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3 points by almkglor 6012 days ago | link | parent

efficiency concerns! efficiency concerns! yeah yeah we don't care about efficiency, until it makes stuff 100x slower!

As an example, my ssyntaxes -hack severely slows down 'eval. And that's just part of the program. The slowdown appears to be from the arc compiler occasionally adding 'ar-eval at various points, apparently "just in case".



4 points by absz 6012 days ago | link

It's a very important concern. Now, I don't know the details of the subject, but Steve Yegge just gave a talk on optimizing dynamic languages; he uploaded the transcript at http://steve-yegge.blogspot.com/2008/05/dynamic-languages-st... . Thoughts?

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3 points by almkglor 6012 days ago | link

Possibly we can hack apart 'ac and fix the parts where 'ar-eval is randomly inserted, even though they are unnecessary (I think).

However the million dollar question of optimizing an Arc with a redefinable 'eval is the fact that Arc 'eval has TWO steps: compilation and then evaluation. Function definitions are always compiled.

For example:

  ; eval to make everything postfix
  (redef eval (e)
    (if (acons e)
        (given fun (last e)
               arg (cut body 0 -1)
          (old `(,fun ,@arg)))
        (old e)))
  (t 0 5 if)
  (nil 0 5 if)
But how do you handle functions?

  (foo ((x)
      (x
        0
        42
        if)
      fn)
    set)
Do you implicitly insert 'eval to the function body, or not?

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2 points by absz 6012 days ago | link

This is actually also the million-dollar semantic question. Right now, arc-eval is not inserted around function or macro bodies, so only top-level forms (those at the repl) are affected. But we can't insert it around bodies as is, because (1) Arc-side eval doesn't take an environment, but they need to pass an environment in, and (2) they don't evaluate things immediately, but instead they create the forms that will be evaluated. What is the best way to do things here? We have no other language to guide us, after all.

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2 points by skenney26 6012 days ago | link

I'm curious: So arc-eval translates your arc code into scheme code and then passes it to scheme's eval? If so, would it be possible to print the scheme code to a file before it gets evaluated?

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1 point by almkglor 6011 days ago | link

> I'm curious: So arc-eval translates your arc code into scheme code and then passes it to scheme's eval?

Yes, I think so.

> If so, would it be possible to print the scheme code to a file before it gets evaluated?

Yes. sacado did some work on this I think.

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1 point by almkglor 6011 days ago | link

Personally, I'm rather squeamish about letting 'eval be redefined. Because the redefined 'eval will not be consistently used.

Perhaps it's better to just define a top-level which preprocesses the code before passing it to 'eval?

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2 points by eds 6011 days ago | link

That could be accomplished by redefining 'arc-eval rather than 'eval. 'arc-eval is used internally for evaluating top-level forms but not really anything else since it isn't exposed to arc, whereas 'eval could be used by arbitrary arc code. If you want to redefine the top-level evaluation function, than maybe what you want is some way to influence the results of 'arc-eval.

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1 point by almkglor 6011 days ago | link

So much easier:

  (def mytl ()
    (pr "arc> ")
    (eval (my-transformation (read)))
    (mytl))

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2 points by eds 6011 days ago | link

I guess I misunderstood your intention. I thought you wanted to be able to redefine the existing toplevel used by the arc interpreter itself, not define a completely new toplevel to be used in user code... (and yes, the latter is quite trivial).

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1 point by almkglor 6011 days ago | link

> I thought you wanted to be able to redefine the existing toplevel used by the arc interpreter itself

As opposed to emulating the existing toplevel in user code?

Allowing a redefinition of 'eval to work on the REPL will probably be OK, but still, there would be an impedance mismatch with functions that were defined before 'eval was redefined.

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