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1 point by eds 6149 days ago | link | parent

The question of how a particular implementation represents with arc lists has nothing to do with what arc lists are.

The code is the spec.

The fact remains that in arc when you type '(a b c) you get '(a . (b . (c . nil))) and in scheme you get '(a . (b . (c . ()))).

You could make ac.scm more efficient by doing a (define nil '())

There is a difference between nil being the empty list and nil evaluating to the empty list.

One problem with (define nil '()) is that then 'nil returns the symbol nil rather than the empty list ().

I am not convinced that (define nil '()) would greatly increase efficiency, because most of that overhead is incurred in the initial read, and not at run time. It takes billions of times longer for the user to type a statement into arc than it takes arc to denil the input. And after that, nil or () isn't an issue because arc functions are compiled to scheme functions anyways.



2 points by absz 6149 days ago | link

I'm fairly sure that "the code is the spec" applies to arc.arc, not to ac.scm. That is, anything that can interpret arc.arc properly is a conforming Arc implementation; ac.scm is just one of them. And since nil is (), then in Arc, your two lists are the same but with different formatting. Observe:

  arc> (is nil '())
  t
  arc> (is nil ())
  t
  arc> (iso '(a b c) '(a . (b . (c . nil))))
  t
  arc> (iso '(a b c) '(a . (b . (c . ()))))
  t
  arc> (iso '(a . (b . (c . nil))) '(a . (b . (c . ()))))
  t

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2 points by eds 6149 days ago | link

Please note that the behavior of is is defined by ac.scm, not arc.arc. (And iso uses is to test for equality.)

The equality and interchangability of nil and () is just because there is a line in the definition of is that specifically says that false values are equal.

  (xdef 'is (lambda args
              (tnil (or (all (lambda (a) (eqv? (car args) a)) (cdr args))
                      (and (all string? args)
                           (apply string=? args))
                      (all ar-false? args)))))
  
  (define (ar-false? x)
    (or (eq? x 'nil) (eq? x '()) (eq? x #f)))
So even if you put #f in the terminating position, your lists will still be iso.

  arc> (iso '(a b c) '(a b c . #f))
  t
Are you saying that arc lists are #f terminated just because it doesn't break arc to put #f in random lists? Even if arc lists can be terminated by nil, (), and #f, it doesn't mean they necessarily are. Any given list (ignoring nested lists) can only have one termination object. I think it is reasonable to say that that list is terminated by that object. I do not think it is reasonable to say that list is terminated by another object, even if it could be, because the actual object at the end of the list is not that other object. And because the current implementation (the only official implementation) uses nil, I think it reasonable to say that arc lists are terminated by nil. Note the use of the present tense. If that changes at some future time, I my statement will obviously not apply.

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2 points by absz 6148 days ago | link

What you say is true, except for one thing:

  arc> (is #f nil)
  t
In short, given the current implementation, we have (at least) six different ways to write nil: nil, 'nil, (), '(), #f, and '#f. These six things are all considered identical within Arc. The same is true, for instance, of 'a and (quote a), which are the same thing entered differently. You can check that they are the same with is; I won't put all those examples into this post.

I have never said that Arc lists aren't nil terminated--clearly, they are. What I'm saying is that Arc lists are nil terminated for any representation of nil--whether that representation is nil from Common Lisp, '() from Scheme, or #f from a leftover artifact of using the mzscheme reader.

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