(in-package "SB!KERNEL")
-(file-comment
- "$Header$")
-
(!begin-collecting-cold-init-forms)
;;; Define the translation from a type-specifier to a type structure for
;;; some particular type. Syntax is identical to DEFTYPE.
-(defmacro def-type-translator (name arglist &body body)
- (check-type name symbol)
+(defmacro !def-type-translator (name arglist &body body)
+ (declare (type symbol name))
;; FIXME: Now that the T%CL hack is ancient history and we just use CL
;; instead, we can probably return to using PARSE-DEFMACRO here.
;;
;; package!)
(multiple-value-bind (whole wholeless-arglist)
(if (eq '&whole (car arglist))
- (values (cadr arglist) (cddr arglist))
- (values (gensym) arglist))
+ (values (cadr arglist) (cddr arglist))
+ (values (gensym) arglist))
(multiple-value-bind (forms decls) (parse-body body nil)
`(progn
(!cold-init-forms
;;; DEFVARs for these come later, after we have enough stuff defined.
(declaim (special *wild-type* *universal-type* *empty-type*))
\f
-;;; The XXX-Type structures include the CTYPE structure for some slots that
-;;; apply to all types.
+;;; the base class for the internal representation of types
(def!struct (ctype (:conc-name type-)
(:constructor nil)
(:make-load-form-fun make-type-load-form)
#-sb-xc-host (:pure t))
- ;; The class of this type.
+ ;; the class of this type
;;
;; FIXME: It's unnecessarily confusing to have a structure accessor
;; named TYPE-CLASS-INFO which is an accessor for the CTYPE structure
;; even though the TYPE-CLASS structure also exists in the system.
;; Rename this slot: TYPE-CLASS or ASSOCIATED-TYPE-CLASS or something.
(class-info (required-argument) :type type-class)
- ;; True if this type has a fixed number of members, and as such could
- ;; possibly be completely specified in a MEMBER type. This is used by the
- ;; MEMBER type methods.
- (enumerable nil :type (member t nil) :read-only t)
- ;; an arbitrary hash code used in EQ-style hashing of identity (since EQ
- ;; hashing can't be done portably)
+ ;; True if this type has a fixed number of members, and as such
+ ;; could possibly be completely specified in a MEMBER type. This is
+ ;; used by the MEMBER type methods.
+ (enumerable nil :read-only t)
+ ;; an arbitrary hash code used in EQ-style hashing of identity
+ ;; (since EQ hashing can't be done portably)
(hash-value (random (1+ most-positive-fixnum))
:type (and fixnum unsigned-byte)
:read-only t))
(declare (type ctype type))
`(specifier-type ',(type-specifier type)))
\f
-;;;; utilities
-
-;;; Like ANY and EVERY, except that we handle two-arg uncertain predicates.
-;;; If the result is uncertain, then we return Default from the block PUNT.
-;;; If LIST-FIRST is true, then the list element is the first arg, otherwise
-;;; the second.
-(defmacro any-type-op (op thing list &key (default '(values nil nil))
- list-first)
- (let ((n-this (gensym))
- (n-thing (gensym))
- (n-val (gensym))
- (n-win (gensym))
- (n-uncertain (gensym)))
- `(let ((,n-thing ,thing)
- (,n-uncertain nil))
- (dolist (,n-this ,list
- (if ,n-uncertain
- (return-from PUNT ,default)
- nil))
- (multiple-value-bind (,n-val ,n-win)
- ,(if list-first
- `(,op ,n-this ,n-thing)
- `(,op ,n-thing ,n-this))
- (unless ,n-win (setq ,n-uncertain t))
- (when ,n-val (return t)))))))
-(defmacro every-type-op (op thing list &key (default '(values nil nil))
- list-first)
- (let ((n-this (gensym))
- (n-thing (gensym))
- (n-val (gensym))
- (n-win (gensym)))
- `(let ((,n-thing ,thing))
- (dolist (,n-this ,list t)
- (multiple-value-bind (,n-val ,n-win)
- ,(if list-first
- `(,op ,n-this ,n-thing)
- `(,op ,n-thing ,n-this))
- (unless ,n-win (return-from PUNT ,default))
- (unless ,n-val (return nil)))))))
-
-;;; Compute the intersection for types that intersect only when one is a
-;;; hierarchical subtype of the other.
-(defun vanilla-intersection (type1 type2)
- (multiple-value-bind (stp1 win1) (csubtypep type1 type2)
- (multiple-value-bind (stp2 win2) (csubtypep type2 type1)
- (cond (stp1 (values type1 t))
- (stp2 (values type2 t))
- ((and win1 win2) (values *empty-type* t))
- (t
- (values type1 nil))))))
+;;;; miscellany
-(defun vanilla-union (type1 type2)
+;;; Look for nice relationships for types that have nice relationships
+;;; only when one is a hierarchical subtype of the other.
+(defun hierarchical-intersection2 (type1 type2)
+ (multiple-value-bind (subtypep1 win1) (csubtypep type1 type2)
+ (multiple-value-bind (subtypep2 win2) (csubtypep type2 type1)
+ (cond (subtypep1 type1)
+ (subtypep2 type2)
+ ((and win1 win2) *empty-type*)
+ (t nil)))))
+(defun hierarchical-union2 (type1 type2)
(cond ((csubtypep type1 type2) type2)
((csubtypep type2 type1) type1)
(t nil)))
-;;; Hash two things (types) down to 8 bits. In CMU CL this was an EQ hash, but
-;;; since it now needs to run in vanilla ANSI Common Lisp at cross-compile
-;;; time, it's now based on the CTYPE-HASH-VALUE field instead.
+;;; Hash two things (types) down to 8 bits. In CMU CL this was an EQ
+;;; hash, but since it now needs to run in vanilla ANSI Common Lisp at
+;;; cross-compile time, it's now based on the CTYPE-HASH-VALUE field
+;;; instead.
;;;
;;; FIXME: This was a macro in CMU CL, and is now an INLINE function. Is
;;; it important for it to be INLINE, or could be become an ordinary