
3308 (if (and (typep pairs '(cons t null))
3309 (eql (car pair) (cdr pair)))
3310 (values t (code-char (car pair)))
3313 (!define-type-method (character-set :simple-=) (type1 type2)
3314 (let ((pairs1 (character-set-type-pairs type1))
3315 (pairs2 (character-set-type-pairs type2)))
3316 (values (equal pairs1 pairs2) t)))
3318 (!define-type-method (character-set :simple-subtypep) (type1 type2)
3320 (dolist (pair (character-set-type-pairs type1) t)
3321 (unless (position pair (character-set-type-pairs type2)
3322 :test (lambda (x y) (and (>= (car x) (car y))
3323 (<= (cdr x) (cdr y)))))
3327 (!define-type-method (character-set :simple-union2) (type1 type2)
3328 ;; KLUDGE: the canonizing in the MAKE-CHARACTER-SET-TYPE function
3329 ;; actually does the union for us. It might be a little fragile to
3331 (make-character-set-type
3333 (copy-alist (character-set-type-pairs type1))
3334 (copy-alist (character-set-type-pairs type2))
3337 (!define-type-method (character-set :simple-intersection2) (type1 type2)
3338 ;; KLUDGE: brute force.
3341 (dolist (pair1 (character-set-type-pairs type1)
3342 (make-character-set-type
3343 :pairs (sort pairs #'< :key #'car)))
3344 (dolist (pair2 (character-set-type-pairs type2))
3346 ((<= (car pair1) (car pair2) (cdr pair1))
3347 (push (cons (car pair2) (min (cdr pair1) (cdr pair2))) pairs))
3348 ((<= (car pair2) (car pair1) (cdr pair2))
3349 (push (cons (car pair1) (min (cdr pair1) (cdr pair2))) pairs))))))
3351 (make-character-set-type
3352 :pairs (intersect-type-pairs
3353 (character-set-type-pairs type1)
3354 (character-set-type-pairs type2))))
3357 ;;; Intersect two ordered lists of pairs
3358 ;;; Each list is of the form ((start1 . end1) ... (startn . endn)),
3359 ;;; where start1 <= end1 < start2 <= end2 < ... < startn <= endn.
3360 ;;; Each pair represents the integer interval start..end.
3362 (defun intersect-type-pairs (alist1 alist2)
3363 (if (and alist1 alist2)
3365 (pair1 (pop alist1))
3366 (pair2 (pop alist2)))
3368 (when (> (car pair1) (car pair2))
3369 (rotatef pair1 pair2)
3370 (rotatef alist1 alist2))
3371 (let ((pair1-cdr (cdr pair1)))
3373 ((> (car pair2) pair1-cdr)
3374 ;; No over lap -- discard pair1
3375 (unless alist1 (return))
3376 (setq pair1 (pop alist1)))
3377 ((<= (cdr pair2) pair1-cdr)
3378 (push (cons (car pair2) (cdr pair2)) res)
3380 ((= (cdr pair2) pair1-cdr)
3381 (unless alist1 (return))
3382 (unless alist2 (return))
3383 (setq pair1 (pop alist1)
3384 pair2 (pop alist2)))
3385 (t ;; (< (cdr pair2) pair1-cdr)
3386 (unless alist2 (return))
3387 (setq pair1 (cons (1+ (cdr pair2)) pair1-cdr))
3388 (setq pair2 (pop alist2)))))
3389 (t ;; (> (cdr pair2) (cdr pair1))
3390 (push (cons (car pair2) pair1-cdr) res)
3391 (unless alist1 (return))
3392 (setq pair2 (cons (1+ pair1-cdr) (cdr pair2)))
3393 (setq pair1 (pop alist1))))))
3398 ;;; Return the type that describes all objects that are in X but not
3399 ;;; in Y. If we can't determine this type, then return NIL.
3401 ;;; For now, we only are clever dealing with union and member types.
3402 ;;; If either type is not a union type, then we pretend that it is a
3403 ;;; union of just one type. What we do is remove from X all the types
3404 ;;; that are a subtype any type in Y. If any type in X intersects with
3405 ;;; a type in Y but is not a subtype, then we give up.
3407 ;;; We must also special-case any member type that appears in the
3408 ;;; union. We remove from X's members all objects that are TYPEP to Y.
3409 ;;; If Y has any members, we must be careful that none of those
3410 ;;; members are CTYPEP to any of Y's non-member types. We give up in
3411 ;;; this case, since to compute that difference we would have to break
3412 ;;; the type from X into some collection of types that represents the
3413 ;;; type without that particular element. This seems too hairy to be
3414 ;;; worthwhile, given its low utility.
3415 (defun type-difference (x y)
3416 (if (and (numeric-type-p x) (numeric-type-p y))
3417 ;; Numeric types are easy. Are there any others we should handle like this?
3418 (type-intersection x (type-negation y))
3419 (let ((x-types (if (union-type-p x) (union-type-types x) (list x)))
3420 (y-types (if (union-type-p y) (union-type-types y) (list y))))
3422 (dolist (x-type x-types)
3423 (if (member-type-p x-type)
3424 (let ((xset (alloc-xset))
3426 (mapc-member-type-members
3428 (multiple-value-bind (ok sure) (ctypep elt y)
3430 (return-from type-difference nil))
3433 (pushnew elt fp-zeroes)
3434 (add-to-xset elt xset)))))
3436 (unless (and (xset-empty-p xset) (not fp-zeroes))
3437 (res (make-member-type :xset xset :fp-zeroes fp-zeroes))))
3438 (dolist (y-type y-types (res x-type))
3439 (multiple-value-bind (val win) (csubtypep x-type y-type)
3440 (unless win (return-from type-difference nil))
3442 (when (types-equal-or-intersect x-type y-type)
3443 (return-from type-difference nil))))))
3444 (let ((y-mem (find-if #'member-type-p y-types)))
3446 (dolist (x-type x-types)
3447 (unless (member-type-p x-type)
3448 (mapc-member-type-members
3450 (multiple-value-bind (ok sure) (ctypep member x-type)
3451 (when (or (not sure) ok)
3452 (return-from type-difference nil))))
3454 (apply #'type-union (res))))))
3456 (!def-type-translator array (&optional (element-type '*)
3458 (specialize-array-type
3459 (make-array-type :dimensions (canonical-array-dimensions dimensions)
3461 :element-type (if (eq element-type '*)
3463 (specifier-type element-type)))))
3465 (!def-type-translator simple-array (&optional (element-type '*)
3467 (specialize-array-type
3468 (make-array-type :dimensions (canonical-array-dimensions dimensions)
3470 :element-type (if (eq element-type '*)
3472 (specifier-type element-type)))))
3474 ;;;; utilities shared between cross-compiler and target system
3476 ;;; Does the type derived from compilation of an actual function
3477 ;;; definition satisfy declarations of a function's type?
3478 (defun defined-ftype-matches-declared-ftype-p (defined-ftype declared-ftype)
3479 (declare (type ctype defined-ftype declared-ftype))
3480 (flet ((is-built-in-class-function-p (ctype)
3481 (and (built-in-classoid-p ctype)
3482 (eq (built-in-classoid-name ctype) 'function))))
3483 (cond (;; DECLARED-FTYPE could certainly be #<BUILT-IN-CLASS FUNCTION>;
3484 ;; that's what happens when we (DECLAIM (FTYPE FUNCTION FOO)).
3485 (is-built-in-class-function-p declared-ftype)
3486 ;; In that case, any definition satisfies the declaration.
3488 (;; It's not clear whether or how DEFINED-FTYPE might be
3489 ;; #<BUILT-IN-CLASS FUNCTION>, but it's not obviously
3490 ;; invalid, so let's handle that case too, just in case.
3491 (is-built-in-class-function-p defined-ftype)
3492 ;; No matter what DECLARED-FTYPE might be, we can't prove
3493 ;; that an object of type FUNCTION doesn't satisfy it, so
3494 ;; we return success no matter what.
3496 (;; Otherwise both of them must be FUN-TYPE objects.
3498 ;; FIXME: For now we only check compatibility of the return
3499 ;; type, not argument types, and we don't even check the
3500 ;; return type very precisely (as per bug 94a). It would be
3501 ;; good to do a better job. Perhaps to check the
3502 ;; compatibility of the arguments, we should (1) redo
3503 ;; VALUES-TYPES-EQUAL-OR-INTERSECT as
3504 ;; ARGS-TYPES-EQUAL-OR-INTERSECT, and then (2) apply it to
3505 ;; the ARGS-TYPE slices of the FUN-TYPEs. (ARGS-TYPE
3506 ;; is a base class both of VALUES-TYPE and of FUN-TYPE.)
3507 (values-types-equal-or-intersect
3508 (fun-type-returns defined-ftype)
3509 (fun-type-returns declared-ftype))))))
3511 ;;; This messy case of CTYPE for NUMBER is shared between the
3512 ;;; cross-compiler and the target system.
3513 (defun ctype-of-number (x)
3514 (let ((num (if (complexp x) (realpart x) x)))
3515 (multiple-value-bind (complexp low high)
3517 (let ((imag (imagpart x)))
3518 (values :complex (min num imag) (max num imag)))
3519 (values :real num num))
3520 (make-numeric-type :class (etypecase num
3521 (integer (if (complexp x)
3522 (if (integerp (imagpart x))
3526 (rational 'rational)
3528 :format (and (floatp num) (float-format-name num))
3534 ;; Why SAFETY 0? To suppress the is-it-the-right-structure-type
3535 ;; checking for declarations in structure accessors. Otherwise we
3536 ;; can get caught in a chicken-and-egg bootstrapping problem, whose
3537 ;; symptom on x86 OpenBSD sbcl-0.pre7.37.flaky5.22 is an illegal
3538 ;; instruction trap. I haven't tracked it down, but I'm guessing it
3539 ;; has to do with setting LAYOUTs when the LAYOUT hasn't been set
3541 (declare (optimize (safety 0)))
3542 (!defun-from-collected-cold-init-forms !late-type-cold-init))
3544 (/show0 "late-type.lisp end of file")